The Circle, November 12, 1981.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 26 No. 8 - November 12, 1981
content
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J:a1aCult:M-·Contr.6versy
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:
.
·
chairinen's ni~ting where this problem has
··.
the
-
other
·
courses· can
·
b·e
·
outside
:
th~ College of Coiniiiunicationsat the Univer-
>
,
.
.
<
com~ u~.
~''.l'he
idea
·
of.il° marketing com-
_.
business department.
.
.
..
.
.·
sity of Texas, will
be
hired asa consultant .
.
•
·
··•.
A
·
difference
·:
of ~pinio~-- between the
·
•.
mumcattons major is an excellent
'
_one;
but
·
·
•
This~ then; may create a roadblock in the
.
Dr. Platt said he wante_d to
.
1)1ake
_
this
faculty of
·
Communication
·
.
Arts
,
and the
before it
·
is
:establis~ed
as
:
-
a
"
major,
·
th~
~
Managemenf Studies Division's attempt at
·
.
program
·
unique. "Usually, such a program
.
Business faculty is delaying
·
deyelopment of
:.
responsible division should make sure it's·
•:
accreditation .
.It
also is a roadblock in
·.
is just a
·:
concentration
~
within
·a.
major.
a new major
in
marketing co~munication;
•.
.
going to
·
b~ a worthwhile major,,, said Ms.
creating a
·
major that
·
will
successfully
·.
in-
.
Ultimately, we
.
will
.
have:
.
a
•
major
·
in
.
according'to those h1volved i11 the project.
·
·
·
·
cody,
:
'
.
'The
·
.
main if sue sh
·
ould
_
:
not
:
be
tegrate the two majors as
it
was originally
-
· marketing communications;
.
Whether or
,
·
Under a new million
.
doUar
,
Title
_
III
·
who's baby it will b~, the
.
real issue is
,
'are
proposed.
•
·
.
:
·
.
~
_ . :
·
.
.
'
!JOt this becomes a reality next September i~
·
grant the college received this· summer, new
the courses there'?"
.
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,:·
.:
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Academic Vi"e-President Dr .. Andrew
hard to say at this time."
_
...
programs
wjll
beadd~d, in~luding manage-
_
·
·
There seemed to be some
_
disagreement
·
,
Molloy said he di
_
d expect these problems to
.
Dr. Molloy said "housing the marketing
··
ment information systems; an iniernational
.
as to what the curriculum should lo~k like;
·
arise, as with any dual major
·
in two dif-
.
corr.imunications major in the Division of
components system for
the
business depart-· The original P(Oposals
·
submitted by the
feent disciplines, but he is confident that it
Arts and Letters
·
wm certainly impart a par-
ment an
_
d a new marketing communica-
Business Department was rejected by the
will
all fall into place. The accre
_
ditation by
ticular ch;micter in
.
the program btit
.
·
lions major, according to the Division
.
of Commu~ications Department as being too
the AACSB is
~•a
gradual thing, and the whether it is more appropriate is hard to
·.
·
Manageillent Studi~s chairman,
·
or. John
·
business~oriented.
·
The proposal
.
by the
marketing communications major,. ifhous-
·
answer.!'
..
:
·
· .
•
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:
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·
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·
..
,
Kelly.
-.
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.
-
·
·:
: --·:
·:
. ..
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_
· _ .
Communications Department wasn't ac~
.
ed in that discipline would not be the only
· The nextstep
·
will
·
be to define th
_
e cur-
ldeally,-the new major would· combine
..
:
cepted by the Business Department, either:
·
thing in the way of the accreditation:" He
.•
riculum and add
.
the necessary courses.
business
.
and coijlmunicationscourses with
The main problem, before anything could
said
.
he foresees no pi:oblem in having
After'this is done, it will have to meet with
additional courses, But~ according to
,
Dr.
·
be
_
decided upon,
is
with which discipline
enough business courses within the majpr.
-
fa~uHy and the Board of Trustees ap-
Kelly, he was "unstirewhether
·
there
.
would
would the new
:
'tnajor be associated.
-
.·
.
0
Marist i$ not a large university where
·
provaL The
.
final step
_
will be taking
'
it to·
be
a
major th!lt
.
Jruly
.
combines the two
.
~'If.it
were
h~used under business,'
~
.
said
.
one department can refuse to co~operate,"
.
the State Education Department for their
divisions." Division of. Arts
arid
Letters · Dr. Kelly,
c''th_e.curriculum
would be full ~f
. ·
he said. •~There has' to
be
cooperation;" He
,
sealo(_approval, ~nd then Marist can of-
Chairman Richard
-
P.Iau said that "as the
-
marketing courses. If it becomes part of the
·
added that he was confident that there will
··
ficially institute a marketing
·
.
communica-
program becomes ~fficiaJly housed in orie
-,
Commimication
:
·
Arts departmenl; th~
_
_
em-
be.
--
--
.
·
.
.
tions major.
·
,
.
department,
·
the
·
- program will be
.
✓phasis
will be more in advertising."
.
.
According to Drs. Molloy, Platt and Kel-
·
The funding for all of this is part of a
modified."
_
·
.
·
_· .
..
.
.
The problem with housing a marketing
ly, a marketing communications major will
million dollar Title
Ill
·
grant received by
The first major delay in getting the pro-
communications
-
major
_
in the Division of
tentatively become a part of the Division of Marist. According to Dr. Molloy;
.
"The
gram off the ground was
.
nof'the fact
.
that
Management Studies is the fact thatMarist Arts and Letters
.
At this p~int, though, Dr.
reason
·
for the Title
III
grant represents a
.
Marist offers very few courses related to a--. is in -.the process of having that department
Plau was un
_
llble to say whether next fall
genuine opportunity fm
:
the college to
!l}arketing communications m!ljor;
.·.
In-
.
.
accredited by the American Association of
.
majJceting communications would be in-
,
develop a major-
·
particularly beneficial to
stead, the
_
main issue
·
seemed to
be
where
·
·
College
•
and Schools of
--
Business; Accor-
stituJed as a full-:.fledged major or
.
a concen-
the
.
student body and to evenuially
·attract
this
·
newmajor will be housed,
.
before
.
a ding
.
t(?
_
thestandards of
-
the AACSB;
-
all.
_
tration area within the·communications
more students to Marist:We
·
might even
-
curriculum could be decided upon
;
·
·
·
_
,
_
·
·
programs which permit more than2507o
.
of
·
degree
.
.
_
·
•
.
.
.
_
.
.
develop the program
without Title
III.
As a member
-
of the
,
Student
·
Academic
·
business
,
courses
Jri
their currkulum
.
are
·
-
:.
To help organize arid plan the program,
What is ultimately best.for the
·
stugent arid
Committee, student Donna Cody sits
in on _
_
considered busin
_
ess programs: But to be a
.
next January-a new faculty member will be · ultimately best
for the institution is
·
the
the
.
departmental and
.
the divisional:
·
business program, no
·
more than 25%
-
of added and Robert .l_e_ffereys, Dean of the
reason behind such programs."
.
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ltt
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•
-
.
The curtain rises for the
;
castand crew
:
of
·,:
·
,''Graffiti'
\
tonight
,
jn:
itie
.
. ·
Marist
·
College
Y
·:
,
,
theatre as
.
two and a hair months of plann-
.
.
·
/a
ing arid rehe~rsal
comes
t~
an
en~;
.
.
.
· ·
·
>
•
.
David
:
Heckendorn's original
•
inusical
,
which was
·
directed
by
·
Donald· Anderson is
-
-
t,ejrig presented
'
tcinighlJhrough
Saturday
· ·
at
:
7:30
p.fu.
and Sunday
'
afternoon at
2
o'clock~
_.;-:
>
·:•
.'>
·
·
. · ··
,
'
..
.
·
· :
.
>,•
·
It
seems success:ts
in store for
the Marist
.
·_.
<"
College
.
Council on Theatrjcal
~
A.rt$
.
due
.
to
_.their
unique situation
,In
pi'~ntlng
·'·
an
original play '1Vhich
is receiving a
_
_
greatd~I
of profession~I theatnfattention.
.
.
. .
::'..:·-
.
·
.
•
·
Tickets
'
f()r
'..',Graffiti''
:
1_11~y
·
b~
;
obtained
•
.
•
at'the
-
Marist
:
bmr office at the price of $2
·:
)
for
.
Marist:
faculty
and
:
staff
and
$1 for
.
.
-
~~~dents.
:
?
.
.
~Pb~to ~;
Chris
Dempsey) _ _
""""'
"-"
.
·
_
_
,
,
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..
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_
:-
Maris
t:
·
Case of/he missini typewriters·
.
·
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...
,
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-
..
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.
·
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.-
...
.
'·
c
.
>.
....
•
.
·
·
,
·
·
c
·
1
·
1
·
·
-
.
:
·
bu
.
dg
''-
et,
.
_
I'd
_
be
·
.
glad
__
t
_
o
•
s
·
pea
·
k
.
w
·
it
_
h som
_
_
·
eone cryst
_
alized way," Toscan
_
o sa
_
id.
_
.
·•
,
"
·
Even
·
Dutchess
-
.
ommumty
. \
·
o ege
·
_
-
'·
satisfies· it's students, with a r~m, in the
at Marist about how Dutchess
·
manages o
Toscano was sympathetic'i1bout the cur-.
A
su~ey
.
<>f nea~by
•
colleges shows that
.
libr~; cluttered with electric typewriters:
do this for the students;" Anspach added.
_
rent lack of typewriters on campus.
,
.
1
·
I
ld b
·
·
·
·
.
.
It's
·
1·ron1·c
·.
that
_
D_ utchess C
_
ommunity
..
"Believe it or
.
not, the
·
best
-
tools
parents
:
Marist is
··
alone in not having typewriters
-
Some are a
.
,tt e o , ut most are m
.very
.
ds
f:
•
.
.
av
_
ailable for st
_
ud
__
e
_
nts
_
-
.
a
situat
_
ioil
_
l
_
abe
_
led
_
'
good sh_ape.
_
_
,<.
-
-
·c
.
,·
,
,;
:.
';'
.,
(;ollege is the leader f~r type'ff'.rirers
co
__
uld ~ive
.
t~eir ki
or,
Chnst~as
_
are a
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
..
·
·
·
h
·
c
· c
·
II
·
h
I
.
ava1·1able for
.
students. Vassar College typewriter and tape-recorder .
.
Its essen-
_
_
.
Y
ridiculous'!by
·
onearea librarian
;
_-'
·
<
-
:
Dute ~s
.
ommumty o ege as a arge
_
,
•
:
Vassar College
·
·
has
-
several typewriters
-
·
secretarial curriculum,
,
but DCC
-
provides
'
charges
S60<r
per credit.
-
Marist charges
,
tial," he said.
·
•
·
...
·
·
,
·
' ·
·
·
h
.
d
·
h
·
t
I ss oom
$131·per cr
_
ed1_·1
..
D u
_
tch_ e
_
s s
_
C_o
.
mmun
_
ity Co
_
I-
.
Bill P
_
iazza_, of I_BM~s O_ffice Produc
_
ts in
ayailable fodts-students. The:only problem. t ose stu ents wn a
.
pnva e c a r
.
k
d M
utd b
is· that
_
they
·
are
_.
manual typewri
_
ters and
.
do
_.
packed with new.IBM typewriters
..
~
,
•
-
lege charges·$27 per credit.
··
·
.
•
·
:
Pough eeps1~, sa1
.•
. anst co
uy a
.
• w
b
·
·
..
f
· ·
JDM
ft
The
-
library at Marist College has been a
·
-
IB_M
-
Selectric tYpe'!nter for a. purc_hase
n
_
ot always function pr~_ perly, ae<;~rding to
.
.
• e uy typewnters rom
o
.
o en.
-
f
h
d
I
·
-
·
·
.
.
Thenwhenonegetsold,wetakeitfromthe
·
·
com~on
>
place for
.
students to complain pn~ o $931 at
t
e present e ucauona
~~W~s~;c:~v~
.
\ype~riters
·
per se,u a
secretary who
used
it and put
it
iri
the typ-
about this problem: Vince
•
Toscano dean of.: estimate.
.
.
_
-
s
·
p
·
okesman
·
for
Vassar
College said last
·,
ing room for the students;'' a spokesman · special programs and services, has
·
been
.
~ere may
.
be ho~e yet for students,-ac-
f
Du h
C
·t
··
Coll ge s":d
aware of
.
th1·s growing
:
frustration am
_
o
_
ng cord_mg
·
to Bob
·
Fmk, an em
_
ployee of
week. "They're
not
in the best of shape,
or
.
tc ess
.
ommum
Y
.
·
.
e
cu •
b
but the students still use them just the
.
"My husband,went to Marist College qui!e ··
·
students.
.
.
.
.
.
.
:
.
.
.
_
Mar1st College ookstore .
.
same.'~
.
.
_
-
_
.
.·
_
.
-
,
__
,
_
.
.
a
few
ye;ars
ago,
and
h~ used to
compl~!n
.
"We've
·
often
.
discussed this
.
here in the
."We've been ~eriously considering buy-
·
_
New Paltz College a!~o has a small room
abou! the lac_)( of typeytpters on campus.
.
.
.
library,"
.
Toscana
-
said;
·
'~The
,,
only ing a few typewriters and renting them out
dedl·cated ~o
·
r-
1
·ypcwn
__
·ter
_
use
_
for
..
studen~
_
.. ·:
-
'
.
.
P
_
h
_
d An_spa
_
ch, pro
_
~ty clerk at D
_
u tchess · possibility may be to pl~n
:
on getting-ca few- ..
to
the students," Fink said.
1
'
c
c n
t
I
ys
old ones. Then we run into
-
the
-
problem of
·
-
The
·
bookstore
·
would require a
'
'
.
'We realize the
-
stude~ts need
·
to_
type
-
ommunny
-
0
~e, manages
-
0
a ~a
·
,
where to
·
tocat; the typewriters," Toscana. substantial deposit; but in return, the
assignments and term
·
papers. It's
have machmes~vadable f~r
st
udents. We
.
added
·
. "Should they be in the dorms? In students could take the machine to their
ridiculous· for a college to be
_
without
buy them outnght .. We
·
J~st move
·
them
-
type
.
writers,,, a New
:
Paltz library staff
around
li
lot.
If
so~eqne m a department
-
the library? The clicking of the typewriters room and type t~e assignment, Fink said.
.
_
member said last week.
'
~'There
is always a
needs a new typewriter, we buy 1t. The~:
.
may
be
disturbing to other students,"
"Is it that bad of a problem?"
-
Fink ask-
. few extra
.
dollars
.
in the budget for rental
·
the
.
used ?ne,, goes
,
to
_
the students,
· Toscana explained. "We've been concern-
ed.
"If
students think so; I'll do my best to
from IBtd or elsewhere.,,
·
Anspach said. It comes out of the college
ed with this issue: It just never surfaced in a
help them ou·t."
.
'
J
I
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Page
2· THE CIRCLE~ November 12, 1981
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·Readers.Wl"ite
,
,>
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:
IX\D.~
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i.
_-
riJJf
TUINI<"
-
A_"-D'
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IN
-
'MY
UNDfR-WA"t!R
_
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~~ET
WViYJNG
_
C
.
OUP.SE
·
J
5
GROU~S
FOR
.
~;1
-
iettera niust
tie
ty~ triple spac; wltti a
60
space niargln, and submitted 10 the
Circle office no later than 6 p.m. Monday
.
Short letters are preferred. We reserve the
.
.
'
right to edit
all
letters, Letters must be signed, but names may be withheld upon re-
quest. Letters will be published depending upon availability of
space.
•
.
.
'
· DJSOWH
111EN
T.
-
''Graffiti'' and apathy
To the Mari st Community:
.
For you, the audiem:e, an ex-
A
costly question
·
.
;-
I'm sure that by now we are all perience that no one else has ever
_
tired
,,
of hearing
·
about
·
the
·
experienced before.
·
school's apathy. Well, I
_
'm offer-
.
It
is not easy to direct, act in or
ing
·
you the opportunity to
•
work on any play. When that play
.
· ·
disprove that notion~ I hope that
has never been done before the
Last year, the cost· of attending Marist
in New York picketed last year after receiv-
by
·
now you ·are all aware of the
task becomes more so. In
·
moSt
College was
$5,800.
The
1981-82
academic
ing news of a tuition jump of
$150.
The in-
musical that will be taking place
·
plays, one has a preconceived no-
year saw a rise In cost of
$700.
These rising
crease at Marist was over
10%,
a
$700
jump,-
·
.
this
·
weekend. For those few of
·
tion about what must be done.
figures, coupled with the threat facing
and as students saw no way of opposing
·
you whci do not knqw,
MCctA
is
Since "Graffiti" has yet to be
financial assistance in education from the
this increase,- nothing was said. The gap
·
producing an original musical en-
·
produced it was up to the director_
Reagan budget cuts, make
It
impossible for
between the ability of the student to finance
titled "Graffiti.'' The musical
·
and the actors to decide
,
what
the private college student to turn away
·
an education and the actual cost can only
.was
written· by
·
faculty member
. ·
must be done.
from the issue of educational financing.
expand if proposed federal and
-
state
David
·
Heckendorn and directed
The cast and crew members
The concept of financial assistance
_
in
·
assistance program cuts are made.
·
·
by Donald Anderson; also
-
a
have worked hard. They have
education is
.
based
·
. ·
<>h
·
the "right" of
·
·
The Issue
·
here Is
·
not one
·
of apathy -
faculty member. The shows are at
given their time and all their
students to attend the college of their
students have to care when
·
they are
-
7:30
November
12,
13,
14
and at
·
·energy
>
to produce for you an
choice. This concept, while ideologically
bargaining with ~heir futures in terms of
2:00
on November15..
·
evening of enjoyment. Please,
sound, has little practical appHcation, as
loans, but the inevitable threats to flnancial
Since the musical is an original · don't disappoint them with a lack
many students have abandoned the private.
assistance call for action. The power of the
it presents an unique opportunity
of attendance. Let's prove that
schools and universities of their choice for
·
constituent through an organized lobby,
·,
for .the .Marist Community. For
Marist is not apathetic .
.
public educa(ion.
:
_
·
·.
: .
'
·
_'
·
·
.
.
.
.
whether in writjng to congressmen or in ac-
.
the cast and crew it is a chance to
Dawn-Marie Sturtevant
Marist
is
just one
.
of many priyate in-
ttial attendance at pertinent legislative ses-
-
create upon the stage a new play.
Assistant Director
stitutions in the unconifortabl
_
e position of
·
sions, should not be underestimated.
·
:
_
.maintaining
themselves in an age of rising
There are established organizations work-
et;fuc~tion
_
costs and diminishing enrollment
·
irig in Albany and Washington for the col-
.
in higher education. However,
·
the larger
lege student, but they exist on the support
.
sector of students
·at
Marist; being of
·
a
· .
and action of all co11cerned. In.this case; the
~
·
·
middle-class income. bracket, are caught in
·
·
students relying on aid to off~et the rise in
·
·
A neglected fact
..,.
the trap of ineligibility for adequate finan:
college costs
are
concerned, and should be
·
To the Editor:
•
<
•
.
.
Adapted Aquatics is a swim ac-
, ..
_
·
.
.
,:
.
-
.
c\a\
.
ail:1,
-
.
~t\i\e
th~
.
f~mily
-
income cannot
- '
.
aware
·
ot the role they
,
must play in pfeservJ
Las'i
·
,week's
article "Marist
tivity program designed for the
::tt
~i;!i,
ie!:\;:
i}'sf.
f.;'.;:(\i;.,~l?
,
~&$\):>\~J_\n~~c~)~.:pJ\"'~\.~~d~9'3-\,\C>fk
/,
'
'
'.'
;
2
2
,,\;i
,
/
,
\ng·the\r-Jight to an ed(lcat\on. · · -
.
.
·
Plans'
:
Swimming
.
Program For
individual with a physical or men-
.
,.,,·
.
.
-,
1'.De
.
s
,
~udents
:
atsev~rat~t~t:un\vers\t\es
·
·
-
·
>-
•·,
, ·
.
·
.
.
,
,
,,,
.
,.
·,_:
:
,
·
,,
_.
Disabled''·neglected to mention
taldisability.Jt:isanoppor~unity
"Hi mom it's me,· yeah well I'm doing
al rig tit. Oh yeah all
.
my classes are great; I'm
doing great except I'm having
~
little trouble
·
in Economics; but there's no major problem.
Grades? Ohyeah; midterms, well we haven't
gotten them yet. What? You received what
in the mail? Oh
.
I can expla
_
in, all my
teachers gave blanketD's
·
for our midterm
grades, What do you mean your not sending
up any spending money?"
,
For
some
-
un-announced
reason
everyones mid-terr:n grades were
.
sent home
-
at mid~semester:
1
Remember when you were
in grarnmar'schpol
_
and mommy and daddy
-
had to sign our report cards? Welcome back
to the good old days, even in high school
most of
.
us were responsible enough to br-
ing our report c
_
ards
·
home when they were
given to us at school. It
·
looks like the
registars office
.
has offered us another fan-
tastic
_
service; we no longer must call home
·
to give our mid-term cums to our parents
.
.
The registrars offi~e has decided that this
task was to difficult
,
for the Marist College
student to take part
·
in
·
and has solved the
·
problem by delivering our grades to our
~arents doorsteps. Maybe its
·•
an unfair
assumption to
.·
bel
_
ieve that the
.
average
.
Marisj College stµdent is at a stage of
·
maturity where they can be given tliere mid-
.
term grades and decide accordingly who the
grades should be seo_t to.
-·
.
.
Even if we can't handle the task of giving
our mid-term grades to our parents it would
be nice if the student body was informed
The
Co-Editors
.·
·
.
·
Auociate
Editor
Circle
,
.
·
Featu~Edltor
· ,
.
' 1
.,
·
·
- ·
- ·
.
.
-
\
the
;
fa~t)J;iis:
.
p
_
,r~gra111
originated
· C
·
,
for
-•--the
,:
.
.
disa~J~d
~
i'lpiyi4_~at_
t~
:
• ,
:
·
1
'
,
·_
'
-<
~
·
·
·
·
·
.
from
'
and
·
'is
,
sponsored through
.
·
::
]earn- new
,
skills )1-'hlle enJoymg
·
the Coritiriuing Education Office.
:-
.
aquatic recreation.
. .
.
•
·
.
As
i
a
result
of the success Conti."
· ·
.
:.
:
-
Marist
'
College and
·
the Red
that their grades were
·
going to be
·
sent
•
nuingEducation has hadsponso
·
r-
·
Cross give instrl!cti?n, an~ train
_
-
home. Mahy students feel that this new ser-
irig Red Cross programs, -Marist
.
instructors al}d aides for this pro-
vice is infringing upon their rights as a legal
has been able
to
increase the
·
·
gram. We rieed
.
p~ople who are
,
.
adult. Many student's parents are indeeci
number and variety of Red Cross
willing to
.
volunteer their time to
·
·
paying for our tuition, but any responsible
' ·
safety/health
:"
-
programs
.
offered
assist the swimmers
._
and ~ecome
student or in_terested parent would more
·.
on campus.
.· ·
·
.
.
.
~-
.
·
·
·
traine~ as ~ed Cross. Adapted
than likely
·
bridge the gap of cornmunica-
·
we
.
in Continuing Education~
Aquatics
:'
Aides. All mterested
'
·
·
tions that
·
is going to
be
!illeviatea
· .
)' mail-
are pieased to be
_
able to coor"~
p~ople please contact the Conti
.
-
•ing
grades to our homes.
_
.....
_
diriate the efforts
.
of
.
the. Red
.
·
._
iluing Edu~ation_Office, Donnelly
Ho
_
w many parents are receiving
·
"real" in-
;
'
Cross, McCarin
·
.
Center
,
,
·
arid
-
·
'
Hall, Room
202.
.
.
dicators of what ljttle Bobby or little Sally
SpeciarServices to make Adapted
.
Anita Voogt
·
~re doinq, at s~hoql? So
·
many
1
t~a~hers give
··
Aquaticsa~ajlab~e to our s!udents
·
_
·
Assistant Director
·
blanket
·
.
m,d~term
,
grades that most
· -and
•
..
·
commumty
.
_
residents.
·
C9n
_
tinuing Education
everyones mid-term cums
·
are inaccurate as
·
·
·
to the progress the student has made thus
far in the semester. It would tie nice H
,
when
Mom opens up the envelope and discovers
her little boy has dropped from Deans List to
·
·
a C average that the registrars office would
include an explanation of the tack of
To
'
tlte Editor:
)
:,,
·i~·
-
· ,
man to show what made those -
fairness involved in computing a students.
-
Td like to
.address
this
•
letter
dents!!! I've notice theseJoot-
mid-term grades; and than 'dad wouldn't
·
mainly to everyone who owns
.
~
,
,
prints over. several
.
weeks
·
and
.
•
have to use the smelling salts.
.
·.
car on this campus and has 1t
after checkmg the car several
.
The average Marlst student is
20
years
-
.
parked iriany
'
oftheparkinglots.
:
ti~es a day, ~ound
_that
these
old. We can drink
.
alcohol,
·
buy
.··
dirty
Have you checked
_
the
,
roof or
•
pnnts appeared m dayhght_hours.
magazines, vote for our leaders, drive a car
hood of your car lately? If you
If
anyone finds footprints on
·
and fight in a war. Isn't it unusual that .
·
.
have; did yo11 find the imprints of
.
their car (and I have seen the~ on
Marist College has decided that we can't
a man's sneaker?
_: .
.
..,
· other cars), please report
·-
_
1t to
handle our
.
own academic
..
progress?
,
I wouldn't believe
·
it either
.
~
-
..
Securitr .
•
If
you see it happening
Hopefully instructor evaluations, wlien
that some rnale student was
.
walk-
·
- report it. As to whoever
.
is do-
·
given at the end of the semester, will be sent
·
,
ing onunning across the tops of.
•
·
ing- it, keep
1
)'o~r, feet on the
·
·
home to the parents
.
of every faculty
_
parked
cars
until 6 large dents ap::
_
.
·
ground or go hve m a_zoo!_
member .
.
Then our faculty
·
won't have
fo
peared in the roof of my
1979
car
·
Jane V1ctona Keene
waste time telling their parents how the job
and
·
·
the muddy footprints
·
of a
.
is going.
_
_ _
.
_
·
Letters continued on page 8
Jane Hanley
Terri Sullivan
Rick O'Donnell
Theresa Sullivan
News
Staff
Spor11 Editor
Sta~
.
