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Part of The Circle: Vol. 26 No. 17 - April 8, 1982

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$5Q();
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f {;?WnhOuse
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..
•·•
'
'
.
.
..
'
chal"ge
added
'
.,.
_
by
Gnzla Lo Piccolo
.
. The college, in trying to offset the tuiti~n
_..
trustees
_
decided to in~titute
a
flat Jhition
Jim Muzikowski, student government
.
'
'

• :
• : .

• .
:
:
·

:
:
C
:

.;.
> .
.
increase,
·
.
has
.
allocated
.
an 'additional
..
ratC for full-tiQte students. Beginning in the
.
president, said that he sees the- flat tuition
Marist students
will
face anJncrease of $170,000to financial aid in
.
the 1982-1983
'.
fall, ihe tuition'charge will.be the saine for
:
..
rate as
.
an effort by
the
bo«rd of trustees
·
12.85 percent in tuition and room and·
..
budget, said Murray. But, he said, the all students.carrying at leas
·
t 12 credits, but and the administration to
·
help Marist
·
·
board costs next fall, and those living iri the
extra aid
.
would
.
be available primarily· in
not more than 16. The rate for 1982-83 will students
·
meet tuition cost. He also said he
new lownhouses will pay an extra $100 for
.
the form ofloans.
.
.
.
.
be $4,430.
.
feels that the increase in tuition is fair;
housing, according
to decisions made last
Also at last week's meeting, the board of
·
Dean Gerard
·
Cox
'
said that the flat-rate
.
·
"Standards (at Marist) arc going
·
up, we
week by the college's board ofti:ustees.
·
·
·
policy
will
-
allow
·
students to take more can't survive with a lower increase. There is
The$100surchargefoi:thetownhousesis
·
arin
.
uaJc~stsfrom$6:460to$7,290fodull~
"activity courses;'' ·such as
·
physical no college in America where you
.
are not
nc:eded, according to
.
college of~cials,
.
to
·.
time resident students
.
Tuition will go from
education or chorus, without paying extra. going to pay a tuition increase," he said.
cover
utility
costs for appliances.
·
·
.
.
$3,930
·
to
$4,430,
ail increase of
·
12. 72
'~The
.
stucl~nt
may
see
·•
W(?rking
that
(tlie
·
--
---.
·
Marist President Derinis Murray said the
percent. Room
·
and board costs will rise
activity
.
course)· within the fall tuition rate
With
·
the new increase in tuition and
building of the townhouses had a minimal 13.04 percent, from $2,530
fo
$2,860.
·
rather than seeing it as extra money to
room and board cost have almost doubled
effectontuition,notingthatinflationisthe
Th~ cost of graduate study will also
pay,,.Cox-said;
.
·.
-
··
_ ·
.
since.1975,.76, .from $3;670 to $7,290;
single most important factor leading to the jump, from $131 per credit hour to $155.
He added that it will benefit the student
Murray said that in the future he hopes to
tuition increase.
.
.
.
.
·
Murray said he doesn't expect students
who might take 18 credits per semester to
keep tuition increase at a minimum.

''The cost of everything in society has
_
to greet increase with open arms, but
-
he
a
_
ccelerate his· course of study. With Jlat
Murray said
.
he
.
doesn't feel that the
gone up,"
.
Murray
.
said. "The cost is
·
added that "it's a necessity for a college
tuition rate, he said the student will pay for
·
increase will
··
discourage prospective
passed along. We are not different from a that is improving in quality.'' He said that
-
the 17th and 18th credit but the first 16
students from coming to Marist. "Demand
.
·
utility corporation.''.
.
·
·

..
.
the increase is below the natio~al average
credits will cost
.
no more than a 12-credit
is still
.
very heavy; we are turning students
The 12,85 percent increase
·
will raise of 140/ci.
·
load.
away," he saicF
.
TIIE CIRCLE
Volume
26,
Number 17
.
Marist Coilege, Pough~eepsle,
N.Y;
.
April 8, 1982
Seller's
·
under
review
'as·
.
Cq,npqniesbia
for contract
By
-
~attGoionka
.
.
wiliing to
.
sign
.'
a Jontract for
'{nore
than
a
¥
~•·;·~~
E~;g:1~i~~;~~~~tif~~
I~
~Ji~j1~~i!t~!~i~l~t~~
:~4
{
~•
.•. ,,, .
.
:
:
or
.
riot
to
.
contimie
.
Seiler's
.
food
·:
servke
..
contract:
~'There
'
s.re
fiv°e
mitiorially know
'
n
.>":
'
'-: .
.
_
.>
contract
for
another year.
<
i
:
'
,
-
c
,
;
>·
'
<
'.
companiei
C
for
'this
area,"
he said,
.
"riot
/
·.: >'
.
Grac·e
'.
Tejacfa,< chairman o(:
'.
th
·
e
In-
:
c§unting
'
the
'
hundreds
of
smaller ones
·,
....
·
.
:
.
terhouse Food Committee, said ina recent
.
.
nationwide.'!
.
. .
.
.
.
. .
__
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
:.
interview, the committee will be having
ihe
.
(}ldmixon sa_id it was standard prncess
.
·.
·
: ·
meetings soon: She said;
'
"This is the first
·
for a school to
-
go out and bid fqr a food
·
·
:
time a student wiH be present at these
'
service.
''Marist
will go fonhe best value,
·
-
..
meetings representing the student body."
not necessarily the lowest bid," he said.
. .
·
.
.
"-
~I Oldmixon, manager of the cafeteria,
.
Both Tejada afld_ OldlJ?ixon agreed that
.
.
,-
"
.
.
pointed out that there are a few problems
..
the lack of student input
IS
a problem-sand
:
that have
.
to be ironed out before'the final
does not aid in the final decision .
.
"We
•·
:
signjrig,
'.
and added, "It wiU stay
·
on the
always·
,
welcome students

to.
_
give
back-burner for a little while longer due to
.
.
criticism," Tejada said. "I only wish Jhe
.
the comple.xity of the situation.••
.· . . .

. .
Inter house Council
.
heard
.
more of it so
we
·.:
·
Oldmixon explained that one of the
;
would be able to make some changes."
_· _
proble!}ls
lies
iri
the food and labor
__
market
•.
.
Tejada emphasized the importance
_
of this
·
.

itself
;'
btit refused to comment further on
.
issue
'
primarily
.
because it is
.
"y9u, the
. .
!'-
.
.

.
.
·
:
what
_
\~as
currently taking place currently
.
student, who has to eat the food." She
.
.
,
·
·
..
with the renego~iaiing; "Seeing that the added, and
~•How
are we to know what
WMCR
.
raised
$1,274
·
.
in
the Heart
.
Association
Marathon,
. .
which was conducted
.
last weekend. Bill
Palmeri and Chris Barnes (pictured) teamed with Doug
Haight and
John Russell as they literally sweated out 91.9
food and labor market is so volatile," he
you do or do not like unless you tell us?"
·
said, "very f~w food servi
_
ce companies are
.
.
.

