The Circle, September 16, 1982.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 27 No. 2 - September 16, 1982
content
. Volume
27,
Number
2
Mar/st College,
Poughkeepsie,
N.
Y .
Access to townhouses
sets off controversy
·"We
would at least· double it in width,"
by Bernadette Grey
, ..
said Cox.·
.
.
· ·· The new college townhouses, open little
. Glass would also· like the college to con- .
more than two weeks, have become the · sider the· installation of an elevator, she
subject ofMarist's first major controversy, · said. The townhouses are constructed so ·
that · Glass must- drive all · around
one involving questions about the struc-
Townhouse
c
to get from the common area
tures' · accessibility to students in to her bedroom and accessible bathroom.
wheelchairs.
The cost of one elevator would be about
According to Linda Glass,, a junior in a
-
wheelchair, the townhouses fail ·to ade-
$60,000, . Waters .said. "P~tting
i~ an
quately .accommodate wheelchair students. elevator ts.
t~~
onl}'. answer she (Lmda)
Glass was assigned a room in Townhouse · would accept, he said. .
. ..
C-1 but wm not move in until changes are _ T~e A~SI Stan~~r.ds, butldm~ codes
made, she said; She is currentIY: living in . dealing with ac~~ss1b1hty ~or hand1~apped
Champagnat Hall.
persons, states, In
3:
multi-story butldmg,
Edward Waters vice president for ad-
elevators are essential to the successful
ministration and finance
said that functioning of . physically · disabled · in-
Townhouses B-7 and C~l 'meet all ac-
dividuals:''
...
cessibility standards. "I spent the last two
A_ccordiIW to ~aters, Marist ~as noJn;;
days reading, and rereading to make sure • ten~ton ofmstalhng an elevator-m any .~f
we were within the guidelines _ and we · the to~nhouses.
ANSI.
Standards;reqm~e
are " he said ·.
- ·
alterations "to the maximum extent feas1- .
The real i~sue here is· agreeing .. on the ble,'! he said._
.
.
-definition of adequate accessibility, Gerald
The arch1t~ct . did not design _the
Cox dean of students said .
townhouses usmg ANSIStandards;Penera
'
'
·
said. "But to my knowledge, Linda was
Director . of Special Services, Diane never told that the townhouses would be
Periera, agrees. "I define it one way;the made totally accessible," she said.
school sometimes defines it another way,".
Dean Cox said Champagnat Hall is bet-:
she said.
.· · · ·
·
ter suited for wheel-chair students. "(the
' Glass is dissatisfied with the path leading townhouses) may .be technically orJegally:
'i'
__ ··
around the back of Townhouse _C to the inadeguate,J' hesaid, %ut that rCJlllyjs·
. I: ···,,.,,., .
..,-,,-downstairs....Je.veFof·C~
1."' 'I· tried...tr:aYelmg· · no.:the point""" ., . ..:..s
i,
,
,;..;."-', :,-.,;
~~
· ., ·
;i.
,
;.
·
'
..,,,,.;/>~
;s~lkh~,-:;.;.~,,~~~\~~~~;ra}:ilf~~~;r.f
n:{~~t;:<>~>~!-
,_'.-~d~~~s2~!E;i{i,£~i~~!:r£~!~=
_
_
·T~e path 1s too !1-arrow and there ~s no_ and picked the townhouses. "Champl(lgnjlt:
lighting.· Glass said.
:•1
-
w3:nt Pres19-el}t · is by far the betier_positioil for her,'rne
Murray to try and drtve ·this wheelchair said.
·· · .. ,,
·
1be ramp-system at the
new
townhouses
down that path at night," she said.
Still, Glass would much rather live_ in the
bM been
the
target of criticism by Linda
Dean Cox told glass he would make sure townhouses, she said. "All of my atten-
Glass, . a. -Maiist studenc who ·uses a
lights were put in and the. path was ,widen-
dants are over there and my friends are • ·
wheelchair
aiul
wants :.to, live - in the
ed .. "I'll do everything I
can
to get the path over. there;'' Glass said. '"They-- are
townhouses. · ·
·
· ·
widened if that is the problem," he said.
.
segregating."
New.frosh
check
·
o.ut ·
College life
by
Carol Lane, .
September 16,
1N2
Marisf gets·
new·poli~y
on·
·drinking
l
·,
'·
i
'I
I
I
---•·
·Page 2
~
T H E C I R C L E - ~ S e p t e m b e r 1 6 , - 1 9 8 2 • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
'wiP£
GOJ>JG
ro
HAVFA
QUIZ,'.'
- SPWll> Ol1T.
I
Wff
WAAff
IJM'
CHulTWG
!! "·
Readers
Write
All letters musi
be
typed triple space with a 60 space margin, and submitted to the
Clrcle 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.
~ay
·
Wells
replies .
-
•'•
W orkirig •
for the· weekend
Dear Editor:
find positions
at
some poitlt in the
1982-83
year.
,
·
· This office;
in
cooperation with
Bernadette .Grey's look at· on-
the Office of Financial Aid, will
campus
employment
w_as
do all it can
to
help students find
"There's a keg party down at the river!"
"Did you hear about the daiquiri party on
the sixth floor?"-
"We're having a party tonight in our room.
Do you think six cases will be enough?"
·
"The house parties cost three dollars.
How many kegs are they going to h_ave?"
"The vodka's finished, looks like the party
is over."
·
Is a weekend at Marist measurable by the
shot? How many pitchers are poured in one
weekend at the pub? How many students
pass out? How many students are hurt,
physically or emotionally. Who cares
anyway?
· Now that the first two weekends have
passed, it's time for us to evaluate the good
times we've had on those late Friday and
Saturday nights. How many friends have we
made while sucking down the thirteenth
beer. How many real friends havewe made?
How many people have we hurt, because
we said the wrong thing. We didn't mean to,
it just slipped out How many fights have we
got involved in while we were drinking. Com-
pare that number to the number of fights
we've gotten into while we are sober.
How many strange beds have we woken
up in? How many times have we kicked our
roommate out. How many times have we
been stoned out of our minds? How many
times have we got a real good buzi on, and
ended up crying ourselves to sleep. How
many times?
·· ·
.
·
· · So many · of us decided upon ·
Marist
because of the quality of the students that
are here. Not only academic ,quality, but
quality as human beings. Alcohol only:
covers the real people. that go to Marlst.· It
covers us with masks that are sometime
clowns and sometimes monsters, but never ·
ourselves.
. .
·
.
This weekend why not sit back on Satur-.
day night and decide if we are going to the
pub because we want a drink. Because we
want• to pick up a girl or guy .. Because
everybody else is going and no one dares to
be different or left·out. Because we need a
drink. Or is it just because we want to have a
drink, relax and meet'some new people.
· ·
Most everybody enjoys going out drinking
a few times a week. But nobody enjoys the
problems that occur on campus because
everybody decided to go out and ~njoy
themseles at • others' expense. This
weekend, let's party it up, meet new people,
have a drink with a friend, but let's not
regret what we did the night before!
Forget the kegs, daiquiris, cases and
vodka.- Why don't we make this a wild
weekend because of who we are, not how
many shots we've had. College life doesn't
end on Sunday! It can last all week if we are
mature enough to go a few nights a week
without getting plastered. Weekends can't
last forever. Sooner or later we're going to
pass out, get sick, get written up, or have to
climb out of bed and sneak back to our own
premature and unduly negative
in
11
· ·
its tone_. The impressi.on she left · jobs · and earn their · a ocauons.
To assume arthis point in the year
that . "many" , students with
that. the situation is .· hopeless
_allocations would not find jobs. simply isn't justified. ·
·
simply isn't . true. The point
I
thought
I
conveyed in our inter-
Sincerely, .
view was that there would be
J'.~ayWells
students who.initially would have.
Placement Goordinatoi:
difficulty being placed. I also ex-
·
pressed an optimistic outlook that
Editor's Note:
Thtf<!irHe'
stands
these students· wo·uld eventually .
by its
story.
More on TAP
To the Editor:
This is a reminder to all
t
AP or
Regents Scholarship recipients of
the Question and Answer Sessions
to be · held at the times listed
below.
Wednesday, Sept.
22,
5
p.m. in CC
248
Thursday, S€pt.
23,
11 :20
a.m. in
D 104
Thursday, Sept.
30,
11 :20
a.m. in
D 104
Please try to attend one of these
sessions if you have specific ques-
tions about TAP regulations.
Yours truly,
Rosemary Molloy
Tap Certification
rooms.
'
· ,,;,. · '· .. ,.;.:.., , .....
.
·:-~.,.:
'
:.Students
The population explosion·.
vs.' ,
Reaganomics
During the past few years, the size of the
freshman class at Marist has been steadily
. and rapidly increasing. The student body
has also become more diversified, as the
number of students from states other than
New York, New Jersey, a_nd Connecticut has
in?reased. During a time in which many
private colleges are having serious financial
. difficulties, it is a good sign that Marist is
able to cha~ae and grow ..
However, this rapid growth in the student
body has caused some major problems.
One very obviou_s concern is ttie lack of
classroom space. This year, the largest
number of students permitted to register for
a class is
45.
Two or three years ago, a class
of this size would have been considered
huge for Marist. Imagine, also frnm ·a pros·
fessor's . point of view, the difference
between teaching
30
students and lecturing
to
45.
.
One of Marist's strong points has been·
the. availability of the professors for per-
sonal conferences. With the increase in the
number of students, will these one-to-one
meetings still be possible? The hiring of ad-
junct professors satisfies the need for more
teachers, but they cannot always provide
the time out of the classroom that full-time
faculty can.
·
. There are facilities at Marist that cannot
serve large numbers of people. Each large -
freshman class that enters Marist quickly
becomes a large sophomore class, and it
Co•Edltors
The
Associate Editors
Circle
Sports Editor
Advertising Manager
·,
.
\
.
won't be long until we have four very large
·classes.As it stands now, every classroom
is in ·use all day, and for night classes as
welL Clubs are growing larger, and thus .
To: The Editor
need larger rooms-for meetings_ -
and there
·
·
. are a very limited numb.er of large rooms
As you returri to school this
available ...
•.. . . . ·•. ·., ·.: ,.·. -::· . : .·
<
>
.:> :
ran,
some oLyour friends from
· This,· of course, is nqt' to ,m•~·ntion · the
last year
wiU
riot
be· joining you.
housing problems. where once·only seniors
Theyare victims ofReaganomics.
>
· <ind. some juniors lived. off-campus, now
Instead of supporting the nuclear
many sophomores are· living in apartments • freeze·
.
·· inost Americans want, ..
