Skip to main content

The Circle, November 11, 1982.xml

Media

Part of The Circle: Vol. 27 No. 8 - November 11, 1982

content

}
_
~~;~:.
··:.:~t
· i:/ .
·0:
;f
1
~:lt
i:
~J/
··: · ; ·' <
.
·
:M,~,r~~t,~tj
:
;~~;;;,.;Ju.J;'ic;~i{t;(t~~~/:,
.
.
.
··
... -
~
'
\
~
-~
··.,J
·
·.j'
.
\\
'J
,\
.··_·J
'l
,.




































































































































































































































.
Page 2
-
·
THE CIRCLE'-
:
November 11~
·
1982
.
··.;
Cut ;,
·
cxA
·
·ioi~
~
~
.
Divi5io~·l
·
"
~i~t
:
woQl-h
-c.
'
~;ir)c:,
0v£R
!
·-
.
.
'.
·
,- :
t•
.,
,
.
~
:
·.
\
.
"\
'
ff"
The
party
.
·
To th
e
Editor:
.
young' aduits
:.'
g~~ti~~
?
tbgeth~~ •
.
When I applied to Marist, I
·
listening
,
to music and
:
·
·
aciually .
.
thought I would be enrolled in an
·
havi~gfun~theideais appalirig
:
"
It
adult program. I
.
thought this
.
·
·
must
-
be a disgrace for Marisfto
would
,
be a place for me to grow
.
have their students seen ir
i'
public,
as an individual. After being here .
,
having
·
a
·
good
:
.
tinie>Afte.
(
an, ..
for three years, l've come to
they should
.
J;e iri. their rooms
· •
realize that Marist has
·
very
reading the Marist handbook
>
·
different ideas of what a college
·
~
Marist-you've
·
done
i('again!
.
should do. They seem to feel it is
·
The fines arid rules
· ''
you
'/
have
their responsibility to enforce
.
placed
,
on
:_
the
j~rciup
~
.
·,
'that
. morals, control our sex lives and
organzied this party
:
are absurd .
:·restrict our sotial lives on and off
.
Once again
·
:.ydi6e
fried
.
to
campus.
.
discourage
.
any
I
lcind
:
·
or
,
,
in-
.
Last week, a group
_
of students
volvement
.
. I
,
reaffy
·
dori.'t
·
'
know
·
aistributed
.
announcements
how.
:
so many of our students
.
have
.
concerning a party at a local night
.
managed to atterid
-
.
the
'
weekly
spot
.
I thought it was fantastic.
··
specials, at places like Brandy's~
·
_
._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_.
·
Students actually being involved
without your help.
·

·
It's
<
truly • .
.
.
enough to organize a social
.
amazing that they were
'
able to '.
Ch
·
·
I b
·
:
'
·
gathering, other than a Marist
.
.
make
it
.
home safely
,
\\'.ithout
·
eap
·
·
a
__
or
.
.
·
_
,
.
.
,
mixer
;
.
:is greaL These students
having extra police
.
to guatdihe
.
· ·
:
also provided busing to and from
path back to Marist
,
:'_
,:
.,'
;;
.
• ·::
.
:

·
.
< ·
,
.
.
·
.
..
. .
·
. .
.
.··
.
.
.
the
-
party. This makes it possible
.
·
I think the students here are
·'.
The frustration of early registration
.
Is
·
..
·
a_nd experience being used .primarily
.
in,
<
for the many students without
worthy of a lot'more creclit t
_
hen
almost over
. ·
After
.
studying
(
the
.
course
.
upper-level,m~re specialized courses?
,
: :
.
,
-
cars'to get off campus.
Marist has given them. We should ·
.
advisor
.
for a
.
few
.
hours,

checking
·
.
·
,.
Let's face It -
one adjunct
·
professor
· ....
Orice
~
again Marist and I
all be gratefulto the group
.
that
..
. ·
requirements, getting
.
signatures
:
and
··_
cost~ Marlst aboutone-half the salary
.
of a
,.
,
disagree.
·
It
·.
seems as though
planned
.
this
·
party. We should:
standing on
·
line, we return to our ro
-
utines
.
full-time professor. And that's
'.
not based on
-
.
-
Marist feels hl!,ving a party for
follow what they've done
,<
take
and hope that at least some of those
.
an
.
annual salary;
.
that's
.
on a
-
per cr~dit
·
,
-
their students is
.
inappropriate
initiative, and not be discouraged
courses appear on our schedules.
.
·
basis. So, an
_
adjunctprofessor.·teachlng a .
·
behavior. Imagine
,
a group of
by the administration.
We all know that the increase in
_
the size
.
three-credt course
·
recel
_
ves
.
only half the
.
Linda Glass
.
of the student body has
·
c;aused many
money that a fuU,tlme
.
professor would be
·
problems. One of the biggest problems is
paid for
_
teaching the same course. If we are
.
·
NotWMCR
·

.
.
the number of
·
courses needed to ac
~
·
paying the adjuncts' salarles,-
,
why aren't
commodate all the students, and faculty
.
·.
they
.
getting the mo
_
heyJhey deserve? And
.
needed to teach them. .
.
.
.
. .
..
·.
. . .
..
where d
_
oes the otherJ:ialf
of
our tuition for.
To the Editor:
.
the College
.
'
Th~ individuals
·
~ho
·
·
oM!irist has tried to solve th
.
is problem
:
by
: ·
those credits go?·
~/
:;\:'
'
:
. -
':
· .
.
·
·
WMCR Radio
·
would like
to
performed
·
. ·
at
·
the
·
event were
hl~l
.
,:ig a number
.
of adjunct faculty. There are
·
>
.
Adjuncts are a defi'rtite
·
ti
nanciai advantage
.
.
make clear its positiop concerning
.
..
performing as individuais' and
..
currently
.
84 adJunct
:
p~of~~se>rs aod 79f_ull
~
:~
'i
for Marist. Howf:!ver
r:
as students,
we
know
.
the
·
·
-
r
·
ecent
·
·
"Cousins
.
were in Q0 way representing

tlm
_
e
.
professors teaching
.
at
.
Ma
~
ls!
:
IQ
_
ad-
:
i
that they
:
are not

as
".
-
.
avallable tor time
Arrangeriients
.'
' WMCR. was in
.
WMCR Radio
.
.

.
·
-
dl~l
_
9_n
·.
·
there
.
are
:
24' collE!ge
.
_
el'l'.lPl?yees W.~o
:
.
;:
out~ide
.
_
th~
.
c
.
l~ssr<>om
>
A.n
·
cnt's hard enough
··-
·
·
no way connected to the event and
: ..
,
, .
:
i•
.
.
·
.
·
.
•,
te~c;h
.,
courses
,
s~pplen1entI11g
.-
the full~tl"')e
·
:'?
to
·
fmd
·
excellent.1)i'ofessors :.... having
·
an
h~ been cleared o_f ;any _wrong
·.
.
.
,
·
.
.. .
.:·
. ·, ·
:,.:, :.
s\af
,
1,:';:(
!:h~re
x ·
a~e
.
:
_.
bot_h.
,-. -
~~
~
a~tag~s_;
·_
an~
L.
ever~
9
hanglng faculty
.,
d
_
oesn
•f
help.'
.
.
~
· .
-
domg by the Adm1mstrat1on of
· ..
!
,,:,. ·
..
·
:, ,.,,
·
··
\
~'-~
?
-
\l;
-
<:!
_
,~,d.~~~tage~
.
t<?
.:
l)\T\~~ 'a?iun~t~
'/
\
x-,
.:
-
~
:-::-t.:' ,-:
·
..
~-
'The
·.
communicati~n
· -
·
arts, business
·
and ·
~
.
, •
·
• :
-
: ..
-'.
·
..
::
,-
'f,
i;dJ~!l~t facul~y
.\
a~e.
'.
hired
.
.
to
,,
b,:iqg
_J
~e)f
.:
'
.. '
¢onipute1
r
sclence
:
d~p~f!Jiients·ar:e
·
:three of
· .
L
_.~
-_.
·-
,
.:

· ··
0
,
·
. .
.
expert is~
.
to th
_
e campUSf Often,
,
they ar~ not
.
·
the /argest
:
depart~nts on
·.
campus
·
and
'
the
·
-.
.
.
·
·
·
·
:
.
'
Bern
_
·_,
,
st
_
eifr story
_
.
~
_
·
.,.
.:-_.'
.
·. :
-:
·
available
f?
tea9h full-!ime
!
ci~
do
not'vy
(
~h ~o
, tr~nds
.
seem
-
!~
-
lridlcate
'
J
ti~t those majors

