The Circle, December 9, 1982.pdf
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 27 No. 10 - December 9, 1982
content
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. Sciepph(ssociate
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factor~ .. foll
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is
a .
pie
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have n_o
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.
a ~i~h _turno\'.er
·
~te'in
~hi
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P!O·
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· at Maris't,
·
who
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a1so
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teach~- the
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inmates,
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h1g~
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status ~ym!>ol
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m the r,ci~ty. Ther
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~ !ull da~-at 'Y~~kSit_es
1
_clas~_es are m
. ,
·gram smce faihng ~udents are n'?t allowed
_.
-. _
_ .
?"
· ·
-:-.
said
/
'
'~Tlte
:-
inmates- fi
_
avci
_
a
·
"'.e'alth
·
of-
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ex-
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a~~lt
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150
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perience resulting from crisis situations
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pr9posal
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a ·doctora,if m _Accc,Jgmg t~,tti~
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propo~al, afterthef1rst .
··
sei:vic
,
e
_ ,
~genctes
:
~ho
;
h.o!CS,.mastq- s
,
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;or . P!Ck
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them up aJ th1s
,
~1gher Jevel .
.
This is
·
a -
_
.
clinical/community
,
~ych<>l
9
gy
_
.·
(Psy
.
D),
,.
: class
·
of
.·
_
P~y .D
::
students- grad1;1~tes,
.
the
bachelo
.
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~0/o
are m~_eresfed wi~h
,
,:
•
. new mw;~et:Jt !s self-mterst on our part.''.
c
·
•
·
submitted
:
· bi DlUliel
,
~ir~
;-:
J>ro(essor
of
-
depa~tme~t
;
.mt~nds to
~
eek add1tiona~
.
ac-
330/o v~ry mterested in.the f~Y.P pr~grant;
. . .
.
The
,
mstuuuon of a Psy.D program
-
-
--
-
'
Psychofogy
;
wiU'go
_
b~fore
·
thefac_ulty
·
Fri~
__
·
cred1
_
tat1?n
·-
fr~ip
;
·
th~
-
-_
Amen can
_
"There 1s a l!'rg~ pop~lat1on m
,_
~eed
-.
a~d
_:
would
:
benefit- Jhe
:
,
,
whole
:
psychol~gy
,
-
day for a vote.
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<-:~~-,
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a!}other
~
~arge
.
popul
.
~t1011 that wants
.
to
. J
department, Kirk said.
"If
this program is
··
· · "The purJ>9se
·
or thi.
pr:o~osed
piogram
.
;
:
The
_
p
_
sy
.'
,If
progfam,
-
open to t
,
hose
~,
help,
n
:
Ki~k
said .
.
:
Ther!
_
are ~o doctoral ins
_
tituted t~ere
will
be
,
~
.
better selection of
.
is to educate and
.
frain
.
fun and part
-
time.•· holdi
_
ng a b~chelor
~
of
·
arts degree
-
or
a ..
programs m psy~h~lo~Y
~:°
,
the eight
.
co~:°tY'
.
. teachers
.
and c_ourses
·
and more and
_
better
_
students.at the dpctoraHeyel,'~ ,the pro-. - , mas~er'.s
'
:
degree ·in
_
Psychology,
.
differs·
_
M.id;Hud~on regi<>n .
.
_:\
:
;
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< ·
~
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:
"
/
..
'resourc;es;''
.
he said. '.'There wm be interac-
posafsi~tes_;
-
:•th~
program requires
·
field
"'
frcinf
a
,
Ph
;
D progra'm, J(:irlc
,
sai
_
d; ''Th
.
ose ·
~
Kirk said he feelut i~ 1mportaqt to
:
m- - tio
_
n between undergraduate, master's and
.
experienc~ stan,ng irqhe fii'st
-
semes_ter
.
and
·
who h<>~d a)>h~D
,
are
.
.
_
trah1ed to
·
work in
stitute a grad~ate p~ogr~m ..
.
m
·
psY.chol()gy
·
d~c,~teJevel students
,
where they can
continu
·
es
.
throµgholit the entire
·::
progra1t1.
:
universities, do
-
research and teach,'' he·
·
becau
_
se
_
of~he decline
J
D
undergra~U
.
l!te Jearn
·
·
fron:i, each
-:
oth
7
r
.
and develop ro!e
.
The goal
J
s to
_
increase the n11~ber.
o.L
'
s
_
aid . ."Thos~ with a Psy. D a~e trai
.
ned to
.
.
·
stud~nts
.
of psych'?Jogy'.
_
The num?er
..
of
.
·mo~els.'.'
.·.- ·
0
•
•
:
..
·-,:
-
-
:
•
>
,
.
licensed psycholC>gists and thereby alleviate
·
-give clinlcalhelp to ~pie, ittrains people
·
psyc,hology _undergrad~ates _at
_
Man~t
has
Kirk
-
sees an
·
opum1~t1c Juture
-
!or: _
. the severe shortage of
,-
professionals to
topra~ice_psychology."
.
.
· ·
·
·
declined_ from
11.~
percent_ m
J975
t~
S.S
graduate pr~grams at~ai:ist. Ev!rY thir,d
.
: -
~
....
.
..
,
}
assist
,
those
.
with
.
_the
.
most severe.
-.
•.
The
,
mllrket for such
.
a program is large
percent m
1981.
."The way the trend 1s go-
s
_
tudent
_
_
coE}mg to_ Ma
_
n
_
st ~n the m1d
1980
s
/
psychologlcal disabiljties."
·
·
. .
and
·
in
·
demand
Kirk
~aid. Accordin~ to ari
ing,
if
you were to project it _you might ~ay •
_
will
be graduate s!udent," he said.
· ·
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All letters must be typed triple space with a 60 space margin; ani!·submltted
.
to the
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.
..
,.·
·
..
, .
_ · ·
Circle office
no
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:-
Short letters
·
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mes
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,
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·
request.Letters
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be
published depending upon avallabllltyolspace
.
:
·
·
.
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~
·
Mai°Ii Mall
_.
··
_
·
.
~--
.
,,.
"
'
"
To.the Editor
·
:
<'..
·
·
~
-
'.°:
. ·-
Celebr~tc and five cithe
/
,suc
•·
.:
·
.
.
·
I read the
'
artide conceming
·
the
"
.
c~ssful stores on the Mall/ along
:
:
,
.
.
Main Mairs
,
:
new
iniage in the
·
:
with Mr:Chickery; _,., . ·
.
•
\
s·
.·
,;,
_.>
;,;
. .-.
·_
;:
.
November 18th
'
issue
.
c,f The Cir-
' e
This was
"
not mentioned iri your
·
· cle with much interest. ':
article, but} feel
~k
Niessen;
-_
as
..
·
l
would like
·
to
)
point out,
·
a
·
so%
.
o"'._ne!,
·
_sho~Jd getdhe
.
·
.
however, that my
.
Uncle, Richard
·-~,
·
•
·recognition duep!~·
)
'-- -·
.
::'
,
.
..
·
.
Niessen
is the co':.owner
·
·or
.
-
.
··
·
· : ·
.
·
<::~
,
,:~ank you,
'
\
•
.
_
_
,,
Stacy Parsons
•
J
--
~
· - .
_
I
·
Bernstein
.
.
To the Edit~r:
'
to tallc to
.
any of the players about
..
:
.
.
Six months ago the firing of
.
Coach Bernstein's departure?
>
.:
.
:
.
· .
Danny Bernstein was news, but it
·
lfind itincredulous that C~aclf
;"
·
_.·
is riot ne"£S today.
·
·
·
Bernstein would even mention the
!
word
-
'~loyalty" or talk al:>out
:
his
,
.
•
.
Coach
·
Bernstein and Coach
.
departure.
,
Long
,
before
.
ariy
.
-
· ·
·
Petro do have different,coaching
-·
games were lost lastyear,
.
<::oach
,.
"
..
_
:
j~hHosophies
_
and personalities, as
Bernstein spoke to
·
me about his
_.
\
'
Bill
Travers states. Given
.
that;
marJ.euvering
;tQ
.
siu,ceed
-
Ron
'.
.
___________ ,.. _______ .., ____ ..., _______
.-
:
•
'
-------.1
·
·
doesil'.t it sound a (ad ludicrious
-
Petro as head basketball coach
:
-
.
~:
·
.
to
-
believe Coach Bernstein when
.
-
_,
,
'
·
he
-
says
"
_
He
(Petro)
-
-•
said that
If
anyone believes Coach Bern-
"
.
J
0
.
.
.
.
·
n
"
·.:..
t
.
h
·
;:
e
.
'
c
·
·
r
·
o
··
·
·
ct
·
maybe we can get you (Bernstein)
.
stein
,
turned
,
down two college
'
_
,
·
_
.
.
·
.
}
·
· -
.
_
>
.
.
_
·
W ·
'
"
•
'
-
•
··
··
·
_the job)'
:
·
·
.
coachi'ng jobs.to be an athletic
,
ad-
·
.,.
.-..
· Ron Petro has been at Marist
miitisirato'r; he also believes
John
'-.
:
_
.
_
:"<
.
1
.
.
.
for
·
11
years. Does anyone really
·
.
.
Belushi diedJrom an overdose of
\
Once again, Marist has made it through
An lnt
_
erestlng paradox
I
_
~
that while the
think he would turn over the pro-
·
Coca
7
Cola.
>
·
·
·· ·
·
another fall semester ~nd Is now busily
.
llbrary Is getting more crowded, ttte pub Is
gram to som
_
eone he does riot
,-
.
:·
.
_.<
.
·
,
.
-
;
. -·.
<'
·._
·
~
preparing for finals. Everyone has his or her
getting less crowded, There Is easily as .
.
agrcee with philosophically or to
·
c
·
T~~
·
_feeling
}f
t~e
-
Mc_Cliµlr
·
.
·
-
,
.
_
own favorite way and place either to study
much seatl~g In the pub as there Is In the
_whom he has
a
personality clash?
-
·:
f en_ter
_
~ on;
0
Poya
1
!
0
eve; a -
·
'.
,.
, ·
or
;
not to study for these wonderful exams.. llbrary.
,
Now
.
that one quarter of
.
the campus
_
-
.
·
_ -
·
.
·
,
_
· - _
_
· ..
· · . · ,_.-
:
ec_u~n, or on etro
.
~n
.
em-
,
_
--
.,
:
.
.
Those
who study do so In their rooms, In the
,
can't e~ter the pub, how about moving some
·.
·
-~anr
.
as
5
is~ant
,
coac~~ ten~
_
to
:·
s~e•f!
.
attempted to clot1d
.
th~ _at-
.
·:
:
•
•
·
lounges (if they are lucky enough
to
find the
of
.
that extra seating Into the llbra,:y?
Or
bet•
,.-
--
-
:
haye
-
.
~
--
-
,
.
hig
_
h
.
,
~pinion
.
of
"
mosphere, there~y underm
1
-!
11
!1g
·
.
:
-
.
··
•
.
,
1
.
•.
.
:
"
,
·
•
•
•
-
.-:
.
,.
themselves,
·
as they
~
ncver lose a
the
·
sm
.
ooth
.
function of.the entire
•,
_
·
t.v. of!),
m
secret
·
pla~es an~ ye~, so~e
te_r yet,
-
~ouldn
_
t Ql:li~
,
t hours l
_
n
,
_the pu~--0e
:~:"
.
-_
game
.::
·'Assistant
-
coachcs..arc
-
ex-
.·
department
;
.· •..
~.,,...
_
,.
__ -
.,
.
:_;
>;-
,:
·
·
_
,
.
.
·'·
_
_.
. _
study m
.
Jhe ll~rarv:
,
..:-
.
.
:
·
.
_
·
_ ·,
:
.
_.-
.
_,_.
--
__
,-_
nice?
,
Afterall, ttlls
ls a hlgh~r ed1,1~at~~nal.
_:
·'
·-:-·,
p~i:t
-
,..
at
·
rely_ing
·
on
·
·.
liindsight to
-
.
.
,
.
-
,
.
.-
.:
·
..
·
-
-
--
:
.
.
·
>.
...
.
·
-.
>
·
-
:
·_.-
· ·.
_
Really; they
-
~v.e~fs~udy ln
,
~l:IS:-llpraiy,~\tti
}
\
facll~~Y
:
Mosq>f tJ:ittS~
,
U~
8
.
!Wt
8
Y~~
'N
_
~!1t
,
t9_
.
,:,
;
·
;~
c~~in~
·
~~~
:
~1:1Y: ·
they
,
.
would n~t
:
:
~
·:
~
_
oil)~ d~y-
~~e
peoP.l
,
e
_
~t
-
~anst
_:
,
:
·,·.
_
. _-,
: -
.
■~""""""""_,
-
,,
·
·
."-
lts
"el<..+enc,lue" seat\nn
·
tor
-
one·hundred and
';,
~
•
:
18
,
~
·
"
,-
8
9!:"~
-
H~Jng,, :a
.
u~
-:
J,!
d
"J~~)!
~
~'.!'.!~~~t
,
:,,1,:,..have lost a parucular,game~ .
.
:.;·
·
,
.
, ar
_
~
.;
,
IOJDI
·
t~
.
appre~
1
a!C
·
.
alLJ~_at
,
,
.
.
·
·
.
.
:
·
•
.....-
~Jt"".,..
··
-
0
"1
,~~iiv'c71etl'l'rtnic58Dh..;.......-·(tff' ...
'cf __
,,,;,,;!
,
to study
~,,<.,,-,.,.,
--.-,.&~,---"
----
~
--
-,;,
--
1"
·
:'-
..
• ,: •'
~:-
~
-;;-,~':ts:.···.
·
, .• -
·
, ·
·
-
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
· -
,
-~.
,
.::·,.·-'-'-•
'
,,
,
-..
\:
:
Rore-P.etro
,
has,done:.for-the
7
Col=-:
.,,:.,:::
·
,
.
•
.
, .. -,
·
.
' .
· .
s
-
occas. ona_
Y
qu e
8
mosp er~
e., ays
,
~
:~·
(
,: ·
_
If
:
1s
·
obviousiy
:-:_t(?O
:;
iate
\
to
.'
"
do
:
;
anythlni{·~
i:--
(-'.
.qf
,
the.pJar.~~s
_:
Jis~~:!n-,ifie:a'i-~P
:i-::'
]~s~
:
:•~·(!-:
-:i
-
f:-:~.;-
_,.
,
_
:
;< ~--·~·
:
·
. ;,
:
,.-:::;,
,_t:·.·~
·
-
_
~
..
·
.
_
.
o.f the spmste~ librarian andJ1er
.
SHH
-
~re
.:
'
__ .
abp~qf'.l_e
8 ~
9
,:tage
"
of
_
stuay
areas
·
this late,
-
.
,._
cl_e, oply
,
_Ro~me
·
Rtan:and B~
_
ce
·_
:·
_
:'i
-
·
.: ..
_-::
:
;:,,.;/'~
-'-::
:~
·,
:
·
_
Siil~erel~,
:
.
.
-
'~
·
.-.
:
f
: ·
gone from
:
the Marlst
-
ca,~p4s
.
forever). The
-
:.
In the
:
semester.
·
But
·
If
,
Marl st Intends
,
to
_
;
-_'_
-John~on
· ,
wei:e
.
,
B
_
ernstem recrmt~.
·.
-
.. ,-
.-:
;
_
.-
:
··
< ·
::
:;.
:
.< ·_
·
-
l_)ick Quinn
·
-
:.> : :
;.-~:,_;-
.
llbfary has been full
\
each week-Qlght sl~ce
.
·
keep
·'
tricreaslng
·
1ts population
_
every
,
ye
·
ar,
>··
.
Why _
_
di~
_.
Bill
:
:
'.fravers c
_
ho~se
~
not
_
:
·
.,
:~
~
Assistant~thleticDirecior
:
·
:;·
·
'
,
".'\ ·
,
,
..
:
·
the thlrd_,~eek of school
_
and !tt
.
mld-t~r
-
~~
-
I~
-
~
,
.:-'_
:·
s(?meorie In cha,rge
_
9
t
planning should start
-
;
.
. ,
-·
,
.
.
::
,·
:
;,,
~
~Y-
•
·;:
-
.\·
·
-'.
-;<·
:
t
··
··.'_.-:(.~-'!-, ;;_.-
·
\
_
.
,
_
·
..
-
:
·
..
_
_
':_
..
-·
·
~:
'·
:.
_
:
'·
_
.
·
-'
-
. ·
·
,
,
creased
,
campus p~p1Jlatlo~
:
:
.
~o.ul(!
:
9~!-'_Se
;
~:
'.'
·
the s,tudE!nts
_
g:oe~
,
IJl),
;
and
-
study areas life
;:
\ \
0
'_:
:-::::C
;
\::.
:
;/~r:
,ii<::
Tug
'
of
War
'-}~<:
~:>
:;:;
+
·c--
.
problems
>
Well, here's a biggie,
_
admissions
-:,
·
.:
going
_
to become Increasingly more lmpor~
,
.L
:
·
:-c
,.
,.
,
,
·
/-
:-·
:,
/<·;
~
:-i
_
-
',
·
- ·
-
,_.,
,
.
..
.
: ·: ,.
:
..
'
Office;
NOVI
'.
that
,
.
yoiJ'v~
.
·
gof all
'.
'
-
these
,
).
tant.ln
:
f(ve years
.
where !re
!
,
he
1,000
extra
_
·
--
.
·
·
. ·, :
-
,-;_.
..
::
;
·
,
:_·.'
·
._t/
:
"c;;/:
_:<> -
;,
:
·
_
·
:
,
/
i
-
.
·
•
·
_
·,
:
.
:;;_:
.
:
.-<
·
\
·:
.-' ..
::.
'./,
,.
students how are they
.
-suppose to
·
stay
if -
,
.
',:::
.
students
_
gotng to ~tudy?
: ,
;
-
_
,
•
.
.
.
. _
,
}p
tl,l~
_
~dnor
:
,
\
,·
,
:
.
.
(;:-;-:
:·
>
.
,
com~limcat_!= •
.
The aud1c11ces
-
at
·
_.._:.:
-
··
,
.
th~y
'
pav~n•t ·gotiP
,
l&ceJ? study? T·he
~orn:1
: :_
'::
·
t:,f.
9tc6u
_
rse there_ I~
'
alw.aY,s
_
the
.
p
·
osslblllty -
.
, ·.
:,
,Oi;t
,
~f
,
~,~
c
0
t,n
;i
~e;
,
~tTuhdents
,
.t·
our p~rforman~cswere peautifuL
\
'
/
..
:·
.
halls
.
are far from quiet;
-
the
·
lounges: are
·
,.-
,'
.
o
thatJhey
_
simply won't be al be to study.
pr~
_
entlY.
-...
S,~!1dyiµg;
..
,
~ctie
·
• eory
.
>
The donations made by those
·
•
·>
,.
__ ._.
television rooms and
j
he
)
ibr~ry
Js
nofonly
.
<
·
,
Ttie
_
n
:
Ylh
_
en prospe~tlve
:_
students
·
find
_
thl_s . : an<!
.
fr~C!~f~
.o,f.
~
_
9de~ Thcf*~•
,
?
wtio
,
~tten?.ed
'-_
will
,
be f9rw~rded
:
,
:.::_>:,'
'
:
: -.
·
,.
over~crowded,
,
but
.
.
nol~y.
·
Mayt>e
. _
alternate
: ::
out they won't apply for admission, and the
.
-
·
.I
_
wa11t, ti~
-
:,.
tllanlc
:
t~
.
o~e stu. e~ts,
c'r
to t~e Astor
,,
Home
Jot
Children
•,'.·_.,,: ·
->
,
.
.
..
t.
v
:•s
-
should_ be
.
turrted
·
o~f
-
_
~_rid
.
the
:
n~r3-':)'
·;
t:
pr9blem
·
:
w
_
lll
•
bf!
_.
solved.
\
_
M
_
arlst wi
11
.
oryce
_
_
fac~lty
!
an<l
;
~ta
_
!°!,
~ho fou
11
,
f
tim~
-:
to prov_ide €little extra joy duri11~
)
\·/
:
:_,
}
)
·.
-
should _consider quiet h9~rs.
·
·
•
·
:
.-
__
,-
,.
::
:.
:
again be a small private llberaLarts college .
.
.
.
.
c:iur
_
~n~ ~
-
v~
_
~Y
,
:,:
~u~y
,
wee
_
Jc
,
t<>
_
attcn
-..
the hol
_
1d~y S?sgn,
,
>
_
_
:
: ·
.
.
,_
·,;:
:
<
:
.
,
>
.
_
.
.
•
,
.
.
·
_
.,
one
,
of
,
the
:
_
~erf~rm1l;flc~ofJb
_
e
.
·
:
·;
·
Agam,a
.
specialthanks
·
t
.
oeach
,
:)'·
:".:
.·
t
·::
.
',
.
-·
Th
"
.
.
-
_
·
.
_-,;:
'
''
d
,
.
.
Tu1°,w~r
:
.
·
:-,-~
-=-~
-
·
:'>"" :·
·
·
..
-
.
membei
'
of-our"audiences
•
for
t,e;.
.
:
c
;
~
-:
:
:
:,-,
-
.
>;
-."
:
:
<
J.
:
e
-
en
'.
·.-
.
/
_
_--:,.-_
·
_
__
.
Jhe
_
efI?~rten
_
ceof
'
t
b~t~, (>n~
:
,
,·
in,~
-
part
·
o~
•·
-
our_
-
~roduction
~·
and_
:
:\~i
;:J
-
_
<
,::
·._
·
·---''
•
_
:
.0,
.
.
,· :-
:
:>"<>
·
,
of ~lln; s
;..
g.ld~t font1s
,
gf
com
·
for
yoµr generosity:
-:-
,
__
;
-
·
·
;
.
:,,.
-:
:
5:-~,:
..:.-
-
_.
'
-
.
,
-
,
,
, ,
mumty involvement, cannot hap-
· ·
· ·
·
- -
-
--
-
·
·
·
-.,
.
.t.;;,"
.
.
•_
is a,nyone -ever r~ally
,-
prepared. for finals
/ •
wor~
:·
easier to bear; ~nd, In
a
-
few
.
ie~~s
i
:
--
-
.
p~n
;
Jnle
_
~s° there
.
is an
•
a~~ience
,
Sincerely
:
yours
·
~
. -·
..
..
week?
Well,
brace y9urself, because here it
·
-
-
when finals are past history, the
-
anxiety will
•
·
·
w1tl}
·
-whom the
_,
perforra:i~rs
.
can
·
·
·
Gerard*· Cox
comes_!
,
.
>
·
•
·
•
.
•
•
.,
,
:
·;:/:<-
_
'., ·
'.
:: ,
. ·
_i
•
·
·
'
,.
~e forgotten ~nd !he memories of
•
gQod
·
,;.
•
'.
·:
'·
··
\~
(,
<
':,.
~~~~~·t!~o
1
~9~'.
1
w~:~
·
;g:ci~i's~~
0
a~
ti·~:~~
-
.
.
_
~'."y~\~
.
hs~~~~~:
f::n!f1
~~~:ti;
·
t~rough
· ..
_,,:
.
:
,,,,'
..
,:•.
·.·
·
·
.
>t}(
}':>;·
.
.
·~:
'
·
·:
-
.
•
..
¥
!~~+\~~rA~i~;i3~•~of
~~~:s ~f~~~9.
~~~:b,:~~~ikri:
1~:~~r'~n~
0
~~~d~~g·~~~~
,
{I::f
~
,
l(
,
: \
-
Tha:ks
h
•
ii
.
f
.
h
- , '
'
.
_o e
__
~om,µc a
_
once,su e
_
ns
-
manage
-_
_
o
.
·-i
forthe
,
hplidays.Andit'susuallyduringthat
__
Onbebillfof.
_
theteamandthe
t roug outa o our omegaines
_·
.
,
'
,
.
_
,
.
_
:
Juggle 1t
,
all. A~d ev~n
.
,
with aUthe anxlet}'.,
_
..
ride home that we first get a chance to
,
•
.
c
·_
oac
_
hing
.
starr,
:
·
,
1_. wo
_
uld like to
will
continue to
-
motivate us and
•
·
..•
·
.
P
ressure and msamty who can deny that
fl
-
t
·
th
·
d hi
·
·
·
-
contribute to our. success
:
You
·
.
·
.
·
.·
.
.
,
.
.
,
.
·
-
-
,:
·
re ec on
e gqo t ngs of the semester
.
·.
tha.nk all of. our supporters
:
-
who
·
·
·
.
:
:
.
Chnstma$ Is the best time of year on cam-
_
.
,..... namely, our friends _ and be thankful for
-
att~nded
~:
th~
:·
Utica
,
game last
:
can make the difference in a
close
:-
.,;...
·
pus?
'
·
.
.
·
,-
.
__
_
_
.
.
.
them
,
,
.
.
_-
---_-
.
_
-.
·
. ·
.
-
: . ·
-
·
·
·
Saturday:
-:::,
The Pep Band;--Zoo
·
'
game .
.
We
all
appreciate you
r'
sup-
·
~:.
i
.
·
The activities of these
'·
weeks are always
'
,.
'
The classifieds ads this week are full of·
Crew
~
Cheerleaders and all those
port, especially the
crowd
behind
/
·
.
.
.
well-attended -
eyen
_
wl,h
.
papers ~ue and
,,.
·
messa
·
ges
_
of "Merry Christmas." we at
The
m ·attenderice provided us with a
·
the opp
·
onent's
:
basket; you were
.
.
.
_ _.
test.sto take,.~arrs
.
~
,
s~udents_get mto
,
th~
Circle
v,,ish
_
eyeryone a very happy and
·
:-'
definitehomecourtadvantage.
·
great.
-.
-:..,._
·
•,
Christmas spmt. Maybe enjoying the hoh-
_
:_.'
healthy holiday season, and look forward to·
_
-Yo
_
ur
.
c
__
<>n
_
tinued
cheering
-
Ron Petro
'' 0
'
tiay season with frie__nds mak~s
_
all of the
·
-
;
continuing our work in
1983.
-
-
·
·
.
Head Basketball Coach
:.
'
·
"""
, ··
...
.
.
- ._
.
.
.
.
.
~
~
:
·
;
-
~r:~·
..
..
The
C
• .
-
-
1
.. ,
,
:
Sports Editor
--- ire e
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:
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:
Advertising Manager
Associate Editors
·
-
.
Business Manager_
·
.
..
-
Rick O
'
Donnell.
-
-
:
Adve!11slng
Staff
..
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.
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-
.
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Patti Walsh
.
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_
,
·
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Karen Lindsay
Classlfled
-
Lou ~nri Se
_
ellg
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Reporters
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,
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,
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.
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·
em
Traver~
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.1im Barries
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:_,;
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,
Adrienne Ryan
,
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Caroline Krei
·
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Photography Editors
·
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.
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Jeanne LeGloahec
:
-
Lisa Cr!indall
·
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Kyle MIiler
,
Christine Dempsey
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Kevin Shulz
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Photographers
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Mlchael Ward, Sandy Olso~
Meg Adamski, Bernadette Grey;
.
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J~ck D'Orlo, Gina Franclscovlch
C~rol Lane, Matthew Mcinerny,
✓"'
Ivan Navas, John Petac:chl,.
: ·
Copy Editors
.
/, :
.
:
'Lisa Crandall, Judy K~ox,
Richelle Thomas, Briari Kelly, •
.,
..
·
Mark Amodeo, Adam Their
Andrea Holland, Sue Vasallo,
Kathy O'Connor, Ken Bohan
Bill Fl_ood, Karen Magdalen,
:
c
·
.
Paul Crowell, Joe Paretl
Brian O'Keefe, Allee O'Keefe,
John Petacchl, Dawn onver
-
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Holly Sraeel, Richard Copp
Pat Brady, Barry Smith
.
.
New,s Editor
· _
EIieen Hayes
Cartoonlit
Ted Waters
Faculty
Advisor
·
David Mccraw
.
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~.,~,. -~----~----~ .. ----~-----------------------------0.ecember 9, 1982 -
THE CIRCLE· Pages--•
.
.
.
'
'
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.
Chf}SJmaSJestivitieSfill
.
aii with holiday spirit
With the holiday season upon us, many
townhouse residents will take place_ in the
f~stivites have _bee~ planned on campus to . cafeteria.
fill students .with the holiday cheer .. · ·
During the preceding weeks, many of the
~
· You've probably seen . so.me bizarre · lounges and hallways of the dormitories
· h
have undergone a transformation from dull
s1g ts around campus this week as stuclents
and drab to colorful surroundings bursting
have been participating in Kris Kringles.
with the Christmas spirit as students com-
Students match their imaginations to see
who can come up with the zaniest acts for
peted in the Christmas decoration con-
their Kringles to perform. The Kris. Kr-
test.The creativity and imagination of the
ingles end tomorrow, but the festivities are · students will be judged and the winner an-
.
b
nounced on Saturday.
JUS
t eginning..
If
you are looking_ for warmth and
The College· Union Boa~d will_ help something out of the ordinary, the Omega
students get a jump on their Christmas Club has planned a bonfire at 8 p.m. on
shopping bysponsoring a trip to Manhat-
Saturday by the townhouses;
tan tomorrow. The bus will leave at
8
a.m.