·
Denise FIim, Karyn Magdalen;
·
•
'
·
MarbtlnglAdtlertlalng
John Kraus, Joanne Holdorf, Pat Brady
Dlatrlbutlon
Manager
,
.
Photography
Cartoonists
Jeanie O'Rourke
Joann Buie
·
Terri Tobin
Maggie Browne, Grace Gallagher
Jeanne LeGloahec
Michael Moore
·
Eddie Powers
Staff
·
Donna Cody, Christine Dempsey,
·
Barry lewis
Nancy Brennan, Tim Dea~le,
Tim Breuer, Pat Cullough,
Karen Flood, Denise FIim;
John Petacchl, Ken Bohan,
BIii Travers, Dennis Martin
Peter Fredsall, Karen Johnson,
·
Jean-Marie Magreno, Joanna Rosato, PatU Walsh,
Copy
Editors
Social Editor
.
Buslneaa Manager
Allison McCarthy
Janet McNamara
Maggie
Browne
Faculty Advisor
.
Oav(d McCraw
\
'
-
-
Female gridders
take thefie/d_
Last Sunday, the sophomore girls'
powder puff football team
met
the
freshman girls' t~m In an afternoon
football game in which
'
the freshman
emerged as the victors,
14-0.
-
·
The game
·
was sponsored by the
sophomore class, and was open to all
·
female
·
·
.
students.
,
Refreshments were
s«;>ld, and
aU
who attended enjoyed wat-
·
ching the girls try their hands out at a
game usually reserved for males at
Marist.
·
.
The
.
sophomore
.
class
hopes to
organize a soccer intramurals team for
girls in the spring, In which all female
students are welcome.
.
·
·
.
.
·
Marist to launch major co-op progfam
student will
·
not
,
earn any credit; said Mrs
.
sion; Dr
.
Florence Michels, Psychology
She also said that the students benefit by
Sarnoff
.
She added that this might mean
and Sociology Division; Jake Maness,
getting their hands on experience in an in-
A federal grant will allow Marist College
that the student will have to attend an extra
Management Studies Division, David
dustry early enough in their career to make
.
'to launch a new co~operative educatjon
.
semester of classes or summer class-es in
,
McGraw, the Division of Arts
&
Letters,
decisions that they will eventually have to
·
program next semester offering jobs
·
and
·
order
to graduate. in four years
.
Mrs.
and the Rev. Rhys Williams, Humanities
make later in their careers
.
extra funds for interested students.
Sarnoff stressed, however, that the pro-
Division.
It has not yet been established, Mrs.
by Grazia
E.
_
LoPiccolo
"The program will provide students with
posal is still being refined and worked out
Marist College already has a similar pro-
Sarnoff said, whether the faculty advisors
actual and meaningful work experience
and is subject to change.
.·
gram in the communication department: a
will receive extra salary for their participa-
related to their academic major," said
Mrs
.
Sarnoff did not say how many
paid internship, in which students earn
tion in the program, or whether they will
Judith Sarnoff, director of grants at Marist
-
students specifically will benefit from the
·
credit and money at the same time
.
Mrs.
receive their regular salary and teach one
College, "and it will enable students to
new co-operative program, but she said
Sarnoff said that
.
the major difference
less
.
course. "If the latter is the case then
earn extra money
.
"
that the program is designed to help as
between the new co-operative program and
Marist
will hire other professors to teach
Under the program, Marist students will
many interested students as will become in-
the internship program is that the co-
the courses," said Mrs. Sarnoff.
be placed in jobs in the Mid-Hudson area,
volved.
operative program
will have more than one
The $94
,
000 grant
,
said Mrs. Sarnoff,
New York City and elsewhere.
As
a co-op
The program will have a director, whom
placement.
will be allocated for the director's salary,
program, students
will receive pay for their
'
Marist is presently in the process of hiring,
.
.
"The co-operative work program
wil\
re-
for faculty release time, and the largest
work
.
and one advisor from each division,
-
said
quire a more extensive work commit-
part of the grant will go for the traveling
The program, which was given impe~us
~
·
Mrs. ~am~ff.
-
The fac~l!)'. _advisors will
ment," said Mrs. Sarnoff
.
She added that a
._
that wil\ be involved in setting up the
by a
.
one-y~ar . $94,~. Co-Operative
~ave d1vers1fied ~cspons1b1!1t1es. The
.
mo~t
.
student in the program
wi\\
_
devote a \2
l)\acements.
.
.
Educat10n Grant, admm1stered
by
.
the
.
important of which she sm,_d she feels will
,,
month
,,
time
,
equivalcn~
.
-to
the
program,
.
~he
i'!'itia\ {unction
ClHb.c
director.
a\tb.e
Department of Education
;
is still in
_
its
·
be to "ensure
:
that
·
there1s a connection
·
which
·
wm
·
..
include
.
··
three
·
· ...
difrerent
·
·
:.'
oeg\nn\ng
•
fa\d'M1:s'
,
·,
-samon;
.
-..,\vl'~<>'<>a'<>\.'j
.
,,
p(elimiriary stages and it will .not
-
be
-:
firial
with
'
the
·
w<>rk place and the classroom."
plac~ments.
.
.
•
.
·
.
·
·.
be
to make initial contact with the local in
~
·
until a
.
director is hired, said Mrs; Sainoff;
· ~
she added that the advisors will
·
share all
. She added that the student can complete
dustries and businesses
to
participate in the
·
who wrote the proposal for'the grant
.
·
responsibilities with the director other than
his co-operative eniploymerit either by
program. Mrs. Sarnoff said that Patrick
Mrs. Sarnoff said that there _are some
the financial management;
'
They will also
working a full semester or on a part-time
Lennahan,
;
,former director of career
·
restrictions to tl!e program. In order to par-
.
set up the placements and evaluate the per~
basis, depending on the rieeds of the stu-
development at Marist, had made an infor-
ticipate in the program, she said, a student
:
formance of the students, Mrs. Sarnoff dent and the employer.
mal survey of companies that would be in-
rriust have a minimum cum1,dative average
·
said
.
.
Marist students who have been involved
terested in participating in the program,
of
2.S
and has to be atleast a sophomore.
The five division advisors are: ·Dr.
.
in. the paid internship program speak
.
but he has since left Marist College
.
According to the written proposal, the
Joseph Bettencourt, Natural Science
.
Divi-
favorably of it. "You learn so much by do-
The new co-operative program is a
·
·
·
·
·
ing rather than reading
,
" said Cathy
semester late in getting under way, bur
Cassetta, a Marist senior who is currently
Mrs. Sarnoff does not feel that this will
Circle K dances for
-
those who can't
by
Joanne
Holdorff
''I wanna rock with you (all night)
Danc:e you into day (sunlight)
I
wanna rock with you (all night)
We're gonna rock the night away"
·
Michael Jackson
Dancing for Jerry's kids - that's what it
,
is all about, and it will
be
happening right
here at Marist College, Saturday, Dec.
5,
1981 at 1 p.m.
·
There is a $20.00
.
m_inimum sponsorship
for singles and a $25.00 minimum sponsor-
ship for couples. The money
is
to be col-
lected before you dance and
.
handed in at
the dance marathon.
A cash prize will be awarded to the cou-
ple/single who brings in the most money!
Dinner for two at the Culinary Institute of
America is among the other prizes.
Local talent for entertainment during the
breaks will be provided for. Free food and
drinks will
be
served. Each dancer will
receive a free T-shirt entitled "Superdance,
U.S
.
A
.
"
.
working at IBM Poughkeepsie on a paid in-
hurt the college's chances of getting the
ternship.
.
.
grant next year upon reapplying
.
She added
Sally Petro, who is also involved in the
that if the director is hired soon, the col-
same program at
IBM in East Fishkill,
lege's chances of getting approval of the
agrees. She said that in a class, no matter
grant next year will not be affected.
how much one reads or discusses, one is
Overall, Mrs. Sarnoff said
that
the college
limited.
Liz
Kerins, a senior at Marist, who
will compensate since Marist already has a
worked at Paramount Pictures last summer
similar program in the communication
said that
·
"You learn just by being around
department.
that environment."
Mrs. Sarnoff said that she worked
All three agree that the money factor
together with Patrick Lennahan in prepar-
helps. Ms. Petro said "You can get used to
ing the proposal, which was submitted
last
it very easily."
spring
.
Originally, she added that the pro-
Ms. Kerins also said that having par-'
posal called for a five-year grant, but a
ticipated in the program will be beneficial · one-year grant was awarded since the
pro-
to her in finding a job after college. She ad-
gram is new
.
·
·
ded that a co-operative or internship place-
Mrs
.
Sarnoff also said that this wasn't
ment is a good place to make contacts for
.
the first time Marist had applied for a co-
future employment.
operative educational grant. She said that
According to Adrianne Singer, manager
this was the third or fourth time. Mrs.
of Employee Communication at IBM East
Sarnoff said that it had been previously
Fishk
_
ill, co-operative education is
refused since the college was not well
·
The Circle
K
Club on campus is sponsor~
_
ing a 12 hour dance marathon to benefit
·
the
·
Muscular
.
Dystrophy Association.
Local DJ's Tom
,
Cunningham and John
Winston (of 3WI) will be hosting the dance
marathon while several guest DJ's from
K104,
WBPM, WEOK,
WKIP,
and our
own WMCR, will
·
be dropping in to spin
some records.
.
Everyone is invited to come dance .
.
·
beneficial to both the employer and the
stu-
enough informed and did not have a good
Registration/Sponsor forms may be ob-
dent. "We get students from academic en-
understanding of co-operative education.
-
tained by contacting Joanne Holdorff,
vironment, which bring us new ideas and
"The proposals submitted showed that,"
P
.0. Box C-298, or in room C-424.
helps us with whatever workload there is."
said Mrs. Sarnoff.
Students addicted to lust in the afternoon
by Karen Lindsay
It's 3:00 on a weekday afternoon. Do
you know what the majority of Marist
College students are doing? They are in-
volved with the lives of a heroic young
·couple who cannot get married uniil the
·
divorce papers arrive from Mexico, a
man who is dflnking again because of
this young couple, another couple who
were divorced and want to get married
again -
t~ each other, another couple
who are in a bitter fight over getting
divorced, a young woman accused of
murder and the handsome young lawyer
. ·
who is trying to
.
clear the murder
because
.
he is in-love with the suspect.
.
How can Marist students be involved
'Yith so many people with so many pro-
blems? It's easy -
just tune in at 3:00
and watch the number one ranked day-
time television drama,
·
General
Hospital.
·
.
When asked to comment about the
show, students gave a wide range of
reasons for watching. "I really enjoy it;
I love to hate som
·
e of the characters.
It's a kind of outlet," one sophomore
said.
Others
.
watch to relax or to take a
break from the day
:
"I watch it because
it's
_
so popular around here and it is at a
good time for me," one
R.A. said. "It's
relaxing to watch for an hour, and it's a
good break."
·
Another popular reason for watc~ing
is that there is nothing better to do
.
Lin-
da Erico, a resident of Benoit House
said, "There is just nothing else to do at
that time, so I watch GH."
Many students say that the show is
really exciting. "When Heather shot
Diana Taylor, everyone in the dorm
went
:
crazy. You could hear everyone
talking about it," said one student
about the show's characters.
"I watch because I like the topics they
deal with such as murder, divorce, rape
and alcoholism," said one junior, "I
watch because I'm a
GH
freak
.
"
Next week, on November
I 0,
Elizabeth Taylor will be appearing on
GH as Mikkos Cassadine's wife. "Who
·
ever doesn't watch it now, will watch it
just
to see Liz Taylor. Then they'll pro-
bably get hooked and the ratings will go
way up," commented Gabriele Piehler,
a junior at Marist.
So if you want the scoop on- Bobby
Spencer and Noah Drake, or if you
want to find out about what really hap-
peoed to the divorce papers, just tune in
to General Hospital.
--•Page
4-
THE CIRCLE~ Norember 12, 1981
B-Guido 's Corner
by Manin Sims, Kevin Babc~k
Tony Cardone, Joe Verilli
We would like to thank Frank Scott
for the delicious steak dinner this past
week, but what ever happened to the
other 196 meals. With the serving of
steaks also brought along the notorious
steak bandit. Those of you who had
your steaks stolen don't worry, it won't
happen again because we won't have
steaks anymore., - ,•
-
On a sad note B-Guido'.s would like to· _
say good-bye to the prettiest secretary
on campus, DaraZinney.-We wish you
all the luck in the world
~
Love the
cutest R.A's Marvin and Tony.
Those of you who thought
tt~at
those
wild and crazy . woman were the Phi
_ Tappa Keggars in drag, you're.wrong:.
~
:.
\
'
_ awa~d ·wm be
a_
b~ahtiful ;ummer hcime
- in Siberra. Her reply to this award was,
"I'm
so excited but· I still"don't know
whalthis crew sport. is."
-
-· _-
.
It's that time of the yeai" again,
Registration Time! Yes the time when
you sign up for,5 classes anct' get the tri~ -
dent gum results when .4 out of 5 of your
classes have been dropped. When Joe
Verrilliw'as asked how he felt, he com-
mented
."It'
really doesn't upset ine _
because I. don't get t~at many classes
dropped as compared to the amount of
times_~hat I've b~~dropped by girls."
Boo's of\he Week
Boo to Billy Colgrove for spilling a beer
on Ellen's rug before intoxication.
,
Boo ,.to 'fim '.'Johnny' Appleseed" .
Grogan for receiving a black eye from a .
member of the opposite sex.· Boo!!
JOKES
It's a newly founded group that calls
'
themselves the "Wenches." When Col-
een Hollywood was asked _why this
group was formed she replied "It's time
the women at Marist had something to
call their own besides Soup Campbell."
Three Potato Chips are standing on _
a
This weeks -- winner of· the "Guess
b~idge, two jumped off why didn't the
what's for din.ner" contest was that
other? Because he was Wise Potato
famous security person Tom .Rooney.
Chip.
.
.
When we invesHgated into his ,
Mr. Bigger
married Miss Jones, they
background and we found out that Tom
became Mr. and Mrs. Bigger, then' they
loves to travel, so his grand prize will be
.
had a baby, who is the . biggest .
.... A Map!!!_
·
.
.
>..
_.
.
memberof the family? The baby'
This week's BsGuido's Athlete of the,; because he's a little bigger . . , . ...
. _
week goes to Kelly McMahc:m for her . Wha\_ did Cinder'ella · say when her, ·
outstanding performance in last .week's . photographs were late? ;
Si:>1nedflY ·
my , , ,
crew race. When Kelly: single· handedly
prints will c_ome! ! : _
,
. _·
stroked the Marist boat to a second
Why did ih_e monkey fall out of the. ,
place finish in a two bo;it race .. E:elly's.
• tree? Because it was dead.
'
'·•
Donate.to
Oxfam
,,
.
·
·Nov.
19~-··
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ROBERT'S-
Hair Shoppe
Precisio
·
n Cuts
Perhlanent Waves
·
.Nofu
·
ralii.ings.
> ,~-
'·
••
i
Women's Cuts·.".
$
9
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.
.
.
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.M~n_'s
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~
·.•: $8~~00
~ith sh~mpoo
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-
Per
·
m,,'
s: .........
$25.o·o:a.~~
up ·
Open Tues.-Sat. _
·8:30 -
5_.p.111.- ' ; . •'
-6· Mt~
CQ_rm·el P.lace
.
Pou
_
ghke~psie
.
.
'
113-7757.:
., · ·. PERTIN'ENT ,THANl<SGIYlNG·.}
.
. RECESS RESIDENT
MiLL •' ,_
IN_.· FORMATI_-_O_.
N ..
. /
_
l"he
r~sidence
halls
Will -
-~ The-Resideii'ceiHalls wi
:
11·
•
Close-at
f
·
.1
:00
p
'
.m
•
•.
9n
·W~d.,
November 25,
19.81.;
- The· last meal will be l·unch
:
-
..
-on
.Wed~esd~y.
-.. ::;_·-rfi~open
at
l0:00'.·a~n,).·on:
:<)Su')d_ay
·
, ·Novertiber.
29t
l:981 ..
- Thefirst
meal serVe·d will:
.bedinOer On
Sunday.
- Failure
.ori
the p.art of.
_
residents
·
to
meet with
. the exp'e~tations of.
~
this:
-:_· ·_closing
WUI
:result in_~a:·fir{e
·
,
low pr_ior-ity housing for __
spring, or both.·
·
.
, '
.
,
-
.·
.
.
- So
.
please, take
a
friend
hoJTl,e
~r,d
have a ~afe
and
happy Turkey
Day.
NO ONE WILL BE PERMITTED TO ST A Y
IN RESIDENCE HALLS OVER THIS RECESS~
r
r
---------•------------------------..November
12, 1981-
THE CIRCL~
•Pages--•
Steillerstackle the Mariststage
The.
Jersey Shore was the setting for
Jerry Cox's vacation. It is also the set-
tin~ for The ~enny Stealers. The play
.
written by Cox, dean of studentaffairs,
· will ~e seen at Marist Theater Dec. 3, 4
andS.
.
.
·
.
·
Over last summer, Cox had thoughts
developing for two plays. "I promised
myself that I would begin work on the
plays while on vacation at the Shore,"
he said. "I brought my pads and pencils
and didn't write a thing
.
.,
·.
'
One night after vacation the ideas for.
Cox has written five one-act and two
·
other full-length plays. He has also writ-
.
ten
·
poetry and short stories. "Theater
··
For A Dandy Horse," performed at
Marist in 1979, is his only ·other work
performed. "I'm
a
closet writer," Cox
said.
"I
like to write. If
I
had the time
I
would
just
write." He seems to have no
fears or ambitions connected with
writing.
.
The "Penny Stealers" serves a dual
purpose. Cox teaches Theory and Prac-
Hce- of Modern Theater. The students
analyze modern plays. "Instead of just
being able to guess at the meaning in-
.
tended by the playwright, the students
·
can
·
have feedback from the author "
said Cox. "The students have a r~al
situation to work with."
Co~ said that he wrote the play to ex-
.
pose the
.
students to straight theater."
"Penny Stealers" took written
:
forin,
"It
is a light mystery that has nothing
t9
do with the serious concepts thought
about over the summer," Co:,{ said. The
images of ttie old
.
houses on the Shore
.
come to life in the two days the audience
..
.'
shares with the cast in one such
·
house.
·
"I look at the houses and try to imagine
what the
·
people inside are doing, what
they're like," Cox said
. .
·
·
·
Even if. the students have been to a
Broadway
·
show it was probably a
.
.
.
musical," he said.
·
"Most of them
haven't seen a straight play. This is a
prime example of a modern play."
. The play is in its third week of rehear-
sal.
By
the fourth week, Cox will give up
his
·
role as director. Assistant director
Kevin O'Connor will become the direc-
tor; he said.
Mike Hayden is already
handling the production.
The character's ages range from 20 to
80. "One important factor in choosing
.
the cast was how they could capture the
essence of the character with their
voices," Cox said. "You can get away
-with
a loi more visually if the character
· comes through in the voice." The play is
going very well, according to Cox.
The cast includes Steve Maniaci (Ted
Kielty), Arlene Hutnan (Marge Kielty),
Beverly Morlang (Laura Creegan), Tom
Greene (Jack Creegan), Teresa Mattiace_
(Millie Costello), Philine van Lidth de
Jeude (Vera Costello), Karen Lindsay
Dean Gerard Cox
(Kate Grant), Allison McCarthy (Anne
Westrom),
Mark
Skinner
(Bob
Westrom), and Stan Merritt as Ralph
Tyrzak.
Cox is optimistic about the play. He
says he wrote it for pleasant entertain-
ment and for the students to enjoy
themselves in being a part of the play.
Performances will be at 8 p.m. in the
Marist College Theater. Admission is
free.
·
Vandalism and theft plague Marist library
by
Leslie Heinrich
Mrs. Brenner said. "What is worse than
most is 'oh, I forgot to check it out,' or
that, and more frustrating is someone who
'How did that get there?'," said Mrs
.
Bren-
Vandalism is
_
a problem that strikes
.
all
hides
a
book from the rest of the class until
ner.
over
·
today, and area college libraries are after that
·
particular assignment is due.
Marist College Library
·
houses 82,000
not excluded
as
victims of this thievery and There is quite a bit of that," Mrs. Brenner
volumes, "and we cannot afford to lose
•
sabotage.
:
.
.
,
.
said.
. _ -
.
.
~ny of them," Mrs. Brenner said.
The Marist Co!lege Library,
.
though
'
. Because
·
of the lack of recent inventory
-
Across town, at the Vassar College
equipped with a modern security system,
figures, Mrs. Brenner has no idea
.
how
Library, Barbara Lamont, the
.
director of
has one of the largest stolen book percen-
'
much ,money is spent each year replacing
the library there says that Vassar's theft
tages in the area. As Barbara Brenner; stolen materials. "It's difficult to say ex- · problem has remained about the same dur-
director of the Marist Library says, "There actly how much money is spent, but I think
ing the last few years.
is most definitely a theft problem at our
,
that this whole thing (thievery) is more an-
"The theft problem is annoying,
.
but
library. W_e haven't had a complete inven-
noying and time consuming than anything
here
·
at Vassar, we have a high level of
tory done in a number of years, but the last ~lse," Mrs. Brenner said.
academic competition, and books are hid-
time a mini-inventory was done, a large
den just about as often as they are stolen,"
percentage of the books were missing,''
Despite the security system, the theft
said Ms. Lamont.
said Mrs. Brenner.
problem has not decreased that much.
Vassar, like Marist, has not taken a re-
But the problem doesn't end there for the "There are other ways that people find to
cent inventory of their 500,000 volumes,
Marist Library. "What is more upsetting
'
get out of the library, and that's a shame,"
thus making it difficult to quote the exact
than theft is the vandalism," said- Mrs. said Mrs. Brenner. An average of one per~
number of books stolen, or what type of
Brenner. "People pull out articles from son
·
a day attempts to· walk out of the
materials are stolen.
At Dutchess Community College, the
ad-
dition of a security system one yea, ago
.
was a blessing for their their 83,121
volumes.
Having just recently completed an inven-
tory of materials, Michael Pope, director
of
the
Dutchess Library, was able to quote
the encouraging figures. "Before we had a
security system, there was an average of
386 books a year stolen," said Pope. "But,
now we average only about 30 stolen books
a year," said Pope.
.
A(Diitchess, the
·
reference books are at
the top of the most stolen list, with special
interest books running a close second.
"Books on subjects such as witchcraft and
the occult seem to be stolen the most," said
Pope.
There is also
a
large number of
periodicals stolen. "The top
·
five stolen
periodicals are now put on reserve to deter
the thieves," said Pope. "But sometimes,
this doesn't eve11 work."
A
journals, or pages from reference books.- library with a book that has not been sign-
"We, too, have
a
security system, but
We are able to replace these pages, but it ed out. This sets off the alarm, and the per-
that doesn't seem to deter the ones intent
'(the journal) isn't the same anymore,"
·:
son
_
is then approached. "What we hear the
/'
on stealirig
a
book," said Ms. Lamont.
.
;·
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-Pog
hieepsie-.,
NJ.
Convocation to focus
·
on hunger
by Cindy Lacey
·
This year's Dean's Convocation Day is
Wed11esday, November 18, beginning at
9:30 a.m., in the Mccann Center.
·
The topic for
the
day is entitled "Global
·
Perspective -
A
Current Necessity." A
key note address will be given by Ms.
Patricia Kutzner, the Executive Director of
World Hunger Education Service in
Washington D.C.
The purpose of Convocation Day is aim-
ed at making students more aware of
world-wide problems that exist outside of
the Marist community.
Academic Vice President and Dean An-
drew A. Molloy said, "Marist College aims
at academic excellence and the develop-
ment of personal world-views values." One
major goal established for the college for
the years ahead is "to generate a curricular
effort to free
·
ourselves and our students
from
·
the confinement of cultural artifacts
and to encourage the development of a
sense of
world
citizenship as a basis for en-
vironmentar responsibility, human and
natural resource distribution, and social
and economic interaction.''
Students will hold a more active role in
that they will form discussion groups
along
with divisional chairpersons and faculty
members. Following these discussions, the
divisions will have lunch together to discuss
the topic further and try to cement relation-
ships between students and faculty.
After lunch the student discussion
leaders and faculty will gather together in a
"rap up" session. Hopefully, these discus-
sions will be recorded and in some way
shared with the community.
As a result of the convocation, Marist
hopes to identify activities and events over
the rest of the year which further build
upon this theme.
Marist to join 8th annual fast for Oxf
am
by Grace Gallagher
In the course of one hour 1,680 people
will die because they don't have enough to
eat. That's 41,000 people per day. Grim
statistics that can be changed by some car-
ing people at Marist. The Eighth Annual
fast for
a
world harvest is going to be
observed on Thursday Nov. 19, 1981.
Students are being asked to give up one
meal, dinner, on Nov. 19, and one dollar
will be sent to
·
Oxfam to help those who
don't have enough to eat. The purpose of
this event is for everyone to learn
something about the plight of the im-
poverished and help in a little way towards
combating world hunger.
.
Starting on Saturday, Nov. 14 through
Tuesday, Nov. 17, there will be tables set
up in the rear of the cafeteria at lunch and
dinner for students to donate one dinner so
that one dollar is sent to Oxfam America.
Campus Ministry, the Spanish· Club and
the Communication Arts society will be
organizing this event.
Last year more than six hundred Marist
students gave up their dinners and over six
hundred dollars was sent to help ease world
hunger ...
This year a series of slides showing the
villages that Oxfam has helped will be
shown on Nov. 19 in Fireside C-249 at 8:15
p.m.
Oxfam America is an organization that
currently funds
55
projects in some of the
poorest regions of Africa, Asia and Latin
America. It attempts to help these poorer
nations develop more productive farming
technology and better means of global food
distribution.
/
.
·.
--.-~
... eage
6_-TH_E CIRCLE·
November 12, 1981
. "R.Yan · revea(sfaqts ·• ..
,abOutSciencC?(JJM~n
The Science· of Man Program is one of
the most misunderstood fields of study at
Marist, even though it has proven itself as a
major success in interdisciplinary educa-
tion.
·
·
"Even after 8 years, very few people ac- .
tually know anything about.the program,"
said Program Director Dr. Xavier Ryan ..
The main objective of the Science of
Man-program, according to Ryan, is to get
the 150 to· 160 students in the program to
look into themselves and answer the ques-
tion, "what does it mean to be human"
"Students deal with hum.an values, and ac-
quire an interdisciplinary logic," Ryan
said.