.
.
C:SL elections attract
by Geoff Aldrich
was; however, eff«:tive representation of
students.
.
·
.
.
,
·
.
.
.
·

..
With one
.
of the smallest voter turnouts
.
.
Schatzie wants the club presiden~ to
be
·
in recent
·
year.,s,
-
Joan "Schatzie" realistic and responsible in dealing with the
..
Gasparovic has won
.
the position of allocations. "I think that club presidents
Student Government President.
·
The have a personal responsibility' for the
election of the Student
.
Government budgets and should
be
held accountable for
·
,
President and other government offices them. It is the
.
students money we are
gave the student body an opportunity to dealing with,'' she said. "We
can
be ef-
.
select officers for the
-
1982~83_ academic ficient
in
·
working together," she con-
year.
tinued.
.
..
.
..
.. ·
.
.
Other . winners in last Wednesday's
elections included Bernadette Cosner for
College Uni9n Board, James
.
Glavin for
Inter-house
··
Council, Chris Blood for
Commuter Union President, and Dawn-
Joy
·
oliver for the president of the Student
Academic Committee.
·
The other candidates that were running
for S.G. president included current S.G.
vice president Ted Perrotte and Tony
Giannone, Perrotte, who came in second in
the election, emphasized on his platform
his experience with government. "I know
how to work the job," he said at the
forum. After failing in his bid for the
Student Governm
_
ent presidency, Perrotte
has filed for Senior class president. Tony
Giannone also spoke to students at the
·.
lrours
in
the WMCR_studio.
·
· ·
lllow
voter turnout
..
.
.
business of this board. I know its
.
president and served this year as the head
operations and
'
'I can
be
efficient' as its
o
_
ftheSki club-.
.
.
-
·
.
president,'
.
' she sai
_
d.
.
.
.
.
·
.
.

.
"My initial reaction
·
was ecstacy on
.
.
Current .Junior cl.ass president Chris
·
_
winning the election," she said. "Later, I
Blood also campaigned on the experience
thought what the _win meant, and how I am
platform in his bid to become head of the looking forward to a productive year and
CommuterUnion.
,
workingwithCSLofficers."
.
-
· .
With the transition of the . new govern-
.
"I feel that my involvement with campus
·
ment to
_
take
·
.
place within the next few
government both as a resident and com-
weeks, the
·
newly elected CSL officers
will
muter gives me the best perspective for this
be attending meetings, talking
with
_
ad-
.
position," he said.
.
·
·
ministrators and
·
stµdents, and trying to
·
Student Academic Committee winner learn the jobs they were elected fQr .
Dawn-Joy Oliver said at the forum, "Its
"My
basic goals are getting the newly
·
my opinion the students should
be
made elected CSL officers to become familiar
aware of the academic changes, I
can
make with their jobs, one of the more immediate
.
.them aware,
1
have two years of experience plans that I
·
have; is to clear up
.
the current
on the
S.A.C.
board." In her presentation
problems, so we can start next year clean,"
.
at the forum, Oliver proposed the idea of a
said Schatzie.
-
.
·
newsletter to keep the
·
student body in-
While the elections was a success for
for~ed of these changes.
·
.
·
Joan Gasparovic and other newly elected
·
·
With current Inter-house Council leader
Dave Skrodanes as her vice president,
Schatzie wants efficient student govern-
ment.
"I have a inward desire to run the
student government as effectiyely as
possible," she said at the candidates forum
the night before the elections;
forum. He addressed
·
issues including
.
Though not present-at the forum, George
Reagan's educational budget cuts and the
"J.R."
Fleming was elected to serve as the
need for greater student involvement.
·
president of the newest service
.
organization
officers, the turnout was low according to
CSL vice president Ted Perrotte.:
"The turnout
was
low," he said, "but•
CSL thinks that those who voted were
Schatzie also addressed issues such as
allocations and
'rental
procedures of the
McCann Center for events. Her platform
Other winners of student
.
government
·
·
on campus, the Non-traditional Students
positions also expressed their platforms at
_
Organization.
the Monday night forum. C.U.B. winner
The main winner, Schatzie, was excited
Bernadette Cosner stressed. her past
·
ex-
by her election, but kept everything in
.
perience with that organization.
perspective. Not
·
lacking experience,
"I have
·
had much exposure to the
.
Schatzie was last years_ Sophomore class
·
fairly representative of the entire campus."
.
The commuter vote was also low. Perrotte
said, "I am unsure if the commuters were
represented. Only 150 of them voted of a
possible
800."
l
I




























































--Page2-
.
THECIRCLE

-Aprl/8,
1982 •. - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
At·the core
"Each Core experience should be very
any values, or to
·
other disciplines such as
·
special," according to the Marist College
history, communications, or art.The nature
Catalog. If Core courses are so special, then
of psychology naturally causes the course
.
,
·
why do so many students see them
·
as
.
to touch on some of these other disciplines,
obstacles on the path to graduation?
but a course th~t actually intertwined
The Core program
.
began in 1976. Its
.
psychology with history, communications
purposes were to confront the basic value
and art would fulfill the goals of the Core
questions of
.
a
·
discipline, teach skills
program and would serve to enhance the
associated with the discipline and expose
experience of the foundation courses.
the discipline's methodological approach to
Incoming freshman have barely a clue as
knowledge; How many students can say
to why they are being required to take these
that Arts and Values, Meaning of History, or
Core courses. The educational philosophy
Science, Technology and Human Affairs
behind them is very good, but it cannot work
have fulfilled these guidelines?

·
unless the student has an understanding of
The foundation courses in
·
the Core
the objectives of the Core program. This
program do create the opportunity for a
lack of understanding as to why students
student to face his/her values, but the goals
are required to take Core courses only adds
of the Core program see to stop there.
to the antagonism the student develops
When the Core program first evolved at
.
.
toward the Core curriculum. .
·
.
,
,:
tv,_aris} i~ 19!6, it
v-.tci~
<:1e
_
9
_
i
_
~ed t~at it ,would
"
.,
.
.
;
.
.
. '.
R!g~f
ngwjtu~. shij:i,en
:
~s
.
ar~ri'.f
.
thrilled: at,
·
.
...
be a two part pro9ess. l'h~ foundation

:
.
~H
:
oy~r
Jh~
:
t.am,t.tia~
-
t
.
n~y
;
c3,:re required to
courses of /ntroduct,on to Philosophy
.
and
'
-take
Core,courses.
,The
lack
:
of enthusiasm
Introduction to Ethics were to be one part of
·.
pfobab,Y Jsri't'becai.ise
.
students feel that

the Core experi
_
ence. The second part of t~e
t
_
he Core
·
program

has
·
no
.
worth; it's
process was
·
to
..
require courses m
probably because the students don't realize
disciplines that the student wouldn't
how important a broad background of
·
necessarily be exposed to in a four-year
studies within a liberal arts education is.
.
.
education. It was expected that' these two
So the question must
be posed:
·
will
parts
·
would eventually
.
intertwine. They
···
students come to understand the new Core
don't.
.
.
.
.
·
·
program, now that the Student Academic
The students certainly are being exposed
Committee has helped to form- the latest
to
.disciplines
other than their declared
Core proposal? Hopefully
·
, now that· the
major, but the value judgment process of
students have been represented by the SAC,
·
the Core ends in the freshman year when
tne
SAC will do their best to let the student
the foundation courses are through. The
body know what it is that they approved.
distributive
.
Core
:
courses serve as
For the past six years the students have
.
inadequate electives, instead of 9onfronting
been alienated as to what the purpose of the
the students with a process of questioning
core was. The students of Marist Coliege
themselves and their values.
are of a
.
much higher callber than the
·
··.
Now that a revision of the original Core
students of past .years and we want to know
program is being done, It will be interesting
why we are required to tak~ Core courses.
to
·
~ee
how _ the
distributive Core

·
Now It's up to
.the
individuals who ap-
requirements will be
·
pres~nted. Perhaps
.
proved the new core proposal to help the
this is the chance to intertwine the foun-
·
general population of students at Marist
dation courses and the many disciplines, so
College to understand what the benefits of
that they create a core program, rather than

a core program are.
some extra required electives. Core
131,
Let's hope the students that approved the
Introduction to Psychology, is a very in-
new core program understood it them-
formative course. However, with the way
.
it
selves.
is currently being taught, it doesn't relate to
.