"We hope it will get the whole school in-
and transport the holiday shoppers to volved in the Christmas spirit," said Diana
Rockefeller Plaza in New York City. The Kais~r, a member of Omega. Omega has
_ students will have until 8:30 p.m. to can-
printed up many favorite Christmas ·carols
vass the city, whether it be shopping for which will be sung as refreshments are serv-
bargains or just taking in the decorative ed._This will be followed by midnight mass
sights.
.
at Our Lady Seat of Wisdom Chapel.
The tentative price has been set at $4
Music and harmonies will fill the air on
and_ signups are at Donnelly and the . Sunday when the Marist College Singers
cafeteria.
present a traditional holiday lessons and
A Christmas semi-formal will be held at carols service at 4 p.m. in the chapel. The
the McCann• Center tomorrow. Admission service will include a candlelight proces-
is fifty cents and food will be served and a sion, a traditional telling of the Christmas
cash bar available
story and performances of . international
Also tomorrow,- the holiday cheer will be and contemporary Christmas carols.
flowing as Christmas social gatherings are
In keeping with the spirit of tradition,
held on campus. Leo, Sheahan and Cham-
the classic film "Miracle on 34th Street"
pagnat's celebrations
will
be held in their will be shown Sunday
aC'7
p.m. and 9:30
respective loun,ges. The gathering for the. p.m. in the theater.
Freshmem prepare Christmas tree for lighting in the courtyard. (Photo by
Chris Dempsey)
Seniors say go·odbye · early
by Bernadette Grey
&
Andrea Holland
school where everything is on a smaller
scale," she said.
"If
I had to change things,
While Mari st freshmen are worried I would have gone to a larger university."
about taking their first college finals, some
Another fashion design major, Denise
seniors are anxious about taking their last.
Pecchio, transfered to Marist for the
A
number of Marist residents interview- fashion design/retailing program and was
ed last week are looking forward to also disappointed, she said. "The only
graduating this· January and leaving reason I stayed was because of the friends I
everything about college, except the social have made.
If
I
didn't get in with good peo-
life, behind.
pie,
I
would have left."
"I
wanno get out and prove to myself
Communication arts major Ed Kenny
that I can put into practice all the theory also would have preferred to have gone
that I have learned," said Bonnie Blan- somewhere else. "l would have gone
chard, a communication arts major who is someplace else -
with more notoriety," he
graduating one semester early.
said.
The idt:a of_graduating also makes Elise
Kenny's main complaint was thet
A~g1;1illa, a fashion design/business major, .Marist's growth was. b:ing,~ind~red by the
l~---
•
<
--·. - --_
happy but she·wm mis:phe foriand her ,lac~ ~f faculty, '1e
s~1d. _ .
Manst has_ the
_
.
. fri~nds; .•
she'.
saia;:,'
:The
be~f
asset I
gained .
!l~~t ,:qui_p'll\~~'-.?~\riot \nc-fac,u\t.-y t.o t.ca~b.--:'
·
"
•~W -~
~---,;c.-,-...,-
.
_. ,.from coUege are all the fnends'
l
made,'-'•. it, he sa1~. , • • , . ,
...
_
;
.
t, -
.
Christmas
Senio-_. citizen seJJs dolls for craft 'show:.'
.
she said. "The. residence
life
was the best"
Complamts
at,out th_e academic side of
held last ·saturday In the campus center.
part ofit
all." ·
. · _
the coHege were also given by Blanchard.
..
·
· -- crafts
(Photo by Chris Dempsey)
Overall; the January graduates ·looked··
~•1
do_not feel t~~t I was
~hal!~nged
enough
back favorably on the Marist residence
life.
m my courses,
she said.
They
should
"The Marist community enabled me to have been more diverse."
Happy
.
Holidays!
.
.
_
-~,
,
Se
_
tf:you
riext semester.
-
T
_
he Circle
Friday:
Meeting:
Student Development
Committee 12:30 p.m.
Candlelight
.
Formal Dance
10p.m.
McCann
Saturday:
Film:
"Miracle on 34th
Street" .
·Theater
Christmas Decoration
Contest
Christmas Dinner
Dinning Room
House Socials
Kringle Prizes
Lounges
Bonfire
Midnight Mass
Chapel
Marist Swim Club
Winter Meet
Sunday:
Lessons and Carols
4p.m.
Film:
"Miracle on 34th
Street"
7
p.m.
&
9:30 p.m.
Marist Swim.Club
Winter Meet
maintain many'·friendships from freshman
Chris Barnes, a communication arts ma-
yea
'
r," Blanchard said.
jor, said that many of the problems with
Dick Daronco a history major, also com- · the.school stem from a lack of communica-
plimented Marist life. "The quality of !iv-
tion at all levels. "The communications
ing here, as a whole, is high compared to program is fine, but the communication
some schools I have seen," he said.
between individuals and groups is, more
. Angulla, who lived· on-campus for all often than not, unsatisfactory," he said.
four years, said that a small school like
Pecchio particularly looks forward to
Marist also has its disappointments. She waving goodbye to the registrar's office.
blames her let down with the fashion design "My biggest problems were with the
program on the small size of Marist. "My registrar, said Pecchio. "To tell you the
major, fashion design, was totally disillu-
truth, I am waiting for Marist to tell me
sioning. I guess it was that I went to a small that I can't graduate," she said.
Monday:
Final Exams
Tuesday:
Final Exams
Wednesday:
Final Exams
Women's Basketball vs.
Montclair State
7
p.m.
Thursday:
Final Exams
The guys at
Dirt
Pit Manor capture the Christmas spirit.
(Photo
by
Chris
'i
-
Dempsey)
·I
j
i
--•Page 4 ·
THE CIRCLE•
December
9,
1982
Cutting
class:
Who
·
decides?
by Susan Vassallo
few years, the school has been making an .
Does a student have the right to decide effort to ragain some of the structure lost
. not to attend class? Theoretically, yes; in in the '60s era. "Perhaps now is a good
reality, not always.
. time to review that attendance policy and
The Marist College Catalogue reads, implement a standard rule." She used three
"Regular class attendance is a primary excused absences as an . example. This
responsibility for all students." However, would make
it the same for all.classes.
in some classroom situations, the student is
Jake Maness, an instructor at Marist,
penalized if he or she misses class. .
thinks a standardized attendance policy
According to Denise DeVincintis, a may cut down on cutting, but that it may·
senior at Marist, one of her professors re-
not necessarily be the best move. "We
quires a five-page paper on all material don't want students in the classroom that
covered in a missed class after
'
two allowed don't want to be there."
cuts.
·Maness said he feels that as you'ug
DeVincintis said she feels it should be the adults, it should be part. of. a student's
student's perrogative
to
miss as many training to make decisions such as whether
classes as they want. "We're paying for
this education.
If
we choose to miss a class, or' not to go to the class on their own.
that's our business."
·
He also said that it is up to the individual
Director of Student Academic Affairs instructor to make the class interesting
and Services Liz Nolan agrees with · enough so that the students will want to at-
DeVicintis. "At some point, a young per-
tend.
son has to stop being directed by others and
Nolan said she feels the student that
take responsibility for self direction."
doesn't go to class is making a statement ·
The catalogue's statement on absence about his attitude towards learning and the
was reviewed about four years ago by six value of a college education. "They are ·
tenored faculty . members. According to cheatiT1g themselves because they're not
Nolan, although it states that attendance is getting all they can out of what is
the student's responsibility, it is also available," she said.
understood that the instructor should be
There are a number of students who.
told prior to the class and that all don't understand the critical · nature of
assignments are required to be made up;
what U1ey are doing when they are late and
"There is a loss to the students if they're absent. According to Nolan; the freshmen
not there to benefit from the instructor," mentors are ·available for the purpose of
said Nolan.
getting,.to students before .they run into
DeVincintis also feels that there are times academic difficulty. .
when there is no extra benefit from the in-
structor at all, making it undesirable to at-
Nolan says thatrecords indicate a major
tend class. "We can read the text ourselves. contributing factor on why students don't
Some teachers teach right out of it,,, . said make it in school is that they have not been
DeVincintis. "They should have something attending classes.
"If
a-.student is absent
more to add so that it's worth while to at-
continually and there is no contact with the
tend class.•,
teacher,. the instructor, in;terms of applying
Core courses and elective classes . are the catalogue's grading system, is obliged
where most cuts take place, according· to. a to take that into c9ns
.
id~ration
Marist sophomore. "You're made
to
take
Since there is no school~wide attendance
core courses you hate, and you're closed rules, the student should.abide by the mies
out of the electives you really want."
of the individual ·classroom. "The students
The catalogue does not specifically state should be guided by how the instructor ap-
;
any mandatory attendance rules, it is up to plies
·
the · attendance policy
in . the
/
.
. the individual . instructor to alert their catalogue," said Nolan. ''It should be
f
;
students of t\!~ir.;poUcies, ac1::or<,i_ing
fo
'!ll.!3.~;
c!~~£(.~o H!:1.<it;nt~at:'li~
~c:g!~!iJ*g_gf_:..
r
•
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·
,.··, '"
.
... --,-.. •• ., .. ,.
·•,_N_·oH\ao·n.w·
,.,,e, ·v·,""e"r',.,,.
7.
·s.r-h:'.e.·•·p;,_0·1:n'~t~s· •'o,;,..u·.· .. :..t•.,...t:.h.,.· ·a~
.. ··.t~.·._1·-n
·
·.-t·h; .. , .• e· .·-~.-p~,,a· -s,,t·. :
the~.coune.,-~u"' \t ,-hasn',f,,aandtthc,. student: .
.
wants to know, they shoi.dd
ask:"
·
: ··
:\·
<
.
C ...
t.
-··•
-
..
··
..
·
-
---
'
.
~ .
-
'
.•..
.-,
.·
-·
.
.,.:··-
._·
-'.
-
ATTENTION
Students who·. have belongings : stored in Champ,agnat
Hall basement -' please make arrangements to remove
them before
·
·
NOON, FRIDAY 17th DECEMBER
After that time, anything pr~sently in storage will be con-
sidered the property of Mari st College.
M ichaei Bowman
Residen·ce Director
Champagnat Hall
MAMA'S DELI
·
·
&
PIZZERIA
Now
that the
cold
weath,er
is
here,
why
come out into the··cold, ·
call me for all·· your lunch time,
and dinner needs. We deliver.
Call. ·471-3443
218 Main Street
WE DELIVER
WEDEL/VER
CLUBS AND
ORGANIZATIONS
:
:
December 15, at noon, is the deadline to
submit proposals to the Friends of Marist for.·
the annual
gi_ft
from-the Flea Market ~. Satur-·
:
.
day Feb.
12, 10
a.m -
4
p.m.·
in t.he·.rv,9Ca~n:.;
. Ceht~r .· (Space :_rental:_
$20
·tora·
10 ':
;x
:_10:'.:_·, __ , ·
spot). Call· extension·
278
for ·more,.i~f6rn1a-··:
tion·.
_
· · ·
·
· - :
.
·
. · .· ' · :;-
-:>•)~
:
:· ·· · ·· ::-.,
_
_:. .,
_
;
.
...
\
' '
.
DELI
Quality Sandwich Meats ·
At.Most
Reasonable Prices
S~lads • Soft Drinks-~
Ic~_C:reafil-'
.Open Nightly 7: 30
p.m.·~ i·a.ID~,·;
See us for your ffoorparti~~:,;::,
.
•..
,-
,
.,; ·J:
!
:
'
l . ; , :
Special Platters A
vaiI1iliI~:- .'
a
--~--------------•------------------December
9,
1982 ·
THE CIRCLE· Pages--•
Special services helps
.
the learning disabled
·
'. by Christine Dempsey
.
Picture
·
yourself sitting in a classroom
· reading the blackboard as any other college
· student. Only certain words bec9me jumbl-
'.
ed and do not make any sense.
This is the plight of the student with a
learning disability .
.
Mrs. Deane Perriera, Director of Special
.·
Services, defines a
·
person with a learning
,.
disability as " a person
·
who has difficulty
:
:
in processing what they see or hear."There
·
~.a
·
re currently 11 students attending Marist
i
C91lege who are enrolled'in the.Special Ser-
.
vices Learning Disability Program.
·
"No one knows what causes these learn-
.
ing disabilities," Perriera said,"so it's dif-
ficult to help these students.'•
·
A common problem that plagues these
- learning disability students is dyslexia.
:
Dyslexia, which is
.
a visual perception pro-
.bl em,· involves
·
the reversal of words and
letters.
Students who have dyslexia have to learn
·
how to decode words and then put those
·
words in the context of a sentence. "It's as
:
if they face a pothole in the
·
road
: everywhere they go;" Perriera added.
·
. Learning disabled students at Marist
who have not been able to master decoding
·•
are aided by Susan Franke, the Learning
: DisabiHty Specialist. Franke helps these
i
students· with
their
;
stu!}y
\
skills by teaching
;:.
them
-
how to process and organize their
,:
thoughts.
.
.
_
;
The main problem L.D. students with
'.:
auditory perception problems face is lack
i'
of retension, Perriera said.
t
These students cannot properly process
.
.
~
what they hear.
.
.
.
Perriera said "Since they don't receive it
:
well; they can't express it well, either."
.
The assignment of a term paper for a
,
;
.
class presents a
·
problem
.
for learning
; disability students because these students
:· often have a hard time
·
·
dealing with
;:
abstract thought according to Perriera.
f
"The material has
to
be cut and dry, or else
·
it gets caught up in the processing," Per-·
riera added.
One of the many ways in which Special
Services helps the L.D. students is to allow
·
them to avoid taking Philosophy in their
freshmen year, since it deals with abstract
thought.
·
·
Perriera said that freshmen with learning
disabilities have a double load fo carry. Not
only is he independent for the first time but
L.D
.
students "have to learn in a much dif-
ferent manner."
·
These students are also encouraged to
take only four courses instead of five. Per-
riera added, "Only so much knowledge can
come in at once."
Three additional ways in which Special
S~rvices helps L.D. students is by providing
tape recorded textbooks, notetakers, and
tutors, according to Perriera.
,
·
Extended time for
tests,
with permission
from the instructor, is another feature of
Special Service's Learning
_
Disability Pro-
gram. Frequently, tests have to be read to
the L.D. students, arid often their answers
· must be dictated back to the tutor.
When questioned about the
·
validity
•
of
this testing program, Mrs. Perricra describ-
. ed
.
the tests~ which take place in the Special
Services office, as being based on a type of
honor code:
·
According to Perriera, the faculty has
been
·
very good in allowing the students to
take tests out of the classroom. "Unfor-
·.
tunately," she added, "we ran into
;a
few
.
situatins with the testing program." Per-
riera said that
·
it
is very hard for testing
tutors, who have been prompting and in-
structing a studenta all along, to avoid giv-
ing him the answers. She said that this is
.
·
why a new testing
·
program will be in-
.
stituted in January. In the new program,
the L.D. student will have a different
•
testing tutor than his regular tutr, Perriera
·
·
said_
Counseling ,is also
·
provided for L.D.
,
students. Perriers said that there is no ques-
;
tion that L.D. students have academic
{
',
(
Glubs
COillpete
for
4nd
<
annµal
.
.
gift
l
"
'
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.
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:·
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.
.
;
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...
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.
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'_...
'
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:
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~- by
_
Meg'\;V~itbread
.
:
·
-
:-
. ...
.
.
a 10;
x
10'
spot. •
.
~Bootlls
_
c
_
ould b~
_
us~~ for
.!
·-'
•
'
.
·
-
·
.
.
·•
_
·
.:,-
'
. - ·
.
_
--
_·
··
~
"
'-·
-··
-
·
':
·.
- '
such things
..
as
'
selliiig
~
raffle ticfels,'!-
.'
slie
:
·
The Friends of Marist are sponsoring the said.
·
i
second annual flea market Feb. 12, 1983,
The Friends will have their own booth
•
·
from
10
a
:
m. to
4
p.m. in the Mccann this year. According to McKiernan, their
·
Center.
.
.
_
profits go directly to the annual gift-
The Friends of Marist raised more than
·
_
"White elephant" donations are en-
."
-
$2,000 at last year's flea market, according
·
couraged and appreciated from the Marist
·
to Karen McKiernan, chairman of th~ community, according to McKiernan.
·,
event. These funds were donated to the "The faculty was very generous last year
·
Marist Singers to assist in funding their trip and
I
look
_
for their support again," she
to Italy last spring
:
said.
-
The flea market is open to all of the
For more information about the pi'o-
Marist community. Any organization or pos~ls
.
and the ~lea Mark~t, con_tact
.
chartered club can submit a proposal to Chr!stme Lapham
m
the Public Relations
receive the Freinds annual
.
gift, said Office .
.
McKier~an. Proposals niust be submitted
Prohosal req
·
uireme_ nts
by December. 15: The proceeds go to_ the
:y
organization most in need for
-
proJects
which wiU-"directly benefit the students, "
she said.
''The flea market is the Friends biggest
fund-raising event," said McKiernan. "It
was so successful last year that we decided
to do it again." According to the chair-
man, the flea market was not only well
received
.
by all of its
.
vendors, but by the
·
students and the Poughkeepsie community
as well.
"It's a lot of fun and students can
·
find
·
valuable things for their rooms," she said.
.
• 'The choice of trinkets is endless. You can
find almost anything from socks to books
and even flowers." Admission is free to
both browsers and buyers so it's worth the
trip just to look, said McKiernan .
.
Students are allowed to set up their own
·
booths for a $10 space rental fee accordng
to McKiernan. Vendors are charged $20 for
The Friends of Marist organization is en-
couraging all eligible groups to submit pro-
posals for the annual gift from the Friends
of Marist flea market.
Proposals
.
from chartered clubs, stan-
ding organizations and departments will be
eligible for consideration, provided that
they
·
do not alrady receive substantial
fuding from other sources at Marist. Last
year the Marist Singers received $2,000 for ·
the flea market.
The members of the group must be will-
ing to help with the flea market and
preference will be given to those not
previously funded by the Friends of Marist.
Proposals should include
a:
description
of the special poject or need to be funded.
.
Forms for submitting proposals may be ob-
tained from the Office of College Advance-
ment and submitted no later than Dec.
15th.
p
ris
Q
n-----------•m•o•ti•va•t•ed~.•
-
g•e•t •th•e~ir•
_
~de•g•re•es-a•n~d•w•o•r':"'k~i•n
continued from page 1
to continue, but those w~o do succeed have
3.5 or above grade pomt averages, says
Scileppi. "Motivation is enhanced
?Y
t~e
structure of the facility," s~y Scdeppi.
"They're not going to
.
be datm& or gomg
Class time is a special occasion for one
student who says, "it is a vicarious ex-
perience that allows me to mentally
abstract myself from the four walls of the
prison and Jree my mind
.
from the mun-
dartei:• al~~
:an
~ccasi~n that is refreshing
and challenging for Scileppi, he ~ays. "The
greatest feeHng comes from seemg people
·
tu
.
rri
around completely to become
Fi
the field. Many people's lives were changed
as a direct result of the program. It has pro-
.
vided many inmates with an opportunity to
utilize talents and learn skills that would
not have been realized and developed
otherwise," says Scileppi.
Breen says he feels the whole experience
is worthwhile when he
.
thinks about the
Marist graduates of the progra_m who now
have good jobs and are raising families.
The recidivism rate, (number of inmates
who were released from the facility but
were sent back), for the general inmate
population is 70 percent. Only 12 percent
of the inmates who completed the program
returned to the facility.
Dick Daronco
ability. She added that they are "very in-
telligent people," pointing our that most
have high to superior I.Q.s.
"Since
they
have to learn in an unusual way, they are
unusually resourceful," she said.
Pcrierra also
.
said that L.D. students
must be motivated. She added "They have
to sacrifice
-
their social life to succeed
academically."
,
·
·
Orie student who Mrs. Perierra described
as starting out with a lack of confidence is
Dick Daronco; currently a Resident
Ad-
visor in Champagnat.
When asked about the Special Services
Program, Daronco, who will be
·
the first
graduate of the Learning Disability Pro-
gram, said, '' It has helped me graduate col-
lege;
l
seriously
.
·
doubt
I
could h
_
ave
graduated without it.''
Daronco did express concern for the
financial difficulties that a L.D. student en-
counters. Special Services, which costs
$700 a year for the L.D. student, is called
''an additional financial burden for
the stu-
dent," by Perriera.
When asked about the level of guidance
the Special Services program provides,
Daronco praised the program by claiming
that it gives "emotional support as well as
support with classwork." He said, "There
is always someone there to help me."
Inquiries about the program have been
coming from places as far away as West
Germany and Japan, according to Per-
riera.
Perriera said, "The Learning Disability
Program is a kind of statement on the part
of the college that Marist has faith in these
students."
Day
for
peace
Monsignor John Ahern speaking at last
week's
Connvocation.
Ahern's
theme
was
"The Absence of War,"
Government after loan defaulters
by Richelle Thomas
The federal government's crackdown on
borrowers who default on government
loans is beginning with the National Direct
Student Loan (NDSL) program.
The Department of Education is focus-
ing on colleges with poor student loan
repayment records and individuals who
have defaulted on their loan repayments.
Legislation proposed by Senator Charles
Percy (R-Ill.) would allow the government
to report defaulters to commercial credit
bureaus, charge interest and penalties far
unpaid debts and expand access to Internal
Revenue Service files for addresses of
defaulters. The proposal would also allow
the federal government to take part of the
paychecks of federal employees without
going to court.
.
Under the new rules, colleges with
default rates above 25 percent will no
.
longer be eligible for new (NDSL) funds.
Colleges with a default rate between 10 and
25 percent will be penalized by a reduction
in funds. There will be no effect on colleges
with default rates below 10 percent.
Schools can still receive new loan funds by
turning over default cases to federal collec-
tors, but their share of the money is lost to
the Treasury Department.
·
In the NDSL program, money is con-
trolled by each college, so that funds can be
recycled as debts are repaid. Each year, at
the end of June, colleges are required to
submit a Fiscal Operations Report to ac-
count for how their financial
·
aid for that
year was spent. NDSL funds can be used
only for student loans and administrative
purposes.
Since 1958, the program has provided
$7
.5 billion for about 6.5 million students.
Accordng to
.
Education Department
reports, $645 million is in default. Current-
ly, the national default rate is 16
.
3 percent.
Compared with the national rate,
Marist's default rate of 9.76 percent is
relatively low
.
The reduction from last
year's rate of 12.196 percent, according to
college
..
'icials,
has made this year the
best for the NDSL program at Marist.
7
l·
,.
i
.
.
.
.
- -
·
Page 6. THE CIRCLE.
Oecem~e,
9, 1982---------------------------------------------
)
.
.
.
.
LEAV
·
E
-
SOYOU
·
CAN COME·BACK
·
?
:
.
.
The college residence
·
halls will close and no services will be available
.
from December
·
17 to
J
an
_
uary 23
~
·
1983.
.
.
-
.
.
The residence halls will clos
·
e
·
at 11 :00 p.m. on December 17, 1982
·
·
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
The last meal of theterm ·will be lunch on December 17. Dinner will be
.
served on Sunday, January 23, 1983.
.
·
On or before December
J
7, rooms must be cleaned; ail belongings must be taken home,
···
except furniture.
,
or those items that can be left in a dresser drawer or in the closet. The col-
·
lege will not assume any liability for
·
lost
or
stolen or damaged items. Your departure
.
directly affects
-
the
·
ability
.
of students and professional residence staff to complete their ·
- .
work and m·ove toward their own holiday plans: therefore
you are to leave
the residence
_
-
halls in an orderly fashion on the day of your last exam.
Rein ember that
the
following f ac-
..
..
.. -.
·
.
.
.
tors will be central to any decision on allowing a student Jo
.
occupy a room in Marist
_
residence halls for next semester even if you have
-
registered:
1. Disciplinary Record
·
·
2.
Academic Standing
3. Vacating of room on. day of the~r
_
last exam.
4. Condition of room at departure (cleanliness and lack of damage).
Students who have been denied a room for next'semester will be notified by January 7,
1983, if they have registered.
If
you do not intend to r~turn to the residence halls in January, or if you have been assign-
.
ed to a diff er,ent room,
.
please be sure_JQ retu
.
tri
·
your ke.y.Jo
.
t
_
qe
Jesid~nt d_irector.
·
.
·.··
.
..
.
.
.
_
.
:
·..
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·
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:<
. . _':}.
,,
_
_
... _
,
:.
·
Failure to l~ave youf_roomiIJa
.
clean state can
.
result in a
_
$25.00 fine.
.
;
·
..
·,
.
_
·
Failure
·
to leave on the
·
day of your last exam can
·
result in low housing priority for
_
fall
1983.
As well,
:
an authorized early retur~ to the dorms can alsb result in low priority.
.
.
:
·
·
DEPARTURE PROCEDURES
·-
Each R.
_
A. must inspect each room, file the room inspection form. Students must make an
appointment with their
R.A. to have their room inspected,.
·
Upon leaving, you must secure
the room (lights off, appliances disconnected, curtains closed and door locked). Trash
bags will be distributed b_y the R.A. to each resident on December 13 and 14.
-
We encourage you to do your part to make this period enjoyable for all!
·
On behalf of all the residence hall staff, we wish you a safe, enjoyable and Happy Holiday
·
Sef!son, and offer ou.r Best Wishes for the coming New Year. _
_
.
See you in January!
.
..
..
:;:°~,~:''
111,.,1111
,_
-•~,•-.·!Ill,.,,.■.
... • .
.
,•,,
------------ii!i--------riiiii••·•.-i------•Oecember
9, 1_982 • THE CIRCLE· Page
7
,_;.;
. ··>.
" : -.. · :~..;-.,.' · .. : .
■lilllliliiill
\
(_·
~
.... ·-.:~:_~-_\·:·>·<·-;./(~:.•:_·_'.>···· ..
_: .• _:
.
·•·
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--
_ . -
. _
_ -'
· _··
_·
·
·
~-H.JJjhe'f·:-:eQUc~ti<)fl.::-'·_:,Iiiv.esting __ Jn·--
:
America'·s
f
u
tur_e
'
. ,:'. by Dt~~sJ.~Murray, .
, which can be as high'.·as $12,000 at some. in the .world in per CaJ)ital gross national . colleges and universiti~s are replaced by tax
- ,1
. ;.- .•
> ..... :-: · ...
< · ,
7 _.
· · ·
. ': ,, ,
private ·college, with a package of support .. product, · the Federai , government is
supported institutions, the struggle to
_ The greatest resource thatany nation has· from personal resources,· family contribu-
sacrificing investment in education for
preserve academic freedom will have been
is its people. Thus, tax dollars' spent on - tions and Federaiand State aid.-
·
.
.·
short-term economic relief. Nationaily,
lost." Yet current administration's budget
. higher education must'be viewfd ·as_ ~n ig- · ; Since 1965, the Federal government has
funding for 1982-~3. edu~ational programs . policies are increasing _the number of
vestment rather than an expenditure.
- .
allocated almost $20 billion
.in .·
loan
dropped by $29 million smce 1979-80. New students at public universities, at an in-
~he 12 ini~Ho~ young Ame.ricans .enroll- _ \ guarantees and. interest subsidies for col- · York's students will receive $11 million less creasing cost to the taxpayer, and creating
ed m o~r n~~ipn s more than 3,000 co11eg~s·_: lege and university students, plus billions . in direct student aid from programs such as , a higher education system where only the
and uruvers1t1es. would, agree tha~ ~here is
more in direct financial. aid to students
Pell ·Grants, Supplemental Educational rich can afford private college, and the
!1?
more_pro~l!ctive an~ bro~dly beneficial·. • most in need:· The U;S; Congress believed
Opportunity Grants, College .Work Study, - middle class and poor are limited in choice
~
· myestment . m. the nation's furture than
that these funds would be a fruitful invest-. National -Direct Student Loans and the to public universities .
. higher educatio?, Our ,future ·.computer
ment in the nation's future·. The aid has
State Student Incentive· Program, than
Strong Federal support is crucial to
· scie_!l-tists, dpctors, lawyers, t~~her~, jour-
broadened educational opportunities for .. three years ago. Yet, over the last three
higher education and the future economic
nah~ts, busmessmen,, and pohtical leaders_
Americans,. providing accesst choice, .and
years, higher education cost increased by
growth of the country. The "savings,. pro- .
are today•s college students. And the future
promoting equality. among citizens .. This
ove(~5 percent. Thus the amount of unmet
posed by Federal budget cuts to higher
.. growth ofthe.-entire country depends, not
support was in keeping with the history of
need to be funded from studen and parent
education represent only a· minuscule part
only•,eccinomically,
·:~µt-
culturally and
America's · post-secandary educational
resources has substantially increased. This
of the Federal budget. These savings come
socially on their. continue~ d~velopment. . · . system,· which has growri
in
its ability to
demand for greater family financing comes
at a high price. The scientific and
. Presently; most ·or the .country's college · utilize the intellectual, moral and 'creative
at a time when unemployment is rising to
technological competitiveness of ·the U.S.
_· students come from homes with incomes of potential of its citizenry.
.
levels reminiscent of the great depression.
will be won or lost on our American cam-
less than $30,000. In fl:lct, the fainilies of
Yet, under the current administration,
President Reagan, delivering the com-
puses.
many student~ earn. less then. $20_.~ ... this grow.th' h~ _riot only stopped, but
mencement address at Notre Dame Univer-
Dennis
J.