.
.
· ·.
Science of Man students are not required
to take Core courses, but are required to
prepare a thesis over a four year period.
According to Ryan, these thesis can be on
any topic that the students choose, bunhe
topic must be thoroughly examined from as
many, angles as possible. "When a student
has truly worked on his or her thesis for the
entire four years, the final product is, in a
sense, a book," Ryan said.
Science of\ Man students major in Ac-
counting, Business, Biology, English or
any other major offered at Marist and ac-
cording to Ryan, "This is so we have a
group of people with . diverse interests,
which is a important factor in successful in-
terdisciplinary study." This year more
students are majoring in Computer Science
than any other field but Ryan claims that
that has not affected the program.
the course. Ryan said that by ."asking their
way in'' the students usually stick with the
program. "Only a few find that they can't
cope," according to Ryan.
Dr. Ryan said that contrary to what ap-
pears · in .the
1981-82
Marist Catalog,
students may gain · admittance to the
Science of Man program after their .
sophomore year. "I've had seniors take the
foundation
course." The foundation
course.is the first in a series of five Science
of Man courses.
'According. to Ryan,
the
·
major
misconception _that students have about the
· Scierice of Man program is.that it is a three-
year program. "M~rist. requires students
who wish to graduate in three years to take
the Science of Man course. Other than that,
this is a four year program," Ryan said.
He also added, "Actually, a very limited
rtumber" of students in the program
choose to graduate in three years.
The students in the program meet every
week in groups of four ·dl!ring their first
year and are encouraged to talk with other
non-Science of Man students about topics
covered in those. groups, Ryan said.
. Dr. Ryan's "dialogue" groups also
review and .critique each student_s' work in -·
other classes. The st~dents are expected to
critique each others work as wen. Accora
ding to Ryan, they benefit greatly from the ·
experience.
. .
· .
Ryan also meets with groups of twenty
students once a month at his home to
discuss "much more than academics."
These meetings are designed to. help the
students "look into themselves." ··
Because of the large number of students
in the program, a new instructor has been
added this year to preserve' the amount of
time that first year students spentwith their
instructor. Beth Ann Goldring has jqined
Dr. Ryan as an instructor on the founda-
tion level while
Dr. Gerry White,
Dr.
Peter
O'Keefe, Richard LaPietra and Dr. Robert
Lewis teach the second, third and fourth
The selection processes for the Science of
Man program is always changing, accor- ·
ding to Ryan, but he thinks that he has
found a successful method in a three step
process. He first looks into
S.A.
T. scores
and grades. If he thinks the st11dent can
handle the program, he brings the potential
student to his office for a "very, very
tough" interview . .At this point it is up to
the student, and ·he or she is given a month
to decide whether or not they want to take
.
year Science of Man courses.
The Marist College Council
on the Theatrical Arts
an original musical
by
David · Peter Heckendorn
~ - -'-_ -_ .:____,-'----:::=::-~-r
Directed
by.
J [
Donald And.erson
~
l _____
~Jf
~
_J [
li
.J __
Marist College Theatre
November 12, 13, 14, 15
·
7:30
p.m.
and 2
p.m.
on Sunday.
Tickets
$4 adults, $2 Marist faculty, staff and senior citiz~ns
and
$1 for students.
For Information call
471-3240
·1
Joseph's.
Restaurant
-serving lunch and ·dinne·r-
2 Delafield-Street
-
P6ughke.epsie
Park
'
Discount 'Beverages
-Specials This Week
MILLER·
Blatz.
$1.496
pack
16
oz.
CANS ·
$2.39
&pack
Old Milwaukee Lite
White Rock
CANS
2
liters.
$2.99
&pac~
.89¢
ALBANY
POST
ROAD
HYDEPARK
•"t~'
·c;m;g;jill'i~~··
Bri~i
a;;Pi~~ffis
SPR1NGBREAK)82
in
Fort ~auderdale, Fla.
/
March 13-20
ay
·
aus
$225.00
Price Includes:
.
· -Round trip air /bus fare.
By
Plane·
$340.00"
~
8
day/7night accommodations at
.
·
hotel located across the street
.
.
from the beach
- many extras
For more information come to brief meeting
on Monday, Nov.16 at 9:15 p.m. in
Fireside Lounge
r
I
I
l
·
EASY STREET
cor
ia y
invites
·
you
.
to
.
join
us wit
~
U)
QI
u
·:::
Q.
~
i::
i
t\l
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Cll
Cll
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·
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Cll
Cll
f:Sm.,,i8
O)CU
E "
IESTAIJIANT BOUBS:
11 AM 'till 10-.30 PM
·
Rt.
9 •
Hyde
Park
229-7969
.
E
,:S
f
·i
; :,;.
1
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JH
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Friday, Nov. 13
.~
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__,.. _ _ _ _ _ _
--tl
-
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~
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-HARRISON
STREET
Thurs.,
Nov.12
i!
~
0
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...,_--=~~-----:-:::----:----=~--
,
----------
,
~
!
~
NORTHERN STAR
Saturday, Nov.14
o oo ci..;_
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - . . , .
~ ~
1
HARVEST
Sunday, Nov.
15
~
~~~----·----------------------
:;
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~
J.B.A.
-
Monday, Nov. 16
i,:,~---------------------------,1
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Rememher .your $3.00 cover, charge always include5 l free drink.
•
Nort1mber 12, 1981 · THE CIRCLE - Page
1--•
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Queslion: What do you think about
the music in the cafeteria?
;
, rf
·
Patty Barrel, freshman: "It's a good
idea but they should play rock."
John Gallagher, freshman: "I heard bet-
ter music at Lou's Barber Shop."
Jimmy
Hage, senior: "What Music?"
,;
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Donna Fidaleo, sophomore:
"If
that's
their idea
of
trying to pacify us it's not go-
ing to work
.
"
..
--------------------------
·
\
}
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-
~
Dar;I L~ H;cks,
·
j:nior: ,;,1
•':
d:esn
·
•
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•
l/
4
lh.
Hamburger
w
/lettuce·
&
tomatoe ......
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75
.
W
_
/Cheese .. :
-
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·
.•....
·
•.••...
-
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.....
1.90
W/Bacon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-.
1. 95
W /Both . . . .
·
.
_
. .
·
. . . . .
'
. . . . .
-
~ . . . . . . .
·
. .
2
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10
Cheese Steak
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2.50
.
.
BLT ......
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1.95
':
Grilled Cheese . . . . . .- .
.
. . : .
_
.
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. . . . . .
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.85
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W
/B~con or Ham
~ ~
... _
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1.35
.
J~mbo Hot Dog .....
.
• .........
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1.25
Onion IUngs
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.....
:
. .- •...•........ :
·
. ....
1.50
French Fries ; .........
~
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •
7 5
Available:
8: 00 - 1 : 00 Monday-Thursday
8: 00 -· 2 : 00 Friday
&
Saturday
!
.-
..
. ·
·
bother me to listen to some noise while I'm
eating, but let
it
be good noise, like
WBLS."
.
-
·-;:
.
,.':
-~-,;
_
-
.
·
~
,
'
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Steven
Maniaci,
sophomore:
"The
.
school publicizes WMCR
in
the Circle so
much,
why
don't they
-
play
WMCR
through the cafeteria and it will ease the
pain of eating.'
-'
(SUPER NEW YORK CUTS)
.............
at
49
·
Academy Street
(Near "Good Times Cafe"
Ample Customer Parking
Hl1 ancl Her
BODY PERM
leg.-$35.00
$185
0
OPENING SP!CIAL
SHAMPOO, CUT
AND BLOW DRY
From$
5oo
Open
Dallr
10•8·
No Appointment Nece11ary
·
For
Appointment,
·call
454-998'
;
I
..
I
I
\
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.
--•Pagel·
THE CIRCLE·
November 12, 1981
·-: .-,.·. - , .. :, .
Exclusive · club sets groundwork
.
for eYeiftS
'.
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•_,,··
.•
,._.·.
-
. .
by
Looi~
Corsetti _
. To those of us who are well versed in the
Greek language the word Omega represents
the 24th letter in the Greek alphabet mean-
ing "long." Here at Marist College the
· word Omega has a different meaning: shar-
ing, love and brotherhood ..
_
Three years ago a group was started with
this concept in mind. Father Richard
LaMorte was responsible for the birth of
the Omega group. "I wanted a small group
of upper-classmen who would instill pride
in the institution · and help incoming
Freshmel} adjust to college -life,'~ said
LaMorte.
·
The Omega group is a group of 15 young
men and women who were selected because
of their leadership qualities· and a basic
concern for the Marist community. The
· group has no president; vice president,
treasurer, or . secretary. ."We want to
decrease the amounc·of student apathy
· toward.;; the school itself," said senior. John
Schoch, · one of the founding Omega
members. "Our major concern is to· give
the school and. the people in it a better
name-that's our main goal,'' said Schoch.
With the Omega group came the birth of
the Big Brother and Sister program. This
program was designed to help the 1980
Freshmen class. The main . idea was to
assign every freshmen with a big brother or
sister, to help them with the rigors of ad-
justing to a new life-style.· ·
Junior Susan Vassallo was. responsible
for· contacting the upper-classmen who
volunteered over the summer.-"I contacted
the Big Brothers. and Sisters by letter who . common bond is to slay small bu_t to get the
in turn wrote. to their prospective little
_
rest of the clubs and organizations inv_olv-
brothers and sisters. Also this year we
ed," said Chandler• ·
,:, ,· -
·
started Family Day, which was a huge sue-
One of the . Omega's greatest . ac-
cess." "We wrote to all the .Freshmen's
complishments wa~ turning the Qrotto into
parents and invited them to a picnic and
a memorial for student's who have died.
day full of fun games,'' said Vassallo._ A,c-
."Father LaMorte gave us the idea of the
cording to Vassallo Family Day-was a very memorial," said Vassallo "We planted aU
big success, over 760 people were present
the, flowers and cleaped up the statue of
for the festivities;
·
Jesus and Mary. The _Grounds crew helped
The omega's try to keep a low profile us with the weeding and cleanup." Thanks
because they want to get others involved in
to the Omega grol_lp .ihese students will
school functions. "Family Day would not · always be a part ofMarist College.
-'
have been'such a success if we didn't have · The-Omega's are sponsoring a giant hon-
the help of the Residence Staff, C.U.B.,
fire and Christmas carol· session in
Seiler's and the McCann Center," said · December. The event will take place after
Schoch. According to senior Matt· the Christmas dinner . in the · cafeteria
Chandler, the Omega group is not meant to. followed by the -traditional house parties.
be big but to have a· great effect. "Our Help get involved_,- the Omega's did.
More readers write
-- Barry Lewis I ·
batty', it is beyond us why, then; you do.
If
you have "always turtleneck sweater with a vest,
The
mayor of Marist
you even noticed the so-caUed
found the female mind to be un- .dungarees with a
.
name on the
Dear Barry Lewis,
Freshman with "semi-permed balanced and slightly batty,'' then pocket with a huge hair_ brush
To The Editor:
. We are writing in response to
hair, tight sweaters, and jeans." I find I must wonder just how . sticking out of
it."
I'd like. to
I would 'like to take this oppor-
your "chauvinistic satire," "The
We only regret that maybe you Jong "always" has been for you. know how those two freshmen
tunity to tha~k you for the ex-
Female. Persuasion,'' in last
missed an important play in the Surely you 11_ave not been around girls got themse~ves into one
cellent feature article on our own
weeks issue.
process.
the block even once yet; and, turtleneck. Either you had more
"Mayor of Marist," John Hig-
Constant complaints have been
Sincerely, · ·naturally, I'm not very interested of a story than you realized or
gins. I have known Mr. ,Higgins
made by all sections of the Marist
Patti, Cindy or Gail · in your thought processes, assum-
you've. got a· lot to learn about
since my freshman year and
I
Community as to the low atten-
(and not freshman)
ing you have some. Perhaps when writing. Did the girls at.least wear
have benefited many times from
dance at sports events. Even if all
you have grown up a bit, perhaps. separate dungarees? · Further-
his vast resources-of wisdom, his
of us females, aren't Howard
Barry
Lewis
II
when you've had the time to ac-
more, when you write that "Their
sense of humor, and his sincere
Cosells at least we are there to·;
quire. so.me exp~rience, perhaps· names are always Patti, qndy <>r
concern'. for, the students. The
clap, cheer, and root the team on, ' MydearMr. Lewis: -·
·:: when.you have had the privilege. Gail," did you mean the hair
residents of 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th
and that's what matters, isn't it?
You began your recent, er ;col- · of spending .. ti_me with women, brush, the designer label, or the
floors of Champagnat Hall
We were among those who at-
umn "The Female Persuasion"
perhaps then you wm have dunag;trees? If you meant the hair
should consider themselves lucky
tended the game in question_ and
by . invoking . the . rights of the something of interest to say about brush, I think your reference to
to be able to draw from John's
were seated directly in front of a
satirist.
I'
hope that your ig- _: the subject of women. But, the major in business is a little un-
experiences, wit and care.
section of guys. As they . grew
norance is bliss, but I must point perhaps not.
If
any of the females fair. Why shouldn't a hair brush
It's too bad that the same care
louder it soon became pretty ob-
out that you have. not written a
wJ]o could possibly -.teach you named Gail major in business? ·
and concern shown- towards the
vious to us that it wasn't the game satire. Your thoughts (such as, anything should read your little
The refreshing aspect of your
students by John Higgins is not
they were talking about. Also, the . they are) cannot shield behind the , article, they won't waste time on column (using the term loosely)
shown by some members of the
stereotype you used was not ap-
mask of satire. What yoti wrote · you.
was that, at a minimum, you
Marist College administration.'lt
predated. Not all women are ig-
was not only not satirical, it
-Since. I have written you off as seemed to have done some think-
is. a sad commentary. on Marist
norant about the subject of wasn't very smart.
an extremely young big-mouth, I ing. All too obviously, you can
College when some members of
sports, as you implied by the ex- ·
You warn us not to ask you· find nothing to frighten me in use the practice.
,.
its administration can learn
a
ample you used.
.
how you knew those two frightful
your ideas. But your prose! You
And a good spanking.wouldn't
valuable lesson on students from
Furthermore, in reference to women
were
freshmen.
I .tried to· pass the following thing hurt.
·
a member of its maintenance
1(
your comment labeling the fema\e: - wouldn't dreall\ .of. ;aski_pg, you, off-as,a sentence (which -it-isn't): ->:•
Since_rely, ; , s_taff.
·., :·• '.t-Michael I>oifotty
'•~r~iii•
'•••fil••~ .•••
19
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.
uary_ 4
_
--2--
-
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''
'.t)}-:
Three Weeks (Monday thrUFriday)
DAY CLASSES
Principles of Accounting I
Ecology of the Urban Environment
Marketing Management
Radio Broadcasting
Introduction to Psychology
Introduction to Philosophy
World Literature
Introduction to Computing
(APL)
Introductory Statistics
AFTERNOON CLASSES
•
Siding
Beginning Swimming
1·
EVENING CLASSES
Business _and Society .
Financial Management
· Public Speaking
American Drama 1945-Present
The Art of The Film
Introduction to Computing (APL}
College Writing
Soviet Union Today: Land, People and Culture
Basic
Algebra
Introduction to Politics
American National Government
..
Wi11ter l
.
nt-ersession
·
enables
you
to
-*acceler~te your p~ogram
*satisfy
CORE,
major
or elective, _
-
requirements_
*concentrate
on one course
0~ Campus Housing is Available.
Registration begins
on Nov. 9
For more inf orm<1tion come to the Continuing Ed office
j
-!
f,
rr··· ...
h
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f,
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - N o v e m b e r
12, 1981 · THE CIRCLE· Pages--•
George Sommer
- , / college :writing students entering Dr.
George Somnier's · office to -discuss the
"D'~:: they got on their . papers, probably
. ; won~t. notice· much .. about··· their surroun-
dings·other than the floor. However, to one
of the many . uppercl~smen frequently
visiting Sommer's office; the three drift-
. wood lamps and wood~lath painting ori the ·
wall ~ontinually dra:,v orie's
eye.
·
"Walking along beaches on Cape Cod, I
saw pieces of driftwood and
I
picked them
up because I'm a scavenger," said Som-
mer.
"J
also got theidea that each piece of
driftwood is unique'·just as each person is
unique."; That was ten years ago. Since
then, he has constructed between 40 to 50
driftwood fa:mps with flaf'wood bases and
textured shades: With the exception of the
lamps in his ·home and office; all the lamps
have been gifts. "I never make one without
having a person in mind,'' said Sommer.
· While in Provincetown, Mass., he saw
pictures made with odd pieces of wood.
Through observing one man's work, Som-
mer developed a process of sketching,
measuring, cutting, sanding, and staining .
He said of his wood-lath painting,
"I
do
not consider it an art; I consider it a craft."
Sommer, the senior faculty member,
came to Marist in 1950 to teach part-time.
At that time there was one full-time English
Tfie univefsity inside the college
by Ken Bohan
Five-hundred --~rea· · students are taking.
courses at_ Syracuse University, without
leaving the Hudson Valley.
-·, In
1952
Syracuse University received
a
charter from· the state to offer graduate .
courses in engineering and science in the
Mid-Hudson area. ·
fr~m Syracuse, butals~ the opportunity to
have staff members · and select students
enroll-in the graduate programs. Although
the number of students that have done so is
small, Bickart said, "The staff is able to
take advantage
qf
our,computersysten:i iri
addition to .the orie they have." Alth~ugh
it's· .. two' different in'stitutions · sharing
facilities, it's a co~perative endeavor.
For the .past eight .years, .the University's
Mid-Hudson graduate center·, has . been
.-Most of the large number 'Of students
. .located .at Marist College in .Poughkeepsie. . come· from local businesses and corpora-
. The office is in room 242 in Donnelly Hall. · tions such as IBM. Courses are offered in
,
..
Electrical. and Computer Engineering, In-
According to Academic Chairman,- ~r.
dustrial Engineering and Chemical
T
.A~ ..
Bickart,. Syracuse University is leas-
· Engi!'leering, eventually leading to a Master
ing the-facilities they use on Marist's cam~- · of Science degree: In addition at ·the pre-
. pus: Marist rece_ives not only the leasing _fee
sent :_time; by, spe_cial. arrangements, a few
students are completing a portion of their
Doctorate degrees.
·
Bickart said that as many as 20 faculty
persons are involved in a semester. They
are all Syracuse professors who come down
once a week to teach their classes.
AU
courses are taught on the Marist cam-
pus.
Despite the fact that the branch of
Syracuse at Marist is some 200 miles away,
-it remains very attached. The office at
Marist could be confused with an office on
the Syracuse campus. The school ·paper,
The Daily Orange, is always on hand, as
well as scenic pictures of the campus. A
.colorful picture of the new massive athletic
, facility, The Carrier Dome, jumps out at
. you as you walk in .
professor and all 125 student brothers were
required to take composition, public speak-
ing,' English Literature, and American
Literature. In 1952, he joined the faculty
· full-time,
teaching two French, two
history, and two English courses.
·
By 1957, Sommer chaired the English
department and established an English ma-
jor within three years. "Way back when
Marion took up their first students (English
majors), my ex-wife and
I
would open our
house to them," he recalled.
"Before
'63,
we could be very close with
the · students," · added Sommer.
He
remembers Friday· afternoons when
students and faculty would walk over to
McManuses (now Skinner's) together.
Smiling, he reminisced, "We'd always end
up around a piano."
He has witnessed Marist's changes since
those days, citing one year specifically. "In
1967, a national unrest occurred -
a rejec-
tion of authority, a rejection of industrial
military context. I think that was the begin-
ning of what
I
call the noncollegiate stu-
dent. This came to its climax with the burst
of gun fire at Kent State (in May 1970). As
a result, students refused to accept the pro-
grams and disciplines that their institutions
knew they should pursue. That period ex-
tended to 1977. Since 1977, we've seen a
resurgence in interest in things academic
and things scholastic. But the resurgence
Continued on page 10
Film cOnSultantexposes · moVie industry
by
Susan
Vassallo ::. .
living in Gramacy, N.Y.,, works as a
and Advertising at graduate school at
· theatre critic for Key Magazine. But his
Baruch University.
You're watching television one night and , main profession is that of a free-lance ·
Contrary . to· his teaching ambitions,
you see coming attractions Jor a movie that
creative consultant. Mov_ie producers con- · · Tatelman began his career . on Madison
yoii really think looks good and you- want
suit him with about problem, hard-to-sell · Avenue in New York working for two years
to go see it. The next thing you know . movies, and ask him to write a catchy
creating ·commercials.
"You
may
you're walking oul of the movie theatre
slogan, and in conjunction with the editors
remember my claim to fame in the com-
telling your spouse what a horrible movie
choose the best scenes from the movies to · mercialindustry, said Tatelman: "Yahoo,
you though that ~as. Milt Tatelman at-
·
make them look and sound appealing.
Mountain , Dew;'' it will tickle your in-
. tracts the p_eople _with his _coming. attrac-
"I've worked on some real losers," said
ners.'.'·
·
tions but takes no responsibility
for
the
Tatelman.
,
quality
of
the film.
,
Tatelman was originally an English ma-
' Tate\man said he got bored with
· . .:.Tatelman,,a:riative ofBoston; currently.,.-jor in college; but switched to Marketing·> Madison,Ave1me and.barged his way into
,.,,._,._,·,: ·•·:· .. ·.··""
:
. ,
·.
•~-•- --... .:,'
.
:. · : .. •,., • . ··
-·· ·
.
·
,,, · MGM,Sttidios"and became Creative Direc-
Eat,~rink
and
Be
.
Merry
\
'Bt
FOOLISH
_
..
,...
_,
.
.
.
-
.
··
-
FOX PUB
· MON.-THURS·
8: 00
p.m. to
1 ·: 00
a.m.
FRI. &SAT.
8:
00
p.m. to
·2
::oo
a.m.
NON-ALCOHOLIC DRINKS
&
FOOD 2 AM
to
3 AM
tor . .
"Anyone Jhat. wants anything bad
enough and perseveres can get it without
stepping on toes," says Tatelman.
"Giving my portfolio to MGM turned
them off," said Tatelman. "I won them
over with my en'thusiasm." He asked them
to exploit him with a campaign he would
do for free. He said MGM was happy with
· that· deal and · they gave him .a James
Coburn movie to work on. He wrote some
copy in which MGM officials saw some
. potential and they offered him a job.
"Quietly go about what you want and
believe-you can get it. Push for yourself,"
said Tatelman. He's been in the business
for
12
years now:
Tatelman said he believes he is successful
because he has middle-class taste. "I love
Doris Day: This is the kind of thing people
ROAST.BEEF
Tender, Tasteful, Tempting!
Lean roast beef piled high on
a fresh foot-long roll .. Mmm . .,
Served hot or cold,
the
way you
like it!
lry
one today!
I
~U
BMIJC°J~ /
~
__
....
.,.,,
Famous Foot Long Sandwiches
We've got more taste.
PARK DISCOUNT PLAZA
HYDE
PARK
(Next to Carvel)
Open Late
e
· want, said Tatelman,··"l'm not very 'art-
sie'."
' ·
,
·. · · ·
· '
1 '
Tatelman has worked with many stars
such as Marlo Thomas and Kirk Douglas,
who he says are "bitches." He adores Shel-
ly Winters and Carol Burnett, and has
worked with and most respects Joanne
Woodward and Paul Newman. "They have
been screwed, says Tatelman. "They hate
them in Hollywood because they don't play
· the games," Tatelman said.
"A
lot of sen-
titnent has to do with winning the awards
and that's why Joanne and Paul never get
them."
Bette Davis is Tatelman's favorite ac-
tress of all times, who graduated from the
same high school as he. Newton North, the
name of the high
school is also
Tatelman's
pen name because he says he doesn't want
to be famous. "I must be content about
myself," says Tatelman.
·
"The movie business is very hectic and
you're under a lot of pressure, says
Tatelman. "Jobs are done overnight above
yelling and screaming."
In the past seven years, Tatelman has
begun to give lectures at· colleges and
universities. He says it gets him as close to
teaching as he's going to come. He closes
his lectures by saying, "Even if you think .
the movie industry is ripping you off, go to
the theatre anyway. Chances are you'll love
it."
.
-"WE'VE
GOTADATE
NOV.19th'!
"That's when the
American
Cancer
Society
asks
every
smoker
in America
to give
up
cigarettes
for a day.
Give
it
a
try.
You might
find
you
can
quit
forever'.'
THE GREAT AMERICAN
SMOKEOUT
American Cancer Society
t
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----•Page
10·.
THE CIRCLE·
Norember12, 1 9 8 1 - - - - • • - - - - - - - - - • • - l l l l i -1111111- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
.
Waters praises
new
alarm
sYSf.eni
Classifieds
Ted:
. .
.
..
.
"Hand Curtain much?'
·
'~Loveya
Adrian
Elisa:
I'm so proud of you!
Your "roommate''
To the Casfaitd Crew of Graffiti:
You're all wonderful. Break a leg!
'
Sue and Dawn
To the World:
Nobody cooks like M.B.
Michael:
Keep searching until you find.
FC
FYEO
EM
Dawn:
Thanks for all your support.
Always
Wanted:
A) Airheads
B) Easy Women
B.L..
Laura
Elisa
C) Pity Faas
See Dick Keeling-
An Equal Opportunity Lover
Female Wanted:
. ,
Adorable male who resembles a monkey
desires a lasting relationship with a female
anything! Only serious applicants need ap-
ply.
"MARVELOUS" Marvin Sims
Mark Guiffre:
You've got to be sincere.
Judy,
HI!
Mc:
A Friend
Guess Who
lt-'s comedy hour in the Parthenon!
your
_
roommate
by Pal Brady
.
.
The new fire alarm system at Marist is
a
"definite, positive improvement" over the
old
.
system,
·
according to Din.-ct~r of
Security Joe Waters.
. .
··
The
·
new fire alarm system, frl'm F:,ir
Security. is compost.-d of smoke and h~,t
detectors, fire horns. m,d pull stati~,ns.
This system was inst:tlll-d in the 0-\mpus
Center, Champ.'\!1na1. lkm,it. Gr(•iJ•t~\
'
and Leo this smm,,cr. ln:~tallation in
Sheahan should be c,..m,pk·tcd. in a
f\'W
weeks.
It
is e.xp(\:'tt'l.i that
the-
t\.'
1
wnh~)US<'$
will ha"e thc same- fire alarm s~-stcm
in--
stalk-d.