·. around Poughkeepsie. -
If
the· idea of
~eagan: has cut funds ·for Pell.
residence ha.Us 'is to create a community of
·
Qrant_s and student loans while
students who support one another through
poming money irito. America's
.· 4 ..
years, then. what good is . the present
nuclear· ai:seqaL
He
has denied
system? Yes, the townhouses· have eased
· students equal access to education
the situation, but only slightly,
·
-
✓•
while cutting . taxes
•
for the
• The questjoi:i .· is, how much ,more gr.owth , ... '"'..ealt~y { ·.
Trt··
~dm}njst"ra!ion
can Marist take?'W~en.will
iJ
~top?. f>resi- ;- _'. c!.ies,<~~~ musf.-make A?J,e_rica,
den_t Murray has said that increases in . strong agam!," and then attacks
enrollment may continue, but they_ will_ not
the ro?t of our ~trei1gth • our
change the "small-college nature.· of
educational system. ·
Marist." How large do we become before we
lose that "small-college nature?"
.
We w·ant a number. How large will next
year's freshman class be? Are we going to
find or build more classroom space and
housing facilities? When? When is Marist
going to become less concerned about the
number of students they bring in, and more
concerned about the students that are here
and who would like to remain here? The gap
must be closed between the size of the stu-
dent body and what the facilities and staff
at Marist can handle.
Rick O'Donnell
Business Manager
Patti Walsh
At a Time when the President is
forcing students out of college,
the Governor should • be working
to keep students . in school. No
deserving student
should . be
denied access to an: education. ·
What can the Governor do? In
_; New York, o·ut state-based system
· of financial aid must- be expanded
. to
make provisions for part-time
students, and for those who are
financially independent ~f their
Adrienne Ryan
Faculty Advisor
Karen Lindsay
Louise Seelig
Reporters
Meg Adamski, Bernadette Grey,
Copy Editors
Carol Lane, Matthew Mcinerny,
Bill Travers
Ivan Navas, John Petacchi,
Richelle thomas, Brian Kelly,
Jim Barnes
Andrea Holland, Sue Vasallo, Bill Flood
parents. In addition, we must re-
establish our committment to a
high quality, low cost education
at the State and City Universities,
as well as . maintaining aid to in-
dependent institutions · · (Bundy
aid) at existing levels.
In
1980, I
joined with students
to fight Reaganomics while some
Democrats embraced Administra- .·.
tion policies. This year we should
renew that effort. Ifstudents pro-
ve that they can successfully
mobilize a political movement :to
defen·d
higher education,
legisltttors
will
be more likely ·to
pay heed to student concerns in
. the future.
It
is my hope that a
· reinvigorated student activism .
will continue long after we have
reversed the policies of the pres ,. -
sent administration. After all,
while the :Stat.e has a responsiblity
to educate its citizens, our recent
history shows that · politicians
have something to learn from
students, too.
Sincerely,
Mario M. Cuomo
David Mccraw
Lisa Crandall, Judy Knox,
Mark Amodeo, Adam Their,
Kathy O'Connor, Ken Bohan,
Paul Crowell, Joe Pareli,
John Petacchi, Dawn Oliver,
Pat Brady, Barry Smith
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
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..
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- - - - -
.
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.
--•September 16, 1982 ·
THE CIRCLE. Page
3--
llojffiiln ~.
;
a,
Jpng
r
Oad
to
.
RD job
By Karen Lindsay
training. He also wants
to
give the R.A.'s
.
.
.
.
more time together before school starts.
·
Michael Bowman has traveled
·
around·
.
"That way, they can get to know each
the
.
world,, has a bachelor's
.degree
in
_:._
othe
_
r and work l>etter together as a team,"
theater
.
and
·
has.· served
.
as an operating
.
·
he said .
.
room
-
technician in the Navy. So what is he
.
One of the harder things for Bowman
doing at Marist College as the new resident
was coming into the job
·
with limited ex-
director of Champagnat'! "I needed a job
perience
.
He said that not being able to
and a sense of community," he
.
said;
speak with Bob Kaminski; the former resi-
,
"There was an ad inJhe
,
newspaper-for the
-
dent director, has been good and bad.
"It
position c1nd it sounded like a challenge."
is good l?ecause I can start out fresh but
.
Bowman,
·
28, said he likes a good
.
Bob probably could have'filled me in on a
·
challenge. That is why
.
he went to school
lot of little things about the job," he said.
·
for acting. '.'l_g~t bored easily
-
and acting
Bowman was born in England in 1954
never bores me. It is
.the
one thing that I
and moved to New Zealand when he was
·
can
_
do
.
that of~ers nie· many challenges,''
five. His
_
parents were divorced when he
:
Bowman added ..
-,
·
·
was· 14
·
and his mother got married to an
·
.
_
Bowman became
.
resident director in
.
American serviceman. They came to the
·
May
,
of .this yea·r after graduating from
:
,
United States and
·
traveled around for six
Lycoming College
•
in
.
Williamsport, Pa.
·
months while his step-father was in train-
Bowman would like
.
to be able to give the
·
fog
:
.
His
'
step-father was
:
stationed in
resident advisors more
,
money an~ more
.
Naple~; Italy where Bowman finished high
By
Matthew
Mcinerny
.
•
'
.
'•
'
,
·•·
.
In June of 1812, Wliliam Monroe
established· the first pencil factory in
.
America in Concord, Mass
:
Monroe
made 30 lead pencils which he sold
to
.
Benjamin Adams, a Boston hardware
·
store owner. The items sold so well' that
Adams
·
cqntracted to
.
purchase all- the
pencils that Monroe could produce.
·
To get
to
the point, one needed a
device that would chop the pencil up.
It is 170 years later and that device
still
·
has not .been invented. At least it
would seem that way if one was
.
sitting
·
.
in a Marist College classroom using a
pencil to write with. When the point
isn't a point anymore, it is time to
search forthe sharpener.
But there isn't one.
"It is annoying,"
·
said Dawn Oliver, a
senior majoring in fashion design, "par-
.
ticularly in the arts department where
pencil sharpeners are needed
.
"
Josie
.
Trapani,
.
a fr~shman; uses a
knife;.
,
uThere aren't any,''
.
she said
when asked about the sharpeners;
.
;
'.
Where does one
·
go to conquer this
problem'!
·
·
'_'It has to be done in the library,"
said freshman Annette LaClair. The
business major assumed there
.
were
some in Donnelly, "But I haven't found
them yet," she said.
It is just as difficult to find out who is
in charge of these accessories as it is try-
ing to find a pencil sharpener itself.
After asking in the Registrar's Office
who might be in command of the pro-
blem the Business Office was suggested.
The Business Office was amazed at the
thought and
suggested the
Vice-
President's Office might know.
The secretary in that office pointed to
the Physical Plant Office
·
(maintenance
in laymen's terms). They were also
perplexed by the inquiry. After thinking
it over they decided that the Business
Offic~ would be the place to go
,
The Business Office was where the
questioning began. It was now
.
evident
that no one in any of the offices knew
who is responsible for the positioning of
pencil sharpeners indassrooms.
Corine Strange has gotten wise to the
situation. The senior business· major
said; "I brought my own so that should
tell you something."
_
school. For a year, he traveled around
'
~urope then moved back to the U.S. when
,
he was 18. Bowman joined the Navy in
Nov.
,
1972 and served as a medic.
·
In 1976, he got aboard a freighter and
·
sailed around the Mediterranean for four
•
months
.
He
·
spent some time in Eygpt and
then flew back to the U.S. and moved to
Williamsport. He worked there for five
months and then attended Williamsport
Area Community College for one and a
half years. He transferred to Lycoming
College to major in theater and graduated
summa cum Iaude in May, 1982. Bowman
would like to earn a living as an actor
someday.
.
As far as the Marist theater goes,
Bowman said he would like to get involved
later this year when he gets used to the
R.D. job
.
"It takes up a lot of my time and
I don't want anything to interfere," he
fl'
said
.
Michael Bowman
Marist College to host Simon Bolivar Chorus
By
Richelle Thomas
·
Marist College will host the Simon
Bolivar Chorus from Caracas, Venezuela
for the "Choruses of the World: Fifth In-
ternational Choral Festival." The event
will take place on Saturday, September 25
at 7:30 p.m
.
in the
.
theater.
"Choruses of
-
the World" is a festival
which features international choruses from
many universities. Each year a different
country sponsors the three-week long
festival. This year the festival will be held
in the U.S. 'from September 19 to October
10. Five hundred singers will represent
,fourteen universities from eleven countries
and five continents.
Through the combined efforts of Marist
College, the College Union Board and
Choral Director DorothyAnn Davis, the
accommodation fees for the Simon Bolivar
Chorus have been paid
.
Their efforts have
made it possible for Marist students to be
admitted free with their ID cards
.
"The
students have to be given a chance to show
their support for the activities," says
Davis. "They are our main source of public
relations." The admission price is $3 for
faculty and other guests.
and
the- amazing
tedu\lcolon.
dreamcoat
THEATRETRIP
SUNDAY OCTOBER
IO MAT.
Tickets $18.00 Sign up by Mon. Sept. 20th
S
ponsored by Campus M
i
nistry
.
Return
tear-off
below.
----------------------------
COUPON
Return with check payable to Marist College to Sr. Eileen, Office of Campus Ministry, P.O
.
Box 789.
NAME _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
ROOM NO.____
P.O
.
BOX NO. _ _ _
_
NUMBER OF TICKETS_______ AMOUNT ENCLOSED _ _ _ _ _ _
_
l.lJNCH
.
.
.
.
.
The Pub is now open for lunch
.
.
.
Monday thru Friday from 10:00-2:30
-
C
.
old Sandwiches
-
·
-
Hot Sa
-
ndwich Platters
-
-
Hot
&
CO·ld Heroes
-
Soup·
&
Salad Bar
.
!
I
I
I
j
j
I
/
'
.•'·• • • • . , 1 , • •
•
. .
•
•
• ..
._.
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·
•• ~. I ..
•
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...
• • - .
--Page
4 • THE CIRCLE· September 16,
1/82 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~ - - - - - - - - - -
Friday:
On Campus:
-Jr. Cla'ss Mixer
9p.m.
-Film:
"Star
Trek" 7:30 p.m.
The Chance: Blot-
to and Fear of
Strangers
Mid-Hudson Civic
Center: David Frezel
and Shelly West in
concert
Saturday:
On Campus: Foot-
ball vs. St. Peter's
1:30 p.m.
The Chance: Kid
Creole
and
the
Coconuts
The
Bardavon: ·
"Robin Hood" 11
a.m.&lp.m.
Sunday:
On Campus: Film:
"Star Trek"
7:00 -
p.m. &'9:30 p.m.
- The . Chance:
Asleep at the Wheel
An excellent haircuttery.
Monday:
The Chance: Mon-
day Night Football
- Giants vs. Packers
Now featuring CELLOPHANES, the new non-
peroxide haircolor/conditioning system with
unlimited color choices and excellent sheeri.