Murray is President of Marist
.·) ,
These students pay for the cost of tu1t1on,
reversed. While the U;S. slips to tenth:place
sity, said:
"If
ever· the great independent
College .
. , ·MaristStude-izts ict.taSte,dfother
·
side.
()J
cl(!Ssroom·
-
I
•
,
by Jim
Leonard,-.: . · ·
fir~t or second grade level. "The personal . teacher in special educatiort.C'My_ car tends
.. ,
contact I have-with the kids is the best part
nofto run when it's wet ...
"One boy is madly in love with me. He of my job/' said Bovee.
Hill also pointed out that she felt
tells everyone that he's married to me, but I . · · · To become involved in . the student
ostracized from campus life because much
don't mind. Besides he's real enthusiastic teacher program, . juniors must . carry at
of her time was spent at Mount St. Mary's.
which isjustwhat'I need."
·
. least
a
2.5 cumulative average overall and a
"It got to a point where I felt lik~ l wasn't
The speaker is Jeanette Bovee and the 3.0 average in their chosen field. In addi-
even a part of Marist because. I was in
boy is not her boyfriend, but one of her tion, a student teacher candidate must have
Newburgh so much,•' said Hill.
sixth grade pupils in a special educaiton written
·
recommendations by
·
three
I
Marist.offers two programs in student
· program. Bovee- is one of eleven Marist ' members of the Marist faculty and have to
teaching, secondary education and special
seniors who student tea~h in D.utchess be interviewed by Nolan; Upo.!!_ completing
education. In secondary education student
County school districts.
.
these requirements, juniors must split their
teachers specialize in teaching one subject
Student teachers take over.' the respon-
schedule between Mount
St. Mary College
area to students at the junior high and high
sibility of teaching eleµientary and secon:.. in Newburgh and Marist .. The students take
school level. Student teachers in special
dary level studeiµs in realclass room situa: two courses at Mount St. Mary in their first
education emphasize all subject areas in
tions for 12 credits says Elizabeth Notari; semester and four in their second, while
their lessons, but in more generalterms.
the direct_or of teacher educadon. :-. .
taking their remaining courses at Marist.
. Both Hill and Bovee said they prefer to
strengths and weaknesses,•• said Hill, "By
grouping the students according to their
ability, none of them can get lost in the
shuffle."
When Bovee and Hill graduate from
Marist this spring, they
will be qualified to
teach in elementary education as well as
having a certification to teach in special
education.
Asked if
their dual certification
will help in landing a job, Bovee and Hill
seemed optimistic about their future.
"Even though there is a larger number of
teachers in the field right now, special ed.
certification makes you more marketable
because every- school 'district is finding a
need for the program," said Hill.
Bovee,- who is enrolled in the special
Marist seniors who are student teachers · t_each in the special _education program
education program of. student teaching,' look back·at their junior year with mixed_
.
· because they can give more individualized
Asked what the key to success is in stu-
teaches children who aie classified as learn-
emotions, agreeing they loved the program . attentiori to their students in the areas of dent teaching, Bovee replied,
"YOU
must
'ing disabled<or mentally impaired ..
Cur-:-~·buthated the inconvenience.of tra\'.·eling to: Janguage arts, spelling, reading and math .. be yourself.
If
you allow yourself to get
,
I ·'· •.· •.. •, ' .•..
j
.
:
.
. '
rendy working
Jn'
the:Arli11.gton schooL<fyioi.int
SL
.Mary. ~·The: worst"pari
of
the
.
. · . "T~e ,kid~
:a!e
placed
in
different groups Close to your'students, the kids
wil\
respond
..
. '{/.}\(-\,, -;-l.:
\./district,:~ovee is teaching
a:!fself
¢'ontained ; prograin
'/
(
was:<
providing' : your'·: own
.
ac,#rdirig .'·
fo .·:
their . ability
,v
so - stuaenf ·
bi\cam\n" aifrl'TQ'ff\nf 'ff\.\~
jo~·-•\n~t• .. -
--~~~~-
. -
·<
.
.
:' -·
-
,
class;>• sixth grade students'who read o~: a> ~raitsportati<Jn/~·said -Janerfiill, a
stiJ<:lent
teachers,, can . focus on their studentsf --~
en
you ee
1
ea rea
teac
er.
·
' -
.,-
.I
.
'-
·
,
l I BR A:RY too
<·L
Campus Center
Rm._249-_.--
- 9;30pm-l=-00am,
_<'·
o·uRING FINALS ·wEEK
.
.
Sun.Dec.12 · thru Thurs.:Dec.16
*-
Refreshments available
Sponsored
by
CSL ·&,.Class Offi.cers
;THE COLLEGE· CLOWNS
· Do you have the- capacity to reach out and
·.10.ve?·
·
~-\1•\ .
. DitJ,_ou have the ·capacity·ti, care about the.
,yo_ung
~nd the old, the sick and infirmed,
i
the imprisoned? Would you like to be able to\
bring a little Joy and happiness to othersr
JOIN
.
THE COLLEGE CLOWNS!!!!!!
Students interested in magic, mime, juggl-
ing, clowning, puppetry, tumbling, make-
up: of ifyou would like to learn and be a part.,-
· ofJhe
,·college ... _clowns join us. WE
NEED,_
YOU!!!!
CONTACT JIM O'DOHERTY 471-3495,
PETER AMATO
Ext.
272
.
or
SR.
EILEEN
Ext.
275
GIVE A CHRISTMAS GIFT TO SOMEONE,
GIVE A PART OF YOURSELF.
JOIN THE COLLEGE CLOWNS!!!!/!
C
·
.-
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by Rick
O'Donnell
sounded great," tie said .
.
:
_
. .
'
·
· .
.
.
.
••.
The American music industry is ripe for
:
.
.
l:.lanis added tl@t Pierce White·
:
has been
·
··
regional barids. The Stray Cats~ a band that playirig with
'
·
The Striders ever
.
since then
:-
..
once played th
'
e Lo
·
ng Island bar circuit, is "We have
.
a
unique -sound. arid that's
now enjoying the rewards of national sue- where music is at these days," Llanis said.
cess
.
Blotto
,
a band that has been playing "Glitter doesn't
sen,
·
·
and sex appeal
bars in the Albany-New York City area for doesn't sell
,':
but a new sound
_
is where;it's
·
years, is now riding at the
.
crest of their at.''-
.
. - ·
,
-,,
·
-
· ..
.
.
·
·
·
·
<·.,
·
.
·
·
·
popularity with the release of ari album,
.· ·
Llanis had taken time
off
from his exten-
.
and a p~pular video on MT.V. The
·
time is sive 29-city nationaL toui:: to
·
retu'rn
Jo
ripe for regional bands, and t~e time is ripe Boston for three sold-out shows over Than-
.
for Gene Llanis and the Striders.
sgiving weekend
at
orie
of
the,hottest n~ght
·
Gene Llanis and the Striders have been clubs in Boston, The Cocoriu
f
Grov~.
playing localJ3
.
oston bars for the fast three Llanis said, "We owe the fans in Boston so
:
years. They've had two regional
hits► and
:
milch. We couldn't let them
·
down
·
on
.
have developed a faithful following in the turkey day.
",
.
·--
-
<
Boston area. One of Llanis'- hits, '
.
'The
·
Llanis appeared
ori
.
stage in a black
Boston Lobster," which he recorded on his leather running suit
;
and a pair_ofbrighf
.
own
.
Tech
_
Pak label has received a great orange
Nike
running sh
.
oes. The Striders in-
amount of air play on Boston's top rock
·
stantlf' kickedinto a cut from the new
rai:lio
,.
station, WBCN. The song was listed album, ;'Going to a Met Gt!meJ•
Just
as
in WBCN's top 100 cuts of 1981. The The Striders \_Vere picking up speed, Llanis
Striders ar~ P?PUlar i~ Boston, and now pushed them into overdrive with another
.
the poP.ulanty _is spreadmg.
..
. .
.
_ new song, "Be Wise.'' that was approved
•
~lams has fmally re.leased his fi~st L.P., by the entire audience. Everyone was readf
entitled
·
"Da~dy Wears Boxer Shorts.
u
for a steady night ofrock
'it'
roll.
'. .
.
.
,
:
.
Even though 1t was recorded on the Tech
.
:
.
He then
.
proceeded to perfolJll a mixture
..
Pak label, it is being distributed
·
nationally of originals
t
and classic rock tunes such as;
by a major record label. The first hit that
·
"The Stroll,"
.
·
«Walking
·
·
in the
.
Sand,"
has been released from the album, "Where
·
"Day Tripper," "Walk Like a Man" and
-
is Lloyd?"
-
is curremly climbing up the na-
"Self Abuse
.
"
...
·
.
·
•·
.
·
.~
.
·
·
·
tional hit charts. Llariis' brand
.
of blues-
·
·
·
He
finished the set with his recently writ-
.
based, party rock 'n' roll is what America ten song, "The End of the Rainbow,,.
.
wants to hear.
which he said was written about, "A boy; a
.
• ·
The Stri~ers have a sound very much like
··
girl, happiness
·
and the will to s11rvive." He
Bruce Springsteen's or John
.
Cougar's. added,
"If
has a great amount of personal
They
.
play unpolished rock 'n' · roll
.
that·
-
meaning to me, but then again, sodoes
i,TIY
-
would sould like a hundred other bands if pet alligator . ., Llanis' alligator is named
there wasn't the talent, the tunes, and the after Llanis'
·
greatest idol, Walt Disney,
_
tuba
.
.
·
.
·
.
"Disney was a man
·
who could imagine
·
•
The most unique aspect of Llanis' sound everthing. I Wish he was alive today,''
.
is the presence of the tuba, an instrument Llanis said.
.
·
'.:\
.
thadt ha
11
s nLe
1
ve~ bee
1
kn
.
dassob
.
ciatedh witbh rocdk. · The show was
_.
over,
·
but
there's always
·
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·
.
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Call me at485
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To the other half (Carla):
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Hope you have a wicked good Christmas
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Guys, have a good holiday season and
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gonna miss you.
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Rock& Roll-Books &
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Magazines;
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Dear Dawn-
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D~wnandP~t
The
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,
.
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.
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r
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:}•
nouced. They
.
mus,t t1e Jokmg-:--- hav~ a
,
,
my
.
.19th birthday
,
the
,
best
;
yet
-
~ Thank
~
good one buddy.
· ·
.
,
.
·
·
·
, ·
you! You guys are the greatest!
.
'
'
:<
,
·
·
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__,__
,..
_A_"_re_a-'l'_'
-
:.c..p_al
.
·
·
•.
Love always-€arla
Jean-Marie, Jean-marie don't be
-
blue~ Andy~
_..
·-
~
-
,:
:
,-:
,,
-
.
..
.
:
..
,
Frankenste
i
n snores loud too!
·
.
We've got the box
.
iLyou've got the
.
·
~Lo and Doil
-
••
Christmas balls. Have a nice Christmas.
·
---------------
Lorett a J .-
.
·
·
Donna-
Love ya babe .
.
Merry
_
Christmas and
You own
.
some -lovely outfits, but
-
that
thanks for everything
.-
.
·
. ..
shower curtain has got to go!
.·
•
·
-,
Johnny
V
·
- -
.
·
--
·
-
-
--:-
.
.;;.
··
__;.. _ _
___;. _ _ _ _ _ _
__;_
------'---------'----=--•
.
To my buddy Cindy-
_
.
.
·
.
Santa and Ray~
.
.
'
·
-
< :
H3:ve a wonderful.
19t~
. .
birthday,
and
My two favorite roomies
::
I luv ya. Merry
,
_
·
m
.
_
ay
·_
the yc=ar that fol
_
Iows be
_
'th
_
ebest ever!
Christmas!
·
"-
·
"-
·
·
·
,.,
Love, your buddy Lori
Sheahan II-
\
·
.
STAY TUNED FOR
.
THE COMING OF
•
.
·
..
,
-
Hastheworldcometoanend?
WMCN,
·
,
CHANNEL
3
•
·
·
IN
-------'-~-~.;........;_
:
s_a~lly
•,
POUGHKEEPSIE .
.
SOON
.
TO
BROADCAST AFTER CHRISTMAS
LC-
.
.
,
·
Merry Christm~s fr~m all your women
.
and Hollywood. P.S. I.love you!
BREAK.
·
..
To Fanny, Beth; Constance
,'
'
Sam and
Hey Roxie-
.
,
.
,
.
·
.
,
,
,.
Nora-
·
.
·
.
·
•,·:',
-
---.-
T
•
:
·
·
•·
··
.
·
Hear you
.
wefe aU
~
~rapped
up
1
Thurs.
'
·
•
.
Happi Holidays ~nd be sharp, be happy
.
night.
.
·._.
.
.
;
·;
':·
,
.
•
. ,
'
· · ·
.
· Dean Hamlin
·
:·
9uess your b~t!
.
:
'
Sheahan
3
., ."
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
·
_
,
D--av_i_d_-W_h_a_t_!d_n_~_o_,_f_f_u~Ii-?_J.;;..
;,
-
,
-'-
.
_,_ _ _
...:__
;
:
Merry
'
Christm~
·
s! H:,tve
.a
great holid~y
.
RPB-
·
t
•
.
,
.
l
;
-
you all d?erve
11.
You're the best!
·
.
.
·
Tant belle cose per k
'
feste a te
e
pe
r
la tua
..
.
·
.·
'
·
Love, Patti
famiglia
.
Non dimenticare
.
che ti voglio
-
Bnan - Thanks for the chicken -
too bad
bene cara mia. Per oggi e per sempre.
.
you
•
didn•t get any!
.
Baci e amore; Sandina
Frank-
.
.
.
·
.
.··
··.
Merry Chrtstmas! I'll
_
miss ya! Loye,
:
·
Allison Schwab-
Kris
·
·
·
.
You have ... (hands
Guys-You see, that's ~here you're wrong.
.
..
.
TC,CT,KD,MT
account!
·
·
-
From your
,-
neighbors
·
overhead
·
up) .. ;in your bank
·
Love, the
embarrassed teller
Katy, TC, Marylou
-'
. .
.
.
·• . .
_
.
.
Have a Merry
.
Christmas and
·
I will miss
Lucan-
,
my buddies
.
over yacation!
.
;
>
..
.
=
Love ya~Carole
'-
Tlie TRIP to Boston w~s
a
lot of laughs.
We have to do it agaiQ sometime!
.
Luv, Giggles
Woody and
i/11.:
."Don't break open," eveq in case
emergency, or you'll be in trouble.
of
.
Diver-
Need a ride? I should know not to trust
PurpletipS
kids!
.
Cave Cleaner-: Do you flick em or hide Bozo-
.
em? -Sweater teeth and monkey mouth
.
\
I'm glad we met! You made my bir
-
thda;
Love, T~te
To the m:magement of H:otel Cohab-
.
the best ever!! Thanks!! Love, the kid
.
Thanks for the ~ec-~ptacle and lesson~,
~
,.
:
·
·
Studly-
.
_
-
.
·
, •
.
·
..
.
·
·
·
The
_
all-nighters
.
Merry Christmas and Happy Birthday to
Ronnie.: Congrats
·-
on· Snow
.
White.
·
a super chum. · '
.
·
You'll really
be
great
.
I can't wait to see it.
Chumly
- Usual Question
,
·
:. /
'
tBEtONG
I
JfC>'
:
,
:
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·
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December
9,
1982 •
THE CIRCLE· Page 1 1 - - •
SEASONS
_
_
_
.,
-.GRE·ETINGS
-
FROM
Best Wishes from Tom Welsh and
·vour--
,
f.
-
riends
-
,
a'.t
,.
'.Rlver,_·Distributing•:.·co~
.
.
~
'
.
·
-
.
~
-
Classifieds
Mike
Bowman-
Eh-heh. -The loud ones
Leenie and Donna-
.
I'm into black leather jackets and whips,
are you? Get m
·
e chains for Christmas!
Guess who
Dick
9th-
.
Don't forget that the sky is the limit and
you know that you can have what you want
and be who vou want-'- Rood luck. -Grace
Dear Ann-It is going to be a lonely five
weeks without you. BE GOOD! Merry
Christmas and God bless you and your
family.
I love you. -Mark
Pam and Diane-Yau are Godesses!
Interpersonally yours-Beaker and Joe
Speedster
·
Karen, Marie, Liz, June, Joanne, etc.-
Friday night was a night to remember if
only I could remember it! Love, Joe
speedster
Andy Sadowski- I'm sorry. I wish you'd
talk to me. Our friendship means too much
tome.-Mary
LO-Happy two month anniversary on
Friday, Dec. 10th. I'll never forget, will
you?-Love, Goody-two-shoes
Lori and
·
Donna-Sleeping over your
house is so fun! Thanks, you guys! Love ya
lots-JM
Tree- Can you say "Lozr"? Sure you
can! -Ted
_To
everyone in House II Leo, Merry
Christmas. Love, "Lady ace," "ML,"
"Kitty"
Baby doll -
Miss ya lots. Love, your
little girl
Pete-Thanks for being understanding,
loving, and so special to
me.
I love you!
Merry Christmas! Love, your angel
Moped women -
We're buying you ar-
mored suits for Christmas so when you
wipe out you won't get hurt, even if you do
p;et OWis.
Jen and Nance
Eh-heh girls- Merry Christmas. -
Jennifer
Jon-
..
~
.
..
.
_
.
Enjoyed the movie. We like ours rare.
.
R.D
.
L.B.R.
-
conCinued from page
IO
CHAMPAONAT FRESHMAN
TOGETHER FOREVER!
Bo'k
Kissy-
Who cares about this place! There is
•
more to life than Marist. No matter what,
I'll always love ya.
Steve
Merry Christmas Gina, Gabe, Jane 0.,
Karen, Kim, Maureen and Linda!
Love ya-Ursula
Maaary-Happy birthday! Midasize ii! We
are going to get you on your birthday, even
though you say "no way"! -Your bes test
friends and pals, but not your buddies -
·
the losers
Manhattan Man - The one who believes
in quantity, not quality-
M.M.
and
M.M.
Hey New Yorkers-Who said Connecticut
wasn't good for anything? Whalers
4,
Rangers
2.
We know better! Buffy and Kiki
Intoxicated 6th floor sweetie -
who can
it be knockin' at my door?
-Captain zoo crew
Woody and
#11 -
Get some sleep over
Christmas vacation-and get ready for the
re-opening
of Hotel Cohab.
Merry
Christmas.
the all nighters
Grace, Joanne and Cheryl-
Thanks girls for being there! We're
going to have a great time next semester!
Love, Pat
Dick-
Congratulations on your graduation! I
wish you much success and happiness
always.
Love, Pat
Andrea-
There is nothing
I
can say to you but
"I
love you". I'm going to miss you!
Love always,Corinne
Andrea-
It's about those sagging c.b.'s! What
does Mark have to say!
A fellow
C.B
Robin, Sue, Lynn, Mary Jo, Paula,
Elizabeth and Donna-
.
Thanks for the great dinner-
it
was fun!
Patti
CC-
Merry Christmas, I love you!
T .D.
Hey Gina (Lisa)-
Any
-
strange
·
occurrences at the Pub
lately? Merry Christmas-
Guess who?
is
now open
for
Monday
/1
_
·
/J
--
.
-
-
.
c__;~l4<_/
· 1 1 - t r t ~ P ~
1 / U ~ · · { l u ~
k t v ~ / 3 u J
---
·
/0·'00- 2
:30
;:z::'
.;r}
<:-'{~~
');
--•Page 12 •
THE CIRCLE·
December 9, 1982
Exter:nal u·sers behind···
growth of computer·. center
by
Grazia E. Lo Piccolo
said he sees this arrangement as havin~
· The computer center of Marist College is benefits for both Marist and the externai
one of the most sophisticated in the area.
However, not everyone knows how
it
has
achieved this level of excellence.
"The external users of the Marist com-
puter play'a vital role in the growth of the
computer center," said Cecil Denney,
director of computer operations.
"If
the
external users would not be here, the equip-
ment we would be using would not be as
advanced as it is now."
Denney describes the. external users as
non-profit organizations, separate from
Marist, who rent computer services from
Marist Coilege. Denney said that at present
there are about 15 external users .. These
users, said Denney, provide a yearly in-
come of about $200,000. "It's almost
enough to pay for the hardware that we are
now using," said Denney.
users.
"Students· are benefiting by having
larger resources available to them.By mak-
ing use of external users, 'Marist can pro-
vide to the academic community all the ad-
vantages of computing
in
a large ·universi-
ty, while having all the advantages of atten-
ding a small, .personable, liberal arts col-
lege." said Denney. .
In addition, Denney pointed out that, in
the future; the external user can be a source
of student internships or potential
employers. "The external user benefits by
having access to a substantial larger and
capable level of staff support in a ·
technological area that they could not fund
themselves. By sharing with the college, the
risks
involved
in
computing
are
substantially reduced,'' said Denney.
According to Edward Waters, vice presi-
dent for administration and finance, the
A
concern that might arise in the Marist
external users enhance the image of the col-
community, said Denney, is that the com-
lege. "We couldn't have the machines we - puter center may give preferential treat-
have without them. We would have old
ment to the external users since they pro-
machines or small ones, with about
I/ JO
vide real dollars. But Denney said that all
the capacity of the present ones. T~at is all
the users -
students, administration and
we could be able
to
afford," said Waters.
external
.
users -
are treated equally. "No·
Denney added that the sophistication in
priority is given to anyone. There is equal
computer use gives Marist the image of opportunity for all the users, r~gardless if
"up and going someplace."
·
·
students or external users," he said.
·
Denney said that for the most part the
Denn·ey said this is the reason why Marist
external users use the computer to store in-
is one of the few institutions to' make sue-
formation and conduct research. Some of cessful use o·f the external users; "Other in-
the
users include St. Dennis Catholic stitutions have made the mistake of
Diocese, The National Funeral Directors treating the external users -as secondary.
Association, Cary Arboretum, and Preven- 'citizens, instead of treatilig them . as·
~ive Medicine Institute Strang Clinic.
equals," he said.
. Maria Sergi, supervisor of medical , Denney said that Marist•also has a few
research and statistics for the Strang 'Clinic accounts of individuals who are external
in New York City, said the clinic is satisfied users .. These· users are also ,charged· the
with the service it is receiving fronlMarist'. · same-rates>They pay in advance and are
"We get prompt service whenever we need given a corresponding· amount,of time on
it, and Marist is easily expandable to every the computer. , ,
need we have," said Sergi.
·
Marist has had external users since
1979,
Sergi said they consid.ereci setting up when the
·
IBM 'computer
was
acquired.
their own computer center, but wheI). it Before 'that, Marist rented
1
ffom. Shared
came_ time to .make. the/purchase,. they •Edu-cationa\-,eomptiia-·:Systems::: ·Because· "
.. rea\ized-they,,"¥0\l\~
1)-C>t
be.
a"k.to,
!if.ford.
a ,
Qf'
r'ate :
0
,ncr~ases;-·
said' :
De'l'lney, :·
Marr'st ·
com purer equivalent
to'
1'v1aris(s: Denney. ·decided
to
buy their. own 'coinpu.ier.' · ·
-.,,
.
..
.
".
. .
...
..
.:-
.'·~.:'
.
DUTtmS
. COll'NTY'S
#1 IOCK CLUB!
Thursday, December 9
LADY
Friday
&
Saturday, December 10
&
11
STARRFIRE
Sunday, December 12
VOICES
Monday,
December
13
~ -
·
4 Great Bands: Northern
1
-. ~_~.
· Star
&
others. Special Benefit
for underprivileged children
Tuesday, December 14
THE HURT
Wednesday,
December 15
APPLE
A
Beatles
Tribute
.·
.
co~oP AT
i
•
:
,,,
.
MARIST
. . . . . •
,
•
~
.:<
·coLLEGE
The Office of Cooperative Education would like to ex- ._
tend its congratulations to the followf ng students who are,·
_
• -
among those. acceptsd, for Co-op_ positions
tor
the spring
1983 semester:
·
'
Monica Finnegan-
Terri Sullivan -
Joe ·Perretti ·
Paul ZurNieden
· Katherine Gerardi
Nancy Qilworth
Patrick Mulrain
Susan Rompala
Elizabeth Miller
Linda Foster
John Catalano
Paul Dreja .
Milton Watson
-Andrea Holland
Debbie Valentine
Paul Crowell
.:;: ,-°Jhe'resa Sulllvan ·;
Sally Howard
IBM
IBM
IBM
IBM
IBM
IBM
IBM
18,M:
. M: Shwartz
. :·~ ~-. ·orrfiond.'s' -
·.f
Martfn!'lnc.:< .
IBM
Dutchess Bank
NYS Assembly
NYS
Asse!:71J>ly.
-,_}tf
li~l:£0
.
_
,.;·:-.;
·'
,,-.
;-,-,JW,i
are iooklng forward-io the coming. ysar,~_ild wish .
you all a Happy ,~ofi~ay Season.
·
· · ·.:~\.:;~
. '.--Coopetat\ve Education· puts you one step ahead of the crowd!''
•• •.-o;J:"">•,r.:•~•·••'-<:.,
•·•••
-,.·, •·
•
-•
;·.·:.,-<.- . •
~
. .-..;,.-'-~
,;;~,.: ... _::', . .;.•
, ... ,.
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<.--..-::-••••-
•
.:_.,'...,_c:•.-•·;.,;, .. ,,;.: •
•.
~
.• .-_._~/~-•-
•.'
-·· -·Dr;~Cod~&
· . Proper ID Required
Thursday, December 16
THUNDERROAD
Fridar, December
17
FRIENDS
Saturday
&
Snnday, December 18
&
19
CANYON
Tnesday,
December
21
·
.
THE HURT.
DUTCHESS COUNTY'S
#
1
ROCK CLUB
Where Every Night is Special: TUESDAY: LADIES NIGHT .
Ladies Drink Free • WEDNESDAY: NICKEL NIGHT Every
. other Drink 5
¢ .
all . night •
THURSDAY: COLLEGE NIGHT
. No Cover Chg w/College ID all night • FRI.
&
SAT.: Reduced
Adm. before
11 •
SUND!\ Y:. F~EE DRINKS Bef~re
1 O
p.m. •
Dress Code
&
Proper 1D. Required. Thursdays: Free
Drinks
9-10:30
·
33 Academy Street, Poughkeepsie
471-1133
--
.
.
i
----------------------------------December
9, 1982 ·
THE
CIRCLE· Page
1 3 - - •
r-~--~----------------~--~~,
·
.IJ!f-;~
coupon
~
. .
I
·
·.
Nuclear plant site stirs dispute
I
.
THE
.
HAIR
·s
. .
I
by Carol Lane
replacing these plants with solar or hydro
.
·
•, ·
.
·
.
·
·
· · HACK
·
·
·
1
-
Re~a~!i(n~\~:i~~n~~l:~t\:dsi;ed~;nt~~
po::::s::;~~:e;::i~:.:g:~~~:::~::~~e
.
4
.
9
.
..
.
·
A
·
·
·
d
.
·
construction of a nuclear power plant,
dangers of nuclear power is one
.
of
I
•
.
.
ca emy Street
I
.
Joanna Hess a_member of Hudson_Valley
NYPERG's top priorities, according to
I
· .
·
.
•
I
Green, and environmental group, said.
·
Geary. "We have the priority of educating
I
N
·o
·
.
A
.
.
.
t
.
t
N
I
"We are fighting Con-Edison for 600
people through teach-ins, films and class
ppOlll
men
ecessary
acres of land in Red Hook," Hess said,
I
discussions. Our basic philosophy is that
I
"They won't say what they are building but
our society does not teach people to be ac-
1
.
.
$
_
2
·
.
o
·
.
FF
.
I
it could be nuclear and therefore we are
tive citizens so people have given this power
I
_
I
concerned."
.
to large corporations and the govern-
(R eg $8 00}
Hess is a member of the· Grass Roots
ment," Geary said. "We want to teach
I
•
·
.
•
I
Energy and Environmental Network (Hud-
pe9ple how to make changes in the world
I
··,,
,
;
;
_s_
H
_
AM.
po
·
o,
·
CUT~. BLOW
·
STYLE
I
son Valley Green,) a volunteer group of -teachthemtotakeonissues."
.
-
3,000 members located in Red Hook, N.Y.
I
(I
h
$
)
I
Hudson
.
Valley
Green works throughout
The public is made aware of many of
I
ong
.
air
4 .00
extra
I
Dutchess, Columbia, Ulster and Green
these issues through the Hudson Valley
·
·
H d
v
11
G
· ·
I d
Green Times, published every six weeks by
I
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
I
counues.
u son a ey
reen1smvove
·
"d
f
f "f
"We a econ
Hudson Valley Green, Hess said. The Hud-
1
·
$
_
,
.
.
o
I
ma wi e range
O
ac ivi ies.
r
•
son Valley Green T1
·
mes, 1·s, paid for by it
.
's
cerned with all the environmental issues,
I
OFF
.
·
(Reg. $30 .O
_
O}
.
I
like pollution,"
·
Hess said. "We went from
members, has a
circulation
of 10,000 peo-
1
.
.
I
being solely focused on anti-nuclear to a
pie. Many of the local environmental
·
BO DY
p
ERM •
I
·
d
broader scale of environmental issues.
groups in the area contribute to the
I
* .
.
.
'nc u es
- · •
Another major force behind the anti-
newspaper.
