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Part of The Circle: Vol. 26 No. 13 - February 25, 1982

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Marlst Coliege, Pough~eepsle; N. Y.
>
. Studerits protest
---
recterc:lFaid.cut·
by
Mait Golonka

.
·
..
.
students could lose over
:
$
1.2 mi11ion by
.
.
1984
,
i (
the budget is passed.
·
Equally

'.
In a special convocation that was held
·
devastating in the president's bµd_get cuts is
·
last Wednesday~
·
students were informed
the reduction in
·
the College -Work-Study
that the total potential loss in financial aid. ··Program~ which underwrites jobs on cam~
to Marist. students could exceed
;
$1.6
.
pus for needy students. Here at Marist, the
milliori
if
-
President Reagan's proposals·
.
c
.
uts would mean a 120/o reduction during
·. ·
through 1983-84 areaU approved;
-
.
·
·
'
:
- .
·
1982-83 resulting in 100
fewer
student jobs
:.
Citing the budget cuts
··.
as
·
·
being
on campus, and a 27% reduction during
."Ridiculous and insane," President Mur-
1983-84 resulting in anJOO additional jobs
ray asked the students to write to their con- · being cut. Overall;
·
Marist students could
gressman to urge them to oppose the pro- . lose
.
$56,000
.
by
·
19g4 in the· Work~Study ·
.
posed cuts.
"It
is our own constitutional
program alone.
:
..
.
..
·.
..
·
.
right," Murray said, "to write to our con-
, An_oth~r
.
program being hit
.
hard
is
the
gress arid express our opinions."
· ·
-
.
·
·
government sponsored Pell Grant. In this
·
-
.
-
Jim Muzikowski, president of the stu- · basic grarit prograµt, students who come
:
dent body here at Marist, also spoke to
.
the
from a household
..
where family incomes
studen
.
ts saying that, "President Reagan's •· are $25,000 or less can apply for aid from
proposed reductions are like a cancer." He
$150 to $1,800 for educational expenses.
continued by saying, '
.
'and if we don't act
.
Wi
.
th the proposed
.
cuts
-
, the maximum
:
now,
.
)
c
_
will only spread and
.
become
grant would be reduced to$1,600 and they
.
·
..
w
·
orse."
:
.
_
. .
.
.
would be limited to families who earh less
·
:
What President Reagan is planning is
than $14,000 annually beginnlilg in ,1982~
drastically reducing the amount of money a
83 .
.
This would mean that Marist students
student
·
could acquire through financial
couid lose up to $400,000 in government.·.
aid. There are three basic loan programs
aided Pell Grants.
.
-
·
.. ·
·
.
·
.
:
that Marist students use
·
to help
.
finance
Nationwide,
.
the effects would be severe.

.
their
.
educatio~. Th~y
·
indude:
·
National
.
The America
·
n Council on Education
.
the
:
.
.
Di~ect Student· Loans
;
urider which
-
a
stu-
_
principal group that represents the voite of
i
;
,:
. ~e
.
n°t-
/
borrows fr9m
,::
the - government;·· .
..
'the countries 3,000
-
coHeges
i
and
·
unfver-...
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-•
February 25,
f
982
J. G~ils
and Magic
Dick
of The
J.
Geils
Band in concert.
See
story, page 6.
·

·
.
_
(Photo
by Rit.k
O'D~nnell)
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tok~epstudentsher!atMarist," he said. : ·
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.
Studeflts
:\:ft
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,
·
.-
For
.
h;~~;/e~
J
c~tion to survive
.
today,.
1
vi
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_
_
,
.
,
, ·
the institutions iil it have to be able to meet
·
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the
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br
Theresa
Sulliv~n
.
students
>
.-
'.',The stµdents atMarist College
···.
p
-
o~itive i;ar~ing experience. Peggy Fussell,
.
?
::
0 : \ : '
:

••
-
·
•·
.
College administrators know that they
·
aren't really con~erried with learning," said- a senior fashion
·
design
·
major;

said,
3
./
:;L
:;
\
·
-;,
l!av¢to
·
p~epare
tp
m,eet
:
new

~eeds,
.
new
:,
·
Preside!lt DennisMu
'
rrayand Academic

..
Matt
·
Chandler,
·
a
.

senior
·
business ad-
••science of Man stimulated me
to
learn
·
as
·
d!m~~~s and new c1;1mculums.

::_
.
.
•·.
.
V:ice
·
President
.
Andrew Molloy
.
fielded
,
ministration major'. He added, ''th
_
inking is
much as I could. If it weren't for the pro-
.
Manst College 1s fully aware
:
of
.
the
·
questions.from some
,
70 students at
'
a one-
no
_
treallyencouragedhere."
_
-
-
.
. gram, I
·
wouldhaveleftY


'
.
· :.
_
·
change~
-
~aking pl.tee
.
in higher edu~ation and-a-half hour meeting last week
;
.
·
Coi:nniunicatio
_
n
,
arts major
:
Dee Nell, a
.
.
Students asked Murray and Molloy ques-
and
'
th1s 1s o~e of the reasons
.
why
.
it has
<:oncern over the 1;:frge percentage of
se
_
nior, said that(he problem does not end
tions
·
ccincerriing the Science of Man pro-
become so succes~ful.
.
.
-:
.
:
~
.\
..
·
.
Gareer-_oriented students
.
and strong interest
-
with
.
the
·
··
students.
.
"I've found
.
that
·
gram's
.
destiny
·
.
.
Murray said that
·
.the
.
On Friday: Feb~uar; 19
·
, Marist took
,
in the future of;the Science of ~an pro-
.
.
teachers will hand yciu a t
_
ex.t book and you
CORE and Science of Mari program may
.
·
another step in its upward bound direction,
,
gram
.
at Marist
.
were ·the two recurring
will
give back what you've read," she said,

be blended. When asked by a soP.homore
The vote to add a graduate program to
.
the· issues discussed on Tuesday, Feb. I 6, 1982,
adding, "All I
-
have to do is memorize the
Science of Man stµdent a~out the future of
college's
.
computer scien!=e
·
curriculum
,
in Fireside Lounge.
.
. ,
_
book and
I'U
get an A.''
.•
.
.
the program, Molloy said, "We can't deal
overwhelmingly was passed by the faculty.
_.
S_eve~ty~~ve percen_t of Mans! s_ stud~nts
.
Many students verbalized iheir agree~
with what will be."
.
No definite answer to
W~:it exactly does this mean? Well,
it
__
maJor
.
m _e1th~r ~usmess adm1mstrat1on,
.
ment with Nell. In response to Nell's con-
the question was given.Statements like,
"It
_
gives Marist the chance to become pro-
commum~ation
·
_
arts,
-
comp.uter
cern, Murray said; "Not every professods

may be possible the Science of Ma
·
n pro-
minently known to the community and mathemat1i;:s . or co!"puter . science.
going to challen_gC: you."
·
gram will continue,
.
but not as it does
more
,
for being able
·
to
.
offer to
_
students· a ; ~O\yev~r! Manst calls itself a hberal _arts
presently," were indicative of Molloy's
complete education_ i_n c_omputer science. -
_
institution.
~any,
--
.
st~d
7
~ts
questions
_
A soph()more communication arts major
answer.
-
.
.
,
The largest IBM facihty m the world, only whether the
.
col!ege s pnonties h
.
ave fallen
expressed dissatisfaction with some of the
The students repeatedly expressed their
.
about nine
miles
down the road, has of-
away from the liberal a
_
rts.
_
faculty, sighting computer science
.
teachers
concern about
-
the future of academics at
·
-
as an ·example. "There are a number of
Marist. According to the
·
students, Marist
fered to assiSt Marist in giving students ex-
·
:
Chri
.
s Harrison, a sen1·or En
.
g1·1sh ma1·or
··
,
-
t
ht b
h
·
·
h
h
h Id
·
h ·
t
f h' t
'perience and a quality ed
.
ucation in the field
.
courses aug
y teac ers ere w o are ex-
s ou
.
·
stress
_
t e 1mpor ance o
1s ory,
of computers.
asked,-"How much of the Title
Ill
Grant
per~ in their field; however, they have
religion, . philosophy,
literature,
- went to the liberal arts?" Murray said the · n~r learned how to teach," he said.
.
mathematics and the natural sciences.
~he Director of Computer Scie~ce, John money was distributed into the areas of ~Murray said that the general deficiency
Chandler said; "Students are trying to go
MacDonald,
is
retired from IBM
.
He join-
"hardware,
·
the

business component,
hi the educational system is that teachers
through as easily arid as quickly as possi~
ed the
·
staff at Marist in July 1981. The management and !flarketing communica-
aren't taught how to teach
;
He said, "We'll
ble." He said that when he entered Marist,
~_now ledge and experience he has is a big tions." Altho.ugh none of these programs is
identify the deficiencies. If they can't im-
his goal was to.obtain a high-paying job. ·
asset to Marist. When asked about how he classified under the traditional liberal arts,
prove, we'll find other teachers."
·
,
He said that knowledge is now more impor-
felt about the vote MacDonald said, "I'm Murray said, "Any course on this campus
Although students sighted many· tant to him.
"If
it wasn't for Dr. Ryan and
very pleased.."
_
·
·
can be considered a liberal arts course if it weaknesses in Mar
.
ist academically, most
his program, I wouldn't be the
·
person I
The vote still has to pass by the State is
-
taughtwithinaliberalartstradition."
seemed to agree
.
that the Science of Man
am," said Chandler, adding, "If there
.
.
The
-
Stu.dents
said that in reality, this
program, created by Dr. Xavier Ryan,
-
were more teachers like him, Marist would
-
.
ideal does not
·
exist for most Marist
.
associate professor of philosophy, was· a

be the best institution in the ~ountry!"
·
Continued to page
J
0


























































- - Page 2 · THE CIRCLE• February 25, 1982
DOt-.J
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Att)l1"hirt~!-
Policies, rules, . guidelines, handbooks
propaganda. Now that The Circle is trying·to
and regulations. Marist College has more
ope·rate more like a newspaper than a
than Its share of these,and for what?
·
school press release, the staff is told they
Apathy,
rumors,
unhappiness,
. are overstepping their bounds, or trying only
· absenteeism and chaos. Mari st College is
to rake up dirt.
.
packed to the rim with these, and why?
Contradictions can ·be found in so many
"Contradiction''. is a choice word for
areas: student organizations that cannot be
describing Marist, as contradictions can be.
run by students, continuous complaints
found throughout the campus.
that there is nothing to do, while events are ·
Take a look.
·
being attended by 11 people, converting
Marist is a school boasting of an exper-
video tapes in the library over to VHS while
tise in communication arts, one that is
we have only one player this size so that
vigorously trying to raise funds for a com-
students can wait on line to see their
munication arts center. Yet, there is no com-
assigned tape (which is really conducive to
munication at Marist. Who knows what is
academic progress), as well as the variety of
going on?
·
conflicting stories to· be found on and
Resident. Assistants are chosen by the
-around the campus.
college's Student · Affairs Office .and the
Granted, other Institutions across the
Housing.Offlce·to live in the dorms an_d en-
country have their share of inaccuracies In
, ... . ..
.
force a set ofnormsout\ined in.the student .. -·•·· po\iciesand'student Hfe/butone<th\hg·sets
::t'-c,,c/h'' ..
,,·ec,,,·:;nandbook:"",Now;--:-·euner'·some
·students
. '"'.Marist ab'oiie'the rest. '. .. ·. '.
i.
. .
.
~
·
haven't received
a handbook or
th_e college · ·
Marist
College
has two prevalent majors:
has
deemed
certain
individuals -
like
Communication Arts and Business. Both of
members of the basketball team --- above
these explore interpersonal relationships
the rules. Heaven help the people assigned
and management skills. Why doesn't_ the
to work in areas with such individuals.
college itself enroll in . some of these
The Circle takes a_ place in this list· of
courses?
school contradictions, The Circle has one of
· It's almost funny • -
this · is a school
the smallest staffs on campus yet half of ·
stressing a moral and aesthetic view of the
the school has had extensive journalistic-_
world lri relation to interdisciplinary study.·
training, siri9e they are so willing to offer us
That Is the core of this institution, and yet,
their professional criticisms. For years this
· Mari st doesn't practice. what it preaches.
paper was regarded as nothing more than
Guest editorial: Spirit
· Perched in the corner, high above the
basketbaU court at St. Francis College in
Brooklyn, I couldn't help but realize· the
school spirit that exists at Marist.
On this night, Student Appreciation
Night, there was no admission charge to
view possibly the most important Metro-
South Conference game of the year. Sitting
at the. press table in the corner, which was
much like· sitting in the blue seats at
Madison Square Garden-obstructions and
all-I could count the spectators in the
starids.
I estimated the small crowd at 300 (coun-
ting players, ushers, cheerleaders, the press
and the Marist Fox}. Feelings of watching a
high school game surfaced, but were erased
Editor
The
Associate Editors
Business Manager
Circle
News Editor
when I heard the name Steve Smith.
, • , The St.: Fra·ncis gym -was about half the
-· size of the Mccann Center;· Wlttl a public ads
dress system · that was muffled in the
acoustically poor facility.
·
At the McCann Center, the past two home
games have drawn crowds of 2,200 and
1,600. It isn't nearly as -many as a Notre
Dame or UCLA or even St. John's would
draw, but when Marist is winning, nothing
can compare with the. electricity that
generates.
.
·