·
-
-,
.
'
.
·,
--......
.
·
The
Circle
Correction
WMCR's
budget allocation was not held back due to a business
office error, as was reported in last week's Circle. In fact the error
·
was
WMCR's
and not the business office's. The mistake was
.
due to
misinformation given to us by
WMCR
and the business office's
failure
to
comment at the time the story was written.
Editor
Terri Ann Sullivan
Sports Editor
Associate Editors
Rick O'Donnell
Entertainment
Patti Walsh
Business
,
Manager
Maggie Browne
Arts
& Reviews
News Editor
Ginny Luciano
Secretary
Photography Editor
Grace Gallagher
Layout
Readers Write·
All letters must
)le
typed trlple space with 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 avallablllty of space •
...
Admissions
Intern
TO THE MEMBERS OF THE
CLASS OF 1983:
The Admissions Office is now
accepting applications for the
Fall,
-
1982
Internship
in
Educational
Administration
(Admissions Internship).
·
This
·
internship is restricted to seniors
who have earned the
-
minimum of
·
a
2.S
cumulative index and have
made a significant contribution to
the Marist College community.
The Interns must complete
·
a
three-week training program
.
which
·
includes workshops on
academic programs, financial aid,
student services and admissions
policies. Specific duties of each
intern include:
.
seven weeks of
recruitment travel representing
the College
·
at high schools arid
College
·
Information Programs;
maintaining expense reports,
travel logs and· visit reports;
·
a
research paper or project on a
.
chosen topic concerning higher
education.
.
This internship is the oldest in-
ternship
·
program at Marist and
has received recognition from
professionals in the field. The
Alumni interns
·
have had
.
the
satisfaction
·
of
.
a professional
experience combined with the
opportunity to make a con-
tribution to the future of Marist
College.
·
·
·
·
·
Interested juniors should contact
my
·
office no oater than Friday,
April 16th.
.
Sincerely,
James E. Daly
Dean of Admissions
Health
line
by Karen Flood
Theresa Sullivan
Ruth Warren
ATTENTION
.
CIGARETTE
.
SMOKERS:
Do you want to stop
smoking but lack the initiative?
This week's Health Line will try
.
to help you understand· what is
known about cigarette smoking in
hopes that it will ignite you to
extinguish the habit.
First;
·
l~t's
.
,
1,lear up one. myth.
··
You don't have to wait 20' years
for smoking to affect you.
It
only
takes a few seconds. According to
the U.S. Department of Health,
Education and Welfare
,
(HEW),
"In
just three seconds, a cigarette
m
·
akes
.
your
.
heart beat' faster,
..
shoots your blood pressure up,
·
replaces oxyg~n in your blood
with carbon
·
monoxide
.
and leaves
cancer~causing
·
chemicals to
spread through your body."··
1
pressure, obesity and high blood
cholesterol.
Too often, lung cancer and
heart disease lead to death. The
A.C.S.
·
says that there are more
deaths,
·
at · any age, among
cigarette smokers than among
non-smokers
.
Each year, more
than
300,000
people die un-
necessarily from smoking-related
causes.
Statistics compiled by Medical
Datamation, Inc. indicate that
.
a
young
.
person who does not
smoke can expect
.
to Jive
eight'
years longer than the two-pack
per day smoker.
.
In
.
general,
.
the more you
-
smoke, the more likely you are to
develop these diseases. lfyou find
it difficult to quit altogether, then
.
try to cut down the quantity of
·
cigarettes you smoke.
·
If
you
smoke high-tar and high-nicotine
cigarettes, switch to lights. It
·
·
doesil't
t
_
ake
long·
10·
·
gef
us
_
ed
to
..
The U
;S;
Department of HEW:
the change, and your body
will
also states
·
that with every year
appreciate it.
that passes, a pack-a-day smoker
.
Your overall health will im-
·
pours "a cup of tar into his
.
prove the most, however,
if
you
lungs." In addition
.
to tar,
quit completely. If you are a
·
cigarettes
.
contain nicotine. The
moderate to heavy smoker and
same nicotine
·
you inhale into
quit
·
now, your lungs will
.
your lungs is used asa\veed killer.
.
gradually begin to return to
·
Long
·
range side-effects
·
of
.
normal,. After 10 years, your risk
smoking frequently involve lung
·
of
·
developing smoking-related
cancer,
.
heart disease and death.
·
·
problems falls to the level
·
of
.
·
According to
·
the
.
U.S. Depart-
people who never smoked.
·
ment of
H.E.W.,
smokers
One word of caution: Don't
comprise some 90 per cent of lung
..
expect
·
·
quiting to be easy.
cancer
·
victims. The American
Although your
.
body starts
Cancer Society (A.C.S.) says that
cleaning itself out imniediatel~, it
lung cancer is rare among non-
·
.
takes three weeks for the nicotine
smokers but is the
.'
third most
to leave your system because it is
frequent cause- of death among
an addictive drug.
··
·
smokers (following
·
hea,rt attacks
For more information contact
·
and strokes).
.
the Marist Health Services located
qgarette smokers have 70 per
in Champagnet Hall; room
109;
cent more heart
·
attack's than
·
nonsmokers, accqrding to the
A.C.S.
The risk of heart disease
for
·
the smoker increases
:when
there
.
are -other risk factors
present, such as high blood
Bill Travers
Theresa Cignarella
Linda Glass
Michael Thompson
Karyn Magdalen
DonnaOody
Copy Staff
Photography Staff
Advertising Stall
The above is the· first part of an
.
ongoing series put out by Marist
Public
..
Relations · students
in
conjunction with
the
Health
Service.
Karen Lindsay, Joanne Holdorf!
Meg Adamski Steve Cronin
Caroline Hamilton, Linda Soviero,
Carl Carlson, Jeanne LeGloahes
KyieMille
_
r
Theresa Abad, Gail Savarese,
James Barnes, Jeff Knox,
Jack Grafing
Jami Rosen: Classified
Copy Editor
.
Theresa Sullivan
_
Writing Stall
Chris Dempsey, Eileen Hayes,
Cartoonist
Faculty Advisor
Ted Waters
David Mccraw
Jeanmarie Magri no, Louise Seelig
Marketing Advertising
Joann Buie
Debbie Valentine, Pal Brady,
Barbara McMahon, Paul Palmer





































































