-
1
.
·
.
C
f
&
N
·
C d
•t •
·
·
r
I
nuclear movement in the Hudson Valley is
"We see our paper as a means for other
:
L
.
· .
.
.
.
·
.
u
.
exus on
I
,one
.
.
..
the New York Public Research Group, Inc.
groups to publish their views," Hess said.
•·
- - - - - - - -
- - - - - - _ _
... _ - •
·
• - - - - - -
(NYPERG) located in New Paltz,
-
N. Y. Fif-
''We don't. have the experts to do lobbying
ty people comprise the New Paltz chapter or research so we depend on other groups
R~!~Y!!-!
lHEATIIE
Starts
Friday
ACRES
OF FREE
PARKING
·
RICHARD PRYOR
...
'
,.-J1CKIE GLEASON
-
~
.
.
.;
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.:
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:
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:
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·
IPGI
·
Exclusive in
Dutchess County·
·
.
·
SHOWN
-
EVENINGS
·
7:25
&
-
9:30
·
SAT
&
SUN •
.
MATINEES
at 3:1
·
s
.
:
.-._
-
NeWly
i
Remodeled.
:
IC>le>tn6t?
6ru)?dys
·
...
Pub
·
·
..
oa·nce Club
·
·
Of
.
·
The 80's
Great New Dance Floor
Fabulous
New Light Show
Sensationa_l New Sound
System.
of NYPERG, a public interest group which
to do this and we disseminate the informa-
has student organizations at
18
campuses
tion." It is important to get everyone in-
throughout New York State.
volved in stopping the spread of nuclear
NYPERG is interested in the elimination
power, Geary said. "An example of the
of
·
nuclear power plants as a source of power of the people was seen in
1975
when
energy, Linda Geary, project coordinator an idea was proposed to build a nuclear
of NYPERG
;'
said. "Since
1978
we
·
have
power plant about 25 miles north of New
been working with legislative, community
Paltz." Geary said, "A coalition of people
and campus organizations to phase out and -
Mid
.
Hudson Opponents to Nuclear
shut down the nuclear power plants with no
Power -
were able through their numbers
new construction being started but rath~r
to stop the plan."
Marist to give commuter scholarships
Marist
·
College
has established
·
a at Marist.
$100,000
scholarship fund for freshman
"Marist recognizes the particular plight
·
commuters
:
from the Mid~Hudson Region, of middle class families who must struggle
according to
:
Dennis
J.
Murray, Marist to meet tuition costs
.
during
·
the un-
College President. The scholarship awards favorable economic climate. We believe
would begin with the fall,
1983
academic private education should be a matter of in-
semester.
·
dividual choice and realistic option for
The scholarships will be awarded on the students. This scholarship fund will help us
basis of academic qualifications andfinan-
meet ths goal," said ~aly .
..
cial need, _aci;ording.
,
tQ
..
fames
,
E .
.
Daly,
For further information about Marist's
dean of admissions. Individual awards commuter Scholarship, contact the Admis-
wo
.
1Jld
be
.
renewable for four years of study
.
sfr:iris Office, 471:3240
:
ext:
226,227.
Come and party with your
~
friends over Christmas Recess!
Great new Dance/Rock Bands
and All New Dance Floor!
DECEMBER 29th
½
PRICE ADMISSION
ALL DRINKS $1.00
·
With Mari st I .D.
LOCATED ON210 MERRICK RD., ROCKVILLE CENTRE,
LONG ISLAND, N.Y.
•
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•
>
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=
:.
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:!,
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CALL FOR DIRECTIONS: (516) 764-4700
Dress To Impress
,
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--•Page
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14•THECIRCLE•December9,1982
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Cardone
adds
experience
-
to
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Foxes
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as 'pasta line' heads
for piayoJJ;
1983 -WINTER INTERSESSION-1983
·
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...
,
January_ 3-21 ·
..
.
by
Ian O'Connor
·<
Playing pick-up games on the local pond
-
and participating in area leagues
,
were
-
the
only ways he could gain the experience
needed to play on a higher levet.
·
·
Obviously,
this
.
experience proved
valuable
to
Marist senior Tony Cardone, as
he was selected co~captain of this year's
Red Fox team.
"I didn't exactly come from a big hockey
town," said Cardone, a native of Monroe,
New York. "l feel that my friends and I
established some interest within the town,
and the kids are just now starting to pick it
up," he said.
.
,
•
.
Cardone,
who
played
football at
Monroe
0
Woodbury High School,
has
played hockey here at Marist
-
since his
sophomore year. In his last year at Marist,
.
Cardone is honored to have been chosen as
co-captain and he realized the great respon-.
sibility placed on his shoulders
.
,
"We have some young, inexperienced
players this year and Jim Md)onald (the
other captain) and myself try to help them
out," said Cardone
:
"We have been there
before, and we know that the young guys
need leaders who can set
,
examples," he
said.
Alchough the team is currently 4-3 in the
Metropolitan Collegiate Hockey Con-
ference, Cardone feels that the Red Foxes
still have a legitimate shot at the league ti-.
tie. "We definitely have not reached our
peak yet, and I hope we don't until the
playoffs," he said.
Tony Cardone
"We definitely have the talent and the
coaching (Head Coach Jim Peelor) to go
places," said Cardone. "Our depth has im-
proved from last year, and we have a great
deal of speed, hustle and desire,'' he said.
As the team improves .each year, Car-
done says that
.
fan interest and·support will
become even greater t'han it is now.
..
"The fans h
'
ave been great this year, and
If
Marist is to win the league, Cardone the student support is probably triple that"
says that McDonald will have to lead the of last year/' he said. "Their being there at
way.
-
McDonald,
the
league's Most the games puts more pressure on us to per-
Valuable Player last year, leads the league form
.
We
-·-
usually
respond
to this
in scoring with 24 goals. He combines with
-
pressure," he said.
·
•
Cardone (7 goals) and Al Pette (S goals) to
With the increasing interest in Marist's
form the "Pasta Line."
·
hockey program, Cardone ~iews the futtire
·
.. Three
·
Weeks ·(Monday
thrµ
Fri
_
day)
DAY CLASSES
Marketing Management
·
Radio Broadcasting
·
World Literature
Introduction to_ Computers
Introductory Statistics
EVENING CLASSES
-
Business and Society
Marketing Management
-
Public Speaking
The Art of the Film
..
·
M,eaning of. History
·
Soviet Union Today
Introduction to Computing
Basic Algebra
.
American National Government
lntrodu_ction to Psychology
.
·.
,
.,,_
WINTER INTERSESSION
ENABLES
YOU
TO:
*A~celerate your ·program
.
-
*Satisfy CORE, major or
elective requirements
,
*Concentrate
.
on one course
On Campus Housing is Availa
_
ble
·
Registrations are being accepted in the
·
.
_,,Schoo{-otAdtilt ~ducation '(Donnelly Room
200}.
•
Cardone also Cites Rob Trabulsi, Brian
with anticipation. "Money is tough to
Foley, Tim Graham and Rob Shanahan as
come by, bu
·
t there is no doubt ill'my mind
players who must continue to perform well
that this
-
program-.will.continue,to
,
grow;
,
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i.f
tb.e. Re.d Fox.e.s are to go
far;
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he
sai.d .
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BREAKAWAY
on
Spriflg
·
BrfJak ((}
Bahamas
·
or
Fort
·
Lauderdale
·
PRICES:
-----
-
Bahamas: $343.85
Fort Lauderdale: $366.85
Sponsored by College Union Board
For more information contact:
JANE SCARCHILLI Ext. 6-114
or
KATHY SHEA Ext. 117
.
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N~~i~e
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~'!9~~d,"'g
;•f
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l;io_usi
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ng
for
Win,ter
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l.nter~~~io
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AN .
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2,
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1982
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JAN.
'
21,
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1983
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All those interested
·
in being housed on campus for the
• ·
winter 1983 Intercession should come to the Housing
-
of-
·
fice
·
by -De
_
cember 1 O, to make these arrangements
,
.
·-
·
-
-
.
.
The Room
-
Rate will be $8.OO/day
.
The total
-
amount,
-
·
covering the length of time you will be on campus
-
must
be paid to the B
.
usiness Office prior-to the finalization of
any Intercession Assignment.
No
Food
Services
will
be
provided during the Winter
Intercessions.
·
QUESTIONS?
Please come to the Housing Office
....
:
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;,~~,;1~;:i_ .....
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•Pagets-
.-,· :-
·.·-
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0
~Y.l:Ji,~T~vers : · ·•_ :··:·:
.':sht)\yed -that:.they could play "good"
, • .·En~ering)ast nig_pt's:c!as~ at: Villanova:>.basketballas they forced the-Red foxes in- .
·:·. with.a _1~1- record,""the,Manst Red ~oxes -:to a;slow tempo, exactJy':opposite of the .··
:'-•~tiad: pro~~n
-orie
thing; When the_' te~m is.< Re~ Foxes ruri~and
0
gun offense, and knot-. . .
· good.-:"." it s good. When the team is bad -
·· tedthe score at 44-44 on a White jumper. - .
; ·'
· it;'.s bad .. :....
\ · /
-- , · · . · .· ·. · · ·
:<_
:r
> · ''They slowed the ball up on us· arid we
. : : The ~ed._Foxes\ Wf~e- good Saturday. as
started· to rush our game,° Cap~ain Steve.
they· romped former NBA coach _Larry . Smith said.
"Ii
was really frustrating when
CosteUo'.s · Utica J:>ioneers 61-51 before an ··they held the ball so long."
.
.
oj:,ehing game record cro~d of 2,449_..in the : . Marist frantidly tried to regain its lead
McCann Center,:
.. - .
·.
. .
but a.Tom Meekins errant shot from the
. ,,TWp~!ght.sJater, the Red Foxes were bad..-_· right ·corner. and.Ted_ Taylor's missed .10~
as .J?1~1s1on, 1~1 C~stleto!1 State shocked · footer :,foupled with ·Jour on target·
:M~,ns,t_65-60.on !~e Fox~s, ~omC: court. ·
Castleton foul shots gave the Spartans a 48_-
lt s. pr.obably _the·,b1ggest
~in
that the
44 lead which wasn't relinquished.
basketball program has had;" Castleton.
Marist was·hurt-by a poor 10-or:-37 (27
· · CoacliJimCascian~ said.:''We really came
percent) mark from the field in the second
. into the game \\:'anti~g,.,~o be respectable
half, , and
a .
two~of-nine from the free-
·
. and_ nofexpecting t,o wiri. We just wanted
throw line.· ·
· ·. .
<- .:
. ·
·.
to 5.how .tharwe_ do plli)' some good basket-
. The roles were reversed two nights earlier
bait''-
· :
· ·
, · .
asUtica;shot a horrendous·26 percent from
The Spartans were led by freshman Chris
the 'fie1d ;. in the first · half · and .
never
White's 20 points and 13 •rebotirids; Scott
recovered as the Red Foxes rolled to an
Sterling and · Matt Dempsey. each con-
easy 61-51 win. · . · .. ·
· -
<' . ,
tribuied 10. Steve Smith led the Red Foxes . "Our win was··a combiriatiori of their
with 20 points.· •·
.
poor shooting .and our m~tch-~p zone
ln.thefirsfl6 minutes,the Spartans were . defense," Petro said. "We had scouted
.. less.than respectable as_M~rist jumped out .Utica and we kriew they weren't too strong
· qui~kly
tc>
-a
14-2 e~rly advantage, and led . shooting from the. outside." .
.,
·29•l7;:Iate in'the
·first
half. The Spartans
- The Pioneers proved Petro right as they
theri re~lec(off eight points in the fi!}al..f our
sank only four of _32 attempts from the
minutes and Marist led 29-25 at the half.
· field in the first half and overall hit 19 of 61 ·
:•·: ''We
got--out to a quick lead but we let
duringtheentfrecontest.· .·
them creep lip
on
us;'' Marist Coach Ron
Meanwhile, Smith .was leading the. Red
.
. Petro ·said, &'There. wasn't. enough inside
Foxes with 19 points and six rebounds.
· .. , scoring in the fjrst h;llf. T-hree guys jump in Bruce Johnson sank 11 points, brought
.,✓
the' air atthe same lime for rebounds and cfown seven rebounds and had four steals.
we cari't do _that?The loss is frustrating."
' ."It's difficult' to win a game wh:en
YOU'
..
:::
"'·
_...__
~
Fans·
display traditional enthusiasm after first Marist basket during Marlst-Utfca
clash.
(Photo by Chris Dempsey)
.
.
·:
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.....
half," said .Costello, former. coach of the . do," Meekins s·aid. "We were a lot quicker
Milwaukee Bucks. "We shot a little better
than they were." .
_
later but we have
a
lot of work to do." .
Utica cut Marist's lead to 45-32 with
Marist stormed to an. early 9-0 lead
10:45 remaining in the
·game
after bask!!tS
before Utica could penetrate Marist's tight · by Padilla and Johnson gave the Red Foxes
defense 'and . score its first basket on a
a 19-point lead.·
,tayup, 6:30 into the game by Jonathan.
But 7-1 center~John Donovan answered
Carter.
.
with two straight baskets on feeds from
; Meekins had the early hot hand as the
Johnson to keep the game out of reach.
tiny guard sank a 15-footer and a 20-
· Extra Points: Marist travels to Iona to
footer. Taylor hit from the inside and the
compete in the Manufacturer's Hanover
Foxes had a comfortable 13-3 advantage.
Tournament tomorrow night
facing
Utica drew to within six points, at 19-13,
American University. That clash will be
but .a Marist 12-2 edge in the final six
followed by. the Iona-Loyola tilt. The
miriutes of the first half, led by Gil Padilla
following night the losers meet at 6 p.m.
and Johnson,· gave the Foxes a 31-15
and the winners at 8 p.m.
halftime lead.
·.
\
·
The Red Foxes' next home game is Jan:;5
"Controlling the tempo of the game and ' against Northeastern and . Marist's first
get the early lead. was what we wanted to
home game next semester is_ ~an. 24.
!hroughout the: s~c.ond half Castleton only score four field goals in_ !he first
wotfJ:~~,hOojJstersface
Rhodelslitnd io/1ight
·
The·Maristwomeri'.s ba~ketball:teamwill .plays.''
.
·',_
.
.
.
.
C.W. Post coach Kathy Solano felt that
face-Rhode Island in a collegiate basketball ·::- Fourth-year head coach Susan Deer has
the reason for her team's loss was their
gal]le tonight in tlie McC~im Center:_· ·
, been emphasizing ~efense du!ing the . last
poor shooting performanc·es.
·
... __
.. _La~t- week _p.oint ·g· uardXynne Griffin
three days of pract_ice following an 82-61
"We didn't shoot well against the zone
·
drubbing at the hands of . eastern
·
• nor from the free throw line and that's
__ scored'.16 ·poirits to lead Marist to a 60-54
·
-
h
I
h
"
"d
s
1
win O\'.~r. C~W .l>.ost in'a women's C!)llegiate
pQwerhouse Syracuse last Saturday;, .
w ere we . ost
t
e game,
sai . o ano.
b' k tbiill
· 'Th
<la · · ht•at-theMc-
-
~ '-f!er
_
e_ffo~~ paid. off as
1
th4? Mari~t's .,'~'.f.hesalllething1'appened•last.yearand.w,e.
_
. ·.
~ e ..
gllll!:e .. U,C
5
.
_.
Y
~!g __ _
, .
.,;'."
: ...... ·
•Lolita •Silva played .a key :role in-holding ·•, lost that one, too.'_!:.
.
,;
·
·•
.
< ..
·
... : .
·"·· ~:: '_·: ~Can~£ente_!:-
·
_."~Ji ,:•.•:
''.W'''c:'''~s~r~~';It'\,{
;'·Sue.Salg;'wnoi-Was''eighth in the iiationlast · .. : :solano's, team.,shot .. a, dismal 12~of-29
-
; ... : ... :
.
;_; :~i~ffink H~,-h
SchC:t
l:2:·
0
s:~;n·
as;ists ·.
'year
iii
~eboi1~dirig; to 13
1
ie!)o,111ids'arid.on~ '-:ii:om the 'charity stripe and a disappointing·'
. . .
':-::."~and':
!&fed~di~~-five rebouricls as the Red
_JY
!.°
points. '•
.
.·•' ..
. . .·, . . . ;,
JS•percerit from the field. In last year's 58-
·
'.'·F
'
·. P ·,. ..~t·h • ·· · ·.o·n··m·
· a··rk.·at. l"·1, .
0
-
,
That was the game strategy tom
.. ght,
55
loss to'the Red Foxes, C.W. Post shot 9-
. oxeseven .... eirseas
·
'·
· · ·
'd D · "I · t
ltd · ·
· b ·
f24f..
h f
h
1·
·
·
._. ,,.,
.
. .
· .;._
..
<,.• .. · ,· . ...-,,--- .· .. ·
,sai
_eer;
.:conempae ~u~mg a _ox- ~o-
romt e reetrow me.
.
.
... ~
-
'Our. defense "'.as.excellent, . saidJinf- ,:and-one on her (Salg) butldecided agamst
The game started out on the slow side
·
.
••
:
fin;·'. _: '.'Offensively2we didn't bring. it : that. Lolita was supposed· to ·deny her , with neither team - able to · convert · their
.. fog~her.6Wc
were:·
nishing :through; our ',_.everything: She di_d a super job.''
~
. · ·
. shots. Sparked by Griffin's six points and
· , . : .
•
•
.
,
,
•
·, • • . '•C
'
•
C
,
.
•--~«
. '
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::->.<·---~·-· ,· .. •
two by Mary
Jo
Stempsey, the Red Foxes
broke open a 9-9 tie to go ahead 17-11 with
eight minutes to play i:Q the'first half. By
halftime, the lead stretched to '33-20.
' C. W. Post employed_a full-court press in
the opening fly~ minutes of the second half
.
to· cut the lead to 35-29 with 16:40 to play ..
Marist increased the· lead to · nine· before
Griffin
pi~ked
up her_ fourth personal foul
with
p
minutes to play .
. With Griffi11on the bench, C.W .
.
Post
bounced back to cut the lead to-under seven
points. Griffin was placed back in the game
. with five mimites to go as the Red Foxes led
by_ only four,
56::52,
with 2:12 to play.
-·~Noclcey·:team
tci·meet
c~w~:
P.ost·
;~
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~-
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•
I
._f-. ·;.·-.:··: .. -·~-
•
·.·.·.
:.._.-:~.r:.',}::~-·
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I
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.·
•
/ ·
•
· Volleyball tearrtcaptures title;
·banner.to
hang
in McCann soon
· · ),y~ea.nne
LeG~,~.ec. . ..
.
.• .
_
third period in the Pace game to keep the
<
:;:{i~~-Mllr~St
lio~key tew.,/wm conclud~-it~· :::rsie~ut;f lfa~!t:~r ~:/~:Sbu:i-::;
by
Kathy O'Connor· '
th~ 'An-League AU-Star team. The all-star
··- .:: "': first semester gaqies toQigh~ as they travel .. Brian Foley.; .
.
. . :·:. _ .·
players are seniors Laura Cross and Linda
.
-- t.o. ~ong_Island to battl.e C- W .. ,Post. The
.
'
.
·
. . .
:· ·
•. · The Marist College Women's volleyball
Peter, sophomore )odi Johnson, and
.// . team's:-scltedule res~mes_Jan_. 26 .. against ·
·
: 'tpe
1:
0rdhaID game w~s exciting .. The -''team• has captured ·the Hudson Valley' freshman Marie Bernhard .
.--::<Fairl_eigh D!t:kj11son University at'the Mc-
first per~od saw b_ot~ Manst.and Fordham Women's Athletic Conference Division 'B'
In . addition, Cross was awarded
CanirlceArena; ·
· .·:,,score _four ~oals._ Jim McDoJ1.ald scor_ed
championship.
. .
.
"November Player of the Month" for
.
. · ·.
.
:·
<
·... .
.
. .
·
two with assists by Gary P,edlow and Tim
f
l
. J'he ska~ers lost to Ke~n College I::tst
(}raham. Tony Cardone "scored
a
shor-
· With a team led by our A I-League
receiving the most ·news coverage for the
Thursday;_by a score _of
.
9-5
after defeating . thanded goal assisted by Ed Cardoza and players, the women went undefeated in
month in the league.
• Fo,rdhain µniversity t!Je,ni_ght before 14~7
Al Pette. Tim Graham s~ored late in the regular season dividion play and reached
"I was so surprised to win the award,"
· d ·
· · p
11 5 · ·
N
23
·
·
the semi-finals in a· divisional tournament.
said Cross. "Winning this and having the·
an ro':llpin~. ace . - on oy.
. ·
· .. - period assiste9 by Brian Foley and Rob . They wi'll soon ·be rewarded wi"th. an offici·at
b •
A
•
d
• h h
Mar1st.now stands at 4-3 .m th~ Metro
Trabulsi.
·
· team
em5 recogmze
wit
t e .most
<•-Confererice.
·
banner to be hung in the Mccann Center ·. amount of players from· one teatn to be
· Jim ~icDonald was the hero in the two
.
;
. Marist wins as;he accounted for 13 goals in
. tJ!e two games. He score,d four goals in the
The second period was a shooting gallery
fieldhouse.
.. named all-stars helped to alleviate the pain
for the Fordham. goalie, Marist scored
"We're really excited about getting the
of losing the divisional tournament," she
_seven· goals\Fordham was held scoreless.
banner/' said senior co-captain Linda
said.
_
,
Jim McDonald scorecJ four times ·during
-
Petei: . ."I'm. personally happy b·ecause it
· The women were eliminated for the
Jhe perio4. The first lWO wer~ assisted by
enables me to ·leave Marist ·knowing that . tourney in the semi-final final match
• :·1
~
-,. • . •'
I
• ·
•'
• .
•
\
...
. .
.
Rob Trabulsi and.Gary Pedlow. The other ,, I've been a part of a team that is leaving• against ManhattanvilleCollege .
. _;:_ :
.
.
-.: <M_
.. ··.·.·,i_ller SP. o.
n_··
sors
.
· .. -.,.
two goals were both, shorthanded and 'thc:ir mark in Marist athletics,'-'._she said.
"The problem we encountered in the
· unassisted. Jim became unbeatable in the
In the four years that Peter has been a· semi's was a tack of concentration," said
: :--2. -~:•_:••.•.·
0
-
<Il,·-2
tOU
__ ..
f .
ney ·
game. It· looked Jike everytime he picked up
member of the women's team, the changes . Piccone. "The girls had easily won their
_
.
the puck, he was 'go_i_ng fo ca.rry it down the
and · improvements made in the women's
preliminary matches, then they had a three
,
~
_
,:ice to score. Al P~tte scored assisted by
volleyball program have been significant. . hour layoff until the semi-final match,,;
.
.
: ,. ·
'":'·
' .
.
McDonald. ·Tony Cardone scored a shor- . Until last season, Marist had been lucky to said Piccone. "The layoff was a disadvan-
,
The Miller '-Brewing Co. is sponsoring thanded goal assisted by Bob Caldiero. · win one ·or two matches a season, said
tage to us playing against Manhattanville
their two~on-two ,tournament. for the Bob Caldiero went on to score his own
Peter.
_
who had just come off winning a match
. fourth conse~utiye year at Marist. Any goal: a powerplay goal assisted by Brian
"I'm very satisfied with what we have
against Mt. St. Vincent," Piccone said.
Marist student· is eligible to participate, · Foley a~d Keith BJachowiak.
·
·
accomplished inmy two years of coaching
Our energy level wasn't at it's peak and
prov1ded they have not lettered in basket-
Brian·
Keily
came into the. net repla~ing .. at Marist," said Coach Marje Piccone.
Manhattanville was very up for the mat-
ba_ll atthe college level, The winners of the Bob M"onaco at.• the sta.rt of the .. · third "The girls have come a long way in im-
ch," said co-captain Bernhard. "Tlie inten-
. iournatnent
will
receive $200. Worth of
•
,-
. k proving their skills," she said.
sity in the semi-final was a lot greater than
scholarships''. each._. There
"{ill
'also be period. Fordham· finally scored two quic
The success and talent of the team was
in the preliminaries, and we just weren't up
trophies 'awarded to the second place team goals late in the period st
ill
leaving them evi~ent_ when four players were named to
for it yet,'' she said .
. ·. arid each.team receives a Miller basketball behind 11-6. ·
·
·, ,\ jersey Just for participating.
'.- '
·,
McDonald s-c~;ed his seventh goal of the
r----.;..-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
'"""!'!l.•-----
',. -·names will •bi'ptayed in th'i M,<;Cann 'game ~ssisted by Tony Cardone. He was
Center, starting next .semester. Any student. followed by· two quick goals,
IO secs. apart,
· wanting to play ·should ·contact. Glen from Bob Trabulsi and Tom "Ziggy"
Marinelli in the McCann· Center or Tom Lehrkinder .. Lehrkinder's goal was
Welsh, The Miller campus representative at . unassisted and Trabulsi's had assists by
'7:1-5600 ·
·
Tim Graham and Ed Cardoza .
.
'-'
Semi~Forinal Dan'ce 10-2p.m.
Friday Night at the Mccann Center
Catch the Christmas Spirit!
.,.
By
Bill
Travers
.... ·. •
.... ; _. ..
.
.
.
, -.· ...
. ·.:
Griffin
t~~tJJ?'. ...
~),t;Z:· . . . ·
·
. . . ·
.
du°nirnie"s
with
0
t~e:numbers
2 an<1-1\~wed · .
Blrsda, :tau,r:'t:ross,· Nancy·•: Jen~ericb
..
.. -~ ·,
:
.... ::
.
•;:,<·
·
.?.
•
:·
'
•-'.:c=i:<'-·; ·.
~iristtennlsteam~repairs
oil
.
the ten-· on. : · --·, . ._ ·· .
·
. · ~~.-;
'
/c: .. ,,. ·.
and·~•t~amp~n
)_~'the congratulations.
- Now :
·
that Christmas . .is : approachiQg, nis courts to •niake:.thern
.
"DM~iQn ·1,. .. ·
·'Marist' basketbali
t~nt.:....
a bid
.ti.
the
-
from The:Cifcle.for·winrung the Hudson
everyone ~us(preparehis !ist of desired "caliber.''. ,-
0
.f:·_;,:
.
·,-:: '':-:
.
~;::
.
. .
NCAA playoffs. :·
.ci ::·• :' '
..
.
Valley Division Bconference.
. _-:. ··
.
•C
prese.~t~'. _Belqw are my: recomn:1endatio?15
·
•· .:,
Dia~_
J.9~
~
a. 'beware' ~!~n: to warn:
·
Gary
Pedlow -
a
singing voice· as goo4 . ·.
GIi Padilla --
a
full season without an in~
for g1fts
,
~o
-
tho~e iaffihated with ·¥anst opposmg_teamsofher aggress1veness,hus-.-
.
as his slapshot. - .
'~
·
.
-... -
· jury;; .. ·.;., ,,·,
0 -
•
; . ~ .
A>,;,.:•:
s.-,-.. ,-,,,.,;..--.:-- .
. ·•· -
-
~ athletics: :--- .
.
:,
",·<
·
·, .-- ... ·.
.
. .- ·:
tie.and enthusiasm.:., ·
.
-
.-. ;
:..
> - . ; :. -·~ ·
Brian·Foley
,:_;_-agam~withou~ a penalty.
-
Marist
crew,_teltin~--i:~
;on~r device to .
·
. Wayne Cargill --
two pa~ m tlleMarist ·
Marist
hockey
team -
·a bus to take them
Jim
Mcdonald -
'"a· lesson on how to
help the rowers avoid floating debris in the
r~ord.booksforhimtofill.
>
.
· ·
<:,.::::
_toitsaway°games.·- -~-:- ::::-.
-
. ·
• ·
<' : ...
scoreagoal_."-:
_
•.... .
._ , ·Hudson •. · .• ·
-,.J ·· ,.:
.
. . .
·
. ,.. .. Jlon Dimmie
:"..a chance to go back_m ,:
Jay
'.'Yllllams
~
a day away from the
·· ~rge ~en -
a;•we_wantToqd' ban-
- ·
Marist
Red
Fox ~-
.a ·fe~ale fox to --
. umeanddeckthecoachwho_pulled-h1m,McCannCenter.·/
·
.
<
... .
nerwith'Todd'crossedoutand.George's- ·cohabitatewith.
,. : .;,:--
-
.. out of his final high.scliool football game :·~
Dic~-
_
Quinn .--::-:,
the !!official_ approval
name inscribed.-:
.. , . -. (-,--
._.
Marist women's· basketball · team
:· 10gards_shyofthe_1,000mark.
.
.".
sta.mp'' for the B-Guido's!Be there or be
. -
Marist
croMountry
team -
for Steve·
equal.time. · ·
•.
..
<· .·,,: :,,. -.. _ ._
. Mike Malet -
a team that is. not so con- . square' Basketball BEER blast and rally,
Kittredge to win the millicn dollar iottery _
Marist
Zoo Crew;:_
morcdec;;;iti. · ·
·
·
. '·
sistent.
.
that. has been cancelled. because of ;"no so he can refuse scholarships aiid affor,d to "
C.
Johh
Hegeman
--foot warmers .
. ·Ron Petro-
a vetoed DivistQn-l pro-
stamp."_·.·
.