Naturally, the result of the game is more
important than the size of the gym or the
fans, but, nonetheless, it's good to be back
· home.
,,
-Bill Travers
Terri Ann Sullivan
Sports Editor
Rick O'Donnell
Entertainment
Patti Walsh
Maggie Browne
Arts
& Reviews
Ginny Luciano
Secretary
Readers Write
All letters must be typed triple space wl_th a 60 space margin, and submitted to the
Circle office no later than 6 p.m. Monday. Short letters are preferred. We reserve the · .
right to edit all letters. Letters must be signed, but names·may be withheld upon re-
quest. Letters will be published depending upon availability of space.
Misquoted
To the Editor:
In last week's Circle an article
· was printed about the campus
pregnancy rate. It is not my pur-
pose to discuss the topic of this ·
article but rather to questio!l the
amount of professionalism in its
writing.
·
· Several quotes appeared in the
article, one of which bore my
name. I am aware- of the inac-
curacy:, of my quote and won~er
how many_ of the other quotes
were also inaccurate. When
writing for a newspaper, quotes
should be reported in the_ same
· context in which they were given,
else they lose their meaning and
may· be easily misinterpreted.
Perhaps in the future those who
are being quoted in the paper will
be made aware of that fact and
given the opportunity, out of pro-
fessional courtesy, to read the ar~
ticle before it is printed.
.
Sincerely yours,
Regina Murphy
What about
guys? ·
To the Editor:
We are writing this letter in
protest . of the outrageously
slanted article concerning the
pregnancy rate at Marist College.
The article itself, regardless of its
content; is a disgrace. Sources
were misquoted and· -the jour-
nalistic ethic of presenting both
sides of the story was nonexistent.
· The · reporter
says
.
the
"students" went . for counseling
':but it is obvious she meant ·only
· girls, since
it
is about the after af~
fects · of having an abortion. I
would like to know how many
guys went for counseling, or even
admitted responsibility for their
actions.
Are we to assume that Marist ·
guys are merely hapless victims of
"promiscuous" · females,
or
maybe we should thank them for
helping . out all ,those "lonely .
freshman girls. No mention at all
a girl gets pregnant, does that
automatically mean she sleeps
around? The decision whether to
have sex or not to have sex is ·not
"taken too lightly" by many
· girls, .it is often a very difficult
decision. A remark such as this
just reenforces the view many
outsiders have of Marist as "Mat- -
tress College."
This article was written by a
girl? Does she stiil hold. the ar-
. chaic belief that iHs the girl's du-
ty
alone to protect' herself against
pregnancy? Why must girls bear
the burden of pregancy and it's
stiinga by themselves? It takes
two to tango;· if these inexperienc-
ed underclass girls are irresponsi-
ble, what does that say for sup-
posedly mature Marist guys?
·
.
Signed,
The Freshman girls who-
want to be accepted on
. was made about the concept of -.
male responsibility at Marist:
their merit; not their
mattress
Gloria Walsh
Lauri Sheridan
There.Sa Rocco
Dee Zappolo
Mary-Ellen Muzikowski ·
Why are there contraceptives
available only to girls at the
health office? What about con-
traceptives for guys? Just because
Doctoring the record
To the Editor: -
In response _
to your editorial
·entitled "20 questions," I would
like to .take this opportunity to
respond to question No. 6: Why .
does' Marist offer courses in pre- ,
med?
Vincent Coda '72 DPM
Rodney Steller '72 DDS
John Noonan '68 MD
Richard Dickerson '69 MD
Joseph Ritz '70 DDS
Gerald McKenna '62 MD
Bill Travers
Copy Staff
Theresa Cignarella
Linda Glass
Phgtography Staff
Michael Thompson
Karyn Magdalen
. Advertising Staff
Stanley Harris '68 MD
Bryan McCulloch '75 MD
Patrick Parcells '72 MD
James Vaughan '70 DMD
StevenMink '72 DPM
Peter Passaro ~68 DDS
Although this list is not com-
plete, I do believe · that
it
ade-
quately answers the question.
Ronald T.Zurawik '70 ·.
Director of the
Annual Fund
Karen Lindsay, Joanne Holdorf!
Meg Adamski
. Caroline Hamilton, Linda Soviero,
Carl Carlson, Jeanne LeGloahes
Kyle Miller
Theresa Abad, Gail Savarese,
Layout
Donna Cody, Mary Huber
James Barnes, Paul Crowell,
Photography Editor
Grace Gallagher
Jami Rosen:Classified
Copy Editor
Theresa Su
Iii
van
Writing Staff
Chris Dempsey, Eileen Hayes,
Cartoonist
TedWaters.
Jeanmarie Magri no, Louise Seelig ,
Marketing Advertising
Joann Buie
Debbie Valentine, Pat Brady,
Faculty Advisor
David McGraw
Barbara McMahon, Paul Palmer




















































































































































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THE CIRCLE· Page
3
>
Off-campus .secllritYrclises ~tudent concern
by 'Jennifer Grego
,
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This 'semester's exodus of 16 students
·
from
·
Park
·
Place and 30 from Oakwood
.
raises concern .!)Ver security at these off-
·campus dorms.
·
''You don't think twice
_
.about security
until you're there one night and the place is
·
pretty empty," said Peggy Ahearn, one of
the remaining 54 Oakwood · residents.
"Then you realize there isn't sufficient pro-
tection."
·
·
Maria Argano, another Oakwood resi-
dent, said, "There is a feeling of isolation
in
.
Oak
_
wood ~nd you can really
.
get
frightened;'-'
.•.
Mary Ellen Mills, a former Park Place
resident who moved to Marist's regular
campus this semester for convenience, said,
.
"Everyone else had security and it wasn't
·
right that we didn't. They kept promising it
tous/'
._-
·
·
"There's nobody out there this
semester," said Mills.
Park Place now houses 4 male students,
1 l female students, and
·
one female resident
assistant.
·
Two
·
weeks into this semester, the hous-
ing office, which handles security for these
dorms, initiated security at Oakwood. A
desk, positioned:at one of two doors that
a_re always
·
kept unlocked, is now manned
nightly.
'
Argano, who is one of the residents who
·
works the desk, pointed out there is no
phone at this desk. The phone, which was a
. direct-line to Resident Coordinator for
Off-Campus Facilities Barry Jamison's
room, was lost" last semester and has yet to
be replaced.
.,
•:
·
Housing Director Geoff Seeger said he
was unaware of this.
.
"Security could be very effective
·
here
and it's not,"
.
said Sheryl Bassford; an
Oakwood
RA.
.
-
.
At Park Place, Dennis Deisel, a resident
who has worked security on campus in the
past, now makes exterior rounds of the
building in search of what he considers to
·
be security breeches. He reports these to
housing.
Deisel,
whose room is without a phone,
has no direct line to campus at the present
.time.
·
Bassford indicated that when there is a
problem at Oakwood she is forced to call
the police. "Once we call the p
·
olice," she
said, • 'the situation is out of our hands.''
. Ted Perrotte, an
RA
at Oakwood who is
not worried about the limitations of securi-
ty there, agreed that they are at a disadvan-
tage because they can not call campus
·
security for assistance
.
He explained that
when a
.
problem arises he first calls
Jamison, who calls Marist Security, which
calls the police.
"I don't know if the police would res-
pond as well if an
RA
called as if Marist
Security called," said Assistant Resident
·
·
Director John Schoch.
Seeger suggests protective measures that
the residents at these off-campus dorms
Lack of
_
.
space is problem at library
..
_
·
by Mark Skinner
a little over a hundred
:
people, not counting
"They may not want to go along with ideas
,..
the seminar rooms," said Mrs. Brenner.
-
of years ago.''
..
·
L~ted in a
·
·
Campus Center storage
Possible solutions to the library's pro-
According to Vincent Toscano, dean of
·
room, whose only access is through _the of-
blems were offered by both its staff and ad-
academic programs and services, a hard
·
fices of. Upward Bound,
.
are old sewing
·
-- ministration.
·
look at the way the library space is curre~t-
machines and typewriters, ironing
.
boards,
According to
·
Adrian
Perreault,
ly being used is necessary before any maJor
a furnace, garbage cans, a park bench -
·
senior/archival librarian, an expansion of
steps are taken. "We first have to figure
and about SOQO library books.
the library, known as Phase III, was envi-
out what's the best way to store the
Although the books stored there are
sioned in 1976 and planned to be built
books" he said.
·
·
·
can take. These are "the obvious things
that I would suggest to any students -
on
or off," he said. This includes keeping
room doors locked at all times and main-
taining communication with fellow
residents.
Seeger called attention to the nature of
the Park Place building (each room has its
own street entrance). "lt's almost like hav-
ing your own apartment," he said, "and
it's too easy not to communicate with each
other."
Many of the Park Place residents have
phones in their rooms. Seeger said they
should never hestitate to call the state
police when a problem arises because they
have a two-minute response time.
· Although Maria Argano feels an outside
patrol such as the one at Park Place would
be a waste at Oakwood, she wishes there
were some way to make the dorm more
secure.
"We're secluded," said Argano, "so
maybe intruders wouldn't ·be able to find
our dorm."
·
·
between 1983 and 1986. "This plan called
Tos~ano said that he is considering th
_
e
seldom requested, they represent a serious
k
problem the Marist college library is facing
for a four-story structure to be built over
possibility of. going to closed stac s, m
~
.
. _
·
i.i.
W
Id h di
the Patl•
·
o o
·
n the \"est
·
s1· de," he said, adding
which a person who wants a book would
· - Jack of space. " e cou
an e a cou-
'
d ·
ld b
·
k
h
·1
that
1·1
could add up to 24,000 square feet to
have to ask for it at a desk an it wou
e
pie thousand more boo s
.
at t e most unt1
d h
_
we get some better storage," said Barbara
the library's current 26,000 square feet of
gotten for him. "Maybe it's goo t at peo-
Fr. Berry
.
\
Brenner, director of the library.
space.
ple can browse, but I'm n?t sure that's the
·
L
t
.
r
g
To add to the situation, the recent ac-
.
·
,
.
· .
most efficientway," he said.
ec Uf ef
ti
es
creditation report by
··
the Middle States
Although other members of the staff
Closed stacks could :e {laced clo~~r
\
:
evaluation team again criticized the library, ·:also favored_ t~is a~dition, Perreault s~i~ . togt'ller ~ttn ·
.
op:~d~~~n:!i
ro~~\l~iuf:\~
new
:
concern
,
.
... ;
;;,;-,,..
.
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C

C:i-;
"i
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1,)•
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as it had
_
~n 1974, not only for "jnadequ_ate
that the ad_m11~1stration probably wo_µldn.t
,
.. an_ posshi Y anth
.
-
..
.
_.
'!Th
.
.
-
15
-
·
•w
·•
o
·
u
•·
id open up
·
.
-_- ..
--
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-_.'
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.
. ·
·
·
--.
·.
· ·
·
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·
·
· -·
·.
·
b · 1
·
·
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r
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·ts
I k
f

.
t
n
·
alon
·
g w1th
·
1t "New people come 10 and
·
built to
.
ouse
em .
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,
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· •
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t
·
y
·
·
~;:~~~r:~;iude~t/Z:-rr~
1
iibr;iy
:
6nl~~:eit!
?
.
fi~e to
.
:
have their own ideas..-•
·
he
s~id.
:


mct::~~~frt~~}::i;:~J/:u~~it
cat~i~~~
:
,.·
'.L
or
·
en
·
v1ronmen
·

·
·
·
ing system, Toscano said that he was work-
·
·
ing on a proposal in whic~ a person could
by
Meg Adamski
-
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES IN
.The
·
.
Division ~f .Arts
an
_
d
Le"tters
sponsored
by
_
__
__
The
.
-
Student
.
Academi·c ·comm
-
it~ee
·
ATTENTION:
_
·
·
browse the library's holdings on a com-
·
puter. He said that advantages of a key
word search on a computer over the current
system include "locating resources that you
might not find in a conventional
·
~ear~~,.
and "the speed of computer processing. .
.
Toscano said that this is the way libran~s
are heading in the 21st century an~ t~at fie
would like to implement it at Manst m the
next five years.
"It
is a priority for
,
next
year for me to develop thi~
1
and give t to the
library staff for reactions.
Sp~aking to a group of Marist students
and faculty last week, a Fordham Universi-
ty Professor called for a new relationship
.
between humans and their environment.
Father
.
Thomas Berry's lecture was the
first of the Spring 1982 Faculty Lecture
Series. The
·
theme of the series is Global
Awareness
,
Alternative Approaches.
"The Environment" lecture was funded
by the division of Sciences, with Bob
Meadowcroft serving as co-chairman, and
the division of Humanities, with Gene Best
providing the introduction for Father
Berry.
Communicati·on;
·
English
·
-
,
.
Fin·e
Arts,
.
Fashion
Design,
&
;
.
.
According to library staff members, t!tey
are against closed stacks and computenza-
tion of the library for a number of reasons.
One
.
major reason for their stand is
because people would not be able to browse
.
through the shelves. uAnyone who lik~s
books is in
:
favor of browsing," said Mrs.
Brenner. "In a huge library it might have
its place but not in a library this size. You
Father Berry, a Passionist priest, is the
director of Riverdale Center
,
Center for
Religious Research, now Center for E~uth
Studies. He is also an associate professor
of Asia Religions at Fordham Universi!Y in
New York City. Berry has done extensive
research in the discussed topic. He has also
written several novels related to the topic.