The new s,-stt'm is
llH)rt'
advan~ than
the old one. ·which was C'\nnpo.~ l'f pull
bells. The bells had
11.1
be ulled manually
b)' Michael Oliva
.
in order for
them
to
ring.
To keep the bells
rinRhlR,
someone \u,d
t\,
kec\\
\\\\tl\\\l!, them,
The fire horns in
the new S)'Stcnl cnl\
he
ncti\':\ted
by
the prcsem.'C
\,t'
the smoke \\\'
ht"nt,
:md c:\I\ he
m:m\mll)'.
Onl'C
the
I\\W\\~
st:ut ri\~it~, they
wUI
conth\\l('
h,
l'in~
\Ill·
tit thcv m'C' n•s,•t.
\n
1\
\\'Ckcd
,
·
0,,,,1 \\\
the
b,'\st·m~·nt
hi,
fh'\' \','\\\\'\
w\t\l
1,
\'\lsh
\l\\lh'll
• .
\.-
.
:
·
:
,
tlmt stops the horns and resets the system.·
·
:
The
now
system has been working very
..
wc\l,
Tht1
only
problem was that initially,
the sc11~1th'lty of the horns had
.
to be ad-
_lustc1I,
The
·
fire alarm system obviously
w,w~t-\\
\'1.'Q'
well during the small
.
fire
,
whkh
\W~\IHed
in
Champagnat on Hallo-
\\\'\11\
llhlhl,
.
has
l\\"lt
b«\\
ll\
tl\e-
h\\1nauities or the liberal
tion, for if students foday are not pas-
am~,
t\1.'rQ..,~
therountr)\ the r~surgence has sionately dedicated
1
to language··: and
b«n in job odented majors, such as literature, our civiUzation is going into a
b\\siness and media.
·
new Dark Ages/' he said.
-·
1
"My
paramount concern is for the con~
.
"Where is t
_
he next generation of what I
tinuity of the culture of· Western civiliza-
·
represent coming fro~?''.
·
·
'
LiVillg
1egenct~
•·
.
-
:-
.
.
'
•
:
-
--
.
.
.
Your Eyes: Next rip, Justin Hayward in~
elbows, knees and·feet on
Veteran Cosmic
troduced two songs front' the album·
Days
Rocker. Then withouf announcement, the
They are legends. They came over to
of Future Past, "TwiUght Zone" arid Tues-
.
band started into
.
~nights fn
·
White Salin .
.
America with the Beatles, Stones, and
day Afternoon. Gypsy and Watching and
From_.that poiiltori, everybody in the arena
Dave Clark Five in
,I
964. When they
.
tour
Watling, followed them.
·
.
.
was standing.
:
Ray
'
Thomas
··
provect his
·
·
(and they_ rarely do) it is an immediate
The crowd, a mellow one, did respond
·
ability to play t'1e flute on an explosive ver-
sellout. The name of the band is the Moody
·
·
with enthusiasm. The band played several
,
sion of
Legend
of a
Mind. On this song the
Blues, and
.
they played a
fuU
house at the
more cuts from
Voyager including· 22,000
·
screen from
·
b~hirid the stage
.
showed dif-
Brendon Byrne Arena in New Jersey last
Days, Nervous and Meanwhile. Justin
·
ferent psychedelic imprints, reminiscent of
Monday,Nov. lst.
·
Hayward then introduced one of John's
thelatesixties,withanintenselightandfog
.
·
The house lights went down at about
new songs. With that
"the
band
.
went into
.
show. Ray Thomas the~ infor!l}ed the au-
9:00 p.m., and the then Justin Hayward,
Isn't Life Strange, whkh received a
_
big
dience it was time to
go
and that
"We
will
John Lodge, Ray Thomas, Graeme Edge,
·
reaction from the audience.
.
leave you with
The Question." After that
and Patrick Moraz took the stage. There
.
John Lodge
·
was jumping up
on
the
.·
.
song 'the Moodies left the stage. With
were some technical problems which
'
amps, and waving to the crowd. Ray
lighters and matches igni
_
tjpg
.
the arena,
delayed the concert for fifteen minutes,
Thomas and
.
Justin Hayward were joking
·
.
along with foot stomping and hand clapp-
.
.
and forced the band to leave the stage.
with each other. The crowd seemed to be
ing, the Moodies Teturned for an c:ncore.
With the sourid problem fixed, the
·
getting
a
little bit rowdier as the show went
They played a rowdy version of
Ride My
'Moodies' returned to the stage. Patrick
·.
on. The thumping sounds of Lodge's bass
.·
See Saw. On this song the house lights went
Moraz's keyboards and synthesizer
·
launched the band into
I'm Just a Singer in
·
on, and the audience went crazy.
,
The
openedthe chords to their hit single
Gemini · a Rock and Roll Band followed by Stepp-
'Moodies
then ''thanked New York for
··
·
Dream. They followed that
'.
with
The
Ing in a Sliding Zone. ·
.
_:
·
.
..
.
·
coming," and left the stage.
·
··
·
·
Voice, another cut from their new bestsell-
· ..
Justin Hayward then
.
showcased his
• ._
The Moodies, after
.
fourteen
·
years
ing album
Long Distance Voyager. Ray
.
guitar ability with
·
an excellent solo
·
on
.
together; still prove that they can
,
play
Thomas then introduced ·an oldie and with
·
._
Driftwood.
·
Patrick
_
Moraz displayed his
·
ballads and
rock
out with the best of them.
that the band began to play
·
The
Story in
·
showmanship by playing the keys with his
·
rniglad thatlgotthe chance to see them.
·
-------------~---------· -
·
-· -·---•--•.
>
-· .......... - .................... ________ .... ________ _
j/ho/e5ome .
~utriti;u;
food
af
f
ea5onable friceS
We
I
come
'
Alternative
·
Food
·
.
Coop
1
7
8'1
·
Main
Stree-+
Poughkee.psie.
Op,in
to
the
Pub
r,c
Tues.
e
Sa't.
10-~
Wed.1hurs. Fri
.
10-1
530
:
MAIN·STREET
OPEN:
\
if:30 am~3:00 am
Week~ays
lli30
'a~
:
ffl~'~4:'.00
alm.
·
w~ekends
_
·
-.
.
F~$t Del
_
i~ery
·
_
SPECIAL-OF~ THE~MONTtl
:
$3.75
P;as
471
·
-0223
.
A-l
Florist
·g
Garden Center
·
.
.
.
.
_
l~2
Washington
:
St:
Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 12601
91
-
4-471-5700-
.
JO% Discount with
.
Student ID
_... __________ .... _______________ ~--------------•November
12, 1981- THE CIRCLE. Page
1.1--•
; Marisf'endssoccer season
12~6-2·
· ·
,:.
.
,·:,-
''.,
. The Marist soccer
team
came ,from
~
2-0 .
momentum going their way, Marist's
Bill
halftimdieficit to defeat Union College 4-2 ·· Cooper gave Maristthelead, 3-2. Finally,
, last Wednesday.
'
,:· ·;
..
. -·
it· was senior Eddie Isaacson scoring
· ' .. :'· U~ion got two early goals; the firston a
Marist's fourth goal. .,'
disputed call, and 'the second on _a baHthat
· The wiri brought Marist to a record of
_ was'deflected into ·the upper corner of the · 12-5-2, •
· net to give Union a 2-0 lead. _ _
Saturday, the hooters fell to Manhattan
., As the second half started, it appeared
1-0
in their final game of the season and the
Marist was really in trouble as Union con•
Tri-State Conference.
· •tinue to controrthe flow of the.game. Bill
· 1n the gaine~ played at the ·Riverdale
Cooper was fouled in the penalty area, and
campus, Marist outshot Manhattan and led
Marist was awarded a penalty shot which
in ~orner kicks 8-2.
.
Oyvind Larssen continued.
The team's standings for the season were
Next, Tore Udahl tied the game up·for
left at 12-6'-2.
· Marist
a
few mi_ntltes later. With the
PLAYER
:
op· THE WEEK
'
After having led his squad to a surprising
seventh place finish at the IC4A's at Van
Cortland Park Monday; with
·
a
personal
best of 26:06 over a 5-mile course, Joe
Burleski has been chosen Miller's Athlete
of the Week.
•.
.
.
.
Burleski,- a senior, has been doing a great'
job for Bob Mayerhofer's harrier's,
finishing among the . top runners jn every
·race he has participated in this season. This
past Saturday he led the Red Foxes again,
this time to a ninth place finish at the New
.. York State Championships.
After graduating from Arlington High
School with .only one year of running ex-
perience behit1d him, the hard-working ·
· Burleski embarked.on an uphill battle to· -
become the best runner he possibly could,
and thus far, he has not ~ome up short.
Praised by Coach Mayerhofer as being one
of the best and most dedicated workers
on .
the team, Burlesk_i likes the challenge of
pushing himself
to his maximum best.
So, Joe Burleski, for all your fine
finishes, hard . work, persistence, and
dedication; we salute you, Miller Athlete
of
the Week.
·
_ RIVER DISTRIBUTING CO.
Noxon Road
· ·Poughkeepsie, New York
PLAYER OF THE WEEK_
SPONSORED BY THE MILLER BREWING COMPANY
:-,
Vinn·y Caru'os (15) and
E~
Isaacson (18 use teamwork in last week's ganie.
Soccer statistics
Name
G
A
TP
Min.
Goalkeeping
Games Played
G.A.
Tim Buchanan
5
5
15
Andrew Homola
20
1781
21
ToreUdahl
6
1
13
Andy LaRocca
1
45
0
Ed Isaacson
4
4
12
John Malatestinic I
29
0
Oyvind Larssen
5
2
12
Heinz Warmhold I
15
0
Ian Arscott
5
I
ll
Total
20
1860
21
Bill Cooper
4
2
10
Bob Cooper
3
4
lO
John Goff
4
I
9
G.A.A.
Saves
Pct.
so
W-L-T
· Vincent Caruso ·
3
1
7
1.06
108
.837
5
12-6-2
Knut Roald
I
2
4
0.00
2
1.000
0
0-0-0
Bob Sentochnik
I
2
4
0.00
I
1.000
0
0-0-0
John Hintze
l
0
2
0.00
0
.000
0
0-0-0
Paul Sutherland
l
0
2
1.02
III
.841
5
12-6-2
Joe VasilecCozzo
I
0
2
2.13
147
.770
5
6-12-2
Mike Vardilli
0
I
I
TOTALS
44
26
11 I
OPPONENTS
21
9
51
Shots.on goal
Corner Kicks . Scoring
by
period 1st
2nd 1OT
2OT
TOT
Marist 178 _ . ·. Marist 102
Marist
20
22
l
l
44
Oppo~e.nts
g3
Opponents 7 l · Opponen!.\
12
9
0
0
21
t
Marist drops· fifth straight
by Bill Travers
The emotional high that sparked the Red
Fox offense during the Iona victory, has
faded. Since that win, the Red Foxes have
suffered five consecutive losses, the most
recent a 23-0 shutout by Ramapo, on the
frozen turf in New Jersey.
The offense which scored 34 points in the
season opener ag;iinst St. Peter's, has only
tallied 44 points since the Iona win.
"The loss of Jim Cleary for two games
certainly hurt us, said coach Malet." These
were both -closely fought games and the
running of Cleary would have helped."
«Both Brooklyn and Fordham were good
football teams, but they were definitely
beatable."
.
Except for brief instances during the
Lowell and Pace games the offense has
been totally non-existant. The usual strong
running of Ron Dimmie, and Jim Dowd
and Mike -Spawn has been shut down,
especially during tlie Ramapo clash.
"Ramapo was an extremely strong
defensive team," said Malet. "One third of
our possessions started inside our
10
yard
line. We were forced to play con-
servatively, so as to not make any fatal
mistakes. Running -the wish bone _
is dif-
ficult with our backs against our own end
zone." ·
Ramapo's
tenancious
defense
held
Marist to eight yards rushing and
25
yards
passing, as their offense led by RB Jim
Conyers, slowly put the game in the bag.
At halftime Ramapo led 14-0 on a 3-yard
touchdown run by John Lobman, and a I-
yard score by Jim Coriyers.
· During the second ·half, Ramapo was
just as stingy as they completely shut down
Marist while scoring another TD, a I-yard
tally by Conyers. Faced with another drive
inside their own ten, QB Cleary was forced
to down the ball in the end zone for a safe-
ty, ending the scoring .
·#98 Tom Lawton and John O'Leary bring down a Ramapo rusher.
•
f
-·
I
.I -
.
~
.
.
I
.
,
.
/.
.
Marist ~katel'. being ~becked by
·
a Rider clefenderJn action Saturday night
.at
the Civic Cent~r.
_
·
Hockey
wins2
athOme
.
:
sCOre
,
and win
by Tim Bl'.euer
wereMike Caridi, Brian Foley, arid Dennis
Walsh. Tony Cardone and Mike Caridi
.
•,
.
...
·
·
.WeekFour
:
The Marist College ice hockey team re-
were credited with assists as Caridi received
·
• d
·
h
.,
·
•
~
·
..
f
·
.
THIS WEEKS
-
QUESTONS:·
·
·
An • people say not mg 1s ,or ree any
bounded from·
_
th
eir season opener loss by
two and Cardone one.
· ·
·
-
more. Just tell that
.
to ·another weeks worth
1.
Who
·
was the pitcher who pinch-hit
recording two consecutive victories over
_ Marist continued their winning ways last
•
.
.
-
.
·
h
..
CIRCLE'
.
b"
t
safely
.
l l
4
times?.
King's Point and Rider:
·
Saturd~y as they were victorious over Rider
.
·
0
!
wmners
10
t
e
.
_
s . igg
_
es
The Red Foxes
.
won their home opener
8 to
5.
Once again Jim McDonald lead ttie
.
g1yeaway, SC(?RE AND WIN.
T~1s ~eeks
2 .
.
Who was the only player to win the
on November
2, 7 to 4 against King's Point
.
Red Foxes 'Nith another scoring exhibition.
·
-
·
·
wmners are J:?irk~
_
McMahon
-
and _M1ch~el
batting and home run titles with two teams
·
.
:
-.
as
Jim
McDonald scored four goals. Marist
''McDonald
:
scored the game's first goal
.
Zucc~rello, Mike is ali:e~dy a two-time wm-
in the sameJeague?
•
.
jumped out to a
4 to
J
lead after the end of
about a
:
minute into the game," com-
ner and.
Y(?U can be a wmner to.
·
·. ·
· ·
3. Who
.
is the '?resent-day play~r who
the (irst period. After being outscored 3 to
rnented head coach Glenn Van Bramer
>
.
..
_-
To ~m,1ust answer as many sports ques-
.-
h?lds the club ~attmg mark lead with two
1 in the game's second period .the stickmen
"Jim is playing very well
·
for us. He really
·•
tt0ns as
.
you
_
can
_
.
,
A,fter; th~
·
week
-
_of
.
different te~ms.
..
.
.
took
·
the.final period
2 to"0.
_
_
•
·
.
.
:
put.on quite
,
a show
:
in the. Rider
,·
game."
·
·
.
:::.
Nove111ber 15; the pers~,n
_
or perso~ wtth
_
4
.
~ho hit 40-o~:morC: home runs_m the
,
1
:;
Joining McDonald in the_ sco
.
__
ring column •
All of. McDonald's goals ·were unassisted.
.
t~e mo~t answe~ed qu~st1on9vms_.
It s that ~mencan Leag~e eight times, but faded to
1 -~
,
•
·
·
.
.
.
·
·
.
simple. Just mad your answers to CIRCLE htt the .50mark?
'.~
·
'i.:
:
_\•_
·
•
.
:
__
_
•
.
:_: __ ·
.
·
.
.
·
.• ·
.
·.:
__
:
.
. ·:·
·
·:.··,··_
..
-
.
:
.
·
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u··<·n
·
· .
..
•
·
n·
e
:~
:·
:
~'S
;:',.,
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~l-
·n·
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~-:
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· -
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· -
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:_:,
:'.
.·
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t
·
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.
.
:
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-
-
-
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·.
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·
:
~~~e~;
~Pri~?rubJ~?
.
-~!1!!s
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Ztri~~r~: · ·.
N:ri6'!°:i
0
i,~~g~t~g~~t
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~fm~~m~:t~!i:;dt~~
.
·i;
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ilt
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f!llJrv~
~--
-
-
·
~~~~~:~a~~~oCIRCLEstaffm~mber hitthe50mar}c?
'
.
·.
ji
· -
.
:.. .
~;ke~B6h~n
<-
:·,
·
.
.
,,
f~llowed~i~s~IY:b~J~nfor"C
·
~,;a1taln
Mike
·
•·
~
-·
". :'.
~in~e la~t ~a
;
i 7
h
{;:i
~is
/
~oUeg;
;
Cross
-
~
-
ci%~;6l~n!
5
~t~~c~~i,e::J
.
ie:sn ~~:di;
:
·.
~
.
.
•
-.
:
·
country team
:'
has
:
been
.
frainirig with
.
real key' to the teams success
:
The scoring
. ~.
-~
•
.
f
.
T.olleyers
fall
:to
_
··
s.ienq
at
horrie
t
~.
·
~
··•
·
·:
.....
specific ·goals
,c
iri
'
mind;
-
Last Saturday one
·
was
..
rounded
.
out
-
by Paul
:
Peterson
.
who
.
.
of
·
those goals, to finish in the top 5 at the
···
·
.
placed 6lstin what was by far his best race
'
state meei~wasachieved.
·
:·.
_
.. ·
:
·
•
:
_.
of the year
,
Peterson is considered by his
By Kal'.en Flood
.
"We a~e really excited about this win
•
:
'
At the State
·
university
_'
at Albany the
coacli"
··
arid teammates
to be
,
the most im-
because it and the two remaining league
··.
Red
.
Fox harriers placed
i
foui:thin.a field of.
.
.
.
proved athlete
.
on
the
squad. :
:
- ·
·
.
·:
On .
·
Monday;
.
·
•
.
November 9th,C the .. garnes could put
.
us at the .500 mark and in
21
and upset Cortland Staie in a fifth; and · •
.
:.
'
Dave Haupt, the 6th man forMarist
pr_o-
women's volleyball tearrl_su'rfered a divi-. the HVWAC tournament," said co-captain
' .
.
Colgate seventh.
·
.
.
. '
.
' ·,
.
- duced a strong finishing kick to catch
·
two
·
sion lossat the hands of Sie.11a College: ·
. ·
Linda Peter after
-
the match.
.
.
Despite a temperature
·
change of-30 opposing ruimers
·
in the last straightaway
•
·•
In the first game, Marist's starting player -
-
Marist advanced it's league recqrd of 4-6
·
degrees in30 hours, snow fllii'ries
;
and high
·
and ·placed 64th.'
·
. -
·
·
·•
·
_
•
\ :
' .
·
·>
Maureen
-
Mirra,
,
· gave
,
.
the
,
~
foxes · a · by defeati~gMount Saint Vincent's women
winds Maristcran a strong
-
race totaling
167
,
:-,_:
,
There was
·
a
controversial start to the
substantial lead by serving
_
up six
:
straight by a score of3-2
.
The Red foxes easily took
.,..
.
Points to finish
•
.
bc;hind a tightly
_.
packed
.
_
.
race
:
i!i which
·
a:
secon~
.
g~.in was
..
fired -irn°
.
:
.
points, this and excellent court coverage by the fir
.
st two games with
-
scores of 15-8; and
Fredonia squad
.,
(46/points); Siena
;
and
_
iriediat
.
ely after the starters gun. This
·
pro-
.
Marist co-captains Linc!a
-
Petcr
·
and
-
Pam
.
·
15:10. ~he determined College of Mount
.
.
University of Rochester
:
The Marist defeat
:
cedlire signals a false s
.
tart arid immediate
.. -
.
Green, g~veMarist
a
15s10 win; The Siena
.
..
Saint Vmcen~, however,
·
fought back by
·
.
·
·
or
·.
cor
·
t1and ancLColgate was the
.
surprise
/
halting of the race, usuallx. Th~ race was
Indians edged
:
Marist in
_,
the
·
second game
· .•
capturing the next two games 16-14; and
of the day, both had oeaterithe
.
Red Foxes· not stopped however,
·
causing widespread
15~13 to
·
ev~n up the scor~
;
The third game
-
15~6. Marist came through though in the
·
only
a
week earlier.
0:<, '.
.
;
.'
/ -
<
;
> ·
=
,-
_.
confusion and hesifation by the runn~rs.
was taken
by
Marist'IS~l 1 ~nhe result of·
:
'fifth
.
g
_
~me with a score of 15-11, to clinch
.·.
/
Mark Wickh
.
am;
-
~ft~r suffering some
-
· Dennis Martin, 7th man for Marist in 76th,
team work and determination, but the skill
_.
the match
.
setbacks in receri(W~eks;
·
lead the team
·
·was one of those thre>wn off by the mishap.
~
.
and
·
experience of Siena dominated in the ·
On Wednesday;- November I Ith, the
with his• 14th place fiilish:
-.
This e
.
arned
While
.
not making excuses
-
Martin
.
was
fourth and fifth gamefasthey.won 15-11, Marist College Women's Volleyball Team
Wickham AII~State
c'
rankirig .for the '81
·
disa
·
ppqintedJhat in a meet of this calib
.
er
.
and 15-10, and improved their record to 19-
will travel
_
to
:
Manhattanville College and
:
season~ The second runnirig
·
Re~ Fox
.
across
·
there
,
was controversy marring the
'
out-
:
13. The Marist
.
College
,
Women's on Friday November 13th the Red Foxes
.
the line was freshman,
·
John Lovejoy in
come.
.
: :-
. -·
·
·
·
.·
-
.
'
Volleyball Team served up a league win will finish their season on
.
home courts at 7
26th.
Lovejoy
/
has
·
been riinni
.
rig excep~
"
.
Coach Mayerhofe,:
,
was very pleased with
over the College of Mount Saint Vincent on p.m. against D9minican ~ollege. These
tionally
all
.
~eason and missed be(:~min$
. ·
·
the team pe~formance
·
·
and
.:
sai~, ?It was
· .·
Friday November
_
6th to bring them
-
one
·
two all important league gar,ies should pro-
.
.
All-S
_
ta~
_
ebyJusJ 6scconds.
·
':·•
.
_
_·
one of our goals and reachmg 1t waL
.:
.
-
game closer to
·
·
playing in the Hudson
-
ve
_
t9 be exciting and all are welcome to at-
.
-
.
-,_
~
.
Senior Co-captain
:
Joe
:
Burl~ki was the
.
great.•;
.
·
·
.
.
Valley
·
Women's
::.
Athletic Conference tend.
·
'
·
-
next rnan across
.
in 31st. Burleski
·
was
.
,
Tournament .
.
·
-
·
·
·
·
1yotes
off tfle'.meiflQplld
-
-
'
.
-
·
.
·
.
·
.
,
;
.
'
::
·
:
who ~tr~nd~ill be surprised at
.
our
mys~~ry
'
.-
6-2 record. Top goal scorer was Tor~ Udahl
.
opener to
C.W. Post,"the team has won the
.
-
.
:
·
.
·
:
'.
_
·.-:-
mascot
:-
:
The Fox
\.Viii
reveal him or herself
with 6, a~d the Jeadirig assist man
-
was
next (wo outings an~ are being led by Jim
Who will
.
bt
in the Red
·
Fox
.
suit'? That's
·
just prior t
.
o the tip
.
~Q(f of 'the
<
game, so
freshman standout Tim Buchanan with IS
·
McDonald
;
This sophomore has had two
·
.
the question McC1mn Dir~or Dick Quinn
.
·
each and everyone attending
will
see
for
points. Don't think Doc
.
Gol~man isn't
,
consecutive hat-trick
_:
night~, including
is asking the students of Marist; It's only a
himself just whothe celebrity Fox
·
is. Early
·
worried about losing super goalie Andy
·
: several unassisted goals in the
-
team's vie-
week
.
away tiW
'
our Red
:,
Foxes
·..:.
til)'.'off
Lewis Line predictio:ns has.Betty Yeaglin ar-
.
"cricket" Homola. "Cricket"played in all-
tories over King's Point and Rider.
·
·
against the Yugoslavia National basketball
:
2-1, with Dean Cox at 6-1. -·
.
·
·
·
.
of Marist•s·20 games and gave up only 21
·
·
·
·
·
·
'.
team in an exhibition contest, the final· ·
.
•
·
··
_·
..
· •••
.
.
.·
:
·
goals while saving 108 shots on goal, in-
•••
.
preliminary to our
-·
'veritur.ousjoui-ney into
.
I would personally_ like to thank all
_
the
.
eluding S shutouts_.
'
.
•
·
Division }basketball.
:
., ..-
:
.
- .
.
.
. .
·
._
wornen who
"
took the time to react'
on
last:
.·.·
.
, . .
•••
:
.
~
The f~ns 3:tthc
.
hockey
gam~
hav~'reany
.
. A Mar!st
_
dignitary
will
.
don
·
Red _Fo~ at-
_
_
week's
_ .
c
_
o
,
hi.~~•
.
The
.
Female Persuasion.
· ·
wh
·
at a
:
differen
.
cc
a
_
year
.
can ~~ke fo"°r
.
.
helped
.
boost the morale of the team: Isn't
tire, and 1fyou can guess
\Vho
this d1gmtary
.
All
.
Your cnuc1sm
_
was welcome,
·
but I'm
the Marisf Hockey team; which last year
·
it sad that
.
the other Marist
:
men's and
is, you win.a McCann center
.
jacket
:
You
·'
~orry that I cannot comply with your re•
had neitber the coach nor the funds to
women's
·
teams can't r~p from audience
can start mailing
iri
your guesses now to
·
quest to jump off the McCann Center.
·
finish out the season. This year the team is
·
..
participation?
If
all those students that
Dick Quinn at the McCann Center, or give
·
•••
·
part of the Metropolitan Collegiate Hockey
knock our team•~ play would
.
·
go to the
the person at the door on the night of the
.
Congratuiations are in order for our soc-
Conference, and are making a red mark in
-
games,
.
I'm sure each
.
individual would
game your guess. Dick assures me that all cer team, which ended the season with a 12-
their conference play. After losing their
understand how wro!lg they are.
;:
1
.
,
..
,•·
.l
•. ~
·
26.8.1
26.8.2
26.8.3
26.8.4
26.8.5
26.8.6
26.8.7
26.8.8
26.8.9
26.8.10
26.8.11
26.8.12
.•-~
· ,
t
:•-
.:.;
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.'-
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·
.
.
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··
·
, '
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.