, ·
.
.. -
__
comeloMarist.
· · .
.
.
. .-' .. ·
McCannCenter-·J,5()9seatsand3,SOO:'
posal.
,
-
· - ---
-
~·
Marist
Sid·
team -
some 'real'
.
winter
·
·,
:
a Jim,Cleary....:.
the finding of a new runn-
fans to
Jill
them to. meet new..:..NCAA -
· Steve_
Eggink·:.:-.
a speedy and healthy
.
weather.
·.
·
·
":
·
.
-
,
ing back froin Johnstown to fill the shoes
criter:ia. ·
· '" . . ..
recovery. ·
.. ··
·
.. · ·
Rich Steve~s --:- a "Microphone"_ by ofDimniie. ·
-
··
·-,,~" •
-
._
·
·.;:,,
... ., ... " .
Bob Mayerhofer :- a ,"you're welcome" Rem co as advertised on
t.
v. - ··
·
·
• · · - ·
· h '- .The.(;ircle
sporb
.
;t~ff -
K~n
Bohan, Bill
card from the NCAA council who designed ·
Steve· Smith -
scouts in the- McCann
Ivlari~t woine~•s volleyball team (co·ac · Flood, John Petacchi, Holly Sraeel,'Jeanne
.the Division I proposal._ :
Center
, , a-' ..
.
.
Marie Piccone, Jody Johnson, Linda
Le Gloabec, Joe Didziulis and Ian O'Con~
· · . Lynne Griffin -
a-video~tape of Bruce
John Dorii:,van...;. 30 pounds.
· Peter, Janice Willis,· Hilary Polawsky; . nor·- and I wish everyone involved with .
· Johnson to study, · ... • .
. ·
.
. · · · .
Tom Meekins-five inches.
· Kalby · ~)'.Con~er, __ Tanya_ .Whitebui;_st,
Marist athletics a ·Merry Christmas and
a:
-Bmce·Joiinson-avicleo-tapeof.Lynne
Marist football
team -
new tacklin~-.-Mari'! Barnard, 'Dina Chari~, Stacy':- HappyNewYtar.
:
......
----
·
-
27.10.1
27.10.2
27.10.3
27.10.4
27.10.5
27.10.6
27.10.7
27.10.8
27.10.9
27.10.10
27.10.11
27.10.12
27.10.13
27.10.14
27.10.15
27.10.16
''·)·
::
,
:·;
.:
,;,,_
,nd
,
noise as he walked
·
:
down
~
the corndor;
\
·
'
:Green
:
Hay~n
~
1n
,
197~~~
,t
ugljuncr.e until
,xt;t
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:
siudenis
·
siarte'cfaskingquestions
-
relatedfo
.
\
.
are
·
ge
_i
titjg'the m9st
_
ou
t
of.the progiiuii
/!
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· ·
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Maris
U
deology.
~
and
·-
similar
·
tpi~; Breen
~--:--'·
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:i
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,
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,
highly
·
motivate~
,:
imd
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to
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eager
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and
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turday
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:
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..
. Sciepph(ssociate
:
professor
·tr
psy~hology
:.
, ~otiv,atio~
'
(<>S~~e~~~
~
factor~ .. foll
_
ege
;
is
a .
pie
~h~
have n_o
_
t~Hig b~tter.
to
dQ
!_.
rh~y
~
:""
'.
The~e.iS:
.
a ~i~h _turno\'.er
·
~te'in
~hi
_
P!O·
-,
-~
-
::
:
·
:-
· at Maris't,
·
who
·
a1so
-
teach~- the
;
inmates,
0
:
_:
.
h1g~
~
status ~ym!>ol
_
m the r,ci~ty. Ther
_
~ ll~e
·
w~u~
~ !ull da~-at 'Y~~kSit_es
1
_clas~_es are m
. ,
·gram smce faihng ~udents are n'?t allowed
_.
-. _
_ .
?"
· ·
-:-.
said
/
'
'~Tlte
:-
inmates- fi
_
avci
_
a
·
"'.e'alth
·
of-
:
ex-
··
a~~lt
18~
mmat~
_
an~?,nlf
_
150
.
o~~ng~
:---
..
!he ~~enu:i~s anctfre~J1
_
m~ 1
_
s use~ (o
_
r stu
~
y
~
-
-
·
. ~
_
ut
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bars! so
_
they spen
_
d
_
more time st~d
_
y-
.
:
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:
·
-
~
-
·
..:.,---
~
perience resulting from crisis situations
_
an4
.
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1
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-
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:
pr9posal
~to
offei:_
,
_
a ·doctora,if m _Accc,Jgmg t~,tti~
_-
propo~al, afterthef1rst .
··
sei:vic
,
e
_ ,
~genctes
:
~ho
;
h.o!CS,.mastq- s
,
:
;or . P!Ck
_
them up aJ th1s
,
~1gher Jevel .
.
This is
·
a -
_
.
clinical/community
,
~ych<>l
9
gy
_
.·
(Psy
.
D),
,.
: class
·
of
.·
_
P~y .D
::
students- grad1;1~tes,
.
the
bachelo
.
r s_ degre~;
~0/o
are m~_eresfed wi~h
,
,:
•
. new mw;~et:Jt !s self-mterst on our part.''.
c
·
•
·
submitted
:
· bi DlUliel
,
~ir~
;-:
J>ro(essor
of
-
depa~tme~t
;
.mt~nds to
~
eek add1tiona~
.
ac-
330/o v~ry mterested in.the f~Y.P pr~grant;
. . .
.
The
,
mstuuuon of a Psy.D program
-
-
--
-
'
Psychofogy
;
wiU'go
_
b~fore
·
thefac_ulty
·
Fri~
__
·
cred1
_
tat1?n
·-
fr~ip
;
·
th~
-
-_
Amen can
_
"There 1s a l!'rg~ pop~lat1on m
,_
~eed
-.
a~d
_:
would
:
benefit- Jhe
:
,
,
whole
:
psychol~gy
,
-
day for a vote.
:-o,,.
-
:>;
>.
<-:~~-,
-
,.-.:.
::·~
-:
:
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_?sychc,log11:_3l Assoc1
_
at10(1.
<-
:·
-:
.:
.:
:~,
~
,
a!}other
~
~arge
.
popul
.
~t1011 that wants
.
to
. J
department, Kirk said.
"If
this program is
··
· · "The purJ>9se
·
or thi.
pr:o~osed
piogram
.
;
:
The
_
p
_
sy
.'
,If
progfam,
-
open to t
,
hose
~,
help,
n
:
Ki~k
said .
.
:
Ther!
_
are ~o doctoral ins
_
tituted t~ere
will
be
,
~
.
better selection of
.
is to educate and
.
frain
.
fun and part
-
time.•· holdi
_
ng a b~chelor
~
of
·
arts degree
-
or
a ..
programs m psy~h~lo~Y
~:°
,
the eight
.
co~:°tY'
.
. teachers
.
and c_ourses
·
and more and
_
better
_
students.at the dpctoraHeyel,'~ ,the pro-. - , mas~er'.s
'
:
degree ·in
_
Psychology,
.
differs·
_
M.id;Hud~on regi<>n .
.
_:\
:
;
•
< ·
~
'<
:
"
/
..
'resourc;es;''
.
he said. '.'There wm be interac-
posafsi~tes_;
-
:•th~
program requires
·
field
"'
frcinf
a
,
Ph
;
D progra'm, J(:irlc
,
sai
_
d; ''Th
.
ose ·
~
Kirk said he feelut i~ 1mportaqt to
:
m- - tio
_
n between undergraduate, master's and
.
experienc~ stan,ng irqhe fii'st
-
semes_ter
.
and
·
who h<>~d a)>h~D
,
are
.
.
_
trah1ed to
·
work in
stitute a grad~ate p~ogr~m ..
.
m
·
psY.chol()gy
·
d~c,~teJevel students
,
where they can
continu
·
es
.
throµgholit the entire
·::
progra1t1.
:
universities, do
-
research and teach,'' he·
·
becau
_
se
_
of~he decline
J
D
undergra~U
.
l!te Jearn
·
·
fron:i, each
-:
oth
7
r
.
and develop ro!e
.
The goal
J
s to
_
increase the n11~ber.
o.L
'
s
_
aid . ."Thos~ with a Psy. D a~e trai
.
ned to
.
.
·
stud~nts
.
of psych'?Jogy'.
_
The num?er
..
of
.
·mo~els.'.'
.·.- ·
0
•
•
:
..
·-,:
-
-
:
•
>
,
.
licensed psycholC>gists and thereby alleviate
·
-give clinlcalhelp to ~pie, ittrains people
·
psyc,hology _undergrad~ates _at
_
Man~t
has
Kirk
-
sees an
·
opum1~t1c Juture
-
!or: _
. the severe shortage of
,-
professionals to
topra~ice_psychology."
.
.
· ·
·
·
declined_ from
11.~
percent_ m
J975
t~
S.S
graduate pr~grams at~ai:ist. Ev!rY thir,d
.
: -
~
....
.
..
,
}
assist
,
those
.
with
.
_the
.
most severe.
-.
•.
The
,
mllrket for such
.
a program is large
percent m
1981.
."The way the trend 1s go-
s
_
tudent
_
_
coE}mg to_ Ma
_
n
_
st ~n the m1d
1980
s
/
psychologlcal disabiljties."
·
·
. .
and
·
in
·
demand
Kirk
~aid. Accordin~ to ari
ing,
if
you were to project it _you might ~ay •
_
will
be graduate s!udent," he said.
· ·
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-
-
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>>
All letters must be typed triple space with a 60 space margin; ani!·submltted
.
to the
·
-
:,'.
,
,
.
..
,.·
·
..
, .
_ · ·
Circle office
no
later than 1 p.m. Monday
:-
Short letters
·
are pn1ferred.Wneservi, the
·::
-..
;:
_.
·•.
• ; ·
right to edit all leiters
.
Letters must
bl!
.
signed, liut !'a
.
mes
:
may
be
withheld upon
'._
.
:
'
·
.
. ·
.
,
.
.
,
.
·
request.Letters
will
be
published depending upon avallabllltyolspace
.
:
·
·
.
·
: .:
·
,
.
:·
·'.'
·
,.
.
•
.
_.
,
.
-.
...
_
..
;
·<:,
,
•
.-_/
;_
.-
·
-
·:~~/
-
-
~
·
Mai°Ii Mall
_.
··
_
·
.
~--
.
,,.
"
'
"
To.the Editor
·
:
<'..
·
·
~
-
'.°:
. ·-
Celebr~tc and five cithe
/
,suc
•·
.:
·
.
.
·
I read the
'
artide conceming
·
the
"
.
c~ssful stores on the Mall/ along
:
:
,
.
.
Main Mairs
,
:
new
iniage in the
·
:
with Mr:Chickery; _,., . ·
.
•
\
s·
.·
,;,
_.>
;,;
. .-.
·_
;:
.
November 18th
'
issue
.
c,f The Cir-
' e
This was
"
not mentioned iri your
·
· cle with much interest. ':
article, but} feel
~k
Niessen;
-_
as
..
·
l
would like
·
to
)
point out,
·
a
·
so%
.
o"'._ne!,
·
_sho~Jd getdhe
.
·
.
however, that my
.
Uncle, Richard
·-~,
·
•
·recognition duep!~·
)
'-- -·
.
::'
,
.
..
·
.
Niessen
is the co':.owner
·
·or
.
-
.
··
·
· : ·
.
·
<::~
,
,:~ank you,
'
\
•
.
_
_
,,
Stacy Parsons
•
J
--
~
· - .
_
I
·
Bernstein
.
.
To the Edit~r:
'
to tallc to
.
any of the players about
..
:
.
.
Six months ago the firing of
.
Coach Bernstein's departure?
>
.:
.
:
.
· .
Danny Bernstein was news, but it
·
lfind itincredulous that C~aclf
;"
·
_.·
is riot ne"£S today.
·
·
·
Bernstein would even mention the
!
word
-
'~loyalty" or talk al:>out
:
his
,
.
•
.
Coach
·
Bernstein and Coach
.
departure.
,
Long
,
before
.
ariy
.
-
· ·
·
Petro do have different,coaching
-·
games were lost lastyear,
.
<::oach
,.
"
..
_
:
j~hHosophies
_
and personalities, as
Bernstein spoke to
·
me about his
_.
\
'
Bill
Travers states. Given
.
that;
marJ.euvering
;tQ
.
siu,ceed
-
Ron
'.
.
___________ ,.. _______ .., ____ ..., _______
.-
:
•
'
-------.1
·
·
doesil'.t it sound a (ad ludicrious
-
Petro as head basketball coach
:
-
.
~:
·
.
to
-
believe Coach Bernstein when
.
-
_,
,
'
·
he
-
says
"
_
He
(Petro)
-
-•
said that
If
anyone believes Coach Bern-
"
.
J
0
.
.
.
.
·
n
"
·.:..
t
.
h
·
;:
e
.
'
c
·
·
r
·
o
··
·
·
ct
·
maybe we can get you (Bernstein)
.
stein
,
turned
,
down two college
'
_
,
·
_
.
.
·
.
}
·
· -
.
_
>
.
.
_
·
W ·
'
"
•
'
-
•
··
··
·
_the job)'
:
·
·
.
coachi'ng jobs.to be an athletic
,
ad-
·
.,.
.-..
· Ron Petro has been at Marist
miitisirato'r; he also believes
John
'-.
:
_
.
_
:"<
.
1
.
.
.
for
·
11
years. Does anyone really
·
.
.
Belushi diedJrom an overdose of
\
Once again, Marist has made it through
An lnt
_
erestlng paradox
I
_
~
that while the
think he would turn over the pro-
·
Coca
7
Cola.
>
·
·
·· ·
·
another fall semester ~nd Is now busily
.
llbrary Is getting more crowded, ttte pub Is
gram to som
_
eone he does riot
,-
.
:·
.
_.<
.
·
,
.
-
;
. -·.
<'
·._
·
~
preparing for finals. Everyone has his or her
getting less crowded, There Is easily as .
.
agrcee with philosophically or to
·
c
·
T~~
·
_feeling
}f
t~e
-
Mc_Cliµlr
·
.
·
-
,
.
_
own favorite way and place either to study
much seatl~g In the pub as there Is In the
_whom he has
a
personality clash?
-
·:
f en_ter
_
~ on;
0
Poya
1
!
0
eve; a -
·
'.
,.
, ·
or
;
not to study for these wonderful exams.. llbrary.
,
Now
.
that one quarter of
.
the campus
_
-
.
·
_ -
·
.
·
,
_
· - _
_
· ..
· · . · ,_.-
:
ec_u~n, or on etro
.
~n
.
em-
,
_
--
.,
:
.
.
Those
who study do so In their rooms, In the
,
can't e~ter the pub, how about moving some
·.
·
-~anr
.
as
5
is~ant
,
coac~~ ten~
_
to
:·
s~e•f!
.
attempted to clot1d
.
th~ _at-
.
·:
:
•
•
·
lounges (if they are lucky enough
to
find the
of
.
that extra seating Into the llbra,:y?
Or
bet•
,.-
--
-
:
haye
-
.
~
--
-
,
.
hig
_
h
.
,
~pinion
.
of
"
mosphere, there~y underm
1
-!
11
!1g
·
.
:
-
.
··
•
.
,
1
.
•.
.
:
"
,
·
•
•
•
-
.-:
.
,.
themselves,
·
as they
~
ncver lose a
the
·
sm
.
ooth
.
function of.the entire
•,
_
·
t.v. of!),
m
secret
·
pla~es an~ ye~, so~e
te_r yet,
-
~ouldn
_
t Ql:li~
,
t hours l
_
n
,
_the pu~--0e
:~:"
.
-_
game
.::
·'Assistant
-
coachcs..arc
-
ex-
.·
department
;
.· •..
~.,,...
_
,.
__ -
.,
.
:_;
>;-
,:
·
·
_
,
.
.
·'·
_
_.
. _
study m
.
Jhe ll~rarv:
,
..:-
.
.
:
·
.
_
·
_ ·,
:
.
_.-
.
_,_.
--
__
,-_
nice?
,
Afterall, ttlls
ls a hlgh~r ed1,1~at~~nal.
_:
·'
·-:-·,
p~i:t
-
,..
at
·
rely_ing
·
on
·
·.
liindsight to
-
.
.
,
.
-
,
.
.-
.:
·
..
·
-
-
--
:
.
.
·
>.
...
.
·
-.
>
·
-
:
·_.-
· ·.
_
Really; they
-
~v.e~fs~udy ln
,
~l:IS:-llpraiy,~\tti
}
\
facll~~Y
:
Mosq>f tJ:ittS~
,
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8
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,
t9_
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·
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they
,
.
would n~t
:
:
~
·:
~
_
oil)~ d~y-
~~e
peoP.l
,
e
_
~t
-
~anst
_:
,
:
·,·.
_
. _-,
: -
.
■~""""""""_,
-
,,
·
·
."-
lts
"el<..+enc,lue" seat\nn
·
tor
-
one·hundred and
';,
~
•
:
18
,
~
·
"
,-
8
9!:"~
-
H~Jng,, :a
.
u~
-:
J,!
d
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~
~'.!'.!~~~t
,
:,,1,:,..have lost a parucular,game~ .
.
:.;·
·
,
.
, ar
_
~
.;
,
IOJDI
·
t~
.
appre~
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·
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alLJ~_at
,
,
.
.
·
·
.
.
:
·
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,~~iiv'c71etl'l'rtnic58Dh..;.......-·(tff' ...
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to study
~,,<.,,-,.,.,
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.::·,.·-'-'-•
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Rore-P.etro
,
has,done:.for-the
7
Col=-:
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·
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s
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occas. ona_
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,
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obviousiy
:-:_t(?O
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iate
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to
.'
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do
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anythlni{·~
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the.pJar.~~s
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·
.
_
.
o.f the spmste~ librarian andJ1er
.
SHH
-
~re
.:
'
__ .
abp~qf'.l_e
8 ~
9
,:tage
"
of
_
stuay
areas
·
this late,
-
.
,._
cl_e, oply
,
_Ro~me
·
Rtan:and B~
_
ce
·_
:·
_
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·
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:
f
: ·
gone from
:
the Marlst
-
ca,~p4s
.
forever). The
-
:.
In the
:
semester.
·
But
·
If
,
Marl st Intends
,
to
_
;
-_'_
-John~on
· ,
wei:e
.
,
B
_
ernstem recrmt~.
·.
-
.. ,-
.-:
;
_
.-
:
··
< ·
::
:;.
:
.< ·_
·
-
l_)ick Quinn
·
-
:.> : :
;.-~:,_;-
.
llbfary has been full
\
each week-Qlght sl~ce
.
·
keep
·'
tricreaslng
·
1ts population
_
every
,
ye
·
ar,
>··
.
Why _
_
di~
_.
Bill
:
:
'.fravers c
_
ho~se
~
not
_
:
·
.,
:~
~
Assistant~thleticDirecior
:
·
:;·
·
'
,
".'\ ·
,
,
..
:
·
the thlrd_,~eek of school
_
and !tt
.
mld-t~r
-
~~
-
I~
-
~
,
.:-'_
:·
s(?meorie In cha,rge
_
9
t
planning should start
-
;
.
. ,
-·
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.
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,
,
creased
,
campus p~p1Jlatlo~
:
:
.
~o.ul(!
:
9~!-'_Se
;
~:
'.'
·
the s,tudE!nts
_
g:oe~
,
IJl),
;
and
-
study areas life
;:
\ \
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:-::::C
;
\::.
:
;/~r:
,ii<::
Tug
'
of
War
'-}~<:
~:>
:;:;
+
·c--
.
problems
>
Well, here's a biggie,
_
admissions
-:,
·
.:
going
_
to become Increasingly more lmpor~
,
.L
:
·
:-c
,.
,.
,
,
·
/-
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Office;
NOVI
'.
that
,
.
yoiJ'v~
.
·
gof all
'.
'
-
these
,
).
tant.ln
:
f(ve years
.
where !re
!
,
he
1,000
extra
_
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--
.
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,.
students how are they
.
-suppose to
·
stay
if -
,
.
',:::
.
students
_
gotng to ~tudy?
: ,
;
-
_
,
•
.
.
.
. _
,
}p
tl,l~
_
~dnor
:
,
\
,·
,
:
.
.
(;:-;-:
:·
>
.
,
com~limcat_!= •
.
The aud1c11ces
-
at
·
_.._:.:
-
··
,
.
th~y
'
pav~n•t ·gotiP
,
l&ceJ? study? T·he
~orn:1
: :_
'::
·
t:,f.
9tc6u
_
rse there_ I~
'
alw.aY,s
_
the
.
p
·
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.
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:,
,Oi;t
,
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,
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0
t,n
;i
~e;
,
~tTuhdents
,
.t·
our p~rforman~cswere peautifuL
\
'
/
..
:·
.
halls
.
are far from quiet;
-
the
·
lounges: are
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brace y9urself, because here it
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·
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contribute to our. success
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tha.nk all of. our supporters
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who
·
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.
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,..... namely, our friends _ and be thankful for
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game last
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·
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game .
.
We
all
appreciate you
r'
sup-
·
~:.
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.
·
The activities of these
'·
weeks are always
'
,.
'
The classifieds ads this week are full of·
Crew
~
Cheerleaders and all those
port, especially the
crowd
behind
/
·
.
.
.
well-attended -
eyen
_
wl,h
.
papers ~ue and
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·
messa
·
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_
of "Merry Christmas." we at
The
m ·attenderice provided us with a
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the opp
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.
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test.sto take,.~arrs
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s~udents_get mto
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eyeryone a very happy and
·
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definitehomecourtadvantage.
·
great.
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Christmas spmt. Maybe enjoying the hoh-
_
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healthy holiday season, and look forward to·
_
-Yo
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.
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<>n
_
tinued
cheering
-
Ron Petro
'' 0
'
tiay season with frie__nds mak~s
_
all of the
·
-
;
continuing our work in
1983.
-
-
·
·
.
Head Basketball Coach
:.
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Sports Editor
--- ire e
·
:
·
· · .
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Advertising Manager
Associate Editors
·
-
.
Business Manager_
·
.
..
-
Rick O
'
Donnell.
-
-
:
Adve!11slng
Staff
..
.
.
.
-
.
.
Patti Walsh
.
'
_
,
·
_
Karen Lindsay
Classlfled
-
Lou ~nri Se
_
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-
Reporters
-
,
·
·-
~
-
,
.
.
'
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em
Traver~
.
.
-
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.
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..
·
.1im Barries
-,
'
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:_,;
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Adrienne Ryan
,
·
Caroline Krei
·
.·
Photography Editors
·
.
.
.
Jeanne LeGloahec
:
-
Lisa Cr!indall
·
.
Kyle MIiler
,
Christine Dempsey
.
.
~
-~
·
.•
.
.
.
,
.
:
-
.
.-·
.
-
..
-
:
'
Kevin Shulz
·
Photographers
-
-
:
-
Mlchael Ward, Sandy Olso~
Meg Adamski, Bernadette Grey;
.
.
J~ck D'Orlo, Gina Franclscovlch
C~rol Lane, Matthew Mcinerny,
✓"'
Ivan Navas, John Petac:chl,.
: ·
Copy Editors
.
/, :
.
:
'Lisa Crandall, Judy K~ox,
Richelle Thomas, Briari Kelly, •
.,
..
·
Mark Amodeo, Adam Their
Andrea Holland, Sue Vasallo,
Kathy O'Connor, Ken Bohan
Bill Fl_ood, Karen Magdalen,
:
c
·
.
Paul Crowell, Joe Paretl
Brian O'Keefe, Allee O'Keefe,
John Petacchl, Dawn onver
-
·
.
Holly Sraeel, Richard Copp
Pat Brady, Barry Smith
.
.
New,s Editor
· _
EIieen Hayes
Cartoonlit
Ted Waters
Faculty
Advisor
·
David Mccraw
.
.
-
-
-
\
-
.
~.,~,. -~----~----~ .. ----~-----------------------------0.ecember 9, 1982 -
THE CIRCLE· Pages--•
.
.
.
'
'
-
~
.
Chf}SJmaSJestivitieSfill
.
aii with holiday spirit
With the holiday season upon us, many
townhouse residents will take place_ in the
f~stivites have _bee~ planned on campus to . cafeteria.
fill students .with the holiday cheer .. · ·
During the preceding weeks, many of the
~
· You've probably seen . so.me bizarre · lounges and hallways of the dormitories
· h
have undergone a transformation from dull
s1g ts around campus this week as stuclents
and drab to colorful surroundings bursting
have been participating in Kris Kringles.
with the Christmas spirit as students com-
Students match their imaginations to see
who can come up with the zaniest acts for
peted in the Christmas decoration con-
their Kringles to perform. The Kris. Kr-
test.The creativity and imagination of the
ingles end tomorrow, but the festivities are · students will be judged and the winner an-
.
b
nounced on Saturday.
JUS
t eginning..
If
you are looking_ for warmth and
The College· Union Boa~d will_ help something out of the ordinary, the Omega
students get a jump on their Christmas Club has planned a bonfire at 8 p.m. on
shopping bysponsoring a trip to Manhat-
Saturday by the townhouses;
tan tomorrow. The bus will leave at
8
a.m.
"We hope it will get the whole school in-
and transport the holiday shoppers to volved in the Christmas spirit," said Diana
Rockefeller Plaza in New York City. The Kais~r, a member of Omega. Omega has
_ students will have until 8:30 p.m. to can-
printed up many favorite Christmas ·carols
vass the city, whether it be shopping for which will be sung as refreshments are serv-
bargains or just taking in the decorative ed._This will be followed by midnight mass
sights.
.
at Our Lady Seat of Wisdom Chapel.
The tentative price has been set at $4
Music and harmonies will fill the air on
and_ signups are at Donnelly and the . Sunday when the Marist College Singers
cafeteria.
present a traditional holiday lessons and
A Christmas semi-formal will be held at carols service at 4 p.m. in the chapel. The
the McCann• Center tomorrow. Admission service will include a candlelight proces-
is fifty cents and food will be served and a sion, a traditional telling of the Christmas
cash bar available
story and performances of . international
Also tomorrow,- the holiday cheer will be and contemporary Christmas carols.
flowing as Christmas social gatherings are
In keeping with the spirit of tradition,
held on campus. Leo, Sheahan and Cham-
the classic film "Miracle on 34th Street"
pagnat's celebrations
will
be held in their will be shown Sunday
aC'7
p.m. and 9:30
respective loun,ges. The gathering for the. p.m. in the theater.
Freshmem prepare Christmas tree for lighting in the courtyard. (Photo by
Chris Dempsey)
Seniors say go·odbye · early
by Bernadette Grey
&
Andrea Holland
school where everything is on a smaller
scale," she said.
"If
I had to change things,
While Mari st freshmen are worried I would have gone to a larger university."
about taking their first college finals, some
Another fashion design major, Denise
seniors are anxious about taking their last.
Pecchio, transfered to Marist for the
A
number of Marist residents interview- fashion design/retailing program and was
ed last week are looking forward to also disappointed, she said. "The only
graduating this· January and leaving reason I stayed was because of the friends I
everything about college, except the social have made.
If
I
didn't get in with good peo-
life, behind.
pie,
I
would have left."
"I
wanno get out and prove to myself
Communication arts major Ed Kenny
that I can put into practice all the theory also would have preferred to have gone
that I have learned," said Bonnie Blan- somewhere else. "l would have gone
chard, a communication arts major who is someplace else -
with more notoriety," he
graduating one semester early.
said.
The idt:a of_graduating also makes Elise
Kenny's main complaint was thet
A~g1;1illa, a fashion design/business major, .Marist's growth was. b:ing,~ind~red by the
l~---
•
<
--·. - --_
happy but she·wm mis:phe foriand her ,lac~ ~f faculty, '1e
s~1d. _ .
Manst has_ the
_
.
. fri~nds; .•
she'.
saia;:,'
:The
be~f
asset I
gained .
!l~~t ,:qui_p'll\~~'-.?~\riot \nc-fac,u\t.-y t.o t.ca~b.--:'
·
"
•~W -~
~---,;c.-,-...,-
.
_. ,.from coUege are all the fnends'
l
made,'-'•. it, he sa1~. , • • , . ,
...
_
;
.
t, -
.
Christmas
Senio-_. citizen seJJs dolls for craft 'show:.'
.
she said. "The. residence
life
was the best"
Complamts
at,out th_e academic side of
held last ·saturday In the campus center.
part ofit
all." ·
. · _
the coHege were also given by Blanchard.
..
·
· -- crafts
(Photo by Chris Dempsey)
Overall; the January graduates ·looked··
~•1
do_not feel t~~t I was
~hal!~nged
enough
back favorably on the Marist residence
life.
m my courses,
she said.
They
should
"The Marist community enabled me to have been more diverse."
Happy
.
Holidays!
.
.
_
-~,
,
Se
_
tf:you
riext semester.
-
T
_
he Circle
Friday:
Meeting:
Student Development
Committee 12:30 p.m.
Candlelight
.
Formal Dance
10p.m.
McCann
Saturday:
Film:
"Miracle on 34th
Street" .
·Theater
Christmas Decoration
Contest
Christmas Dinner
Dinning Room
House Socials
Kringle Prizes
Lounges
Bonfire
Midnight Mass
Chapel
Marist Swim Club
Winter Meet
Sunday:
Lessons and Carols
4p.m.