.
_
.
·
-: -~
:-.
-
~
:/
:. ·
.
.
.
do
_
so. The,rexpert/se ,s _the main qenef1tJor
.
win cor:itlnu~ J9
·,
draw
;-
large
·
numbers or
·
.
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
, .,
·
··
·
· ··' ··
·
·
·
:
, ~arlststiJdentS.
\ ;::·
:-
. '.
;
·
'!·
>
:
>
~
O:.'.
: ' .:
·
·<
,:
s
·
tudents
;
,
'
If
'
Marist
·,
is
,
:
concerned
:
with
· .. ·
,
T6theEciitor:
.
.
.
sowdiss~nsion
or
·
~~~te
p
t
oblellis
·
·
. .·
·
.
Ho"-'.ever, _mclnf adjuncts have been hired
.
.
building a ~eputation for excellence in those · .
.
~
-
·
.
.
With the
.
exception of. gre~t.
-.·
has.no part iriJhe propediehavior
·
• . ·
wh?
,
·
haye I 1ttle
·
ba~,kgrou nd

..
·
in
.
the
.
actual.
<
·
areas,
if
is
;
necessary
to
,
have
·
a we
.
I I-known .
.
issues of our time
-
many incidems
··:
·
of
.
the
.
.
assistant. · Ambition
,
is
_
co~rse
..,
t~ey·
~
wil~ Jeach;

AISO
;

adjun
'
cts
.
-
are
:_:;c\
orat le~s.tiden
,
tifiable
'
,
f9:culty
<
~
.
.
'
(.
:

'
~
:
:
:
·
'.
: '.·
·
-
six montJ::is in thlp~st
·
are history
laudable; ai'theexpense o
(
others .
.
being

t?rough~
.
.
m
:•'
to
;
,.teach
··
:
lower-level

:
,
,:•··
·::
Adm1mstrators
; :'i
t
J
s
::
time
.
for
.
Marist
.-
to
···
..
·
-
·
and
:
·
bestc:
;-
left
.
that
,
way.
:'
To

i(isregrettable aiiduriethi,cal.'To
·
.
.
,
courses,
:
such as Mass Communication
;
aod
·>
c'
inv~st',in the
·
fufore
.-
.
arid
'
'
hire the
:
fuil
~
time
·
·
..
. ·
resurrect a non
~
even
f
such as the
.: ·
quote fytr
_'.
B¢rnste
_
in,
::
"A,ll
i
suc-
-
.
(?me
.
courses. Y"h
.
'! isn't th~i
_
r
.-
knoy.rledge

·
.
.
qua!!fi~d profe~;'sors
_
we need.
:
.
\
,'
,
<
,
.
/
'
·
:,
''departure"
>.
of
.
Dan
·
Bernstein
c~ssful coaches put winning ahead
·
·

,
>
,
.
,,.:
.
·
.
does little credit to THE CIRCLE
.- .
of
everything
-
else'.'
..
'(emphasis ·
• '
·
·
,
.
/
orthe method of reporting. .
.
<'
mine);is
.
a regrettable statement,
:
_
._.
_
:
:
11J)
·
e a
-
na
·
.
:
,
t
,
1•me

_._
aga1•n
·
.
.. ,·
,.-·
..
.
•·
,
.
.
,.
hin
1
_
_
the
,
whorldd
·
.
_,
llfsphor.t
·
·
.
andd
·
.
·
·
_
especial!Y,
.-
a(
'.
thehigh schooi
,
or
.
_
_
.
a
.
t cues
.,
.:
ea
... .-
coac
.
es
-=-

.
an
-
.
college
>
level.
~
People
.
are
z
.
stm·
·
,
.
..
.
assistant coaches arc "departing''
·
,
important, as
,
are
:
the
_.:.:
v~lues
.
,'
'Does anybody really know what time
.
it
have 11 :20 classes,' three minutes
can
make
·
.
constantly •
.
In
t
~is instance,
,
the

.
·
:
learn
·
ed

frnm
:::~
i>ir:ti¢ipadng.
is? Does ahybodyreally care?
.
.
..
the . qlfference betwee
.
n
.
eating
,
lunch and .
:
circumstances si.irroun.ding
:-
the
\
· Win,ning is more
;
f~n 't_h,~p.
:l
osing
,,.\
Wouldn'Uhis ,:nake a greaftheme
·
song
inhalingJunch.
,,
· ... ,
_
' _
:
.
,
.,.
_
.
.
_
.
removalofM~
.-
.
~er~stem_arebest
:,.
an.~. more n;wardmg
'
.
!p
;'
d
.
e~er-
:
10
(
Marist College? At check, none
'
of
)
~e
.
·

.
·
'A_no
_
ther
-
triviar 'compfaint ·-is
"the
....
1ime
t
~
..
.
know
_
n,
,_
to the Prl?Clpa_ls l!1V<?l-.;f
.
<
t'
'.
0
m1mn~~het~er one
~
lcecps
,
tn~Job
clocks on campus agreed with the chimes in
sch~
_
c:h.lle of WMQ~. Forget the
'
fact.that 1t-is
i.
an,d aJew fther~. ~~f!.1ce It to ~l.lY
.
·
.
or not;·
:
.Pl!.~
.
above an
:
.
e
J
s~
·',
tel!s
:
Dqnnelly, not to mention agreeing with each
only
,::-
an
'
occ~~ionally 24~nour

.
.
station-.
;:::
..
Mr
.
_.
;
l~etro s
~c~
~
~~s
_
1~ su~gestmg
_
:
~
t.tS
:
SOIJ_l~th.
_
mg ~b<>ut t~IS
;

$,
OD s
othe
f
·
.
·
·
·
·
. ·
_ .
·
°'
:
;
· ...

·
·
. •
:· :-· .
. ·
·
Someone once
.:
said about radio
:
that'evell
·
ac
·.
-
Mr·
:
~er~s,te.1n
:'
.:
·:
;:
d_epart
.
~~re
--
.,
.
,
P,hll<>~<>ptiy
'..
·
_
.
,
..
·/,
:,:_
·
.-
·
,,
: ..
:
·_"
·
Not only don
'
t th
_
e clod
.
ks agree, but the
its worst
it
is at least on time, Well, perhaps
;;
.
b<:>th.
,<
Jusuf1cd
:
~n~
·
proper
.
-
~1~
h
\
:
.
: .
_
·
Jpe
·
c
statements Mr,
;
,
B,ern,stem
·
people in charge of opening certa
.
in doors at
.
the, DJ's at
·
W_MCR
qon't
·
ha.ve
.
·
clocks that7:
regar9tq reasons and J)rocedu~~
t
< .
·
~ttnbut~ to
.
Ron Petro
;
ar
.
eat_best
·

certain times don't seem to be able to read
m~t
9
ti
..
·
_!lny
_
thini;( ~l~e,
,
so_
,
: their l~ck
oL
:
··.·
·
W~~ther or not
f\1~.
Ber9st~
p.1,,
impl~usibl~?
,.
~ut_ .
m.or~
/
h~ely
then{
'
For instance, the library hours are
·
.
promptness isexcusable. WMCR is not
,
the
::
:
s,-
recrmted
.
_
a
_
p, ~r
_
)l
,
~alf,
_
m one
-:
:
·
:;~
term1~q}~$1~al
,
1Qco
,
ns1
.
~t
:
enc1e~.
listed as
a
a.ni. to 12 midnight, but woe to
·
.
only club
.
that has trouble running
·
ori time.
"
te~th of:\he
_
team l~st
,
year and
·
.
·~hey
<
a~e out otcharaft~r
.-m
otm
_
..
th~ person who wants
t~
1.90k
something up

.
Most club meetings are planned to start five
.
.
,
this
.
ye~r 1s.11!1matenal.The
_
fact
hne ~1th
.
Mr.
_
Petros style ~f
.
quickly
.
on the way to h1sor ~er 8:30 class.
to ten or ~ven 15 minutes after the time
;
ttiey
:
t~at ,his_ plu~osophy
·
and
,
Mr. wacJung
or
~anageme
.
~t,
,
,,
and
The normal time for the library to open is
.
are scheduled because the presid
.
ents4khow
:
Petr()
,
s d1ffey 1s releva!l~· T~e fact
:
:
,
patentl_y preJud1ced., .
;<:_:,;
...
:
.
,
·
somewhere between 8:10
.
and 8;20
.
(usually
-
that ~o
.
o.ne
.
wil_l show on time. Maybe they,
tha!
:
the. pnme
.
r~qµ1S1te·
_
of
~~
.
..
Mar!st
:
.
.. ,
College
,
· and
::
Marist
closer to the latter time). It doesn't matter
too, fl~ure that all cl
.
?cks are
_
wrong.
·
~,m:,-;J
ass1s_tant 1_s
.
!?>';tit¥ 1s
_
relevant.
·
...
,

,
Athletics would be be
_
tter
,
_
se~ed
'
thatthe clock in the library runs pretty close
.
So 1t all comes back to the clocks: Wtieh
·
.
··
D_1sa_l;ireements
·
between a
_
head
.
by
,
THE CIRCLE concentratmg
.
to the accurate tl
.
nie
~
'
:
·
.
·
·
.
.
.
.
·
·
: .
;
!S
_
someone going to synchronize the~? Or
coach
·
and
'
a~sis
.
~nt
.
are
·
no
_
n~w
-
·
_
.
on sul)port and Pt~~pJi~e ~
~
t~er
.
.
And when was the last time the cafeteria
Is that too much to ask? Until someone
phenomena.
,
~mng

these
.
d1f-
.
·
than
.
.
pseudo-1nf~
_
sf,iJat1ve
_
_
:
was openea
-
for lunch at its scheduled 10:45
·
;finds an answer, Marist will just hav~ to sing
ferences,.!n public are not part
_
.
e>f
.
':stor~es'' which hay~ p~
~
.
b~ing
a,m.? Granted; three or four minutes is not a
-
along with Chicago ... "Does anybody really
t
_
he
,
._
et_h1cs
_
· of
_:
the· coachmg
·
oQ,the present, nor any relevance
·
·
very long time to be late, but when students
know what time it is?"
·
·
·
·
·
profession. Gomg

Jrom sym~
.
for the future.
·

..
:

.
.
:-
,
.
·
·
.
·
pathetic ear to sympathetic
eano
>
.
·
.
,
·
Pr: Howard Goldman
·
The
Circle
-
Co•Edltors
.
Associate Editors
Sports Editor
Advertising Manager
·
Business Manager
News Editor
Rick O'Donnelf
Advertising Staff
Patti Walsh
·
Karen Lindsay
Cl■sslfled
Lou Ann Seelig
.
,
-.

Reporters
· BIii Travers ·
·
.JlmBames
Adrienne Ryan
EIieen Hayes
·
Cartoonist
·
·
Caroline Kretz
Lisa Crandall
.
Kevin Shulz
.
Meg Adamski, B~madette Grey,
Carol Lane, M
_
atthe\fl'. Mcinerny,
Ivan Navas, John Petacchl,
Richelle ThOmas, Brian Kelly,
Andrea Holland, Sue Vasallo,
.
BIii Flood, Karen Magdalen,
Brian O'Keefe, Allee O'Keefe,
.
.
Holly Sraeel, Richard Copp
Ted Waters
Phot~raphy
E(!lto
_
rs
/ . _
..
·
· ·
Jeanne LeGloahec.
Photographers
·
Copy
Editors
_
:
Faculty
Advisor


-
·
Kyle MIiier, Chrl~t
_
ln~ De"!l~sey
·
· '
Michael Ward, Sandy bis~~
'• ·
Jack D'Orio, Gina Franclscovlch
· ·
,
·
~),
,'•
Lisa Crandall, Ju
.
dy
,
Knox,
M~rk Amodeo, Adam Their
Kathy O'Connor, Ken Bohan
Paul Crowell, Joe Pa
r
etl-
'
John Petacchl; Dawn
.
Oliver
Pat Brady, Barry Smith_
..
r,avld McC~aw
;
.


































































by Mary_ Wall
will be a great isset
-
to Marist. Students will
.
for classes as long as students maintain a
.
be able to obtain
_
their B.S. (bach~lor's of
-
cumulative average of 3.0.
·
.
The state of New York recently appro~ed
science) and M:S.(master's
.
degree) at the
"Usually students will work from 9 a.in
·
.
Marist
College's proposar for a master's
·
same college.
.
to 1 p. m. then
.
have the rest of the day off
degree
in computer science .
.
Marist has
·
The computer science:_
.
master's
·
degree to go to school," said McDonald.
·
been awarded a $LI million federal grant
·
program is mainly designed for part-time
.
To qualify for the master's degree, a
to develop
·
a combined computer and
students .
.
Classes have been scheduled for student. must complete thirty credits at the
business management program, which will
··
both afternoon and evening so as to ac-
.
graduate level. McDonald said, There are
start this January,
·
commodate
·
and encourage people who are no core courses requirements. There is a
The purpose of the new master's degree
working to get their master's degree.
selection of courses of which a student is
program is to provide advanced training
Marist has designed a graduate
.
work-
required to take ten courses."
and experience in various areas of com-
study program in correlation with IBM in,
The new computer science M.S. degree
..
puter-science to individuals who have
·
a
Poughkeepsie. "This enables students to
was approved by the State
.
Department of
·
bachelor's · degree in
.
computer science
work for IBM part-time a:nd go to school · Education. The program follows the ACM
·
mathematics, physics or engineering.
·
'
part-time to get their master's degree,"
(Association of Computing Machinery)
.
.J~h~ McDonald, director of Marist's
said McDonald.
-
guide-lines. The M.S. program is designed
?,ta.th ~pd
,
computer science program said,
IBM will pay tuition in full, buy all
to satisfy the needs of softwear
·
The _n,~w computer science masters degree
books needed for class, and give time off
engineering," said McDonald. Soft wear
Marist professor reCeives
cC>mmuility service. award
by Nancy Keschinger
He's faculty advisor to the basketball that almost half of these student athletes
team and a volunteer
·
coach. He is also have not graduated with a degree after five
chairman of the admissions committee at
.
years of education.
·
Marist while serving on the Enviromental
His personal goal as advisor to the team
Advisory committee
·
in the town
.
of

is to
-
provide the players with a serious
Poughkeepsie. His

summers are
,
filled academic opportunity as well as
:
the chance
conducting
.
science camps.-
,
for gifted to excel
_
in their sport. Menapace said that
,
children from all over the country.
·
_
these young men are "students first,''. then
··
His name is Dr. Lawrence Menapace and
·
basketball players.

these arejust a few of the services. which
,
Menapace has also devoted much of his
-~
made him the recipien! of the Pres1dent~I
·
time to the youth of today. "Your society
award bestowed on him by Dr., Denn_1s
.
won't survive if you don't nurture your
Murray, President of Marist College
m
young people," he said. Besides coaching
October of
·
1982 at th~
.
··
J6th Annual Little League and CYO teams and working
Community Breakfast a~tended by over with
.
boy scouts, one of Menapace's most
300 business and commumty leaders.
·
emotionally and physically time consuming
"The award was a suprise to me because activities is the summer science camps that
traditionally it has been awarded to people he conducts at Marist.
-
who are active in the greater-community,"
These camps consist of a two to four
Menapace
:
said. He added that he was
·
week program in which students from all
extreinely flattered to have been chosen for over the
_
country come and live at Marist
the recipient of the award. He was chosen
·
under Menapace's supervision and conduct
.
·
·
on the basis of his contributions to Maris.t
.
scientific experiments. Menapace began
.
College and the Pougkeepsie area.
.
.
._
this. program
-
with studies in,enviromental
,
f
:. ·
·
·
·Along
with
'
his services to
·
the Marist science and has added a
.
computer science
, t
-
~
-:
,
.
:-
,.
com.~uriity,
_
M
_
e~apa_c~
·
h~
_
s also performed session.
'''.f
_
hes~ kid~ '!{ere so sma~I
:
and so

·

"
. services
.
to the Dutchess County
:
com-
,
young, bi.It the1r
:
·
ab1hty
'
to'-
,
assimdate
:
was
•'
1
1

munity by acting
.
as a
.
rriember
.
of
-
the
·
unbelievable;;, said Menapace.
·•:_
.
·.·.
Citizens Advisory committee
.
.
and
.
.
by
.

'
''The
.
success was undeniable. Marisf has
serving on the Advi~ory committee to gained recognition nationwide," he said.
··
Congressmen on Conservation.
·
"We got a five minute spot on CBS news
engineers are concerned with the programs
that are printed ~:,ut from the computer .
The Title Three grant funding ~ill enable
Marist to expand the number of terminals
and the capacity of the computers greatly.
"Marist
will be hiring in January two, full
time teachers for the program. As a result
of buying new equipment and hiring more
teachers, there will not be any overloading
problem," said McDonald.
There are currently eight, full-time, two,
half time and 15, adjunct teachers, Mc-
Donald said
.
"I
am extremely happy to see the new
computer science master's degree coming
to Marist
.
I
feel the program will be very
successful and will definitely help Marist
grow into a much better broader in-
stitution,'' said McDonald~
Not only does Menapace perform these which enhanced the reputation of Marist
services,
but he is also emotionally in- College." The camp has also been
volved in what he is doing. "The problem promoted by NBC.who ran a feature story
with student athletes is a serious one,''
on
the camp and by Omni magazine which
Menapace said, speaking from his ex- is wr:iting a feature article for their spring.
perience as
faculty advisor
_"
to t_he issue. "We are already getting phone calls
basketball team.
·
·
He said that the
m-
and
letters
-
from people who are interested
_-
stitutions are failing in their primary goal in
.
the camp for
_
next summer," Menapace
:
of higher education. Menapace explains said.
. Ted Waters plays the synthesizer at last week's Coffeehouse
-
for student talent.
Friday:
·.
···.·
'
On Campus:
Take A Prof
·
to Lunch
·
:.
•L.
~
.
:


.
Marlst
Swim Club
Fa11Meei
~
' ·
·
sa
;
ni:~ pJn.
·.
·\
;,:
.
/
Vivien Cord
,
:
Antique Show
.
_McCaitn
- all day
Film
"The Seduction"
7:30
CUB Mixer
9p.m.
Last Day
for
.
Early Registration
,
f~rSpring 1983
Ulster Performing
ArtsCenler:
·
Hudson Valley
Philharmonic
Serles8p.m.
Saturdiy:
·
On Campus:
·
Marist Singer
.-
Concert
.
.
Commualcation
Arts
Advisory Council
meeting
11
a.m.
&
1_:JOp.m."
Marist Swim Club
Fall Meet
1
·
a.m.-6p.m
0

·
Commuter Union
trip to the
·


·
.
New Paltz Planetarium
Vivien Cord
·
- Antique Show
McCann - all day
Freshman
Variety
Show-9p.m.
Dinning Room
Bardavon 1869
Opera House:
Hudson Valley
Philharmonic
·
Series8
p.m.
.
Sunday:
·
OnCampus:
Marlst Swim Club
Fall Meet
,. ·
·
8
a.m.-6
p.in.
Vivien Cord
Antique Show
McCann - all day
House
-
iv Dinner
Pub-5 p.m.
Film
"The Seduction"
Monday:
Tuesday:
·
On Campus:
Lecture
·
"Family°Therapy"
·
Teens
Encounter
Christ Reunion
Byrne Residence
7:JOp.m.
Bardavon:
.
Film
"A Midsummer
Night's Dream"
8p.m.
Highlights
CUB is sponsoring a Swing Mixer this Friday featuring
music from the 1940s by G.I. Jive, a swing band. Ad-
mission-is free if you dress in the40s style; it's 50 cents plus
I.D. if you don't.
On Friday and Saturday, the Hudson Valley Philhar-
monic Series is sponsoring a concert featuring Alexander
Schneider as a guest conductor. The orchestra will be doing
the symphonies of Hayden and Mozart.
The film, "A Midsummer Night's Dream" featuring the
New York City Ballet will be shown at 8 p.m. Tuesday at
.
_
(Photo by Christine Dempsey)
Wednesday:
Bardavon:
Vassar Brothers
Institute presents a
Travelogue Lecture:
"South Africa"
2
p.m.
Thursday:
OnCainpus:
Coffeehouse
"Godspell" 8 p.m.
Bardavon:
Boystown Choir
sponsored by the
Wapplnger's Falls
Rotary Club
8
p.m.
the Bardavon. This film of George Balanchine's magical
two-act 1962 ballet is based on Shakespeare's play and uses
music by Felix Mendelssohn.
The Marist College Council on the Theatrical Arts
presents
·
"Godspell," a musical based upon the gospel
according to St. Matthew. Show dates ar Nov. 18, 19, 20
and 21. Tickets are $4 for adults, $2 for faculty and staff
and $1 for students and senior citizens. Call 471-3240 ext.
133, for information.
'
l
'·I
1
l
.
J
,:
,.







































































,
~-·
-
-
--·•-·••·•.
-
--•Page 4 ·
THECIRCLE~·November 11';
1982 ...
-.lllllllli . .
_ _ _ _ _
;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
...
_ ...
.._ _ _ _
__
·
Division
.
prepares· prpposal
f
of,
ady~rJiSb-1g,; :,:
.
.
?
.
.
',
..
.
.
.
'
.
,
'
'
.
·,
/
.
.
by Mercedes Whitbread
·
..
vertising, Advertising Media~· Advertising field (of advertising), is more· important
in advertising.
:·•:··· • ·. ·
The Marist College faculty
·
is currently
considering a proposal for a. major. in
advertising, which would be offered
through the Division of Arts and Letters.
The proposal was planned by Richard ·
Platt, chairman of the Division of.Arts and
Letters, and Eugene Rebcook, professor of
advertising, with the advice· of Academic
Vice President Andrew Molloy. According
to Platt, they were assisted by Dr. Robert
C.
Jeffrey, dean of_the School of Com-
munications, University
of
Texas.
·
The proposal is now being considered by
faculty committees: If passed · by the
college, it goes to the state Department of
Education for consideration.
Campaigns and an Advertising Internship. than the . narrow . specialist now," · said
The strong point of theprogi-Jm'is that
it :.
The two. advertising courses _
currently Rebcook.:
·
.
.
.:
·. .
.
_integrates.marketing, coinmur1i~ati6_ils;_ the . '
offered, Introduction to Advertising· and
The need for such a program arose from . behavioral sciences; mathematical analysis,
Retail_ Advertising and Sales Prnmotion,
both 'the advertising industry· and the computer.facility, business and economics'·.
will remain in the curriculum.
.
Marist College student-body, according to with- advertising ·_fundamentals.· and·. ''tne
This
advertising
program · · is
the 'proposal. Advertising Age, a trade : creative process; said. Rebc9qk.:-:•~1au'·.
distinguished from other business studies at
magazine, · said the advertising industry ··agreed. that .its interdiscil)l~nary nature is,
a :,
· Marist by its relationship to the area of
looks toward undergraduate advertising .highlight. -
·
. · .
communication arts,· according to Platt.
programs to supply it with advertising
· · · ,··
"It
was originally going to be housed .in the . generalists. According to Advertisin. g Ag_e,
The · advertising_ agencies that revie:,ved · • .. ·
·
·
h
II ·the courses said, that•a•good balaµce:bet-
Div1sion of Management Studies but it is : many in the industry beheve that t ere w1
.
.
. .
1
. A
.
more · communications-oriented,'' said
be a serious personn_ el shortage throughout wee~ the9ry ahnd _practtcel is tchnuca :-· .
c- .
Platt ·
h ·
·
d
d .
.
.
. · cordtng to t e proposa,.
e agencies ..
:
t e commg eca e. ·
·
.
. ·
l ·
·
f "h d · •• ·
According to the proposal, the program
"This program would also be meeting . pra~sed t_he
me
USl~n o . ·. ~n
5
.011 ,
~x- ·
will
be· ·taught within_ a marketing
the educationalinterests and occupational penence ma the~rettcal ~ra_mew,ork.
·>·• '·
>
framework but the emphasis is on the
needs'of the students,'' said Rebcook. Platt . Th~ prop_?sal ts
f!OW
~n its s~cond .P!.t11~e ·
development of a studen_t's creative skills in
said the program is very attractive_ to _the
of dehb~ration ~nd ts bei~g reyie\Ye,d
~Y
th~••,
each segment of advertising: · ._ . ..
·'
students and there are many opportunities Academic Affairs _Committee, accord!.~g t<? , :
The · proposed program combines a
mixture of advertising curricula, marketing
and the various liberal arts disciplines
offered at Marist. The advertising courses
included are Advertising Copy, Developing
• the Broadcast Commercial, Industrial
Advertising, Production of Print
Ad- ·
· . The objective of:tlie prqgz'am is to trai1;1
in the·
fibia:
Nearly
40
.
percent of Marist's Plat~. _Th~ committee has. requ~t~ ~so,l!le
advertising "geri¢ralis'ts":,; according · to
busineif xs'ti.ii:lk'nts surveyed'· iiidicated an
mod1f!cat1ons tha_t~~e being ~oi;k~d pµt, .
Rebcoo~. He said the generalist is one who
interest in majoring in advertising, ac-
he said. The Dl\'.ISlOn of· Manageme~t _ ·
is able to plari arid manage the various
cording to- the proposal. In the present · Stud~nts, at th_e. requ~st. t_he .A_cademic ··
phases of an advertising campaign. "The
advertising classes
50
to
75
percent of the
Affairs · Comm_1ttee, . is_ -dis~ussmg ... t_il~
·
generalist, who
has
a smattedng Of every .. students saidthat they would have majored
pre>P,~_sal no~.
··· ·
"·' ·
- - - - - - - - - - M o r e
letters----------......... -----
- all
the members
Of
ib?;eni6;
.ROTC forum
Hunger
institution· providing
such
available. For purposes of 1m-
directory information is required
plementing this procedure, the
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
to give public notice of the in-. College will allow thirty days
On Mon. Nov. I a student
On Monday,' Nov. 15, at 9:15
formation it plans to _make
from date of publication in the
forum was held in the theatre
p.m. in the Fireside Louge there
available to the general public and . College·newspaper and posting in
regarding the·R;O.T.C. proposal.·
will
be a presentation on· the· to· allow_students time to notify· ·conspicuous places about the
The success of the forum relied on
World Hunger issue. The speaker
the intitution that any or all of campus for students to respond.
two main factors: the four
will be Jon Forget, regional
that information should not be
A form has been developed and
students who were willing to
organizer of the Bread for the · released. Marist will release at
can be obtained from the Office
publicly state their personal views
World organizatio_n.
_
· ·various · times the .foUowing in-
of the R:egistrar.
.
·
about the proposal, and the. at-
Anthony For~ato formation . unless- requested in
.
Registrar's Office
tentive · audience who actively
President writing not _ to do· so by the
participated in the discussion
Political Science Club
student: student name, · address,
period that followed.
telephone number. date and place
On behalf of the Student .
Student privacy
of birth, major field of study, To the
Editor:
Government, . I would like to
participation
in
officially
The ·Senior Class Officers
thank George Fleming,· Michael
To Marist Students:
· recognized activities and sports, would like to take this op-
Senior class
Class who helped··•to coordinate,
• the eventmade this the best mixer.
· to date. ·.- . ".
· ·.,. · , .
cc •
.Again, ·thanks!
.. · . Ted Perrotte ·
·. ·" · Jennifer Grego
Trisha O'Donohue
. _Donna Mazzola
Class of
1983
Disgusting
headline
·
To the Editor:
Your page
9
article
last week
on .
Lowen, Martin Pizzarelli, Gai
The Family Educational Rights. weight _and height of members of portunity' to thank everyc;>ne who
Poe and· the 200 concerned . and Privacy Act of 1974 athletic'• teams, dates of at- 'helpedmaketheHalloweenMixer
students who took the time to . specifically provides that a school
tendance~ degrees and awards such a tremendous success. A
take a stand on this important
may safely provide ~hat is termed
received . and the most recent special thank you goes to Betty
issue. The student response was
.''directory . .information," such
previous edu.cationai institution · Yeaglin, for ·taking .an entire
.·. -.~e~tainly ·
_.
e~couragehig · an<;l
personal ·facts
as
·
name;· address, · attended by the student.
_ evening _of her. personal ctimc to
·
~timulating:
.·.:
·<
:. , ; -·.
.
1
·
., ;_ ·
:
teleP.hon,i: number,· etc .• i,to. thi~d :. -, ~tud,epis,m11st _no,tifr_the Office supervise the event; .
··
<•
the Commuter Ui1ion's "resuter" ·
program · was informative. The· .
headline was; to say the least,
disgusting. , "Sleep ·. with a ·
Communter''? Come on. l
thought you _
already did your
't
cohabitation issue. THE CIRCLE
. is
certainly
no
'NEW
YORK
- TIMES; but
does
it have
to
try
to·
'?,· ,:/
··.beaNATIONALENQUIRER? .•-·_
::!.:'.-"'-~
• · ·
·
· · Joan Gasparovic parties without fear of havmg
its
.
of
the Registrann:wntmg should
.
. J,,The ._.effort,
of _·
W.M.C.R.,
Student Body President ·• federal funds:. withdrawn._ The· . - they J?,Ot want' information made _.
_
Seiler'.s, the ;Activiti1:5. Office and
'.
·
. ·
· ~- Stev~nEastwood ·
81 North Road
.
'
Route
9
Poughl<eep!;ie,
N.¥!
can
473-2500:,
r--------------~------~
I
I
.
I
I
I
:
'
ONE FREE TOPPING
I
1
with

I
-I
I
Large. Pie Purchase
I
I
I
I
I
L
. .
.
I
~------------~-------~~

















































































































































































































































_
_
November 11~
1982-
_
THECIRCLE
~Pages--•
·•

·
ffilie 'ins
·
and
ollts
'Of
renting youi apartment
~~
·
.
by
Mat
_
~hew
Mcinerny
, ,
The lease should specify:·
-
-:
::a_
Are pets allowed?
-
_
_
_
in the carpet or furniture, cracks in walls,
-
·
.
-
-· .'.,. - --
· -
-
-
,
·
-
'
· .
- ...:.. The amount of rent and ·when it is
:- ~ho ~uts the grass and sh~vels the
broken windows, etc. Ask the landlord to
_:
a;!p~rJt~~ ~~;tt:~~~rt::i~
0
:::e~T:h~t
du:. The'
~~~ponsibilities
of the landlord
'
sidewalk?
-
,
.
sign the list and keep a copy in a safe place.
-
~spcc1ally
"
1f you
_
are a student. But once
and the tenant.
-
-
_.
_
_
-
·
-
Who installs storm
-
windows and/or
If
the apartment you choose is in a
. •