i
i
Modern Lan.g~age M~iors
·
On
Tuesday,
Ma·rch 2
Af
3:30
p.m. to
5:00
p.m.
·
_
·
1n Fireside Lounge
·
Learn about
career
opportunities
with an Arts and Letters education.
Listen ai1.d talk to ...
Eugene Rebcook -Marketing
·
-
Kasimir Norkeliunas-Bi-Lingual
Jeptha Lanning-Marist Abroad
David Mccraw-Journalism·
Open Discussion
Refreshments Afterwards
'
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,,
can see almost all our books m one room.
Marian Nichols,
.
cataloguing and
reference
·
librarian, said that Toscano's
proposals would be a disservice to the col-
lege.
"If
Marist wants to be hull\.an, they
won't close the stacks," she said.
"It
would be like going to
a
-
grocery store
·
where you couldn't look at the products."
·
Perreault said that closed stacks would
-
not substa
·
ntially reduce the space problem.
"We have no more than 36 inches between
stacks
·
now and a minimum of 30 inches is
needed to get through," he said, adding
that special construction would
.
~e ne~ded
to hold the weight of more books m
a
given
area.
'...
Staff members also cited the cost of t~e
possible change-over as a reason for their
disapproval.
"It
would J?robably
_
be more
expensive to gel all
_
the mformat1on on
:1
computer than to bmld a much larger addi-
tion to the library than they ever dreamed
of " said Mrs. Nichols.
~'Employment costs would increase
too," said Mrs. Brenner, because pages
would have to be employed to get the
books. "Also
,
people would get annoyed
of waiting for their books."
Other means are needed to cure the
library's problems, said Perreault: "This
library is far from being able to be pulled
out by a computer or page," he said.
The lecture started with various exerpts
from a speech on extinction that Berry
presented at the Cathedral of St. J~h~ the
Divine. From 1982 to the year 2,000 1t 1s ex-
pected that from 500,000 to 2 million
species will be extinct. According to Berry,
"there is a list available from the Interna-
tional Union for Conservation of Nature
and Natural Resources a list of some 500
species of higher animals that are presently
imperiled."
Berry touched upon the involvement of
the four basic aspects of the world
:
political,
.
commercial, educational, and
religious. Of the four, the political aspect is
the official group that is effective even
though it is on an extremely small scale.
The speaker explained
-
that the United
Nations has been involved with a "World
Charter for Nature" that was proposed by
third world country, Zaire. It may be noted
the United States has not supported this
draft.
According to Berry, "What we are talk-
ing about is not simply another historical
change or cultural modification but a
change of geological and biological order
of magnitude."
When it comes to reversing this destruc-
tive path man is following, "hope lies in
marginal subcultures of this country,"
stated Berry.
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- - - Page 4 •·Tf:IECIRCLE. February25~
1912
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Sµrvey describe'S
'typical'
Maristfre:s,H.Qlafl
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by Kathy O'Connor
at ~arist, conducted jointly by U<;:LA, and
,
Compared with other students in colleges . ·-~~sponded
,
th~i'\;
·
i;
0 1
L),.1or~·
;~,~{~~Id
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I

the American Council on Education. ~·The simiHar to Marist, Mrs:
Am~IO
concluded
that married \vomen's activities should
be
i
.,;
:
.
The typical Marist student
'
is middles _purpose of the survey is
to
describe college that Marist is average in background and·
confined to the home·and family, and they
·
.
-..
class; Roman Catholic, has a B average,
students
·-
as a nation," said
..
Roberta attitudes. "Marist students
-
ate represen-
-
_
. also responded positively more often that
drinks beer often, stays up all night; strives
_
Amato, director
.
.
of the Marist co'unseling . tative of what we see nation~lly," she s
·
aid.
_
·women should bdubjcct
to
th
e
di-art:
..
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for equal rights for women, thinks sex is
Center,
·
"as well-as find out what
.
the
·
·
·
·
·
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.
"Overall there has
.
been no
·
significant·
OK if people like each other, believes abor-
students at Marist are like "
.i\ccordirig to the sur~ey,
th~
attitud;s of
,
change
;
with Marist st
_
t,tdents;';'

said Mrs.
-
t
_
ion should be legalized, believes that
~ The questionnaire,
.
giv~n in Septemb
.
er,
.
Marist stu.dents iir~ similiar
~o
the auittide5.
-

.
Amato,
-
.
-
•~with
-
~
the
·
.
excc:pti?n
-~
-
of.
'
SAT

·
women should be subject to the draft, and
during orientation, consists of
50_
items
.
of other students 1
.
n the '!-at1on .. However,
scores;" This year's freshmen class
·
has
believes in minimum competence for col-
asking the freshmen to provide both fac-
males and femal_es ~ften differ widely. --.
scored higher on the,math portion of the
lege grads.
·
_
tual information as well as the attitudes
For ex~_mple,. while
7_2
percent o_f Mansi
test. Mrs. Amato. said that this may be due
-
-
.
This description is according to a
toward a variety of topics, said Mrs .
..
males say sex 1s OK
_
1f people_ hke each . _to the new computer science major being
research survey of college freshmen given
Amato.
other, onlv
28.7
percent of Manst fe~al~s·
offered at Marist.
·
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HOdd
Couple" opens on staie tomorrow night
:

.

by
Karen Undsay
Nancy Underhill had a dilemma. She
came lo Maris!
10
direct the play, "Don't
Drink the Water," but the hostage
·
situa-
tion in Iran and the discontent in Poland
were factors that made her decide to do
"The Odd Couple."
" 'Don't Drink the Water' is a comedy
about Americans being held hostage at the
American Embassy in Germany.
·
1
felt that
it would be tasteless to do that play, con-
sidering what is going on in the world. 'The
·
Odd Couple' i
.
~ more innocent," said
Underhill.
Kalamazoo College in Michigan with a deliver lines in their
.
own words
,
while in
.
·
"Thebdd Co~ple." T6 deal with this
pro-
-
:
B.A. in Theater and received her. master's character."
-
-
-
-
blein, the cast decided
to
develop their own
degree from the University of Michigan. .
Neil Simon is a
··
·
subtle corriediari; she
characters. ''They will have to be strong in
Since then, she has worked for the Arena said. His comedy comes out of real. life
the the first five minutes so· the audience
Stage in Washington, D.C., the Children's situations that are physical as well_as ver-
will throw away
.
their
·
preconceived ideas
Television
·
workshop in New York and
_
at
-
bal. Underhill says-that timing is the key to _ out the window," she said;
..

-·•
·
Fifi
Oscard and associates where she was a
this kind of comedy: The actors can't an-·
The fact that there is
.
no theater depart-
·
-
casting agent.
ticipate their lines; it has to be
-
SROn-
ment at Marist has created much difficulty
taneous. Her advise to comedy actors is:
for the directo
_
.
r. "Nothing is provided and
During rehearsafs, Underhill uses im-
"D

- 1·
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·
·
··
·
h
fl
_
e !Vet your mes
in
a
-
.
stra1g t,
at
there. is
.
no faculty support,"
..
said
provisation to help the actors get' in touch
tone of voice.
If
you
·
say them with serious
Underhill.
"Y
oti"have to beg, borrow
.
and
with what their charact
_
ers are really saying
intensity; it's not funny any
:
more. The au:.
__
steal for furniture and props."
-
and feeling
,-·
According to Underhill, it
.
dience shouldn't" feel
·
sorry for your
·
-
helps establish a pasi for the character.
·
character,
"
i
said Underhill.
·

·
' Nan~y Underhill stated h~r
·
goal as: "To
"Actors get stuck with th~ written word,"
.
Underhill said that the audience will pro-
put on a show that lean be proud of and to
she said.
_
"Improvisation gets them to
bably identify with the television \iersion of kriow everyone's name by the end."
Tomorrow night, "The Odd Couple"
will open on the Marist stage
at
8
p.m.
Underhill said that her reasons for choos-
r------~---------•---------•-----•---------•••-----..
ing "The Odd Couple" were that ii had
never been done at Maris! and
-
that
it would
sell. "Neil Simon is a good American
writer
but
he is
not
studied enough," she
~aid.
.-
-
·
Ms. Underhill is an actress and produc-
tion wordinator for the Community Ex-
perimental Repertory Theater (CERT)
which is a iouring company and does shows
for the Tri-stare area. She graduated from
Club allocations-
i•
-.
,
:o,-,v

,;,
,
,.
,,,,~,."
~,
;
_,
.,.' .
·"'
., '
.
'
·
'"
:
:.~':
_
.
:
.
_.
.
:
'
..
· ·.
f
.
:
apptoved
by
CSL
r
hf Geoff
Aldri1;h
-
l
<
-
The Council of
Student
Leaders has ap-
proved the allocations of ai least 90070 of
the clubs and organizations on campus for-
this semester, according io CSL President
JirrfMuzikowski. _
.
.
·
·
·
·
·
The long process of gettin'i the
_
al_t:oca-
tions approved due
10
the fact that many
issues
-
come. up when discussing them at
·
csL meetings'. ''It is important that we br-
ing up issues pertaining to the allocations
;
and talk
_
1hem over before we approve
~,nything,"said
Muzikowski.
_
·
.
One
-
problem, that delayed CSL in ap-
proving the
.
budgets was that many of them
_
were submitted late. A CSL guideline states
that if a dub submits its allocationafter a
.
certain date,·
that
_
club \viii face a 10%
_-.
reduction in its final allocation, a budget
submitted requesting $l000 would face a
$
IO0 reduction,
.
"A significant number wertr late,"
Muzikowski said. "So a lot of clubs will
find their allocations redui:ed aboiH JO%."
·
Muzikowski then went on to say that the
·
'
·
I0OJ'o reduction would be
-
minor. There is
time
to
appeal the decisions by CSt- from
the clubs that feel they have not been given
just
·
consideration.
.
.
· -
-
_ -
._
·
Jim Muzikowski said that there will pro•
~
.
bably be
.
few complaints. "There have been
very few grievances up to this point," he
said. "I think thar almost everyone got
what they wanted."
According to CSL, there is
.
only
·
one club
that will not receive its requested allocation
at this time. Muzikowski said he was confi-
dent that the one club will meet the CSL re-
quirements and will then receive its funds.
-
One club president said that CSL has
trealed all the clubs fairly in dealing with
the allocations. "I think that CSL takes in-
·
to consideration that all clubs and
organizations must be treated equally when
approving all the allocations," said Gaelic
Society President Don Eustace.
"We applied for a certain amoum in our
allocation, but I don't think that we will get
that much due to the fact that CSL has only
so much to give to each club," said
Eustace.
·
Of all the
·
responsibilities CSL has,
allocation approval is the longest and
hardest according to Muzikowski. •
--
~
--
-
-
·
-._
,
.
.

-

I
.
i



























































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-----------------lllllllliiiilll ...
11111llilliiiiliilii . . .
_ _ _ _ _ _
llllii _ _ _ _ _
February 25, 1982 •
THE CIRCLE~
Page5
Around the world
by Ginny Luciano'
,
This week I'd like to scope the United
States colleges and universities and glance
.
at
·
what's happening to deem them
newsmakers.
.
The most prevalent topic which has
outraged college presidents and students
alike
-
is Reagan's proposed student aid cuts.
Just as Presidenf Murray spoke to ·the
Marist community last week, one specific
·
group of college presidents gathered to pro-
claim the
55% cut in a matter of two years
"a catastrophic step backward."
·
Presidents froin the University of Penn-
sylvania, Lasalle College, Villanova,
·
and
Temple University are up in arms over the
··
turn around in the government's 25 year
commitment
·
to equal· opportunity educa-
.
.
tion. Agreeing that student aid programs
are an investment in the future, the group is
still puzzled about a solution. But, they
won't give up without a fight.
-
Elsewhere on the college scene, Molloy .
College in Rockville Centre is finally going
Saturday night fever-
by Eileen Hayes
It's Saturday night and you're
'
in the
Pub. You've just
_
received change for the
drink you bought. Instead of leaving a tip
for the bartender, you walk over to the
video games
.
You pause,
·
wondering
whether or not to waste
·
your money on this
silly contraption. Then you put the quarter
in; now you're hooked. You've got a highly
contagious disease that's sweeping the na-
tion called 'video game fever.' Three-
fourths of America have this disease and
have contributed 20 billion quarters and
75,000 man-years to this craze.
·
Actually, it's the manufacturers who
score higher than anyone else.
·
Atari
,
.
the
leading producer earned an estimated 415
.
million do1lars last year. Bally, the next
largest, profited an approximate
130
million dollars.
The home video systems are
-
also raking
in the proceeds for these companies. The
·
sales of Mattel's
·
Intellivsion increased
300%
in
1981
over the previous year. Atari
and Magnovox's Odyssey also reported an
increase. These consoles which hook up to
any television set cost anywhere between
150 to 300 dollars. The cartridges for them
·
are in the price range of. 15 to
50
dollars.
The prices alone make this toy quite an in-
vestment for the average home.
An average video game arcade will reap
profits between
200
and
800
dollars a week
depending on location. An addict to the
games will usually spend anywhere between
.IO
.
and 40 dollars a week
.
Not all players
will deplete their monetary sources on the
games, but they agree that an investment
between 20 and 50 dollars has to be made
to excel at any game.
Controversy has arisen about the games.
The machines
-
are squandering the
allowances of the nation's youngsters.
Gamblers Anonymous discourages the
games with the theory that compulsion can
begin in children as young as ten. Other
anti- video-gamists claim thet they con-
sume too
·
much time that can be used for
more productive activity like schoolwork.
They also claim that the games glorify
violence. There are rumors that laws are
going to be put into effect to make it illegal
for children under a certain age to play in
the arcades.
The advocates of the games say that
video style
there are a number of advantages to the
video machines. They speed hand eye coor-
dination, sharpen driving and ~ath skills,
shield the youth from technological future
shock and the young players are becoming
maste~s· of the computer; they live with it
and play with it.
One way to beat the games has just hit
the market: a book entitled
How to Beat
the Video Game by Michael Blanchet.
It
can be found in any bookstore. Excerpts
from the book appear in the Sunday edi-
tion of the Daily News. The book tells the
reader how to get huge scores on the
popular games. Some people feel that tile
books take out the fun of the games, while
others want as much play from a quarter as
they can get.
But beware, the video game industry has
just launched a device called a chip to alter
the games. By installing the chip into the
computerized machine, the pattern will
change or will speed up. The chip could
lower the scores for a while, until they are
mastered also.
Has the video game fever gotton out of
control? The only antidote known at this
time is for the afflicted to give no quarter.
.
co-ed. Molloy has been an all girls college
for
.
the past 27 years, but
·
starting this .
.
September there will
.
~e a change of
scenery.
Most of
.
the 15 hundred students think
it's a good idea.
-A
three year study showed
A long trip toMarist and America
today's high school student reluctant to
by Laurie Lovisa
said. "It's a real cultural adjustment."
enroll in a single sex college. College of-
Machogu said the hardest adjustment for
ficials said going co-ed
.
was designed
"to
Nyabonyi Machogu, a transfer student
her was learning to cope with the attitude
make the school not only attractive to men,- from
Nairobi University in
Kenya
of Americans.
''I
find people in this coun-
but also more attractive to women."
remembers well her first encounter with
try to be very unfriendly," she said.
Here's a story about the Sigma Alpha cold and snowy weather at Marist College.
"Everyone is so much to themselves that it
Epsilon Fraternity Chapter at the Universi-
"Classes were
·
cancelled one morning
is difficult to make friends." It was her
ty of Cincinnati. It seems the frat has lost due to a snow storm the night before," she
first experience with culture shock
,
she
its c
_
harter for two years as punishinent for said: "Because
I
had not known of the
said. The amount of segregation in
a "trash" party held last month. The party cancellation,
I
walked to Champagnat
America also bothers Machogu. "In
was said to be insulting to blacks in where my class was usually held
.
Suddenly,
Kenya, no segregation exists. Every na-
.
·
general. It was held on the ~eekend of
I
was feeling nauseated. I could not stand
tionality is welcomed," she said.
Martin Luther King's birthday and guests so
·
I
went to a classroom and laid on the
After four years at an American college,
were told to dress accordingly.
floor. I remained there for about an hour.
some students find it hard to return home.
What about the good things frats do? The snow ha
·
d made ine physically
ill."
Machogu said she does not see herself ob-
.
Well, there is one service fraternity in par-
Dealing with unaccustomed weather is
taining permanent citizenship after the
ticular
I'm
referring to.
·
·
.
just one of the many adjustments foreign
.
completion_ of :her Communication Arts
·

