The Circle, March 5, 1981.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 25 No. 16 - March 5, 1981
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I
·. Marist
College P.oughlceepsle,
N.Y._.
Volume
25,
Number 16
~
Mar~h
5;
1981
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.,.,
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Re·agan'
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,WMCFt
Marathon:
A
SUCCESS
·· cuts'·Aid ,_ -·
By Monica Finnigan
by.Evelyn Greco
In a small room of Donnelly Hall,'
. .
. .
_
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,_
- four Marist students sacrificed their
.-
.
Beware students, there may not be a usual weekend plans and instead gave
semester for you_ next September. The of themselves· for a _worthy -cause.
reason
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for this will ,not be· the usual WMCR, . the ··college
•
· radio . station,·
"lack of a cum," but a lack of funds. ···sponsored their first marathon"for the
According to Karen Atkin, Director of · American Heart Association.
·. ·
Financial Aid; there
will
be many
;,am .
Paimeri, Doug-. Haight, Ed
reductions in the aid students receive, . Powers .and Chris- Barnes, all whom
if the Re~gan Proposal goes thro_l,!gh.
are members ofthe_ WMCR staff, set Ni
Also, It will be much harder to obtain a out:to conduct a marathon in order to \'
Guaranteed Student Loan, the money raise money for the station. "We didn't
r: ..
that
.
95%
of - the students depend
have a large allocation of money so we
.'J;,'N!
upon. . , ·
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asked The American Heart Associa-
•F
· If the Proposal is voted in, it wm at-
tion to sponsor us and they agreed"
feet three phases of student aid_:_
1)
Na
0
explains Palmeri. Pledges were made
tio11al Direct Student Loans {NDSL); 2)
from various members· of the Marist
Guaranteed
-
Student-Loans {GSL),
3)
.·community- a·nd~--the proceeds were
Pell Grants. {formerly BEOG), Atkin ex- · split-50/50. WMCR's portion of the pro-
plained that new· ·federal money fitWill be used to build up the station's
_ directed •for NDSL usage would be
record catalogue.
- reduced and that would cut aid to the
The marathon ran for a total of 72
.
,. _
_
1
student by
25%.
When dealing with
hours, with each disc jockey airing six,
the· Guaranteed Student Loans; Atkin
three hour shows. The four spent their _
stated that undergraduates might be
entire weekend eating, drinking and
· L
to
R. Chris Barnes,
Doug
Haigh~, Ed Powers and Bill Palmeri.
.
facea with paying their interest on
sleeping at the station and as Haight
. · ..
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··
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Photo by Mike Chung
their loans now and poss_ibly not being
commented, "For the station, rest has .
-:--
.. . able to get a loan at all because of stif-
no bounds. We're sponsoring this' for
unusual,''. Palmeri remarks. "We had a
unaware of the financial status of the
fer requirements. One positive note
both the humanistic part and to·
ii- ·
large. amount of requests and the
Marist hockey club, it would have been
· though: the borrowi_ng amount on .the
lustr_ate the power thaCWMCR can . .
.Hstening
.
participation · was great" · good to raise money for them through
GSL's has been raised .from
$7500
to have/' At tirst_·'IIIMCR was a bit hesi- · reported Haight._. Station -identifica-. a marathon."·'
'\
I
i'
,"
~
$12,S0Q
_along with .the interest rate
tant con<?er'nlng · the" icfea · of the Uon_s were. aired __ from-various faculty
The total profit from the marathon
from 7.o/oio
9% .. '. ~\- · .. · ·.··· .
_
--,
.
marathon .
.
''We took
a
:
.
chance and . members 'endorsing the prqgram as . was. approximately .
$600,
.
and when
~..:.~n.'.o.therJyp_1iJ:>Ji!.ii.dAhatwould be ..
lri
,,were'. am~~d._at .hQW:.;well;'
.
it.weri,t,. ,"weJl_,·asfr'pin. Jim Carroll ot'2T6"e
Jim.<' asked.If collectlrig th~
0
pledgedmoney_ -~
,
> .... :_ ..
•::>· __ } '
, · ·
..
.. ,
..
. ,.,tro.ut,f.;fa
.
cAorc!l
ri_g.jo:,,Atrt,nfi~~the:,pell
::eyijiypife\'v<Jas-.~v.efy:c9bpeiattve/'l'
says:--··:
Car'rQI
I'
r:rarrd''
:whi6!i'
p_ei"form·et:r
ati.tfle
·
;
'''vH5u lcF·Jj:Ef taim
cu
It,'
•
.
Pal
rri'.e·ri .
.
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op:
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Gr!,lf'.lts{Tt:,e"Ft~agan>F?r6po·!3aL)vquld : -paJn:i,ert:
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Good.Times Cafe. in-f>oughkeepsiEf on .. timistically. replied,' "It.·. shot1ldil't .. be
once·again put theJncomecap limit of ·· ,·In order_tooccupy the long enduring .,·Friday night:
•
·•.£
<·.
i<<
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·
•
,.::.:.· ...
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:_too ·tough because ·the peo·pte .who
$25;ooo
onJhe program'. This. means
hours,,/'C_;all
.
Jhat,Cut,'.'._~()pen ~equest
.
, .When asked
if
they would consider
.
pledged are all faculty or friends?
that. parents and .s'tudents who make
lines and live hou~§c:were conducted. -•doing
•
· it. again, - the fo_ur replied,·
Even though it_was a long tiring ex-
$25,000
or more would not be able to · llThese format~ create listeri!l')g par-···: "definitely, everything Was positive." .perience, the enthusiasm and efforts
receive any qf this aid, even if you have ticipa,ti()n, people get to he,ar
_
their
Palmeri also explains th~ possibility of -
-
of the four and WMCR shouJd be com-
eight children in the family-attending
names on the _air which is someth(ng 'doing it again for another club, "I was mended.