YO
.
U
haveJound o~e, there are many things
_
-,. Exactly what you are renting; use of
-
screens?
-
.
building that contains six or more housing
you should be aware of.
·
·
·

-
--
laund
-
ry, liackyard, storage space, etc.
_
-
-
-
_
Once yoti have examined the lease it
is
units, the landlord is required by state law
~
-
.
"There is
'
no rent control in this area, so
--
_ Who pays the bills for el~ctricity, gas,
important to know that a landlord ca1:mot
_
to put your security deposit in an interest-
if the
-
landlord wants to raise
·
the rent, he
heat and water?
.
: ·
_
-
-
.
.
refuse to rent to you because of race, color,
-
bearing account. This law also requires the
can, and lf you don't have a lease there
...:.. Penalties for late rent payment and, if religion, ag~ or other such reasons. He also
landlord to notify you, in writing, of the
·
isn't ·
·
much you can do," s~ia a
.so,
how much?
_
cannot refuse you because you have
name and address of the bank where your
spo~e,swoman for the local office of the
_ Does the
_
lease
_
protect you from a
-
-
children or are pregnant.
money is being held.
-
state attorn~n~en~ral.
:
-
~ change:
from
landlord paying utilities to
_
Before you agree to rent, c~refully
State law allows the landlord to keep an
;~The.
followm1pnformation on tenants' · tenant paying utilities?
-
(
examine the condition of all windows,
annual one percent of the interest on your
ng~ts wa~ provided by t~~t office and is
_
:- What kinds of alterations are you
storm windows,
wmng,
insulation,
deposit for his administrative and custodial
available ma booklet publtshed by the state
·_
allowed to make?
plumbing and basic structures such as
expenses. The balance of the interest may
iitled
"-~
'-Tenants'
_
Rights
for.
Better
-
-, What kinds of repairs are you
walls, floors and stairways. Make sure
be held in trust for you until the end of the
Housing
~
":,
·
' -
·
'
-_
_
required to make?
_
,
_
-
-
·
·
·
· ;
;
-
-
_
appliances, toilets,
:
sinks and the heating
lease, be applied to the rental of the leased
-
-
,
~~ere
:
?re·
.
~a~y
.
facts in
.
a lease
-
~hat
.
:-:- .Is there a clause allowing the l~~dlord
system a(e in go
.
od w·orking condition.
apartment or paid to you annuall.
_
-
.
.
shoul~ be ex~mmed close17because
_
it states
~o increase
,
ren,t if
,
t~es
,
pr h~~tif}~
;
~x·p~~ses
.
.