-~ A I R C U T T
f;
R S
$2.00 Off
With Marist I.D.
Serving
Marist College
Since 1975
3 Liberty St., Main Mall, Poughkeepsie
.
454-9239
.
By
Appointment Only
. Thursday Night
Tuesday:
The Chance: New-
Beat Music Dance
Party-: Live D~J.
Tuesday
Ladies Night -
Ladies Drink
FREE
COLLEGE NIGHT
Free Admission with College ID.
FREE
DRINKS 9-10:30
Thursday:
Wednesday: ·
The Chance·: ·DC
Star
On Campus: Cof-
feehouse
(student
talent) -
9:00 p.m.
·
-Women's
Volleyball vs. Pace
-7:00p.m.
Wednesday
Nickel Night
Every Other
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Friday and Saturday Free Admission before 10 p.m. with Valid College I.D.
Dress Code
33 Academy Street
Sunday Night Party Night
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8
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Live Entertainment 6 Nites
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Poughkeepsie
Proper I.D.
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September 16, 1982 - THE CIRCLE· Pa
es--•
Feeding
.
3.
Hringr)'
.
World:
Challehges & ()pportUilities
ATTENTION
by Tony Cernera
can reach their potential, that individuals
and societies can find happiness, peace and
Food is basic to human beings. Where justice. Viktor Frankl in his remarkable
there is no food there is no life. And for book MAN'S SEARCH FOR MEANING,
.
hundreds of millions of our fellow human reminds us that meaning and purpose in
beings the
.
struggle for food ~nd the battle life emerges. It is the fundamental human
against hunger is a constant reality.
value and need.
SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS
AND SENIORS
Hunger remains the daily and
.
deadly
As E. F. Schumacher remarked in a
companion of precious and unique human paper entitled
"A
Metaphysical Basis for
beings who, created in the image of God, Decentralization," "After all,· everything
long for life and happiness like the rest of we do and talk about should be orientated
us.
Acccording to the Food and to, and dcri~ed from, an answer to the
.
Agriculture Organization's Fourth World question, ''Why are we here in the world
· Food Survey victims of severe malnourish-
anyhow?" ..... We are not using the
ment increased from
400
million people at facilities the Creator has put at our
the beginning of the 70s to
455
million peo-
disposal for . the purpose of attaining our
pie by 1975. The data for the most recent end. We don't even think about what our
years suggest that the situation is just as end is. We're using things only because
serious.
they're there. Our engineers and scientists
·
The Cooperative Education and Internship
staff will be hosting a reception and informa-
tional meeting.
·
The World Food Council's assessment of produce something more we could use, so
•
the
~ff~~~s
of such malnutrition)s sobering: we must use it. We do things because it's
·
"Up to one third of all children born alive possible to do them. We're a society that's
die
.
from_ malnutrition and malnutrition rich in means and poor in purpose."
related' diseases before the age of 5. Many · The crisis that we face is the result of the
of the rest of them have their mental and fact that we have lost sight of the reason
physical development irreversibly impaired for our existence our individual existence
·
WHEN: Wednesday, September 22, 1982
WHERE: Fireside Lounge
·
by poor nutrition. Many other suffer the and our collective existence. Perhaps the
·
consequences of specific dietary deficien-
best image for us is that of a journey. Life
cies. Every
year
at least 100,000 children go is a journey. When a person is on a journey
blind as a result· of severe vitamin A defi-
-
to a new place it is important that he/she
TIME:
7:30 p.m.
WINE AND CHEESE WILL BE
.
SERVED!
ciency."
·
·
·
·
read the map carefully.
If
you read the map
Why?
.
correctly and
·
follow
.
it you will arrive
Simply put, people are hungry today in a where you are going. If you use the wrong
world where there is not absolute shortage map, you won't get to where you are going.
of food,' where there is the technical capaci-
If
you do not have a map, you would seek
ty
to
wipe out the worst aspects of hunger directions/guidance
from · someone
·
and malnutrition within a generation. Peo- . familiar with the route from here to there.
pie are hungry and children die of starva-
Without the guide you would be lost. I
tion in a world where that need not be the would suggest that our problem is that we
case. We can eliminate hunger. We just are using the wrong map and listening to
If ·you are unable
.
to attend this meeting,
another will be held:
haven't.
WHY?
the wrong guides who are as lost as we are.
At the heart of the matter stands the fact
I
am defining the problem as one of the
that we have created a society and a world human heart but the human heart in the
order where people and nations have lost context of history. There must be a change
touch with the meaning and purpose of in the human heart but this must be carried
life. And it is for this reason that people re-
on with efforts to bring about profound
main
.
hungry and children starve. It is for economic and social changes as well. Such
this reason that we face the crisis that our change is necessary ifthe
,
heartis going to
civHiziitioii'
faces: tis only'wli~h
'
individirals ,, changef If!'w.
,
e are
.
to
·
seek;
to ~change our
and societies stay in touch with the essential . hearts and
al.so to
seek
profound changes iri
meaning of life and its purposes that they
·
conti~lled on page 7
WHEN: Thursday, September 23, 1982
WHERE: Fireside Lounge
~
Thursday - September 23
The Triplets w/special guest Neeva
Route 9
TIME:
11: 20 a.m
~
(Free s\ot)
-
~'The Ultimate Night Club"
·
Thursday -
se,tember 16
Neeva with special New York City
Surprise Guest
Friday -
September
17
.
·
Special Regional Surprise Guest
Saturday - September 18
·
Radio/ Atlantic Recording Artist
The Phil Garland Band with special guest
Linda Koutrakos Band
Wednesday - September 21
Sealed With A Kiss
(SWAK)
For Those Who Love To Rock
COMING ATTRACTIONS
Friday - September 24
Frankie and the Knockouts
Hyde
Park Plaza
229-9413
Saturday -
September 25
Dave Edmonds
Hyde
Park
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6 • THE CIRCLE· September 16,
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CAPUTO'S RESTAURANT.
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11-12 Daily--,- 11 to 2
weekends
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Mondays
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5
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FR
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or More
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DRINKS-FOOD-MUSIC 11
:00 a~m.-4:00
-
a.m.
SANDWICHES 11
:00
a.
·
m.-8:30 p.m.
.
,
Skinners Welcomes
_
You
Back
Rte. 9 Poughkeepsie
.
·
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·
914-473-4725
continued from page 5
- the\~~onomic and s~ial structures ·of our livemo're simply so that others might simp-
society, what kinds of signposts do we · 1y live.We do this with the recognition that
need? What map should we foHow? What in the end we would all be living fuller and
· are the values around which _we need to healthier lives if we consumed less and
organize our individµal lives and our com~ shared more.
.
munal lives? I would like to suggest 5: . . .
Second, it means that we must apply the
. • (1) To
be
htinian is a state of being and principles and teachings of the Judeo-
. not of thaving. My value and dignity and Christain Heritage to our world. For too
worth as a person is rooted in the fact that I · long religious people have tended to their
am. Ultimately, this fact' of my being is own . "spiritual . concerns" and left
rooted in God's being and activity and in economics, politics and the affairs of
his love for me; a love that Isaiah speaks of gove,nment to people who were not
when he writes " You are precious. in my • netessarily concerned with the dignity of
sight and I love you. I have called you by the person
ana
the fostering of the com-
name and you are mine." ·
.
mori good.
·
·
.
(2) The second signpost that I would pro-
Third, kindness is not enough; piety is
pose is the organization of society around not enough. To continue to apply bandaids
the principle of the common good. Such a is not sufficient to the depth of the pro-
principle would affirm _creative activity as blem. In .addition to supporting aid pro-
more important than profit. It would af-
grams which foster self-reliance or respo_nd
firm people as more important than things to ·disasters we must seek out the structural
and would . seek patterns of work that reasons which foster or cause the different
would enha~ce th~ human spirit.. .
forms of poverty and injustice, so that we
(3). A third s1gn~ost on. this Journey can apply the proper remedy.
·
toward. · hum~n ful~tllme~t 1~ that to be
What are the concrete options for us?
means to be m relat1onsh1p with other~. In
First, the challenge before us is to
the Old T~tament_ to
~
m~ant precisely become advocates for the poor and the
that: to be m relationship with the other. hungry· to become the voice of the
My self at its·deepest .and most real level is voicele;s.
· · ·
a being in communion. That is ou~ truest
Second, we need to pray. We need to
. self. When I reach out to the other m love, pray for assistance in the great task of
fidelity and commitment I become more creating a world without hunger.
my self than I was before.
Third use this• time in your. life to
(~) The fourth v_alue ?as _two dimensions. prepare yourself to be of service. The world
which
are
. int r
10
sic a II
Y
c
~
n - · needs economists,
political scientists,
· nected/remembermg the past ~nd radical sociolgists, educators who are on fire with
openness to ~he future. O~r Journey to ·the passion of Yahweh for justice.
human · fulfillment requues that I
Fourth, let us dream dreams. We need
remember and acknowledge the past and people who will dream the dream of the
affir~ and. embody the future towards prophets and
J
esus---the dream of the lion
which we are journeying. Remembering and the lamb lying down together---of
and dreaming are critical human activities swords being beaten into plowshares---of a
especially when the remembrances and the world where no child will have to go to bed
dreams are shar
7
d in sto~y.
hungry---of the Kingdom of God. We need
(5) The fifth signpost 1s the acceptance of such dreamers in our society as surely as we
our finitude and creatureliness/to need ecnomists· political scientists and
recognize who w~ are in the face _of God,_ to organizers·. In e~ch of us, whatever we are
know our pla~ m the great cham of bemg doing needs to be a
little
bit of a dreamer.
and to recogmze that we are stewards of We are locked into an age of cynicism and
this creation. What ~oes this mean for us i!l despair. We have become a people with out
terms of our own hves? And what does 1t dreams and without a vision and as pro-
mean for hungry p~ople and our efforts to verbs tells us "the people_without dreams
create a more . just sodety? What does it and without a vision perish."
mean for us?
.
SO-lefo·s
drearn'dfeams~
C -
:: ' , , '
~ . ,
· First, our lives need to reflect and em-
Tony Cernera is excutive assistant to the
body these. values .. We must find. ways to Marist College president.
·
·
September 1G, 1982 • THE CIRCLE• Page 1 - -
DELI
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See us for your floor parties
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C·O·M·l·N·G · ·
S·O·O·N
Robby
Krieger • Orleans · The
Roches • Ke.nny Rankin ·
The
Producers •
Robert Gordon·
I99Y
Pop·
DIRECTIONS TO TH,E CHANCE FROM MARIST: Take Washington St. Into downtown Poughkeepsie. At Fourth Traffic Light (Mansion St., op-
posite City Hall) tum left. Go past two traffic llghts. Tum right on Catherine St. Go past one more traffic light and tum left Into the large Myers
Parking Lot on your left. The Chance Is adjacent to that lot and can be seen from the center of It as you face south. Total distance from Marlst
campus Is approximately 2 miles.