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----------------------------------------April
8, 1982-
.
THECIRCLE •
Page
3--
·
·•
Fine
.
arts area.faces 'period
.
of transition'
-
-
-
,
by
Louise Seelig
member in the Fine Arts area, whose job it .·
will be to "bridge the fine and applied
As of August 198r,
·
the Fine Arts arts," said Platt. The department wants a
Department cease
_
d
·
to be a separate person who will support the art related
division and was put under the supervision fields as well as the fine arts themselves.
of the Arts and Letters Division chaired by
·
Arnold Levine, adjunct instructor of
Dr. Richard Platt. The resignation of John
"
Fjne Arts, said that
it
is unclear
-
what
·
Warenko
,
last year left the Fine .Arts direction the Art
_
department will take.
Department with no
.
··
full-time faculty
.
Levine
·
forsees the possibility that the Fine
- member. There is a concern within the
..
Arts ,department may be in danger of_
department
·
about its own future, but, becomming
part.
.
of the
new
according to Platt, the Fine Arts will
be
marketing/advertising depariritent .
.
·
supported.
. Levine knows the value of the practical
The . Fine Arts Department is in a arts, yet he said that there has not been
"period of transition" according to Platt. enough emphasis put on a viable fine arts
.
Marist
-
will be hiring
a
full-time faculty

progr~m; or on the humanities in general,
·
.
Lewis: Science
·
of
Man
by
Rick O'Donnell
Robert Lewis,
·
assistant professor
.
of
English, has been appointed to take over as
head of the Science of Man program next
fall when current director Xavier Ryan
leaves Marist College.
Lewis has been working under Ryan in
the Science of Man program for the past
·
five years.
·
His primary responsibility has
been
·
working with students on the four-
year thesis required for Science of Man
students.
·
In the past three years, Lewis said, he has
become interested°in the whole educational
philosophy behind the Science of Man
program. "In an intense way I've been very
interested in general methodology and
interdisciplinary work," Lewis said.
Lewis doesn't foresee much change in
the way Science of Man is being taught
now. "That's my commitment," said
Lewii;. "I will try to communicate my
commitment to other teachers in the
program in as tactful a way as possible.
·
Lewis added that he expected there may
be some resistance, but he doesn't an-
ticipate much trouble.
"Some people may have alternative ways
of teaching The Science of
Man,"
said
Lewis. "Science of Man is trying to· do .
something different than the typical honors
program." Lewis pointed out that he is
very close to Ryan and to Ryan's
educational philosophies. Lewis sai
_
d, "I've
come to assimilate the spirit of the
program."
·
Lewis indicated that there would be
difficulties in taking over tor Ryan
.
"He
.
teaches with passion and commitment,"
said Lewis. Lewis added that he will
become familiar with the texts that Ryan
.
.
has been using. Lewis said, "I would like to
quell some of the basic apprehensions that
students have." Lewis also expressed an
interest in meeting
'
with the students of
Science of Man in the near future.
Lewis will be teaching the Science of
Man I and II classes next year. He noted
that he's familiar with the foundation of
Science of
Man,
but
it
will be a learning
experience for him also.
"A
program can't be just a person; it's
principles," said Lewis. He said that the
program can carry on because of its strong
foundation.
Park
Discount
Beverages
.
.
.
.
Route 9
-
-
_
Hyde
-
Park
Open
7:Days a
-
Week
Mon.-Thurs.
-
-
--10-9.
Fri.
-
&
Sat~ -
9
.
-9
Su.nday
~
1 2~5
.
This We~k's Spe
.
cials:
Molson
··
$2.99
6 Pock
·
Pabst
$6.49
Cose
Co'ns
Rolling Rock
$2.09
6
Pock
Fort Schyuler
$1.29
6 Pack
229-9000
·
He
sees Marist moving away _ from the
humanities into the practical arts. Levine
·
said that people "lose the value of
.
·
education without the arts."
Platt ·said, "My hope is that we will be
able to have a good balance between the
two areas of art." He said that the Fine
Arts department" will be re-vamped and
broadened, and that a
-
Fine Arts major is
still
·
alive. According to Platt; the Art
department developing interdisciplinary
course activity with such a program as
Communication Arts. "The foundation is
already there," said Platt referring to the
existing courses in photojournalism and
cinematography. "What
I
want to do ino
support the fine arts and develop the
applied arts," continued Platt.
·
·
Both Platt
.
and Levine mentioned an
interest in reestablishing a gallery. Levine
has written a proposal for a gallery that
would display the art work of the students
and that could be used for other types of
exhibits as well; such
·
as private collection
displays. This would get the whole com-
munity involved with the arts, said Levine.
According to Platt, the Communication
Arts Center (to be completed by
1985)
will
in certain aspects be a combination
Communication and Fine Arts Center. The
added space in this center could provide
room for art studios, and perhaps the
gallery will be housed in this center. With
the combination of the two arts, the gallery
could be usedto display paintings and
sculpture from the fine arts, as well as
photographs and advertising projects from
the communication arts.
According to Platt, the Fine
Arts
department has not been targeted for any
budget cuts, but there will be an addition to
the funds used to develop the practical arts.
Workshop for All
Newly Elected
_-
Presidents
Sunday,
April 18, 1982
'
Lunch -
11 :30
a.m.
Pub
Workshop-
_
1:30-4:00 p.m. CC249
Topics: 1982-1983 Calendar Planning
The
-
Budgeting Process
R~!~Jct'-!
THEATIII
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
$
~
·
--
·
-
-
.
,.----~i
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,
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-
--
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~

.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- - -
-
--·
,!_,-
.
Wl.
WtSMJIJ'1KDDOG.
ASJILll
8CUO\l:Pl
lt(
K
.
-IIO!IQJ.l!ICS
·
~
QICATTl,IU
·
SCOTi
altliBl
·
IWGIUITTIIII.Ur.MlASa'lo-Sl&\'IQ.Ntll.--
--HMtlP~•llll'l'll~-•COICAAIOJ'l'•l!al
ttm
IRF-~---·"'"-
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'J
.
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Now Playing - Held Over!
Absolutely the most fun
·
filled picture of 1982.
Shown Evenings at 7:30 and 9:30
Present this Ad and
receive
$1
Off
Adult
Admission.
DRIVE IN: Richard Pryor - Some Kind of Hero-Saturday April 14th











































