,
\\'.it_h
_
s?m~
_'
aparunerits;
_
a. security
.
State law does not specify the time' in
'.
·
what nghts you do or don
.
t have.
--
increase?
-
-
- .
, _
-
,
·
-
_
-
deposit may
_
be required.
If
one 1s needed,
which the landlord must return the security
NOW PLAYING
1st
·
RtfN
-
:: -,
_
_.
-
-
_
Spec:lal Qlscou11j
·_
M,flhe~
_
_
-
_
_ · ·
Thuis.
2
:
p.m.
Only
·
_
__
·
you should find
·
out how much it is.
deposit, but it should be returned in full
Usually, it is equal to one or two months
shortly after you move out,' unless the
rent.
,
_
·
landlord tells you that you are being held
If you pay a-security deposit, make sure
responsible for any damages besides
yoµ · get a signed receipt indicating how
normal wear and tear of the apartment.
If
.
much you paid and what the money is for.
you think the landlord has wrongfully
Also, before paying the deposit, you
_withheld
any part of the deposit, you can
h
·
take him to court. Many communities have
s ould
-
carefully inspect the apartment.
a small claims court where an individual
,
Make a list of
-
all the damaged or dirty
can take action inexpensively and without
items. Be
~pecific.
Note any cigarette burns the aid of an attorney.
. -~
·
·
by
Paul Murnane
_
and during the construction, traffic jams
_·'.
I
'.
-
·
The traffic on Route 9 was backed up for
bMeca~e com~on
11
pladce
~:m
Route_ 9 neadr
_
TIME SCHEDULE
·
a half mile. The gas station attendant at the
anst, espec1a
Y
urmg mormng. an
·
·
·
Sun Plaza gas station rocked in his swivel
evening peak traffic hours. The com-
,
'
'
:

__ :
'
'
.
'.
.
Feature
Shown
chair;
-
:
'
;
bination of Mari st students and faculty,
-
_
_
-
--~--
. ,
Eves~
7:25
.
&
9:35
"You should" have seen it a couple of
and the workers from Western Publishing
days ago," he said,
_
as a customer drove up.
made the situation quite a problem at
Moving towards the door, he remarked,
times.
·
"It
was backed up all the way to Handy
The project
involves
the
repaving
of
over
Harry's."
·
a mile of roadway, the reconstruction of
;
'
Matinees Saf
.
&
sun.
:
.3
p.m.
_
·
The cause of the traffic back up was the
the intersection of Washington Avenue and
-
:
__
,
~
·
·
·
.
:
·
,
,
,
,.
,:_:
-
construction being done to improve traffic
Route 9, new drainage for the road the
l!:HI;
·
-
-
~
flow on Route 9 between
·
washington
·
widening of the roadway, installato~s of
.
'".'·"'"
_
"
.
·
l_J
_
'
.
·
,
_-
·
,
·
:--
;
.;
,
-''.·
· --
·.
-
>·
,.
-
:
_
·
·:
·
- --: '._
:
·
·
-
-
.
-
1
·
982
w ·
_
_
alt
_
D
_
_
,·s
·_

8
·
y
·
.-,
a,~d-~ction
__ -_;.
'
_
-
_Ti
_-_
e_·_chn_ /colo
_
r
Avenue_ and The Mid Hudson Psychiatric
areas for bu
.
s stops, the relandscaping of
_
fie~ea~ed by
Bu_ena_ Wsta Dl~trlbutlon Co;;
-
Jn.c.
c
r,
-
.
-
-
h
f
.._
_ _ _ _ _ _
1111111
_
. . . . . .
. . , . , _ _ . . ,
_ _ _
- .
_ _
, _
_ _
, _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ .
Cen~er . .

·
-
-
·
-
-
.
t ose are<lsa fected by the work, and new
.. --------------------•------111!111 ... _
... _•
·
·•
•it
·
(ihe construction)
·
wiH improve
sidewalks;
·
·.
·
·
-
.
·
,
:·;-)"';;
,
._:u"',
: .
i ;, •
,.-
,
·
-
!

t
~--
tr~ffj(f\~w
,and
drainage on R~ute 9 near
·
_
: ••you've got one guy putting in curbs,
. ·;
.
''-
_
-
·
.
.
_
Maiist;''
sa.id Bob Lay;" an engineer for the ., another one painting·lines on the road, and
New
·
York State Department of Tran~
even another
.
guy doing the landscaping,•
_
sportation
.
.
_
.
' - .
-
_
said a representative of Herman's nursery,
·

Lay added
-
that the original cost of the
one of the subcontractors and the company
project was 1.25 million doHars. But Sal
in charge of the landscaping along the
Delfino,
·
a
representative of Cahill Con-
route of the job
.
struction, the main contractor
·
for- the
·
Within two weeks the construction on
project, said that the cost right now is in·
·
Route 9 should be co~pleted, and cars will
the vicinity of 1.7 inillion dollars, and may
_
be able to get along on Route 9 easier than
,._
·
go even higher. De~fino also added that the · before. Even the attendant at The Sun
.
__ -.
-
.
-
·
.
~-
·
__
-
_
__
_
_
__
9
_
_
,
.
.
_
_
.
_,
_
_
·.
-.
-.
,
-
'.
-
_
·
•'.
·' ·
-
project is about
9q
percent complete, and
Plaza gas station will be glad to see the·
.-
...
.
_
:
.
_
.
._
will be finished in about another week to
work finished,
·
or as he put it, "It'll be
.
- -·
-
week and a half.
_
_
good to see Route g·as a road and not a
_
.

,
...
-
-_
_
The constructio_n began last January,
parking lot."
:
..
,
·
.
.
'
__
·
.
_:
;
:
..
'
..
'
.
_
::
-
·
...
:
.
.
.
.
.
.
_.
-
_.
..
'
.
,.
:_
.
.-.
'
PABST
::
/
Bottles
·
-
,
·
5
6.99
case
,:
.
C
.
OORS
-.;
sa.18
--
iPk.
-
-- ·
· . -
·
An excellentlJai~clJttery.
- _
i
·
,,
Now
featuli'n·g
;~
c~):LQ~f[ANE~
!{
\he
'
~
ne~hn~
peroxig_e
'_·:
t1~aitp~l9r./con.~:f~ti91iJng
'
:
sysfenf_:wtt~
-
unlimited col<;>r choices and excellent sheen.
$2~0.0 Off'
·
_
_
:
··_--
-
With Marist
1.0.
··.-·
·'
Serving
Marist
-
Gol/ege
Since 1975
-
lfti~
CUTT~V.,,,
3 Liberty
St.;
Main Mall, Poughkeepsie
-
454-9239
.
By
Appointment Only
seniors talk
·
favorably
ab
-
ollt
all-fro
·
sh dorms
by_
Jane
M:
Scarchilli
nqrms,
·
because
·
I knew I could handle my
· liquor, I
-
-
realized
_
that • some students
·
_
The "guinea pigs" of the first all-
-
couldn't arid therefore the norm was
:
-
__
:
freshman dorms are now graduating and
necessary,"
Willie
Clare, a senior, said.
-
-
some
.
of this year's seniors feel more
Gina Murphy, a senior, said that the
·
unified because of being together since
.
alcohol
-
norm made
,
you realize the
their freshman year.
-
.
seriousness right off the'bat. "It's better to
On March 8, 1979, the board of trustees
·
get the restrictions and-have
-
them removed
:
decided to make Leo Hall an all-freshman
than to have no restriciions and then have
C
dorm. According to Gerry Kelly, assistarir
.,
them placed on you:" she said.
dean of students at that time, the policy
'._
Fred Gainer, mentor,
-
said that the
·
stemmed from the overwhelming academic
freshman dorms
.--
makes the students
-
problems of the freshman of
:
1978 and
become more involved overall with campus
before.
·
life. "There is now more representation of
_
Reaction of seniors seemed favorable
the students in the freshman class in the
toward the all-freshman dorms.
"It
·
was
~
clubs and organizations than ever before,"
good experience because you were thrown
he said.
-
together with people that were in the same
According to Lynch, the fr_eshman dorm
situation as you were," said
,
Maureen
policy was
implemented
to bring up the
Tynan, a senior. "Closer friendships and
grades of freshman by removing the in-
mor~ class unity developed," she added.
fluence of the upperclassmen.
"The
Bob Aufiero, a
-
senior, agreed w{th
statistics prove that it has improved
Tynan. "Everyone was in the same boat
·
freshman grades tremendously," Lynch
and therefore the classes are really close
said.
and united," he said.
-
· Murphy said that
it
was good not to have
Bob Lynch, freshman mentor, said that
upperclassmen on your floor. "You didn't
the freshman benefit by being in the same
have to falsify your feelings because·you
dorm because they can sh~re their feelings
had a senior next door," she said.
of hope, anxiety, joy and sorrow.
Clare also felt that it was more relaxed in
·
"Students have enjoyed the experience
the freshman dorms. "I wasn't under the
overall," he said.
peer pressure to go out during the week,"
The freshman dorms are also restricted
he said.
with different alcohol rules. Alcohol is
Lynch and Gainer both agreed that the
forbidden from Sunday at 6 p.m. until
freshman dorm policy has been a
success.
Friday afternoon.
"It has made quite a impact on the whole
"Although I disliked some of the alcohol
community," Lynch said.
'1
i
;

























































































,
_ . . _Page·,·TH':_CIRCLE_,··Nore~b•r11,:198~ .-
.
_ _
....... _., .. _,
__ ·_
, .. ,,, . .-_
.
____ ,
.. , ...
,._,
.
. -~-- .- ... ,:.,;~:.:::-.·
·-:-::<·r-..:,:-:f'-.--',c!, .. .,.,:.~,,--:-:"··:
·Stlldent:t~kes.";'t:cfth.~
:Se~if
P:r-.se:tnesJ¢t:~{:/.~~~~if
. by
Br_hi~ Kelly
.
.
.
<'H~ really .want~d- to
se~
:the. w~rld;tt .f~r/' .- said Pecorar~. ·• .. B~t he
i~~;·
he' is
it
was m~kiiig hi~ tireci~nd ~,etirio,4-s~ -~<?,'he'.::..:-
.
.
. .
. .. ·• ,:.,
. ·•· said Su_san Pecorara,:K.issei's,girlfriend and '. having the iiine of his life.~• • . -
i;, : ':'.'*
'.;c,.
stop~d, "· sh_e
~
1
~~ \·~ /.' {'.,/\/'.;(:
:r<?:f'•;:;,.: .. ··
. · Ted Kissel,
a,
junior at Marist; has :_ a senior.at .Marist. "For him 'it's a dream ,··_· · According_tcfi=»ec~rara, Kissel is-,takiri.g ·•-~ :•'.'I .~eel: so ~eatl:tly:~~th
-
~11?':Yl~dg~:·••'I>t ;'.
transferred ·schools for this semester. Now· com!! tru~."
. ' ., , .
.
...
· four C~>Urses
(12
credus). They are: ~oder~ . haven. t.,;!!OPPOO.- ·-~"~~·~r~mg:
.f
PL~:5>1'!~ : ; .
he's using the. world as his campus. _
·..
: ,
Kissel departed . from Seattle, , on ·,, Cultural•.· Anthropology,. Jntr9d~~U<;>n. _to ·.: n_io.ment, . ~~id .J(is~~l
}r-:
~-l~tt~f;
t~ -~1-~ : ·
Kissel is one of _430
·
students par- .'-Tuesday, Sept.' 14·and-will be visiting a :, Marketing; . Hu~~n ·. R~s.our_ces, s1st~.r~.••_1t'~b~e.n_t~~pfic;~of~r.? ...
:.,:;r'.'.:-'/'./F1 :•·
ticipating in ~he Semester at Sea program,
·
total of eleven countries includi
11
g
.Japan,.-.. Management a_nd America: .. 9ne. ~ountry .,··
·
•-Kiss~). sa1~ :Jh~:•Jirst. ;n,1ght
,
·he::_sp~nt ::1,n
-
····,
which· is acaderl)icaHy s()onsore9~ by the . India, .. Israel,

Egypt • and Greece. ·His · Among Many_,,:.a c9l'~\ cou~se that almost.· Ho~g Kong_ he enJOYfd
a,
~opderful
Ip~
at
._
University_ of. Pittsb1:1rgh and administe~ed · ... jour!'ey will _·.end ·. in . Port Everglades, • , _
evffYOne !akes, Peco~ar_a said.. . . ; . ; ··.· ... /. a~: mn, . bu,t J_at_~r,id1_Sf~v~re_d that
.
, he. ·hap
. _
_
through a cooperauv~ arrangement . wit~ .. Flonda on December 23. ·. · .
.
.
.
He satd _he was s~1_ck- at_ f1r~t, V:hl!=h ,is _· .. eaten dog -meat.~
c
For_tµnatelY.Jhercrwas a
>
the Institute for Shipboard Education: .
·
"He's been· doing ·a lot of studying so\ · natural. He took medicine for a while, but
McDonald's there.also/' hesa1d:.,,.>: ,
.
•:•\::; : ...
' •