·
college_. Also, one's eligibjlity index
.
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. would-become too high and cause less
,
··· · · ' ·· ·· · · ·
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:•··. !n~):sJ~~
I
~;iri~~
t~
s~opthls pro-
_,
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-f!oWers
:R~signs:from
fHc.-- -
p:osal from beii:ig passed through Con-
..
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·
·
·
·
gres.s, says Karen.
If
the students are
.
By
TomH_assett
It Is something that I :en]oY,'.·' in ex~ :
;
u1
am totally taking myself out of
coQcernE1d en<>ugf) about being able to
. . ..
·.
,
plaining his Jesignation:· Powers Is
_sh1dent
government · for this
have an _education, th~n t~ey should -~ · Ed Powers has resigned from -his . _ presently-the business manager of the . semester" says Powers. However, he
wr!teJhelr: congrf3ssman before J~ne ,, position a~ president of theJnterho~s~ •
..•. ce>ll_ege radj<> st~tion and Is running for . ·expressed. thclt he. would serve as a
30. The Re.agan Proposal Is not toq
.
far Council. He has also chosen to. resign ,, general m_.mager of· the staticin for
consultant to the Council because he
from·· reality, explained-.Atklr:i,·· as·.the the .council. ·of .Stude_nt Leaders and :: nextsernester'. -· ; ·
.•
,
-:.__ ·
_. -·
doesn't want to-see the:plans and pro-
Jan;
1
cuJ insoqlal security.benefits to -House Council ·of Gregory House as •
Powers had been :a member of the
gress that hal/e been made dropped.
students has sho}Yn.-_
> , .
•
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well: .
,
.... ·. . . .
.-
. Inter House Council beforeaccepting
· Powers Is putting all
his
:efforts-Into
For furthecliiformation on types of.
· Powers at the beginning of• this : the position as president. "I went to
WMCR for a variety of reasons.
aid orjustori h.ow
10
f!II out your F.AF. semester· replaced . Matt: Chandler f.c:,r ~. the. meetings and saw nothing getting
"Students are not aware that the radio
form, At~ln ·is -avaUable for "on the_ the posl!lon. eowers says, '-'I want to_:
dQrie.
1. saw the . councjl as just a
station is here for them" says Powers.
spot'-' questions or by appointment.' · · ·· pufall
my
efforts Into WMCR ~Eica1,1se <Pacifier forstuderits. Becaus~ they are .. He sites little ·· administrative co-
.
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0• · ·
.:
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nof utlllzlng: the student government : operation for the unpopular status of
;...
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.. ; and the house council to Its full ex-
WMCR in
·
the . past. . Powers feels,
·
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'
·
· · .. · ·
· tent," says Powers:: .
.· ,
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· •. "More '"emphasis should be m~de. in
Fa.
c· ··1·ng<F•1r· e Facts· -
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_.
Plans that Powers had in mind to. · overall. bettermenrof the college not
/
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· .:: . . : , . : .
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· carry out while he ,.was pr:esident In-
just in one area such .as_ basketball." --
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,elude a newsletter in the Circle stating
He added, "the college Is a com-
.
By
V•~n~ca
s,taea :• • · :;:
.
around to witness . them " · he notes: . the promises that f:rank Scott, the new
munlcations and busfness
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-orlented
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Seeger feels that the trash_ can fires dJnlng services in~nager, made
!Or
im~. c~!lege but little em~hasls is put on
A
$100
r~ward has· been offered t9 : arEt'. all_ - related, but another_ ·. fire provln~ the quality of. food. -- m the
it.
. .
_
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anyone provldlr:,g "information : t!'laL discovered Friday in - the · first - floor-- cafeteria. As wen~ plans are
l!l
effect
.
Tony Giannone, a member of
the
ln-
feads to the arrest ancf' convl.ction
QC
bathroom was not "It was ,not by the {or a fleld
-
-,day In the spr,mg - ~o-
te_r H.ouse Council from Champagnat,
the person
or
persons who recently SE!t: ·-:-saroe metl:lod," says_ Seeger, "that's_, sponsored by C.U.B. and a more active
w1U repl~ce .Powers ·as president for
. a small flre:on. the- first floor of Leo. :the unfortunate part of it. People start food committee.
the remamderofthesemester.
Hall: .. ,
< :::, :.-
· , ·
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.·.• ,, · : _
jumping on the bandwagon when they
The fire ~was :discovered at approx-, see all the at_tentlon they can get." ·
imately •· 3:30
-
A.M., :-
·on_ : Saturday,>
·i:
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The Fairv_iew Volunteer.Fire Depart-
February 2t in the trash can on the
·
ment responds to all Marlst's caUs,
first floor In.
Leo;
According to Geoff · altl:iough an alarmJ,as not been pulled
Seeger,. Resident Director of Leo Hall, . · for all the fires. The bathroom fire was
- three similar fires have been found in
put out by the students who found it ..
the same location, an·d anothe~
111
the.
_ «The -<?oncern of
t~~
stud!3nts has
trash can on the third floor, since the
been a big help t? ~s, expl~ms Ch!ef
beginning of the spring semester. "We - - Decker of. the Farrvrew Volunteer Frre
feel that they were all set," ~xplains
Depa~ment, <lln the lat~ ... 60's and ear-
Seeger, ''the reason b~lng t_hat in all
ly 70 s, we WOIJ!d receive·3
to}
false
·
cases, we,foi.Jnd a waym which It.was alarms from Mansteveryweek.