[:':;
':''
r,1
:•·
••
.':•
!
1
:!J.Y
.
r
<?·
:
~
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- - - Page 4 · THE
CIRCLE·
.
Aprl/8,
1982
-
.
U.N.
·
urges globalview
by
Grazia
E.
Lo Piccolo
Last week, while addressing a group of
-
Marist students and
.
faculty members a
United Nation official said we should
recognize the interdependence that exists
between developed and developing nations
and the United Nations is helping to foster
that interdependence.
'
.
'The United Nations is hope for
humanity," said Michael Geoghegan,
senior officer bureau for finance and
administration. "The United Nations
Charter Global Welfare is insurance that
the global community. is concerned about
the people."
Geoghegan emphasized that the
·
·
in-
terdependence
.
that exists is often not
acknowledged by the developed countries
especially in the area of trade. "The
·
protectionist minded West ignores world
countries as far as trade," said Geoghegan.
.
He added that the West often puts up
barriers, but he pointed out that this could

have an awkward effect since the
developing countries are a market for the
West.
"For mankind of approach human
synthesis we need planetary management
of
·
food, energy and population," said
Geoghegan. He said he feels this will ensure
that the small developing countries, who do
not have enconomic leverage in the world,
would get their share of goods.
He pointed out that whenever there is a
world
'
crisis, such as the energy crisis, it is·
.
the small developing nations who suffer.
"Those who suffer are not the big coun-
tries, but the small countries who have been
deprived or are not able to pay
.
the high
cost of energy," he said.
Goeghegan also stressed that we should
· develop
a:
global awareness or con-
sciousness
.
He
said
if
such consciousness
reaches problems involving arms control,
·
resource
·
management,
conflict
management and disease control would be
lessened.
STUDENT CREDIT
Ever wish that while traveling, vacationing, or maybe
just for emergencies, you could have a national credit
card?
Well, now -
YOU CAN~ obtain a Master card or
Visa while still in school, no co-signer required.
·
.
.
We
·
have establisheaa division to exclusively handle
·
~he credit needs of college students ... freshmen,
sophomores, juniors; and seniors
-
... so you can
.
enjoy the
conveniences of credit NOW, artd
.
have your credit
·.
established for your prof essiorial life after graduation .
.
On a 3 x 5 card, print your
·
name and complete ad-
dress. (Enclose $2
;
00
for postage and handling.) Send
·
to:
CREATIVE CREDIT
INTERNATIONAL
COLLEGIATE CREDIT
DIVISION
SUITE
_
303
D
PENN LINCOLN BLDG
.
789 PENN AVENUE, PITTSBURGH.
_
PA 15221
MARKETING STRATEGY
Experience a multi.:media study
of the marketing s\rategies that caused
.
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.
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.
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·
Professional Management
Quality Confrol ·
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.
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Media
:
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Market Segmentation
·
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A classic case of textbook marketing
that revolutionized an er,tire industry.
RIVER DISTRIBUTING COMPANY, INC .
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Iriside Marist P.R.
by
Carol Lane
Poughkeepsie Journal gets is of strong
quality. There shoJJld be consistency. They
: The phone is constantly ringing. There
should associate you with strong,
are
dealines to 'meet, last-minute details to · newsworthy stories and . well-written
take care of and people to deal-with~ Who
publications," she said.
.
. would want a hectic job like this?
Dealing with the press is not always easy:
· Christine Lapham would. It's all part of · "One· of the most difficult things is to
her job as director of public relations at
establish a good relationship with the press
Marist College.
·
·
but- also represent your institution in its
Christine Lapham· is· the force behind
best light," she said. "Sometimes you are
most of the events at Marist College. Her
caught in the •middle."
responsibilities
include · preparing
This· is a busy time of the year for
publications and organizing publicity and
Lapham. "One of the best things about
· special events, but there are other aspects
doing public relations for Marist is there
to her job. "I have a responsibility to know
are a lot of good things happening," she
what is goirig on all over campus," she said
said.
in a recent interview. "It is an exciting
She also worked on a free computer
responsibility."
horizon conference to be held on April 15.
She said many skills are needed for the This conference is open to all junior and
job. A
P.R.
person needs good senior high school students and their
organization and decision~making skills,
parents. There will be four computer
.
strong writing.and speaking skills and must , experts present to talk about their field.
be able to work with the community, she
Before coming to Marist in July of 1981
said.
Lapham, who graduated from Villanova
Arranging publicity for upcoming events
is one of her responsibilities. She said it is
difficult in the Poughkeepsie area as there
is only one big, daily newpaper. The
Poughkeepsie Journal, which has space
limitation. "The Poughkeepsie Journal has
a kind of monopoly," she said.
She said establishing a good relationship
with the press is important to her. "I feel a
resp_on~_ibility that everything The
University with a B. A. in English in 1977,
worked for the director of development at
the Pingry School, a prep school in New
Jersey.
·
.
She then went to Albany and held the
position of Associate Director of Public
Relations at Russell Sage College. She
proceeded to work for the·New York State.
Board Association in Albany as Associate
Director of Public Relations for
Publications.
Financial Aid Office announces scholarships
by
Jeanmarie Magrino
There are .several scholarships available
for eligible applicants, according to the
. financial aid office.
The Phi Chi Theta Scholarship is
available to full-time woinen students who
are business or economic majors and who
have completed one semester of college
work; The filirig deadline'is May 1.
·
A
scholarship sponsored by the Long
_ Island Advertising· Club is open to_ Long
· Island residents who are majoring in
marketing. The applic~tion deadline is
May
7.
All
students who are interested in
working on camp1,1s next year must
complete a Financial Aid Form
(FAF)'
and
a Marist Financial Aid Application and
submit these with a copy of their parents
1981 income tax return to the Financial Aid
Office in Adrien Hall.
The deadline for filing the FAF for
upperclassmen· is May 1st. AU forms are
available at the financial aid office.
. SCOTTY'S BAR
-
129 Washington St.
(across from Stop 'n' ~o)
.
Monday-Vodka Night
W~dnes~ay - Beer Night
Thursday- Rye Night
&
ladies Night
soi:
Off Liquor
Happy Hour:
Monday thru Thurs. 6 p.m.-8 p.m.
Friday 5 p.m.-7_p.m.
sot
Off Liqu_or Only
.
~
-
.-
·•
llli!ll!,..."-,l,...,~i,,1.111---....
.,pa ....
...,i
.
...........
.
.
I
.
.
.
(SUPER
NEW YORK
CUTS)
.
...............
.
,
..
-~9-Academy
Street
Ample· Customer
_
Parking
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BODY PERM
.... t•.oo
s
1910
. ,OPENING SPECIAL
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SH~OO, CUT
AND BLOW DRY
Froms500
Open
Dallr
10-8•
No Appointment Nec•Jar, ·
For Appointment,
call
.t5'•ftM
Aprll
8,_
1982 · THE CIRCLE· Page
5 - - •
(914) 473-2500.
Caputo's Pizza Palace
SALADS, SUBS
&
DINNERS
FREE DELIVERY
5-12 Daily
Dining Room
81 North Road
Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
5-2 Weekends
Closed Monc:lays
Looking for
a
quiet place to
SIT AND TALK?
WE OFFER A
DIFFERENT
ATMOSPHERE
10%
473-2727
All Bills with
Marist l.D.
Sun. Beer Night
6-12
p.m.
Domestics . 40
Imports .65
51 Raymond
Ave.-Across
from
Juliet Theatre
OPPORTUNITY FOR SUCCESS!
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TUITION ASSISTANCE AND LOAN
INFORMATION AVAILABLE
CALL OR VISIT TODAY
471-0330
Poughkeepsie,
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--Page
6-
THE.CIRCLE
-April
8,
1982------------------~-~~-------------
"S1>rin~ F«•wr Da~···

A day of fun for tht' rnlirr Maris! community
·
·
~
.-.
MayDay
·
~
.
·
.
Friday.
A1>ril 30
-&
Ruill l)ai,•:
Mf•)·B
-
~ . •
n.d.
5 Kilonwtn
Ra<"«'
~ \ ! J I ! )
2::Jo p.m.
-
~ -
~
OrwMil«•FunRun
·
~
-
·
2:45
J>.111.
l'rhws for 1111• ,~
·
irmrrs!
Sprin~
_
F,~stival
Saturday. May
l
·
l
to
5
p.m.
Flt•a Markt

l
;
Follow
th'is
?