·•
f!~W
:;
t!laJpi:
•
.
s.trr;
\
J:a1aCult:M-·Contr.6versy
··
·
C
•.
.
:
,
.
·
..
,
.. ,
.
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·: .
·.:
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,
·
,
_.
-
,
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\.·
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'">,
,
·
.
.
, ·
.
:,
.
.
.
,
.
_
.
.
.
/
.
'
.
.
.
.
.
: ·
.
.
:.:::~
'<:
_
:
·
-:
'.,,
-
:
.
::._-
.
.
.
.
.
.
':.:;:.:
:
:
.
:
.
·
chairinen's ni~ting where this problem has
··.
the
-
other
·
courses· can
·
b·e
·
outside
:
th~ College of Coiniiiunicationsat the Univer-
>
,
.
.
<
com~ u~.
~''.l'he
idea
·
of.il° marketing com-
_.
business department.
.
.
..
.
.·
sity of Texas, will
be
hired asa consultant .
.
•
·
··•.
A
·
difference
·:
of ~pinio~-- between the
·
•.
mumcattons major is an excellent
'
_one;
but
·
·
•
This~ then; may create a roadblock in the
.
Dr. Platt said he wante_d to
.
1)1ake
_
this
faculty of
·
Communication
·
.
Arts
,
and the
before it
·
is
:establis~ed
as
:
-
a
"
major,
·
th~
~
Managemenf Studies Division's attempt at
·
.
program
·
unique. "Usually, such a program
.
Business faculty is delaying
·
deyelopment of
:.
responsible division should make sure it's·
•:
accreditation .
.It
also is a roadblock in
·.
is just a
·:
concentration
~
within
·a.
major.
a new major
in
marketing co~munication;
•.
.
going to
·
b~ a worthwhile major,,, said Ms.
creating a
·
major that
·
will
successfully
·.
in-
.
Ultimately, we
.
will
.
have:
.
a
•
major
·
in
.
according'to those h1volved i11 the project.
·
·
·
·
cody,
:
'
.
'The
·
.
main if sue sh
·
ould
_
:
not
:
be
tegrate the two majors as
it
was originally
-
· marketing communications;
.
Whether or
,
·
Under a new million
.
doUar
,
Title
_
III
·
who's baby it will b~, the
.
real issue is
,
'are
proposed.
•
·
.
:
·
.
~
_ . :
·
.
.
'
!JOt this becomes a reality next September i~
·
grant the college received this· summer, new
the courses there'?"
.
.
..
.
-
-
.
_
.
,:·
.:
·
·
.
Academic Vi"e-President Dr .. Andrew
hard to say at this time."
_
...
programs
wjll
beadd~d, in~luding manage-
_
·
·
There seemed to be some
_
disagreement
·
,
Molloy said he di
_
d expect these problems to
.
Dr. Molloy said "housing the marketing
··
ment information systems; an iniernational
.
as to what the curriculum should lo~k like;
·
arise, as with any dual major
·
in two dif-
.
corr.imunications major in the Division of
components system for
the
business depart-· The original P(Oposals
·
submitted by the
feent disciplines, but he is confident that it
Arts and Letters
·
wm certainly impart a par-
ment an
_
d a new marketing communica-
Business Department was rejected by the
will
all fall into place. The accre
_
ditation by
ticular ch;micter in
.
the program btit
.
·
lions major, according to the Division
.
of Commu~ications Department as being too
the AACSB is
~•a
gradual thing, and the whether it is more appropriate is hard to
·.
·
Manageillent Studi~s chairman,
·
or. John
·
business~oriented.
·
The proposal
.
by the
marketing communications major,. ifhous-
·
answer.!'
..
:
·
· .
•
·
:
.
·
.
·
..
,
Kelly.
-.
-
.
-
·
·:
: --·:
·:
. ..
.
_
· _ .
Communications Department wasn't ac~
.
ed in that discipline would not be the only
· The nextstep
·
will
·
be to define th
_
e cur-
ldeally,-the new major would· combine
..
:
cepted by the Business Department, either:
·
thing in the way of the accreditation:" He
.•
riculum and add
.
the necessary courses.
business
.
and coijlmunicationscourses with
The main problem, before anything could
said
.
he foresees no pi:oblem in having
After'this is done, it will have to meet with
additional courses, But~ according to
,
Dr.
·
be
_
decided upon,
is
with which discipline
enough business courses within the majpr.
-
fa~uHy and the Board of Trustees ap-
Kelly, he was "unstirewhether
·
there
.
would
would the new
:
'tnajor be associated.
-
.·
.
0
Marist i$ not a large university where
·
provaL The
.
final step
_
will be taking
'
it to·
be
a
major th!lt
.
Jruly
.
combines the two
.
~'If.it
were
h~used under business,'
~
.
said
.
one department can refuse to co~operate,"
.
the State Education Department for their
divisions." Division of. Arts
arid
Letters · Dr. Kelly,
c''th_e.curriculum
would be full ~f
. ·
he said. •~There has' to
be
cooperation;" He
,
sealo(_approval, ~nd then Marist can of-
Chairman Richard
-
P.Iau said that "as the
-
marketing courses. If it becomes part of the
·
added that he was confident that there will
··
ficially institute a marketing
·
.
communica-
program becomes ~fficiaJly housed in orie
-,
Commimication
:
·
Arts departmenl; th~
_
_
em-
be.
--
--
.
·
.
.
tions major.
·
,
.
department,
·
the
·
- program will be
.
✓phasis
will be more in advertising."
.
.
According to Drs. Molloy, Platt and Kel-
·
The funding for all of this is part of a
modified."
_
·
.
·
_· .
..
.
.
The problem with housing a marketing
ly, a marketing communications major will
million dollar Title
Ill
·
grant received by
The first major delay in getting the pro-
communications
-
major
_
in the Division of
tentatively become a part of the Division of Marist. According to Dr. Molloy;
.
"The
gram off the ground was
.
nof'the fact
.
that
Management Studies is the fact thatMarist Arts and Letters
.
At this p~int, though, Dr.
reason
·
for the Title
III
grant represents a
.
Marist offers very few courses related to a--. is in -.the process of having that department
Plau was un
_
llble to say whether next fall
genuine opportunity fm
:
the college to
!l}arketing communications m!ljor;
.·.
In-
.
.
accredited by the American Association of
.
majJceting communications would be in-
,
develop a major-
·
particularly beneficial to
stead, the
_
main issue
·
seemed to
be
where
·
·
College
•
and Schools of
--
Business; Accor-
stituJed as a full-:.fledged major or
.
a concen-
the
.
student body and to evenuially
·attract
this
·
newmajor will be housed,
.
before
.
a ding
.
t(?
_
thestandards of
-
the AACSB;
-
all.
_
tration area within the·communications
more students to Marist:We
·
might even
-
curriculum could be decided upon
;
·
·
·
_
,
_
·
·
programs which permit more than2507o
.
of
·
degree
.
.
_
·
•
.
.
.
_
.
.
develop the program
without Title
III.
As a member
-
of the
,
Student
·
Academic
·
business
,
courses
Jri
their currkulum
.
are
·
-
:.
To help organize arid plan the program,
What is ultimately best.for the
·
stugent arid
Committee, student Donna Cody sits
in on _
_
considered busin
_
ess programs: But to be a
.
next January-a new faculty member will be · ultimately best
for the institution is
·
the
the
.
departmental and
.
the divisional:
·
business program, no
·
more than 25%
-
of added and Robert .l_e_ffereys, Dean of the
reason behind such programs."
.
,,.
...,.
;,-
~
--====-
.-
·::
~
.
...
~
,
.
:
~
-
.
:~~
-
<<
-~
..
·
..
_
-
f'Graf#Jti~
:
~
::
_
~- -:/:'
.
.
.
··
.
.......
·
,,:}
.{
g1
i',
ltt
irii
J
1!f
•
-
.
The curtain rises for the
;
castand crew
:
of
·,:
·
,''Graffiti'
\
tonight
,
jn:
itie
.
. ·
Marist
·
College
Y
·:
,
,
theatre as
.
two and a hair months of plann-
.
.
·
/a
ing arid rehe~rsal
comes
t~
an
en~;
.
.
.
· ·
·
>
•
.
David
:
Heckendorn's original
•
inusical
,
which was
·
directed
by
·
Donald· Anderson is
-
-
t,ejrig presented
'
tcinighlJhrough
Saturday
· ·
at
:
7:30
p.fu.
and Sunday
'
afternoon at
2
o'clock~
_.;-:
>
·:•
.'>
·
·
. · ··
,
'
..
.
·
· :
.
>,•
·
It
seems success:ts
in store for
the Marist
.
·_.
<"
College
.
Council on Theatrjcal
~
A.rt$
.
due
.
to
_.their
unique situation
,In
pi'~ntlng
·'·
an
original play '1Vhich
is receiving a
_
_
greatd~I
of profession~I theatnfattention.
.
.
. .
::'..:·-
.
·
.
•
·
Tickets
'
f()r
'..',Graffiti''
:
1_11~y
·
b~
;
obtained
•
.
•
at'the
-
Marist
:
bmr office at the price of $2
·:
)
for
.
Marist:
faculty
and
:
staff
and
$1 for
.
.
-
~~~dents.
:
?
.
.
~Pb~to ~;
Chris
Dempsey) _ _
""""'
"-"
.
·
_
_
,
,
.
..
;
·.
_
:-
Maris
t:
·
Case of/he missini typewriters·
.
·
.
'
~
.
·
...
,
-
-
..
·
.
·
.
.-
...
.
'·
c
.
>.
....
•
.
·
·
,
·
·
c
·
1
·
1
·
·
-
.
:
·
bu
.
dg
''-
et,
.
_
I'd
_
be
·
.
glad
__
t
_
o
•
s
·
pea
·
k
.
w
·
it
_
h som
_
_
·
eone cryst
_
alized way," Toscan
_
o sa
_
id.
_
.
·•
,
"
·
Even
·
Dutchess
-
.
ommumty
. \
·
o ege
·
_
-
'·
satisfies· it's students, with a r~m, in the
at Marist about how Dutchess
·
manages o
Toscano was sympathetic'i1bout the cur-.
A
su~ey
.
<>f nea~by
•
colleges shows that
.
libr~; cluttered with electric typewriters:
do this for the students;" Anspach added.
_
rent lack of typewriters on campus.
,
.
1
·
I
ld b
·
·
·
·
.
.
It's
·
1·ron1·c
·.
that
_
D_ utchess C
_
ommunity
..
"Believe it or
.
not, the
·
best
-
tools
parents
:
Marist is
··
alone in not having typewriters
-
Some are a
.
,tt e o , ut most are m
.very
.
ds
f:
•
.
.
av
_
ailable for st
_
ud
__
e
_
nts
_
-
.
a
situat
_
ioil
_
l
_
abe
_
led
_
'
good sh_ape.
_
_
,<.
-
-
·c
.
,·
,
,;
:.
';'
.,
(;ollege is the leader f~r type'ff'.rirers
co
__
uld ~ive
.
t~eir ki
or,
Chnst~as
_
are a
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
..
·
·
·
h
·
c
· c
·
II
·
h
I
.
ava1·1able for
.
students. Vassar College typewriter and tape-recorder .
.
Its essen-
_
_
.
Y
ridiculous'!by
·
onearea librarian
;
_-'
·
<
-
:
Dute ~s
.
ommumty o ege as a arge
_
,
•
:
Vassar College
·
·
has
-
several typewriters
-
·
secretarial curriculum,
,
but DCC
-
provides
'
charges
S60<r
per credit.
-
Marist charges
,
tial," he said.
·
•
·
...
·
·
,
·
' ·
·
·
h
.
d
·
h
·
t
I ss oom
$131·per cr
_
ed1_·1
..
D u
_
tch_ e
_
s s
_
C_o
.
mmun
_
ity Co
_
I-
.
Bill P
_
iazza_, of I_BM~s O_ffice Produc
_
ts in
ayailable fodts-students. The:only problem. t ose stu ents wn a
.
pnva e c a r
.
k
d M
utd b
is· that
_
they
·
are
_.
manual typewri
_
ters and
.
do
_.
packed with new.IBM typewriters
..
~
,
•
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lege charges·$27 per credit.
··
·
.
•
·
:
Pough eeps1~, sa1
.•
. anst co
uy a
.
• w
b
·
·
..
f
· ·
JDM
ft
The
-
library at Marist College has been a
·
-
IB_M
-
Selectric tYpe'!nter for a. purc_hase
n
_
ot always function pr~_ perly, ae<;~rding to
.
.
• e uy typewnters rom
o
.
o en.
-
f
h
d
I
·
-
·
·
.
.
Thenwhenonegetsold,wetakeitfromthe
·
·
com~on
>
place for
.
students to complain pn~ o $931 at
t
e present e ucauona
~~W~s~;c:~v~
.
\ype~riters
·
per se,u a
secretary who
used
it and put
it
iri
the typ-
about this problem: Vince
•
Toscano dean of.: estimate.
.
.
_
-
s
·
p
·
okesman
·
for
Vassar
College said last
·,
ing room for the students;'' a spokesman · special programs and services, has
·
been
.
~ere may
.
be ho~e yet for students,-ac-
f
Du h
C
·t
··
Coll ge s":d
aware of
.
th1·s growing
:
frustration am
_
o
_
ng cord_mg
·
to Bob
·
Fmk, an em
_
ployee of
week. "They're
not
in the best of shape,
or
.
tc ess
.
ommum
Y
.
·
.
e
cu •
b
but the students still use them just the
.
"My husband,went to Marist College qui!e ··
·
students.
.
.
.
.
.
.
:
.
.
.
_
Mar1st College ookstore .
.
same.'~
.
.
_
-
_
.
.·
_
.
-
,
__
,
_
.
.
a
few
ye;ars
ago,
and
h~ used to
compl~!n
.
"We've
·
often
.
discussed this
.
here in the
."We've been ~eriously considering buy-
·
_
New Paltz College a!~o has a small room
abou! the lac_)( of typeytpters on campus.
.
.
.
library,"
.
Toscana
-
said;
·
'~The
,,
only ing a few typewriters and renting them out
dedl·cated ~o
·
r-
1
·ypcwn
__
·ter
_
use
_
for
..
studen~
_
.. ·:
-
'
.
.
P
_
h
_
d An_spa
_
ch, pro
_
~ty clerk at D
_
u tchess · possibility may be to pl~n
:
on getting-ca few- ..
to
the students," Fink said.
1
'
c
c n
t
I
ys
old ones. Then we run into
-
the
-
problem of
·
-
The
·
bookstore
·
would require a
'
'
.
'We realize the
-
stude~ts need
·
to_
type
-
ommunny
-
0
~e, manages
-
0
a ~a
·
,
where to
·
tocat; the typewriters," Toscana. substantial deposit; but in return, the
assignments and term
·
papers. It's
have machmes~vadable f~r
st
udents. We
.
added
·
. "Should they be in the dorms? In students could take the machine to their
ridiculous· for a college to be
_
without
buy them outnght .. We
·
J~st move
·
them
-
type
.
writers,,, a New
:
Paltz library staff
around
li
lot.
If
so~eqne m a department
-
the library? The clicking of the typewriters room and type t~e assignment, Fink said.
.
_
member said last week.
'
~'There
is always a
needs a new typewriter, we buy 1t. The~:
.
may
be
disturbing to other students,"
"Is it that bad of a problem?"
-
Fink ask-
. few extra
.
dollars
.
in the budget for rental
·
the
.
used ?ne,, goes
,
to
_
the students,
· Toscana explained. "We've been concern-
ed.
"If
students think so; I'll do my best to
from IBtd or elsewhere.,,
·
Anspach said. It comes out of the college
ed with this issue: It just never surfaced in a
help them ou·t."
.
'
J
I
j
Page
2· THE CIRCLE~ November 12, 1981
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•
·Readers.Wl"ite
,
,>
/ :
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,
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:
IX\D.~
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.
i.
_-
riJJf
TUINI<"
-
A_"-D'
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IN
-
'MY
UNDfR-WA"t!R
_
-
~~ET
WViYJNG
_
C
.
OUP.SE
·
J
5
GROU~S
FOR
.
~;1
-
iettera niust
tie
ty~ triple spac; wltti a
60
space niargln, and submitted 10 the
Circle office no later than 6 p.m. Monday
.
Short letters are preferred. We reserve the
.
.
'
right to edit
all
letters, Letters must be signed, but names may be withheld upon re-
quest. Letters will be published depending upon availability of
space.
•
.
.
'
· DJSOWH
111EN
T.
-
''Graffiti'' and apathy
To the Mari st Community:
.
For you, the audiem:e, an ex-
A
costly question
·
.
;-
I'm sure that by now we are all perience that no one else has ever
_
tired
,,
of hearing
·
about
·
the
·
experienced before.
·
school's apathy. Well, I
_
'm offer-
.
It
is not easy to direct, act in or
ing
·
you the opportunity to
•
work on any play. When that play
.
· ·
disprove that notion~ I hope that
has never been done before the
Last year, the cost· of attending Marist
in New York picketed last year after receiv-
by
·
now you ·are all aware of the
task becomes more so. In
·
moSt
College was
$5,800.
The
1981-82
academic
ing news of a tuition jump of
$150.
The in-
musical that will be taking place
·
plays, one has a preconceived no-
year saw a rise In cost of
$700.
These rising
crease at Marist was over
10%,
a
$700
jump,-
·
.
this
·
weekend. For those few of
·
tion about what must be done.
figures, coupled with the threat facing
and as students saw no way of opposing
·
you whci do not knqw,
MCctA
is
Since "Graffiti" has yet to be
financial assistance in education from the
this increase,- nothing was said. The gap
·
producing an original musical en-
·
produced it was up to the director_
Reagan budget cuts, make
It
impossible for
between the ability of the student to finance
titled "Graffiti.'' The musical
·
and the actors to decide
,
what
the private college student to turn away
·
an education and the actual cost can only
.was
written· by
·
faculty member
. ·
must be done.
from the issue of educational financing.
expand if proposed federal and
-
state
David
·
Heckendorn and directed
The cast and crew members
The concept of financial assistance
_
in
·
assistance program cuts are made.
·
·
by Donald Anderson; also
-
a
have worked hard. They have
education is
.
based
·
. ·
<>h
·
the "right" of
·
·
The Issue
·
here Is
·
not one
·
of apathy -
faculty member. The shows are at
given their time and all their
students to attend the college of their
students have to care when
·
they are
-
7:30
November
12,
13,
14
and at
·
·energy
>
to produce for you an
choice. This concept, while ideologically
bargaining with ~heir futures in terms of
2:00
on November15..
·
evening of enjoyment. Please,
sound, has little practical appHcation, as
loans, but the inevitable threats to flnancial
Since the musical is an original · don't disappoint them with a lack
many students have abandoned the private.
assistance call for action. The power of the
it presents an unique opportunity
of attendance. Let's prove that
schools and universities of their choice for
·
constituent through an organized lobby,
·,
for .the .Marist Community. For
Marist is not apathetic .
.
public educa(ion.
:
_
·
·.
: .
'
·
_'
·
·
.
.
.
.
whether in writjng to congressmen or in ac-
.
the cast and crew it is a chance to
Dawn-Marie Sturtevant
Marist
is
just one
.
of many priyate in-
ttial attendance at pertinent legislative ses-
-
create upon the stage a new play.
Assistant Director
stitutions in the unconifortabl
_
e position of
·
sions, should not be underestimated.
·
:
_
.maintaining
themselves in an age of rising
There are established organizations work-
et;fuc~tion
_
costs and diminishing enrollment
·
irig in Albany and Washington for the col-
.
in higher education. However,
·
the larger
lege student, but they exist on the support
.
sector of students
·at
Marist; being of
·
a
· .
and action of all co11cerned. In.this case; the
~
·
·
middle-class income. bracket, are caught in
·
·
students relying on aid to off~et the rise in
·
·
A neglected fact
..,.
the trap of ineligibility for adequate finan:
college costs
are
concerned, and should be
·
To the Editor:
•
<
•
.
.
Adapted Aquatics is a swim ac-
, ..
_
·
.
.
,:
.
-
.
c\a\
.
ail:1,
-
.
~t\i\e
th~
.
f~mily
-
income cannot
- '
.
aware
·
ot the role they
,
must play in pfeservJ
Las'i
·
,week's
article "Marist
tivity program designed for the
::tt
~i;!i,
ie!:\;:
i}'sf.
f.;'.;:(\i;.,~l?
,
~&$\):>\~J_\n~~c~)~.:pJ\"'~\.~~d~9'3-\,\C>fk
/,
'
'
'.'
;
2
2
,,\;i
,
/
,
\ng·the\r-Jight to an ed(lcat\on. · · -
.
.
·
Plans'
:
Swimming
.
Program For
individual with a physical or men-
.
,.,,·
.
.
-,
1'.De
.
s
,
~udents
:
atsev~rat~t~t:un\vers\t\es
·
·
-
·
>-
•·,
, ·
.
·
.
.
,
,
,,,
.
,.
·,_:
:
,
·
,,
_.
Disabled''·neglected to mention
taldisability.Jt:isanoppor~unity
"Hi mom it's me,· yeah well I'm doing
al rig tit. Oh yeah all
.
my classes are great; I'm
doing great except I'm having
~
little trouble
·
in Economics; but there's no major problem.
Grades? Ohyeah; midterms, well we haven't
gotten them yet. What? You received what
in the mail? Oh
.
I can expla
_
in, all my
teachers gave blanketD's
·
for our midterm
grades, What do you mean your not sending
up any spending money?"
,
For
some
-
un-announced
reason
everyones mid-terr:n grades were
.
sent home
-
at mid~semester:
1
Remember when you were
in grarnmar'schpol
_
and mommy and daddy
-
had to sign our report cards? Welcome back
to the good old days, even in high school
most of
.
us were responsible enough to br-
ing our report c
_
ards
·
home when they were
given to us at school. It
·
looks like the
registars office
.
has offered us another fan-
tastic
_
service; we no longer must call home
·
to give our mid-term cums to our parents
.
.
The registrars offi~e has decided that this
task was to difficult
,
for the Marist College
student to take part
·
in
·
and has solved the
·
problem by delivering our grades to our
~arents doorsteps. Maybe its
·•
an unfair
assumption to
.·
bel
_
ieve that the
.
average
.
Marisj College stµdent is at a stage of
·
maturity where they can be given tliere mid-
.
term grades and decide accordingly who the
grades should be seo_t to.
-·
.
.
Even if we can't handle the task of giving
our mid-term grades to our parents it would
be nice if the student body was informed
The
Co-Editors
.·
·
.
·
Auociate
Editor
Circle
,
.
·
Featu~Edltor
· ,
.
' 1
.,
·
·
- ·
- ·
.
.
-
\
the
;
fa~t)J;iis:
.
p
_
,r~gra111
originated
· C
·
,
for
-•--the
,:
.
.
disa~J~d
~
i'lpiyi4_~at_
t~
:
• ,
:
·
1
'
,
·_
'
-<
~
·
·
·
·
·
.
from
'
and
·
'is
,
sponsored through
.
·
::
]earn- new
,
skills )1-'hlle enJoymg
·
the Coritiriuing Education Office.
:-
.
aquatic recreation.
. .
.
•
·
.
As
i
a
result
of the success Conti."
· ·
.
:.
:
-
Marist
'
College and
·
the Red
that their grades were
·
going to be
·
sent
•
nuingEducation has hadsponso
·
r-
·
Cross give instrl!cti?n, an~ train
_
-
home. Mahy students feel that this new ser-
irig Red Cross programs, -Marist
.
instructors al}d aides for this pro-
vice is infringing upon their rights as a legal
has been able
to
increase the
·
·
gram. We rieed
.
p~ople who are
,
.
adult. Many student's parents are indeeci
number and variety of Red Cross
willing to
.
volunteer their time to
·
·
paying for our tuition, but any responsible
' ·
safety/health
:"
-
programs
.
offered
assist the swimmers
._
and ~ecome
student or in_terested parent would more
·.
on campus.
.· ·
·
.
.
.
~-
.
·
·
·
traine~ as ~ed Cross. Adapted
than likely
·
bridge the gap of cornmunica-
·
we
.
in Continuing Education~
Aquatics
:'
Aides. All mterested
'
·
·
tions that
·
is going to
be
!illeviatea
· .
)' mail-
are pieased to be
_
able to coor"~
p~ople please contact the Conti
.
-
•ing
grades to our homes.
_
.....
_
diriate the efforts
.
of
.
the. Red
.
·
._
iluing Edu~ation_Office, Donnelly
Ho
_
w many parents are receiving
·
"real" in-
;
'
Cross, McCarin
·
.
Center
,
,
·
arid
-
·
'
Hall, Room
202.
.
.
dicators of what ljttle Bobby or little Sally
SpeciarServices to make Adapted
.
Anita Voogt
·
~re doinq, at s~hoql? So
·
many
1
t~a~hers give
··
Aquaticsa~ajlab~e to our s!udents
·
_
·
Assistant Director
·
blanket
·
.
m,d~term
,
grades that most
· -and
•
..
·
commumty
.
_
residents.
·
C9n
_
tinuing Education
everyones mid-term cums
·
are inaccurate as
·
·
·
to the progress the student has made thus
far in the semester. It would tie nice H
,
when
Mom opens up the envelope and discovers
her little boy has dropped from Deans List to
·
·
a C average that the registrars office would
include an explanation of the tack of
To
'
tlte Editor:
)
:,,
·i~·
-
· ,
man to show what made those -
fairness involved in computing a students.
-
Td like to
.address
this
•
letter
dents!!! I've notice theseJoot-
mid-term grades; and than 'dad wouldn't
·
mainly to everyone who owns
.
~
,
,
prints over. several
.
weeks
·
and
.
•
have to use the smelling salts.
.
·.
car on this campus and has 1t
after checkmg the car several
.
The average Marlst student is
20
years
-
.
parked iriany
'
oftheparkinglots.
:
ti~es a day, ~ound
_that
these
old. We can drink
.
alcohol,
·
buy
.··
dirty
Have you checked
_
the
,
roof or
•
pnnts appeared m dayhght_hours.
magazines, vote for our leaders, drive a car
hood of your car lately? If you
If
anyone finds footprints on
·
and fight in a war. Isn't it unusual that .
·
.
have; did yo11 find the imprints of
.
their car (and I have seen the~ on
Marist College has decided that we can't
a man's sneaker?
_: .
.
..,
· other cars), please report
·-
_
1t to
handle our
.
own academic
..
progress?
,
I wouldn't believe
·
it either
.
~
-
..
Securitr .