·.
.
The A.lpha Phi Omega Fraternity is not a students like Machogu must make when
_
:
.
degree at Marist.<'l don't think
l
would be
.
_
:
'.
·
social frat but·
__
one based
~
on service, The coming to
.
an American college. For
,.
many
.
:
f!appyliving_inA111eric~
t
• sliesaid.
.
:'.
;
j
iic>'re
:
campus
arid
cbmmunity
:
s•ervice pro~ of the foreigners studying at Mai-ist; >the
.
.
Roald said deciding
whether
to
live
in
·
·
··
jects performed, the
:
more
·
recognitic;m they chance for an American education has
.
been
America or go back to Norway would be a
difficult decision. "Factors such as work,
graduate school and relationship~ will
determine my decision," he said.
· Milidakis plans to put off. his decision
for a later time
.
"Right now the odds arc
70% against my staying here," said
Milidakis. "But it would be hard to make
any definite decision at this point."
The problem of foreign students here are
not unlike those faced by Americans goiqg
abroad
.
Gabriele Piehler, a Russian majo
r
at Marist College, studied abroad in Russia
last summer. The best part of her abroad
experience, she said, was getting to know
people of another culture. "The people in
· Russia were
·
s
uper friendly," said Piehler.
"A.t
first
h. wa
s
diHku\t_ for them to get us-
ed
to
oufway of dressing. They are
_
not ac-
..
customed
to
jeans
or'
the Western
·1ook
·
. ''
.
·
receive:
·
Chapters
'
are
·
located on college a valuable experience - but not one free of
.
and university
,
campuses
.
throughout
·
the hardships.
country. Some are even
·
co-ed
~
.
·

Machogu is one of many foreign
Affiliated
-
with the Boy Scouts of students who leave their homeland for an
America, this is one frat that is keeping
-
opportunity to study abroad. "More and
their head above water.
more students will be coming to the United
Miller times:::~
Life

Hamilton College president J. Martin States to study simply because education
Carovano announced a
200
thousand has become such
an
important commodi-
dollar gift to_ the college from the Pew ty," said Casi1t1ir Norkeliunas, assistant
Memorial Trust. Established in honor of professor of German and Russian at Marist
Joseph Pew, founderofSun.OilCompany, College. "We
.
have some very excellent
the trust will be used to renovate the James modern programs
;
America still has the
Building for foreign languages.
best business schools in the world and we
Princeton University is back in the news. lead in computer science."
Two
1981
Princeton grads have developed
Norwegian
.
business majors Knut Roald,
.
a
full
line of anti-preppie t
-
shirts, neckties, Oyvind Larssen and Tore Udahl said they
_,
belts,
·
bumper stickers,
buttons and learned of Marist through the North
posters. They even have a book published. American Soccer Association. Roald said
It's entitled
Save An Alligator, Shoot A he wanted to
.
find a college with a good
Preppie.
180
thousand books are in print business
.
program and soccer team.
and over
600
thousand anti-alligator but-
Through Howard Goldman, president of
.
tons have been sold.
the North -American Soccer Association
·
·
In addition there is a list of the top ten and coach for the Marist College
-
Soccer
· ·
non-preppies of the world
.
Who have the Team, Roal~, Larssen and Udahl were
honor?
·
People like Woody Allen who · eventually recruited. "A college education
.
"spends his life finding out what preppies heightens your chances of finding employ-
enjoy doing" and then does the opposite, ment and going abroad to study is very
and Burt Reynolds who is termed a "free-

good experience," said
.
Roald. "This is
·.
wheeling non
-
preppie
.
"
:
why most students from Norway go abroad
Others on the list include Olivia-Newton for their education."
John, Princess Diana, Jodie Foster (now a
Foreign students are also attracted to
Yale student), Dorothy Hamill Martin, · American colleges because o( the country's
·
Kristy McNichol, Edward Koch, Reggie superior technology. Chemistry
·
major
Jackson, and of course the ultimate non-
Dimos Milidakis came from.his native land
preppie, Hawkeye Pierce of
M.A.S.H.
of Greece to the United States because he
And finally, in Poughkeepsie, Vassar wanted to study in a "highly developed and
College made this week's TI
_
ME magazine sci~ntifically advanced country."
after a bestselling alumnus revisited the
For other
_
foreign students, the question
school. Mary McCarthy, class of
'33, and• of coming to this country is often a matter
author of
The Group, celebrated her 70th of money. Norkeliunas said that the value
·
birthday at Vassar.
·
_
.
of the dollar. has a gr~t deal to do with
Her bestselling novel featured Vassar as whether foreign countnes can afford to
a backdrop for the story.
educate their students in America
.
"When
the U.S. dollar plummets, Western coun-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - tries prosper in that the value of their
money increases."
·
.
.
.
"Marriage, love and other Mysteries"
auditions
will be held for
Experimental Theatre
Mond~y, March
_
1st from 7-9:30 p.m.
.
in
Fireside Lounge
There are 17 female and 11 male roles
"for example, the effects of the oil
boom in Arabia has made Arabs so wealthy
that they can afford to send their children
anywhere to study. They choose to send
them to America because of our advanced
technology in engineering, chemistry, com-
puters, etc.," he said.
·
Once
here, the students are likely to ex-
perience emotional hardships. "These
students must adapt to American means of
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - travel, food, ancl lifestyle," Norkeliunas
9a-me
o)d
story.
These
coJl~qe
9l.!~~
love
f.lOc.{
a~-ruqHt
and
~oss
~"':t
out
ln
the mot-n1n9.
· /



























































--•Page
6 ·
THE CIRCLE·
February
25, 1982
·
.
_
J.
GeilsBaf},if-r-@n
tQPllftek
1B)'eqt~ ...
'~C->.Y·<
by Rick
O'Donnell
•or geta little high, bu't they can put a gun in - ,out.
A
_ke/o~J>ortunity.for ~he
J •.
Geil;· - Eve~ ii~li~li
th~~~~
1t1~terial that
c:,;if
,
-
our hands. and ask us to go ove.rseas and Band -was. a sold-out show last Sat. ur_day
covers, ·.the old has_ n_ot'been forgo.
tteri.
·
-
Peter Wolf is an angry man, but he can.
blow some
oth d d
, "
d
w
If
·
·
·
·
.
er u e away•, sat
o .
night at Madison Square G. arden.
. _ _·
Wo.lf .· was i. n usu
... al forin -as. he. bo. uilced
keep smiling as long as The
J.
Geils Band is
· · ··
On top.
After
13
years of touring and recording; _ , around -stage_;.in. his ac1iuired stnit and
Wolf has never passed Up the opportuni-
Th
J
·1
B d h
·
·
h
f
d .
h
l
. . .
"S.
Peter Wolf, lead singer for The
J.
Geils
k
-
e . Get s an
as -found itself at
t
e
~
sa ire t . e mora maJonty.
ome guy
Band,
l
·s·angry·over.the current cond1't1·ons
ty to spea out against what is wrong with top, while many other bands are diving
conies on my T.V. and tells me that God-.
society, and.now that the J. Geils Band has
d h b
h
k
t h
0
H
·
h
·f
· ·
of our world. "They tell us we're too
h
b
.
towar s t e ottom;
· _ as spo en o 1m.
e says. t at
I
we want ·
_bot
a num er one selling single and
c
t ·
-d d
h
t b
d
h · t
· d-
·
young
to have a little. something to drink,
lb
- h
ur ams surroun e
t
e stage .
.
. at
o e save we ave o sen _our money to
a um, e gets more opportunities to speak Madison Square Garden, as the arena of ·him~. kind of like getting into heaven on· in-
fans awaited the start of the show -in New
stallment plans!" The rap went on for a ·
2from Maris! will win Florida._trip
York. -· -
few more minutes and ended with the band
· Three years ago,
J.
Geils couldn't sell
joining in·for "Musta Got Lost."
out a nine thousand seat arena in their
When it· comes to personality The
J.
home state of Massachusetts, and-curtains
Geils Band is never lacking: Guitarist
J.
were out of the questions. Three years ·ago,
Geils has the name, lead singer Peter Wolf
the small stage that the
J.
Geils Band -per-
is the ·voice of the band. Magic Dick is uni-
formed on was half covered with stacks of que in _the fact that he plays Jhe harm~mica
sound equipment; the band could hardly· and nothing else (he has been touted as.the
move.
·
best white _ harmonica player _
today).
by
Paul Drejza
Imagine getting out of your last class ·
tomorrow and
24
hours later (or, even
sooner) finding yurself catching rays in
Disney World located in Orlando, Fla.
This could happen to you tomorrow at
midnight during the "Ultimate Road Trip
Mixed." What makes it "ultimate" is that
the winner, and his selected companion are
allowed only one hour to pack for the trip.·
The trip starts Saturday morning at 1
a.m. when the two will be driven to New
York to board a plane to Orlando, Fla.
There the winner and his or her (compa-
nion?) will stay in Disney World for the
weekend.
Sometiine Monday morning · (some
classes might be missed due to flighttimes)
the two will be flown back to New York'
picked up at the airport,
-and
be drive~
back to school before noon.
The winner will also be given
$200
(spen-
ding?) money, making the total trip worth
$950.
The idea, which was originally designed·
by Mike McCarthy, was set up by Student
Government President Jim Muzikowski.
_ ~uzikowski said, "Students were excited
over this i~ea wheti they heard about it."
Chances for the trip have been sold dur-
ing the week and will be available atthe
mixer for
$2.
The mixer is sponsored by __ the class of-
ficers of Marist (Freshman President Roger
Romano, Sophomore President Chris
Molluso, Junior President Chris Blood,
Senior President Loretta Kennedy), and the
music will be provided by the college i:adio
station, _WMCR.
.
_ .
. . -
Only Marist students can win. However,
anyone can be selected as the travelmate.
Muzikowski said,
"If
I
win, I'll take Betty
Yeaglin."
Now, the latest . in sound equipment is
Stephen Jo Bladd -has the _
good looks,
hung from the ceiling and the curtains rise
which are often hidden behind the large
at the start of the show to reveal an entire
drum set he beats away at. Seth Justman is
marching band on the stage.
.
the keyboardest, song writer and producer
Times have changed, but the energy
of the band. Finally Bassist Danny. Klein . ·
hasn't.
has the "let's party" image and more often
The music has changed, but . the
than not is seen· on stage in a pink tux with
numerous on-stage raps and non-stop dan-
tails.
.
.
cing by Peter Wolf hasn't.
All
six members are unique, and they've
As the marching band began
to
leave the
been around awhile. The stage personas
stage the six member
J.
Geils Band march-
have not changed with the new-found
ed into "Ju'st Can't Stop Me." The songs
popularity, Peter Wolf still allows fans on
have changed in the last three years. "Give
stage to dance with him. The length of the
Classifieds
.It·
To Me," "Musta Got Lost" and The . show hasn't changed; the band still puts
Supremes classic "Where Did Our Love
out. a full two hour show. The audience
Go" were on_ce the show stoppers at a Geils
reaction hasn't changed; fans still spend
concert. Now "Love Stinks," "Come
most of the night dancing on top of their
Back" and the number one single "Center-
chairs. However, there has been a change;
fold" are what the new audience wants to
because now The J. Geils Band is -selling
hear.
out Madison Square Garden, and ·Peter
To my#6,-L.F.,
I've been worshipping you from afar.
I
Love You.' .
Anonymous
Tree,
Are you asleep? M ... S ... O ... ! Did you
ever ... ?
Love Lu
Sigma Phi Epsilon thanks all of those ·
Marist students who gave blood on
Thursday's Drive.
HappyB'.'Birthday Terri, Love.you.
' . . ,,
_
' . , .. •-.
;
. '.
. .. ,
Little
Me ;
but we still lurve you.
The old fans are still here, but they
Wolf1s picture has made
it
to the cover of
P.P.-women
found themselves surrounded by a new
theinostrecentRollingStone.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
crowd of fans that have an average age of
The concert finished after five encores.
To roomie Lu,
ff
h
·
Always eat the ice cream and save the
I
teen. W oever the fans are, they always
The· six members of the band climbed on
cherry for last.
play an integral part in a
J.
Geils concert.
top of each other to form a human pyramid
Peter Wolf raised his hand and asked for
and Seth Justman, writer and producer,
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
-_T_r_ee
anyone who had cameras
to
flash them - climb_ed up on top and gave the open hand
To Collette,
when he dropped his hand. He dropped his
salute tha.t has become a trademark of the
SLEP me?
hand and amidst a splurge of blue-white
group. Peter Wolf was right below him
· Your Secret Admirer
flashes the band kicked into "Freeze
smiling. He may. be an angry man, but he's
Kathy
Don't get stuck in the mud-with your new
'·'._Z.,.
Before. you. take.us ba.ck to Tulsa-
Phui
anothercup·of coffee. .
-
_.
. ·
·
·
· ·
· · ··
The Parkettes
Frame.''
_ enj~ying the hell out ofit!·
To Tony,
__ ..
We love you!
· Bill, .
.
.
.
..
/:>.<>.:·~
·
·
Love Bonnie, Lisa & Collette
Devo&MikeG.,
You forgot Valentine's Day, remember
Mother's day.
·
-
·
Love Mom
Bye-All!
Love Always Petra
3rd floor Sheahan,
.
.
Sheahan wom~n are the best, _
Sheahan -
women have big ... !_
·
Love, "Leggs" (C.E.)
D.M.-
You have the most beautiful eyes in the
world!
Happy Birthday Venetta.
From, Robin, Cheryl &Jeanne
Fegs,.
.
There will always be a place for your
foot in my pocket.
·
Love Pubmates
Jeff,
Happy Birthday one day late! It's green,
The crabs will be our little secret.
Love a concerned friend. .
Your're on! But I.don't know who you are.
Letmeknow. ·
To Whom it May Concern:
_
College makes strange bedfellows.
·
• - .K.S.
and Coyote
Kenny,
' Stay well. We love you! And we miss
you.·
·
Frankie-
·-
It
was great when it all began; but what
about now?
If
only ...
Columbia
It's a boy!! Congratulations Mitch and
Monique.
Kathy
Mike Moore, · ·
.
Didn't mean to confuse you. Hope all is
well.
JT
·s30MAINiSTREET
OPEN:
J
1:~Q
irm-3:QO
a.111
Weektla,s •
11:
30_a-.ni.-4::oo __
3.-ffl.
W~ekends
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
.-
.
.
.
·Fast. Delivery
(SUPER NEW YORK CUTS)
............
at- -
49
Academy
Street -
Ample·
Customer Parking -
Hl1
anti.Her,
~DY PERM
. . .
~ $31.00-
•1110
. ,OPENltG
SPECIAL--
SHAMPOO, CUT
ANDILOW DRY
from
•500
Open Dadr
10-8·
No Appolnt..-nt N~euary
-
.
-
-
For Appolntffl(tnf,
call
-'M-ttM ·






