For Freshmen Only:
What
it
means to be a
Sophomorl'
Ttlt'sclay.
April 27
· 9::Jo p.m.
Stom· Loun~t•
Come find the answers!
.
.
'
..
.
roadforfun
and personal
growth
i;t>ll
or hart
P
r any
iteni to your
.
:.
frllow sttulPnls
Al'th
·
ili,•s
t'air
·
.
Displays by
.Clubs und Ori:anizatio~~

S1m11.-.ore<I
by th,,
Campus <:e11t,•r
.
flff!lli~U
.
''
:
.
..
·.
:
.
~
.
.
.
....
•·
.
-
~
-
-
'

,
··
..
·A
Tiiue to Rtiffoct
;·,
:
,
.
Assault
Awareness
Workshop
This w~rksbop will educate women on how to avoid beinl!
assaulted. raped or robbed

Annual l\ft·morial St
i
rvict·
.
.
Coniml'nioratinl! de
c
l'asl'd stncl,•nl~
of
Marist
·
Friday.
A1>ril 2:J
.
;l:151>.m.
l\larist
Grotto
... this spring
at Marist.
Sponsored
by
the
Residential Programming
·
Committee
·
i~
Frida~
'
. Saturday. S11i11lay
April
1<,-1
";"-JS
Fr<'
,
hnu•u Only· By Sp1><"ial ln\'itation
Ex1wri,•11r1> An
.
\ppro,u·h
lo:
l.hinl!. Lo\'in'ir. Com,;mnirati,
,
n
and 1'1>r"orrnl Hrlation,hip,.
E\'aluatr Lill' Goal, and \'aim•,-;
Sha1w l'ositiw ,\1tit111lr, al,.1111:
Friday. Saturday, Sunday
A()i-iJ.16-17-18
'
Repr
e
sentatives from the St.
-
Francis Crime
victim Center
and the Poirl!hkeepsie
,
Town Police will presmt the
workshop.
W edncsday.
April 21
7:30p.m.
Champagnat
Hall.
2nd floor
L<:1unge
.
uv~XPERIENCE
John Powell
.
S.J
.
and
Lorella Brady
.
S<'lf
.
Otlwr".. 1hr World and CT0<I
Spo11.,;or,•d
I,,·: G,m,m ...
Mi11i.,;try



























































- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...
- -...
- - - - - - - - A p r i l
8, 1982 · THE CIRCLE - Page
1--
New
-
·conference a.head
f
Orwotnen's basketball
school that makes the transition will be in
better shape." The Hudson Valley
"We are taking a
·
giant step up," said Women's Conference operates under
.
Sue Deer, h~ad coach of the Marist College AIA W rules, not NCAA.
by Deborah M Valentine
women's basketball team
.
Transition for this Marfst team will be
The team is no longer iil the Hudson seen in its playing roster
_
for next year and
Valley Women's Conference; which it has
·
possibly in
_
its coaching staff; Besides
dominated for the past
.
three years. , recruiting three new players, Deer has
·
Marist's record in the
HVWC
last season · applied for a full-time assistaritcoach.
was 7--0.
·
·
.
One recruit, Valerie Wilmer, broke a
Deer and the coaches of Wagner,
·
state record last year when she scored 62
Fairleigh Dickinson, Monmouth, Mont-
points in a single game
.
Wilmer "will be a
clair, Queens and two schools
.
to be named shooting guard," said Deer
.
at a later date are in the process of forming
Mary Joe Stempsey will be adding the
a conference under NCAA domain. The inside strength that Marist needs said Deer.
·
Marist team is currently in the Association Stempsey is 6'3, and is
'
from Bishop-
.
·
or Intercollegiate Athletics for women
;
a McGinn High School in upstate
.
New York.
rival to the NCAA,
·
Jackie Pharr, 6'2, will "help compliment
"The feeling is the AIAW will not be in from the inside," said Deer. Deer said she
existence much longer," said Deer. "The plans to use Pharr as a power forward .
.
Sports schedule
·
Key: L: Lacrosse
T
:
Tennis Tr: Track
C:Crew
·
19
Mon
20
Tues
21
Wed
23
Fri
24
Sat
26
Mon
27
Tues
28
.
Wed
29
Thurs
L
Kean - 3:30 p.m.
. T at Ramapo - 4:00
p.m.
L Skidmore - 3:30 p.m.
. T-
at New Haven - 3:30
p.m .
.
Tat Siena - 3
:
30 p.m.
C President's Cup
Regatta at. Marist
8:00a.m.
Tr at Hartwick
T Drew-1
:
00 p.m
.
L Stevens• 1 :00 p.m.
T Quinnip
i
ac - 3:00
p.m.
.
L at St. John's - 3:30
p.m.
Tr at Union w/ Albany
Tat Kings~ 3:30 p.m.
Deer and Sports Information Director
Jay Williams are both ·very optimistic
about the upcoming season. Deer said she
"hopes to gain a bid to the NCAA
Nationals
.
"
"
I wouldn't rule out our
getting an NCAA birth next year," said
·
Williams
.
"It
looks like the AIA W is on the verge
.
of dissolving," said Williams. "Now that
women's sports are getting bigger it doesn't

have the resources or manpower that the
NCAA has.
"The AIA
W
stresses academics before
athletics. It's 1982,
_
and they have to face
up to the fact that women's basketball is a
money-making business," said Wiliiams.
The AIA
W
was formed about nine or ten
years ago to
.
organize women's athletics,
said Williams
.
"They've been the NCAA
for
'
women's basketball," said Williams
.
Williams said the
NCAA,
which has been
in existence since 1904 can do a better job
than the AIA W because of manpower and
promotional offerings.
Marist had a successful 21-and-10 record
under the AIA W last year, which could
make
.
the move lo NCAA a

risky
proposition.
PLAYER OF
-
THE WEEK
,
Bill
·
Flood, tri-captain of the Marisf
College Men's Tennis team
,
has been
chosen as the Miller Athlete of the Week.
·
·
Flood, who led the team in victories last
season with a 10-2 record, scored the lone
.
win for Marist in the season opener against
,
New Paltz last Friday in a grueling three-
set tie-breaker match
.
Flood
,
a ju11ior from Newtown, Con-
necticut, played at Newtown High School
and Nichols College in Dudley, Mass.,
before transferring to Marist in 1981.
·
·
.
"I
·
feel honored to be named Player of
the Week," said Flood. "But it would have
been a perfect day if the entire team had
.
captured the opening match
.
"
·
·
So for all you've done this week, we
salute you Bill Flood, as the Miller Athlete
of the Week.
RIVER DISTRIBUTING CO .
.
-
·
_
Noxon Road
Poughkeepsie, New York
PLAYER OF. THE WEEK
SPONSORED BY 1HE MILLER BREWING COMPANY
e-teadenay
WINB
.
&.
LIQUOR
21 A
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CADEMY
·
ST.
.
·
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.
-
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.
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·
·
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.
,_
..
.
.
--Page