· :

.
·.
. , i · ,
.•
i:Accordi11g:Jo- Kiss.el: each, c~µ!ltry has:
16. ·
uear· o'
l,
'",J
w1·ns·.
lead:
ro· · 1e. ·1··n .
~~o
As;nel/ '· ,'
--,:~~f~~!~tt~u:~~:\:::i!~~~:\h~1~~e~it ..
. --.,.
~
u
: .
'I .
u .
U,

.
~,
'
.
had '' to
,
receive:' injectioris ; for.-· different .
..
'
·
·
: .
·
· · ,.·._ ·
·
' · ·
diseases before etite'ring some.countries.;,.-'':,
_by
Mike
Harlneu
"I'm treated a little differ~~tly by other
O'Connor. "He seems to be handling .. ,"In some plac.e~ lle's,gotten a chance to
. Paul Raynis is a l6°year-old- who has
won the lead part· in his school's fall play
"Godspell." And what is so important
apout a kid winning the lead in the fall play
at his high school? Nothing. But Raynis
isn't ~n high school, he is attending Maris1
College. . ,.
·
: , · ' 1
Sometimes l .think I'm a little young to
be i_n college; but I'm doing well," said
Raynis .. "And lnever argue with success." .
Raynis is one ·of four 16-year-olds at
Marist, according to Wendy Whiteley, the
Marist Operations Manager. Raynis said~
. his age placed
him
at a disadvantage with
other college students, but he feels he can
handle the situation.
.
"I'm always _competing with people two
: or more years.older than me," said Raynis.
"It's a handicap in sports and more of a
challenge in academics."
He said his age has affected his social life
as well.
students because half of them say,they have
college and living away very welL He se~ms •. st~Y <in .. ;, people's · -hotisesj'.:_ofernight;!t,
little brothers.and si~ter~. that are my. age
to be adjust,ing . better than most fresh- · Pecorar~ said. Kissel told her·tfiat:people'\ ·
and they can't pictµte· theil,'; little br~th~rs · men."
.
·. .
are amazed at how free Americans are.
·
..
>:'.:
and sisters going.to:college/'_s~i~ Raynis, _:; - . Rayp~s;~qei;A<?t
1
thjnk-!~~~~o~~~g up
.
. . ~'.While wew~re _in Hong ~qi'lg{:mci
:
~ :_
, an on-campus resident.
.
: . ; · _
,. ·: .~-. quickly has hurt.him. :' . -
. . .. ..
• · : Cllinese English studeht __ at _the Sun ,yat~Sen
Most of his fellow freshmen have trouble
; .. !'As a matter of fact,
J
think it was kino
:
Uriiversity. ·. He
i
showed
\'.me
:.:around' th'f.
· believing how young he is,· according· to• of beneficial in a Wtty'.becauseI still d6ri't .· campu~
:and .
~.e i~xchanged: questi9ns'··~nd / ..
Raynis and some of his friends. .
.· ..
.
· ·. ·,· think
I
missed any part of.maturing,'' said .. answers,
on
whahit's
like to
JiveJniChina':
"He doesn't seem 16," said freshman
Raynis.
0
l'm glad that lam in this position and theJ.Jnited States; He .ex},lahied
:10-rrie '.
Nancy Champlin. "He seems to have his . at this age·andatthis point-in time."''.

·iha(.only ..
·five·.·:~rcent
·of.
the:·people in~
head on straight, and that is rare even
for · .
Raynis is in college at suc
,
h a young age .China·.~re .~bl~· to ~tte_g~:a:_µ1_1iv~rsity· •.
H~ ·,
· an 18-year-old. ·.
-
.
· .·
.
..
,
, because he started elementary-school early said that- he hates Cominunism
·
and thinks · ..
. "He acts so much more mature for his ... and skipped third
·
grade. He .does have ifis doing China.:moi:e,harrrijh~n
goo4/\)
age compared to other ·16-year-olds," said
mixed feelings about being academica_lly ,Kisselsaid. ·&<lie.was so·._surprised
.
vvhei(I;
Denise Fontaria, a college friend of Raynis. · two years ahead of his age group. • ••·
·
. · told him
I could have any job
I
wanted and .
"He appears to be confident and secure.''. "
_
''J.havc;Jhouglit·.a lot _about what would :::mo,ye'iuiywfiere ·!"wanted.: Lthh:ilctit'made
>
Ian O'Connor, Raynis' roommate, was; . :have:.happened
if
I'
would
.
ltave taken life "··hinisad:'' ··: '~· .,,:,., :-'".~: .'·
f,_': :
y:::, ,:
ct

. •
living with him :f~r two weeks befo~e·h_e; slower," said·Raynis. "Could
I have gone . · _According toKi~sel the_94d~(pa:rt;ofhi_s
)>
found out Rayms' age. O'.Connor said he; : to an Ivy League school? But no,w that I'm · tnp, so
·far
was
an
event: ofi
:
thifship··ca11ed
,:a
has found few differences between living_ :'hereat Marist, it issenseles_s t<> thi.nkabout Neptune Day, ;which is run· by the., crew
with-Raynis_and
a.n
l8~year-old .. · :,, , ._ ':. ,: it. l have 'to say_\ though;·-'(I~vet: b'een'. 'members:';[>uring the
:
·eveiil'any orie who
· "It
doesn't make any difference that
regretting moving up 'a grade ever• since . has. not crossed the equator before .. niust
Paul is 16 because he· acts matu~e,'.' said
.
high ~ch~?•• when grades· really. _started pay,: homage, to:
King
Neptune, -legendary
counting.
' ...... · __ .•...
, .. · ·
.i ::
ruler of the:, scas,.,by · going· through.
an
Take
a
professor out, toJun
_
cli. at
the
Ptib·. ·.
Rayn·i~
s~id:h~
isn~t afritid
:
of•:r~spd~:·• ini,t.iation~·--<:/ :: :·::.- ....
·-<\ . . ..
-*
·
. .
..
.
. .
-
. . . . •
.
:·. sibility and he is willing to push himself to
. ,The -ere\\' go
_
t us ; 1;1P .: _at ,6.30 ;m~
by Ve
·
Sh
·
.
: ; . ·..
·.
·
.· · ·
·
·
, ;
the limit.
_
·
·
, .
proceede~·t,o cover, us .. wup dead fish an?
:
·
romca
ea
together I~ an mfor.mal atmo_sph,ere to, talk,• :
" . . .
' .
. - . .
. . Hershey'.s syrup. Thenwc had to sa-- hello ,· ..
, While.mos.t of the Marist,communityis about th. mgs other· t.han dasses, · ... and. ·
1 feel, all
10
all, that I am takmg_ on a 't a
'
dead fi h'.· . d k' · ···t "h
..
·,''•ct·-' •.
.YI h. d •

,
,
,
.
,
g'ra' des ·,, says Dawn Joyo
.. liver se.nior. and,
lot and
I do fee. I the pr.essure, ,, said
R.
aynis; . -f~ h.' .h. . 'dlS . ·al.r_t·h·· ISbS,I k'_""····e·.· _,s.a1.
·< . ,
a -~
-
.•.
making plans
for.
the ~eekend tomorro_w _
. ,
. _ .·
.
. . , . ._ .. • .
, "But I don't feel I'm taking-
t
O
ch . 1s s ove up, e. ac
91 my pants and · .
. , a(ternoo!1, an,u_nusual kmd of "class'' will President of. SAC'.:'
·· .
. ::,
/,:<·' ·;
I'in
oin
to.ex
·erienceiev on
'?
.
m~. ·:. anotlt~i: o~e:g<>'VP:~Y,,P,ant~: lalso had last
Sllll be m session for ~ome faculty and- .·· Students. may bnng .a prof~sor,~~t~ff.· · that
f;m
~apablepof
:6 ., ·
:e?ii.
blt
~f
hfe•.-we,ek's leftovei:nmeared_ir(myhairand
oh
. students. .
.
. .
· · m~mber ~r me~tor. to the luncheop,-;,\Vhlch :' _
and the responsibility : i ; : e e:;a:d e:;;·,
~f
f~ce. Itw~~jisgus.t!ng/!/ _; ;,/) ;{ -
·
••·
f •.
·

.
"s
Fdromt_2.A3~ tdo.4:3Q _pC.m. •~ttthc:,_Pu_bll• !hbe "wb
.. 1ll __ co!}ds_1st ~?~•s~ofict,s'!td~dues!fse~rt~"tsTal1·ca~est,,' . gro)V/t·:,.~ ..
Ft<i
':'.~:

'.-,f
'~'.i:i::'.i,.~cl-'\/:::\\•,. ·;
,.Th~.,av_~~,g~
.
... :~Bs~_;pf·.t!J.~;< P!,e>gra.~:}s
r:; .
.
·
r
_ tu el}_
~aem1c
~mmi .. ee w1.
e
e
7
r,so a,tea,co,ee,a~.
e_.
":-
''lt's·no.funj,eing:cons1dered.a_li~t.l~,~~.9QP
_
p~r~~~QH,:
~
-~h!c!t.::
.
c.q:y5r_~;tu1t,i~~~'.
__
·5
1?~psonn¥;.
1
t~,
~~cp~1 a~
11
~~!
l,kf ~.
~t~f.
-
.
prices r~nge f~qm $!_~q ~
5,_-~~~
0rd'.i:ig to t~e,: brother, but maybe the two-year head start. p~s.sage_ ··-fair,· :;ac
_
a~enu~ ·_
:
11_1-countfY ',
·
·
t~,Hµni;~; , .:,;'
.3: :~::- :·-::
~
-;:
O>
"'-£''· -·, ,..,,
·.·•t'Stl.l~ent,SJ.i;esi(\sn..t, >SJa!US,",a~d,: Jr:e . st1
Jl=
will make
a
'successful career •. that, much :; programs, visa fees,, h~Ith. insuran~e .
.
af!.d .' ·
,
,;:;
;
T~e •
.1~.~a,1sto g~J.,~tttd,~_n}S~~nd_f~cphy;;,.ara,tlable today.in Champagnat,:r.~rr 417, '
,
closer at hand,'' saia Raynis. ,......
. . :.s~1..1.dent f€:es:• . ·:,:,-.· :·,_-. :.•·
, -:-'::
\:-~.;. .:.~:.._-_ •• :·: : '
~::·:• ' : ,1
'.·. ," ·


,
:>. :
~•
-,·. • _.: · -~::. •.: '·:
:,
·}'·::-;;;t
. :· ·.
_t'. ·":-:~.·•:
· ':;'..; ·,•.::-:
;~_, ~-:, • ;....: _:,
'. ...;:,-,.~~.:,~• · -
-
-


, : ...
.. :~: ··"', ' -
•.-::
;:~
~...-:~-:~!-,•
,
:•.:~~
:~:'t

· .. ;•.
-:r · •'
•··cM.>>
·
····
'?-, . .. .. \.·:
.,
...
~rT-he Ultirna(e·Nigli/Club''.'_o'
·
''. ...
.
.···
• ;
' EVERY'WEDNESDAY &-'fiilJRsDAY
NIGHTS
ARE'PARTY
.NIGIITS
,.• . , ,
~~e4i)~lssii ,:'
Up
to
$100.00-rnven
i~~Y,~;c0.:rig~f_
•>_c-\)~?'1tt
... · ON
Friclay,'NOV:.::·12· - St~f.{!_re.
·
· ·
·.:~~/i~~~->< . .
.
'
'
•'
-~-'
;
. . •'
Saturd~y Nov. 13~'siturday Night SPe~i~I performing
"38
si,ecial, LynyrdSkyiiyrd
pills
other,greatRock
&.Rriu.
.
,
,
~
_,
-·. .
.
. .
.
.,
Route9
This ~oue9.n en~itles you, to -·a
.
FREE DRINK
w/Adniission
l Per Person
,.
..
Hyde Park Plaza
·. 229-9413
Hyde
Park·
-














































































\?\~~~ ·
~'O~~l~
of Resid~nt
StuderitS •.·
·
?_:·_,ar~
r,q-ui~!_dito.~av~.a .Gues·t Pass
.
in
.• :the.ir_J)Os,essie>'n while
01"1
campus:
No_vember
11,
1982 ·
THE CIRCLE·
Page
1--•
1J}o"elll.h'efo,
saves man
O!ftefJeap from bridge·
by
Bernadett~
Gr~y ·
O'Boyle said he was out late, with these
; Poughkeepsie resident Marty O'Boyle
friends the night prior to the incident and,
called home to New Castle, Del., last week
therefore, slept late that Saturday morning.
with an exciting tale to tell his mother.·
When he awoke, he decided to go running.
His story was certainly worth calling
"I always run down .near the park and
I
home about.
.
. .
heard some commotion on the bridge but I
;
:
;"
'
'.
.
.•:.
':
.
'
.
'
.
.
~
'
. .
. .
"'-; 'i
.\~.~~~'sf
p~sie;::~~y be
0
0btai ned ·f;~m t-he' Director '
,i/;;\i;~r- _;
tiousl ng / (Housl ng · ·Office, between
9:00 ·
-
When a Dutchess County resident
really did not know what was going on," '
jumped off the Mid-Hudson Bridge on
O'Boyle said. "This guy came running up
Saturday, Oct. 30, in an apparent suicide
from the shore and said, 'You gotta save
·· ,
attempt, O'Boyle; 24, dove into the cold,
this guy, he fell off the bridge."
~
:. polluted Hudson River and pulled the·semi-
. Since he has a lot of swimming ex-
:•r>f\'..~:~:.·4.=Q9'..p.rn.~i
Moh;•fri.)
·
·
.. \;/•::;\l~::·_p_\_:_~:·-:: :.
\-_;/.--,;~-::··~•~-·t<•',. _··~·. . .. .",.
-.
/Jj?}·:Jrfl~b~:,c~se\ol.un
-
announ-ced-guestsarriyipg_,~ft~~'.•:·.
:.t/\•!io~~~ng;(?ff.1ce h_~ur_s, the Gu_est Passes·
may'be · ·
:\//~}.~~p~,~i-~Y:~~~-
F\es1d_ence Director on duty.
·•-. ·
_.
~
ih~f~:
i~:i.-.,~~.1i--o(~wo civernlght gu~st~ ~er ~esi-
/ :, de,nton a given night.
-
-·-: -~~:~:.-:::-,~.: /
~
·:.-~~~;.:•:··•~---;,:.-/=•:_·_.~;- ·. '~ ,'..;_ ;:,,
.
:·,_·.-...:~: _...:
·: .. ,.·The,.
Gue$t--,-Pass.
will._--ena~le~.:
you-,
i
.
;:'.:-G'.,,1,st
.:To:, .
.
. "' -:· .- -.