·
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•••••Page 8
~
THE CIRCLE•
September 16,-1982! .. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - -
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Foi:m'er NBA guard
Ai
Skinner will join .
the Marist basketball team this season as
.an assistant coach.
.
.
.
not rehired by Marist this pastsummer.
Petro names
I
ormer
pro ·
as assistant
• Head coach Ron Petro said, "Al
will
br-
. ing a new dimension to the Marist basket-
ball. program with his varied experience as
a basketbaU player. He is certainly a
. welcome addition to our staff."
··. Skinner, who wHI be responsible. for
recruiting, scouting and coaching, played
in Barcelona, Spain last year on the Euro-.
pean Circuit. He replaces .former assistant
basketball coa!=h Dan Bernstein who was
· The 30syear-old Skinner, a graduate of
the University of Massachusetts, • was·
drafted· by the New York . Nets of the
· American Basketball Association in .1974.
where he averaged 8.9 points per. game,
grabbed 427 rebounds and.had 40l·assists
in two seasons. In· 1976 after the NBA-
ABA ··merger, Skinner scored 12.6 points
per game and had 103 steals for the Nets.
: In 1977 the West Hempstead, N.Y.,
native was traded to the Detroit Pistons for
Kevin Porter, and cash. After one season
~ith the Pistoris, he signed on with the New
Jersey Nets as a free agent. Skinner played
with theNets until February, 1979 when he
was sent' to Jhe Philadelphia 76ers · for
Harvey Catchings, Ralph Simpson and
future considerations. He ·played with the
76ers through
:
the 1981 season .and in·
playoff action averaged 3.6 points, had 10
.
rebounds and 11 assists.
·
· Career totals for the Malverrie High
School graduate. come to averaging 9.4
points per game, 673 rebounds,
524
assists
and 208 steals.
Rowers face the uriknown in 'rebuilding year'
.
.
.
by John Petacchi
While most people are. still sound asleep
at 6 a.m., a ~ertain group of people quietly
make their way down to the Hudson wher.e
·they'll meet, and for the next- couple of
hours exert more energy than most ofus do :,
for an entire day. . ·
Who are these river dwellers? They're
_the Marist crew team, which begins
its
.Cross country team pl.aces 2nd
at Fairfield Invitational meet
grueling nine month campaign this week.
· "This is strictly a rebuilding year, and
the tenacity and attitude of th.e rowers are
major factors in the · outcome of our
season,'' explains second-year Coach Larry
Davis.
·miles on some days, Davis said. Technique
is important here; with the rowers trying to
improve their form to perfection. In order
to
give
the team some racing experience,
three races have been scheduled for the fall
season.
'
.
,
.
. With only 20 rowers returping from last
Lake Saratoga, Boston and Philadelphia
year's.squad, Davis expects a large turnout. are the cities the Marist squad will travel to
of freshmen and transfers to help fill the
this fall to race. After the fall season is over
boats for Marist this year. ·
and winter sets in, the team moves indoors
"This is a novice squad," says Davis,
for weight training and running in hopes of
"but the potential is there." "We need a . buil_ding up power and endurance.
by
Ken Bohan
"Aside from our top five, encouraging ·· growth and expansion of our talent pool
first race. efforts were turned in by . this year because we don't have a lot of ex-
Spring training features a trip'southward
W,ith a majority of new faces and a freshmen Mike Mcclintock and Mike Mur-
perienced people," he says. "If we can ac-
to get in some water time while the Hudson
handful of returnees the Marist harriers phy,,, Mayerhofer saiq. They finished I 8th
complish that this year, whether we win all,
is still frozen, with double workouts on the
placed second Saturday, in the Fairfield In-
and 24th respectively. Mayerhofer said that
half, or none of our races, we'll be in that water in preparation for the upcoming
vitational at Fairfield University for these-
over the next few weeks the workouts will : much better shape next year," he said.
races. The team goes through some intense
cond consecutive year;
.
'
be geared to enabling the team to maintain
workouts, according to Davis, because just
Out of a field of eight teams only the a faster pace during the late stages of a .
On a crew team, there is really no one . like any other sport, the more you practice,
University of New Haven, with 37 points race. He said he feels the team is strong due
member who stands out because crew is a '· the better you become.
was able to beat the Red Foxes, who finish-
to the summer mileage run, but that it lacks
total team effort, according to Davis. If
ed with 47. Kings Po1"nt wls th1"rd w1"th
65.
two members of a boat are rowing oetter
Sounds tough? Well, it is; and it takes a
seedwork. The average summer mileage of
Only three upperclassmen, Pat Mulrain,
the team ranged from
500
to 750 miles a . than the other six, the six who•aren't row- certain "men.tal and physical toughness,"
· John Lovejoy. and Mike McGuire, com~
d"
•
•
ing fast will conflict with the faster rowers
as Davis puts it, to stick with the sport.
peted at Fairfield last year when the team ma,n, accor mg
10
Co-captain McGuire.
and the boat will never win the race.
Davis says the chances of making the team,
also finished second to New Haven. The re-
Freshman Mike Barker, bothered by the
· "Your companions have to support your · even if one has never rowed before, are bet-
mainder of the team consisted of freshman extremely high.temperature at race time, 91
effort," says Davis, "and you have to sup-
ter than any other sport.
runriing in their first college race.
degrees, didn't run as well as expected and
port your companions' efforts."
"If,
one
Head Coach Bob Mayerhofer said he needed assistance after the race. Both
person is dogging it, the boat has lost that
Right now, the team is looking for
didn't quite know what to expect prior to Mayerhofer and Barker himself said they · race," he says.
anyone who has some interest in the sport
the race. He was concerned about the feel he'll be able to make a contribution to
According to Davis, crew is probably the and would like to tryout for the team.
teams lack of experience, he Said. After the
.
the. team in the. future. Another freshman,
most demanding athletic sport there is, and
Practices . are at. 6 a.m. at the boathouse,
race he said he was pleased with the overall Dave Filarski was forced out of the race
the team's training schedule alone reflects
and if you can survive the walk down there
team. effort, especially_ the· maturity the with a possible stress fracture of his foot.
that fact.
. ..
.
ori. a chilly autumn morning, chances are,
freshmen showed. .
·
·
..,.
..
In the fall, pract. ices.• startat.6 a;m;··, with
i
-you can.survive throughout-the season'and
✓
. The team is still without the services of
·
·
Sophomore John Lovejoy led the Foxes freshmen Mike Mueller and Howard
M
ii-
the team working .mainly on endurance help Marist on its way to a successful·
with his 6th place finish in25:02. Freshman ls, .due. to leg. injuries. While Co-captiari
conditioning on the·river, rowing. up to 15
season.
Pete Pazik and Co-captains Brain Hanley
·
Ken Bohan is still out with an illness.
and Mike McGuire. finished 8th; 9th, and · McGuire said, "I was pleased with the
10th respectively. Sophomore Jim Hegarty,. results of the race and I think the outlook
who missed most of last season with a knee for .· our season. looks real good. The•
injury, rounded out the scoring finishing freshmen have real positive attitudes and
14th.
·
that's a big part of this sport."
Soccer
tet;1,m se_t.
to
play Fordham
· The Maristsoccer team travels to For-
iri the net, Most of the play was in the mids
dham on Saturday to play it:S ffrst Tri-State· · die of the field during ~he evenly contested
Conference match of the 1982 season.
.
·
St. Francis•game: ·
Marist, which ranked 10th in New York
;
<
In Forham, Marist will be facing the
last year, lost its first match of the season
defending. conference camps. Back. from
. to St. Francis College, 1-0, this past Satur- · last year's 7-1 Ram squad are First Team
day at Leonidoff.Field. Bernard Celestin
All~Conference members Mark . Lugris,
scored the games only goal with 15 minutes
John Shannon and Keith Loeffler. Shan-
left to play. .
.
.
. : non, a senior mid-fielder, led' the con-
Celestin, a freshman, entered the game · · ference in scoring last year with S goals and
as a substitute only minutes before drilling
I assist.
·
a 30-footer pasi-Marist_ goalie Heinz Waf-
mhold.
<
The summaries:
Marist freshman Wayne Corgill almost St. Francis .... · ................. 0 1,-1
tied the game with 15 seconds left but his · Marist ..........•............. 0 0-0
shot went wide by a foot.
.
·
2nd half: StF - Celestin 74:59
·
Marist, starting six freshmen, had scor- -
SOG: StF 5, M 9; CK: StF 1, MS; GS:
ing opportunities but couldn't put the ball StF (Conte! 9, M (Warmhold) 4.
Women's tennis team impressive in victory
by
William
Flood .
The Marist College women's tennis
team took to its home courts last Satur-
day afternoon and came up with an im-
pressive 6-3 victory in their first try.
Playing a key role in the victory over
New Rochelle were sphomore Cindy
Krueger and freshmen Denise Bagarose
and · Michele Pisano. They were all
singles and doubles winners.
Nancy Calagreasse, head coach of the
Foxes, was "very pleased" with her
girls, but especially impressed with the
play of Cindy Krueger. Krueger, in her
first year on the squad, showed "great
talent and poise" according to her
coach. Krueger easily disposed of Jenny
A.ndrews, 6-0, 6-0, in an awesome
display of tennis. Then she teamed up
with Kathy Mulligan, the number one
tennis player, in doubles and won 10-1
over Jean DeRado and Jenny Andrews.
In other matches for ·Marist, Kathy
Mulligan lost to Jean DeRado, 6-2, 6-4.
Josie Trapani defaulted to Denise Byrd
after winning the first set 7-5, because
of a spained ankle.· Michele Pisano
swamped Ann Palache 6-2, 6-3. Denise
Bagarose romped over Maura Cronin.
Rounding out the singles, Connie Roher
was beaten by Jeanne Covell 6-4, 6-3.
Doubles action went 'as follows.
Number two team of Chris Carey and
Denise Bagarose came up victorious
over Meg Crowley and Ellen Raferty 10-
5.
Michele Pisano and Christine
O'Dwyer destroyed Lisa Arleo and
Shirley Griffith 10-4.
.
Overall, Coach Calagrasse felt "very
good about the win" in her first match
as a coach, and feels that with what her ,
team showed Saturday "a successful
season is evident."
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tr-:' : /\
(
>,.'<ij1'';'?,'v:""':;;l!"lm~•~,;,;et7-,,•,:·•=:"'"'w
27.2.1
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27,
Number
2
Mar/st College,
Poughkeepsie,
N.
Y .