·-
. . . . • · · · • • • • j
• •
4
,...


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.
t11111_llllill _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
lllil _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
February 25, 1982 ·
THE CIRCLE· Page
7 . - - •
Carnavale-
Entertainment
-South End Tavern, 154 South Ave.
Poughkeepsie ·
. Daily Specialty Drinks - soc
Mug. 25c Pitchers $1.00
-Chastitys, Rt. 9, Red Hook
Rustic bar and restaurant. Entertain-
ment on Friday and Saturday nights.
-Mid Hudson Civic Center, Feb. 27, 9:30-
2 drinks for the price for 1
-McGuins, 49 Main St., New Paltz
Fri. Feb. 26, The Ulstafarians
On Campus
-Tonight Film: "Treasures of Ireland"
cc249 sponsored by the Gaelic Society at
9:15 p.m.
.
11:30
.
For years Joseph's Restaurant at Mt. ·
Back to the food. Joseph's had prepared
Skate-a-thon for the benefit of the
Carmel Place in Poughkeepsie has provid-
a special menu for the festival. Included on
American Heart Association. The skate-a-
ed · excellent Italian food at reasonable the menu was the Carneyale special which
thon is open to area skaters over five years
"Odd Couple" Friday, Feb. 26, Theater
_8p.m.
prices. This weekend · they offered more consisted of Devil Crabs or shrimp, salad,
of age.
Carnevale. For those who are not aware of stuffed shrimp parmigiana and spaghetti
-Holiday Inn (Plums), Rt. 9, Poughkeepsie
Sat. Feb. 27 8 p.m.
Sun. Feb. 28 2 p.m.
-Friday 26, 9:30 p.m. "The Ultimate Road
Trip Mixer" - Dining Hall
what .. Carnevale is, let me explain. and coffee, all for $7 .95. Other additions
Free pizza on Feb. 26 from 4-8 p.m.
Carnevale is an annual festival that enables to the menu included chicken cacciatore for
Happy hour 4-8 p.m. Feb. 28
Adm: Take a $2 chance
all lovers of Italian food to increase their $5.95. Both dishes were excellent. Included . .,._.;.;;.;. _ _
~ ; ; . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , , . . . - - - ,
. weight by at least ten pounds.
with the meal was a cheese platter, cherry
Along with good food, entertainment is
peppers, breadsticks_ and garlic bread with
usually provided. Sunday night at Joseph's
fresh butter. All m all, Carn~vale at
was a mixture of incredible food and an ac- · Joseph's Restaurant has to be defmed as a
cordianist who did an admirable job of wonderful experience.
.
livening up the restaurant.
-Michael Thompson
. Wine and Stein
The Wine and Stein Cafe, located at 51
Raymond· Ave. (across from the Juliet
Theatre), offers something new in the way
of entertainment to the Poughkeepsie area.
In the cafe tradition, The Wine and Stein
has a mellow atmosphere and is ideal for
college students who want to sit and talk. A
variety of wine bottles adorned with dry
flowers sit on the small tables which line ·
the room and add to the earthAone decor.
· Games such as monopoly, password," bog-
gle, chess and checkers are available and
you'll often find people playing these whBe
enjoying a glass of wine or beer.
. The menu at Wine and Stein is well
varied and relatively · low priced. Among
the listings, one can find salads,
cheeseboards, quiches and deli specialities,
as well as desserts and coffees. Unique
featur:es such as dips and dipables (which
· are raw vegetables' or chips· with cheese,
onion:, or clam dip). are big favorites
_
at the .
cafe .. ,
-
.;;,, ·. {· -.
,:,;cc• •
< _•;:
_I'/
. In the process of estab1ishing live enter-
tainment, Wine· and Stein offers a folk
singer, Jamie Gaull, with accompaniment
every Thursday night.
If you're a jazz fan
the Footnotes perform two nights a week
after
11
:30 p.m.
Some of. the weekly specials featured at
Wine and Stein are: Sunday-beer night with
reduced prices on domestic and imported
beer, Monday and Tuesday- buy one get
one free on a half or full carafes of wine,
·Wednesday- sangria night all pitchers are
$3.00 and everyday from 4-6 is attitude ad-
justment hour with every purchase of
a
glass of wine or beer get the next one free.
For only being open eight weeks The
Wine and Stein Cafe has established itself
as a welcome alternative to th~ typical bar
scene.
-Maggie Browne '
· Terri Sullivan
Campus
CClsual.Wear
.
.
..
25%0FF
Selected Styles
·
(Li
mited Quantities)
.We're-more than
a Bookstore
Open
10-5
Monday - Friday
Looking
fora
quiet place to
SITAND TALK?
WE OFFER A
DIFFERENT
ATMOSPHERE
!il
..
1
473-2727
Wine for
FREE
Sun~ Beer Night
10
·
%0
.
·~.
All Bills with
Marist 1.0.
0
6-12
p.m.
Domestics .40
Imports .65
_.51 Raymond
l\"e··Across
from Juliet Theatre
Would you be interested in helping--
freshmen and their
a part of Marist:
talking with them
Orientation
parents become
by
walking
and
during· June
contact (in person or via Campus Mail):
Assistant Dean of Student Affairs ~ffice
by:
28th
February 1982
Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
Room or Home Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
P.O. Box _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
Major _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
;..,,I,






























































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-Page 8
·
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THE
CIRCLE--Februa;y
2~, 1982
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by
Tony Cardone, Joe Verrilli
Monkey Sims, AND what's his name
We're back! After a
week
layoff due
rn
management problems (Tony for~ot to
type the article), B-Guido's is glad to
~,c-
commodate you for the rest of the
semester.
We are
sorry to disappoint all the
people who hate us and thouiht that
we
were kicked off the staff.
-Inside sources ha\'e revealed that to solve
the high fertility rate at Marist. next ~~ar
Marist will issue chasity belts. The keys to
these belts will be issued at graduation in-
·
stead of diplomas.
-B-Guido's answers to a few of the twenty
questions in last weeks Circle.
-Why do opposite attract? Ask health ser-
vice nurse Lori Winchell.
-Why are most of the doughnuts in the cafe
rock hard?
.
Because they don't want the
rolls to be lonely.
-Why do students march down to the cafe
evry night? Who
·
would want to run?
-Why must people die? Because they march
80(.)'s of the
Wt:EK
-A bis
lllX)
to
n-GlllOO'S l\w
not l)\ltting
:m
:mkk
in
th~
r,'\l')(t'
htsl week.
BOOOOOO!
-BOO
t\,
D.1l\
~P\\hkt
t\'t'
dri\\kh~
~~
shots
~md m,t p~
·
h~
t\,
th~
p,,K~kun
sod.
BOO!
-8lX)
to
Ttish
lxfriSi.~
for think.it\$
thnt the
~'Qun:-"<' "lahot
RelatiN\.'-"
w~,s
about
sc.x
all\l'l~St
employ«s.
BOOt
-Boo to
Carol Wantuch for going
to
bed
at
9:00
l'l\
a
Friday night.
Bom
-There has
been a
large shortage of toilet
paper during the basketball
·
season and
students
·
are quite upset using leaves. We
encourage the
·
fans to throw streamers,
next year, instead of toilet paper.
-Who would your choice for the Mad hatter
be?
1)
Sue Lawrence, 2) Roscoe Balch, 3)
lee Miringoff, 4) Chris Novak, 5) All the
above.
·
•.
·
·
JOKES
.
down to the cafe every night.
-Why do Eskimo's wash three clothes in
-Why do they play dentist office in the cafe Tide? Because it's too cold to wash them
instead of WMCR? They're preparing you out tide!
for your trip to the dentist after you eat the -Doctor: Nurse, how is the patient who
rolls and doughnuts.
swallowed the quarter doing? Nurse: No
-Why did the registrar office let students .in
change
yet sir!
·
courses, even though they haven't met the -My parents are in the iron and steel
prerequisite? Ask Danny's Ma...
business! My mother irons and my father
-For those of you who are wondering why
.
steals!
there is such
a
surplus of desserts and ice
.
-Girls submit your entries f9r top ten male
.
cream it's because of countdown (pounds) bodies
ON
campus by Friday, March 5.
time to spring break vacation and all the Send them via campus mail to Box C-82,
ladies are trying to lose
·
weight. After all Tony C.
they don't want to burn out the sun trying -B-Guido's
will
be selling shirts
at
$7
and
to tan that excess weight. (No harm intend-
$l2
consult your member of B-GUIDO's.
ed).
Six
·
we
·
eks Basic
Ccimp at_Fort Knox, Kentucky.
You'Hget $500 for attending a challenging camp. And. if your performance is
exceptional, you just may qualify for a two-year scholarship
as
you enter
·
the Advanced Program.
.
·
Park DiscolliltBeverages
Route 9 ..
Hyde
POrk
.
.
.
Open
7 Days a
week
Mon.-Thurs. - 10-9
.
.
·.
Fri.
&Sat.-~9-9
Su~day -
l
~~s
This
Week
.
Mick~y's
$2.19~6pack
Geriny
bock
•.
$1.59
-6Pack
.·coors
.
$.3 •.
1
.
9.6Pack
~
Molsons
·
$2.69 6Pack
Multiple entry/On-campus
summer
program
:
·
Enter Army ROTC during your freshman
or
sophomore year with no military
obligation. You'll find a curriculum that'.s flexible and exciting enough to meet your
da~s schedule and academic needs. You may even consider enrolling this summer
·
.
m Army ROTC on
ca'!IP.US.
At the end of the summer you may find yourself
3
·
,
ehg1ble for the Advanced Program.
.
-
·
Advanced
Placement
If
you are an Army veteran or a Junior ROTCgraduate, you are eligible to
.
..
automatically enter Advanced ROTC.
.
. •
No matter how you enter
Anny ROTC, you'll experience adven-
tures in leadership. You'll learn how to
lead throuih hands-on training. And
as a c.adet m the Advanced
Pro-
gram, you'll receive $5000
over your last two years.
No matter whether your
.
career plans are military or civilian, upon
graduation Army ROTC provides for
·
both-active duty status with a starting
.
·
.
.
·
·
salary
·
of over $17,000 or re-
.
serve status (Active Duty for
lhinin~) while employed in
the civiltan community.
Representative on campus
Wed., March 3, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Chanipagnat Hall













































































































































































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School stuff
.
.
\
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i,y Christine
Dempsey
-
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qa~Hci
Society.
:::/
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· , . • •
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.
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1:i,iiproposed Irish Studies program has
· .
This year'.s st
:
Patrick's Day
'
parade
faUs
.
:~-
.;,
:
•been
_:
:t!ltified
·
by
>.
'
the Siuden~ Academic
·
during
-
the spring vacati
_
on, but"hopefully
.
· ·
..
Committee.
~~t
thC: P.rogram
__
s!tll has a way t~at will not stor, Marist
:
stude~t_s ~rom
/
· ·
,
to go bef:f~e
II
becomes _a regular part
.
of
.
marching 1oget~er
,Allstude
_
~ts a~e mv1ted;
.
th
_
e
Ma~,s~
Co_llege curncult!m, The pro-
..
bus transportation from Mansi will be pro-
,
,
gram_ sttll awaits approval from
-
the Divi-
,:,
vided. At-the end of the parade a reception
:
siori of · Humanities,
which
·
includes will be held
.
at.the Grand Hyatt Hotel for
J>olitical Science and History, and the Divi-
.
all those Marist students who

rriarched.