....
l
., ·

' ' : ~-'·,; ;
/~:~j&y;lh~ir-~isl~(a~· -~
le,glti ~ate~g-~est ,a(rv1'.a~is.t '' '
'
I
~
~_.J,:_•_~_y_:.
_
;.,·:_,,r_·.·_•~--
.
·_._:_;_;:\'.
_j::;F:~?--~-~>~~·lco.m~-~
(as:!;._
r~spo:ri~-ib~e'
gue:~t·
·,Jf-:
ihe
,
.
·.
"'1~r~$t,_C9ll~g~ 99111mtmity~ : -
··
· · - ... , ·
·~;·; :•, .,: ;,;•·,·, .. ,~ _. -.;-;'·' .. ;~-
1 •'
•·:··i;:,,:,;;"..:.'::
,
·:•_,l:•••,
1
::~••
(i':
!,;•
, .. ;:,;;:!}_e•,:/
.
'.,'f"<••'-.~'.,\/f,;~·<
-."t'',,,; ••', -·.,.·
.,\·
''1,:
,,•i-•,•·
'
.
, .. -·,
·-i:·'
.-.
_
•.---MUNCH BUNBH-x_ .. -·.:' __ · .. ~---
·. '._;iS::, -
-
,
--c ':•
'
-
/_/·\.;·_c'.<
<'.:
eomm·utersw&
Residl!llts· .··
·•····, ·;Sav~,10~·
.
· ·
'
Ch.:~k
out
coupc,n
. -~ .:booklet~
,GOOd i11-> -
.
.
,
-
,·.
.
--·.
.
'
. · ' .
.
COff"
ShOp,
Deli ·
.
.
..
. and Dining Hall
Purchase of
booklets
may
be
lllade
in
Food Service Off ice
·
conscious stranger to safety. _
perience and took lifesaving as a teenager,
. "I called home arid said, 'Mom you are O'Boyle decided to attempt it.
· 'not going to believe what happened,• " said
"But I had to wait and catch my breath
O'.Boyle. "I-told· her the whole story and · because I was pretty tired from running,
· said; 'Are you surprised?' "
.
"he said. ·
·· Much ·to his shock ·and,.dismay, Mrs.
O'Boyle reached the drowning man but
O'Boyle was not overly excited. She an-
was too weak to pull the man to shore
· swered, "I'm not surprised at anything that alone. He called back for help and 17-year-
happens to you, Marty."
old Jim Beckfermit of Charles Street came
O'Boyle, who rents . a rqom at 92
to assist. ".We grabbed each arm and
Academy St., ·1eft his hometown in July to
started swimming. We towed him to the
take a position at IBM. He said he intends · Main St. dock,'.' O'Boyle said.
to permanently settle in_ Poughkeepsie but
Both O'Boyle and Beckfermit were taken
still misses home. .-
to Vassar Brothers Hospital. "I was really
He enjoys talking about his heroic just cold and tired, O'Boyle said.
episode but does not have too many friends
But when he went to work on Monday,
in
,Poughkeepsie to tell. _Besides his Ian-
some of his fellow employees told him that
dlord, Mark, O'Boyle has made only a few
the chemicals in the Hudson River would
friends other workers at
IBM.
"I guess you
cause permanent damage. "They said to
can say it is narrow. They are the only
me, 'You are gonna lose your skin from the
people here I met," he sai_d.
ch~micals,' '' said O'Boyle with a smile.
· Cof!lm~ Arts Council to hold career day
Marist students will have · a chance to
learn about careers in communication this
Saturday, when the Communication Arts
Advisory Council holds a career day from
the Hudson
Valley
to conduct five panels
based on different areas of com-
:munication.
·
1 :30 p.
Iil.
to 3 :30 p. m. in the Campus ·
All students are urged to attend the panel
Center. ·

.
· ·
·
discussions beginning at I :30. Each panel
Robert Norman, director of the in-
will be conducted twice, from 1 :30 to 2:10
ternship program at Marist, has invited and from 2:30 to 3:30. This will give eac.
various people in the media from the student the opportunity to attend two of
metropolitan-area, upstate New York and the five seminars.
























































'.
·.:.,
I.
''
·Forum
;
":
~:~
,.,~_AIUST
'co~L~E
-,oo~TORE ·.
:. '·._·-' CAMPUS.CENTER: ·.
,Open.;Motiday
thru-Friday ·- :. '::: -·
World >ltunger r~fl~_qti<J.1:lf:: ..
bv
Milton Teich~an

6. I'm willing
to
take"the risk of sayi!ig I
·
·
make a difference. I want to encourage
' . : 10:a;m;.5·
p.m~ ·,' .:
~
:· .
.
- .
,
.
,
.. · - f.
.
1.
To be human means to be responsible
for ending hunger: Hunger has everything
to do with who
I am.
2. I don't want to think of responsibility
as burden or.as guilt...:.. but as the source of
the quality of life on this planet.
3. My desire is to get in touch with that
others to take that risk.
· ·
7.
l
am part ·of the solution to world
hung~r. So is my neighbor. ·
.
. .
If.
The gift I want to give my children is -
my own contribution to a world in which; -
no one dies because he .hasn't· enough .to
eat.
part ,of .me which relates to' world
. Come
to
the one-day course on world
humanity. I. experience Satisfaction being hunger, "A Briefing on World Hunger/'
an American, but. I _want to be a citizen of which
will -
take place · on Saturday, ..
the p)a'net too.
· · November· 20, Champagnat
248~·•
0
Make
. 4. In a real sense: there's nobody out . your reservation · by · contactng · Dr. _
there but me. Everybody
.
is me. ·
.Teichman at exterision 290 ,or Joy Kudlo_at ·
5. Despite all voices which. say that extension 400. There is
·no
fee for this
ordinary individuals. cannot make a dif-
course.
.
.

· '..· · "· · ; : · · --
_ • ··
feFence, l say that ordinary individuals.
Dr.
Teichman
iia
1
P,i:ofess~r
of
Engiish
can.

at Marist.
..
•··
· ·
·
Com.munication problems
.
:
hinder
SAC·
eff ortS · ·· · ·
By Andrea Holland
students.''.
..
The Marist College Student Academic
Oliver said that the S.A.C. is also havin°g
Committee is experiencing communication
problems recruiting student repre~eriath'es.
problems with faculty and students ac-
The majority of t~e committee coilsis~s. of _
cording to Dawn-Joy Oliver, committee . seniors.and many of theni have internships
president.
. : . -
.
.
. · or jobs off campus. Freshman .cannot be
The S.A.C.
's
biggest problem is the lack
on_ the committee, she said because they
of communication between · the faculty
need the-first yeano lea·rn how the school
divisonal heads and .'student represen-
runs academically., · '
· · .. :
·
tatives, which has cause·d poor attendance
"Having mostly seniors causes conflicts
at meetings by .student representatives, said
with meeting times duririg the day because
· Oliver. Committee members are to serve as
ol other committments." she said.
a liaison between students and faculty.
According to Oliver; the
.
S.A.C .. has
"The student represeniatives are
never really sponsored an' event as fa(-as
· complaining that the faculty .. is not telling
the ~arist Comm~nity is c;oncerqed until ·
them when meetings are," she said. .
last year with the "Take
a
Prof toLum:h; ''
. A Jetter expressing the need for. _better
which is also planned this year 'for Nov. 12.
communication was sent
to
the divisional . A campus newsletter is also being planned ·
heads last week. Oliver said that. the letter
to explain what goes.on at the meetings and
contained the names fo the. student
any new academic pr<lgrams of policies she
committee members and ca\lep on.faculty
said . . · _··.-.
· ·
._ to announce all meetings and sencfminutes · .. Oliver said° that positiYe 'feedbackifrorri·,
\ of.each-to _the· S.A.C .. office. "There are students and' faculty wiH
help ..
the. coma ,
' alway's' difficU!ties with the meetings,".
slie
mfrtee set things in.motion.·«Witfrthe/ight ".
said. "Faculty change·the· dates and· times• ·. input we• can ,gef organized
,
and:;function
of the !llt;etings without notify_ing -. the properlY:." she said.
· ·
· ··,-· · •·
I
'
..
,
..
I"
••
-
'
·_-
.
.. CAMPUS.CASUAL
WEAR''
.
_BYARTEX.
~; :.>·:~_ -•.
;_:. _-:_ ; __ :·~,; -~-=-.-~:-._r:
. . .
_,,.
··
..
--·
·.
WE'RE.MORE
TRANA
B'ooKS·TORE
·•··PER"l"1N·ENt••fl-l.ANKSGIVl'NG·:>··
•;_ REcESS-'RESiDENl"
1-1~t1., · · ·· ·
.. . . INFORMATION· ...
-The••·-Residerc~
.
'H~9~\~if
1
.
•-- ·
.close
·
at·11:00
~p.tn.:·on_-.
·
_
Wed-., November24{,)_982. __
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
.
.
.
~
-'."The lastme~I will be
:
lun·ch
on Wednesday.
··.
.:
·:
·...
.
.
·.
.
. .
-•,
··•--
.
~i:reaiilt;o~~~~i~~l~Ji~ay,.
-N,overribeh:
2a~?1sa2.
·
,
. .
,,_:· _; ·"' ,
·
.. ,
.
. ,:•· ..
-
,:·.:.-::c-:c'"·
.
. ' '
,_-

-:~;·:':·•.The
firsl~meal
·served
wlll
be
'11\~ ')
'<~~
'
.
dinner on/Sur1day~ '_
~-~·~.:",
,
•: .. ,. ,•·.-- F~i~_ute'·on~ the ·paSt_?:!-,f~~}?-~~ts.
,
· ">·::
,;;.J'~~t~""Jgirpeet with the-exp·ecta't1.ons-
·
/~t'·· ..
·;;B~~;'._-:ipl-,h-is.:clo~i_ng
wi)I
'res.t~ilt i"n~
ci{
_ f i n_e, low priority ho.using- for~i
..
_Spring_,,
:_OfJ?,,Q~
n
.. · ·,; ~:.
So please, Jake a frie:nd home
. ·and 't:1-a·ve
a
"safe and happy.
Turkey Day.
NO
ONE WILL
BE _,ERMITTED TO
STAY
'IN R_ESID~NCE HALLS
.
OVER
THIS RECEs·s.
-

































































































































































I
,.
..
,
.:
.
:
·
..
.
.
ROOM RECONFIRMATION
_
.
:
-
'.
·
..
_~-
~ SPR1Na
:,-
19s2
··
~
-
-
·
-
-
PERTl~ENT
1N
FORMATION·
'
.
'
.
,
.
-.
-::-
·
Al
r
'i
'
stlldents
reconfirm
:
their
~
w.-ith
/:
/-
a
>
s
·
1s.oo
~~P.osit.
-_
:
_ _
t
.
..,-
.
:
·:·
'--;
'(,.
~-
.
.
..
.
;::,:-
_
~-~
:
::·

,
~
,
~
? .
··
·
:

.
.
a
·
re
:
r~quired
·
·
to
·
College
·
t-iousing
-
non-re.tu nda
_
ble

.
:; .
...
;,_
-~
----
-
-.
-

::.
:
t;
·
.-
'.:.
·'..
.
..
~
-:
:

.'"':
¥
:
.>)I)le.\
·
_
,tJ~posi
.
t and a
_
completed
Hod
_
s
_
iQQ
:/
;'·
·
Gard are due
.
in
·
the
Busi hes~
.
Of.fice prior to
.
December
1~
198!t,
:' :
:
~
-
.
·.
.
.
-
·
.
.,
.--
..