Film:
"Miracle on 34th
Street"
7
p.m.
&
9:30 p.m.
Marist Swim.Club
Winter Meet
maintain many'·friendships from freshman
Chris Barnes, a communication arts ma-
yea
'
r," Blanchard said.
jor, said that many of the problems with
Dick Daronco a history major, also com- · the.school stem from a lack of communica-
plimented Marist life. "The quality of !iv-
tion at all levels. "The communications
ing here, as a whole, is high compared to program is fine, but the communication
some schools I have seen," he said.
between individuals and groups is, more
. Angulla, who lived· on-campus for all often than not, unsatisfactory," he said.
four years, said that a small school like
Pecchio particularly looks forward to
Marist also has its disappointments. She waving goodbye to the registrar's office.
blames her let down with the fashion design "My biggest problems were with the
program on the small size of Marist. "My registrar, said Pecchio. "To tell you the
major, fashion design, was totally disillu-
truth, I am waiting for Marist to tell me
sioning. I guess it was that I went to a small that I can't graduate," she said.
Monday:
Final Exams
Tuesday:
Final Exams
Wednesday:
Final Exams
Women's Basketball vs.
Montclair State
7
p.m.
Thursday:
Final Exams
The guys at
Dirt
Pit Manor capture the Christmas spirit.
(Photo
by
Chris
'i
-
Dempsey)
·I
j
i
--•Page 4 ·
THE CIRCLE•
December
9,
1982
Cutting
class:
Who
·
decides?
by Susan Vassallo
few years, the school has been making an .
Does a student have the right to decide effort to ragain some of the structure lost
. not to attend class? Theoretically, yes; in in the '60s era. "Perhaps now is a good
reality, not always.
. time to review that attendance policy and
The Marist College Catalogue reads, implement a standard rule." She used three
"Regular class attendance is a primary excused absences as an . example. This
responsibility for all students." However, would make
it the same for all.classes.
in some classroom situations, the student is
Jake Maness, an instructor at Marist,
penalized if he or she misses class. .
thinks a standardized attendance policy
According to Denise DeVincintis, a may cut down on cutting, but that it may·
senior at Marist, one of her professors re-
not necessarily be the best move. "We
quires a five-page paper on all material don't want students in the classroom that
covered in a missed class after
'
two allowed don't want to be there."
cuts.
·Maness said he feels that as you'ug
DeVincintis said she feels it should be the adults, it should be part. of. a student's
student's perrogative
to
miss as many training to make decisions such as whether
classes as they want. "We're paying for
this education.
If
we choose to miss a class, or' not to go to the class on their own.
that's our business."
·
He also said that it is up to the individual
Director of Student Academic Affairs instructor to make the class interesting
and Services Liz Nolan agrees with · enough so that the students will want to at-
DeVicintis. "At some point, a young per-
tend.
son has to stop being directed by others and
Nolan said she feels the student that
take responsibility for self direction."
doesn't go to class is making a statement ·
The catalogue's statement on absence about his attitude towards learning and the
was reviewed about four years ago by six value of a college education. "They are ·
tenored faculty . members. According to cheatiT1g themselves because they're not
Nolan, although it states that attendance is getting all they can out of what is
the student's responsibility, it is also available," she said.
understood that the instructor should be
There are a number of students who.
told prior to the class and that all don't understand the critical · nature of
assignments are required to be made up;
what U1ey are doing when they are late and
"There is a loss to the students if they're absent. According to Nolan; the freshmen
not there to benefit from the instructor," mentors are ·available for the purpose of
said Nolan.
getting,.to students before .they run into
DeVincintis also feels that there are times academic difficulty. .
when there is no extra benefit from the in-
structor at all, making it undesirable to at-
Nolan says thatrecords indicate a major
tend class. "We can read the text ourselves. contributing factor on why students don't
Some teachers teach right out of it,,, . said make it in school is that they have not been
DeVincintis. "They should have something attending classes.
"If
a-.student is absent
more to add so that it's worth while to at-
continually and there is no contact with the
tend class.•,
teacher,. the instructor, in;terms of applying
Core courses and elective classes . are the catalogue's grading system, is obliged
where most cuts take place, according· to. a to take that into c9ns
.
id~ration
Marist sophomore. "You're made
to
take
Since there is no school~wide attendance
core courses you hate, and you're closed rules, the student should.abide by the mies
out of the electives you really want."
of the individual ·classroom. "The students
The catalogue does not specifically state should be guided by how the instructor ap-
;
any mandatory attendance rules, it is up to plies
·
the · attendance policy
in . the
/
.
. the individual . instructor to alert their catalogue," said Nolan. ''It should be
f
;
students of t\!~ir.;poUcies, ac1::or<,i_ing
fo
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the~.coune.,-~u"' \t ,-hasn',f,,aandtthc,. student: .
.
wants to know, they shoi.dd
ask:"
·
: ··
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.
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-
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-
ATTENTION
Students who·. have belongings : stored in Champ,agnat
Hall basement -' please make arrangements to remove
them before
·
·
NOON, FRIDAY 17th DECEMBER
After that time, anything pr~sently in storage will be con-
sidered the property of Mari st College.
M ichaei Bowman
Residen·ce Director
Champagnat Hall
MAMA'S DELI
·
·
&
PIZZERIA
Now
that the
cold
weath,er
is
here,
why
come out into the··cold, ·
call me for all·· your lunch time,
and dinner needs. We deliver.
Call. ·471-3443
218 Main Street
WE DELIVER
WEDEL/VER
CLUBS AND
ORGANIZATIONS
:
:
December 15, at noon, is the deadline to
submit proposals to the Friends of Marist for.·
the annual
gi_ft
from-the Flea Market ~. Satur-·
:
.
day Feb.
12, 10
a.m -
4
p.m.·
in t.he·.rv,9Ca~n:.;
. Ceht~r .· (Space :_rental:_
$20
·tora·
10 ':
;x
:_10:'.:_·, __ , ·
spot). Call· extension·
278
for ·more,.i~f6rn1a-··:
tion·.
_
· · ·
·
· - :
.
·
. · .· ' · :;-
-:>•)~
:
:· ·· · ·· ::-.,
_
_:. .,
_
;
.
...
\
' '
.
DELI
Quality Sandwich Meats ·
At.Most
Reasonable Prices
S~lads • Soft Drinks-~
Ic~_C:reafil-'
.Open Nightly 7: 30
p.m.·~ i·a.ID~,·;
See us for your ffoorparti~~:,;::,
.
•..
,-
,
.,; ·J:
!
:
'
l . ; , :
Special Platters A
vaiI1iliI~:- .'
a
--~--------------•------------------December
9,
1982 ·
THE CIRCLE· Pages--•
Special services helps
.
the learning disabled
·
'. by Christine Dempsey
.
Picture
·
yourself sitting in a classroom
· reading the blackboard as any other college
· student. Only certain words bec9me jumbl-
'.
ed and do not make any sense.
This is the plight of the student with a
learning disability .
.
Mrs. Deane Perriera, Director of Special
.·
Services, defines a
·
person with a learning
,.
disability as " a person
·
who has difficulty
:
:
in processing what they see or hear."There
·
~.a
·
re currently 11 students attending Marist
i
C91lege who are enrolled'in the.Special Ser-
.
vices Learning Disability Program.
·
"No one knows what causes these learn-
.
ing disabilities," Perriera said,"so it's dif-
ficult to help these students.'•
·
A common problem that plagues these
- learning disability students is dyslexia.
:
Dyslexia, which is
.
a visual perception pro-
.bl em,· involves
·
the reversal of words and
letters.
Students who have dyslexia have to learn
·
how to decode words and then put those
·
words in the context of a sentence. "It's as
:
if they face a pothole in the
·
road
: everywhere they go;" Perriera added.
·
. Learning disabled students at Marist
who have not been able to master decoding
·•
are aided by Susan Franke, the Learning
: DisabiHty Specialist. Franke helps these
i
students· with
their
;
stu!}y
\
skills by teaching
;:.
them
-
how to process and organize their
,:
thoughts.
.
.
_
;
The main problem L.D. students with
'.:
auditory perception problems face is lack
i'
of retension, Perriera said.
t
These students cannot properly process
.
.
~
what they hear.
.
.
.
Perriera said "Since they don't receive it
:
well; they can't express it well, either."
.
The assignment of a term paper for a
,
;
.
class presents a
·
problem
.
for learning
; disability students because these students
:· often have a hard time
·
·
dealing with
;:
abstract thought according to Perriera.
f
"The material has
to
be cut and dry, or else
·
it gets caught up in the processing," Per-·
riera added.
One of the many ways in which Special
Services helps the L.D. students is to allow
·
them to avoid taking Philosophy in their
freshmen year, since it deals with abstract
thought.
·
·
Perriera said that freshmen with learning
disabilities have a double load fo carry. Not
only is he independent for the first time but
L.D
.
students "have to learn in a much dif-
ferent manner."
·
These students are also encouraged to
take only four courses instead of five. Per-
riera added, "Only so much knowledge can
come in at once."
Three additional ways in which Special
S~rvices helps L.D. students is by providing
tape recorded textbooks, notetakers, and
tutors, according to Perriera.
,
·
Extended time for
tests,
with permission
from the instructor, is another feature of
Special Service's Learning
_
Disability Pro-
gram. Frequently, tests have to be read to
the L.D. students, arid often their answers
· must be dictated back to the tutor.
When questioned about the
·
validity
•
of
this testing program, Mrs. Perricra describ-
. ed
.
the tests~ which take place in the Special
Services office, as being based on a type of
honor code:
·
According to Perriera, the faculty has
been
·
very good in allowing the students to
take tests out of the classroom. "Unfor-
·.
tunately," she added, "we ran into
;a
few
.
situatins with the testing program." Per-
riera said that
·
it
is very hard for testing
tutors, who have been prompting and in-
structing a studenta all along, to avoid giv-
ing him the answers. She said that this is
.
·
why a new testing
·
program will be in-
.
stituted in January. In the new program,
the L.D. student will have a different
•
testing tutor than his regular tutr, Perriera
·
·
said_
Counseling ,is also
·
provided for L.D.
,
students. Perriers said that there is no ques-
;
tion that L.D. students have academic
{
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Glubs
COillpete
for
4nd
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annµal
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gift
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a 10;
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spot. •
.
~Bootlls
_
c
_
ould b~
_
us~~ for
.!
·-'
•
'
.
·
-
·
.
.
·•
_
·
.:,-
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. - ·
.
_
--
_·
··
~
"
'-·
-··
-
·
':
·.
- '
such things
..
as
'
selliiig
~
raffle ticfels,'!-
.'
slie
:
·
The Friends of Marist are sponsoring the said.
·
i
second annual flea market Feb. 12, 1983,
The Friends will have their own booth
•
·
from
10
a
:
m. to
4
p.m. in the Mccann this year. According to McKiernan, their
·
Center.
.
.
_
profits go directly to the annual gift-
The Friends of Marist raised more than
·
_
"White elephant" donations are en-
."
-
$2,000 at last year's flea market, according
·
couraged and appreciated from the Marist
·
to Karen McKiernan, chairman of th~ community, according to McKiernan.
·,
event. These funds were donated to the "The faculty was very generous last year
·
Marist Singers to assist in funding their trip and
I
look
_
for their support again," she
to Italy last spring
:
said.
-
The flea market is open to all of the
For more information about the pi'o-
Marist community. Any organization or pos~ls
.
and the ~lea Mark~t, con_tact
.
chartered club can submit a proposal to Chr!stme Lapham
m
the Public Relations
receive the Freinds annual
.
gift, said Office .
.
McKier~an. Proposals niust be submitted
Prohosal req
·
uireme_ nts
by December. 15: The proceeds go to_ the
:y
organization most in need for
-
proJects
which wiU-"directly benefit the students, "
she said.
''The flea market is the Friends biggest
fund-raising event," said McKiernan. "It
was so successful last year that we decided
to do it again." According to the chair-
man, the flea market was not only well
received
.
by all of its
.
vendors, but by the
·
students and the Poughkeepsie community
as well.
"It's a lot of fun and students can
·
find
·
valuable things for their rooms," she said.
.
• 'The choice of trinkets is endless. You can
find almost anything from socks to books
and even flowers." Admission is free to
both browsers and buyers so it's worth the
trip just to look, said McKiernan .
.
Students are allowed to set up their own
·
booths for a $10 space rental fee accordng
to McKiernan. Vendors are charged $20 for
The Friends of Marist organization is en-
couraging all eligible groups to submit pro-
posals for the annual gift from the Friends
of Marist flea market.
Proposals
.
from chartered clubs, stan-
ding organizations and departments will be
eligible for consideration, provided that
they
·
do not alrady receive substantial
fuding from other sources at Marist. Last
year the Marist Singers received $2,000 for ·
the flea market.
The members of the group must be will-
ing to help with the flea market and
preference will be given to those not
previously funded by the Friends of Marist.
Proposals should include
a:
description
of the special poject or need to be funded.
.
Forms for submitting proposals may be ob-
tained from the Office of College Advance-
ment and submitted no later than Dec.
15th.
p
ris
Q
n-----------•m•o•ti•va•t•ed~.•
-
g•e•t •th•e~ir•
_
~de•g•re•es-a•n~d•w•o•r':"'k~i•n
continued from page 1
to continue, but those w~o do succeed have
3.5 or above grade pomt averages, says
Scileppi. "Motivation is enhanced
?Y
t~e
structure of the facility," s~y Scdeppi.
"They're not going to
.
be datm& or gomg
Class time is a special occasion for one
student who says, "it is a vicarious ex-
perience that allows me to mentally
abstract myself from the four walls of the
prison and Jree my mind
.
from the mun-
dartei:• al~~
:an
~ccasi~n that is refreshing
and challenging for Scileppi, he ~ays. "The
greatest feeHng comes from seemg people
·
tu
.
rri
around completely to become
Fi
the field. Many people's lives were changed
as a direct result of the program. It has pro-
.
vided many inmates with an opportunity to
utilize talents and learn skills that would
not have been realized and developed
otherwise," says Scileppi.
Breen says he feels the whole experience
is worthwhile when he
.
thinks about the
Marist graduates of the progra_m who now
have good jobs and are raising families.
The recidivism rate, (number of inmates
who were released from the facility but
were sent back), for the general inmate
population is 70 percent. Only 12 percent
of the inmates who completed the program
returned to the facility.
Dick Daronco
ability. She added that they are "very in-
telligent people," pointing our that most
have high to superior I.Q.s.
"Since
they
have to learn in an unusual way, they are
unusually resourceful," she said.
Pcrierra also
.
said that L.D. students
must be motivated. She added "They have
to sacrifice
-
their social life to succeed
academically."
,
·
·
Orie student who Mrs. Perierra described
as starting out with a lack of confidence is
Dick Daronco; currently a Resident
Ad-
visor in Champagnat.
When asked about the Special Services
Program, Daronco, who will be
·
the first
graduate of the Learning Disability Pro-
gram, said, '' It has helped me graduate col-
lege;
l
seriously
.
·
doubt
I
could h
_
ave
graduated without it.''
Daronco did express concern for the
financial difficulties that a L.D. student en-
counters. Special Services, which costs
$700 a year for the L.D. student, is called
''an additional financial burden for
the stu-
dent," by Perriera.
When asked about the level of guidance
the Special Services program provides,
Daronco praised the program by claiming
that it gives "emotional support as well as
support with classwork." He said, "There
is always someone there to help me."
Inquiries about the program have been
coming from places as far away as West
Germany and Japan, according to Per-
riera.
Perriera said, "The Learning Disability
Program is a kind of statement on the part
of the college that Marist has faith in these
students."
Day
for
peace
Monsignor John Ahern speaking at last
week's
Connvocation.
Ahern's
theme
was
"The Absence of War,"
Government after loan defaulters
by Richelle Thomas
The federal government's crackdown on
borrowers who default on government
loans is beginning with the National Direct
Student Loan (NDSL) program.
The Department of Education is focus-
ing on colleges with poor student loan
repayment records and individuals who
have defaulted on their loan repayments.
Legislation proposed by Senator Charles
Percy (R-Ill.) would allow the government
to report defaulters to commercial credit
bureaus, charge interest and penalties far
unpaid debts and expand access to Internal
Revenue Service files for addresses of
defaulters. The proposal would also allow
the federal government to take part of the
paychecks of federal employees without
going to court.
.
Under the new rules, colleges with
default rates above 25 percent will no
.
longer be eligible for new (NDSL) funds.
Colleges with a default rate between 10 and
25 percent will be penalized by a reduction
in funds. There will be no effect on colleges
with default rates below 10 percent.
Schools can still receive new loan funds by
turning over default cases to federal collec-
tors, but their share of the money is lost to
the Treasury Department.
·
In the NDSL program, money is con-
trolled by each college, so that funds can be
recycled as debts are repaid. Each year, at
the end of June, colleges are required to
submit a Fiscal Operations Report to ac-
count for how their financial
·
aid for that
year was spent. NDSL funds can be used
only for student loans and administrative
purposes.
Since 1958, the program has provided
$7
.5 billion for about 6.5 million students.
Accordng to
.
Education Department
reports, $645 million is in default. Current-
ly, the national default rate is 16
.
3 percent.
Compared with the national rate,
Marist's default rate of 9.76 percent is
relatively low
.
The reduction from last
year's rate of 12.196 percent, according to
college
..
'icials,
has made this year the
best for the NDSL program at Marist.
7
l·
,.
i
.
.
.
.
- -
·
Page 6. THE CIRCLE.
Oecem~e,
9, 1982---------------------------------------------
)
.
.
.
.
LEAV
·
E
-
SOYOU
·
CAN COME·BACK
·
?
:
.
.
The college residence
·
halls will close and no services will be available
.
from December
·
17 to
J
an
_
uary 23
~
·
1983.
.
.
-
.
.
The residence halls will clos
·
e
·
at 11 :00 p.m. on December 17, 1982
·
·
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
The last meal of theterm ·will be lunch on December 17. Dinner will be
.
served on Sunday, January 23, 1983.
.
·
On or before December
J
7, rooms must be cleaned; ail belongings must be taken home,
···
except furniture.
,
or those items that can be left in a dresser drawer or in the closet. The col-
·
lege will not assume any liability for
·
lost
or
stolen or damaged items. Your departure
.
directly affects
-
the
·
ability
.
of students and professional residence staff to complete their ·
- .
work and m·ove toward their own holiday plans: therefore
you are to leave
the residence
_
-
halls in an orderly fashion on the day of your last exam.
Rein ember that
the
following f ac-
..
..
.. -.
·
.
.
.
tors will be central to any decision on allowing a student Jo
.
occupy a room in Marist
_
residence halls for next semester even if you have
-
registered:
1. Disciplinary Record
·
·
2.
Academic Standing
3. Vacating of room on. day of the~r
_
last exam.
4. Condition of room at departure (cleanliness and lack of damage).
Students who have been denied a room for next'semester will be notified by January 7,
1983, if they have registered.
If
you do not intend to r~turn to the residence halls in January, or if you have been assign-
.
ed to a diff er,ent room,
.
please be sure_JQ retu
.
tri
·
your ke.y.Jo
.
t
_
qe
Jesid~nt d_irector.
·
.
·.··
.
..
.
.
.
_
.
:
·..
;
:if/·f,
:;.:_~
:;:
2
~
2
--
·
:
:~':
·~···
-:
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... _
,
:.
·
Failure to l~ave youf_roomiIJa
.
clean state can
.
result in a
_
$25.00 fine.
.
;
·
..
·,
.
_
·
Failure
·
to leave on the
·
day of your last exam can
·
result in low housing priority for
_
fall
1983.
As well,
:
an authorized early retur~ to the dorms can alsb result in low priority.
.
.
:
·
·
DEPARTURE PROCEDURES
·-
Each R.
_
A. must inspect each room, file the room inspection form. Students must make an
appointment with their
R.A. to have their room inspected,.
·
Upon leaving, you must secure
the room (lights off, appliances disconnected, curtains closed and door locked). Trash
bags will be distributed b_y the R.A. to each resident on December 13 and 14.
-
We encourage you to do your part to make this period enjoyable for all!
·
On behalf of all the residence hall staff, we wish you a safe, enjoyable and Happy Holiday
·
Sef!son, and offer ou.r Best Wishes for the coming New Year. _
_
.
See you in January!
.
..
..
:;:°~,~:''
111,.,1111
,_
-•~,•-.·!Ill,.,,.■.
... • .
.
,•,,
------------ii!i--------riiiii••·•.-i------•Oecember
9, 1_982 • THE CIRCLE· Page
7
,_;.;
. ··>.
" : -.. · :~..;-.,.' · .. : .
■lilllliliiill
\
(_·
~
.... ·-.:~:_~-_\·:·>·<·-;./(~:.•:_·_'.>···· ..
_: .• _:
.
·•·
_,,.,._,.
-
._.~-:?-:_:r-·•:-'._· ---.:~- · -·
~r.:
- ,.·
--
_ . -
. _
_ -'
· _··
_·
·
·
~-H.JJjhe'f·:-:eQUc~ti<)fl.::-'·_:,Iiiv.esting __ Jn·--
:
America'·s
f
u
tur_e
'
. ,:'. by Dt~~sJ.~Murray, .
, which can be as high'.·as $12,000 at some. in the .world in per CaJ)ital gross national . colleges and universiti~s are replaced by tax
- ,1
. ;.- .•
> ..... :-: · ...
< · ,
7 _.
· · ·
. ': ,, ,
private ·college, with a package of support .. product, · the Federai , government is
supported institutions, the struggle to
_ The greatest resource thatany nation has· from personal resources,· family contribu-
sacrificing investment in education for
preserve academic freedom will have been
is its people. Thus, tax dollars' spent on - tions and Federaiand State aid.-
·
.
.·
short-term economic relief. Nationaily,
lost." Yet current administration's budget
. higher education must'be viewfd ·as_ ~n ig- · ; Since 1965, the Federal government has
funding for 1982-~3. edu~ational programs . policies are increasing _the number of
vestment rather than an expenditure.
- .
allocated almost $20 billion
.in .·
loan
dropped by $29 million smce 1979-80. New students at public universities, at an in-
~he 12 ini~Ho~ young Ame.ricans .enroll- _ \ guarantees and. interest subsidies for col- · York's students will receive $11 million less creasing cost to the taxpayer, and creating
ed m o~r n~~ipn s more than 3,000 co11eg~s·_: lege and university students, plus billions . in direct student aid from programs such as , a higher education system where only the
and uruvers1t1es. would, agree tha~ ~here is
more in direct financial. aid to students
Pell ·Grants, Supplemental Educational rich can afford private college, and the
!1?
more_pro~l!ctive an~ bro~dly beneficial·. • most in need:· The U;S; Congress believed
Opportunity Grants, College .Work Study, - middle class and poor are limited in choice
~
· myestment . m. the nation's furture than
that these funds would be a fruitful invest-. National -Direct Student Loans and the to public universities .
. higher educatio?, Our ,future ·.computer
ment in the nation's future·. The aid has
State Student Incentive· Program, than
Strong Federal support is crucial to
· scie_!l-tists, dpctors, lawyers, t~~her~, jour-
broadened educational opportunities for .. three years ago. Yet, over the last three
higher education and the future economic
nah~ts, busmessmen,, and pohtical leaders_
Americans,. providing accesst choice, .and
years, higher education cost increased by
growth of the country. The "savings,. pro- .
are today•s college students. And the future
promoting equality. among citizens .. This
ove(~5 percent. Thus the amount of unmet
posed by Federal budget cuts to higher
.. growth ofthe.-entire country depends, not
support was in keeping with the history of
need to be funded from studen and parent
education represent only a· minuscule part
only•,eccinomically,
·:~µt-
culturally and
America's · post-secandary educational
resources has substantially increased. This
of the Federal budget. These savings come
socially on their. continue~ d~velopment. . · . system,· which has growri
in
its ability to
demand for greater family financing comes
at a high price. The scientific and
. Presently; most ·or the .country's college · utilize the intellectual, moral and 'creative
at a time when unemployment is rising to
technological competitiveness of ·the U.S.
_· students come from homes with incomes of potential of its citizenry.
.
levels reminiscent of the great depression.
will be won or lost on our American cam-
less than $30,000. In fl:lct, the fainilies of
Yet, under the current administration,
President Reagan, delivering the com-
puses.
many student~ earn. less then. $20_.~ ... this grow.th' h~ _riot only stopped, but
mencement address at Notre Dame Univer-
Dennis
J.
Murray is President of Marist
.·) ,
These students pay for the cost of tu1t1on,
reversed. While the U;S. slips to tenth:place
sity, said:
"If
ever· the great independent
College .
. , ·MaristStude-izts ict.taSte,dfother
·
side.
()J
cl(!Ssroom·
-
I
•
,
by Jim
Leonard,-.: . · ·
fir~t or second grade level. "The personal . teacher in special educatiort.C'My_ car tends
.. ,
contact I have-with the kids is the best part
nofto run when it's wet ...
"One boy is madly in love with me. He of my job/' said Bovee.
Hill also pointed out that she felt
tells everyone that he's married to me, but I . · · · To become involved in . the student
ostracized from campus life because much
don't mind. Besides he's real enthusiastic teacher program, . juniors must . carry at
of her time was spent at Mount St. Mary's.
which isjustwhat'I need."
·
. least
a
2.5 cumulative average overall and a
"It got to a point where I felt lik~ l wasn't
The speaker is Jeanette Bovee and the 3.0 average in their chosen field. In addi-
even a part of Marist because. I was in
boy is not her boyfriend, but one of her tion, a student teacher candidate must have
Newburgh so much,•' said Hill.
sixth grade pupils in a special educaiton written
·
recommendations by
·
three
I
Marist.offers two programs in student
· program. Bovee- is one of eleven Marist ' members of the Marist faculty and have to
teaching, secondary education and special
seniors who student tea~h in D.utchess be interviewed by Nolan; Upo.!!_ completing
education. In secondary education student
County school districts.
.
these requirements, juniors must split their
teachers specialize in teaching one subject
Student teachers take over.' the respon-
schedule between Mount
St. Mary College
area to students at the junior high and high
sibility of teaching eleµientary and secon:.. in Newburgh and Marist .. The students take
school level. Student teachers in special
dary level studeiµs in realclass room situa: two courses at Mount St. Mary in their first
education emphasize all subject areas in
tions for 12 credits says Elizabeth Notari; semester and four in their second, while
their lessons, but in more generalterms.
the direct_or of teacher educadon. :-. .
taking their remaining courses at Marist.
. Both Hill and Bovee said they prefer to
strengths and weaknesses,•• said Hill, "By
grouping the students according to their
ability, none of them can get lost in the
shuffle."
When Bovee and Hill graduate from
Marist this spring, they
will be qualified to
teach in elementary education as well as
having a certification to teach in special
education.
Asked if
their dual certification
will help in landing a job, Bovee and Hill
seemed optimistic about their future.
"Even though there is a larger number of
teachers in the field right now, special ed.
certification makes you more marketable
because every- school 'district is finding a
need for the program," said Hill.
Bovee,- who is enrolled in the special
Marist seniors who are student teachers · t_each in the special _education program
education program of. student teaching,' look back·at their junior year with mixed_
.
· because they can give more individualized
Asked what the key to success is in stu-
teaches children who aie classified as learn-
emotions, agreeing they loved the program . attentiori to their students in the areas of dent teaching, Bovee replied,
"YOU
must
'ing disabled<or mentally impaired ..
Cur-:-~·buthated the inconvenience.of tra\'.·eling to: Janguage arts, spelling, reading and math .. be yourself.
If
you allow yourself to get
,
I ·'· •.· •.. •, ' .•..
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.
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. '
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Jn'
the:Arli11.gton schooL<fyioi.int
SL
.Mary. ~·The: worst"pari
of
the
.
. · . "T~e ,kid~
:a!e
placed
in
different groups Close to your'students, the kids
wil\
respond
..
. '{/.}\(-\,, -;-l.:
\./district,:~ovee is teaching
a:!fself
¢'ontained ; prograin
'/
(
was:<
providing' : your'·: own
.
ac,#rdirig .'·
fo .·:
their . ability
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so - stuaenf ·
bi\cam\n" aifrl'TQ'ff\nf 'ff\.\~
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class;>• sixth grade students'who read o~: a> ~raitsportati<Jn/~·said -Janerfiill, a
stiJ<:lent
teachers,, can . focus on their studentsf --~
en
you ee
1
ea rea
teac
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<·L
Campus Center
Rm._249-_.--
- 9;30pm-l=-00am,
_<'·
o·uRING FINALS ·wEEK
.
.
Sun.Dec.12 · thru Thurs.:Dec.16
*-
Refreshments available
Sponsored
by
CSL ·&,.Class Offi.cers
;THE COLLEGE· CLOWNS
· Do you have the- capacity to reach out and
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i
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bring a little Joy and happiness to othersr
JOIN
.
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Students interested in magic, mime, juggl-
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PETER AMATO
Ext.
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GIVE A PART OF YOURSELF.
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sounded great," tie said .
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The American music industry is ripe for
:
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.
l:.lanis added tl@t Pierce White·
:
has been
·
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regional barids. The Stray Cats~ a band that playirig with
'
·
The Striders ever
.
since then
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once played th
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e Lo
·
ng Island bar circuit, is "We have
.
a
unique -sound. arid that's
now enjoying the rewards of national sue- where music is at these days," Llanis said.
cess
.