sfon
'
of Arts and
.
Letters.
It
must a
_
lso be
. ,
One
_
may
have noticed
.
the -new Irish
':,
cl~aredwith the
_
Academic Affairs Com-
displays;
·
courtesy of the
·
Gaelic Society, in
:·:
·
m1ttee and the faculty. The President of the
·
·
the
·
library
,
The displays, which are near
·
Gaelic · Society;
·
Don
·
Eustace, is en> the
,
drculatiori desk;
concern
Irish
.
thusiastically
.
pushing
·
the program,
.
literature, culture, as well as numerous
,
because accor~ing to him, "The need is
•.
:
posters with similar Irish t~emes.
·
r
there.".·
·
-
·
·
·
·
.
.
·
Variety show
.
·
·
/
.
.
.
.
A
fun-filled Variety Show to he held. in
.
eludes dorm skits, teacher spoofs and other
.
May is in the
.
making. The show is being types of fox foolery. Scheduled to appear
·
produced by Mike McCarthy of
:
the MC-
.
as special guests ar,e Dee Nell as MC,
·
CTA, although it actually has nothing to George Penny, Mike Moore, Jim O'Doher-
.
..
do with the theater group.
It
is simply an
.
·
ty,
·
Brendan Ke_lly,
·
Jim Gallagher, Tom
.
·
.. -
antieipated night of Marist-relatec! comedy Cassaro,-
.
Dan Kucero and the one and
·
only
.
.
·
.
to be held
·
in the
.
cafeteria, complete with 8-Guidos group. Anyone interested in join-
'
j'efresbments
such as wine and cheese. The ing the bandwagon of diversion, call
·
shol.V will be run by the students and in-
Moore at 473-0578.
Medja
-
Center
·
gets
.
editing ~ystem
Comm~nicatio~
.
Ar
.
ts students and those
by
Eileen
Hayes
who work for AV
/TV:
The system is the
.
.
.
·
newest, most technologically advanced
Ther{;! is a new toy in the Bierne Media piece of equipment available. It will give
center
:
It's a Sony V 0-S8S0
¼
inch editing the students planning a career in television,
··
tap( recorder system. According to Scott hands-on experience with the exact same
Badman, "It's the best industrial grade you equipment that is used in a professional
can get at this level. It allows
~us
to edit braodcast news station.
video tapes together in the same way film is
The Bierne Media Center acquired the
edited together.''.
·
-
·
money for the machines through the efforts
.
,
This new system will greatly advance the of John Calabrese, a Marist gra4uate who
AV/TV
department, Badman said. Cur- works at the Hughes Sports Network. The
.
rently Maris
_
t has two parts
of
the-system. cost of the system)s in the area of 14,000
~:

'
AV_is a'N.ai~ing to acquire'the third piece, a dollars.
. ...
.
_· ..

.

·
:
·
·
..
,
.
.:
:
:c.e
controller~
·
which wiUmake
.
the edited pie-
:
_
·.
-_rhe departmc;nt 1s ecstatic about the new

.
ti.ire!qok~orepro.fessionaL
·
-
<<
:··:
:.:.
('::
1mivaL
,
.
Badrrian
·
said
.
that he loves the
· ,
.
·,
:
:.-
-
:
·
Badman stated that the
use
oftlle equip:
..
systt!m in ~
;
platonic sort 9fway ang added;
:,.;
_
:'.
'
ment
<
will he
'
restricted
lb
the
'
'
upper
·
level
!'J'hey're)vonderful!"
:
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.
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.
.
.
,
...
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-
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--
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: ARCH
DAILY Ol~NER
SPECIAL:!
.
-~
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.

RT :
.
SLICED
STEAK
a.
SCALLOPS
COMBQ
CE
:
1o1i+h
soup.
~olod.
·
.
$7qs
·
.
.
,
.
poto-to or
r1c.e
..
·
·
:
.
·
evuy
n·19ht
.
ir1
Marc.h
..

.
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PRIME RIB DINNER
SPEC\AL.-;
wi-th
soup;
-
solad, rice.
:
.
or
pot-a-to .... SeNtd · every
$
7.
95
Sul'\, Mon., 11.1g,,t, Weds. ni~ht
,
2
-
Humphrey Bogart
Ingrid Bergman
·
Paul Henreid
· Claude Rains
Peter Lorre
Sydney Greenstreet
C>it
ect
ed by
Michael Curtiz
• February
25,
1982 · THE CIRCLE·
Page
9
CASABLANCA
This
_
1943 classic is one of the most memo<·
, Obie of all film
experiences.
Cosoblonco
has over the years taken on the slotus of o true Hollywood legend
.
All lhe ele-
ments
of
1he produclion. slOI)'. casl. photography
.
ditection and = i c o,e
woven experlly together
.
Nominated !Of e
i
ght
Academy
Awards
.
th
e
film went
on
to
win three fOf Best Picfure
.
Best Director
.
and Best Screenplay
.
1943
CLASSICS
5
THE
TQoo .
HQBIN
BAND
·
.
.
·
4

·
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:-:-::-·:-:-::-·-::-::-· -=-·::.-:-:·
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·-:-:-·
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·=-=-·
-_-·
~
·
--~-----;,:.:.:~==::;;;.J.;.;..~~,.;_.,,,.J...,_ _ _
_ _ .
.
.
.
.
'
HAPPY
HOUR PARTY
:
........ ~t,,.1,.,9'~;
wi+h
ROY
ATK\NSON
I

.
.
--


'

GUITAR
VIRTUOSO FROM
HOT
lUNA, lEFF. At~t
iHURSpAYS
&
'
FRIDAYS 5·
8
PM
:
:
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We·re
·
interested
in yo_ur
suggestions~
What
-types
of ertterloinMerrl; or specific acts,
would
you.
like
-ro
see
at The Chance? _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
What
time 5hould our shows start
on weckn
i9hts
? __ _
What
about
Wdnd starti113
iime? _ _
Use
of
her
.side
i~
nee..
,,.
.
.


































































































































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- - ~ -
- ~ - - : - -
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Page
_
10
~
THE CIRCLE·
Febr41ary
25, 1982
Marist launches
coll1J)utersc/ence
:
·
:
adv
_
isory
_
bo<i°rq
·
Local
·
experts in computer sicence have
been appointed to a Computer Science
Ad-
visory Board formed by Marist College in
Poughkeepsie, according to John E.
Mac-
·
Donald, Jr., director of Computer Science.
.
"The advisory board was formed to heli:
Marist graduate the best comuter scientist~
possible," said Dr. MacDonal~. ''Our ex-
pert advisors know what industry will de-
_
mand of future computer scientists.
We
will look to the board to offer suggestions
for improved courses and programs to keep
abreast
.
of
·
current
technological
demands."
The Marist Computer Science Advisory
Board
will examine the College's
undergraduate
program,
computer
facilities and plans to increase the com-
puter science facility. The board will con-
sider development grants, exchange and
loan programs with industry and funds
from the 'Linus
R.
Foy Endowed Chair in
Red Cross volunteers at Sigma
Phi
Epsilo~

blood drive; where 80 pints of blood were donated last week.
.
.
.
--
-.
-
'
:lifL'!p:i:~~e,::h.w::.:.p~er.~::i::
M
_
_
arist awarded
_
,
:
~50_
-
,
--
,
-
·
O
_
·
00
.
N
_
BH
_
-

_-
--
g-
·
n
_
.
ant
_
:
:
:
;::
Members of the board include: Winifred
-
_
_
_
.
.
..
4/J,
..
_
_
__
A.
Asprey, professor of Math and director
of computer center, Vassar College; Robert
Students are graduating from, our col~
·
students understand
·
how basi~ ways of
philosophical modes.
-
·· .
-
·
Berger director of electronic data process-
leges and
_
universities
.
without a
.
clear
thinking ("modes'' of understanding) ·app-
-
"The work the grant will
·
fund is signifi-
ing, Central Hudson Gas a
nd
E~ect~i~;
hierarchy of values toguide
'
them in mak-
lytoavarietyofsubjects. Thepilotcourses
cant," said
_
Dr.
,
LaPietra, '~because
·
:
it
Robert L. Carberry, director
·
of scientific
ing
·
critical life decisions, according
.
to
.
will prepare students to
·
see how modes
·
of
.
highlights co~cern for liberal education
processor Products,
·
IBM Corporation;
Richard LaPietra, Marist College pro-
.
understanding, or
.
consciousness,
.
rather
and humanistic development of the
·
stu-
James Falanga, commissioner, Dutchess
fessor.
·
than particular subject matter form the
·
dent. The core program will teach stud_ents
County Office of Computer Information
.
To
.teach
students to integrate human
·
essence of liberal education. The new
to realize there is no one way of.looking at·
Services; Joseph F. Fisher, admini
st
rator
knowledge into their everyday experience
courses will teach students how the modes
the world." The grant was developed by a
of computer services, New York Power
a~d develop a healthy skepticism about the
interplay in the study of particular subjects
committee composed of six Marist faculty
Pool;
·
David Lampell, vice president,
world, Marist will field test a new core pro-
and therefore relate different subjects to
members: Philip Chase, assistant professor
TOPIC Systems, Inc.; Paul
·
R. Low,
.
gram of courses.
·
The work is being funded
.
each other.
·
-
·
of Business; Robert Lewis, assistant pro-
General Technology Division (GTD) vice
by a $50,000 grant from the t'/ational En-
.
fessor of Philosophy; Richard LaPietra,
president
a nd
Ea
st
Fishkill
general
dowinent for the
·
Humanities (NEH),'"ac-
Grant funds will create five new courses:
-
pr9fessor of Chemistry; Xavier Ryan;
manager, IBM Corporation; John E. Mac-
cording to Dennis J. Murray, president of
an
·
introduction to the modes of con-
associate professor of Philosophy; Rev.
Donald, Jr., director, computer science,
Marist College.
.
sciousness and courses in each of the sjen-
Rhys Williams, associate professor of
Marist College; a
nd
Ra
nd
Y
Su
th
erla
nd
,
-
The grant project is desjgned to help
tific.
mythopoeic(
religious
.
,
and
Religious Studies; and John Werenko,
assistant director of systems and planning,
·
.
.
-
t
·
formerly assistant professor
·
of Art at
Alfa-Laval Corporation.
.

-
MarisL
,
.
·
·
.
_
.
-
-
.
·
,.
.
_
_
-

Currently. 13~ Marist und~rgraduate
.
Workshons to Focus
on careers
:
·
.
The project was describedas ~'bt!ing
.on
•r•
students maJor
ID
comphul:r sc1ehnce. !hef
,
_
,
,
,
,
.
,,
Y
. _
_
.. _
J)_
.,
_
_
. .
·:

.
,
.
. .
..
·,
.
,:,
.,
, '
.
the frontier
:_'
of educational purpose and
,
_
·
_._
.
_
__
. _·
_
_
programofstudyempas1zesteuseo
.•·
·
:
.
·
-
:·.

.
'·:
·
·.
-.--·
-··
·
..
·:···•·.,
.
. '..
·:
_
·
.
.
_

.
.
'.
. "
societalneed"byamember
.
ofthe~NEH
·
\
,_;,;-;;,,;~,~
,
,,,;.,,.
-"-
,'fr:Y
'
-
-
~0-m-pu\.1.ng·equ,timent
·
anc\ fo\\ows th~ s
oft-
.

.
.
.
A
series
oi~orksh~ps on ho~ tq w
.
epare
~
Qegr~e
._
.i~d
.
You_r,

Car!!er,' ,
_
rvra}ch
.
)st;
:;
.:
review committee, accor~ing
:
!O
John
L
.
:
-
:~
>
·
ware
approach
·
to
·
computer
·
science.
for careers
will
·
be offered at Marist Col
-:'
"Credit for Life Experience;'' March 2nd;
--
Lahey, Marist vi<;e presid!:ntfor college ad~
_
,
.,
I '
Course work focuses on language st udy,
·
lege;
\
Mondl!Y,
·
March
·
I,
:
.
'through
"Proficiency
Testing Workshop/' March
··
_
:
vancement. "The gramwas
·
the maximuin
data management,
-
basic computer arc
·
Thursday, March 4, from
5:30_
to 6:
15
p,m.
3rd; and "Financing Your
·
college Degree
•.
aniountay_ailable un_der
NE
H's Pilot Grant
chitecture and
·
sy
st
em design. Ha rdware
in Donnelly Hall. All workshops are free
.
During the Reagan Years" on March 4th.
,
Program an
·
d is a strong endorsement of
design and physical characteristics of com-
and open to the public,
c
.
.
- ,
. .
.
.
'
the strength of the proposal
-
because of the
.
puli'ng equipment are addi:essed through
The workshops, tided •~Career Explora-
·
:.
Registration is
"
11ot requiredjo; thefree limited funds available," said
-
Dr. Lahey,
· .
.
electronics.
:
.
..
·
.
.
··
.
tion" will provide
·
career guideljnesarid
workshop series
.
.
'-·
/
.
7
i
. .
"The
'
grant is
.
a sigtiofthe
_
continuing com-
.
Career preparation is the major em-
academic information helpful
.
to prof es-
.
·
Further
-
information may
'
be
-
obtained mitrileht
-
of MaristCollege to liberal educa-
phasis of the program, since it
is
estimated

sional developmenL
.
·
·.
_
frqm
·
·
the
·
Marist
--_--·
College
.
Continuing
·
.
tion and human
.
vahies which has been sup-
that the number of computer specialists
:
Topics include:·
:
"Th.e _
_
Liberal
.Arts
Education Office at471-3240 ext:221.
ported throu
_
g_h Title
III
and QuiHgrants."
will
increase by
30
percent in the '.80s.
.
·
·
·
Jn.
f964;·
·British
rock music invaded the
Starr released albums that landed them hit numbers, "Destn;>yer" and ''Yo Yo," the
.
.
"Come to Ray, Come on." This p~~edway
U
.S'.,
changing forever the
.
course of pop
singles;
.
_.
·
.
·
._
·
·
· -
-.
.
.l~tter
~
demonstrating
.
·
Davies'
·
bro~her