-
.
If
_
..
_
yoii
will not. require
·
Cq
-
lJege
·
Housing
for
·
the _ Spring
,;
198
_
3

-
Semester, fill
out
the Ro
:
om Recon-
--
firmation
:
.
·
Card -
-
accordingly
.
·.-
and
return it to the
·
Housing
-
Office.
:
~
After December 1,
1982 all
uncon-
· firrried
·
rooms will be considered
·
va-
·
cant
:
o
/
-.
I***********
.
*·,
_
.
I
·
By
Eileen
Hayes
Defense Caspar Weinberger can.save it_-
Washington's bewilderment about El
·
Tlhe ballots were cast, and the message
Salvador came into the open two weeks ago
that the White House received was that the
when the United States Ambassador,
American people want a change, but they
Deane R. Hinton, stunned a group of
want to see President Reagan succeed.
Salvadoran businessmen by saying that the
The Republicans lost 26 s
·
eats in the
rightjst "gorillas" were as much a problem
.
House
.
of Representatives, while the Senate
to the nation
'
s stability as leftist guerrillas
.
remained the same with
the
Republican
With this
-
statement, Hinton threatened an
end to U.S. military aid unless the rightist
majority of 54 to 46 seats.
"mafia" stopped its murderous activities.
.
President Reagan may now find it a little
more difficult getting his budget
,
and
This is a drastic turn in United States
defense spending plans through.Congress.
policy. $31 l million in military and
The
...
Democratic
:
gain in the House may
.
economic aid has been sent in efforts to
hinder Reagan in
·
reassmbling the con-
th wart a lef
t
ist takeover. Now, the United
servative
·
coalition
..
with which he
States finds itself doing everything to
dominated Capit&i Hiifroi- mostof his first
prevent a rightist takeover.
two years in office.
Hinton's speech reflected the angry
feelings that resulted when two Salvadoran
The Democrats were victorious, but the
.
judges ruled that
_
there was "insufficient
win was no landslide. Many people still
·
evidence;;
10
send a well-connected officer
·
want the President to
.
succeed in his
to trial in the killings of two American land
policies, but they also want him and
reform experts and a Salvadoran official.
Congress to listen and admit that they are
not always right
.
Also the speech reflected the feeling that
Air Force officiah
.
are working
the revolt and repression have trapped
vigorously to get the MX missle project in
American diplomacy .
action
;
In hopes to make the plans more
Americans put all their support behind
acceptable to Congress, they announced
Christian Democratic President, Jose
-
two modifications in the "dense Pack"
Napoleon Duarte,
-
who won the election
basing system.
last March
.
But to the distress of the
.
The changes ~ould make the 100 closely
Americans, the extreme right national
.
spaced missles nearly impenetrable
by
a
Republican Allian
c
e and other rightist
Soviet attack. The silos for the missles
parties coalesced, and won conrol of the
would be stregthened to withstand air-
Assembly
.
bursts creating pressures up to 10,000
pounds
·
per square inch
.
Also in the new
Now that Americaans have threaatened
plans, they would be lined up as a slender
to cutoff $61.3 million in military
rectangle one mile wide and 14 miles long.
assistance the fear is that the leftists would
The old plans had the silos in a 14
-
square-
step up their guerrilla offense and the
mile triangle-like trapezoid. The Pentagon
forces of moderation would decline. The
says that changing
_
the shape of the field
significant effect of this would be that the
would force an attacker to expend 10
rightists under Alliance leader, Roberto
metagons a minute and exhaust his
d' Aubuisson, would feel unrestrained in
resources.
their violent activities.
Even
·
with these new plans, military
The right, and not the left, had raised the
·
.
officials
·
acknowledged that the future of
ante in El Salvador, which leaves the
.
·
the MX
.
system remains in trouble, and
American Administration wondering about
possibly"
·
only the President or Secretary of
:.
the extent of its involvement.
·
·
· ·
.
-o
.
I
_
:
.
Tii~sday
,
i
·
*
._
Ladies Night
Thursday N lght
_
************
*
.
*
#
Wednesday
#
*
Nickel Night
.
*
*
*
*
Every Other
*
f
Ladies Drink
*
·
*
·
.
FREE

.
-
*
*
"
'
..
*

*
******-******
COLLEGE NIGHT
-
-
Free Admisslo.n
·
with Coll~ge ID.
-
·
FREE DRINKS 9-10:30
#
Drink
I
.
*
5c
All Night
*
*
*
·************·
Friday and SaturdayFree Admission before 10 p.m. with Valid College
I.D.
****************************************
-
Dress Code
33 Academy Street
·
f
,
Sunday Night Party Night--:- Free Drinks for All
.#
t
·
8 ·10
p.~.
.
·
!
****************************************
Free Parking
Poughkeepsie
Proper I.D.
471-1133

..






































































































f
'
._
.
·
.
, .
.
,
.
:·.
·
.
.
Page
10~ THE
CIRCLE-
.-
November
11, 1982
.
:_


I
Speaker ..
·
focuses
.
on
·
.Third
.World .
~
,
• •
~

. .
·
..
\
·.:
.
'
·

·
.
.
:
·
.
-
...
.
-
'

'
·.
.'
.
~
' '

,
t

.
.
.
..
.
.. ..
by
Richelle Thomas
.
countries 1s relevant, since we

are
.
going
·.
· through
·
a world crisis, both poHtically and
.
The· Third World \:ou~tries have the
economically, Gr_!ly pointed.out, Due tot
.
he
capabilityto change international relations
'.
struggle between the United States
·
an
_
d the
and alter (he
.
world economy, according
10
·
soviet Union for dominance .in the
.
world,
ObikaGray, whospoketoagroupofthirty The Third World
·
countries can play a
students last week at Marist.
·
significant role
fo.r
either side, depending
·
"Tlhe
·
niost pr9mising
.
arenas for
.
a
·
upon which of the
.
world powers the
·
in-
radical restructuring of the world economy dividual countries might
·
choose
to side
and global relationships does not lie in the with, noted Gray.
·
advanced industrial countries,
·
but in the
.
Gray said he feels as certain situations
Third World countries, because they are mature, for
·
example South
'
Africa, the
.
impoverished and experience massive United States will have to intervene. "But
inequalities," said Gray, a p
·
olitical science what ro!e we will play and whether or not
.
professor at Vassar College.
·
we will prepare to use power to 'enforce a
The predicament of the Third. World solution remains to be seen, " said Gray.
CLASSIFIEDS
71-
I'd like the Chance
10
get to know you better.
.
.
-PubLady
Gary and the team-
.,
.
.
.
.
LU
·
·.
Good luck Wednesday night ....;. we'll be there
Thanks for making the worst week of my life
·
to "Cheer" you on.
easier.
-ROACH
-
Carla-
Haveagreat
19th
birthday, buddy.
Love.Lori
Pip and Groovy-
Three musketeers forever!
Love
-
the grooviest Pip
B.C. (71)-
·
Do it with yourself, since you're the person
you love the most.
· ·
l.L.
(35)
Dani Carol-
.
Thanks for being a friend. Sorry
1 'm so
moody.
-
. Dirt
JO'
Happy
"B"
Day! Missed ya this weekend.
Pub, pub Wed. night?
love ya, Kamikazi
To seven lonely girls-
Thanks for a GREAT weekend
.
Love
,
Rich S.
Pal {Burchy)-
, ·
Nothing, but I love you forever.
-Pal (Butch\
Spot Remover-
.
"An Officer and a Gentleman" all over
again'?'
.
Alfred & Grover
'
77 and 60- ·
;
You may be big, but your technique is off.
·
·
·
-the teacher
:
-the girls on the 5th floor
Guy-
·
.
The bank is _foreclosing on your billion-dollar
mortgage.
-Guess who?
.
Bob and Bob-
you
make
oi.tr hearts throb!
·
-
The mystery women on S.
To
Bill Witt-
Congratulations on a job well done. Good
luck Godspcll.
.
-CS
Karen-
.
You're the best roommate! Why do you wear
two pairs oflong underwear???
,
-Gina
Skip-
I'll love you always and forever
.
Let's
cohabitate again sometime!
Love, Bunny
Peter Aquafreda-
.
.
.
What's your cum? Where are you going
_
after
college? Did I tell you what
my
title)s? You want
,
awriuen?
-
-
·
·
f/\:
·

~
3
.lS
·
Here's
·
to-
.
... :
·
'
'·:
c-
'
Bunny,
.
Corkie, Kiffy: Bon~Bori,
'i
]>o~kie
'
;
:
Muffy; Bitsy, Bootsie, Buffy,
.
Mopsy;
..
and
Missy.
· ·
·
·
·
·
·.
t~.
.
.
·

_
,
_
.
..
The New
·
York St~te
.
Supreme Court,
.
·
Kingston
Chambers,
.
is recruiting a paralegal student to assi~
.
t
in
a general admin
_
istrative and research :capacity.

.
Three days/week, expenses covered up
'
to $7.90/day.
·
·
·
The New York Corrimoditie
.
s Exchange
Is
loo~ing to"r
a co-op student to work
.
in the Compliance area~
-
Finance or Research background
·
desired~ Full-time
only.
Cent
_
ury
_
Media, a growing
.
media buying agency,
needs
a
co-op studeot to assist in various duties in a
fastpaced setting. Budgeting, account management,
·
mecHa

price
_
research;
·
etc. Ft.ilt;.Ume~
·-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·Mid~Hudson Civic Center has
two
positions
·
open
.
for students
·
in public relations and publicity.
_
·
Part-
time,
18
hours/week.
Forall
above
positions, call ext. 2
_
10 f~r details!
:''COOPERATIVE EiJUCATION
PUTS YOU ONE STEPAHEAD
.
OF
.
THE CRo
:
wn.1~'
.
.
.
._
-_MondOY
-fhru
Friday
~
I
___
..,.
.
- 1 + d ~ P ~
1/u
~ ~
~
/ 4 p t & ~ ~






























-
---~~---~-
..
~~--~■
-
-------------------------11111------Nov_ember
.1.1,
1982- THE CIRCLE· Page 11 •
·
- •
H~lfback ·
.I:)finin.ie
-§jdesteps dis8.ppointments
.
.
.
.
.
· by\Villiam
Flood
halfback, but my injury kept me:out .most
,:·,_.:,:
-
.
. .. .:,•·.
.
" -,. of'.the game. The·other halfback rec~ived
.
Ron_ J?immie de~cnbe~ himself as
a :
M.V.P.
of the.game and.many offers to
halfback who combmes fmesse-and power
big~time colleges," he said; : '. ·· ;-·, · ·.
with good hands and adequate speed."
,_ Division
I
and
II
schools; like Bostori.
Few opponents would disagree. . ·
.-:
College, Pittsburg, Temple, arid Iowa, that
The Marist senior halfback set the single-
had expressed interest in Dimmie, backed
season · rushing record last Saturday,
·
ff
·
gaining 102 yards to give him 535 total
O