-set, such as matches laying around
T_he.re h~ve been about_ three false
the trash can." _
<>
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alarms-this year In Champagnat Hall ..
Seeger explains that It is very;•_dif-
·
The most· recent one was witnessed .
ficult to firid the person responsible
and the .. offender arrested and placed
for the fires. "At the hour tJ:iey've ~een
.
Continued
on
P.
3 ·
,
happening, there are, · few people
Page 2 •
THE CIRCLE•
March 5, .1981
The
-Circle
coeditors
associate editor ·
news editor
feature editor
sports editor
photography editors
copy editor
contributing editor
· business manager
advertising manager
distribution manager
cartoonist
Faculty advisor
. · .. Loretta Kennedy .
· Marybeth Kearney · ·
.
.
.
.
)
Judy DiSciplo
. Veronica Shel
· , Tom Hassett
Barry Lewis
Michael Chung
Michael Hellijas
Jane Hanley
Michael McCarthy
Dave Barraco
Pegian Reynolds
Thomas Rooney
. Tom Hassett
Mary Keelan
staff: Christia:n Bastian, Tim Breuer, Carol Bu;ke, An~e Marie Calonita; Chris
Campbell, Monica Finnegan, Peter Fredsall, Joan Gasparovic,Donald Gately,
Grace Gallagher, Evelyn Greco, . Lisa Marchesano, Bil Renrick, Mary Alice
Russo, Cece Scanlon, Dawn-Marie Sturtevant Ruth Warren
.
Why
No E~ceptions?
· ·]teaders
Write
· All lell~I'$ mu,,
·
.,. typed triple spocewlth o 60
,pace
margin, ond submitted
to
the
Circl~ ·
olflce no loter than 6 p.m: Monday. Short letteri are prelerred._W• , ...
...,., the right to edit
all lellel'$. lellers inust be.signed. but names may
a,.
withheld upon requ;,11. letters will
. , be
published depending
upon avoUability alspoce.
·
· ,Touchy'S1;1bject .
:
<
: .
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Dear Editor,
. .
· · same touchy'subjectO She. did;
This past S_aturday after- . making statement's such as "I
noon I listened to• a Marist ·am very disappointec;I in her,"
athlete being interviewed on a
·
and stated reasons· why· she
local radio station. She was believed the player did some
asked to do the· interview of the things she did and!why
because
of
·
her
ac-
shethoughttheplayerwasin
compllshments in her athletic .-the · wrong in ·· ·certain in-
. field in her tour years here. · stances: I do
not
commend ·
She was asked about her fami-
her on· her decision .
.. . IY, her reasons
tor
coming to .
When the Interviewer was
· Marist, and her ·career goals done talking with the coach
among other topics; It was a · she switched . back to the
very goo~ interview;
·. player and. asked her if she
When the interviewer asked
now had any additional com- ··
her though, about her relation-
ments to make, and she said, ·
ship· with her coach and the "No. That's it.''
conflicts the two of them have.·
I
would like ·to congratulate
had, she. refused to com_ment
this player, not for all she has
qn
I
this "touchy subject"
accomplished at
Marist, ·
but
because . she felt that as a . for having · acted in . such a
representative of this college . mature and responsible man-
that it would not be proper to
ner during that interview.
I
just
·· bring up the personal . pro-
wish that the coach could
-----------------'----------'----...;...----=-;,..-·..;.·_
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blemsbetween a player and;a
have acted in -as professional
coach on the air: I commend
a manner as the player :did.
her on thatdecision.
After al(, she is the profes-
At the end of this week,. when some
stay at the homes of their off-campus
students will be lounging in their com-
teammates, but feel that they might be
fortable homes, and others will be on
imposing. Their only.other alternative is
their way to 1the sunny beaches of
to sleep on the
,
floor otthe boathouse, a
Florida, the Marist College crew team
prospect which does not sound too in-'-
The interviewer then switch- · sional.
·
ed to a telephone interview
with this player's coach and
• asked her- to comment on the .
.
'
The lcEfAge
Sincerely,
Maureen Kenney
will be gearing up for a grueling workout
viting to a person·who is about to _em-
in West Virginia. Plans for the trip have
bark upon a week-long wo_ rkout.
·
·,
I
I
·
h
Greetings Frorn Alaska:
. .
told there was nothing that
gone re ative
Y
smoot , with one major
It
is reasonable to expect that the ad-
(E
9th Fl
could be done and in a sense
exception.
ministratio·n is eager
to
begin- its vacaa ...
Gi~~~~i~~)
we mean
oor we· &houldn't compiain since
The resident, members of the team . tion as. well. ljowever,.the small matter
.Again for what. seems like
we chose
to
live in the_rooms!
. ··• e.
ar~.,required to find altematemeans of
c:'.9fa·
few hours ,irLa,,comfortable
:
bed,> .an "ice,age'' (jur, rooms are._
.We
f~el w~were
.
1~cky to geta
.
: , -.'..:: -\•locigi':'9 ?11
;Friday. night .be~ause, the
,
... without-~so·,!TIUCh'·as the•·requ~sttora :~·.': .freezliig_:·,Y'(~:~a.ve·ri~f ha~ :a:ny;'\ rooT with tt.i~'~fl!OUh\of_p~o-
>- .
Hous_mg.Off1ce· w1II n~t permrt them to
meal appears
tq
be
a
rather petty'is~ue::.: .· heat for;most ofth.e s~mest_er, , -_pie ,_that ,~er~_-ta~e,:i. In 1~st
remarn- on campus without charge• It
s··
h .. • ·ti, . 1·.· _., · t··
0
-
t ··th .. .