THE
_
C!RCLE
~
Apr/18~
1982 _ _ _ _ _
; . _ _ ~ - - - ~
...
. . ; . - - - - - ~ - - - - - - ~ - - ~ - - ~ - - -
Lacrosse teanigets
SetJ()r
hOme
.
openertoday
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
·
.,
.
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
byJoePareti
especially concerned with the lack of ball
- control.•~
--
·
·
.
The Maristlacrosse
·
tea.:0 pl~ys
·
its'first
Along
.
with better passing
.
and
·
_
ball
home game of the
·
season today against
-
.
~ontrol. M~rist will work ori getting back
.
·
·
Fairleigh
--
-
Dickinson
.
at 3:30 p.m. and.
on defense and sustaining a high level of
according to the players, confidence and intensity throughout the
.
game.
__
Ray
intensity will play a major r<>le
.
..
.
_-·
Valdez. Marist goalie, played exceptionally
.
·
"We're_ very
"
optimistic.'' said Danny
.
well
-
under the
.
conditions and was faced
Costello. senior mid-fielder .
.
"We had
with alot offast-break situations as a result
.
some problems the other day, butthis team
of the poor ball handl~ng and mental
is good. We sho_uld be alright."
lapses. Marist will also have. to reduce the
number
_
_
of "dumb" penalties it took
Costello was referring to Marist's first agairist Maritim
·
e on Saturday. "We can•t
game, a 13-7 loss at
_
the harids of N.Y. afford to lose a player because of a slash or
Maritime on a rainsoaked field. "l know it a trip," said Costello.
·
,
·
·
sounds like an excuse
·
but that field was
Although the first game ended in defeat
·_
outrageous, .. Costello said .
.
The strong
.
for Marist. the players were happy to get
winds and rain and the condition of the the season started. "Everybody
.
was
field were not at all to Maris
_
t's advantage. disappointed after the game." said John
·
"We couldn't run and couldn't stop, .. said Petacchi, a sophomore. "But it was good
Billy Nixon. senior mid-fielder. "the to get the first game out of the way . .,Tim
weather was just terrible . .,

·
-
·
Gaffney.
·
another sophomore. added that
Marist had trouble handling the ball. "everybody will be gunning for us this
.
·
especially the ground balls. in the Maritime year; we
.
have to be ready." And how
game. "We have to control the ball more," about the field? "On a dry day. it would
·
sai
_
d Costello, "Coach Ted Peterson was have been a differeittstory."
Dock delay sloWS crew team
by Joan
Gaspiirovic
·
The Marist crew team scored

four
.
second-place and two
·
__ .
third place
finishes Saturday in a
·
quandrangular
meet
·
with the United States Merchant
Marine Academy,
.
Stockton State,
LaSalle University. and Temple
University ori the Schuykili River in
Philadelphia.
_
.
·-
"We did
·
a good job for the
preparation we had, .. said Marist coach
Larry Davis
.
·
Senior oarsman Scott Bennett agreed.
"Considering the amount of
·
on-water
training time we had, we did well,"
·
Bennett said.
The lack of water time can be at-
tr_ibuted to at least three factors: first;
:
the delay in the installation of the
docks; · second; the
:
uncompromising .
·
•.
weather conditions;
·
and t
_
hird. the
motor for the coaching boat was stolen'.
_
"Not having the docks in has made it
·
harder for tis to train properly. we•ve
had to g9 up to Roos
_
evelt High School
·
and use its
-
docks.'
'.
said thi:ee~year
.
veteran Rich Sommers.
;
\-:::
>
_
_
According to Rita

Deininger,
;1'.j.
J
.
secretary for the maintenance depart-
·•
·..
_
. ·
ment, the rough water
.
conditions had
·
·
·
:
'.\'}'°::
,
postponed the installation. "The crane_
·
·
?
"
·
··
~as originally schedu
_
Ied for Friday
April 2
·
but was re~cheduledfor April
5
because of the inclement weather."
''The loss of the motor and the un-
stable weather conditions is something
_
we had to work around:
.

-
said Som-
mers.
/
.
The M
·
en
'
s Heavywe
.
ight V~rsity-4
·
finished second behind Temple, who
won with a time of 7:14. The U.S.
Merchant Marine and Stockton State
·
were third and fourth. respectively.
·
·
The Women's Varsity-4 also finished
in second place behind Stockton State.
Merchant Marine
·
.
was third while
LaSalle was scratched from the race.
.
· A margin of
-
approximately two
.
seconds separated Stockton from Marist
for second and third place in the Men's
Varsity-8 battle, with
-
Stockton just
nudging out Marist by half a boatlength
.
to take second. Temple was first.
_
The Men's Lightweight Varsity-4 was
second behind Temple's first place
finish of
8:33.
·
Merchant Marine and
two Stockton State
·
squads finished in
third. fourth. ~n
_
d fifth place,
_
LaSalle grabbed first froni theMarist
Women's
·
Varsity-8. TheMen'sNovict:;.
·
8 finished third behind Temple