·
for the best sorig Ray has ever writ
'
ten
music. Today iri 1982, some eighteen years
The Kinks brought the house down at the
.
Dave's ability on a
.
remarkable guitar solo.
"Celluloid Herqes.'
,
' An oldie followed
-~
later,
-
the same bands are
_
sWI

makirig
Byrhe

Arena
·
on Monday night, January
.
Davies teased and toyed the audie
·
nce into a
·
that ''Til the Erid
·
or the Day." Onlhe next"
·
.
·
waves.
26th.
'"
·
,:
· ,·
:,
.,:
-
.
>,
·
·
,
,
_•;
;,
·
;
fr~nzy_ before finally playing their biggest
number, Dave

Davies took the lead vocai
.
·
After their United States tour, the Roll-
From the <?Peiling cords of "Around the
'
'
hitto
date
"Lola."
-

.
·
with
''I
Don't Wanna Leave."
.Then
the
irig Stones can still rightfully hold the~r title
.
Dial" from the new al~~m "Give the P~o-
.
·
·
.
first chords of All Day and

All Night
as "The greatest
.
rock and roll band m the
.
,
pie What They Want,
all p~esent knew
The band theri played two numbers from echoed throughout theArena, with that the
world." The Moody Blues °1980~81 tour
they were in for
.
oneheffofaconcert,The
their previous studio album, "GaHon of
·
Kinksleftthestage
,
proved they were not reHcs, and still had a
·
Kinks followed 'A'.ith '~Hardway,•~ and th.en
·
Gas" and the title cut "Low Budget." The
strong
performance. The Who
released
an
got one of . their biggest ovations With
.
next song surprised_ everybody «Back to
:
The band ret~ri:ied to play th~i~ first of
overdue and under-rated album that yield-
,;
"Catch Me Now I'm Falling." The_nexr
'.
Front," the
.
r~ason being that the band im-
.
·
eight encores. The first was the titie cut 'of
ed them a hit single, and
a
.
planned tour is
·
tune was one that I have never heard
provised with a Beatles tune"Get Back."
·
·
iheir new album "Give the Pe
9
ple What
in the wings. Eric Clapton released a best
:
before, "Johnny
&
the Joker
.
"
.
"Art Lover/' from their new album was
,
They Want." With the crowd rqaring, the
selling album in "Another Ticket." Even
·
Ray Davies, the lead singer and
.
writer of
next.Thesong aboutchild molesting, had
band played another Beatles tune "Birth-
ex-Beatles George Harrison and Ringo
.
the band Jed them into two more new
·:
Davies toying again with the audience,
day" right.into "Pressure_;, A rowdy ver-,
sion of "Twist and Shout" followed. The
.
Computer
Kinks left the stage again. They returned to
.
play "20th Century Man," and
-
followed it
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - - -
·
with another new song, '~Add it
,
Up." Ray
then jokingly introduced an
·
"old Van
Halen number,'.' with this the band played
their trademar~ !'You Really Got Me." On
this song Dave Davies cut his guitar with
some mean licks. Mick Avory, the drum-
mer,
·
anchored the band throughout the
.
show.
It
mixed well wJth the steady playing
·
of Jim Rodford on bass, arid Ian Gibbons
on
.
keyboards. The Kinks left the stage
·
Continued from p~ge
I
.
Department of Education in Albany. Iri the
meantime, however, the college is looking
for two, full-time assistant instructors.
There is already a need for those who
hold a B.S. in computer science to update
the training. This is why a master's pro-
gram is so important.
The purpose of the master's program is
to provide advanced training and ex-
perience in the various disciplines of com-
puter science to individuals who already
hold a bachelor's degree in computer
science, mathematics, electronic engineer-
.
ing, or some closely related field.
There is no campus within a 100 mile
ra~ius of Marist that offers a master's pro-
gra
·
m
i'l
computer science.
..
.
~
IBM, being
-
~ potential employer to peo-
program. Once graduated
_
with
-
a master's
pie in this field; has encouraged the college
.
in coinputer science, students will enter the
to establish such a program. Some ex-
.
computer
'
field at a high level of r~pon-
ecutives from the company are members of
sibility and expertise.
-
·
.
-
··
.
·
the newly formed Comuter
.
Science Ad-
In the falt" '81 semester there were I 10
visory Board at Marist. MacDonald is also
freshman computer science majors and
a member of this board.
·
more than 50 evening students
.
enrolled in
The purpose of this board is to recom-
mend:
·
-What courses should be offered;
.

-What the context of the courses should
be;
.
-What to expect in the ever changing
computer fi~ld, and
-The qualifications1or job placement.
A "B" average will be the standard re-
quirement for
·
admission to the master's
computer courses at Marist.
·
Students have daily access to 20 IBM ter-
minals on campus. MacDonald hopes to
double the number of student terminals
this fall.
.
.
.
J
The field of computer science is con-
tinuously growing and people are eager to
learn more. Adding a graduate program in
this field should not only help Marist to
grow, but will make it a strong survivor in
the higher education circle.
·
again. This time the house lights went on,
and the whole Arena began to boo. Then
suddenly the lights were shut_ off. The
Kinks then took the stage for
_
the last time.
Ray introduced some oldies and
.
they
-
played "Stop Your Sobbing" and "Dave
Watts.•~ Ray then threw up his arms and
waved goodnight.
.
.,..
All I can say is wht·n this band comes
·
.
around again, definitely go
see
them ....:... I
guarantee you will not be disappointed.
·
'



































- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - F e b r u a r y
25,
1982 • THE CIRCLE - Page 1 1 - - •
Addition of two strengthens basketball team
by Ken Bohan
.
·.
Th{ men's basketball
.
team
·recently
.
·
strengthened their
.
ranks with .the
-
addition
of Adam Cohen and Christ Metcalf, accor-
.
ding to Head Coach Ron Petro.
Cohen and Metcalf bear
.
the sidelines
during games this
.
season because NCAA
.
rules state that transfers lose orie season of
.
eligibility.
Metcalf, a sophomore who came from
'
the Up.iversity of Rhode Island, was named
to the Connecticut All-State team in high
.
school.-At 6'8", 215 lbs. Cohen will add
·
.
needed size and strength to the team, accor-
.
ding to Petro.
.
·
.-
Recruited by Marist his
·
senior year
.
in
high school,
.
Metcalf• said he enjoys the
closeness he
..
feels here at Marist. "At the
University of Rhode Islandrd see someone
on a Monday and that would be it for the
·
semester.Here you can see the same person
·
three times a day," he said .
Metcalf added that he had no real pro
-
blems adjusting to Marist because he was
familiar with assistant coaches Dan Berns-
.
tein and Don
·
Kelbick, and played basket-
The story behind
the Mccann banner
.
.
.
.
by Kathy O'Connor
while they visit Mari.st and contributing
·
$25,000 to support the Marist College
Ask the typical Marist student about
athletic program's entry into Division
I.
the Red Fox Club and you will be likely
.
It also placed an ad in
Eastern Basket-
to hear,
''I
don't know
·
what it is, but
ball magazine publicizing the
·
Marist
.
there is a sign at McCann that says
·
College basketball team.
·
something about it."
·
.
·
The donations made by individuals
ball with Bruce Johnson (a starting guard season. He said he's confident he'll get a
for the Red Foxes) since the eighth grade.
chance to play.
Cohen,
.
a freshman from Birmingham,
.
Both Cohen and Metcalf will become
Ala.
played for a short time at Wofford eligible the day after the fall semester of '82
College in South Carolina before coming to ends. A decision will then be made whether
Marist. Cohen said that' while he holds to play them or let them sit out another
nothing against the people at Woffard, he year.
felt that his
talents
would be better put to
Petro said it depends on the overall team
use at an institution where the caliber of picture. "Adam's got three years of
play was better. '
.'
Marist, in its first year of eligibility
·
left and Chris has two so we can
Division
I
competition seemed perfect," decide next year how we'll use them," said
Cohen said.
Petro. He
·
pointed out that the decision
Even though home is seventeen hours would be a joint one between coaches and
away, Cohen said he likes Poughkeepsie the players.
and the people at Marist a great deal.
Petro
·
said, "Right now they're getting
"Coming from the south and all, I ex-
establ
.
ished academic«lly and helping the
pected the people to be a little cold but
I team out at practices. They do everything
··
was really surprised how nice everyone has
the team does except play in games.'' Petro
been," he said.
said that a year off allows the players to ad-
Cohen, a 6'3", 190 lbs. shooting guard, just without pressure and produces a higher
who was All-City at Mountain Brown High level
.
of maturity that really pays off in
School, said he is looking forward to next
game situations.
Skiers fail to gain berths
for
national ch~mpionships
.
Although the banner at the McCann
.
and businesses to join the club give them
Center is familiar to most students, the
various privileges. "Some people· join
by Joan Schatzie Gasparovic
Marist's Moorehouse and Fusaro both
fell and were unable to complete the event.
"After the first run, I was in sixth place. l
didn't fall until the bottom of the second
run, when
I caught some snow and flipped
forward," said Moorehouse. "The fall in-
jured my knee, and I think that the injury
affected my run in the giant slalom on Sun-
day."
·
club that it publicizes is unknown to
-
for the right to join the Mccann
many. The club, however; is one of the
Center," said Dick Quinn, "you must
Any hopes that members of the Marist
.
major forces behind the athletic pro~
be a rriember of the club to join the Mc-
ski team would be competing in the Na-
grams at Marist.
Cann."
.
·
tional Collegiate Ski Association National
The Red Fox Club
.
was formed in
The amount of the donation also
Championships in Idaho were shattered
June 1980. Presently it has 84 members,
determines what other privileges the
this past weekend at Waterville, Valley,.
three-quarters of whom are rton-Marist
donor may be entitled to. The base
·
N.H.
alumni.
·
membership is $25 per year, which gives
Marist's top five rac<!rs, Kevin Samolis,
"The club was formed primarily to
one a listing in the basketball program
John
Levy,
Rich
Kline,
Nancy
raise funds to be used for athletic
booklet and season basketball ticket
Moorehouse, and Krista Fusaro qualified
scholarships," said Dick Quinn, athletic
priority.
.
individually for the Waterville meet, the
director of the Mccann Center.
.
The Red Fox Club has four other
New England Intercollegiate Ski Con-
Although all the athletics at Marist
·
·
levels for
·
individuals, ranging from
·
ference Championships.
are supported by the club, a majority of
$100 to $1000 per year, and two levels
In the men's slalom, Doug Kaworski of
.
the donations received and the club
for businesses, ranging from $500 to
Plymouth State took first, with a time of
sponsored activities seem to be aimed at
.
$1000 per year. Privileges include; a
_
106.57 seconds (Kaworski was an All-
providing for the men's basketball team
Red Fox Club T-shirt, a wall plaque, a
American racer from the 1980-81 na-
only.
- ·
·
paper weight, reserved seas
.
on tickets
tionals). Two University of Massachusetts
. The club has done such things as
and reserved
.
parking for all home
skiers took second and third
'place,
with
hosting the men's basketball. recruits
.
basketb
_
al
_
l gam
_
es'.
times of 145.55 and 145.59.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
·
- - - - - - - - - - -
.
)
.··
Marist's Samo\is finished 16th, clocking
·
ptAYER OF THE WEEK
·
·
Kevin Samolis and Nancy Moorehouse,
·
members of the Marist ski team, have been
chosen as this week's Miller co-athletes of
the week.
·
Samolis, a freshman from Cheshire, Ct.,
has turned in consistently good perfor-
mances this season. At the league's Snow
·
Valley meet, Samolis captured first in both
the men's slalom and giant slaloin events.
in
at 119.31.
Both Levy
.
and Kline fell:-
the fourth gate
.
of the course was
the
.
ap-
parent obstacle. '
_
'I completed the first
run
of the giant slalom with only one ski, after
losing it at the fourth gate," said Levy.
That same gate also took its toll on Kline as
he fell going into it and was unable to finish
the half-mile race.
Plymouth State's Kaworski took first
place once more, finishing with a time of
144.64 to win the men's giant slalom event.
R.
Conway
from
the
Univ.
of
Massachusetts was second, with a time of
145.55,
while Rudy VonBerg of Babson
College took third with a 145.59 finish.
Marist's Samolis took 19th (151.68), while
..
·
Kline took 53rd (164.14) and Levy finished
59th (175.41) in a field of 60 men.
.
.
Overall, the top three men's teams were:
1.
University of Massachusetts;
2:
Boston
College; and 3. Plymouth State,
In the women's slalom, S. White of the
·
University of Massachusetts finished first
·
with a time of 118.41 seconds. T. Collins,
·
White's team-member, took second with
120:19, while J. Davis of Plymouth State
took third with 120.20.
Lori Kline of Browne University cap-
tured first place in the giant slalom event,
with a time of 153.98. B. Vol, also of
Browne, took second with 154.63 and S.
·
White of the University of Massachusetts
grabbed third with 155.62.
Moorehouse finished tenth, with 165.15,
while Fusaro finished 20th (173.10) in a
field of 30 women. "The racers were quite
competitive," said Moorehouse. "Less
than two seconds separated the top three
finishers."
The University of Massachusetts women
took
first -p\ace o'1eta\\, with- P\'ymouth
State taking second and Boston College
·
third.
.
Their overall first place finish has enabl-
ed the men's and women's teams of the
University of Massachusetts to qualify for
the National Collegiate Athletic Associa-
tion
(NCAA)
National Championships.
The overall second and third place
finishers, Plymouth State and Boston Col-
lege, will be going on to the National Col-
legiate Ski Association National Cham~
pionships at Brundage Mtn. in McCall,
Idaho.
Representing Marist's league, the Mac-
Brien Division of the New England Inter-
collegiate Ski Conference, were North
Adams State, Green Mountain College,
Central Connecticut College, and Marist's
own individual racers. The following
schools competed
in
the conference cham-

pionships: Babson College, Boston Univer-
s_ity, Boston College,
.
the University of
Lowell, Worcester Polytech Institute,
Browne University,
Plymouth State,
Amherst College, and the University of
Massachusetts.
.
Likewise, Moorehouse, a transfer from
North Country Community College, took
first· for the women's
-
team in both the
slalom and giant slalom at. Snow Valley.
Moorehouse, a j~nior, was recruited by
R~!!:!!!-l
THEATRI
NOW PLAYING EXCLUSIVE
team coach
Mike Haggerty.
.
Samolis and Moorehouse
·
finished the
regular ski racing season as the no. 1
·
men's
and women's racers in the MacBrien
Divi-
sion of the New England Intercollegiate Ski
Conference, which enabled them to qualify
for the NEISC Championships this past
weekend at Waterville Valley, N.H.
RIVER DISTRIBUTING CO
So, for all that you have contributed to

the team at the Snow Valley meet, and for
N
R ·
all your contributions throughout the
oxon oad
!:::~_n,
we salute you as co-athletes of the
·
Poughkeepsie, New y ork
PLAYER OF THE WEEK
·
sPONSORED BY
·rnE
MILLER BREWING COMPANY
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
·
FIRST
AREA
SHOWING
8
.
"Presentthls ad for
$1.00
ACADEMY AWARD
OffAdultAdmisslon."
NOMINATIONS
Fri., Sat., Sun. 7, 9:"5
Mon.•Thurs. 7:~0 only
Sat.
&
Sun. Mat. 3:15
JAMES CAGNEY
IN
"THE FILM EV.ENT
OF THE YEAR."
-Fred Yager. As~ociott?d Preis
"BESIDES
HAVING
OSCAR NOMINATIONS
WRITTEN All OVER IT, RAG TIME
IS A GRAND TIME."
--Ruth Batchek>r. M•tromftd'io-TV
'iHE MOS
0
T ENTERTAINING
AND POWERFUL FILM
TO APPEAR SO FAR THIS YEAR."
-Richord
freedrrion. Nowhouse N~wspopt>rs
"A TRIUMPH ON EVERY COUNT."
-Edwin
Miller. Seventeen
"ONE
OF THE FINEST FILMS OF 1981."
-JoscphGclmis. News.day
..






















































































































@1-'-;
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.
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.
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.