Blotto
,
a band that has been playing "Glitter doesn't
sen,
·
·
and sex appeal
bars in the Albany-New York City area for doesn't sell
,':
but a new sound
_
is where;it's
·
years, is now riding at the
.
crest of their at.''-
.
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popularity with the release of ari album,
.· ·
Llanis had taken time
off
from his exten-
.
and a p~pular video on MT.V. The
·
time is sive 29-city nationaL toui:: to
·
retu'rn
Jo
ripe for regional bands, and t~e time is ripe Boston for three sold-out shows over Than-
.
for Gene Llanis and the Striders.
sgiving weekend
at
orie
of
the,hottest n~ght
·
Gene Llanis and the Striders have been clubs in Boston, The Cocoriu
f
Grov~.
playing localJ3
.
oston bars for the fast three Llanis said, "We owe the fans in Boston so
:
years. They've had two regional
hits► and
:
milch. We couldn't let them
·
down
·
on
.
have developed a faithful following in the turkey day.
",
.
·--
-
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Boston area. One of Llanis'- hits, '
.
'The
·
Llanis appeared
ori
.
stage in a black
Boston Lobster," which he recorded on his leather running suit
;
and a pair_ofbrighf
.
own
.
Tech
_
Pak label has received a great orange
Nike
running sh
.
oes. The Striders in-
amount of air play on Boston's top rock
·
stantlf' kickedinto a cut from the new
rai:lio
,.
station, WBCN. The song was listed album, ;'Going to a Met Gt!meJ•
Just
as
in WBCN's top 100 cuts of 1981. The The Striders \_Vere picking up speed, Llanis
Striders ar~ P?PUlar i~ Boston, and now pushed them into overdrive with another
.
the poP.ulanty _is spreadmg.
..
. .
.
_ new song, "Be Wise.'' that was approved
•
~lams has fmally re.leased his fi~st L.P., by the entire audience. Everyone was readf
entitled
·
"Da~dy Wears Boxer Shorts.
u
for a steady night ofrock
'it'
roll.
'. .
.
.
,
:
.
Even though 1t was recorded on the Tech
.
:
.
He then
.
proceeded to perfolJll a mixture
..
Pak label, it is being distributed
·
nationally of originals
t
and classic rock tunes such as;
by a major record label. The first hit that
·
"The Stroll,"
.
·
«Walking
·
·
in the
.
Sand,"
has been released from the album, "Where
·
"Day Tripper," "Walk Like a Man" and
-
is Lloyd?"
-
is curremly climbing up the na-
"Self Abuse
.
"
...
·
.
·
•·
.
·
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·
·
·
tional hit charts. Llariis' brand
.
of blues-
·
·
·
He
finished the set with his recently writ-
.
based, party rock 'n' roll is what America ten song, "The End of the Rainbow,,.
.
wants to hear.
which he said was written about, "A boy; a
.
• ·
The Stri~ers have a sound very much like
··
girl, happiness
·
and the will to s11rvive." He
Bruce Springsteen's or John
.
Cougar's. added,
"If
has a great amount of personal
They
.
play unpolished rock 'n' · roll
.
that·
-
meaning to me, but then again, sodoes
i,TIY
-
would sould like a hundred other bands if pet alligator . ., Llanis' alligator is named
there wasn't the talent, the tunes, and the after Llanis'
·
greatest idol, Walt Disney,
_
tuba
.
.
·
.
·
.
"Disney was a man
·
who could imagine
·
•
The most unique aspect of Llanis' sound everthing. I Wish he was alive today,''
.
is the presence of the tuba, an instrument Llanis said.
.
·
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thadt ha
11
s nLe
1
ve~ bee
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dassob
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but
there's always
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a
backstage interview after
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''I
live for theaudience;J sleep
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With
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FRIDAYs
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SATURDAYS
Good Rais
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_
·Dec. 10
.
.
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Allied
Forces
·
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bec.
:·
11
805 - Dec.
·
17
·
Dr.
Jimmy
anq a Who
Sn.ow~
Dec.
18
:
Cousins is available for
-
private
-
J?arties
-
7
days per week.
,
.
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to_
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-
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for c_aputo's Restaurant.
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thr.u
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Tht.irs.
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to
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midnight·
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Saturd
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are
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each_
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Regular'Lllrge
and
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Jeg.
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or
Large 18''
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·
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Value
FROM ALL OF
US
AT CAPUTO'S
. '
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MerryChi-istmasand.Happy New Year '83
"--
-
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semester. Walking
·
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Lovely apt.
.
Brown eyes-Keep smilin', even' when it
gets tough
,
Love
,
a Romantic Fool '
.
Call me at485
-
5322.
·
·
To the other half (Carla):
.
.
.
To the
R.A.
of 2nd Floor Leo: ·
.
Hope you have a wicked good Christmas
So, Terri, who's this guy
.
in the red suit in N.H. Maybe Santa will bring you along
-
that's always looking for you?
. •
nightgown for the lounge. Only kidding
;
·
·
The Elves
·
·
_ ___;._....;...___;. _ _ _ _ _ _
.
_A_"_reat_•_t.:;p_al
'-·
.
'
Sheahan 2nd Floor-
·. ·
To Gidget the
R.A.-
.
_
Guys, have a good holiday season and
...
You may
~
be a midget, but you're a
study for those exams!
.
'
·
.
dynamite
·
Ra-Ra.
Have a good
.
Christmas-
y
you've worked for it.
··
·
ourR.A.
L_e_o_60_6 _
_
- - -
.
-
.
.
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.
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Yo Adrienne-
.
.
.
.
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.
.
_
.
Thanks for the
'
dedication. How about
·
.·
.
·
Hope you enjoy Joe on Sunday-
_
l'm
some fingerpainting sometime?
.
.
sure you w
i
ll. Have a good Cliristmas
.
rni
·
·
Sheahan 200
gonna miss you.
·
·
·
Loveya - 5th floor buddy.
Beno-
.
You're so sweet, adorable, captivating,
A
.
M
.
(~hamp4)-
~
.
.
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.
fascinating and perfect for me; You're also
Are you
·
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-
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.
cannot express how
.
very mtich each and
*Imported
~
Rock& Roll-Books &
.
.
Magazines;
<
·
'
•
.
Dear Dawn-
-
.
ever,roneofyoumeant~us .
.
D~wnandP~t
The
Who-; David Bowie~
~
The
/
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TheCla$h;
.
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c1Thanksforalwaysbeingyou!
--~----'--,-------,-:....---'--=.~
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Love, Andrea
Buddy Tony
~ .
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Maulmucli?Me_rryChriitmasanyway.
.
*SFX
Rock
Magazine.on
Cassette
··
.
'
Keep a room for me! Bobby,
I
want
a
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.
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·
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Mag~zines
if
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Here's hoping your holiday brings+;y:ou
-
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.
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,
the
,
best
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-
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~
good one buddy.
· ·
.
,
.
·
·
·
, ·
you! You guys are the greatest!
.
'
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·
·
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
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_A_"_re_a-'l'_'
-
:.c..p_al
.
·
·
•.
Love always-€arla
Jean-Marie, Jean-marie don't be
-
blue~ Andy~
_..
·-
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-
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.
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Frankenste
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·
.
We've got the box
.
iLyou've got the
.
·
~Lo and Doil
-
••
Christmas balls. Have a nice Christmas.
·
---------------
Lorett a J .-
.
·
·
Donna-
Love ya babe .
.
Merry
_
Christmas and
You own
.
some -lovely outfits, but
-
that
thanks for everything
.-
.
·
. ..
shower curtain has got to go!
.·
•
·
-,
Johnny
V
·
- -
.
·
--
·
-
-
--:-
.
.;;.
··
__;.. _ _
___;. _ _ _ _ _ _
__;_
------'---------'----=--•
.
To my buddy Cindy-
_
.
.
·
.
Santa and Ray~
.
.
'
·
-
< :
H3:ve a wonderful.
19t~
. .
birthday,
and
My two favorite roomies
::
I luv ya. Merry
,
_
·
m
.
_
ay
·_
the yc=ar that fol
_
Iows be
_
'th
_
ebest ever!
Christmas!
·
"-
·
"-
·
·
·
,.,
Love, your buddy Lori
Sheahan II-
\
·
.
STAY TUNED FOR
.
THE COMING OF
•
.
·
..
,
-
Hastheworldcometoanend?
WMCN,
·
,
CHANNEL
3
•
·
·
IN
-------'-~-~.;........;_
:
s_a~lly
•,
POUGHKEEPSIE .
.
SOON
.
TO
BROADCAST AFTER CHRISTMAS
LC-
.
.
,
·
Merry Christm~s fr~m all your women
.
and Hollywood. P.S. I.love you!
BREAK.
·
..
To Fanny, Beth; Constance
,'
'
Sam and
Hey Roxie-
.
,
.
,
.
·
.
,
,
,.
Nora-
·
.
·
.
·
•,·:',
-
---.-
T
•
:
·
·
•·
··
.
·
Hear you
.
wefe aU
~
~rapped
up
1
Thurs.
'
·
•
.
Happi Holidays ~nd be sharp, be happy
.
night.
.
·._.
.
.
;
·;
':·
,
.
•
. ,
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· · ·
.
· Dean Hamlin
·
:·
9uess your b~t!
.
:
'
Sheahan
3
., ."
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
·
_
,
D--av_i_d_-W_h_a_t_!d_n_~_o_,_f_f_u~Ii-?_J.;;..
;,
-
,
-'-
.
_,_ _ _
...:__
;
:
Merry
'
Christm~
·
s! H:,tve
.a
great holid~y
.
RPB-
·
t
•
.
,
.
l
;
-
you all d?erve
11.
You're the best!
·
.
.
·
Tant belle cose per k
'
feste a te
e
pe
r
la tua
..
.
·
.·
'
·
Love, Patti
famiglia
.
Non dimenticare
.
che ti voglio
-
Bnan - Thanks for the chicken -
too bad
bene cara mia. Per oggi e per sempre.
.
you
•
didn•t get any!
.
Baci e amore; Sandina
Frank-
.
.
.
·
.
.··
··.
Merry Chrtstmas! I'll
_
miss ya! Loye,
:
·
Allison Schwab-
Kris
·
·
·
.
You have ... (hands
Guys-You see, that's ~here you're wrong.
.
..
.
TC,CT,KD,MT
account!
·
·
-
From your
,-
neighbors
·
overhead
·
up) .. ;in your bank
·
Love, the
embarrassed teller
Katy, TC, Marylou
-'
. .
.
.
·• . .
_
.
.
Have a Merry
.
Christmas and
·
I will miss
Lucan-
,
my buddies
.
over yacation!
.
;
>
..
.
=
Love ya~Carole
'-
Tlie TRIP to Boston w~s
a
lot of laughs.
We have to do it agaiQ sometime!
.
Luv, Giggles
Woody and
i/11.:
."Don't break open," eveq in case
emergency, or you'll be in trouble.
of
.
Diver-
Need a ride? I should know not to trust
PurpletipS
kids!
.
Cave Cleaner-: Do you flick em or hide Bozo-
.
em? -Sweater teeth and monkey mouth
.
\
I'm glad we met! You made my bir
-
thda;
Love, T~te
To the m:magement of H:otel Cohab-
.
the best ever!! Thanks!! Love, the kid
.
Thanks for the ~ec-~ptacle and lesson~,
~
,.
:
·
·
Studly-
.
_
-
.
·
, •
.
·
..
.
·
·
·
The
_
all-nighters
.
Merry Christmas and Happy Birthday to
Ronnie.: Congrats
·-
on· Snow
.
White.
·
a super chum. · '
.
·
You'll really
be
great
.
I can't wait to see it.
Chumly
- Usual Question
,
·
:. /
'
tBEtONG
I
JfC>'
:
,
:
_
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·
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tj
December
9,
1982 •
THE CIRCLE· Page 1 1 - - •
SEASONS
_
_
_
.,
-.GRE·ETINGS
-
FROM
Best Wishes from Tom Welsh and
·vour--
,
f.
-
riends
-
,
a'.t
,.
'.Rlver,_·Distributing•:.·co~
.
.
~
'
.
·
-
.
~
-
Classifieds
Mike
Bowman-
Eh-heh. -The loud ones
Leenie and Donna-
.
I'm into black leather jackets and whips,
are you? Get m
·
e chains for Christmas!
Guess who
Dick
9th-
.
Don't forget that the sky is the limit and
you know that you can have what you want
and be who vou want-'- Rood luck. -Grace
Dear Ann-It is going to be a lonely five
weeks without you. BE GOOD! Merry
Christmas and God bless you and your
family.
I love you. -Mark
Pam and Diane-Yau are Godesses!
Interpersonally yours-Beaker and Joe
Speedster
·
Karen, Marie, Liz, June, Joanne, etc.-
Friday night was a night to remember if
only I could remember it! Love, Joe
speedster
Andy Sadowski- I'm sorry. I wish you'd
talk to me. Our friendship means too much
tome.-Mary
LO-Happy two month anniversary on
Friday, Dec. 10th. I'll never forget, will
you?-Love, Goody-two-shoes
Lori and
·
Donna-Sleeping over your
house is so fun! Thanks, you guys! Love ya
lots-JM
Tree- Can you say "Lozr"? Sure you
can! -Ted
_To
everyone in House II Leo, Merry
Christmas. Love, "Lady ace," "ML,"
"Kitty"
Baby doll -
Miss ya lots. Love, your
little girl
Pete-Thanks for being understanding,
loving, and so special to
me.
I love you!
Merry Christmas! Love, your angel
Moped women -
We're buying you ar-
mored suits for Christmas so when you
wipe out you won't get hurt, even if you do
p;et OWis.
Jen and Nance
Eh-heh girls- Merry Christmas. -
Jennifer
Jon-
..
~
.
..
.
_
.
Enjoyed the movie. We like ours rare.
.
R.D
.
L.B.R.
-
conCinued from page
IO
CHAMPAONAT FRESHMAN
TOGETHER FOREVER!
Bo'k
Kissy-
Who cares about this place! There is
•
more to life than Marist. No matter what,
I'll always love ya.
Steve
Merry Christmas Gina, Gabe, Jane 0.,
Karen, Kim, Maureen and Linda!
Love ya-Ursula
Maaary-Happy birthday! Midasize ii! We
are going to get you on your birthday, even
though you say "no way"! -Your bes test
friends and pals, but not your buddies -
·
the losers
Manhattan Man - The one who believes
in quantity, not quality-
M.M.
and
M.M.
Hey New Yorkers-Who said Connecticut
wasn't good for anything? Whalers
4,
Rangers
2.
We know better! Buffy and Kiki
Intoxicated 6th floor sweetie -
who can
it be knockin' at my door?
-Captain zoo crew
Woody and
#11 -
Get some sleep over
Christmas vacation-and get ready for the
re-opening
of Hotel Cohab.
Merry
Christmas.
the all nighters
Grace, Joanne and Cheryl-
Thanks girls for being there! We're
going to have a great time next semester!
Love, Pat
Dick-
Congratulations on your graduation! I
wish you much success and happiness
always.
Love, Pat
Andrea-
There is nothing
I
can say to you but
"I
love you". I'm going to miss you!
Love always,Corinne
Andrea-
It's about those sagging c.b.'s! What
does Mark have to say!
A fellow
C.B
Robin, Sue, Lynn, Mary Jo, Paula,
Elizabeth and Donna-
.
Thanks for the great dinner-
it
was fun!
Patti
CC-
Merry Christmas, I love you!
T .D.
Hey Gina (Lisa)-
Any
-
strange
·
occurrences at the Pub
lately? Merry Christmas-
Guess who?
is
now open
for
Monday
/1
_
·
/J
--
.
-
-
.
c__;~l4<_/
· 1 1 - t r t ~ P ~
1 / U ~ · · { l u ~
k t v ~ / 3 u J
---
·
/0·'00- 2
:30
;:z::'
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<:-'{~~
');
--•Page 12 •
THE CIRCLE·
December 9, 1982
Exter:nal u·sers behind···
growth of computer·. center
by
Grazia E. Lo Piccolo
said he sees this arrangement as havin~
· The computer center of Marist College is benefits for both Marist and the externai
one of the most sophisticated in the area.
However, not everyone knows how
it
has
achieved this level of excellence.
"The external users of the Marist com-
puter play'a vital role in the growth of the
computer center," said Cecil Denney,
director of computer operations.
"If
the
external users would not be here, the equip-
ment we would be using would not be as
advanced as it is now."
Denney describes the. external users as
non-profit organizations, separate from
Marist, who rent computer services from
Marist Coilege. Denney said that at present
there are about 15 external users .. These
users, said Denney, provide a yearly in-
come of about $200,000. "It's almost
enough to pay for the hardware that we are
now using," said Denney.
users.
"Students· are benefiting by having
larger resources available to them.By mak-
ing use of external users, 'Marist can pro-
vide to the academic community all the ad-
vantages of computing
in
a large ·universi-
ty, while having all the advantages of atten-
ding a small, .personable, liberal arts col-
lege." said Denney. .
In addition, Denney pointed out that, in
the future; the external user can be a source
of student internships or potential
employers. "The external user benefits by
having access to a substantial larger and
capable level of staff support in a ·
technological area that they could not fund
themselves. By sharing with the college, the
risks
involved
in
computing
are
substantially reduced,'' said Denney.
According to Edward Waters, vice presi-
dent for administration and finance, the
A
concern that might arise in the Marist
external users enhance the image of the col-
community, said Denney, is that the com-
lege. "We couldn't have the machines we - puter center may give preferential treat-
have without them. We would have old
ment to the external users since they pro-
machines or small ones, with about
I/ JO
vide real dollars. But Denney said that all
the capacity of the present ones. T~at is all
the users -
students, administration and
we could be able
to
afford," said Waters.
external
.
users -
are treated equally. "No·
Denney added that the sophistication in
priority is given to anyone. There is equal
computer use gives Marist the image of opportunity for all the users, r~gardless if
"up and going someplace."
·
·
students or external users," he said.
·
Denney said that for the most part the
Denn·ey said this is the reason why Marist
external users use the computer to store in-
is one of the few institutions to' make sue-
formation and conduct research. Some of cessful use o·f the external users; "Other in-
the
users include St. Dennis Catholic stitutions have made the mistake of
Diocese, The National Funeral Directors treating the external users -as secondary.
Association, Cary Arboretum, and Preven- 'citizens, instead of treatilig them . as·
~ive Medicine Institute Strang Clinic.
equals," he said.
. Maria Sergi, supervisor of medical , Denney said that Marist•also has a few
research and statistics for the Strang 'Clinic accounts of individuals who are external
in New York City, said the clinic is satisfied users .. These· users are also ,charged· the
with the service it is receiving fronlMarist'. · same-rates>They pay in advance and are
"We get prompt service whenever we need given a corresponding· amount,of time on
it, and Marist is easily expandable to every the computer. , ,
need we have," said Sergi.
·
Marist has had external users since
1979,
Sergi said they consid.ereci setting up when the
·
IBM 'computer
was
acquired.
their own computer center, but wheI). it Before 'that, Marist rented
1
ffom. Shared
came_ time to .make. the/purchase,. they •Edu-cationa\-,eomptiia-·:Systems::: ·Because· "
.. rea\ized-they,,"¥0\l\~
1)-C>t
be.
a"k.to,
!if.ford.
a ,
Qf'
r'ate :
0
,ncr~ases;-·
said' :
De'l'lney, :·
Marr'st ·
com purer equivalent
to'
1'v1aris(s: Denney. ·decided
to
buy their. own 'coinpu.ier.' · ·
-.,,
.
..
.
".
. .
...
..
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.
DUTtmS
. COll'NTY'S
#1 IOCK CLUB!
Thursday, December 9
LADY
Friday
&
Saturday, December 10
&
11
STARRFIRE
Sunday, December 12
VOICES
Monday,
December
13
~ -
·
4 Great Bands: Northern
1
-. ~_~.
· Star
&
others. Special Benefit
for underprivileged children
Tuesday, December 14
THE HURT
Wednesday,
December 15
APPLE
A
Beatles
Tribute
.·
.
co~oP AT
i
•
:
,,,
.
MARIST
. . . . . •
,
•
~
.:<
·coLLEGE
The Office of Cooperative Education would like to ex- ._
tend its congratulations to the followf ng students who are,·
_
• -
among those. acceptsd, for Co-op_ positions
tor
the spring
1983 semester:
·
'
Monica Finnegan-
Terri Sullivan -
Joe ·Perretti ·
Paul ZurNieden
· Katherine Gerardi
Nancy Qilworth
Patrick Mulrain
Susan Rompala
Elizabeth Miller
Linda Foster
John Catalano
Paul Dreja .
Milton Watson
-Andrea Holland
Debbie Valentine
Paul Crowell
.:;: ,-°Jhe'resa Sulllvan ·;
Sally Howard
IBM
IBM
IBM
IBM
IBM
IBM
IBM
18,M:
. M: Shwartz
. :·~ ~-. ·orrfiond.'s' -
·.f
Martfn!'lnc.:< .
IBM
Dutchess Bank
NYS Assembly
NYS
Asse!:71J>ly.
-,_}tf
li~l:£0
.
_
,.;·:-.;
·'
,,-.
;-,-,JW,i
are iooklng forward-io the coming. ysar,~_ild wish .
you all a Happy ,~ofi~ay Season.
·
· · ·.:~\.:;~
. '.--Coopetat\ve Education· puts you one step ahead of the crowd!''
•• •.-o;J:"">•,r.:•~•·••'-<:.,
•·•••
-,.·, •·
•
-•
;·.·:.,-<.- . •
~
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•.
~
.• .-_._~/~-•-
•.'
-·· -·Dr;~Cod~&
· . Proper ID Required
Thursday, December 16
THUNDERROAD
Fridar, December
17
FRIENDS
Saturday
&
Snnday, December 18
&
19
CANYON
Tnesday,
December
21
·
.
THE HURT.
DUTCHESS COUNTY'S
#
1
ROCK CLUB
Where Every Night is Special: TUESDAY: LADIES NIGHT .
Ladies Drink Free • WEDNESDAY: NICKEL NIGHT Every
. other Drink 5
¢ .
all . night •
THURSDAY: COLLEGE NIGHT
. No Cover Chg w/College ID all night • FRI.
&
SAT.: Reduced
Adm. before
11 •
SUND!\ Y:. F~EE DRINKS Bef~re
1 O
p.m. •
Dress Code
&
Proper 1D. Required. Thursdays: Free
Drinks
9-10:30
·
33 Academy Street, Poughkeepsie
471-1133
--
.
.
i
----------------------------------December
9, 1982 ·
THE
CIRCLE· Page
1 3 - - •
r-~--~----------------~--~~,
·
.IJ!f-;~
coupon
~
. .
I
·
·.
Nuclear plant site stirs dispute
I
.
THE
.
HAIR
·s
. .
I
by Carol Lane
replacing these plants with solar or hydro
.
·
•, ·
.
·
.
·
·
· · HACK
·
·
·
1
-
Re~a~!i(n~\~:i~~n~~l:~t\:dsi;ed~;nt~~
po::::s::;~~:e;::i~:.:g:~~~:::~::~~e
.
4
.
9
.
..
.
·
A
·
·
·
d
.
·
construction of a nuclear power plant,
dangers of nuclear power is one
.
of
I
•
.
.
ca emy Street
I
.
Joanna Hess a_member of Hudson_Valley
NYPERG's top priorities, according to
I
· .
·
.
•
I
Green, and environmental group, said.
·
Geary. "We have the priority of educating
I
N
·o
·
.
A
.
.
.
t
.
t
N
I
"We are fighting Con-Edison for 600
people through teach-ins, films and class
ppOlll
men
ecessary
acres of land in Red Hook," Hess said,
I
discussions. Our basic philosophy is that
I
"They won't say what they are building but
our society does not teach people to be ac-
1
.
.
$
_
2
·
.
o
·
.
FF
.
I
it could be nuclear and therefore we are
tive citizens so people have given this power
I
_
I
concerned."
.
to large corporations and the govern-
(R eg $8 00}
Hess is a member of the· Grass Roots
ment," Geary said. "We want to teach
I
•
·
.
•
I
Energy and Environmental Network (Hud-
pe9ple how to make changes in the world
I
··,,
,
;
;
_s_
H
_
AM.
po
·
o,
·
CUT~. BLOW
·
STYLE
I
son Valley Green,) a volunteer group of -teachthemtotakeonissues."
.
-
3,000 members located in Red Hook, N.Y.
I
(I
h
$
)
I
Hudson
.
Valley
Green works throughout
The public is made aware of many of
I
ong
.
air
4 .00
extra
I
Dutchess, Columbia, Ulster and Green
these issues through the Hudson Valley
·
·
H d
v
11
G
· ·
I d
Green Times, published every six weeks by
I
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
I
counues.
u son a ey
reen1smvove
·
"d
f
f "f
"We a econ
Hudson Valley Green, Hess said. The Hud-
1
·
$
_
,
.
.
o
I
ma wi e range
O
ac ivi ies.
r
•
son Valley Green T1
·
mes, 1·s, paid for by it
.
's
cerned with all the environmental issues,
I
OFF
.
·
(Reg. $30 .O
_
O}
.
I
like pollution,"
·
Hess said. "We went from
members, has a
circulation
of 10,000 peo-
1
.
.
I
being solely focused on anti-nuclear to a
pie. Many of the local environmental
·
BO DY
p
ERM •
I
·
d
broader scale of environmental issues.
groups in the area contribute to the
I
* .
.
.
'nc u es
- · •
Another major force behind the anti-
newspaper.
-
1
.
·
.
C
f
&
N
·
C d
•t •
·
·
r
I
nuclear movement in the Hudson Valley is
"We see our paper as a means for other
:
L
.
· .
.
.
.
·
.
u
.
exus on
I
,one
.
.
..
the New York Public Research Group, Inc.
groups to publish their views," Hess said.
•·
- - - - - - - -
- - - - - - _ _
... _ - •
·
• - - - - - -
(NYPERG) located in New Paltz,
-
N. Y. Fif-
''We don't. have the experts to do lobbying
ty people comprise the New Paltz chapter or research so we depend on other groups
R~!~Y!!-!
lHEATIIE
Starts
Friday
ACRES
OF FREE
PARKING
·
RICHARD PRYOR
...
'
,.-J1CKIE GLEASON
-
~
.
.
.;
\: :·
.:
:::~=~~?
::.
:
:
. i~
.
. :
.
~
:
·'
•:{/~
, ,
~
, ,
-
;
_:,
,:;:
:
,;
,
r:F,
.
·
IPGI
·
Exclusive in
Dutchess County·
·
.
·
SHOWN
-
EVENINGS
·
7:25
&
-
9:30
·
SAT
&
SUN •
.
MATINEES
at 3:1
·
s
.
:
.-._
-
NeWly
i
Remodeled.
:
IC>le>tn6t?
6ru)?dys
·
...
Pub
·
·
..
oa·nce Club
·
·
Of
.
·
The 80's
Great New Dance Floor
Fabulous
New Light Show
Sensationa_l New Sound
System.
of NYPERG, a public interest group which
to do this and we disseminate the informa-
has student organizations at
18
campuses
tion." It is important to get everyone in-
throughout New York State.
volved in stopping the spread of nuclear
NYPERG is interested in the elimination
power, Geary said. "An example of the
of
·
nuclear power plants as a source of power of the people was seen in
1975
when
energy, Linda Geary, project coordinator an idea was proposed to build a nuclear
of NYPERG
;'
said. "Since
1978
we
·
have
power plant about 25 miles north of New
been working with legislative, community
Paltz." Geary said, "A coalition of people
and campus organizations to phase out and -
Mid
.
Hudson Opponents to Nuclear
shut down the nuclear power plants with no
Power -
were able through their numbers
new construction being started but rath~r
to stop the plan."
Marist to give commuter scholarships
Marist
·
College
has established
·
a at Marist.
$100,000
scholarship fund for freshman
"Marist recognizes the particular plight
·
commuters
:
from the Mid~Hudson Region, of middle class families who must struggle
according to
:
Dennis
J.
Murray, Marist to meet tuition costs
.
during
·
the un-
College President. The scholarship awards favorable economic climate. We believe
would begin with the fall,
1983
academic private education should be a matter of in-
semester.
·
dividual choice and realistic option for
The scholarships will be awarded on the students. This scholarship fund will help us
basis of academic qualifications andfinan-
meet ths goal," said ~aly .
..
cial need, _aci;ording.
,
tQ
..
fames
,
E .
.
Daly,
For further information about Marist's
dean of admissions. Individual awards commuter Scholarship, contact the Admis-
wo
.
1Jld
be
.
renewable for four years of study
.
sfr:iris Office, 471:3240
:
ext:
226,227.
Come and party with your
~
friends over Christmas Recess!
Great new Dance/Rock Bands
and All New Dance Floor!
DECEMBER 29th
½
PRICE ADMISSION
ALL DRINKS $1.00
·
With Mari st I .D.
LOCATED ON210 MERRICK RD., ROCKVILLE CENTRE,
LONG ISLAND, N.Y.
•
,.
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•
•
>
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=-
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~
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~
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·
=
:.
_
:..
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:!,
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•_.