. -and . .we-are,sick-and tired of
semester'. We Justwante~~o
:- ._
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uq.
lnJUS
ce s
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n._(~ry o ···-~- com_-
belng•passed from office to
let you know thatwe.feel 1t 1s,
s~ems unfarr that a tea!11 ~h1ch has so
pet1J1ve level Mar,st 1s now trying . to
office and receiving no help.
very unfair and we are literally
aptly represe~ted ~anst .
m
the p_ast
achieve. If a teams' members are spen-
-we -are happy . to see that
"sick" (colds, flu, etcL.) over
should be denied a simple request to re-
ding
$50.00
each for a trip that will, In·.· - Marist is in the process of ex- ·: it. We certainly. know where
main on·campus until
5:30
a.m. Satui'-
· essence benefit the school and 'its
panding<and -·becoming
we won't be living next year
day.
reputation why can't the school show
known, but we· feel that pre-
and we ~ope that anyone th~t
Some members have the option to
•t
· ·
. · t·
f
· ·h·. .
·
?
..
sent problems should be solv
0
moves rnto these rooms 1s
1 s app~ecra ion or sue support·
ed before advancing to other · prepared to wear ten extra
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , . , - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - things. For . the. amount of
layers of clothes along with a
'
Empty
Pockets
money we are paying to. go
few extra blankets to keep
here, we feel it is very unfair· warm. We kno.w there. is an
that we should be deprived of
energy crisis, but we feel.that.
something as basic as heat.· having no heat is taking mat-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - " - - - - - - .. we cannot study, sleep or just . ters a bit too_ far, Thanks!
Each year a significant number of up- .
. For those lucky enough to receive .. relax in our rooms due to the ,
·
.
. .. 9th Floor Girls ..
perclassmen do not return
to
Marist.
government,· private,. or college finan:
excessive co!dnes~: We ,we~e
,
.
Some find that college was not what
<?ial ·aid, it:is of tenth: deter'minatipn .of,. • . -~
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> . . .
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:Meanir)g"fu I
Marathon
they were seeking. Others transfer to
. Y{hether or not he will attend college. . .
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another college, decide to work, or take
vy1th· l?ans; ra_tes increasing ~and .:infla-._ . D~a'(Listen·er~, ·. ··
.
· Vic~-~nno·unter'!tents, security.
time off to pursue other interests.
t1on drmintshmg the awar~ one may
.
When I arrived at this fine for ,their ·patience and late .
Beyond these personal reasons; there is
have rec~ived freshman year; even· the ,. establishmenta little overtwo night engineering, ~II at the
· one more factor that is quickly rising to
aid ascertairted becomes more expen-
-and
a
half years ago,
'I
ex-
Good Times Cafe, Frank Scott
predominate:-money.
sive. Reagan proposes to cut govern-
pected !O' go ~hrough. some . and friends from .the food ser-
Lack .of financial resources has
ment and state aid and make loans .. pre!tY wild and rnt~restrng·ex-
vice, for endless cups of~cof-
always s_ eemed.·. to be. one of tt:ie
.· more difficu1t to obtain _ while the cost, .... penences .. ~ut, I would· trade fee and deli shacks; all of the
.
· .
.
rn .every srngle
one
(well, ex-
administration for · making
foremost problems concerning the-co1,:-
of college continues to increase.
cept one) to go .through · marathon ID's,
The Circle
for
. lege student They work summer jobs
Student s_upport is needed to block
another like I had 'this the . best advertising _ and
and during the academic year to save
the president's action. Letters to our
wee1<e11d. As you
··
a11 know,
coverage,on campus (besides
for their tuition. Parents often·. con-
congressman are the first stage i.n mak-
from noon. February
27,
MCR-ha ha!), .~lso we cannot
tribute towards their child's education, .
ing our voices ~eard. Financially speak-
throug_h no<;>n March
2,
WMC_R forget our No.
1
listeners ~oh
but the burden most often rests upon ·
ing - Will your plans be changed next
held its fir~t annual r,~d•o . Baby •
.
(Jeanette)_, . El~me,.
the_ student. Fi·nally, as
8
hopeful but
year?
·
/
marathon to raise
·
money for . Sharon, .Carla, and Diane,
·
the Heart Assqciation and Diana the girls. of Cham-
last resort, i.s financi.al aid.
Marist College Radio:
'
·
· pagnat 5th an
.
understanding
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .. Well if you haven't heard by · bunch of listeners in Gregory,
: now,
I
'wou!~Hike· to tell you it Benoit, Leo, Sheehan, and
No one likes to have
a
bad reputation.
Recently, two fires were set in Leo.
According to the Fairview Fire Depart-
Why? What sort of person sees delight
ment, in their eyes Marist students are
in setting fire to a garbage pall, smok-
far from "peachy keen." This is nothing
.
ing out the building, and making good,.
to boast about.
,,,
faithful· .. men .have - to
extinguish
Within the atmosphere of "fun" oftE3n
· something that should never have been
• was a total success thanks to Champagnat, and finally every
a countless number
of
people.; person who took the time to
Unfortunately, there is only so b'ring us some. food · or
much space so
I
will thank as · beverage, sign a pledge sheet,
many as
I
can.
or dial our eitension.
First of all
I
would like to
Nothing but love and thanks,
thank
.
Ed · Powers, -chris
.
.
Bill Palmeri
Branes, and. Doug·Halght for
·
·
GM-WMCR ·
au ,heir time, understanding, P.S. Thanks, most Importantly.
and dedication, WPDH for to the staff of WMCR.