.•
yards, while_ averaging over six yards per ·
"I
went to Cortimunity•College to get
my.
carry. In addition, Dimmie is the all-time
grades up and then an 'injury. Schools told
leading scorer. with ..
78.
points and career · me to come but they could not give me
a
rushirig-leaaer with 1009 yards. · .
_
_ scholarship.;
I . went into a state of
. Acco111p~nying· Dimmi~'s success
lia~e.
depression,'.' he said.
b~~n ~.omi.: disappointments. He played his
Dimmi~ went home tb think things over.
high $hoot football at Washingtonville He enrolled at Orange County Community
High in. New York. Dimmie was an all-
College part time and worked· part time.
leagu~ t~9!:>ack in. h!S senior year, gaining · While at home Dimmie started to look at
990
yards and settmg the·school record for Division
U
and
III
schools whe,r~~he·could
yards gained rushing. :
play.
,
• __
~
..
.
.
,-. ,...., .-.
._
,
"My' high school foo_tball coach pulled •
"Marist has- been fair·
'tc{
me'
in· every
. me in the second quarter 'of the last game of aspect. People are all friendly," he said;
my senior year. He thought I had reached
"Most people here, like my teachers, don't
the
1000 yard mark. After the game when I
even know
I, play football, so I get no
had- heard
'I
was
10
yards short, it was a
special privileges, and that's _the way
I
real bigdisappointment," Dimmie said.·
prefer it."
·
_ . Marist recruited Dimmie in his senior
In his junior year, bimmie's first year at
· yearjn high school. The 5'10";
195
pound
Marist he alternated at halfback and led the
back h,oped to get a chance to play Division
team in rushing. ''I.don't mind alternating;
. I.
"I
wanted to play Division
I,
but all the
it gives me a rest and makes me stronger the
· schools· interested- . in me. wanted me to
next time Irush the ball."
'
RonDimmie
(Photo by Kyle Miller)
;improve
my
grades at a prep school or
"We could be 9-0 this year very easily,'~
· ··; .' community college," he said. ·
. Dimmie ·_ said when asked ·· about his · . do my thing on the field, not in words."
League) will open a lot of doors for me,
1
·· , Dimrriie _·went.
·
to : .. Westchester. Com- '· thoughts of the season. "Everyone blames
"What I do on the field is never enough .. hope. The USFL could be the path to the
munity College where. he lead the team in
the coaches, but it's us, the players' fault. ~because I.know I can always do better next .
NFL."
· rushing, and guided them to a 5-4 record in
All season we have had better con- · time. I am never satisfied."
Dimmie said he feels if he makes it to the
1980.
· ·
·
, centration, dedication;-and consistency.
Dimmie's goal is to get
a
chance at the
pros, he will start with special team play
·
:_
After· a two-year stay at Westchester,
than last year, but it. seems to come· in · pros.- !'The way the NFL-is now it's hard to
until he can show he can play halfback in
Dimmie · played in the ·Junior College
spurts. The.coaches are good. We have to
see when football will start again. The
big-time football.
.
North-South All-star g{lme. However, he
execute ' better and eliminate mental_ . coach and
l
are going to sit down after the
"All
I
want is a chance,''. Dimmie said.
injured his ankle in practice the day'before
mistakes," he said. ..
.
season and talk about my options," he
"If
I
get this chance,
I
will make it.
I
the· game and saw limited action in the
When asked his thoughts about his own
said.
"I hope to be playing somewhere the
always give
100 percent plus, and when 1
game.
"I
was going to rotate with_ ahoth~r
per~onal ~eason, he said, "I don't brag.
I
USFL (the new United States Football
stop giving this, I will stop trying out."
·Hockey/tea·m·
-
"'"-'
.
.
.
.
..
Win~
Qpe,n~r
'-"•·--,·_J_ •. _
._
,
~Y _
_J._e~~~~-~{f
1
:~~~t~.:-.-~---I-;,f\
.
,~-~··,._·;~-~,.$;., ._· -
· · ,· . · · •· ·,,;;;:;.;TlieJ
98.2-83_M4rist.hockey\team
.
woti'its•:
. .
. season
:
opener: _Sunday night;
·
beating :Pace
University
9-6. · · . : .
.
· ·
·
: ·· _ -
.-The game. opened up .quick with Rob.
Shanahan scoring only
1:40 into the game.
Rob Trabulsi then .scored- with Jim Mc-
. · Donald .assisting. A powerplay .goal_ by
:
-
Pace put them -into the game, but Tim
Graham · answered with a shorthanded
; goaL Matist had six penalties in the first
period. Two were costly and resulted_ in
~oals by Pace;
·
.,
.
.
·
·<;
In the. second: period Marist outscored
;
Pace. three to one. Tony Cardone put the
first puck in followed _by Jim ·McDonald .
ind
Al
Pette.
.
.
.
· In the third period Marist looked sloppy.
They had three consecutive penalties, but
Pace ·was unable. _to ·score during
.
the
i,owerplays.
. ·
. Rob Trabulsi scored three goals, his first·
:1at irick of the seasorii-with assists by Steve
Pryor. and _ Tim -Graham.Jim McDonald
;cored twice.' His second was a shor- ,
:handed goal 'Yith assists by· Rob Tl;abulsi
md Brian Foley.
i. -
i
.
The
final
moments were n0Q-Stop action
.vith endJq end ptaY-.'When the firial ~uzz_er
C-LJ.\SSl"FIED·s
conti'nued fro~ page
10
"Marist squared off
_against Iona
in
first hockey game of the season.
·
· ·
··
(Photo
by Jeanne Legloahec).
,ounded, Marist hadwon:their first game;
Rob Trabulsi and _Jim McDonald both
h~d-_five point~ in the game. Fr~s_hmf~ Tim
Klinchei-- _: ·•
To my favorite drinking buddy and the
#1
C.M. I love you.
'
·
·
'
--
BAM
Graham had three points. Brian Foley, a
:iefe~semen, had three assists in the game
~or three points .
Jan-
..
Would you be
me
for a while?
I
hate to make
· decisions!
L.A.S.
. B.L.·, (. . _. .
Kiki
and Tiffy speak four foreign Janguages but
"You \all corrie back now, ya' hear." Stop
can't say no in any of them.
.
To 3rd floor Champ. girls-
The wildest, craziest floor!
. Love ya~l'm one
saying that i>iease.
Leo l
Love ya, Charlie Brown
Benny-
~
The whip creain twins-
.
How about the old "squeeze play?" When's
#1-Nice dress; .sorry bout the iron; #2-Glad, the next cO::ed football game?
·
you didn't lose it in my car.
·
BOM-
Open your eyes and get a real kisser.
-CMM
Shirley-
-Ke!
Jeannie-
How old were you 2 years ago?1 What year
were you first a teenager? Which one is it?
-K
StevenP.-
Dear Leo 6th floor-
What a wonderful weekend! Thanks! I Jove ya
all except Nise!
-J.M.
Nise-
Thanks for milking the classifieds.
. :the classified taker
Kris-
Saturday,9, I don't believe it!
Love, Frank
She's a bubblehead bleached blond! Who lives
on the 3rd floor!
205
lb?
-Lavern
you To all of you nice Marist girls-
Thanks for all of the treats.
We'd have cheap
sex
with you, but
wouldn't
be
able to perform properly:
-Nance&Jenn
MomandDad-
No cohabitating: Well$ Don't bite me!
i
·
-from the kids
Moe-•·
To the best 3rd floorer. "Silly me." It's so
sad.
-looneytune
Cuz-
1_ love you and I'm letting go- ·
I.:ove, Cuz
M.P.-
.
Name the place and I'll be there!
First floor pee-wee-
Nice try!
Marist football squad-
Albany State ·
-Love, trick-or-treaters
JoAnn-
. You weren't here so we celebrated for you.
XXXX
Happy belated birthday:·
Love, M.B. and T.T.
Robin-
A sudden interest in CREW! I wonder why?
(Ha)
B.F.A. - your fellow
xxxx
trick or treater
Basketball teams
tip off next week
· The Marist· Red Foxes will play an
!xhibition basketball game against a
Yugoslavian national team on
M~mday
it
_8
p.m. in the McCann Recreation
2enter.
.
The following· night the women's
:earn will play the Irish natio'nal
team at
home at
7
p.m. · ·
Students will be admitted to the
_ games -
and every other home game -
free of charge with a validated in-
jentification card.
The men will be pitted against a team
from Zagreb, Yugoslavia, the country
which captured the gold medal in the
1980
Olympics. The Yugoslavian squad
will
play a six-game schedule in the U.S.
beginning with .the Marist clash and
includes stops at Bosto·n University and
the University of New Hampshire.
The women will face a team com-
posed of the best players of Ireland. ·The
Irish national team will be competing •
for the first time in the U.S.
Volleyballers are
set for tourney
by Kathy
O'Connor
The Marist College women's volleyball
team defeated the College of Mt.: St.
Vincent 3-1, and remains undefeated in the
Hudson Valley conference division
"B".
In the first game of the match, . the
women defeated Mt. St. Vinceht 15-10.
However, their overconfidence caused
them to "slack off" in the third game,
· according to coach Marie Piccone.
- "We were winning easily in the third
game, but then we started to get sloppy,"
Piccone said.
Mt.· St. Vincent took advantage of
Marist's careless mistakes and won the
game 13-15.
Marist came back in the fourth game and
easily defeated Mt. St. Vincent 15-4 to win
the match.
Tkhe last scheduled game for the women
is next Thursday at Dominican College.
The team then travels to Mt. St. Vincent on
Nov. 20 to play in the Hudson Valley
conference Tournament.
"We are going into· the tournament
seeded first," said Piccone. "Since we are
undefeated in our division, we expect to
have no problems in winning all of our
matches in the tournament she said.
'
j
j
j






















































































































































'.
\f
r
i
t:!{t\
~
1
!!
~
~
:
t_
~i(
I
j~f
l
~~
,
, if
i{
f
(!:;;
tif
:
:tr
!
f
'
1
li"
"
i~
Itr
:~il;~j~
;
'
1
f
'
E
"
f
it~i
'
~f ~~
1
1tf
1;~~
:~
::;
~m::ttf
i:
.
;~~1l~~,:
'
0
: -

,-
·

:'
/
'
'
i
:
;/
Jli_5;c:Ienc~edJ;ist}_s
,
ra,is~d
_
_
i11
·.
the
,
:
air'._ }!is. ,Mari~t~nd
_
.
deci~
,
e~
,
~oleavei\labania
/
\ \
.
>-
f.ueno- ;Rico,•t· Cargill
:
-
~aid
:':
•-
'.'Bl.it
.
_
.
gill!
:
-
·
,
·
- <
:
>
squle,
.
1s
a,
mtle_wtd~ as he Jogs
.
b
_
ack
t<?
mid~
-
:· . ''thave
.
~~lat1y~

the ~ronx,
»
·
)u: said.
,
,
d1sappomtment
a
was Jos
,
1ng
:
a
•·•
game
.
. to_
L
-.
:
...

'
field.
:
Waynl! ,CargiH h~
i
s~ored an
,
other:
,
"And rknow
.
fan (Arscott ~senipr
;
playei:
c
Guatainal~ in Dallas, J'exas."
::
,
,
.
.

.
1
·
;
; ·
·
·,
goal .
.
·
._
..
:
,
.
,,_
,
.
.
:
,,
:.:
',
:
>
:
.
~
,
;,:
,r.:
';
ii
, ,
.

on
,
the
,
s¢cer
:
t~m)
'.~
from
.
Kingston
:
·
,
::
At the end of regulation time Guatamala
'
;,,
.
:a~
,
.
.
.
.
_:
i~
.
·
.,
_
:;
J
'
hifis not.li~usqitl. t~rgill has
.
sea
.
red
Z6
:
(Jamaica);
.
He .told
_
ine how
-_
wonderfuLit
·
:
and
_
Jamaica·were
·
tied;
:
Rules forced a 'flip
r
·
-
<
g<>~s thisseasori" for Marist
-
a~d
,
lt
_
as
,:
~c::~
:
was
.
to
_
be
·
here and play S(?CC~r
-
here
_.
.
~o I
-
,
of the coin'
:
to d~ide the outcome .
.
"
i
1

..
\
·
cumul~ted
-_
64 points; ~ett!ng
,
~w~
.
.
ne~
·
accept~
tpi=
s~hola~ship/'
:
·
, ·
·":
a,
..
.
·
Guatamala won.
.
.
-
.
_
. .
.
,
·
.
.
.
·
,
.
-
:;_;
.
_
:
· -
·_
.
.
..
Marist records
:
,
7 ..
:
i
,:
"' ,

; ,
;:,
:_
.
:
,-
.
·
·
.c
"
:'

:)).
_.
,
_
.
::
Cargill was
_
·
nine years old when he saw
_
-,
_
"I thought thatwas very unreasonable,"
,.
l:
C://
He
-
nowol¥ns
the
r~ordfor
·
m:ostgoals
<
his first socc~r
'
game. ''Lsaw
.
these people
-
Cargillsaid.''You play
well
all game
/
and
-
,
~
~
:
..
::
in
.·.
~
.
s~pn an~
_
µ·lo~f PQ~~ts
irfa
-
~easOll. J-fe

:
~
Pl~ying
.
_
~OCcer
.-
a
·
™'
;
-
1-
:
:_
enjOyed
;
~
W~tchin8
-
·
.
>.
loSe
b)'
"
·
a
.
:_
cOin·
t(!ss
_
.
It
.
was
·
very
,
..
diSa~
.
-
·
r.
·
·
:
:
·

r~places
,,
Z
_
enone Naitza,
wl)o
has ht:ld both
them, " be said. They were really' enjoying
-
·
pointing:".
.
_ .
_
· -- .. ..
·
.
.
~
:
f.~
: ,
<
-
t
c
recordnince 1976, from the top
·
s10~ in t_he
.
:
themselves. It looked like~ real
_
challenging
·
.
The following year hew~ selected to the
t.
.
r
· ··
·
.
:. ·
·
record books.
·.
.
"-
_ .
·.
_..
·
·
.-
-
game.»
.
-
:
-'-·7
,>
.
. ,
·
_,
,._ -
·
·__
'
·.
:'.
· .
Jamaican National
·
·team
:
which played __
·,
.

The Kingston/ Jainaican
-
bom player
·
- Cargill played fpur years of soccer at games in Trinidad, HoUand and China.
· ·
transfered to Marist this
.
year after a year at CalibarHigh School
in
Jamaica.
·
:
·
CargiUis used to playing in front of 60- ·. Wayne
_
CargUI
·
'
·
(~hoto by
Kyle Miller)
· _
Alabama
-
A&M; Academically
-
Cargill is
"It took a
·
while for me to de
_
velop my 70,000 people while playing as ari amateur. Nationaltearri players~ "When
I
played in
·
,
--
'
stilfafreshman~ Athletically he is not.
,;.· -
-
:
~ skills/'
:
he said.
'
"But I
;
knew
·
after four on Eleston Flats, a
_
Jamaican dµb team.
·
.
·
·
Alabama;
·
therc;
:.
were 22 National palyers,"
·
·
!
_
,
.
i
~
.
_
_
•. . .
He nette4 26 goals lastyear as
·
h<: 9:n~ his year~ of
.
high
·
school soccer that
·
I could
.
•~It's
really
great t~ play in front ofall he said:
.
"There was a lot inore talent arid
·
,_-• ".'
-
· :
,
:
.
Alabama teammates went to the DivJSion l
(achieve) much more."
.
·
. _
.
.
,
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
·
thQse people," he said. "You feel
·
much
·
the players had great skills.
,
.
·
.
:
..
.
soccer
finals. But Cargill wasn't happy in
·
.:
He
was
chosen most valuable player and
-
rilore motivated.
_
Soccer
-
is definitely the
"Our guys are
·
very young (15 fresh-
.
·
.
-
-
i
.
··
.
:
:"
;
Aiabaina.
'<"
-,
,
:

'
<
.
:
·
·
'
·
0
.
• •
·
player~of-tbe-week several times
i
n
·
high
-
number one sport in Jamaica.1-Iercit isn't
men)
,
" Ca
r,
gill said. "The guys are really
'
,

~
•1
.
didn'tJi
,
ke t~e people in Alabama/
~

school. But his
.
biggest honor
was
<
being as big. Even the officiating is poor here."
·
·
·
trying, and playing very
.
well.
·
we're giving-
-
he s~id. "The people down south aren't as
·
selected to the
.
Jamaican
<
Junior N~tioniil
,

:c
·
Cargill is also' used
-
t9 playing b~i~e it (winning) the
_
best shotwe've got."
~
~
,
-


27.8.1
27.8.2
27.8.3
27.8.4
27.8.5
27.8.6
27.8.7
27.8.8
27.8.9
27.8.10
27.8.11
27.8.12