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CALL FOR DIRECTIONS: (516) 764-4700
Dress To Impress
,
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--•Page
_
14•THECIRCLE•December9,1982
.
.
_
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_
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Cardone
adds
experience
-
to
-
Foxes
:
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,
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as 'pasta line' heads
for piayoJJ;
1983 -WINTER INTERSESSION-1983
·
'
·
-
·
...
,
January_ 3-21 ·
..
.
by
Ian O'Connor
·<
Playing pick-up games on the local pond
-
and participating in area leagues
,
were
-
the
only ways he could gain the experience
needed to play on a higher levet.
·
·
Obviously,
this
.
experience proved
valuable
to
Marist senior Tony Cardone, as
he was selected co~captain of this year's
Red Fox team.
"I didn't exactly come from a big hockey
town," said Cardone, a native of Monroe,
New York. "l feel that my friends and I
established some interest within the town,
and the kids are just now starting to pick it
up," he said.
.
,
•
.
Cardone,
who
played
football at
Monroe
0
Woodbury High School,
has
played hockey here at Marist
-
since his
sophomore year. In his last year at Marist,
.
Cardone is honored to have been chosen as
co-captain and he realized the great respon-.
sibility placed on his shoulders
.
,
"We have some young, inexperienced
players this year and Jim Md)onald (the
other captain) and myself try to help them
out," said Cardone
:
"We have been there
before, and we know that the young guys
need leaders who can set
,
examples," he
said.
Alchough the team is currently 4-3 in the
Metropolitan Collegiate Hockey Con-
ference, Cardone feels that the Red Foxes
still have a legitimate shot at the league ti-.
tie. "We definitely have not reached our
peak yet, and I hope we don't until the
playoffs," he said.
Tony Cardone
"We definitely have the talent and the
coaching (Head Coach Jim Peelor) to go
places," said Cardone. "Our depth has im-
proved from last year, and we have a great
deal of speed, hustle and desire,'' he said.
As the team improves .each year, Car-
done says that
.
fan interest and·support will
become even greater t'han it is now.
..
"The fans h
'
ave been great this year, and
If
Marist is to win the league, Cardone the student support is probably triple that"
says that McDonald will have to lead the of last year/' he said. "Their being there at
way.
-
McDonald,
the
league's Most the games puts more pressure on us to per-
Valuable Player last year, leads the league form
.
We
-·-
usually
respond
to this
in scoring with 24 goals. He combines with
-
pressure," he said.
·
•
Cardone (7 goals) and Al Pette (S goals) to
With the increasing interest in Marist's
form the "Pasta Line."
·
hockey program, Cardone ~iews the futtire
·
.. Three
·
Weeks ·(Monday
thrµ
Fri
_
day)
DAY CLASSES
Marketing Management
·
Radio Broadcasting
·
World Literature
Introduction to_ Computers
Introductory Statistics
EVENING CLASSES
-
Business and Society
Marketing Management
-
Public Speaking
The Art of the Film
..
·
M,eaning of. History
·
Soviet Union Today
Introduction to Computing
Basic Algebra
.
American National Government
lntrodu_ction to Psychology
.
·.
,
.,,_
WINTER INTERSESSION
ENABLES
YOU
TO:
*A~celerate your ·program
.
-
*Satisfy CORE, major or
elective requirements
,
*Concentrate
.
on one course
On Campus Housing is Availa
_
ble
·
Registrations are being accepted in the
·
.
_,,Schoo{-otAdtilt ~ducation '(Donnelly Room
200}.
•
Cardone also Cites Rob Trabulsi, Brian
with anticipation. "Money is tough to
Foley, Tim Graham and Rob Shanahan as
come by, bu
·
t there is no doubt ill'my mind
players who must continue to perform well
that this
-
program-.will.continue,to
,
grow;
,
•
:
..
.
.
.
i.f
tb.e. Re.d Fox.e.s are to go
far;
.
.
,
,
.
.
': .
..
he
sai.d .
. ·
i
,:
.
_
:
-'
,
.
<: .. :,,
. ,,.
i
vi-iL:'
.,.a'.
:
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,:;'::;'ii'
,:
i>::
.
.
.
.
-
.
-
-
.. .
.
BREAKAWAY
on
Spriflg
·
BrfJak ((}
Bahamas
·
or
Fort
·
Lauderdale
·
PRICES:
-----
-
Bahamas: $343.85
Fort Lauderdale: $366.85
Sponsored by College Union Board
For more information contact:
JANE SCARCHILLI Ext. 6-114
or
KATHY SHEA Ext. 117
.
.
·-
·
·
..
.
·
·.
· :
N~~i~e
·
~'!9~~d,"'g
;•f
.
.
·
•
.·
.
..
l;io_usi
·
ng
for
Win,ter
_
l.nter~~~io
,
n
_
.
·
.•
·-
,. -
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•
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:
,
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•
_.
_.,
,
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_.
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_
:.·
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----
..
·
<.
,·
~-
J
-
<
.
.
,
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J
.
AN .
,
-
2,
_
1982
·
~
:
JAN.
'
21,
-
1983
.
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·-
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.
...
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All those interested
·
in being housed on campus for the
• ·
winter 1983 Intercession should come to the Housing
-
of-
·
fice
·
by -De
_
cember 1 O, to make these arrangements
,
.
·-
·
-
-
.
.
The Room
-
Rate will be $8.OO/day
.
The total
-
amount,
-
·
covering the length of time you will be on campus
-
must
be paid to the B
.
usiness Office prior-to the finalization of
any Intercession Assignment.
No
Food
Services
will
be
provided during the Winter
Intercessions.
·
QUESTIONS?
Please come to the Housing Office
....
:
.
. ·-.M~:: ...
;,~~,;1~;:i_ .....
~t~'J_lllllllll~--.·~~-3;~{-$_-:~--,:i.iii.ii-■-. c~a~
....
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~--·.•·-to--._-.,:
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....
'
.--a-.st1;;6;·
s;/~C~E
•Pagets-
.-,· :-
·.·-
·
.--···.:~·:·\:~-.... :<:·._.-,,i·.;.,.
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..·-·.-~·.:-.
-;.,: ·:};'):./'i:
0
~Y.l:Ji,~T~vers : · ·•_ :··:·:
.':sht)\yed -that:.they could play "good"
, • .·En~ering)ast nig_pt's:c!as~ at: Villanova:>.basketballas they forced the-Red foxes in- .
·:·. with.a _1~1- record,""the,Manst Red ~oxes -:to a;slow tempo, exactJy':opposite of the .··
:'-•~tiad: pro~~n
-orie
thing; When the_' te~m is.< Re~ Foxes ruri~and
0
gun offense, and knot-. . .
· good.-:"." it s good. When the team is bad -
·· tedthe score at 44-44 on a White jumper. - .
; ·'
· it;'.s bad .. :....
\ · /
-- , · · . · .· ·. · · ·
:<_
:r
> · ''They slowed the ball up on us· arid we
. : : The ~ed._Foxes\ Wf~e- good Saturday. as
started· to rush our game,° Cap~ain Steve.
they· romped former NBA coach _Larry . Smith said.
"Ii
was really frustrating when
CosteUo'.s · Utica J:>ioneers 61-51 before an ··they held the ball so long."
.
.
oj:,ehing game record cro~d of 2,449_..in the : . Marist frantidly tried to regain its lead
McCann Center,:
.. - .
·.
. .
but a.Tom Meekins errant shot from the
. ,,TWp~!ght.sJater, the Red Foxes were bad..-_· right ·corner. and.Ted_ Taylor's missed .10~
as .J?1~1s1on, 1~1 C~stleto!1 State shocked · footer :,foupled with ·Jour on target·
:M~,ns,t_65-60.on !~e Fox~s, ~omC: court. ·
Castleton foul shots gave the Spartans a 48_-
lt s. pr.obably _the·,b1ggest
~in
that the
44 lead which wasn't relinquished.
basketball program has had;" Castleton.
Marist was·hurt-by a poor 10-or:-37 (27
· · CoacliJimCascian~ said.:''We really came
percent) mark from the field in the second
. into the game \\:'anti~g,.,~o be respectable
half, , and
a .
two~of-nine from the free-
·
. and_ nofexpecting t,o wiri. We just wanted
throw line.· ·
· ·. .
<- .:
. ·
·.
to 5.how .tharwe_ do plli)' some good basket-
. The roles were reversed two nights earlier
bait''-
· :
· ·
, · .
asUtica;shot a horrendous·26 percent from
The Spartans were led by freshman Chris
the 'fie1d ;. in the first · half · and .
never
White's 20 points and 13 •rebotirids; Scott
recovered as the Red Foxes rolled to an
Sterling and · Matt Dempsey. each con-
easy 61-51 win. · . · .. ·
· -
<' . ,
tribuied 10. Steve Smith led the Red Foxes . "Our win was··a combiriatiori of their
with 20 points.· •·
.
poor shooting .and our m~tch-~p zone
ln.thefirsfl6 minutes,the Spartans were . defense," Petro said. "We had scouted
.. less.than respectable as_M~rist jumped out .Utica and we kriew they weren't too strong
· qui~kly
tc>
-a
14-2 e~rly advantage, and led . shooting from the. outside." .
.,
·29•l7;:Iate in'the
·first
half. The Spartans
- The Pioneers proved Petro right as they
theri re~lec(off eight points in the fi!}al..f our
sank only four of _32 attempts from the
minutes and Marist led 29-25 at the half.
· field in the first half and overall hit 19 of 61 ·
:•·: ''We
got--out to a quick lead but we let
duringtheentfrecontest.· .·
them creep lip
on
us;'' Marist Coach Ron
Meanwhile, Smith .was leading the. Red
.
. Petro ·said, &'There. wasn't. enough inside
Foxes with 19 points and six rebounds.
· .. , scoring in the fjrst h;llf. T-hree guys jump in Bruce Johnson sank 11 points, brought
.,✓
the' air atthe same lime for rebounds and cfown seven rebounds and had four steals.
we cari't do _that?The loss is frustrating."
' ."It's difficult' to win a game wh:en
YOU'
..
:::
"'·
_...__
~
Fans·
display traditional enthusiasm after first Marist basket during Marlst-Utfca
clash.
(Photo by Chris Dempsey)
.
.
·:
___
.....
half," said .Costello, former. coach of the . do," Meekins s·aid. "We were a lot quicker
Milwaukee Bucks. "We shot a little better
than they were." .
_
later but we have
a
lot of work to do." .
Utica cut Marist's lead to 45-32 with
Marist stormed to an. early 9-0 lead
10:45 remaining in the
·game
after bask!!tS
before Utica could penetrate Marist's tight · by Padilla and Johnson gave the Red Foxes
defense 'and . score its first basket on a
a 19-point lead.·
,tayup, 6:30 into the game by Jonathan.
But 7-1 center~John Donovan answered
Carter.
.
with two straight baskets on feeds from
; Meekins had the early hot hand as the
Johnson to keep the game out of reach.
tiny guard sank a 15-footer and a 20-
· Extra Points: Marist travels to Iona to
footer. Taylor hit from the inside and the
compete in the Manufacturer's Hanover
Foxes had a comfortable 13-3 advantage.
Tournament tomorrow night
facing
Utica drew to within six points, at 19-13,
American University. That clash will be
but .a Marist 12-2 edge in the final six
followed by. the Iona-Loyola tilt. The
miriutes of the first half, led by Gil Padilla
following night the losers meet at 6 p.m.
and Johnson,· gave the Foxes a 31-15
and the winners at 8 p.m.
halftime lead.
·.
\
·
The Red Foxes' next home game is Jan:;5
"Controlling the tempo of the game and ' against Northeastern and . Marist's first
get the early lead. was what we wanted to
home game next semester is_ ~an. 24.
!hroughout the: s~c.ond half Castleton only score four field goals in_ !he first
wotfJ:~~,hOojJstersface
Rhodelslitnd io/1ight
·
The·Maristwomeri'.s ba~ketball:teamwill .plays.''
.
·',_
.
.
.
.
C.W. Post coach Kathy Solano felt that
face-Rhode Island in a collegiate basketball ·::- Fourth-year head coach Susan Deer has
the reason for her team's loss was their
gal]le tonight in tlie McC~im Center:_· ·
, been emphasizing ~efense du!ing the . last
poor shooting performanc·es.
·
... __
.. _La~t- week _p.oint ·g· uardXynne Griffin
three days of pract_ice following an 82-61
"We didn't shoot well against the zone
·
drubbing at the hands of . eastern
·
• nor from the free throw line and that's
__ scored'.16 ·poirits to lead Marist to a 60-54
·
-
h
I
h
"
"d
s
1
win O\'.~r. C~W .l>.ost in'a women's C!)llegiate
pQwerhouse Syracuse last Saturday;, .
w ere we . ost
t
e game,
sai . o ano.
b' k tbiill
· 'Th
<la · · ht•at-theMc-
-
~ '-f!er
_
e_ffo~~ paid. off as
1
th4? Mari~t's .,'~'.f.hesalllething1'appened•last.yearand.w,e.
_
. ·.
~ e ..
gllll!:e .. U,C
5
.
_.
Y
~!g __ _
, .
.,;'."
: ...... ·
•Lolita •Silva played .a key :role in-holding ·•, lost that one, too.'_!:.
.
,;
·
·•
.
< ..
·
... : .
·"·· ~:: '_·: ~Can~£ente_!:-
·
_."~Ji ,:•.•:
''.W'''c:'''~s~r~~';It'\,{
;'·Sue.Salg;'wnoi-Was''eighth in the iiationlast · .. : :solano's, team.,shot .. a, dismal 12~of-29
-
; ... : ... :
.
;_; :~i~ffink H~,-h
SchC:t
l:2:·
0
s:~;n·
as;ists ·.
'year
iii
~eboi1~dirig; to 13
1
ie!)o,111ids'arid.on~ '-:ii:om the 'charity stripe and a disappointing·'
. . .
':-::."~and':
!&fed~di~~-five rebouricls as the Red
_JY
!.°
points. '•
.
.·•' ..
. . .·, . . . ;,
JS•percerit from the field. In last year's 58-
·
'.'·F
'
·. P ·,. ..~t·h • ·· · ·.o·n··m·
· a··rk.·at. l"·1, .
0
-
,
That was the game strategy tom
.. ght,
55
loss to'the Red Foxes, C.W. Post shot 9-
. oxeseven .... eirseas
·
'·
· · ·
'd D · "I · t
ltd · ·
· b ·
f24f..
h f
h
1·
·
·
._. ,,.,
.
. .
· .;._
..
<,.• .. · ,· . ...-,,--- .· .. ·
,sai
_eer;
.:conempae ~u~mg a _ox- ~o-
romt e reetrow me.
.
.
... ~
-
'Our. defense "'.as.excellent, . saidJinf- ,:and-one on her (Salg) butldecided agamst
The game started out on the slow side
·
.
••
:
fin;·'. _: '.'Offensively2we didn't bring. it : that. Lolita was supposed· to ·deny her , with neither team - able to · convert · their
.. fog~her.6Wc
were:·
nishing :through; our ',_.everything: She di_d a super job.''
~
. · ·
. shots. Sparked by Griffin's six points and
· , . : .
•
•
.
,
,
•
·, • • . '•C
'
•
C
,
.
•--~«
. '
.~ ..... -.
::->.<·---~·-· ,· .. •
two by Mary
Jo
Stempsey, the Red Foxes
broke open a 9-9 tie to go ahead 17-11 with
eight minutes to play i:Q the'first half. By
halftime, the lead stretched to '33-20.
' C. W. Post employed_a full-court press in
the opening fly~ minutes of the second half
.
to· cut the lead to 35-29 with 16:40 to play ..
Marist increased the· lead to · nine· before
Griffin
pi~ked
up her_ fourth personal foul
with
p
minutes to play .
. With Griffi11on the bench, C.W .
.
Post
bounced back to cut the lead to-under seven
points. Griffin was placed back in the game
. with five mimites to go as the Red Foxes led
by_ only four,
56::52,
with 2:12 to play.
-·~Noclcey·:team
tci·meet
c~w~:
P.ost·
;~
•
~-
r . ~•
.
,
•
I
._f-. ·;.·-.:··: .. -·~-
•
·.·.·.
:.._.-:~.r:.',}::~-·
.
I
.
.·
•
/ ·
•
· Volleyball tearrtcaptures title;
·banner.to
hang
in McCann soon
· · ),y~ea.nne
LeG~,~.ec. . ..
.
.• .
_
third period in the Pace game to keep the
<
:;:{i~~-Mllr~St
lio~key tew.,/wm conclud~-it~· :::rsie~ut;f lfa~!t:~r ~:/~:Sbu:i-::;
by
Kathy O'Connor· '
th~ 'An-League AU-Star team. The all-star
··- .:: "': first semester gaqies toQigh~ as they travel .. Brian Foley.; .
.
. . :·:. _ .·
players are seniors Laura Cross and Linda
.
-- t.o. ~ong_Island to battl.e C- W .. ,Post. The
.
'
.
·
. . .
:· ·
•. · The Marist College Women's volleyball
Peter, sophomore )odi Johnson, and
.// . team's:-scltedule res~mes_Jan_. 26 .. against ·
·
: 'tpe
1:
0rdhaID game w~s exciting .. The -''team• has captured ·the Hudson Valley' freshman Marie Bernhard .
.--::<Fairl_eigh D!t:kj11son University at'the Mc-
first per~od saw b_ot~ Manst.and Fordham Women's Athletic Conference Division 'B'
In . addition, Cross was awarded
CanirlceArena; ·
· .·:,,score _four ~oals._ Jim McDoJ1.ald scor_ed
championship.
. .
.
"November Player of the Month" for
.
. · ·.
.
:·
<
·... .
.
. .
·
two with assists by Gary P,edlow and Tim
f
l
. J'he ska~ers lost to Ke~n College I::tst
(}raham. Tony Cardone "scored
a
shor-
· With a team led by our A I-League
receiving the most ·news coverage for the
Thursday;_by a score _of
.
9-5
after defeating . thanded goal assisted by Ed Cardoza and players, the women went undefeated in
month in the league.
• Fo,rdhain µniversity t!Je,ni_ght before 14~7
Al Pette. Tim Graham s~ored late in the regular season dividion play and reached
"I was so surprised to win the award,"
· d ·
· · p
11 5 · ·
N
23
·
·
the semi-finals in a· divisional tournament.
said Cross. "Winning this and having the·
an ro':llpin~. ace . - on oy.
. ·
· .. - period assiste9 by Brian Foley and Rob . They wi'll soon ·be rewarded wi"th. an offici·at
b •
A
•
d
• h h
Mar1st.now stands at 4-3 .m th~ Metro
Trabulsi.
·
· team
em5 recogmze
wit
t e .most
<•-Confererice.
·
banner to be hung in the Mccann Center ·. amount of players from· one teatn to be
· Jim ~icDonald was the hero in the two
.
;
. Marist wins as;he accounted for 13 goals in
. tJ!e two games. He score,d four goals in the
The second period was a shooting gallery
fieldhouse.
.. named all-stars helped to alleviate the pain
for the Fordham. goalie, Marist scored
"We're really excited about getting the
of losing the divisional tournament," she
_seven· goals\Fordham was held scoreless.
banner/' said senior co-captain Linda
said.
_
,
Jim McDonald scorecJ four times ·during
-
Petei: . ."I'm. personally happy b·ecause it
· The women were eliminated for the
Jhe perio4. The first lWO wer~ assisted by
enables me to ·leave Marist ·knowing that . tourney in the semi-final final match
• :·1
~
-,. • . •'
I
• ·
•'
• .
•
\
...
. .
.
Rob Trabulsi and.Gary Pedlow. The other ,, I've been a part of a team that is leaving• against ManhattanvilleCollege .
. _;:_ :
.
.
-.: <M_
.. ··.·.·,i_ller SP. o.
n_··
sors
.
· .. -.,.
two goals were both, shorthanded and 'thc:ir mark in Marist athletics,'-'._she said.
"The problem we encountered in the
· unassisted. Jim became unbeatable in the
In the four years that Peter has been a· semi's was a tack of concentration," said
: :--2. -~:•_:••.•.·
0
-
<Il,·-2
tOU
__ ..
f .
ney ·
game. It· looked Jike everytime he picked up
member of the women's team, the changes . Piccone. "The girls had easily won their
_
.
the puck, he was 'go_i_ng fo ca.rry it down the
and · improvements made in the women's
preliminary matches, then they had a three
,
~
_
,:ice to score. Al P~tte scored assisted by
volleyball program have been significant. . hour layoff until the semi-final match,,;
.
.
: ,. ·
'":'·
' .
.
McDonald. ·Tony Cardone scored a shor- . Until last season, Marist had been lucky to said Piccone. "The layoff was a disadvan-
,
The Miller '-Brewing Co. is sponsoring thanded goal assisted by Bob Caldiero. · win one ·or two matches a season, said
tage to us playing against Manhattanville
their two~on-two ,tournament. for the Bob Caldiero went on to score his own
Peter.
_
who had just come off winning a match
. fourth conse~utiye year at Marist. Any goal: a powerplay goal assisted by Brian
"I'm very satisfied with what we have
against Mt. St. Vincent," Piccone said.
Marist student· is eligible to participate, · Foley a~d Keith BJachowiak.
·
·
accomplished inmy two years of coaching
Our energy level wasn't at it's peak and
prov1ded they have not lettered in basket-
Brian·
Keily
came into the. net repla~ing .. at Marist," said Coach Marje Piccone.
Manhattanville was very up for the mat-
ba_ll atthe college level, The winners of the Bob M"onaco at.• the sta.rt of the .. · third "The girls have come a long way in im-
ch," said co-captain Bernhard. "Tlie inten-
. iournatnent
will
receive $200. Worth of
•
,-
. k proving their skills," she said.
sity in the semi-final was a lot greater than
scholarships''. each._. There
"{ill
'also be period. Fordham· finally scored two quic
The success and talent of the team was
in the preliminaries, and we just weren't up
trophies 'awarded to the second place team goals late in the period st
ill
leaving them evi~ent_ when four players were named to
for it yet,'' she said .
. ·. arid each.team receives a Miller basketball behind 11-6. ·
·
·, ,\ jersey Just for participating.
'.- '
·,
McDonald s-c~;ed his seventh goal of the
r----.;..-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
'"""!'!l.•-----
',. -·names will •bi'ptayed in th'i M,<;Cann 'game ~ssisted by Tony Cardone. He was
Center, starting next .semester. Any student. followed by· two quick goals,
IO secs. apart,
· wanting to play ·should ·contact. Glen from Bob Trabulsi and Tom "Ziggy"
Marinelli in the McCann· Center or Tom Lehrkinder .. Lehrkinder's goal was
Welsh, The Miller campus representative at . unassisted and Trabulsi's had assists by
'7:1-5600 ·
·
Tim Graham and Ed Cardoza .
.
'-'
Semi~Forinal Dan'ce 10-2p.m.
Friday Night at the Mccann Center
Catch the Christmas Spirit!
.,.
By
Bill
Travers
.... ·. •
.... ; _. ..
.
.
.
, -.· ...
. ·.:
Griffin
t~~tJJ?'. ...
~),t;Z:· . . . ·
·
. . . ·
.
du°nirnie"s
with
0
t~e:numbers
2 an<1-1\~wed · .
Blrsda, :tau,r:'t:ross,· Nancy·•: Jen~ericb
..
.. -~ ·,
:
.... ::
.
•;:,<·
·
.?.
•
:·
'
•-'.:c=i:<'-·; ·.
~iristtennlsteam~repairs
oil
.
the ten-· on. : · --·, . ._ ·· .
·
. · ~~.-;
'
/c: .. ,,. ·.
and·~•t~amp~n
)_~'the congratulations.
- Now :
·
that Christmas . .is : approachiQg, nis courts to •niake:.thern
.
"DM~iQn ·1,. .. ·
·'Marist' basketbali
t~nt.:....
a bid
.ti.
the
-
from The:Cifcle.for·winrung the Hudson
everyone ~us(preparehis !ist of desired "caliber.''. ,-
0
.f:·_;,:
.
·,-:: '':-:
.
~;::
.
. .
NCAA playoffs. :·
.ci ::·• :' '
..
.
Valley Division Bconference.
. _-:. ··
.
•C
prese.~t~'. _Belqw are my: recomn:1endatio?15
·
•· .:,
Dia~_
J.9~
~
a. 'beware' ~!~n: to warn:
·
Gary
Pedlow -
a
singing voice· as goo4 . ·.
GIi Padilla --
a
full season without an in~
for g1fts
,
~o
-
tho~e iaffihated with ·¥anst opposmg_teamsofher aggress1veness,hus-.-
.
as his slapshot. - .
'~
·
.
-... -
· jury;; .. ·.;., ,,·,
0 -
•
; . ~ .
A>,;,.:•:
s.-,-.. ,-,,,.,;..--.:-- .
. ·•· -
-
~ athletics: :--- .
.
:,
",·<
·
·, .-- ... ·.
.
. .- ·:
tie.and enthusiasm.:., ·
.
-
.-. ;
:..
> - . ; :. -·~ ·
Brian·Foley
,:_;_-agam~withou~ a penalty.
-
Marist
crew,_teltin~--i:~
;on~r device to .
·
. Wayne Cargill --
two pa~ m tlleMarist ·
Marist
hockey
team -
·a bus to take them
Jim
Mcdonald -
'"a· lesson on how to
help the rowers avoid floating debris in the
r~ord.booksforhimtofill.
>
.
· ·
<:,.::::
_toitsaway°games.·- -~-:- ::::-.
-
. ·
• ·
<' : ...
scoreagoal_."-:
_
•.... .
._ , ·Hudson •. · .• ·
-,.J ·· ,.:
.
. . .
·
. ,.. .. Jlon Dimmie
:"..a chance to go back_m ,:
Jay
'.'Yllllams
~
a day away from the
·· ~rge ~en -
a;•we_wantToqd' ban-
- ·
Marist
Red
Fox ~-
.a ·fe~ale fox to --
. umeanddeckthecoachwho_pulled-h1m,McCannCenter.·/
·
.
<
... .
nerwith'Todd'crossedoutand.George's- ·cohabitatewith.
,. : .;,:--
-
.. out of his final high.scliool football game :·~
Dic~-
_
Quinn .--::-:,
the !!official_ approval
name inscribed.-:
.. , . -. (-,--
._.
Marist women's· basketball · team
:· 10gards_shyofthe_1,000mark.
.
.".
sta.mp'' for the B-Guido's!Be there or be
. -
Marist
croMountry
team -
for Steve·
equal.time. · ·
•.
..
<· .·,,: :,,. -.. _ ._
. Mike Malet -
a team that is. not so con- . square' Basketball BEER blast and rally,
Kittredge to win the millicn dollar iottery _
Marist
Zoo Crew;:_
morcdec;;;iti. · ·
·
·
. '·
sistent.
.
that. has been cancelled. because of ;"no so he can refuse scholarships aiid affor,d to "
C.
Johh
Hegeman
--foot warmers .
. ·Ron Petro-
a vetoed DivistQn-l pro-
stamp."_·.·
.
, ·
.
.. -
__
comeloMarist.
· · .
.
.
. .-' .. ·
McCannCenter-·J,5()9seatsand3,SOO:'
posal.
,
-
· - ---
-
~·
Marist
Sid·
team -
some 'real'
.
winter
·
·,
:
a Jim,Cleary....:.
the finding of a new runn-
fans to
Jill
them to. meet new..:..NCAA -
· Steve_
Eggink·:.:-.
a speedy and healthy
.
weather.
·.
·
·
":
·
.
-
,
ing back froin Johnstown to fill the shoes
criter:ia. ·
· '" . . ..
recovery. ·
.. ··
·
.. · ·
Rich Steve~s --:- a "Microphone"_ by ofDimniie. ·
-
··
·-,,~" •
-
._
·
·.;:,,
... ., ... " .
Bob Mayerhofer :- a ,"you're welcome" Rem co as advertised on
t.
v. - ··
·
·
• · · - ·
· h '- .The.(;ircle
sporb
.
;t~ff -
K~n
Bohan, Bill
card from the NCAA council who designed ·
Steve· Smith -
scouts in the- McCann
Ivlari~t woine~•s volleyball team (co·ac · Flood, John Petacchi, Holly Sraeel,'Jeanne
.the Division I proposal._ :
Center
, , a-' ..
.
.
Marie Piccone, Jody Johnson, Linda
Le Gloabec, Joe Didziulis and Ian O'Con~
· · . Lynne Griffin -
a-video~tape of Bruce
John Dorii:,van...;. 30 pounds.
· Peter, Janice Willis,· Hilary Polawsky; . nor·- and I wish everyone involved with .
· Johnson to study, · ... • .
. ·
.
. · · · .
Tom Meekins-five inches.
· Kalby · ~)'.Con~er, __ Tanya_ .Whitebui;_st,
Marist athletics a ·Merry Christmas and
a:
-Bmce·Joiinson-avicleo-tapeof.Lynne
Marist football
team -
new tacklin~-.-Mari'! Barnard, 'Dina Chari~, Stacy':- HappyNewYtar.
:
......
----
·
-
27.10.1
27.10.2
27.10.3
27.10.4
27.10.5
27.10.6
27.10.7
27.10.8
27.10.9
27.10.10
27.10.11
27.10.12
27.10.13
27.10.14
27.10.15
27.10.16