· · . news, weather, and public ser- ·
times fire alarms -are "accidentallt'
.
. set in_ the first place? O~vlously,
~
sick
- . .
. :_. ·
Locking Up
Mciney· .. '•
; .
' -
pulled.
We do not
live In the
city where - • -mind. It is•not funny,.n9~ fun, 9or,n~~d- -:, : "-:~.:-•-;. _··;'•··
· . ,. ·
·
·· , , - ·.. ,
.
:
-
·
;- ./·.: ·,. ;_, , ~,._firert:1en .are on call· at .the ~t!l~i<?n
.2~ ... · ..
ed.
P.le~se
~t~P
.
. It
r:iow
~efor,e: Marl~t's
~/o~~tFri;~is".:).;i-~
·
~;t;
:=. , ..
intelllQel'!t:··yet:-. unorganized.
.
,
r
_.: :: .. - . .; .
_.hours a day._ Oftery_ times al~_rms_pull.~h.e ..
·
-· reputation is ruln~.-~lso,
g_r,oW.UJ?;,
t~ls. ,: .•
<.·:/Ori
Ji: l'ecent~-m~
·:tb·
the
studen1s · ask_,
"Ho~ ;much
.
'.· ;< :. \
0
_·
·}men·,_literally out.of their
beds.;
This,
is··;•· iscol~ege! • ~. :;-:):::· · · ; . · ·, · - ··,-:
·t'JarislSe<iuri(yof_ttee;HlSked
~-~,s}t~~~t-~or~place"~room .\ , •
., .. ,.. -·· :,notonlyunfair•it'saelflsh.
, .-....
-.".;c';··;:,·•
. . .
--
.
· - · •.-·,·:,;
.
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· :
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.
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-
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-
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.
-·
.
.
,
'
-
~_
--
.
-
.
-
...
.
-
-
,
·
-
.-
-
. Time
·
Out
-
For the
Lord
>
-·
..
.
.
...
-
..
.
.
.___
Rockpile
•
·
By
Mark
R.
Wegg
.
The other side of the shoulder was met
.
.
.
.
·
·
·.
•
•.
•
.
•
with
a
barb-wired fence which enclos-
On December 2 four-Catholic mis~
:
ed countless acres of coffee trees with
slonary women--three
·
of whom were . near-ripe beans as far as the eye could
by Diane Loiacono
"Ransom/' their name has recently
sisters,. one a
-
lay.
,
volunteer--were
see. These poor El Salvadorians lived
-
been changed to C-249,
in
reference to
murdered in El Salvador, a small Cen-
.
on a space no
_
t wider than 10 feet in
·
.
Last Thursday night about thirty or the Campus Center room where much
.
tral American country. Evidence
·
width. Some· of their
.
"habitations"
fourty people were treated to some
of ·their rehearsing takes place. C-249
points to a political motive
for
these
_
were made out of the garbage rem-
.
fine entertainment at the Fireside
is a combination of students, alumni
brutal slaylngs as thesewomen•s
·
lives
.
nants of the
.
rich: cardboard
,
plastics,
Lounge by members of the Marist and faculty. Music professor Dave
were in.Jeopardy because they worked
.
and flattened tin cans wtiichwere con-
.
community
.
·
Heckendorn does much of the writing,
·
·
·
with the poor. and lived
_
their \Yhole
structed · in such
·
a way . to make
·
The show began with an acoustic plays keyboards, sax and sings most
.
lives for
.
Jesus Christ by
_
carlng for the
"walls" for
.
huts.
It
appeared· that
guitar set by Judy Norn~an; Her ch~ice
to the tunes. Marist graduate, Joe San-
rights for the oppressed
.- ·
ro serve
.
·
..
these huts,
.
which
.
were no more than
of ~ongs range? from Jim Croce to the tacroce a.k.a. "Uncle Joe " is the
those of need in many
_
third world na-
·
10 ft. x
10
ft., served as a dwelling for Police. Following Judy was a newly guitarist along with junior
Mike
tions is
--:
conslde'red subversive, com-
.
. whole families ~hich could comprise
.
formed
·
campus band. Bill Nolan, Moore. George Daly takes care of the
munity activity. In fact, to preach the
·
a
dozen. or more members.
·
I saw
.
Adam_Puglia, and George Daly had on-
,
drumming and demonstrated his skill
Gospel
.
of Jesus--charity,
._
fraternity
:
·
c~ildren . di_rty,
·_
.
b~usi~d, naked and
ly decided the previou~ night to play _at
in a stirring solo. C-249's repertoire ex-
and
.
sorority, conversion to God and
diseased with bellies like basketballs,
the Coffee House. The_ir act was ma!n• tends from fast-paced pounding guitar
love for fellow humans-~is
so
contrary . frolicking in the mud--near the barb-
.
.
ly hard-rock covers which were convm-
riffs in "Graffiti" to Billy Joe-style pop
to the selfish, tyrannical g!)vernr:nents
wir~d fence of these plantati~ns-from
cinglX executed._ Pugli~, who has had
tunes.
that anyone
.
who preaches Chnst
·
as
whIch
_
they '!'ere r:nost emphatically ex-
expenence touring with bar bands,
the one who has come to the poor of
·
eluded and
m which guards stood with took lead vocals. The next spot was
thls
·
earth
"'
rs immediately marked
_
an
automatic gunnery to
·
check any
...
fi!led by
Mike
•~nt?sca who displayed
enemy of the State.
·
.
. ·
.
•
trespasser's approach onto the
his tale~t as a pianist.
.
Presently the
.
U.S .
•
government pro-
property-less the poor
.
steal a few
T~~
fmal act _was
0!1~
that Is very
ports documentation tha!