Access to townhouses
sets off controversy
·"We
would at least· double it in width,"
by Bernadette Grey
, ..
said Cox.·
.
.
· ·· The new college townhouses, open little
. Glass would also· like the college to con- .
more than two weeks, have become the · sider the· installation of an elevator, she
subject ofMarist's first major controversy, · said. The townhouses are constructed so ·
that · Glass must- drive all · around
one involving questions about the struc-
Townhouse
c
to get from the common area
tures' · accessibility to students in to her bedroom and accessible bathroom.
wheelchairs.
The cost of one elevator would be about
According to Linda Glass,, a junior in a
-
wheelchair, the townhouses fail ·to ade-
$60,000, . Waters .said. "P~tting
i~ an
quately .accommodate wheelchair students. elevator ts.
t~~
onl}'. answer she (Lmda)
Glass was assigned a room in Townhouse · would accept, he said. .
. ..
C-1 but wm not move in until changes are _ T~e A~SI Stan~~r.ds, butldm~ codes
made, she said; She is currentIY: living in . dealing with ac~~ss1b1hty ~or hand1~apped
Champagnat Hall.
persons, states, In
3:
multi-story butldmg,
Edward Waters vice president for ad-
elevators are essential to the successful
ministration and finance
said that functioning of . physically · disabled · in-
Townhouses B-7 and C~l 'meet all ac-
dividuals:''
...
cessibility standards. "I spent the last two
A_ccordiIW to ~aters, Marist ~as noJn;;
days reading, and rereading to make sure • ten~ton ofmstalhng an elevator-m any .~f
we were within the guidelines _ and we · the to~nhouses.
ANSI.
Standards;reqm~e
are " he said ·.
- ·
alterations "to the maximum extent feas1- .
The real i~sue here is· agreeing .. on the ble,'! he said._
.
.
-definition of adequate accessibility, Gerald
The arch1t~ct . did not design _the
Cox dean of students said .
townhouses usmg ANSIStandards;Penera
'
'
·
said. "But to my knowledge, Linda was
Director . of Special Services, Diane never told that the townhouses would be
Periera, agrees. "I define it one way;the made totally accessible," she said.
school sometimes defines it another way,".
Dean Cox said Champagnat Hall is bet-:
she said.
.· · · ·
·
ter suited for wheel-chair students. "(the
' Glass is dissatisfied with the path leading townhouses) may .be technically orJegally:
'i'
__ ··
around the back of Townhouse _C to the inadeguate,J' hesaid, %ut that rCJlllyjs·
. I: ···,,.,,., .
..,-,,-downstairs....Je.veFof·C~
1."' 'I· tried...tr:aYelmg· · no.:the point""" ., . ..:..s
i,
,
,;..;."-', :,-.,;
~~
· ., ·
;i.
,
;.
·
'
..,,,,.;/>~
;s~lkh~,-:;.;.~,,~~~\~~~~;ra}:ilf~~~;r.f
n:{~~t;:<>~>~!-
,_'.-~d~~~s2~!E;i{i,£~i~~!:r£~!~=
_
_
·T~e path 1s too !1-arrow and there ~s no_ and picked the townhouses. "Champl(lgnjlt:
lighting.· Glass said.
:•1
-
w3:nt Pres19-el}t · is by far the betier_positioil for her,'rne
Murray to try and drtve ·this wheelchair said.
·· · .. ,,
·
1be ramp-system at the
new
townhouses
down that path at night," she said.
Still, Glass would much rather live_ in the
bM been
the
target of criticism by Linda
Dean Cox told glass he would make sure townhouses, she said. "All of my atten-
Glass, . a. -Maiist studenc who ·uses a
lights were put in and the. path was ,widen-
dants are over there and my friends are • ·
wheelchair
aiul
wants :.to, live - in the
ed .. "I'll do everything I
can
to get the path over. there;'' Glass said. '"They-- are
townhouses. · ·
·
· ·
widened if that is the problem," he said.
.
segregating."
New.frosh
check
·
o.ut ·
College life
by
Carol Lane, .
September 16,
1N2
Marisf gets·
new·poli~y
on·
·drinking
l
·,
'·
i
'I
I
I
---•·
·Page 2
~
T H E C I R C L E - ~ S e p t e m b e r 1 6 , - 1 9 8 2 • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
'wiP£
GOJ>JG
ro
HAVFA
QUIZ,'.'
- SPWll> Ol1T.
I
Wff
WAAff
IJM'
CHulTWG
!! "·
Readers
Write
All letters musi
be
typed triple space with a 60 space margin, and submitted to the
Clrcle 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.
~ay
·
Wells
replies .
-
•'•
W orkirig •
for the· weekend
Dear Editor:
find positions
at
some poitlt in the
1982-83
year.
,
·
· This office;
in
cooperation with
Bernadette .Grey's look at· on-
the Office of Financial Aid, will
campus
employment
w_as
do all it can
to
help students find
"There's a keg party down at the river!"
"Did you hear about the daiquiri party on
the sixth floor?"-
"We're having a party tonight in our room.
Do you think six cases will be enough?"
·
"The house parties cost three dollars.
How many kegs are they going to h_ave?"
"The vodka's finished, looks like the party
is over."
·
Is a weekend at Marist measurable by the
shot? How many pitchers are poured in one
weekend at the pub? How many students
pass out? How many students are hurt,
physically or emotionally. Who cares
anyway?
· Now that the first two weekends have
passed, it's time for us to evaluate the good
times we've had on those late Friday and
Saturday nights. How many friends have we
made while sucking down the thirteenth
beer. How many real friends havewe made?
How many people have we hurt, because
we said the wrong thing. We didn't mean to,
it just slipped out How many fights have we
got involved in while we were drinking. Com-
pare that number to the number of fights
we've gotten into while we are sober.
How many strange beds have we woken
up in? How many times have we kicked our
roommate out. How many times have we
been stoned out of our minds? How many
times have we got a real good buzi on, and
ended up crying ourselves to sleep. How
many times?
·· ·
.
·
· · So many · of us decided upon ·
Marist
because of the quality of the students that
are here. Not only academic ,quality, but
quality as human beings. Alcohol only:
covers the real people. that go to Marlst.· It
covers us with masks that are sometime
clowns and sometimes monsters, but never ·
ourselves.
. .
·
.
This weekend why not sit back on Satur-.
day night and decide if we are going to the
pub because we want a drink. Because we
want• to pick up a girl or guy .. Because
everybody else is going and no one dares to
be different or left·out. Because we need a
drink. Or is it just because we want to have a
drink, relax and meet'some new people.
· ·
Most everybody enjoys going out drinking
a few times a week. But nobody enjoys the
problems that occur on campus because
everybody decided to go out and ~njoy
themseles at • others' expense. This
weekend, let's party it up, meet new people,
have a drink with a friend, but let's not
regret what we did the night before!
Forget the kegs, daiquiris, cases and
vodka.- Why don't we make this a wild
weekend because of who we are, not how
many shots we've had. College life doesn't
end on Sunday! It can last all week if we are
mature enough to go a few nights a week
without getting plastered. Weekends can't
last forever. Sooner or later we're going to
pass out, get sick, get written up, or have to
climb out of bed and sneak back to our own
premature and unduly negative
in
11
· ·
its tone_. The impressi.on she left · jobs · and earn their · a ocauons.
To assume arthis point in the year
that . "many" , students with
that. the situation is .· hopeless
_allocations would not find jobs. simply isn't justified. ·
·
simply isn't . true. The point
I
thought
I
conveyed in our inter-
Sincerely, .
view was that there would be
J'.~ayWells
students who.initially would have.
Placement Goordinatoi:
difficulty being placed. I also ex-
·
pressed an optimistic outlook that
Editor's Note:
Thtf<!irHe'
stands
these students· wo·uld eventually .
by its
story.
More on TAP
To the Editor:
This is a reminder to all
t
AP or
Regents Scholarship recipients of
the Question and Answer Sessions
to be · held at the times listed
below.
Wednesday, Sept.
22,
5
p.m. in CC
248
Thursday, S€pt.
23,
11 :20
a.m. in
D 104
Thursday, Sept.
30,
11 :20
a.m. in
D 104
Please try to attend one of these
sessions if you have specific ques-
tions about TAP regulations.
Yours truly,
Rosemary Molloy
Tap Certification
rooms.
'
· ,,;,. · '· .. ,.;.:.., , .....
.
·:-~.,.:
'
:.Students
The population explosion·.
vs.' ,
Reaganomics
During the past few years, the size of the
freshman class at Marist has been steadily
. and rapidly increasing. The student body
has also become more diversified, as the
number of students from states other than
New York, New Jersey, a_nd Connecticut has
in?reased. During a time in which many
private colleges are having serious financial
. difficulties, it is a good sign that Marist is
able to cha~ae and grow ..
However, this rapid growth in the student
body has caused some major problems.
One very obviou_s concern is ttie lack of
classroom space. This year, the largest
number of students permitted to register for
a class is
45.
Two or three years ago, a class
of this size would have been considered
huge for Marist. Imagine, also frnm ·a pros·
fessor's . point of view, the difference
between teaching
30
students and lecturing
to
45.
.
One of Marist's strong points has been·
the. availability of the professors for per-
sonal conferences. With the increase in the
number of students, will these one-to-one
meetings still be possible? The hiring of ad-
junct professors satisfies the need for more
teachers, but they cannot always provide
the time out of the classroom that full-time
faculty can.
·
. There are facilities at Marist that cannot
serve large numbers of people. Each large -
freshman class that enters Marist quickly
becomes a large sophomore class, and it
Co•Edltors
The
Associate Editors
Circle
Sports Editor
Advertising Manager
·,
.
\
.
won't be long until we have four very large
·classes.As it stands now, every classroom
is in ·use all day, and for night classes as
welL Clubs are growing larger, and thus .
To: The Editor
need larger rooms-for meetings_ -
and there
·
·
. are a very limited numb.er of large rooms
As you returri to school this
available ...
•.. . . . ·•. ·., ·.: ,.·. -::· . : .·
<
>
.:> :
ran,
some oLyour friends from
· This,· of course, is nqt' to ,m•~·ntion · the
last year
wiU
riot
be· joining you.
housing problems. where once·only seniors
Theyare victims ofReaganomics.
>
· <ind. some juniors lived. off-campus, now
Instead of supporting the nuclear
many sophomores are· living in apartments • freeze·
.
·· inost Americans want, ..
·. around Poughkeepsie. -
If
the· idea of
~eagan: has cut funds ·for Pell.
residence ha.Us 'is to create a community of
·
Qrant_s and student loans while
students who support one another through
poming money irito. America's
.· 4 ..
years, then. what good is . the present
nuclear· ai:seqaL
He
has denied
system? Yes, the townhouses· have eased
· students equal access to education
the situation, but only slightly,
·
-
✓•
while cutting . taxes
•
for the
• The questjoi:i .· is, how much ,more gr.owth , ... '"'..ealt~y { ·.