•
If
you see it happening
Hopefully instructor evaluations, wlien
that some rnale student was
.
walk-
·
- report it. As to whoever
.
is do-
·
given at the end of the semester, will be sent
·
,
ing onunning across the tops of.
•
·
ing- it, keep
1
)'o~r, feet on the
·
·
home to the parents
.
of every faculty
_
parked
cars
until 6 large dents ap::
_
.
·
ground or go hve m a_zoo!_
member .
.
Then our faculty
·
won't have
fo
peared in the roof of my
1979
car
·
Jane V1ctona Keene
waste time telling their parents how the job
and
·
·
the muddy footprints
·
of a
.
is going.
_
_ _
.
_
·
Letters continued on page 8
Jane Hanley
Terri Sullivan
Rick O'Donnell
Theresa Sullivan
News
Staff
Spor11 Editor
Sta~
.
·
Denise FIim, Karyn Magdalen;
·
•
'
·
MarbtlnglAdtlertlalng
John Kraus, Joanne Holdorf, Pat Brady
Dlatrlbutlon
Manager
,
.
Photography
Cartoonists
Jeanie O'Rourke
Joann Buie
·
Terri Tobin
Maggie Browne, Grace Gallagher
Jeanne LeGloahec
Michael Moore
·
Eddie Powers
Staff
·
Donna Cody, Christine Dempsey,
·
Barry lewis
Nancy Brennan, Tim Dea~le,
Tim Breuer, Pat Cullough,
Karen Flood, Denise FIim;
John Petacchl, Ken Bohan,
BIii Travers, Dennis Martin
Peter Fredsall, Karen Johnson,
·
Jean-Marie Magreno, Joanna Rosato, PatU Walsh,
Copy
Editors
Social Editor
.
Buslneaa Manager
Allison McCarthy
Janet McNamara
Maggie
Browne
Faculty Advisor
.
Oav(d McCraw
\
'
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-
Female gridders
take thefie/d_
Last Sunday, the sophomore girls'
powder puff football team
met
the
freshman girls' t~m In an afternoon
football game in which
'
the freshman
emerged as the victors,
14-0.
-
·
The game
·
was sponsored by the
sophomore class, and was open to all
·
female
·
·
.
students.
,
Refreshments were
s«;>ld, and
aU
who attended enjoyed wat-
·
ching the girls try their hands out at a
game usually reserved for males at
Marist.
·
.
The
.
sophomore
.
class
hopes to
organize a soccer intramurals team for
girls in the spring, In which all female
students are welcome.
.
·
·
.
.
·
Marist to launch major co-op progfam
student will
·
not
,
earn any credit; said Mrs
.
sion; Dr
.
Florence Michels, Psychology
She also said that the students benefit by
Sarnoff
.
She added that this might mean
and Sociology Division; Jake Maness,
getting their hands on experience in an in-
A federal grant will allow Marist College
that the student will have to attend an extra
Management Studies Division, David
dustry early enough in their career to make
.
'to launch a new co~operative educatjon
.
semester of classes or summer class-es in
,
McGraw, the Division of Arts
&
Letters,
decisions that they will eventually have to
·
program next semester offering jobs
·
and
·
order
to graduate. in four years
.
Mrs.
and the Rev. Rhys Williams, Humanities
make later in their careers
.
extra funds for interested students.
Sarnoff stressed, however, that the pro-
Division.
It has not yet been established, Mrs.
by Grazia
E.
_
LoPiccolo
"The program will provide students with
posal is still being refined and worked out
Marist College already has a similar pro-
Sarnoff said, whether the faculty advisors
actual and meaningful work experience
and is subject to change.
.·
gram in the communication department: a
will receive extra salary for their participa-
related to their academic major," said
Mrs
.
Sarnoff did not say how many
paid internship, in which students earn
tion in the program, or whether they will
Judith Sarnoff, director of grants at Marist
-
students specifically will benefit from the
·
credit and money at the same time
.
Mrs.
receive their regular salary and teach one
College, "and it will enable students to
new co-operative program, but she said
Sarnoff said that
.
the major difference
less
.
course. "If the latter is the case then
earn extra money
.
"
that the program is designed to help as
between the new co-operative program and
Marist
will hire other professors to teach
Under the program, Marist students will
many interested students as will become in-
the internship program is that the co-
the courses," said Mrs. Sarnoff.
be placed in jobs in the Mid-Hudson area,
volved.
operative program
will have more than one
The $94
,
000 grant
,
said Mrs. Sarnoff,
New York City and elsewhere.
As
a co-op
The program will have a director, whom
placement.
will be allocated for the director's salary,
program, students
will receive pay for their
'
Marist is presently in the process of hiring,
.
.
"The co-operative work program
wil\
re-
for faculty release time, and the largest
work
.
and one advisor from each division,
-
said
quire a more extensive work commit-
part of the grant will go for the traveling
The program, which was given impe~us
~
·
Mrs. ~am~ff.
-
The fac~l!)'. _advisors will
ment," said Mrs. Sarnoff
.
She added that a
._
that wil\ be involved in setting up the
by a
.
one-y~ar . $94,~. Co-Operative
~ave d1vers1fied ~cspons1b1!1t1es. The
.
mo~t
.
student in the program
wi\\
_
devote a \2
l)\acements.
.
.
Educat10n Grant, admm1stered
by
.
the
.
important of which she sm,_d she feels will
,,
month
,,
time
,
equivalcn~
.
-to
the
program,
.
~he
i'!'itia\ {unction
ClHb.c
director.
a\tb.e
Department of Education
;
is still in
_
its
·
be to "ensure
:
that
·
there1s a connection
·
which
·
wm
·
..
include
.
··
three
·
· ...
difrerent
·
·
:.'
oeg\nn\ng
•
fa\d'M1:s'
,
·,
-samon;
.
-..,\vl'~<>'<>a'<>\.'j
.
,,
p(elimiriary stages and it will .not
-
be
-:
firial
with
'
the
·
w<>rk place and the classroom."
plac~ments.
.
.
•
.
·
.
·
·.
be
to make initial contact with the local in
~
·
until a
.
director is hired, said Mrs; Sainoff;
· ~
she added that the advisors will
·
share all
. She added that the student can complete
dustries and businesses
to
participate in the
·
who wrote the proposal for'the grant
.
·
responsibilities with the director other than
his co-operative eniploymerit either by
program. Mrs. Sarnoff said that Patrick
Mrs. Sarnoff said that there _are some
the financial management;
'
They will also
working a full semester or on a part-time
Lennahan,
;
,former director of career
·
restrictions to tl!e program. In order to par-
.
set up the placements and evaluate the per~
basis, depending on the rieeds of the stu-
development at Marist, had made an infor-
ticipate in the program, she said, a student
:
formance of the students, Mrs. Sarnoff dent and the employer.
mal survey of companies that would be in-
rriust have a minimum cum1,dative average
·
said
.
.
Marist students who have been involved
terested in participating in the program,
of
2.S
and has to be atleast a sophomore.
The five division advisors are: ·Dr.
.
in. the paid internship program speak
.
but he has since left Marist College
.
According to the written proposal, the
Joseph Bettencourt, Natural Science
.
Divi-
favorably of it. "You learn so much by do-
The new co-operative program is a
·
·
·
·
·
ing rather than reading
,
" said Cathy
semester late in getting under way, bur
Cassetta, a Marist senior who is currently
Mrs. Sarnoff does not feel that this will
Circle K dances for
-
those who can't
by
Joanne
Holdorff
''I wanna rock with you (all night)
Danc:e you into day (sunlight)
I
wanna rock with you (all night)
We're gonna rock the night away"
·
Michael Jackson
Dancing for Jerry's kids - that's what it
,
is all about, and it will
be
happening right
here at Marist College, Saturday, Dec.
5,
1981 at 1 p.m.
·
There is a $20.00
.
m_inimum sponsorship
for singles and a $25.00 minimum sponsor-
ship for couples. The money
is
to be col-
lected before you dance and
.
handed in at
the dance marathon.
A cash prize will be awarded to the cou-
ple/single who brings in the most money!
Dinner for two at the Culinary Institute of
America is among the other prizes.
Local talent for entertainment during the
breaks will be provided for. Free food and
drinks will
be
served. Each dancer will
receive a free T-shirt entitled "Superdance,
U.S
.
A
.
"
.
working at IBM Poughkeepsie on a paid in-
hurt the college's chances of getting the
ternship.
.
.
grant next year upon reapplying
.
She added
Sally Petro, who is also involved in the
that if the director is hired soon, the col-
same program at
IBM in East Fishkill,
lege's chances of getting approval of the
agrees. She said that in a class, no matter
grant next year will not be affected.
how much one reads or discusses, one is
Overall, Mrs. Sarnoff said
that
the college
limited.
Liz
Kerins, a senior at Marist, who
will compensate since Marist already has a
worked at Paramount Pictures last summer
similar program in the communication
said that
·
"You learn just by being around
department.
that environment."
Mrs. Sarnoff said that she worked
All three agree that the money factor
together with Patrick Lennahan in prepar-
helps. Ms. Petro said "You can get used to
ing the proposal, which was submitted
last
it very easily."
spring
.
Originally, she added that the pro-
Ms. Kerins also said that having par-'
posal called for a five-year grant, but a
ticipated in the program will be beneficial · one-year grant was awarded since the
pro-
to her in finding a job after college. She ad-
gram is new
.
·
·
ded that a co-operative or internship place-
Mrs
.
Sarnoff also said that this wasn't
ment is a good place to make contacts for
.
the first time Marist had applied for a co-
future employment.
operative educational grant. She said that
According to Adrianne Singer, manager
this was the third or fourth time. Mrs.
of Employee Communication at IBM East
Sarnoff said that it had been previously
Fishk
_
ill, co-operative education is
refused since the college was not well
·
The Circle
K
Club on campus is sponsor~
_
ing a 12 hour dance marathon to benefit
·
the
·
Muscular
.
Dystrophy Association.
Local DJ's Tom
,
Cunningham and John
Winston (of 3WI) will be hosting the dance
marathon while several guest DJ's from
K104,
WBPM, WEOK,
WKIP,
and our
own WMCR, will
·
be dropping in to spin
some records.
.
Everyone is invited to come dance .
.
·
beneficial to both the employer and the
stu-
enough informed and did not have a good
Registration/Sponsor forms may be ob-
dent. "We get students from academic en-
understanding of co-operative education.
-
tained by contacting Joanne Holdorff,
vironment, which bring us new ideas and
"The proposals submitted showed that,"
P
.0. Box C-298, or in room C-424.
helps us with whatever workload there is."
said Mrs. Sarnoff.
Students addicted to lust in the afternoon
by Karen Lindsay
It's 3:00 on a weekday afternoon. Do
you know what the majority of Marist
College students are doing? They are in-
volved with the lives of a heroic young
·couple who cannot get married uniil the
·
divorce papers arrive from Mexico, a
man who is dflnking again because of
this young couple, another couple who
were divorced and want to get married
again -
t~ each other, another couple
who are in a bitter fight over getting
divorced, a young woman accused of
murder and the handsome young lawyer
. ·
who is trying to
.
clear the murder
because
.
he is in-love with the suspect.
.
How can Marist students be involved
'Yith so many people with so many pro-
blems? It's easy -
just tune in at 3:00
and watch the number one ranked day-
time television drama,
·
General
Hospital.
·
.
When asked to comment about the
show, students gave a wide range of
reasons for watching. "I really enjoy it;
I love to hate som
·
e of the characters.
It's a kind of outlet," one sophomore
said.
Others
.
watch to relax or to take a
break from the day
:
"I watch it because
it's
_
so popular around here and it is at a
good time for me," one
R.A. said. "It's
relaxing to watch for an hour, and it's a
good break."
·
Another popular reason for watc~ing
is that there is nothing better to do
.
Lin-
da Erico, a resident of Benoit House
said, "There is just nothing else to do at
that time, so I watch GH."
Many students say that the show is
really exciting. "When Heather shot
Diana Taylor, everyone in the dorm
went
:
crazy. You could hear everyone
talking about it," said one student
about the show's characters.
"I watch because I like the topics they
deal with such as murder, divorce, rape
and alcoholism," said one junior, "I
watch because I'm a
GH
freak
.
"
Next week, on November
I 0,
Elizabeth Taylor will be appearing on
GH as Mikkos Cassadine's wife. "Who
·
ever doesn't watch it now, will watch it
just
to see Liz Taylor. Then they'll pro-
bably get hooked and the ratings will go
way up," commented Gabriele Piehler,
a junior at Marist.
So if you want the scoop on- Bobby
Spencer and Noah Drake, or if you
want to find out about what really hap-
peoed to the divorce papers, just tune in
to General Hospital.
--•Page
4-
THE CIRCLE~ Norember 12, 1981
B-Guido 's Corner
by Manin Sims, Kevin Babc~k
Tony Cardone, Joe Verilli
We would like to thank Frank Scott
for the delicious steak dinner this past
week, but what ever happened to the
other 196 meals. With the serving of
steaks also brought along the notorious
steak bandit. Those of you who had
your steaks stolen don't worry, it won't
happen again because we won't have
steaks anymore., - ,•
-
On a sad note B-Guido'.s would like to· _
say good-bye to the prettiest secretary
on campus, DaraZinney.-We wish you
all the luck in the world
~
Love the
cutest R.A's Marvin and Tony.
Those of you who thought
tt~at
those
wild and crazy . woman were the Phi
_ Tappa Keggars in drag, you're.wrong:.
~
:.
\
'
_ awa~d ·wm be
a_
b~ahtiful ;ummer hcime
- in Siberra. Her reply to this award was,
"I'm
so excited but· I still"don't know
whalthis crew sport. is."
-
-· _-
.
It's that time of the yeai" again,
Registration Time! Yes the time when
you sign up for,5 classes anct' get the tri~ -
dent gum results when .4 out of 5 of your
classes have been dropped. When Joe
Verrilliw'as asked how he felt, he com-
mented
."It'
really doesn't upset ine _
because I. don't get t~at many classes
dropped as compared to the amount of
times_~hat I've b~~dropped by girls."
Boo's of\he Week
Boo to Billy Colgrove for spilling a beer
on Ellen's rug before intoxication.
,
Boo ,.to 'fim '.'Johnny' Appleseed" .
Grogan for receiving a black eye from a .
member of the opposite sex.· Boo!!
JOKES
It's a newly founded group that calls
'
themselves the "Wenches." When Col-
een Hollywood was asked _why this
group was formed she replied "It's time
the women at Marist had something to
call their own besides Soup Campbell."
Three Potato Chips are standing on _
a
This weeks -- winner of· the "Guess
b~idge, two jumped off why didn't the
what's for din.ner" contest was that
other? Because he was Wise Potato
famous security person Tom .Rooney.
Chip.
.
.
When we invesHgated into his ,
Mr. Bigger
married Miss Jones, they
background and we found out that Tom
became Mr. and Mrs. Bigger, then' they
loves to travel, so his grand prize will be
.
had a baby, who is the . biggest .
.... A Map!!!_
·
.
.
>..
_.
.
memberof the family? The baby'
This week's BsGuido's Athlete of the,; because he's a little bigger . . , . ...
. _
week goes to Kelly McMahc:m for her . Wha\_ did Cinder'ella · say when her, ·
outstanding performance in last .week's . photographs were late? ;
Si:>1nedflY ·
my , , ,
crew race. When Kelly: single· handedly
prints will c_ome! ! : _
,
. _·
stroked the Marist boat to a second
Why did ih_e monkey fall out of the. ,
place finish in a two bo;it race .. E:elly's.
• tree? Because it was dead.
'
'·•
Donate.to
Oxfam
,,
.
·
·Nov.
19~-··
·::;-.,-
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_
i:.~_·,:.-.,
.
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~
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' I
ozzv·
&
:
.
ROBERT'S-
Hair Shoppe
Precisio
·
n Cuts
Perhlanent Waves
·
.Nofu
·
ralii.ings.
> ,~-
'·
••
i
Women's Cuts·.".
$
9
~oo
_wit
.
h
~
-
ljdinpo~,
-
-
•
.
.
.
.
.
.M~n_'s
·
c.~t~: ..
~
·.•: $8~~00
~ith sh~mpoo
:
-
Per
·
m,,'
s: .........
$25.o·o:a.~~
up ·
Open Tues.-Sat. _
·8:30 -
5_.p.111.- ' ; . •'
-6· Mt~
CQ_rm·el P.lace
.
Pou
_
ghke~psie
.
.
'
113-7757.:
., · ·. PERTIN'ENT ,THANl<SGIYlNG·.}
.
. RECESS RESIDENT
MiLL •' ,_
IN_.· FORMATI_-_O_.
N ..
. /
_
l"he
r~sidence
halls
Will -
-~ The-Resideii'ceiHalls wi
:
11·
•
Close-at
f
·
.1
:00
p
'
.m
•
•.
9n
·W~d.,
November 25,
19.81.;
- The· last meal will be l·unch
:
-
..
-on
.Wed~esd~y.
-.. ::;_·-rfi~open
at
l0:00'.·a~n,).·on:
:<)Su')d_ay
·
, ·Novertiber.
29t
l:981 ..
- Thefirst
meal serVe·d will:
.bedinOer On
Sunday.
- Failure
.ori
the p.art of.
_
residents
·
to
meet with
. the exp'e~tations of.
~
this:
-:_· ·_closing
WUI
:result in_~a:·fir{e
·
,
low pr_ior-ity housing for __
spring, or both.·
·
.
, '
.
,
-
.·
.
.
- So
.
please, take
a
friend
hoJTl,e
~r,d
have a ~afe
and
happy Turkey
Day.
NO ONE WILL BE PERMITTED TO ST A Y
IN RESIDENCE HALLS OVER THIS RECESS~
r
r
---------•------------------------..November
12, 1981-
THE CIRCL~
•Pages--•
Steillerstackle the Mariststage
The.
Jersey Shore was the setting for
Jerry Cox's vacation. It is also the set-
tin~ for The ~enny Stealers. The play
.
written by Cox, dean of studentaffairs,
· will ~e seen at Marist Theater Dec. 3, 4
andS.
.
.
·
.
·
Over last summer, Cox had thoughts
developing for two plays. "I promised
myself that I would begin work on the
plays while on vacation at the Shore,"
he said. "I brought my pads and pencils
and didn't write a thing
.
.,
·.
'
One night after vacation the ideas for.
Cox has written five one-act and two
·
other full-length plays. He has also writ-
.
ten
·
poetry and short stories. "Theater
··
For A Dandy Horse," performed at
Marist in 1979, is his only ·other work
performed. "I'm
a
closet writer," Cox
said.
"I
like to write. If
I
had the time
I
would
just
write." He seems to have no
fears or ambitions connected with
writing.
.
The "Penny Stealers" serves a dual
purpose. Cox teaches Theory and Prac-
Hce- of Modern Theater. The students
analyze modern plays. "Instead of just
being able to guess at the meaning in-
.
tended by the playwright, the students
·
can
·
have feedback from the author "
said Cox. "The students have a r~al
situation to work with."
Co~ said that he wrote the play to ex-
.
pose the
.
students to straight theater."
"Penny Stealers" took written
:
forin,
"It
is a light mystery that has nothing
t9
do with the serious concepts thought
about over the summer," Co:,{ said. The
images of ttie old
.
houses on the Shore
.
come to life in the two days the audience
..
.'
shares with the cast in one such
·
house.
·
"I look at the houses and try to imagine
what the
·
people inside are doing, what
they're like," Cox said
. .
·
·
·
Even if. the students have been to a
Broadway
·
show it was probably a
.
.
.
musical," he said.
·
"Most of them
haven't seen a straight play. This is a
prime example of a modern play."
. The play is in its third week of rehear-
sal.
By
the fourth week, Cox will give up
his
·
role as director. Assistant director
Kevin O'Connor will become the direc-
tor; he said.
Mike Hayden is already
handling the production.
The character's ages range from 20 to
80. "One important factor in choosing
.
the cast was how they could capture the
essence of the character with their
voices," Cox said. "You can get away
-with
a loi more visually if the character
· comes through in the voice." The play is
going very well, according to Cox.
The cast includes Steve Maniaci (Ted
Kielty), Arlene Hutnan (Marge Kielty),
Beverly Morlang (Laura Creegan), Tom
Greene (Jack Creegan), Teresa Mattiace_
(Millie Costello), Philine van Lidth de
Jeude (Vera Costello), Karen Lindsay
Dean Gerard Cox
(Kate Grant), Allison McCarthy (Anne
Westrom),
Mark
Skinner
(Bob
Westrom), and Stan Merritt as Ralph
Tyrzak.
Cox is optimistic about the play. He
says he wrote it for pleasant entertain-
ment and for the students to enjoy
themselves in being a part of the play.
Performances will be at 8 p.m. in the
Marist College Theater. Admission is
free.
·
Vandalism and theft plague Marist library
by
Leslie Heinrich
Mrs. Brenner said. "What is worse than
most is 'oh, I forgot to check it out,' or
that, and more frustrating is someone who
'How did that get there?'," said Mrs
.
Bren-
Vandalism is
_
a problem that strikes
.
all
hides
a
book from the rest of the class until
ner.
over
·
today, and area college libraries are after that
·
particular assignment is due.
Marist College Library
·
houses 82,000
not excluded
as
victims of this thievery and There is quite a bit of that," Mrs. Brenner
volumes, "and we cannot afford to lose
•
sabotage.
:
.
.
,
.
said.
. _ -
.
.
~ny of them," Mrs. Brenner said.
The Marist Co!lege Library,
.
though
'
. Because
·
of the lack of recent inventory
-
Across town, at the Vassar College
equipped with a modern security system,
figures, Mrs. Brenner has no idea
.
how
Library, Barbara Lamont, the
.
director of
has one of the largest stolen book percen-
'
much ,money is spent each year replacing
the library there says that Vassar's theft
tages in the area. As Barbara Brenner; stolen materials. "It's difficult to say ex- · problem has remained about the same dur-
director of the Marist Library says, "There actly how much money is spent, but I think
ing the last few years.
is most definitely a theft problem at our
,
that this whole thing (thievery) is more an-
"The theft problem is annoying,
.
but
library. W_e haven't had a complete inven-
noying and time consuming than anything
here
·
at Vassar, we have a high level of
tory done in a number of years, but the last ~lse," Mrs. Brenner said.
academic competition, and books are hid-
time a mini-inventory was done, a large
den just about as often as they are stolen,"
percentage of the books were missing,''
Despite the security system, the theft
said Ms. Lamont.
said Mrs. Brenner.
problem has not decreased that much.
Vassar, like Marist, has not taken a re-
But the problem doesn't end there for the "There are other ways that people find to
cent inventory of their 500,000 volumes,
Marist Library. "What is more upsetting
'
get out of the library, and that's a shame,"
thus making it difficult to quote the exact
than theft is the vandalism," said- Mrs. said Mrs. Brenner. An average of one per~
number of books stolen, or what type of
Brenner. "People pull out articles from son
·
a day attempts to· walk out of the
materials are stolen.
At Dutchess Community College, the
ad-
dition of a security system one yea, ago
.
was a blessing for their their 83,121
volumes.
Having just recently completed an inven-
tory of materials, Michael Pope, director
of
the
Dutchess Library, was able to quote
the encouraging figures. "Before we had a
security system, there was an average of
386 books a year stolen," said Pope. "But,
now we average only about 30 stolen books
a year," said Pope.
.
A(Diitchess, the
·
reference books are at
the top of the most stolen list, with special
interest books running a close second.
"Books on subjects such as witchcraft and
the occult seem to be stolen the most," said
Pope.
There is also
a
large number of
periodicals stolen. "The top
·
five stolen
periodicals are now put on reserve to deter
the thieves," said Pope. "But sometimes,
this doesn't eve11 work."
A
journals, or pages from reference books.- library with a book that has not been sign-
"We, too, have
a
security system, but
We are able to replace these pages, but it ed out. This sets off the alarm, and the per-
that doesn't seem to deter the ones intent
'(the journal) isn't the same anymore,"
·:
son
_
is then approached. "What we hear the
/'
on stealirig
a
book," said Ms. Lamont.
.
;·
·:·
···
.'.
.·~
..
'.:
_
;j,
·
~
.
:
.
·
.,:
··
1.
:
.;
i
'
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:
~
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:-
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·
.
y
-
. - ~
-Pog
hieepsie-.,
NJ.
Convocation to focus
·
on hunger
by Cindy Lacey
·
This year's Dean's Convocation Day is
Wed11esday, November 18, beginning at
9:30 a.m., in the Mccann Center.
·
The topic for
the
day is entitled "Global
·
Perspective -
A
Current Necessity." A
key note address will be given by Ms.
Patricia Kutzner, the Executive Director of
World Hunger Education Service in
Washington D.C.
The purpose of Convocation Day is aim-
ed at making students more aware of
world-wide problems that exist outside of
the Marist community.
Academic Vice President and Dean An-
drew A. Molloy said, "Marist College aims
at academic excellence and the develop-
ment of personal world-views values." One
major goal established for the college for
the years ahead is "to generate a curricular
effort to free
·
ourselves and our students
from
·
the confinement of cultural artifacts
and to encourage the development of a
sense of
world
citizenship as a basis for en-
vironmentar responsibility, human and
natural resource distribution, and social
and economic interaction.''
Students will hold a more active role in
that they will form discussion groups
along
with divisional chairpersons and faculty
members. Following these discussions, the
divisions will have lunch together to discuss
the topic further and try to cement relation-
ships between students and faculty.
After lunch the student discussion
leaders and faculty will gather together in a
"rap up" session. Hopefully, these discus-
sions will be recorded and in some way
shared with the community.
As a result of the convocation, Marist
hopes to identify activities and events over
the rest of the year which further build
upon this theme.
Marist to join 8th annual fast for Oxf
am
by Grace Gallagher
In the course of one hour 1,680 people
will die because they don't have enough to
eat. That's 41,000 people per day. Grim
statistics that can be changed by some car-
ing people at Marist. The Eighth Annual
fast for
a
world harvest is going to be
observed on Thursday Nov. 19, 1981.
Students are being asked to give up one
meal, dinner, on Nov. 19, and one dollar
will be sent to
·
Oxfam to help those who
don't have enough to eat. The purpose of
this event is for everyone to learn
something about the plight of the im-
poverished and help in a little way towards
combating world hunger.
.
Starting on Saturday, Nov. 14 through
Tuesday, Nov. 17, there will be tables set
up in the rear of the cafeteria at lunch and
dinner for students to donate one dinner so
that one dollar is sent to Oxfam America.