,
.
a
Com-
.
beans. Many of the rich people
c¢>·
fam11tar to Manst. Originally named
munist. plot is
·
underway to
.
overthrow
parently wen
_
t to church on Sunday
All the acts were received en-
thusiastically and hopefully more
students will be discovered at the Cof-
fee Houses sponsored by the Inter-
House Council.
the present government of El Salvador.
and most assuredly
·
recieved the .
.
.
Whether that documentation be tru
_
e
blessing · of the priest--probabiy to
e>r fal
_
sified, I.do not knoYJ. Personally, I
_
assuage their consciences. One thing
suspect It to be partially true. Bu~)
..
they may not have received
-
-the bless-
Fire Facts
Cont. ..
have also seen firsthand the living
ing of God.
.
.
•·
Continued from
page
1,
column
2
conditions of the poor in E,I
.
Salvador
.
,:he situatio_n in El Salvador and
under psychiatric
·
observation in an in-
and Nicaragua.
·
They are abhorrent--
.
·
such similar countries remind me of
stitution. If and when this student
which might be the primary cause and
·
the parable which Jesus told about the
returns to Marist, "we are 90% sure he
instigation for such a plot.
.
·
·
rich man and the poor man. The rich
will not be residing in a campus facili-
.,
Several years ago before any upris-
.
man put himself out of the love of God
·
;
ty," says Bob Kaminski, Resident
ings
,
began, I visited El S'alvador to do 'by his lifelong· hardness of heart to
Director of Champagnat Hall.
some work with parish communities recognize his
"
selfishness against the
Because of the frequency of false
especially
·
connected
·
with
the poor for whom he would not give even
alarms and small fires on the Marist
charismatic renewal. It was a beautiful
.
crumbs. (Luke 16:19-31)
campus, both Kaminski and Seeger
journey, though a difficult one, of be-
The situation in 'El Salvador also
fear
apathy
among
residents.
ing led by the Spirit of God.
-
In El
remind~ me that anyone who believes
"Students think an alarm is a joke and
can fires reached the sixth floor"
adds Seeger, "There is a gross lack
bt
awareness as to how serious it could
get."
In Decker's 30 member department,
only
4
or
5
are willing to respond
to
a
call from Marist. "The rest are getting
disgusted with it," he explains,
"holding back for a progress report
from myself or an assistant." Depen-
ding on the time of day, and the traffic
situation, Fairview can respond to a
call in two or three minutes.
·
Salvador though
-
I had many life-
that Jesus is the Christ, the way, the
there's no reason to leave," notes
enhancing encounters with these peo-
truth and the life~-is also called to be
Kaminski.
pie of a completely different culture, I Christ to others especially to the sick,
"There's too much of an attitude
Marist is not charged for the Fair-
often cried at the human suffering and the abandoned, the homeless, the Im·
that nothing can
.
burn in these view service; it is supported by the tax-
misery
·
1
beheld. A very small percen-
prisoned, the suffering, and the poor
·
buildings," believes Seeger, "but in
9
payers. But, as Chief Decker asks, "Do
tage of the population c:>wned 90-95% (Matthew 25
:
31-46). Perhaps in El
-
·
of 10 cases, smoke will kill, not fire. you remember the story of the boy who
of the
.
wealth,
:I
was tol
_
d.
I
saw thou-
_
Salvador there
.
will be more f-.merican
.
The smoi..e
from
one of the Leo trash cried, 'Wo\f'?"
.
·
.
_
san9 up
_
on
:
thqusandspf a
,
cres of Jus.h,
,
..•
rna_rty
_
rs.
.
. f~r
•
ti'!~
;'!,,..9fQ
,
Jes1:1
,
s
~
•m,a~¼'i-s
_
-
r~,.....--!"---------------....: ........... ________ .....;,.;...;. __ ..;__;__
cultivated
.::c,
.:
coJfee
<
trees
:·
,
while
,-
a:
who
·
rnay:fmd·
.
themselves unprotected
thousands upon thousands of persons
-
·
and
_
unsupported even
·
-
by their own
lived.on the fringes
-
of this terrain. One government and people who have
'
Sunday, while
I
was going through the been
.
.
blessed with freedom
.
The
·
•
countryside with
a group of
·
Church
.
Church in the first few centu
,
ries after
·
freinds
-
~veering up the side of a small Christ was built on the blood of such
·
mountain which showed
-
a volcanic · martyrs. So the
Church
oOhe future
_
crater, I saw groves and groves of : (and a new civilization I believe)
will
be
homeless people whose llvihg spaces
.
bullt
;
on the blood
_
of those 4 martyrs
consisted of the
-
shoulders of the dlrt
i
and others, whose vallant, humble
-
mud vi~ on which we rode as
·
we acts of love mingle with the ashes of
ascended the slopes of the mountain. the poor and will bear witness to the
·
·
resurrecUon of Jesus even in this pre-
sent age.
.
_
·
PARK
·
:
·
DISCOUNT
BEVERAGE
.
.
Rt. 9, Hyde
Park·
J.R.
is
Back ,;,
-
•1~ 19
Six
Pack
OPEN DAILY TIL 9:00
·
SUNDAY
12:00-5:00
HAJRCl.IlTERS
Open
·
•
,
·
Mott.SaL
-
'
.
/(},6
Thurs. 11
·
9
.
J
Libtt!y
St.
Mo
i
n Moll
~ 4 5 4
-
!12.39
'
Sluiktw.Ducounts
.
.
'
'
·
-
..
:---
l'Servlng
Mu.i.t
put
eight
years."