Trt··
~dm}njst"ra!ion
can Marist take?'W~en.will
iJ
~top?. f>resi- ;- _'. c!.ies,<~~~ musf.-make A?J,e_rica,
den_t Murray has said that increases in . strong agam!," and then attacks
enrollment may continue, but they_ will_ not
the ro?t of our ~trei1gth • our
change the "small-college nature.· of
educational system. ·
Marist." How large do we become before we
lose that "small-college nature?"
.
We w·ant a number. How large will next
year's freshman class be? Are we going to
find or build more classroom space and
housing facilities? When? When is Marist
going to become less concerned about the
number of students they bring in, and more
concerned about the students that are here
and who would like to remain here? The gap
must be closed between the size of the stu-
dent body and what the facilities and staff
at Marist can handle.
Rick O'Donnell
Business Manager
Patti Walsh
At a Time when the President is
forcing students out of college,
the Governor should • be working
to keep students . in school. No
deserving student
should . be
denied access to an: education. ·
What can the Governor do? In
_; New York, o·ut state-based system
· of financial aid must- be expanded
. to
make provisions for part-time
students, and for those who are
financially independent ~f their
Adrienne Ryan
Faculty Advisor
Karen Lindsay
Louise Seelig
Reporters
Meg Adamski, Bernadette Grey,
Copy Editors
Carol Lane, Matthew Mcinerny,
Bill Travers
Ivan Navas, John Petacchi,
Richelle thomas, Brian Kelly,
Jim Barnes
Andrea Holland, Sue Vasallo, Bill Flood
parents. In addition, we must re-
establish our committment to a
high quality, low cost education
at the State and City Universities,
as well as . maintaining aid to in-
dependent institutions · · (Bundy
aid) at existing levels.
In
1980, I
joined with students
to fight Reaganomics while some
Democrats embraced Administra- .·.
tion policies. This year we should
renew that effort. Ifstudents pro-
ve that they can successfully
mobilize a political movement :to
defen·d
higher education,
legisltttors
will
be more likely ·to
pay heed to student concerns in
. the future.
It
is my hope that a
· reinvigorated student activism .
will continue long after we have
reversed the policies of the pres ,. -
sent administration. After all,
while the :Stat.e has a responsiblity
to educate its citizens, our recent
history shows that · politicians
have something to learn from
students, too.
Sincerely,
Mario M. Cuomo
David Mccraw
Lisa Crandall, Judy Knox,
Mark Amodeo, Adam Their,
Kathy O'Connor, Ken Bohan,
Paul Crowell, Joe Pareli,
John Petacchi, Dawn Oliver,
Pat Brady, Barry Smith
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
-
..
.
- - - - -
.
- - - - - - - - -
.
--•September 16, 1982 ·
THE CIRCLE. Page
3--
llojffiiln ~.
;
a,
Jpng
r
Oad
to
.
RD job
By Karen Lindsay
training. He also wants
to
give the R.A.'s
.
.
.
.
more time together before school starts.
·
Michael Bowman has traveled
·
around·
.
"That way, they can get to know each
the
.
world,, has a bachelor's
.degree
in
_:._
othe
_
r and work l>etter together as a team,"
theater
.
and
·
has.· served
.
as an operating
.
·
he said .
.
room
-
technician in the Navy. So what is he
.
One of the harder things for Bowman
doing at Marist College as the new resident
was coming into the job
·
with limited ex-
director of Champagnat'! "I needed a job
perience
.
He said that not being able to
and a sense of community," he
.
said;
speak with Bob Kaminski; the former resi-
,
"There was an ad inJhe
,
newspaper-for the
-
dent director, has been good and bad.
"It
position c1nd it sounded like a challenge."
is good l?ecause I can start out fresh but
.
Bowman,
·
28, said he likes a good
.
Bob probably could have'filled me in on a
·
challenge. That is why
.
he went to school
lot of little things about the job," he said.
·
for acting. '.'l_g~t bored easily
-
and acting
Bowman was born in England in 1954
never bores me. It is
.the
one thing that I
and moved to New Zealand when he was
·
can
_
do
.
that of~ers nie· many challenges,''
five. His
_
parents were divorced when he
:
Bowman added ..
-,
·
·
was· 14
·
and his mother got married to an
·
.
_
Bowman became
.
resident director in
.
American serviceman. They came to the
·
May
,
of .this yea·r after graduating from
:
,
United States and
·
traveled around for six
Lycoming College
•
in
.
Williamsport, Pa.
·
months while his step-father was in train-
Bowman would like
.
to be able to give the
·
fog
:
.
His
'
step-father was
:
stationed in
resident advisors more
,
money an~ more
.
Naple~; Italy where Bowman finished high
By
Matthew
Mcinerny
.
•
'
.
'•
'
,
·•·
.
In June of 1812, Wliliam Monroe
established· the first pencil factory in
.
America in Concord, Mass
:
Monroe
made 30 lead pencils which he sold
to
.
Benjamin Adams, a Boston hardware
·
store owner. The items sold so well' that
Adams
·
cqntracted to
.
purchase all- the
pencils that Monroe could produce.
·
To get
to
the point, one needed a
device that would chop the pencil up.
It is 170 years later and that device
still
·
has not .been invented. At least it
would seem that way if one was
.
sitting
·
.
in a Marist College classroom using a
pencil to write with. When the point
isn't a point anymore, it is time to
search forthe sharpener.
But there isn't one.
"It is annoying,"
·
said Dawn Oliver, a
senior majoring in fashion design, "par-
.
ticularly in the arts department where
pencil sharpeners are needed
.
"
Josie
.
Trapani,
.
a fr~shman; uses a
knife;.
,
uThere aren't any,''
.
she said
when asked about the sharpeners;
.
;
'.
Where does one
·
go to conquer this
problem'!
·
·
'_'It has to be done in the library,"
said freshman Annette LaClair. The
business major assumed there
.
were
some in Donnelly, "But I haven't found
them yet," she said.
It is just as difficult to find out who is
in charge of these accessories as it is try-
ing to find a pencil sharpener itself.
After asking in the Registrar's Office
who might be in command of the pro-
blem the Business Office was suggested.
The Business Office was amazed at the
thought and
suggested the
Vice-
President's Office might know.
The secretary in that office pointed to
the Physical Plant Office
·
(maintenance
in laymen's terms). They were also
perplexed by the inquiry. After thinking
it over they decided that the Business
Offic~ would be the place to go
,
The Business Office was where the
questioning began. It was now
.
evident
that no one in any of the offices knew
who is responsible for the positioning of
pencil sharpeners indassrooms.
Corine Strange has gotten wise to the
situation. The senior business· major
said; "I brought my own so that should
tell you something."
_
school. For a year, he traveled around
'
~urope then moved back to the U.S. when
,
he was 18. Bowman joined the Navy in
Nov.
,
1972 and served as a medic.
·
In 1976, he got aboard a freighter and
·
sailed around the Mediterranean for four
•
months
.
He
·
spent some time in Eygpt and
then flew back to the U.S. and moved to
Williamsport. He worked there for five
months and then attended Williamsport
Area Community College for one and a
half years. He transferred to Lycoming
College to major in theater and graduated
summa cum Iaude in May, 1982. Bowman
would like to earn a living as an actor
someday.
.
As far as the Marist theater goes,
Bowman said he would like to get involved
later this year when he gets used to the
R.D. job
.
"It takes up a lot of my time and
I don't want anything to interfere," he
fl'
said
.
Michael Bowman
Marist College to host Simon Bolivar Chorus
By
Richelle Thomas
·
Marist College will host the Simon
Bolivar Chorus from Caracas, Venezuela
for the "Choruses of the World: Fifth In-
ternational Choral Festival." The event
will take place on Saturday, September 25
at 7:30 p.m
.
in the
.
theater.
"Choruses of
-
the World" is a festival
which features international choruses from
many universities. Each year a different
country sponsors the three-week long
festival. This year the festival will be held
in the U.S. 'from September 19 to October
10. Five hundred singers will represent
,fourteen universities from eleven countries
and five continents.
Through the combined efforts of Marist
College, the College Union Board and
Choral Director DorothyAnn Davis, the
accommodation fees for the Simon Bolivar
Chorus have been paid
.
Their efforts have
made it possible for Marist students to be
admitted free with their ID cards
.
"The
students have to be given a chance to show
their support for the activities," says
Davis. "They are our main source of public
relations." The admission price is $3 for
faculty and other guests.
and
the- amazing
tedu\lcolon.
dreamcoat
THEATRETRIP
SUNDAY OCTOBER
IO MAT.
Tickets $18.00 Sign up by Mon. Sept. 20th
S
ponsored by Campus M
i
nistry
.
Return
tear-off
below.
----------------------------
COUPON
Return with check payable to Marist College to Sr. Eileen, Office of Campus Ministry, P.O
.
Box 789.
NAME _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
ROOM NO.____
P.O
.
BOX NO. _ _ _
_
NUMBER OF TICKETS_______ AMOUNT ENCLOSED _ _ _ _ _ _
_
l.lJNCH
.
.
.
.
.
The Pub is now open for lunch
.
.
.
Monday thru Friday from 10:00-2:30
-
C
.
old Sandwiches
-
·
-
Hot Sa
-
ndwich Platters
-
-
Hot
&
CO·ld Heroes
-
Soup·
&
Salad Bar
.
!
I
I
I
j
j
I
/
'
.•'·• • • • . , 1 , • •
•
. .
•
•
• ..
._.
.
~
·
•• ~. I ..
•
. . .
~
...
• • - .
--Page
4 • THE CIRCLE· September 16,
1/82 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~ - - - - - - - - - -
Friday:
On Campus:
-Jr. Cla'ss Mixer
9p.m.
-Film:
"Star
Trek" 7:30 p.m.
The Chance: Blot-
to and Fear of
Strangers
Mid-Hudson Civic
Center: David Frezel
and Shelly West in
concert
Saturday:
On Campus: Foot-
ball vs. St. Peter's
1:30 p.m.
The Chance: Kid
Creole
and
the
Coconuts
The
Bardavon: ·
"Robin Hood" 11
a.m.&lp.m.
Sunday:
On Campus: Film:
"Star Trek"
7:00 -
p.m. &'9:30 p.m.
- The . Chance:
Asleep at the Wheel
An excellent haircuttery.
Monday:
The Chance: Mon-
day Night Football
- Giants vs. Packers
Now featuring CELLOPHANES, the new non-
peroxide haircolor/conditioning system with
unlimited color choices and excellent sheeri.
-~ A I R C U T T
f;
R S
$2.00 Off
With Marist I.D.