Campus Ministry, the Spanish· Club and
the Communication Arts society will be
organizing this event.
Last year more than six hundred Marist
students gave up their dinners and over six
hundred dollars was sent to help ease world
hunger ...
This year a series of slides showing the
villages that Oxfam has helped will be
shown on Nov. 19 in Fireside C-249 at 8:15
p.m.
Oxfam America is an organization that
currently funds
55
projects in some of the
poorest regions of Africa, Asia and Latin
America. It attempts to help these poorer
nations develop more productive farming
technology and better means of global food
distribution.
/
.
·.
--.-~
... eage
6_-TH_E CIRCLE·
November 12, 1981
. "R.Yan · revea(sfaqts ·• ..
,abOutSciencC?(JJM~n
The Science· of Man Program is one of
the most misunderstood fields of study at
Marist, even though it has proven itself as a
major success in interdisciplinary educa-
tion.
·
·
"Even after 8 years, very few people ac- .
tually know anything about.the program,"
said Program Director Dr. Xavier Ryan ..
The main objective of the Science of
Man-program, according to Ryan, is to get
the 150 to· 160 students in the program to
look into themselves and answer the ques-
tion, "what does it mean to be human"
"Students deal with hum.an values, and ac-
quire an interdisciplinary logic," Ryan
said.
.
.
· ·.
Science of Man students are not required
to take Core courses, but are required to
prepare a thesis over a four year period.
According to Ryan, these thesis can be on
any topic that the students choose, bunhe
topic must be thoroughly examined from as
many, angles as possible. "When a student
has truly worked on his or her thesis for the
entire four years, the final product is, in a
sense, a book," Ryan said.
Science of\ Man students major in Ac-
counting, Business, Biology, English or
any other major offered at Marist and ac-
cording to Ryan, "This is so we have a
group of people with . diverse interests,
which is a important factor in successful in-
terdisciplinary study." This year more
students are majoring in Computer Science
than any other field but Ryan claims that
that has not affected the program.
the course. Ryan said that by ."asking their
way in'' the students usually stick with the
program. "Only a few find that they can't
cope," according to Ryan.
Dr. Ryan said that contrary to what ap-
pears · in .the
1981-82
Marist Catalog,
students may gain · admittance to the
Science of Man program after their .
sophomore year. "I've had seniors take the
foundation
course." The foundation
course.is the first in a series of five Science
of Man courses.
'According. to Ryan,
the
·
major
misconception _that students have about the
· Scierice of Man program is.that it is a three-
year program. "M~rist. requires students
who wish to graduate in three years to take
the Science of Man course. Other than that,
this is a four year program," Ryan said.
He also added, "Actually, a very limited
rtumber" of students in the program
choose to graduate in three years.
The students in the program meet every
week in groups of four ·dl!ring their first
year and are encouraged to talk with other
non-Science of Man students about topics
covered in those. groups, Ryan said.
. Dr. Ryan's "dialogue" groups also
review and .critique each student_s' work in -·
other classes. The st~dents are expected to
critique each others work as wen. Accora
ding to Ryan, they benefit greatly from the ·
experience.
. .
· .
Ryan also meets with groups of twenty
students once a month at his home to
discuss "much more than academics."
These meetings are designed to. help the
students "look into themselves." ··
Because of the large number of students
in the program, a new instructor has been
added this year to preserve' the amount of
time that first year students spentwith their
instructor. Beth Ann Goldring has jqined
Dr. Ryan as an instructor on the founda-
tion level while
Dr. Gerry White,
Dr.
Peter
O'Keefe, Richard LaPietra and Dr. Robert
Lewis teach the second, third and fourth
The selection processes for the Science of
Man program is always changing, accor- ·
ding to Ryan, but he thinks that he has
found a successful method in a three step
process. He first looks into
S.A.
T. scores
and grades. If he thinks the st11dent can
handle the program, he brings the potential
student to his office for a "very, very
tough" interview . .At this point it is up to
the student, and ·he or she is given a month
to decide whether or not they want to take
.
year Science of Man courses.
The Marist College Council
on the Theatrical Arts
an original musical
by
David · Peter Heckendorn
~ - -'-_ -_ .:____,-'----:::=::-~-r
Directed
by.
J [
Donald And.erson
~
l _____
~Jf
~
_J [
li
.J __
Marist College Theatre
November 12, 13, 14, 15
·
7:30
p.m.
and 2
p.m.
on Sunday.
Tickets
$4 adults, $2 Marist faculty, staff and senior citiz~ns
and
$1 for students.
For Information call
471-3240
·1
Joseph's.
Restaurant
-serving lunch and ·dinne·r-
2 Delafield-Street
-
P6ughke.epsie
Park
'
Discount 'Beverages
-Specials This Week
MILLER·
Blatz.
$1.496
pack
16
oz.
CANS ·
$2.39
&pack
Old Milwaukee Lite
White Rock
CANS
2
liters.
$2.99
&pac~
.89¢
ALBANY
POST
ROAD
HYDEPARK
•"t~'
·c;m;g;jill'i~~··
Bri~i
a;;Pi~~ffis
SPR1NGBREAK)82
in
Fort ~auderdale, Fla.
/
March 13-20
ay
·
aus
$225.00
Price Includes:
.
· -Round trip air /bus fare.
By
Plane·
$340.00"
~
8
day/7night accommodations at
.
·
hotel located across the street
.
.
from the beach
- many extras
For more information come to brief meeting
on Monday, Nov.16 at 9:15 p.m. in
Fireside Lounge
r
I
I
l
·
EASY STREET
cor
ia y
invites
·
you
.
to
.
join
us wit
~
U)
QI
u
·:::
Q.
~
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Cll
Cll
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Cll
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f:Sm.,,i8
O)CU
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IESTAIJIANT BOUBS:
11 AM 'till 10-.30 PM
·
Rt.
9 •
Hyde
Park
229-7969
.
E
,:S
f
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; :,;.
1
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Friday, Nov. 13
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STREET
Thurs.,
Nov.12
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,
----------
,
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NORTHERN STAR
Saturday, Nov.14
o oo ci..;_
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - . . , .
~ ~
1
HARVEST
Sunday, Nov.
15
~
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J.B.A.
-
Monday, Nov. 16
i,:,~---------------------------,1
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Rememher .your $3.00 cover, charge always include5 l free drink.
•
Nort1mber 12, 1981 · THE CIRCLE - Page
1--•
.
.
-
.:w:
-~1~:~
·
:
.,
-~
:,/«
Queslion: What do you think about
the music in the cafeteria?
;
, rf
·
Patty Barrel, freshman: "It's a good
idea but they should play rock."
John Gallagher, freshman: "I heard bet-
ter music at Lou's Barber Shop."
Jimmy
Hage, senior: "What Music?"
,;
~,-.:,
t<'
'
•
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.~
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.
..
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'
"
'
'
.......
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Donna Fidaleo, sophomore:
"If
that's
their idea
of
trying to pacify us it's not go-
ing to work
.
"
..
--------------------------
·
\
}
'.
.
-
~
Dar;I L~ H;cks,
·
j:nior: ,;,1
•':
d:esn
·
•
·
•
l/
4
lh.
Hamburger
w
/lettuce·
&
tomatoe ......
I~
75
.
W
_
/Cheese .. :
-
~ .
·
.•....
·
•.••...
-
~
~
·
.....
1.90
W/Bacon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-.
1. 95
W /Both . . . .
·
.
_
. .
·
. . . . .
'
. . . . .
-
~ . . . . . . .
·
. .
2
~
10
Cheese Steak
~
..
:
..
·
.
·
...
·
..
·
.......
·
..
·
•.. ~
-
-
..
·
.
2.50
.
.
BLT ......
~
..................... ~
-
..
,
..
1.95
':
Grilled Cheese . . . . . .- .
.
. . : .
_
.
·
. . . . . .
·
.
.'
. : .
.
. . .
~
·
.
.85
·
W
/B~con or Ham
~ ~
... _
.....
~
...
_
..
-
...
1.35
.
J~mbo Hot Dog .....
.
• .........
_
..
·
........
1.25
Onion IUngs
~
.....
:
. .- •...•........ :
·
. ....
1.50
French Fries ; .........
~
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •
7 5
Available:
8: 00 - 1 : 00 Monday-Thursday
8: 00 -· 2 : 00 Friday
&
Saturday
!
.-
..
. ·
·
bother me to listen to some noise while I'm
eating, but let
it
be good noise, like
WBLS."
.
-
·-;:
.
,.':
-~-,;
_
-
.
·
~
,
'
.
'/'""
'
....
~
'i
Steven
Maniaci,
sophomore:
"The
.
school publicizes WMCR
in
the Circle so
much,
why
don't they
-
play
WMCR
through the cafeteria and it will ease the
pain of eating.'
-'
(SUPER NEW YORK CUTS)
.............
at
49
·
Academy Street
(Near "Good Times Cafe"
Ample Customer Parking
Hl1 ancl Her
BODY PERM
leg.-$35.00
$185
0
OPENING SP!CIAL
SHAMPOO, CUT
AND BLOW DRY
From$
5oo
Open
Dallr
10•8·
No Appointment Nece11ary
·
For
Appointment,
·call
454-998'
;
I
..
I
I
\
.
.
--•Pagel·
THE CIRCLE·
November 12, 1981
·-: .-,.·. - , .. :, .
Exclusive · club sets groundwork
.
for eYeiftS
'.
' .
~
'.
.
.
.
•,
·
...........
•_,,··
.•
,._.·.
-
. .
by
Looi~
Corsetti _
. To those of us who are well versed in the
Greek language the word Omega represents
the 24th letter in the Greek alphabet mean-
ing "long." Here at Marist College the
· word Omega has a different meaning: shar-
ing, love and brotherhood ..
_
Three years ago a group was started with
this concept in mind. Father Richard
LaMorte was responsible for the birth of
the Omega group. "I wanted a small group
of upper-classmen who would instill pride
in the institution · and help incoming
Freshmel} adjust to college -life,'~ said
LaMorte.
·
The Omega group is a group of 15 young
men and women who were selected because
of their leadership qualities· and a basic
concern for the Marist community. The
· group has no president; vice president,
treasurer, or . secretary. ."We want to
decrease the amounc·of student apathy
· toward.;; the school itself," said senior. John
Schoch, · one of the founding Omega
members. "Our major concern is to· give
the school and. the people in it a better
name-that's our main goal,'' said Schoch.
With the Omega group came the birth of
the Big Brother and Sister program. This
program was designed to help the 1980
Freshmen class. The main . idea was to
assign every freshmen with a big brother or
sister, to help them with the rigors of ad-
justing to a new life-style.· ·
Junior Susan Vassallo was. responsible
for· contacting the upper-classmen who
volunteered over the summer.-"I contacted
the Big Brothers. and Sisters by letter who . common bond is to slay small bu_t to get the
in turn wrote. to their prospective little
_
rest of the clubs and organizations inv_olv-
brothers and sisters. Also this year we
ed," said Chandler• ·
,:, ,· -
·
started Family Day, which was a huge sue-
One of the . Omega's greatest . ac-
cess." "We wrote to all the .Freshmen's
complishments wa~ turning the Qrotto into
parents and invited them to a picnic and
a memorial for student's who have died.
day full of fun games,'' said Vassallo._ A,c-
."Father LaMorte gave us the idea of the
cording to Vassallo Family Day-was a very memorial," said Vassallo "We planted aU
big success, over 760 people were present
the, flowers and cleaped up the statue of
for the festivities;
·
Jesus and Mary. The _Grounds crew helped
The omega's try to keep a low profile us with the weeding and cleanup." Thanks
because they want to get others involved in
to the Omega grol_lp .ihese students will
school functions. "Family Day would not · always be a part ofMarist College.
-'
have been'such a success if we didn't have · The-Omega's are sponsoring a giant hon-
the help of the Residence Staff, C.U.B.,
fire and Christmas carol· session in
Seiler's and the McCann Center," said · December. The event will take place after
Schoch. According to senior Matt· the Christmas dinner . in the · cafeteria
Chandler, the Omega group is not meant to. followed by the -traditional house parties.
be big but to have a· great effect. "Our Help get involved_,- the Omega's did.
More readers write
-- Barry Lewis I ·
batty', it is beyond us why, then; you do.
If
you have "always turtleneck sweater with a vest,
The
mayor of Marist
you even noticed the so-caUed
found the female mind to be un- .dungarees with a
.
name on the
Dear Barry Lewis,
Freshman with "semi-permed balanced and slightly batty,'' then pocket with a huge hair_ brush
To The Editor:
. We are writing in response to
hair, tight sweaters, and jeans." I find I must wonder just how . sticking out of
it."
I'd like. to
I would 'like to take this oppor-
your "chauvinistic satire," "The
We only regret that maybe you Jong "always" has been for you. know how those two freshmen
tunity to tha~k you for the ex-
Female. Persuasion,'' in last
missed an important play in the Surely you 11_ave not been around girls got themse~ves into one
cellent feature article on our own
weeks issue.
process.
the block even once yet; and, turtleneck. Either you had more
"Mayor of Marist," John Hig-
Constant complaints have been
Sincerely, · ·naturally, I'm not very interested of a story than you realized or
gins. I have known Mr. ,Higgins
made by all sections of the Marist
Patti, Cindy or Gail · in your thought processes, assum-
you've. got a· lot to learn about
since my freshman year and
I
Community as to the low atten-
(and not freshman)
ing you have some. Perhaps when writing. Did the girls at.least wear
have benefited many times from
dance at sports events. Even if all
you have grown up a bit, perhaps. separate dungarees? · Further-
his vast resources-of wisdom, his
of us females, aren't Howard
Barry
Lewis
II
when you've had the time to ac-
more, when you write that "Their
sense of humor, and his sincere
Cosells at least we are there to·;
quire. so.me exp~rience, perhaps· names are always Patti, qndy <>r
concern'. for, the students. The
clap, cheer, and root the team on, ' MydearMr. Lewis: -·
·:: when.you have had the privilege. Gail," did you mean the hair
residents of 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th
and that's what matters, isn't it?
You began your recent, er ;col- · of spending .. ti_me with women, brush, the designer label, or the
floors of Champagnat Hall
We were among those who at-
umn "The Female Persuasion"
perhaps then you wm have dunag;trees? If you meant the hair
should consider themselves lucky
tended the game in question_ and
by . invoking . the . rights of the something of interest to say about brush, I think your reference to
to be able to draw from John's
were seated directly in front of a
satirist.
I'
hope that your ig- _: the subject of women. But, the major in business is a little un-
experiences, wit and care.
section of guys. As they . grew
norance is bliss, but I must point perhaps not.
If
any of the females fair. Why shouldn't a hair brush
It's too bad that the same care
louder it soon became pretty ob-
out that you have. not written a
wJ]o could possibly -.teach you named Gail major in business? ·
and concern shown- towards the
vious to us that it wasn't the game satire. Your thoughts (such as, anything should read your little
The refreshing aspect of your
students by John Higgins is not
they were talking about. Also, the . they are) cannot shield behind the , article, they won't waste time on column (using the term loosely)
shown by some members of the
stereotype you used was not ap-
mask of satire. What yoti wrote · you.
was that, at a minimum, you
Marist College administration.'lt
predated. Not all women are ig-
was not only not satirical, it
-Since. I have written you off as seemed to have done some think-
is. a sad commentary. on Marist
norant about the subject of wasn't very smart.
an extremely young big-mouth, I ing. All too obviously, you can
College when some members of
sports, as you implied by the ex- ·
You warn us not to ask you· find nothing to frighten me in use the practice.
,.
its administration can learn
a
ample you used.
.
how you knew those two frightful
your ideas. But your prose! You
And a good spanking.wouldn't
valuable lesson on students from
Furthermore, in reference to women
were
freshmen.
I .tried to· pass the following thing hurt.
·
a member of its maintenance
1(
your comment labeling the fema\e: - wouldn't dreall\ .of. ;aski_pg, you, off-as,a sentence (which -it-isn't): ->:•
Since_rely, ; , s_taff.
·., :·• '.t-Michael I>oifotty
'•~r~iii•
'•••fil••~ .•••
19
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.
uary_ 4
_
--2--
-
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''
'.t)}-:
Three Weeks (Monday thrUFriday)
DAY CLASSES
Principles of Accounting I
Ecology of the Urban Environment
Marketing Management
Radio Broadcasting
Introduction to Psychology
Introduction to Philosophy
World Literature
Introduction to Computing
(APL)
Introductory Statistics
AFTERNOON CLASSES
•
Siding
Beginning Swimming
1·
EVENING CLASSES
Business _and Society .
Financial Management
· Public Speaking
American Drama 1945-Present
The Art of The Film
Introduction to Computing (APL}
College Writing
Soviet Union Today: Land, People and Culture
Basic
Algebra
Introduction to Politics
American National Government
..
Wi11ter l
.
nt-ersession
·
enables
you
to
-*acceler~te your p~ogram
*satisfy
CORE,
major
or elective, _
-
requirements_
*concentrate
on one course
0~ Campus Housing is Available.
Registration begins
on Nov. 9
For more inf orm<1tion come to the Continuing Ed office
j
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f,
rr··· ...
h
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. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - N o v e m b e r
12, 1981 · THE CIRCLE· Pages--•
George Sommer
- , / college :writing students entering Dr.
George Somnier's · office to -discuss the
"D'~:: they got on their . papers, probably
. ; won~t. notice· much .. about··· their surroun-
dings·other than the floor. However, to one
of the many . uppercl~smen frequently
visiting Sommer's office; the three drift-
. wood lamps and wood~lath painting ori the ·
wall ~ontinually dra:,v orie's
eye.
·
"Walking along beaches on Cape Cod, I
saw pieces of driftwood and
I
picked them
up because I'm a scavenger," said Som-
mer.
"J
also got theidea that each piece of
driftwood is unique'·just as each person is
unique."; That was ten years ago. Since
then, he has constructed between 40 to 50
driftwood fa:mps with flaf'wood bases and
textured shades: With the exception of the
lamps in his ·home and office; all the lamps
have been gifts. "I never make one without
having a person in mind,'' said Sommer.
· While in Provincetown, Mass., he saw
pictures made with odd pieces of wood.
Through observing one man's work, Som-
mer developed a process of sketching,
measuring, cutting, sanding, and staining .
He said of his wood-lath painting,
"I
do
not consider it an art; I consider it a craft."
Sommer, the senior faculty member,
came to Marist in 1950 to teach part-time.
At that time there was one full-time English
Tfie univefsity inside the college
by Ken Bohan
Five-hundred --~rea· · students are taking.
courses at_ Syracuse University, without
leaving the Hudson Valley.
-·, In
1952
Syracuse University received
a
charter from· the state to offer graduate .
courses in engineering and science in the
Mid-Hudson area. ·
fr~m Syracuse, butals~ the opportunity to
have staff members · and select students
enroll-in the graduate programs. Although
the number of students that have done so is
small, Bickart said, "The staff is able to
take advantage
qf
our,computersysten:i iri
addition to .the orie they have." Alth~ugh
it's· .. two' different in'stitutions · sharing
facilities, it's a co~perative endeavor.
For the .past eight .years, .the University's
Mid-Hudson graduate center·, has . been
.-Most of the large number 'Of students
. .located .at Marist College in .Poughkeepsie. . come· from local businesses and corpora-
. The office is in room 242 in Donnelly Hall. · tions such as IBM. Courses are offered in
,
..
Electrical. and Computer Engineering, In-
According to Academic Chairman,- ~r.
dustrial Engineering and Chemical
T
.A~ ..
Bickart,. Syracuse University is leas-
· Engi!'leering, eventually leading to a Master
ing the-facilities they use on Marist's cam~- · of Science degree: In addition at ·the pre-
. pus: Marist rece_ives not only the leasing _fee
sent :_time; by, spe_cial. arrangements, a few
students are completing a portion of their
Doctorate degrees.
·
Bickart said that as many as 20 faculty
persons are involved in a semester. They
are all Syracuse professors who come down
once a week to teach their classes.
AU
courses are taught on the Marist cam-
pus.
Despite the fact that the branch of
Syracuse at Marist is some 200 miles away,
-it remains very attached. The office at
Marist could be confused with an office on
the Syracuse campus. The school ·paper,
The Daily Orange, is always on hand, as
well as scenic pictures of the campus. A
.colorful picture of the new massive athletic
, facility, The Carrier Dome, jumps out at
. you as you walk in .
professor and all 125 student brothers were
required to take composition, public speak-
ing,' English Literature, and American
Literature. In 1952, he joined the faculty
· full-time,
teaching two French, two
history, and two English courses.
·
By 1957, Sommer chaired the English
department and established an English ma-
jor within three years. "Way back when
Marion took up their first students (English
majors), my ex-wife and
I
would open our
house to them," he recalled.
"Before
'63,
we could be very close with
the · students," · added Sommer.
He
remembers Friday· afternoons when
students and faculty would walk over to
McManuses (now Skinner's) together.
Smiling, he reminisced, "We'd always end
up around a piano."
He has witnessed Marist's changes since
those days, citing one year specifically. "In
1967, a national unrest occurred -
a rejec-
tion of authority, a rejection of industrial
military context. I think that was the begin-
ning of what
I
call the noncollegiate stu-
dent. This came to its climax with the burst
of gun fire at Kent State (in May 1970). As
a result, students refused to accept the pro-
grams and disciplines that their institutions
knew they should pursue. That period ex-
tended to 1977. Since 1977, we've seen a
resurgence in interest in things academic
and things scholastic. But the resurgence
Continued on page 10
Film cOnSultantexposes · moVie industry
by
Susan
Vassallo ::. .
living in Gramacy, N.Y.,, works as a
and Advertising at graduate school at
· theatre critic for Key Magazine. But his
Baruch University.
You're watching television one night and , main profession is that of a free-lance ·
Contrary . to· his teaching ambitions,
you see coming attractions Jor a movie that
creative consultant. Mov_ie producers con- · · Tatelman began his career . on Madison
yoii really think looks good and you- want
suit him with about problem, hard-to-sell · Avenue in New York working for two years
to go see it. The next thing you know . movies, and ask him to write a catchy
creating ·commercials.
"You
may
you're walking oul of the movie theatre
slogan, and in conjunction with the editors
remember my claim to fame in the com-
telling your spouse what a horrible movie
choose the best scenes from the movies to · mercialindustry, said Tatelman: "Yahoo,
you though that ~as. Milt Tatelman at-
·
make them look and sound appealing.
Mountain , Dew;'' it will tickle your in-
. tracts the p_eople _with his _coming. attrac-
"I've worked on some real losers," said
ners.'.'·
·
tions but takes no responsibility
for
the
Tatelman.
,
quality
of
the film.
,
Tatelman was originally an English ma-
' Tate\man said he got bored with
· . .:.Tatelman,,a:riative ofBoston; currently.,.-jor in college; but switched to Marketing·> Madison,Ave1me and.barged his way into
,.,,._,._,·,: ·•·:· .. ·.··""
:
. ,
·.
•~-•- --... .:,'
.
:. · : .. •,., • . ··
-·· ·
.
·
,,, · MGM,Sttidios"and became Creative Direc-
Eat,~rink
and
Be
.
Merry
\
'Bt
FOOLISH
_
..
,...
_,
.
.
.
-
.
··
-
FOX PUB
· MON.-THURS·
8: 00
p.m. to
1 ·: 00
a.m.
FRI. &SAT.
8:
00
p.m. to
·2
::oo
a.m.
NON-ALCOHOLIC DRINKS
&
FOOD 2 AM
to
3 AM
tor . .
"Anyone Jhat. wants anything bad
enough and perseveres can get it without
stepping on toes," says Tatelman.
"Giving my portfolio to MGM turned
them off," said Tatelman. "I won them
over with my en'thusiasm." He asked them
to exploit him with a campaign he would
do for free. He said MGM was happy with
· that· deal and · they gave him .a James
Coburn movie to work on. He wrote some
copy in which MGM officials saw some
. potential and they offered him a job.
"Quietly go about what you want and
believe-you can get it. Push for yourself,"
said Tatelman. He's been in the business
for
12
years now:
Tatelman said he believes he is successful
because he has middle-class taste. "I love
Doris Day: This is the kind of thing people
ROAST.BEEF
Tender, Tasteful, Tempting!
Lean roast beef piled high on
a fresh foot-long roll .. Mmm . .,
Served hot or cold,
the
way you
like it!
lry
one today!
I
~U
BMIJC°J~ /
~
__
....
.,.,,
Famous Foot Long Sandwiches
We've got more taste.
PARK DISCOUNT PLAZA
HYDE
PARK
(Next to Carvel)
Open Late
e
· want, said Tatelman,··"l'm not very 'art-
sie'."
' ·
,
·. · · ·
· '
1 '
Tatelman has worked with many stars
such as Marlo Thomas and Kirk Douglas,
who he says are "bitches." He adores Shel-
ly Winters and Carol Burnett, and has
worked with and most respects Joanne
Woodward and Paul Newman. "They have
been screwed, says Tatelman. "They hate
them in Hollywood because they don't play
· the games," Tatelman said.
"A
lot of sen-
titnent has to do with winning the awards
and that's why Joanne and Paul never get
them."
Bette Davis is Tatelman's favorite ac-
tress of all times, who graduated from the
same high school as he. Newton North, the
name of the high
school is also
Tatelman's
pen name because he says he doesn't want
to be famous. "I must be content about
myself," says Tatelman.
·
"The movie business is very hectic and
you're under a lot of pressure, says
Tatelman. "Jobs are done overnight above
yelling and screaming."
In the past seven years, Tatelman has
begun to give lectures at· colleges and
universities. He says it gets him as close to
teaching as he's going to come. He closes
his lectures by saying, "Even if you think .
the movie industry is ripping you off, go to
the theatre anyway. Chances are you'll love
it."
.
-"WE'VE
GOTADATE
NOV.19th'!
"That's when the
American
Cancer
Society
asks
every
smoker
in America
to give
up
cigarettes
for a day.
Give
it
a
try.
You might
find
you
can
quit
forever'.'
THE GREAT AMERICAN
SMOKEOUT
American Cancer Society
t
... I..
I
\
,
..
~¥
}
:,.,
,
..
\
\
----•Page
10·.
THE CIRCLE·
Norember12, 1 9 8 1 - - - - • • - - - - - - - - - • • - l l l l i -1111111- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
.
Waters praises
new
alarm
sYSf.eni
Classifieds
Ted:
. .
.
..
.
"Hand Curtain much?'
·
'~Loveya
Adrian
Elisa:
I'm so proud of you!