and tne
Marchant
,,
Mai:ine
·
A -
squad.
The
Merchant Marine B squad was fourth.
·
_:
Looking
.
ahead
to
this week's home
meet on
_
Saturd
_
ay
·
against l\ianhattan
c;ollege,
·
:
Ithaca
;
The University of
Lowell,
-
and the U.S. Merchant Marine
Academy, coach Davis said that the
team's success will be largely depend~nt
upon the amount of water time the tearri
swill have before the competition.
.
_
"It
will
:
be a struggle to catch up on
·
the amount· of water-time we missed,
·
_
but the
-
potential is definitely there:'
said Davis.
·
_
·:
EXTRA STROKES: The team was
without the services of senior oarsman
Joe Fox, who has- left the team.
.The Marist Lacrosse Team wiUbe opening its season today
.
.
Tennis loses tWo in a row
by Karen Flood
·-
Flood
·
with accurate serve and volley
winners. In the
,
second set.
_
Flood at-
On Monday, April
s.
the Marist
_
-
tacked Broullard•s
-
serve and volley
College Men's Tennis team suffered an
game with a Bjorn Borg baseline
8-0 loss at the hands of Rensselaer.
·
topspin fashion and rebounded from his
Polytechnic Institute.
one set deficit. "I stayed with the same
. RPl's Lajos Horvath tripped Marist's
·strategy in the third set.'' said Flood. "I
first seed Bill Flood 6-1, 6-2; Joe
stayed on the baseline and moved him
Trausch beat Frank Fox 6-4, 6-0; Andy
around." At 6-6 Flood arid Broullard
Hoffman (RPI) downed George Lovell
.
battled out a 9-point tie breaker which
(M) 6-4; 6-1; Mike Wilegand (RPI)
ended in a
·
5-4 triumph for Flood.
trailed Joe Homer (M) 6-4.
6.J;
and in
In the longest contest of the day.
the closest singles contest, Patil Cohen
freshman Pat McCullough of Marist
(RPI) edged Pat McCullough (M) 4-6,
engaged in a three
-
hour match with New
7-6, 7;.5,
Paltz's Steve Tolh. After splitting sets,
In doubles, Lajos Horvath and Andy
·
McCullough was
-
upset in a tie breaker,
Hoffman (RPI). teamed to defeat
withsetscoresof6-3,4-6,6-7.
Marist's
Bill
·
_
Flood and Jeremey
"Pat responded well to the com-
Schokman in
.
three sets 3-6. 6-3, 6-4;
petition:•
·
said tri-captain Flood. "He
and Ray Lilly and J<>e Trausch captured
gives
110%
every point. He should give
the second doubles
/
match iri
a
nine point
us a lot of wins in the sixth position this
.
·
tie-breaker after splitting sets,
6-4,
4-6
season."
.
-
. . ·
-.
-
·
.
(5~2).
· ._
_
,
.
.
·
_
·
In
other singles New Paltz's first
In the season opener against New
singles player Dave
.
Gramling edged
·
.
Paltz,
_
Friday. April 2, the Foxes were
. ·
Marist's Jeremey Schokman iri three
downed 8-1.
.
_
sets, 6-2, 6-1
,
6-3
;
New Paltz's third
According to New Paltz
'
s coach. Bob
singles player,
·
Greg Schults defeated
Durkin. New Paltz has- predicted an
Frank Fox of Marist, 6s3. 6-0;
·
Jack
-
"easy win"
·
over Marist due to the fact
Daniell
(NP)
dominated George Lovell
that Marist has n,ever defeated N~w
6-2. 6-2; and in the fifth singles match,
Paltz.
.
_
_
.
John Hutchinson of New Paltz hailed
:
"You win some and you lose some," · Joe Homer 6-0; 6-1.
said Coach Jerry Breen.
·
~
'They have a
.
The doubles team of Darnell and
.lot of depth. Bui my kjds tried, and
Hutchinson of New Paltz defeated
·
trying is what it's all ab01.1t."
Marist's Fox and Lovell 6-4, 6-3; and
Bill Flood scored the Ione victory for
Steve Waldron arid Lari:y Winberg of
·
Marist
tn
·
a dramatic two and one-half
__
New Paltz disposed of Homer and
Mark
.
hour match by toppling New Paltz•s
Guiffre in three sets. 3-6. 6-4. -7
-
6; which
Elain Broullard. 1-6, 6-2, 7-6
.
.
wound up the day a't 1-7.
-
Broullard took the
-
first set in an
_
The Foxes are now 0-2.
--
_
almost flawless manner by pinning
.A
'
tale
of
'f
odd
-
"And he didn't think I was hustling
-
on ~he younger players and was ~ent home

·
enough at practice.
·
I felt I was,
·
and the
-
·
on a plane.
_
·
·
kno~ that
alf
of those people
are
behind
The fans wond~ed
;
The players won~
captains
,
on the team agreed with
me!'
·
"They told
.
me it would be better if I.left
dered. Even Todd Hasler wondered why he
·
According
.
to Hasler. assistant
-_
coach
the team," said Hasler. "But they never
didn't play more this season. Was it lack of Danny Bernstein
.
saw
it
differently. "He · told me exactly why."

,
.
<
-
·
-
.
-
.
hustle at pfactice? Or was Hasler's playing
told me that I was too slow and not good
_
Hasler came close to losing
.
his
ability not good enough
.
for Division I?
enough for Division I play.'• said Hasler
,
-:
scholarship, but after meetings with Petro
Whatever the reason. Hasler•s career has
u1
told him to look at my stats from last
and Hasler•s parents, it was decided that he
ended exactly
.
the opposite of the way it
year, but he told me that he wasn•t con-
·
WQuld b~ given guidelines to follow .
.
If
he
b
·
·
_
cerned about last year."
.
didn't adhere to them he
.
would lose· h1"s
_
egan.
_
.
_
Hasaler brought his sharp-shooting from
There were numerous meetings between
scholarship.
:
·
_
·
_
_
Bristol Central High in Forestville, Conn..
Petro and
_
Hasler concerning playing time.
·
"Todd is a free spirit:• said Petro.
where
·
he was an All-State player. He l'Todd didn't show any consistency in
.
"That's why we
.
call him 'Free.' He has h
'
ad
_
jumped into Ron Petro•s starting five in his
-
practice," ~aid P~tro. "His hustling would
.
some behavior problems over the years. but
· .
freshman year and averaged over 17
.
points
.
fluctuate all the ume. Todd thought that he
in no way did that affect my decision on
per game. The next year he averaged just
was working hard but to me it wasn't hard
playing him. After the Florida incident
under 12 and his junior year over 15. This
enough."
·
Todd was given set codes and rules t~
season Hasler's playing time was cut to
follow. concerning his
·
behavior .
.
Todd
almost nothing
·
and the
-
:
phenomenal
Obviously Hasler would have liked to
needed that extra structure off the court."
outside shooting that was his trademark
play more
-
this year; but Petro•s decision
·
on the court, Hasler
·
has put on some
was not displayed. The few glimpses we got
-
did not cause any bad feelings. "Ron is an
awesome shooting displays. He was a
this year wer~ a poor demonstration of his
excellent person and is dedicated to his
threat to score from anywhere within 30
ability.
It
was apparent that he was rusty
team/• said Hasler. "He was fair to me all
feet of the basket.
ln
one outing last year,
from sitting on the bench.
_
.
along and I don•t have any bitter feelings
Hasler sank 18 field goals in a career-high
Coach Ron Petro told Hasler that there
towards him.••
·
37-point outburst against Pratt. Games
was no· place for him to
.
play. Petro
·
.During his sophomore year the team
such as that one is the reason we heard the
.
·
suggested that he sit and wait and see wha
_
t
played some exhibition games down in
chant "We want Todd" throughout this
_
happens. So that's exactly what he did, and
Florida
.
After a loss, an argument broke
season.
nothing ever happened:
"Ron was not sure
out between Todd. Petro and Bernstein.
·
"I really appreciatefl all the chanting.''
whether I would produce," said Hasler.
-
Hasler was told that he was a bad influence
said Hasler.
"It
really psyched me up to
me."
.
_.
_
_
, .. -
-
·
·
. . .
"I would sometimes second guess myself
about not playing Toad.'• said Petro. "But
if he ~idn't hustle during the week he didn't
deserve to play. Deep down it bothered me,
but a coach has basic principles which
·
can•t
be broken!•
·
·
.
.
.
Hasler•s basketball career has not gone
as well as his fans would have liked but he
stuck out the year and
·
is graduating.
"Beyond basketball, the main reason
°
the
players and all students
-
are here is for an
education:• said Petro. "I am very proud
of Todd on graduating and being a suc-
cessful student. He has
·
hit some hills. but
·
has overcome them. He has_ improved as a
person and has shown a warmness to my
son when taking time to shoot a-round with
him."
.
Hasler has worked at summer camps for
Petro teaching basketball skills. "Todd
Hasler has a certain closeness when around
kids.'' said Petro. "I feel he has a
·
great
_
future in teaching kids."
·
Hasler is
·
uncertain about his future and
will go home this summer arid think about
it. Hopefully in the future he can teach
someone hisjumpshot.


26.17.1
26.17.2
26.17.3
26.17.4
26.17.5
26.17.6
26.17.7
26.17.8