Serving
Marist College
Since 1975
3 Liberty St., Main Mall, Poughkeepsie
.
454-9239
.
By
Appointment Only
. Thursday Night
Tuesday:
The Chance: New-
Beat Music Dance
Party-: Live D~J.
Tuesday
Ladies Night -
Ladies Drink
FREE
COLLEGE NIGHT
Free Admission with College ID.
FREE
DRINKS 9-10:30
Thursday:
Wednesday: ·
The Chance·: ·DC
Star
On Campus: Cof-
feehouse
(student
talent) -
9:00 p.m.
·
-Women's
Volleyball vs. Pace
-7:00p.m.
Wednesday
Nickel Night
Every Other
Drink
.
'
5c All Night
I " '
Friday and Saturday Free Admission before 10 p.m. with Valid College I.D.
Dress Code
33 Academy Street
Sunday Night Party Night
~
Free Drinks for All
8
-10
p.m.
Live Entertainment 6 Nites
a Week
·Free Parking
Poughkeepsie
Proper I.D.
471-1133
. . .
- - - - ~ ~ - - - ~
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~~lljllll!I_.,
11111!11.
l!II!'.
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1!111!1
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September 16, 1982 - THE CIRCLE· Pa
es--•
Feeding
.
3.
Hringr)'
.
World:
Challehges & ()pportUilities
ATTENTION
by Tony Cernera
can reach their potential, that individuals
and societies can find happiness, peace and
Food is basic to human beings. Where justice. Viktor Frankl in his remarkable
there is no food there is no life. And for book MAN'S SEARCH FOR MEANING,
.
hundreds of millions of our fellow human reminds us that meaning and purpose in
beings the
.
struggle for food ~nd the battle life emerges. It is the fundamental human
against hunger is a constant reality.
value and need.
SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS
AND SENIORS
Hunger remains the daily and
.
deadly
As E. F. Schumacher remarked in a
companion of precious and unique human paper entitled
"A
Metaphysical Basis for
beings who, created in the image of God, Decentralization," "After all,· everything
long for life and happiness like the rest of we do and talk about should be orientated
us.
Acccording to the Food and to, and dcri~ed from, an answer to the
.
Agriculture Organization's Fourth World question, ''Why are we here in the world
· Food Survey victims of severe malnourish-
anyhow?" ..... We are not using the
ment increased from
400
million people at facilities the Creator has put at our
the beginning of the 70s to
455
million peo-
disposal for . the purpose of attaining our
pie by 1975. The data for the most recent end. We don't even think about what our
years suggest that the situation is just as end is. We're using things only because
serious.
they're there. Our engineers and scientists
·
The Cooperative Education and Internship
staff will be hosting a reception and informa-
tional meeting.
·
The World Food Council's assessment of produce something more we could use, so
•
the
~ff~~~s
of such malnutrition)s sobering: we must use it. We do things because it's
·
"Up to one third of all children born alive possible to do them. We're a society that's
die
.
from_ malnutrition and malnutrition rich in means and poor in purpose."
related' diseases before the age of 5. Many · The crisis that we face is the result of the
of the rest of them have their mental and fact that we have lost sight of the reason
physical development irreversibly impaired for our existence our individual existence
·
WHEN: Wednesday, September 22, 1982
WHERE: Fireside Lounge
·
by poor nutrition. Many other suffer the and our collective existence. Perhaps the
·
consequences of specific dietary deficien-
best image for us is that of a journey. Life
cies. Every
year
at least 100,000 children go is a journey. When a person is on a journey
blind as a result· of severe vitamin A defi-
-
to a new place it is important that he/she
TIME:
7:30 p.m.
WINE AND CHEESE WILL BE
.
SERVED!
ciency."
·
·
·
·
read the map carefully.
If
you read the map
Why?
.
correctly and
·
follow
.
it you will arrive
Simply put, people are hungry today in a where you are going. If you use the wrong
world where there is not absolute shortage map, you won't get to where you are going.
of food,' where there is the technical capaci-
If
you do not have a map, you would seek
ty
to
wipe out the worst aspects of hunger directions/guidance
from · someone
·
and malnutrition within a generation. Peo- . familiar with the route from here to there.
pie are hungry and children die of starva-
Without the guide you would be lost. I
tion in a world where that need not be the would suggest that our problem is that we
case. We can eliminate hunger. We just are using the wrong map and listening to
If ·you are unable
.
to attend this meeting,
another will be held:
haven't.
WHY?
the wrong guides who are as lost as we are.
At the heart of the matter stands the fact
I
am defining the problem as one of the
that we have created a society and a world human heart but the human heart in the
order where people and nations have lost context of history. There must be a change
touch with the meaning and purpose of in the human heart but this must be carried
life. And it is for this reason that people re-
on with efforts to bring about profound
main
.
hungry and children starve. It is for economic and social changes as well. Such
this reason that we face the crisis that our change is necessary ifthe
,
heartis going to
civHiziitioii'
faces: tis only'wli~h
'
individirals ,, changef If!'w.
,
e are
.
to
·
seek;
to ~change our
and societies stay in touch with the essential . hearts and
al.so to
seek
profound changes iri
meaning of life and its purposes that they
·
conti~lled on page 7
WHEN: Thursday, September 23, 1982
WHERE: Fireside Lounge
~
Thursday - September 23
The Triplets w/special guest Neeva
Route 9
TIME:
11: 20 a.m
~
(Free s\ot)
-
~'The Ultimate Night Club"
·
Thursday -
se,tember 16
Neeva with special New York City
Surprise Guest
Friday -
September
17
.
·
Special Regional Surprise Guest
Saturday - September 18
·
Radio/ Atlantic Recording Artist
The Phil Garland Band with special guest
Linda Koutrakos Band
Wednesday - September 21
Sealed With A Kiss
(SWAK)
For Those Who Love To Rock
COMING ATTRACTIONS
Friday - September 24
Frankie and the Knockouts
Hyde
Park Plaza
229-9413
Saturday -
September 25
Dave Edmonds
Hyde
Park
.
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6 • THE CIRCLE· September 16,
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CAPUTO'S RESTAURANT.
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11-12 Daily--,- 11 to 2
weekends
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Closed
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Mondays
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Delivery starts
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at
5
p.m.
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Delivery
FR
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$5.00
or More
473-2500
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DRINKS-FOOD-MUSIC 11
:00 a~m.-4:00
-
a.m.
SANDWICHES 11
:00
a.
·
m.-8:30 p.m.
.
,
Skinners Welcomes
_
You
Back
Rte. 9 Poughkeepsie
.
·
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·
914-473-4725
continued from page 5
- the\~~onomic and s~ial structures ·of our livemo're simply so that others might simp-
society, what kinds of signposts do we · 1y live.We do this with the recognition that
need? What map should we foHow? What in the end we would all be living fuller and
· are the values around which _we need to healthier lives if we consumed less and
organize our individµal lives and our com~ shared more.
.
munal lives? I would like to suggest 5: . . .
Second, it means that we must apply the
. • (1) To
be
htinian is a state of being and principles and teachings of the Judeo-
. not of thaving. My value and dignity and Christain Heritage to our world. For too
worth as a person is rooted in the fact that I · long religious people have tended to their
am. Ultimately, this fact' of my being is own . "spiritual . concerns" and left
rooted in God's being and activity and in economics, politics and the affairs of
his love for me; a love that Isaiah speaks of gove,nment to people who were not
when he writes " You are precious. in my • netessarily concerned with the dignity of
sight and I love you. I have called you by the person
ana
the fostering of the com-
name and you are mine." ·
.
mori good.
·
·
.
(2) The second signpost that I would pro-
Third, kindness is not enough; piety is
pose is the organization of society around not enough. To continue to apply bandaids
the principle of the common good. Such a is not sufficient to the depth of the pro-
principle would affirm _creative activity as blem. In .addition to supporting aid pro-
more important than profit. It would af-
grams which foster self-reliance or respo_nd
firm people as more important than things to ·disasters we must seek out the structural
and would . seek patterns of work that reasons which foster or cause the different
would enha~ce th~ human spirit.. .
forms of poverty and injustice, so that we
(3). A third s1gn~ost on. this Journey can apply the proper remedy.
·
toward. · hum~n ful~tllme~t 1~ that to be
What are the concrete options for us?
means to be m relat1onsh1p with other~. In
First, the challenge before us is to
the Old T~tament_ to
~
m~ant precisely become advocates for the poor and the
that: to be m relationship with the other. hungry· to become the voice of the
My self at its·deepest .and most real level is voicele;s.
· · ·
a being in communion. That is ou~ truest
Second, we need to pray. We need to
. self. When I reach out to the other m love, pray for assistance in the great task of
fidelity and commitment I become more creating a world without hunger.
my self than I was before.
Third use this• time in your. life to
(~) The fourth v_alue ?as _two dimensions. prepare yourself to be of service. The world
which
are
. int r
10
sic a II
Y
c
~
n - · needs economists,
political scientists,
· nected/remembermg the past ~nd radical sociolgists, educators who are on fire with
openness to ~he future. O~r Journey to ·the passion of Yahweh for justice.
human · fulfillment requues that I
Fourth, let us dream dreams. We need
remember and acknowledge the past and people who will dream the dream of the
affir~ and. embody the future towards prophets and
J
esus---the dream of the lion
which we are journeying. Remembering and the lamb lying down together---of
and dreaming are critical human activities swords being beaten into plowshares---of a
especially when the remembrances and the world where no child will have to go to bed
dreams are shar
7
d in sto~y.
hungry---of the Kingdom of God. We need
(5) The fifth signpost 1s the acceptance of such dreamers in our society as surely as we
our finitude and creatureliness/to need ecnomists· political scientists and
recognize who w~ are in the face _of God,_ to organizers·. In e~ch of us, whatever we are
know our pla~ m the great cham of bemg doing needs to be a
little
bit of a dreamer.
and to recogmze that we are stewards of We are locked into an age of cynicism and
this creation. What ~oes this mean for us i!l despair. We have become a people with out
terms of our own hves? And what does 1t dreams and without a vision and as pro-
mean for hungry p~ople and our efforts to verbs tells us "the people_without dreams
create a more . just sodety? What does it and without a vision perish."
mean for us?
.
SO-lefo·s
drearn'dfeams~
C -
:: ' , , '
~ . ,
· First, our lives need to reflect and em-
Tony Cernera is excutive assistant to the
body these. values .. We must find. ways to Marist College president.
·
·
September 1G, 1982 • THE CIRCLE• Page 1 - -
DELI
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At Most
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Salads • Soft Drinks • Ice Cream
_
Open Nightly 7: 30 p.m. - 1 a.m.