(The Spanish Club and Campus
.·
Ministry are jointly sponsoring a Lee•
:
ture
..
on El
-
.
Salvador and Latin
American situation on March
.
30, Mon-
day, 8:00 p.m. In the Theater. This is an
opportunity for us to hear a missionary
firsthand. And I hope you can make it.)
,
CLASSIFIED ADS
Wanted: Attractive females
to
clean
bachelor pad. Good pay and excellent
benefits.
Call
473-1863.
Preferably
devoted fans, of lax and crew.
Happy Birthday
Sprawls!
Good Luck, Mike.
R~!~~c~~,!
THEATIII
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
Bonnie
PLAYING IS
RUN FRI. 3/6
THRU r.,ARCH
26
PRESENT
THIS
ADWITH
COLLEGE
1.D.
&
RECEIVE
ONE DOLLAR
.
OFF
.
THE
REGULAR
ADMISSION
. ~RICE
11\quiring Photographer
How do you feel about Marist Col-
lege Security?
·
Donna O'Shaughnessy (Soph):
"They're fools, because they didn't
hire me.
~1
Meg Wright (Freshman):
As proved
by last weekends incident, security
should be a little tighter.
.
Mark
.
'
.
Fingar
(Junior): "Given the
situation, they're
-
doing the best
they
can."
Susan
Vasallo (Soph): "I
do my
job."
.
David Riley (Soph): Tow Joe Waters
and stick Willie Clare at the helm. '
BIiiy
.
Paimeri
(Junior): "What securi-.-
ty?"
,
.
··
.
.
,;
- - -
·
Page
.
4
~
THE CIRCLE~
Marcti 5, 1981---------------•• •._ •-•-•-•-•
.. •-•-•-•••-•-"'---•-•-•-•---•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•• •-•-•-. •
.. •-•-•-
•-.lljl-. •-•~ •-. •-•--.,
Marist
Cr8¥i
.
,
,:-.
.
·
.
'i
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,
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:
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:
.
Cofflill'gSoon!
.
·
·
Don't Miss the Action!
!
!
.
·.
.
.
.
,
"';
·
-~
Date
&
Time:
·
ro
be
Announ
·
ced
·
.
.
J)onnelly Hall
Comllluter
.
·
CZ:offee
·
.
.
:
·
.
~'
-: ..
·
'.
-
:
_
>
,
-
LOU1lge
-
-
Beverages •
Chips
&
Snacks
Luncheon Special Daily
Open from 8 a.m . .; 9 p.m. Mon.~Thurs.
Fri. 8 a.m. - 2 p.m .
.
(
.
.
campus
Announ
·
cements
'
-
.,
.
,
•
.
•
.
-
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.
. . .
...
-
.
.
.
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.
.
-
-
~:
~
-
·
-.-..
·
.. :
:
\
·:
·;
:,
r~
-:-
:
·
l-:
~
·;~.:.'.·
-'~
:.:-
~:1:
:
~_.;
··(.-
/
.
THURSDAY, March 5
• .
.
:
.. .
.,
·,
:
·
,,
_,
._,
.:.·,
".,",:'.:
·
:
.
.
-
_
J1:20a.m_.Upward8ound•CC270.
,:·
·':
:.
,~.:;~
-
-
~
,·.-.~.
·'.,··~•::
----
..
·•.'
.
·
_
11:30
a.m.
HEOP
mNtlng •
Fireside lp~
~
.
.
~
.
- ·.
·
:·' ...
~
·
-:
: : .·
·
3:00
p.m.
MO~IC
meeting
__
•
fl,-.slc:te
Lge:
: .. .
·
·
·
.
.
. '
· · ·
8:00
p.m.
Special A~ctemlc
Prog. •
~-ndellght
·
,
·
•
7:00
p.m.
Fly
Fishing &
.
Fly
.
Tylng-~C~49
...
:
.
.
. .
.
..
.
_
'
.
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•
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'_
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'
FJIIDAY,Ma~h
,
8
·
.
, •
.
/~-
.·
.
.
~,,-
~
i
'.
_,
:,,..:•
..
·.·-<
,·:
.
'
J~
p
_
.111,
Reslde"c.,
tfall•
Close
.
for ~prl~
~ec•._
·
.
_
SATURDAY,March7
..
-
--
-
·
. .
.
·
·
,
.
.
.
··:
.
..
8:00 a;m. Sl Mary•• Swim MNt · Mcca,.n POOL CLOSED
·
·
,
·
·•·:;:
8:00p.m.Po_ugh~••Psle Clvl~ Ballet~
•
rheatef'Ev•n!ng of pontem•
-:-.
-
·:.,
.
porary & Cla11lcal
QaJtce''
,
.
·
.
.
·
·
:,
..
.
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_
·
.
.
·
,
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.
'
SATURDAY~ March 7-SATURDAY, March 14 SPRING RECESS
·: .
,....
....
.
·
-
SUNDAY, March 15
.
. .
,; :
12~00 Noon Residence Halls reopen
.
~
.
.
.
·.-
.::
..
·
·
NOTES
:
:
.
.
l
~ ·•
-
·
.:.
·
:...
.
..
·
.
•
-
·
-
Program: American Red Cross First Aid Certification Course
and
.
Advanced Certification
-
Course sponsored by M~rlst
·
Health Ser-
.
--
vices.
NO CHARGE ~PR THE
-
COURSE (2.50 for the textbook) Star•
.
·
~
-
Ing March 4, (Wednesday) and every Wedensday thro~gh May 3,
'81 at 7:00 p.m. In Campus Center Room 248
.
;
·
·
· -
·
WIii Leo
·beat
Champagnat or wlll Oakwood take
.