.
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Page 12
~
_
THE
CIRCL~ - February
25~
1982
:
.
.
.
,
_
}i
I~
.
,.
,.

.
.,
-
.
MariSf
ct:ro.ps
game
-
atbtizzer
fO_itoyola
•·
.-
.
.
"
..
.
-
:
.
·
by
PaufPalmer
.
offense i,y ch~nging his game plan byusing
.
his inside strength
-
with Powell and Ryan,
.
"You ·don't expect this at home/' ·
to the outside shooting game of Steve Eg-
.
That was the reaction of Marist's Moose
gink and Todd Hasler. It seemed as tho1:1gh
Timberlake to the foul call that led ·to a
nothing was
·
going to work for Marist ·
Marist loss against Loyola College on because it seemed they weren't able to
.
·
Saturday night.
.
.
. .
. .
maintain their momentum for any length
·
The call, on Ronnie Ryan, came with no of time iong enough to open a big
·
lead:
time remaining as Loyola's Mark Valderas Fortunately
.
for

Marist, Loyola found
attempted to shoot. The referee said
·
that themselves in the same position,
·
'
.
·
Ryan fouled Valderas and
_
awarded him
·
The game came down to strategy t,all in
..
two free throws. The call w~s an extremely
·
the final minute as Loyola went into a stall
:•
·
,:
·
unpopular one and brought with it not only offense
·
after the tying Marist basket by .
.
·
-J
·
the
-
verbal wrath of the spectators but also a
.
Keith
·
Denis off a {lruce Johnson assist.
Iv,
_
deluge of debris.
·
.
Denis was fouled on the play by Bob Selby
·
.
'
.
After the delay caused by the debris 'and hit the bonus to tie
.
it at 73 with just 51
throwing, Valderas calmly hit the free seconds left to play.
throws to win
·
the
·
battle for
the
Loyola brought the ball up court and
Greyhounds 75-73.
·
tried to work it for one last shot. Superb
.
The game in itself was_ a dose one defensive play byMarist caused Loyola to
·
throughout most of the late stages, but in call their final timeout with six seconds re-
:
·
the
_
first halfit. looked as

if Marist was in a
·
maining. After· the timeout, Maurice Hicks
.
lot
·
o(- trouble .
.
Loyola jumped out to an
.
had a jumper partially blocked by Bruce
·
.
·
eleven point lead,
17~6,
before Marist call- Johnson
:
The
.
ball went to Valderas and the
.
· ed a timeout. What ~oach Ron P~tro must
··
foul was called on his
follow
tip shot:'
:
\
.
.
.
have said to his club worked because the
Once
.
again, it was Steve Smith leading
·
Foxe:;' storm
_
ed back to within two points,
the way for Marist with
23 followed by
and proceeded to rescue what looked like a
Ronnie Ryan and Keith Denis wllo each
disaster. Marist was down by only five
had
1 L Loyola's- Bob Selby had 21 and
points at the half,
37~32
.
· ·
Maurice Hicks added
18 for the winners.
Halftime stats showed Ronriie Ryan
It was the second loss in a
·
row for the
leading Marist offensively with 9 points · Red Foxes who dropped a 78-71 decision to
and Steve Smith added
6
more. Loyola was
St. Francis of Brooklyn on Thursday night.
being paced by Maurice Hicks and Tom
In the St. Francis
·
game, the red Foxes
Carahenvith 12 points each
.
found themselves in
a
.
close game
_
which
.
Marist came out in the second half saw several first half lead changes. Neither
knowing that their playoff hopes
_
could be team managed to
·
open up
-
a larger lead
determined within the final twenty minutes
than five points before the half.
of the game. They came from down by five
Marist
·
found itself
·.
out in front at the
to find themselves in and out of the lead.
.
• half 35-33,
·
but the second half spelled
-
~
According to Petro, the game previously disaster for the Red Foxes.
·
.
_ ·
-
'
> .
.
played between the
_
t~o clubs was a see-saw
Once again
·
they fell victim to some
--·
contest in which both teams seemed content clutch
·
late free throws for St.
·
Francis
to play it out. That is exactly wtiathappen-
which iced it for the Foxes: . -
·
- ,
·
.


·
C' .
:.
ed this time.
.
.
·
· ·
-
.
.•
The
·
half was close but St.
.
Francis
Several times Petro tried to shake up the
managed
:
to
_
control mli~h
of
.
it
with
some
:
.
,v. ·'··'""'
·
·;;''"·
'
'"'"-
.
--
.
.
·
,
-;
,,
_-.,
.
.
·•
··.
+,
<-:-_
·:
,:
~,
~-
-

·.
_
good outside shootinkfromTerry Lacewell
·
and Darius Pearson
;
:?'.' . ,:
.
·
':i
.
.:,
-: •·
-
.:.
. _
·
Marist, on the other
-
hand, had
a
:
ki
t
of
·
trouble
.
finding
.
the mark as they wen(

·
almost
3
-
·
minutes
.
without a basket at
.
the
open !'>fthe deciding halt
_

.
_
.
·
·
·· ·

The
.
real problem forMaristcame late in
.
T

.
,.
l i
...
-
·
·1
-
ff
:·~~
~
-
:
t
--.
:
·

thehalfastheypressedtogettheball
·
back
;
· .
.
: .
·
e
-
_
p
ayo
-
·p1c
_
ur_e
·
trailing bf five points with
1:
13
remaining.
·
·
.
·
:
.
.
, ,
·
-
*F.D;U.
*L.LU .
.
St.Francis
iena
· ·
10
3
·
10
.
·- 4
. 8 · 6
· ·
7
7 ·
Darius Pearson and Edgar DaLaRosa then
_
.
-•·•-
_\'.
c";

;'-·:c
·
·
went toworkfor the Terriers hitting ten
of.
·
,
_
Tol_!ight
a_t
_
8
p.m.
_
·
<:o~chRori Petro,
·, '
night;
.
the two t~ms wiffbe tied wit~ 7-8
-
teit, each:from the foul line.
: - .
·
·
·
·
-· .
'
players',::ana fans
will
be
·
holding their
·•
confei:_:ence
,.
records
·
. A tie would force
.
,
On the
·
night St. Francisshot-86% from
-
·
:
breaths: as'-Sieiia-takes
<lt)
the'l.Jniversity
·
:
Siena
.
arid Maris( into
a
game on a
·
arist
agner
6
8
·
.
:
.
:
·
I
.
12
the line as compared toMarist's
59%
'.
\
·
of Baltimore in a key conference match~
,
.
·
_-
neutral court to
.
de~ide
.
who
will
ad-
·
1
-•
·
dDMaryl
_
Po~ehll a
9
nd Sdteve S~ith once a~ai11
.
up
:_
tha(JviWdecjde whethe~ Mafist wHL
.
vance.
,
.
.
.
.
.
·

.
_
.
.
.
Top fourteains make playoffs .
.
*djnched playoff ber
~
h
-
·
_
·
e
·
._
anst wit
1 an 17 pomts respective-
have a shotat a playoff berth.
_ . . .
-
.
However, a Siena victory cir a Marist
ly.
>
·
·
•.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
-
. .
.
If Siena loses and
·
Marist
.
defeats
.
,
loss
w.m
·
.
put
-
the Red Foxes out of the
Pearson and DaLaRosa led

theTerriers
Long
:
Island Univei:s'ity
'
on Saturday
picture .
.
·
·
·
·
with
1~
and
14
points.
·
:
:··
·
.
~
Bet\vccn the Lines
-
·
·
..
by
Bill
Travers

·
_
cocky.
'.'
>
.
.
._
. .
/
_
._ .
_
..
.
__ .
:
. ,

F!)llowing
.
the Hawks game
;
.
Stevens
-.
·
·
._
Some say he is too loud
.
Enthusiast
i
c is
received
~
a
verbal agreement and an en-
'
_
..
more.like it. He is Rich Stevens, public ad-
.
couraging
~
''we
.-
want
you"
·.
froin
·
dress announcer
at
the McCann Center and
·
.
DiTomaso. ''It's
:
definitely a
·
lot
·
tougher
·
as of the endof January
·
he
-
is the new p.a.
:
doing
·
·
National
.
BasketbalL
'
Association
·
.
.
announcer at the Brendan Bryne Arena for
-
games,'' said
.
Stevens. "The
.
play is fast-
:.
_
the New Jersey Nets.
.
_
.
·
-
pacedan9 I have to be very quick when an-
·
.
'
.
'It was a ve!Y l~fky_drcum'stan~.e.that
nound
_
ngsubstitutions."_
.
·
/
.-'
·
:
led to my new JOb, said Stevens. I was
In the
N.B.A. offensive fouls are not
announcing a high school game when this
considered team fouls, Stevens falsely-an-

guy comes over to me and says that I'm too
nounced
a:
team foul when this infraction
lqud. Five minutes later another guy comes
occurred
.
"That was one mistake I made at
·
over to me for, I thought; the same reason.
·
the beginning, but I haven't done it since,"

.
1
was ready to tell the guy off."
. .
.
_
said Stevens. "But I really didn't
IJlake
·
.
.
:
''lt turned out
·
that the guy was Fred
;
many other
.
mistakes.'' I was advised by
Weinhaus,
·
the general manger of
.
.
of Weinhaus te> view a game before my try
.
out.
··
WPAT radio. He
_
was here watching his
If I hadn't, I probably wQuld have made
·.
_
son play basketball,"
··
.
said Stevens .
.
many other errors
.
I owe a lot to Fred."
Weinhaus asked Stevei1s some questions
Stevens is a classic example of paying the
and arranged a trail at the Arena on dues in life and
.
working his way up. He has
·
.
January
14
during the Nets and Bulls game.
gone from announcing at -Roosevelt
.
High
Mike DiTomaso, executive vice president

School,
_
to Dutchess Community <;:ollege
,
and director of operations for the Nets was
the Mccann Center- and now the Byrne
impressed and told Stevens to come back
Arena. As the size of the arena grew, so did
for the Atlanta Hawks game.
·
:
.
his confidence. "The important factor in
"Before the
·
Bulls gaOJe I announced a
my gaining confidence has been from star-
high school game," said Steve!1s. "Ths
.
ting at the bottom;'' said Stcvetts.
-
game helped me relax because 1t was so "Because of my slow rise up the ladder; I
.
disorganized. Actu~lly, I ~ad no time_ to get h~ve_ the .~onfidence that I'm ready for the
nervous. If anything,
·
I was a bit too b1g time.
Rich Stevens
-
·.,
,
.
,
· • >
The
::
big
·
time
_
may
·
'
get
:
eve~ bigger.
·
·
Pr~ently, St~ve
_
n
_
s is ~mpl
_
oyed
.
by
.
the Nets,
,
but Jlopes
.
to get htred: by
'
the Arena so
.
he
..
can an~o~pce wre~tling
,
socci
f
r o
_
r anything
·
-
else that 1s booked; '.'I have decided to
finish out this season at Marist and as of
yet I
·
haven~t decided about next
,
year,"
said Stevens
~
"If w~
can work out a con-
.
t
_
racfl would lov~ to stay."
··
·
Another
.
Jinportant
.
· factor
.
fn
Steven's
decisiol) on staying with Marist
will
be the
_
Arena's ability_in hiring a National Hockey
.
League franctuse to Jersey. Right now the
New York
_
Rangers and Colorado Rockies
are. looking into the move
:
·
If
either one
.
decides ~n t~e transition,
·
and
:
Stevens gets
·
the full
-
t1me_1~b at the Arena, he
will move
to Jersey.
.
·
.
· "_Righ~ no~ I am looking into teaching
~;rhfications m New Jersey,'' said Stevens~
Hopefully I can teach.math at an elemen-
tary schoo! during the day and work at the
Arena at night."
· -
-
Itj the past the Nets have.had announcers
that
·
lack the enthusiasm
·
that Stevesn
posses~es. Th~y now h~ve that enthusiasm.
Stevens
.
unmistakable
'
voice
will
now be
heard around the country as
it
bounces off
the walls of the Brendon Byrne Arena in
the Meadowlands.
.
·


26.13.1
26.13.2
26.13.3
26.13.4
26.13.5
26.13.6
26.13.7
26.13.8
26.13.9
26.13.10
26.13.11
26.13.12