Your "roommate''
To the Casfaitd Crew of Graffiti:
You're all wonderful. Break a leg!
'
Sue and Dawn
To the World:
Nobody cooks like M.B.
Michael:
Keep searching until you find.
FC
FYEO
EM
Dawn:
Thanks for all your support.
Always
Wanted:
A) Airheads
B) Easy Women
B.L..
Laura
Elisa
C) Pity Faas
See Dick Keeling-
An Equal Opportunity Lover
Female Wanted:
. ,
Adorable male who resembles a monkey
desires a lasting relationship with a female
anything! Only serious applicants need ap-
ply.
"MARVELOUS" Marvin Sims
Mark Guiffre:
You've got to be sincere.
Judy,
HI!
Mc:
A Friend
Guess Who
lt-'s comedy hour in the Parthenon!
your
_
roommate
by Pal Brady
.
.
The new fire alarm system at Marist is
a
"definite, positive improvement" over the
old
.
system,
·
according to Din.-ct~r of
Security Joe Waters.
. .
··
The
·
new fire alarm system, frl'm F:,ir
Security. is compost.-d of smoke and h~,t
detectors, fire horns. m,d pull stati~,ns.
This system was inst:tlll-d in the 0-\mpus
Center, Champ.'\!1na1. lkm,it. Gr(•iJ•t~\
'
and Leo this smm,,cr. ln:~tallation in
Sheahan should be c,..m,pk·tcd. in a
f\'W
weeks.
It
is e.xp(\:'tt'l.i that
the-
t\.'
1
wnh~)US<'$
will ha"e thc same- fire alarm s~-stcm
in--
stalk-d.
The new s,-stt'm is
llH)rt'
advan~ than
the old one. ·which was C'\nnpo.~ l'f pull
bells. The bells had
11.1
be ulled manually
b)' Michael Oliva
.
in order for
them
to
ring.
To keep the bells
rinRhlR,
someone \u,d
t\,
kec\\
\\\\tl\\\l!, them,
The fire horns in
the new S)'Stcnl cnl\
he
ncti\':\ted
by
the prcsem.'C
\,t'
the smoke \\\'
ht"nt,
:md c:\I\ he
m:m\mll)'.
Onl'C
the
I\\W\\~
st:ut ri\~it~, they
wUI
conth\\l('
h,
l'in~
\Ill·
tit thcv m'C' n•s,•t.
\n
1\
\\'Ckcd
,
·
0,,,,1 \\\
the
b,'\st·m~·nt
hi,
fh'\' \','\\\\'\
w\t\l
1,
\'\lsh
\l\\lh'll
• .
\.-
.
:
·
:
,
tlmt stops the horns and resets the system.·
·
:
The
now
system has been working very
..
wc\l,
Tht1
only
problem was that initially,
the sc11~1th'lty of the horns had
.
to be ad-
_lustc1I,
The
·
fire alarm system obviously
w,w~t-\\
\'1.'Q'
well during the small
.
fire
,
whkh
\W~\IHed
in
Champagnat on Hallo-
\\\'\11\
llhlhl,
.
has
l\\"lt
b«\\
ll\
tl\e-
h\\1nauities or the liberal
tion, for if students foday are not pas-
am~,
t\1.'rQ..,~
therountr)\ the r~surgence has sionately dedicated
1
to language··: and
b«n in job odented majors, such as literature, our civiUzation is going into a
b\\siness and media.
·
new Dark Ages/' he said.
-·
1
"My
paramount concern is for the con~
.
"Where is t
_
he next generation of what I
tinuity of the culture of· Western civiliza-
·
represent coming fro~?''.
·
·
'
LiVillg
1egenct~
•·
.
-
:-
.
.
'
•
:
-
--
.
.
.
Your Eyes: Next rip, Justin Hayward in~
elbows, knees and·feet on
Veteran Cosmic
troduced two songs front' the album·
Days
Rocker. Then withouf announcement, the
They are legends. They came over to
of Future Past, "TwiUght Zone" arid Tues-
.
band started into
.
~nights fn
·
White Salin .
.
America with the Beatles, Stones, and
day Afternoon. Gypsy and Watching and
From_.that poiiltori, everybody in the arena
Dave Clark Five in
,I
964. When they
.
tour
Watling, followed them.
·
.
.
was standing.
:
Ray
'
Thomas
··
provect his
·
·
(and they_ rarely do) it is an immediate
The crowd, a mellow one, did respond
·
ability to play t'1e flute on an explosive ver-
sellout. The name of the band is the Moody
·
·
with enthusiasm. The band played several
,
sion of
Legend
of a
Mind. On this song the
Blues, and
.
they played a
fuU
house at the
more cuts from
Voyager including· 22,000
·
screen from
·
b~hirid the stage
.
showed dif-
Brendon Byrne Arena in New Jersey last
Days, Nervous and Meanwhile. Justin
·
ferent psychedelic imprints, reminiscent of
Monday,Nov. lst.
·
Hayward then introduced one of John's
thelatesixties,withanintenselightandfog
.
·
The house lights went down at about
new songs. With that
"the
band
.
went into
.
show. Ray Thomas the~ infor!l}ed the au-
9:00 p.m., and the then Justin Hayward,
Isn't Life Strange, whkh received a
_
big
dience it was time to
go
and that
"We
will
John Lodge, Ray Thomas, Graeme Edge,
·
reaction from the audience.
.
leave you with
The Question." After that
and Patrick Moraz took the stage. There
.
John Lodge
·
was jumping up
on
the
.·
.
song 'the Moodies left the stage. With
were some technical problems which
'
amps, and waving to the crowd. Ray
lighters and matches igni
_
tjpg
.
the arena,
delayed the concert for fifteen minutes,
Thomas and
.
Justin Hayward were joking
·
.
along with foot stomping and hand clapp-
.
.
and forced the band to leave the stage.
with each other. The crowd seemed to be
ing, the Moodies Teturned for an c:ncore.
With the sourid problem fixed, the
·
getting
a
little bit rowdier as the show went
They played a rowdy version of
Ride My
'Moodies' returned to the stage. Patrick
·.
on. The thumping sounds of Lodge's bass
.·
See Saw. On this song the house lights went
Moraz's keyboards and synthesizer
·
launched the band into
I'm Just a Singer in
·
on, and the audience went crazy.
,
The
openedthe chords to their hit single
Gemini · a Rock and Roll Band followed by Stepp-
'Moodies
then ''thanked New York for
··
·
Dream. They followed that
'.
with
The
Ing in a Sliding Zone. ·
.
_:
·
.
..
.
·
coming," and left the stage.
·
··
·
·
Voice, another cut from their new bestsell-
· ..
Justin Hayward then
.
showcased his
• ._
The Moodies, after
.
fourteen
·
years
ing album
Long Distance Voyager. Ray
.
guitar ability with
·
an excellent solo
·
on
.
together; still prove that they can
,
play
Thomas then introduced ·an oldie and with
·
._
Driftwood.
·
Patrick
_
Moraz displayed his
·
ballads and
rock
out with the best of them.
that the band began to play
·
The
Story in
·
showmanship by playing the keys with his
·
rniglad thatlgotthe chance to see them.
·
-------------~---------· -
·
-· -·---•--•.
>
-· .......... - .................... ________ .... ________ _
j/ho/e5ome .
~utriti;u;
food
af
f
ea5onable friceS
We
I
come
'
Alternative
·
Food
·
.
Coop
1
7
8'1
·
Main
Stree-+
Poughkee.psie.
Op,in
to
the
Pub
r,c
Tues.
e
Sa't.
10-~
Wed.1hurs. Fri
.
10-1
530
:
MAIN·STREET
OPEN:
\
if:30 am~3:00 am
Week~ays
lli30
'a~
:
ffl~'~4:'.00
alm.
·
w~ekends
_
·
-.
.
F~$t Del
_
i~ery
·
_
SPECIAL-OF~ THE~MONTtl
:
$3.75
P;as
471
·
-0223
.
A-l
Florist
·g
Garden Center
·
.
.
.
.
_
l~2
Washington
:
St:
Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 12601
91
-
4-471-5700-
.
JO% Discount with
.
Student ID
_... __________ .... _______________ ~--------------•November
12, 1981- THE CIRCLE. Page
1.1--•
; Marisf'endssoccer season
12~6-2·
· ·
,:.
.
,·:,-
''.,
. The Marist soccer
team
came ,from
~
2-0 .
momentum going their way, Marist's
Bill
halftimdieficit to defeat Union College 4-2 ·· Cooper gave Maristthelead, 3-2. Finally,
, last Wednesday.
'
,:· ·;
..
. -·
it· was senior Eddie Isaacson scoring
· ' .. :'· U~ion got two early goals; the firston a
Marist's fourth goal. .,'
disputed call, and 'the second on _a baHthat
· The wiri brought Marist to a record of
_ was'deflected into ·the upper corner of the · 12-5-2, •
· net to give Union a 2-0 lead. _ _
Saturday, the hooters fell to Manhattan
., As the second half started, it appeared
1-0
in their final game of the season and the
Marist was really in trouble as Union con•
Tri-State Conference.
· •tinue to controrthe flow of the.game. Bill
· 1n the gaine~ played at the ·Riverdale
Cooper was fouled in the penalty area, and
campus, Marist outshot Manhattan and led
Marist was awarded a penalty shot which
in ~orner kicks 8-2.
.
Oyvind Larssen continued.
The team's standings for the season were
Next, Tore Udahl tied the game up·for
left at 12-6'-2.
· Marist
a
few mi_ntltes later. With the
PLAYER
:
op· THE WEEK
'
After having led his squad to a surprising
seventh place finish at the IC4A's at Van
Cortland Park Monday; with
·
a
personal
best of 26:06 over a 5-mile course, Joe
Burleski has been chosen Miller's Athlete
of the Week.
•.
.
.
.
Burleski,- a senior, has been doing a great'
job for Bob Mayerhofer's harrier's,
finishing among the . top runners jn every
·race he has participated in this season. This
past Saturday he led the Red Foxes again,
this time to a ninth place finish at the New
.. York State Championships.
After graduating from Arlington High
School with .only one year of running ex-
perience behit1d him, the hard-working ·
· Burleski embarked.on an uphill battle to· -
become the best runner he possibly could,
and thus far, he has not ~ome up short.
Praised by Coach Mayerhofer as being one
of the best and most dedicated workers
on .
the team, Burlesk_i likes the challenge of
pushing himself
to his maximum best.
So, Joe Burleski, for all your fine
finishes, hard . work, persistence, and
dedication; we salute you, Miller Athlete
of
the Week.
·
_ RIVER DISTRIBUTING CO.
Noxon Road
· ·Poughkeepsie, New York
PLAYER OF THE WEEK_
SPONSORED BY THE MILLER BREWING COMPANY
:-,
Vinn·y Caru'os (15) and
E~
Isaacson (18 use teamwork in last week's ganie.
Soccer statistics
Name
G
A
TP
Min.
Goalkeeping
Games Played
G.A.
Tim Buchanan
5
5
15
Andrew Homola
20
1781
21
ToreUdahl
6
1
13
Andy LaRocca
1
45
0
Ed Isaacson
4
4
12
John Malatestinic I
29
0
Oyvind Larssen
5
2
12
Heinz Warmhold I
15
0
Ian Arscott
5
I
ll
Total
20
1860
21
Bill Cooper
4
2
10
Bob Cooper
3
4
lO
John Goff
4
I
9
G.A.A.
Saves
Pct.
so
W-L-T
· Vincent Caruso ·
3
1
7
1.06
108
.837
5
12-6-2
Knut Roald
I
2
4
0.00
2
1.000
0
0-0-0
Bob Sentochnik
I
2
4
0.00
I
1.000
0
0-0-0
John Hintze
l
0
2
0.00
0
.000
0
0-0-0
Paul Sutherland
l
0
2
1.02
III
.841
5
12-6-2
Joe VasilecCozzo
I
0
2
2.13
147
.770
5
6-12-2
Mike Vardilli
0
I
I
TOTALS
44
26
11 I
OPPONENTS
21
9
51
Shots.on goal
Corner Kicks . Scoring
by
period 1st
2nd 1OT
2OT
TOT
Marist 178 _ . ·. Marist 102
Marist
20
22
l
l
44
Oppo~e.nts
g3
Opponents 7 l · Opponen!.\
12
9
0
0
21
t
Marist drops· fifth straight
by Bill Travers
The emotional high that sparked the Red
Fox offense during the Iona victory, has
faded. Since that win, the Red Foxes have
suffered five consecutive losses, the most
recent a 23-0 shutout by Ramapo, on the
frozen turf in New Jersey.
The offense which scored 34 points in the
season opener ag;iinst St. Peter's, has only
tallied 44 points since the Iona win.
"The loss of Jim Cleary for two games
certainly hurt us, said coach Malet." These
were both -closely fought games and the
running of Cleary would have helped."
«Both Brooklyn and Fordham were good
football teams, but they were definitely
beatable."
.
Except for brief instances during the
Lowell and Pace games the offense has
been totally non-existant. The usual strong
running of Ron Dimmie, and Jim Dowd
and Mike -Spawn has been shut down,
especially during tlie Ramapo clash.
"Ramapo was an extremely strong
defensive team," said Malet. "One third of
our possessions started inside our
10
yard
line. We were forced to play con-
servatively, so as to not make any fatal
mistakes. Running -the wish bone _
is dif-
ficult with our backs against our own end
zone." ·
Ramapo's
tenancious
defense
held
Marist to eight yards rushing and
25
yards
passing, as their offense led by RB Jim
Conyers, slowly put the game in the bag.
At halftime Ramapo led 14-0 on a 3-yard
touchdown run by John Lobman, and a I-
yard score by Jim Coriyers.
· During the second ·half, Ramapo was
just as stingy as they completely shut down
Marist while scoring another TD, a I-yard
tally by Conyers. Faced with another drive
inside their own ten, QB Cleary was forced
to down the ball in the end zone for a safe-
ty, ending the scoring .
·#98 Tom Lawton and John O'Leary bring down a Ramapo rusher.
•
f
-·
I
.I -
.
~
.
.
I
.
,
.
/.
.
Marist ~katel'. being ~becked by
·
a Rider clefenderJn action Saturday night
.at
the Civic Cent~r.
_
·
Hockey
wins2
athOme
.
:
sCOre
,
and win
by Tim Bl'.euer
wereMike Caridi, Brian Foley, arid Dennis
Walsh. Tony Cardone and Mike Caridi
.
•,
.
...
·
·
.WeekFour
:
The Marist College ice hockey team re-
were credited with assists as Caridi received
·
• d
·
h
.,
·
•
~
·
..
f
·
.
THIS WEEKS
-
QUESTONS:·
·
·
An • people say not mg 1s ,or ree any
bounded from·
_
th
eir season opener loss by
two and Cardone one.
· ·
·
-
more. Just tell that
.
to ·another weeks worth
1.
Who
·
was the pitcher who pinch-hit
recording two consecutive victories over
_ Marist continued their winning ways last
•
.
.
-
.
·
h
..
CIRCLE'
.
b"
t
safely
.
l l
4
times?.
King's Point and Rider:
·
Saturd~y as they were victorious over Rider
.
·
0
!
wmners
10
t
e
.
_
s . igg
_
es
The Red Foxes
.
won their home opener
8 to
5.
Once again Jim McDonald lead ttie
.
g1yeaway, SC(?RE AND WIN.
T~1s ~eeks
2 .
.
Who was the only player to win the
on November
2, 7 to 4 against King's Point
.
Red Foxes 'Nith another scoring exhibition.
·
-
·
·
wmners are J:?irk~
_
McMahon
-
and _M1ch~el
batting and home run titles with two teams
·
.
:
-.
as
Jim
McDonald scored four goals. Marist
''McDonald
:
scored the game's first goal
.
Zucc~rello, Mike is ali:e~dy a two-time wm-
in the sameJeague?
•
.
jumped out to a
4 to
J
lead after the end of
about a
:
minute into the game," com-
ner and.
Y(?U can be a wmner to.
·
·. ·
· ·
3. Who
.
is the '?resent-day play~r who
the (irst period. After being outscored 3 to
rnented head coach Glenn Van Bramer
>
.
..
_-
To ~m,1ust answer as many sports ques-
.-
h?lds the club ~attmg mark lead with two
1 in the game's second period .the stickmen
"Jim is playing very well
·
for us. He really
·•
tt0ns as
.
you
_
can
_
.
,
A,fter; th~
·
week
-
_of
.
different te~ms.
..
.
.
took
·
the.final period
2 to"0.
_
_
•
·
.
.
:
put.on quite
,
a show
:
in the. Rider
,·
game."
·
·
.
:::.
Nove111ber 15; the pers~,n
_
or perso~ wtth
_
4
.
~ho hit 40-o~:morC: home runs_m the
,
1
:;
Joining McDonald in the_ sco
.
__
ring column •
All of. McDonald's goals ·were unassisted.
.
t~e mo~t answe~ed qu~st1on9vms_.
It s that ~mencan Leag~e eight times, but faded to
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·.
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.
.
•
-.
:
·
country team
:'
has
:
been
.
frainirig with
.
real key' to the teams success
:
The scoring
. ~.
-~
•
.
f
.
T.olleyers
fall
:to
_
··
s.ienq
at
horrie
t
~.
·
~
··•
·
·:
.....
specific ·goals
,c
iri
'
mind;
-
Last Saturday one
·
was
..
rounded
.
out
-
by Paul
:
Peterson
.
who
.
.
of
·
those goals, to finish in the top 5 at the
···
·
.
placed 6lstin what was by far his best race
'
state meei~wasachieved.
·
:·.
_
.. ·
:
·
•
:
_.
of the year
,
Peterson is considered by his
By Kal'.en Flood
.
"We a~e really excited about this win
•
:
'
At the State
·
university
_'
at Albany the
coacli"
··
arid teammates
to be
,
the most im-
because it and the two remaining league
··.
Red
.
Fox harriers placed
i
foui:thin.a field of.
.
.
.
proved athlete
.
on
the
squad. :
:
- ·
·
.
·:
On .
·
Monday;
.
·
•
.
November 9th,C the .. garnes could put
.
us at the .500 mark and in
21
and upset Cortland Staie in a fifth; and · •
.
:.
'
Dave Haupt, the 6th man forMarist
pr_o-
women's volleyball tearrl_su'rfered a divi-. the HVWAC tournament," said co-captain
' .
.
Colgate seventh.
·
.
.
. '
.
' ·,
.
- duced a strong finishing kick to catch
·
two
·
sion lossat the hands of Sie.11a College: ·
. ·
Linda Peter after
-
the match.
.
.
Despite a temperature
·
change of-30 opposing ruimers
·
in the last straightaway
•
·•
In the first game, Marist's starting player -
-
Marist advanced it's league recqrd of 4-6
·
degrees in30 hours, snow fllii'ries
;
and high
·
and ·placed 64th.'
·
. -
·
·
·•
·
_
•
\ :
' .
·
·>
Maureen
-
Mirra,
,
· gave
,
.
the
,
~
foxes · a · by defeati~gMount Saint Vincent's women
winds Maristcran a strong
-
race totaling
167
,
:-,_:
,
There was
·
a
controversial start to the
substantial lead by serving
_
up six
:
straight by a score of3-2
.
The Red foxes easily took
.,..
.
Points to finish
•
.
bc;hind a tightly
_.
packed
.
_
.
race
:
i!i which
·
a:
secon~
.
g~.in was
..
fired -irn°
.
:
.
points, this and excellent court coverage by the fir
.
st two games with
-
scores of 15-8; and
Fredonia squad
.,
(46/points); Siena
;
and
_
iriediat
.
ely after the starters gun. This
·
pro-
.
Marist co-captains Linc!a
-
Petcr
·
and
-
Pam
.
·
15:10. ~he determined College of Mount
.
.
University of Rochester
:
The Marist defeat
:
cedlire signals a false s
.
tart arid immediate
.. -
.
Green, g~veMarist
a
15s10 win; The Siena
.
..
Saint Vmcen~, however,
·
fought back by
·
.
·
·
or
·.
cor
·
t1and ancLColgate was the
.
surprise
/
halting of the race, usuallx. Th~ race was
Indians edged
:
Marist in
_,
the
·
second game
· .•
capturing the next two games 16-14; and
of the day, both had oeaterithe
.
Red Foxes· not stopped however,
·
causing widespread
15~13 to
·
ev~n up the scor~
;
The third game
-
15~6. Marist came through though in the
·
only
a
week earlier.
0:<, '.
.
;
.'
/ -
<
;
> ·
=
,-
_.
confusion and hesifation by the runn~rs.
was taken
by
Marist'IS~l 1 ~nhe result of·
:
'fifth
.
g
_
~me with a score of 15-11, to clinch
.·.
/
Mark Wickh
.
am;
-
~ft~r suffering some
-
· Dennis Martin, 7th man for Marist in 76th,
team work and determination, but the skill
_.
the match
.
setbacks in receri(W~eks;
·
lead the team
·
·was one of those thre>wn off by the mishap.
~
.
and
·
experience of Siena dominated in the ·
On Wednesday;- November I Ith, the
with his• 14th place fiilish:
-.
This e
.
arned
While
.
not making excuses
-
Martin
.
was
fourth and fifth gamefasthey.won 15-11, Marist College Women's Volleyball Team
Wickham AII~State
c'
rankirig .for the '81
·
disa
·
ppqintedJhat in a meet of this calib
.
er
.
and 15-10, and improved their record to 19-
will travel
_
to
:
Manhattanville College and
:
season~ The second runnirig
·
Re~ Fox
.
across
·
there
,
was controversy marring the
'
out-
:
13. The Marist
.
College
,
Women's on Friday November 13th the Red Foxes
.
the line was freshman,
·
John Lovejoy in
come.
.
: :-
. -·
·
·
·
.·
-
.
'
Volleyball Team served up a league win will finish their season on
.
home courts at 7
26th.
Lovejoy
/
has
·
been riinni
.
rig excep~
"
.
Coach Mayerhofe,:
,
was very pleased with
over the College of Mount Saint Vincent on p.m. against D9minican ~ollege. These
tionally
all
.
~eason and missed be(:~min$
. ·
·
the team pe~formance
·
·
and
.:
sai~, ?It was
· .·
Friday November
_
6th to bring them
-
one
·
two all important league gar,ies should pro-
.
.
All-S
_
ta~
_
ebyJusJ 6scconds.
·
':·•
.
_
_·
one of our goals and reachmg 1t waL
.:
.
-
game closer to
·
·
playing in the Hudson
-
ve
_
t9 be exciting and all are welcome to at-
.
-
.
-,_
~
.
Senior Co-captain
:
Joe
:
Burl~ki was the
.
great.•;
.
·
·
.
.
Valley
·
Women's
::.
Athletic Conference tend.
·
'
·
-
next rnan across
.
in 31st. Burleski
·
was
.
,
Tournament .
.
·
-
·
·
·
·
1yotes
off tfle'.meiflQplld
-
-
'
.
-
·
.
·
.
·
.
,
;
.
'
::
·
:
who ~tr~nd~ill be surprised at
.
our
mys~~ry
'
.-
6-2 record. Top goal scorer was Tor~ Udahl
.
opener to
C.W. Post,"the team has won the
.
-
.
:
·
.
·
:
'.
_
·.-:-
mascot
:-
:
The Fox
\.Viii
reveal him or herself
with 6, a~d the Jeadirig assist man
-
was
next (wo outings an~ are being led by Jim
Who will
.
bt
in the Red
·
Fox
.
suit'? That's
·
just prior t
.
o the tip
.
~Q(f of 'the
<
game, so
freshman standout Tim Buchanan with IS
·
McDonald
;
This sophomore has had two
·
.
the question McC1mn Dir~or Dick Quinn
.
·
each and everyone attending
will
see
for
points. Don't think Doc
.
Gol~man isn't
,
consecutive hat-trick
_:
night~, including
is asking the students of Marist; It's only a
himself just whothe celebrity Fox
·
is. Early
·
worried about losing super goalie Andy
·
: several unassisted goals in the
-
team's vie-
week
.
away tiW
'
our Red
:,
Foxes
·..:.
til)'.'off
Lewis Line predictio:ns has.Betty Yeaglin ar-
.
"cricket" Homola. "Cricket"played in all-
tories over King's Point and Rider.
·
·
against the Yugoslavia National basketball
:
2-1, with Dean Cox at 6-1. -·
.
·
·
·
.
of Marist•s·20 games and gave up only 21
·
·
·
·
·
·
'.
team in an exhibition contest, the final· ·
.
•
·
··
_·
..
· •••
.
.
.·
:
·
goals while saving 108 shots on goal, in-
•••
.
preliminary to our
-·
'veritur.ousjoui-ney into
.
I would personally_ like to thank all
_
the
.
eluding S shutouts_.
'
.
•
·
Division }basketball.
:
., ..-
:
.
- .
.
.
. .
·
._
wornen who
"
took the time to react'
on
last:
.·.·
.
, . .
•••
:
.
~
The f~ns 3:tthc
.
hockey
gam~
hav~'reany
.
. A Mar!st
_
dignitary
will
.
don
·
Red _Fo~ at-
_
_
week's
_ .
c
_
o
,
hi.~~•
.
The
.
Female Persuasion.
· ·
wh
·
at a
:
differen
.
cc
a
_
year
.
can ~~ke fo"°r
.
.
helped
.
boost the morale of the team: Isn't
tire, and 1fyou can guess
\Vho
this d1gmtary
.
All
.
Your cnuc1sm
_
was welcome,
·
but I'm
the Marisf Hockey team; which last year
·
it sad that
.
the other Marist
:
men's and
is, you win.a McCann center
.
jacket
:
You
·'
~orry that I cannot comply with your re•
had neitber the coach nor the funds to
women's
·
teams can't r~p from audience
can start mailing
iri
your guesses now to
·
quest to jump off the McCann Center.
·
finish out the season. This year the team is
·
..
participation?
If
all those students that
Dick Quinn at the McCann Center, or give
·
•••
·
part of the Metropolitan Collegiate Hockey
knock our team•~ play would
.
·
go to the
the person at the door on the night of the
.
Congratuiations are in order for our soc-
Conference, and are making a red mark in
-
games,
.
I'm sure each
.
individual would
game your guess. Dick assures me that all cer team, which ended the season with a 12-
their conference play. After losing their
understand how wro!lg they are.
;:
1
.
,
..
,•·
.l
•. ~
·
26.8.1
26.8.2
26.8.3
26.8.4
26.8.5
26.8.6
26.8.7
26.8.8
26.8.9
26.8.10
26.8.11
26.8.12