See us for your floor parties
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SU&1ECT
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C·O·M·l·N·G · ·
S·O·O·N
Robby
Krieger • Orleans · The
Roches • Ke.nny Rankin ·
The
Producers •
Robert Gordon·
I99Y
Pop·
DIRECTIONS TO TH,E CHANCE FROM MARIST: Take Washington St. Into downtown Poughkeepsie. At Fourth Traffic Light (Mansion St., op-
posite City Hall) tum left. Go past two traffic llghts. Tum right on Catherine St. Go past one more traffic light and tum left Into the large Myers
Parking Lot on your left. The Chance Is adjacent to that lot and can be seen from the center of It as you face south. Total distance from Marlst
campus Is approximately 2 miles.
·
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•••••Page 8
~
THE CIRCLE•
September 16,-1982! .. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - -
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Foi:m'er NBA guard
Ai
Skinner will join .
the Marist basketball team this season as
.an assistant coach.
.
.
.
not rehired by Marist this pastsummer.
Petro names
I
ormer
pro ·
as assistant
• Head coach Ron Petro said, "Al
will
br-
. ing a new dimension to the Marist basket-
ball. program with his varied experience as
a basketbaU player. He is certainly a
. welcome addition to our staff."
··. Skinner, who wHI be responsible. for
recruiting, scouting and coaching, played
in Barcelona, Spain last year on the Euro-.
pean Circuit. He replaces .former assistant
basketball coa!=h Dan Bernstein who was
· The 30syear-old Skinner, a graduate of
the University of Massachusetts, • was·
drafted· by the New York . Nets of the
· American Basketball Association in .1974.
where he averaged 8.9 points per. game,
grabbed 427 rebounds and.had 40l·assists
in two seasons. In· 1976 after the NBA-
ABA ··merger, Skinner scored 12.6 points
per game and had 103 steals for the Nets.
: In 1977 the West Hempstead, N.Y.,
native was traded to the Detroit Pistons for
Kevin Porter, and cash. After one season
~ith the Pistoris, he signed on with the New
Jersey Nets as a free agent. Skinner played
with theNets until February, 1979 when he
was sent' to Jhe Philadelphia 76ers · for
Harvey Catchings, Ralph Simpson and
future considerations. He ·played with the
76ers through
:
the 1981 season .and in·
playoff action averaged 3.6 points, had 10
.
rebounds and 11 assists.
·
· Career totals for the Malverrie High
School graduate. come to averaging 9.4
points per game, 673 rebounds,
524
assists
and 208 steals.
Rowers face the uriknown in 'rebuilding year'
.
.
.
by John Petacchi
While most people are. still sound asleep
at 6 a.m., a ~ertain group of people quietly
make their way down to the Hudson wher.e
·they'll meet, and for the next- couple of
hours exert more energy than most ofus do :,
for an entire day. . ·
Who are these river dwellers? They're
_the Marist crew team, which begins
its
.Cross country team pl.aces 2nd
at Fairfield Invitational meet
grueling nine month campaign this week.
· "This is strictly a rebuilding year, and
the tenacity and attitude of th.e rowers are
major factors in the · outcome of our
season,'' explains second-year Coach Larry
Davis.
·miles on some days, Davis said. Technique
is important here; with the rowers trying to
improve their form to perfection. In order
to
give
the team some racing experience,
three races have been scheduled for the fall
season.
'
.
,
.
. With only 20 rowers returping from last
Lake Saratoga, Boston and Philadelphia
year's.squad, Davis expects a large turnout. are the cities the Marist squad will travel to
of freshmen and transfers to help fill the
this fall to race. After the fall season is over
boats for Marist this year. ·
and winter sets in, the team moves indoors
"This is a novice squad," says Davis,
for weight training and running in hopes of
"but the potential is there." "We need a . buil_ding up power and endurance.
by
Ken Bohan
"Aside from our top five, encouraging ·· growth and expansion of our talent pool
first race. efforts were turned in by . this year because we don't have a lot of ex-
Spring training features a trip'southward
W,ith a majority of new faces and a freshmen Mike Mcclintock and Mike Mur-
perienced people," he says. "If we can ac-
to get in some water time while the Hudson
handful of returnees the Marist harriers phy,,, Mayerhofer saiq. They finished I 8th
complish that this year, whether we win all,
is still frozen, with double workouts on the
placed second Saturday, in the Fairfield In-
and 24th respectively. Mayerhofer said that
half, or none of our races, we'll be in that water in preparation for the upcoming
vitational at Fairfield University for these-
over the next few weeks the workouts will : much better shape next year," he said.
races. The team goes through some intense
cond consecutive year;
.
'
be geared to enabling the team to maintain
workouts, according to Davis, because just
Out of a field of eight teams only the a faster pace during the late stages of a .
On a crew team, there is really no one . like any other sport, the more you practice,
University of New Haven, with 37 points race. He said he feels the team is strong due
member who stands out because crew is a '· the better you become.
was able to beat the Red Foxes, who finish-
to the summer mileage run, but that it lacks
total team effort, according to Davis. If
ed with 47. Kings Po1"nt wls th1"rd w1"th
65.
two members of a boat are rowing oetter
Sounds tough? Well, it is; and it takes a
seedwork. The average summer mileage of
Only three upperclassmen, Pat Mulrain,
the team ranged from
500
to 750 miles a . than the other six, the six who•aren't row- certain "men.tal and physical toughness,"
· John Lovejoy. and Mike McGuire, com~
d"
•
•
ing fast will conflict with the faster rowers
as Davis puts it, to stick with the sport.
peted at Fairfield last year when the team ma,n, accor mg
10
Co-captain McGuire.
and the boat will never win the race.
Davis says the chances of making the team,
also finished second to New Haven. The re-
Freshman Mike Barker, bothered by the
· "Your companions have to support your · even if one has never rowed before, are bet-
mainder of the team consisted of freshman extremely high.temperature at race time, 91
effort," says Davis, "and you have to sup-
ter than any other sport.
runriing in their first college race.
degrees, didn't run as well as expected and
port your companions' efforts."
"If,
one
Head Coach Bob Mayerhofer said he needed assistance after the race. Both
person is dogging it, the boat has lost that
Right now, the team is looking for
didn't quite know what to expect prior to Mayerhofer and Barker himself said they · race," he says.
anyone who has some interest in the sport
the race. He was concerned about the feel he'll be able to make a contribution to
According to Davis, crew is probably the and would like to tryout for the team.
teams lack of experience, he Said. After the
.
the. team in the. future. Another freshman,
most demanding athletic sport there is, and
Practices . are at. 6 a.m. at the boathouse,
race he said he was pleased with the overall Dave Filarski was forced out of the race
the team's training schedule alone reflects
and if you can survive the walk down there
team. effort, especially_ the· maturity the with a possible stress fracture of his foot.
that fact.
. ..
.
ori. a chilly autumn morning, chances are,
freshmen showed. .
·
·
..,.
..
In the fall, pract. ices.• startat.6 a;m;··, with
i
-you can.survive throughout-the season'and
✓
. The team is still without the services of
·
·
Sophomore John Lovejoy led the Foxes freshmen Mike Mueller and Howard
M
ii-
the team working .mainly on endurance help Marist on its way to a successful·
with his 6th place finish in25:02. Freshman ls, .due. to leg. injuries. While Co-captiari
conditioning on the·river, rowing. up to 15
season.
Pete Pazik and Co-captains Brain Hanley
·
Ken Bohan is still out with an illness.
and Mike McGuire. finished 8th; 9th, and · McGuire said, "I was pleased with the
10th respectively. Sophomore Jim Hegarty,. results of the race and I think the outlook
who missed most of last season with a knee for .· our season. looks real good. The•
injury, rounded out the scoring finishing freshmen have real positive attitudes and
14th.
·
that's a big part of this sport."
Soccer
tet;1,m se_t.
to
play Fordham
· The Maristsoccer team travels to For-
iri the net, Most of the play was in the mids
dham on Saturday to play it:S ffrst Tri-State· · die of the field during ~he evenly contested
Conference match of the 1982 season.
.
·
St. Francis•game: ·
Marist, which ranked 10th in New York
;
<
In Forham, Marist will be facing the
last year, lost its first match of the season
defending. conference camps. Back. from
. to St. Francis College, 1-0, this past Satur- · last year's 7-1 Ram squad are First Team
day at Leonidoff.Field. Bernard Celestin
All~Conference members Mark . Lugris,
scored the games only goal with 15 minutes
John Shannon and Keith Loeffler. Shan-
left to play. .
.
.
. : non, a senior mid-fielder, led' the con-
Celestin, a freshman, entered the game · · ference in scoring last year with S goals and
as a substitute only minutes before drilling
I assist.
·
a 30-footer pasi-Marist_ goalie Heinz Waf-
mhold.
<
The summaries:
Marist freshman Wayne Corgill almost St. Francis .... · ................. 0 1,-1
tied the game with 15 seconds left but his · Marist ..........•............. 0 0-0
shot went wide by a foot.
.
·
2nd half: StF - Celestin 74:59
·
Marist, starting six freshmen, had scor- -
SOG: StF 5, M 9; CK: StF 1, MS; GS:
ing opportunities but couldn't put the ball StF (Conte! 9, M (Warmhold) 4.
Women's tennis team impressive in victory
by
William
Flood .
The Marist College women's tennis
team took to its home courts last Satur-
day afternoon and came up with an im-
pressive 6-3 victory in their first try.
Playing a key role in the victory over
New Rochelle were sphomore Cindy
Krueger and freshmen Denise Bagarose
and · Michele Pisano. They were all
singles and doubles winners.
Nancy Calagreasse, head coach of the
Foxes, was "very pleased" with her
girls, but especially impressed with the
play of Cindy Krueger. Krueger, in her
first year on the squad, showed "great
talent and poise" according to her
coach. Krueger easily disposed of Jenny
A.ndrews, 6-0, 6-0, in an awesome
display of tennis. Then she teamed up
with Kathy Mulligan, the number one
tennis player, in doubles and won 10-1
over Jean DeRado and Jenny Andrews.
In other matches for ·Marist, Kathy
Mulligan lost to Jean DeRado, 6-2, 6-4.
Josie Trapani defaulted to Denise Byrd
after winning the first set 7-5, because
of a spained ankle.· Michele Pisano
swamped Ann Palache 6-2, 6-3. Denise
Bagarose romped over Maura Cronin.
Rounding out the singles, Connie Roher
was beaten by Jeanne Covell 6-4, 6-3.
Doubles action went 'as follows.
Number two team of Chris Carey and
Denise Bagarose came up victorious
over Meg Crowley and Ellen Raferty 10-
5.
Michele Pisano and Christine
O'Dwyer destroyed Lisa Arleo and
Shirley Griffith 10-4.
.
Overall, Coach Calagrasse felt "very
good about the win" in her first match
as a coach, and feels that with what her ,
team showed Saturday "a successful
season is evident."
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