It
·
·
all? WIii
.
the
commuters place or win? Who wlll be the winner of the first annual
field day sponsored by Inter-house council? There
will be tugs of
war, volleyball, softball, an obstacle cou~e
·
and
·
fun for all.
·
.
Commuters-contact
:
Joe Smith
·
to
participate
and
Residents-see
your R.A.'s. Details In the next edition of the Circle
••
_.
.
_,,.
,
.
'
.'
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.
....._
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------••
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----------------March 5, 1981 ·
THE CIRCLE·
Pages--
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.-~
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:
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•;
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.·
H
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·_1.to
•··
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,,
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lettuce,
-
Tomato, Chips
and
Pidde
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1.95
·:
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.
strips
Bacon,
:
lettuce, Tomato, Chips
ond
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1.50
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Served
from
12
p
.
m.
_
to
2
a
.
rri
.
.
.
_
.
.
.
:
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Eggs
any
style,
_
French Fries
;
Bacon,
Orange
Juice or Tomato
·
Juice, Toast
~
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.
·
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open
from
7
p
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.
to
12:30
a.m.
Mond~
thr6ugh
Thursd<JY,
. .
·
Friday and Saturday 7
p.m. to
2
o
.
m
.
·
·
.
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FOOLISH FOX PUB
.
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Nl_e~ry.J-.
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Celel>iate
·
·
sr.PATRICK'S DAY
'
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•
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·••
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•
•
•
•
•
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1
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-
•
•
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-
· .
·
·The
·
Foolish Fox Pub
DELI
1.:
•
..
1
;
QuiilitY
siirtdwich
Meats
At
:
Most
,
•
.
-
·
Reas
.
onahle Prices
Salads • Soft Drinks • Ice Cream
Open Daily 8 a.m.-2: 30 p.m.
7 p.m. - I a.m.
:
See us for your floor parties
.
:
Special Platters A vailahle
· ·
;
Dinner Theatre Spring Festival
presenting
·
5 ONE ACT PLAYS
.
FRIDAY, MARCH 27 - 7:30
SATURDAY, MARCH 28- 7:30
_
SUNDAY, MARCH~- 2:00
_
DINNER/THEATRE -
$5.00
·
GENERAL ADMISSION
·
-
$1.00
TICKET RESERVATIONS
Contact: Tom Hassett
1/\onica Finnigan
C-623
·
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--•Page6-
THECIRCLE-March5, 1981_
... ,
... _
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This
.
.
Week'S
Pla~e:Tc,
.
Bec(~,~
~
{lw'WJ",.
.
.
'
.
-
-·
---
..
too, but who can afford the Bahamas _ lunches soon after.·
For.
Popeye fans , be an
·
ordeal getting to the bar, so your
this time of year?) Scouring the • .'there's
a
Skinn'erburger (c'nion,- take a besf bet is
to
get
your drinks'from a
Every piece of really-great literature streets, I _f~und a place as dearto my · chance), and for those of you with only · waitress .. Thi~ bar·is alw~ys al_lve_ and
. has inherent within it a sort of h~art as it 1s to my bed: So boys and
modest· · ·_- daring-do;
·
:- ·· the·· the decor is ,:iot only attracUve, it has a
motivating force; the philosophy of its girls, without further ado, I introduce . _bacon/cheeseburger .is the best thi_ng ·. philosophy au its own, For. all of the
'by Greg Sydor ·
author. This column is no exception. to you·"Sklnners."
- east of the cafeteria. The pric;_e,
a
coed
electronic game addicts, this.is one of
Perhaps the words of. Mark Twain can
_
.c·conscious $1.95.-Club sandwiches are _· the ·best ·bars in·· town. ''Space_· .In-
give. these humble paragraphs the
Being an upperclassman, let me just •. a mellow $2._50 and once you've ·fried ·· .. vaders," ·11Asteroids'.'_.- and·. ''Rip,-Off"
· metaphysical backbone so necessary take this one short paragraph to pay . them you can't help but go back for_· are _a few of'the games th~t wiU eat
. when conveying the essentials .of life tribute to the greatest of institutions; . more_ (parUcularly. if
you
Uve on cam~
your quarter~- ·as fastas you can get ·
itself. Throughout the years, his words
You seniors know what I'm talking· pus). The menu goes on· to include
them. The 'food, the tunes,rthe ga·me~
have given hope to those mature about A place that gave u~ more than soup de, jour, chef's. salads and fries; ..... and• the people all help to put· l'_Skih- ·
enough to practice what he preached. just a hangover, it gave us tradition.
•1t
all of which are reasonable in· price,
·
·ner.s" in a class by itself (at least as far
At last, in 1981, it is safe to say that is with a heavy heart that I say> delicious and fresh; something we col•
as Potow_n_pubs are concerned).
Twain's . ideas and the -"motivating "farewell"· to · "Frank's;'' for· those. lege kids rarely see away from home. .
_ To•get to "Skinners," hang a right
force" behind this article, can be ex-
memories (foggy as -they are) will re-
' . Bar prices are average for the area·, _ when you get to the Chapel, walk
pressed in his following words, "Never. main as dear to. our hearts as·. the but . the atmosphere is . always con- · across the field, cross Rt. 9 and take a
let your studies interfere with your bygone days of quarter drafts. -- ._·
ducive towards a good time. Bud is _ left. If you can't find it after that, d()
educaton." And so, with these words
Empirically speaking, "Skinners". is· $1.00 a bottle, pitchers are
·
$3;00
yourself a favor, and step ifffroht of a
on my lips and their spirit in my heart, I the best thing to hit Potown · since (Michelob is _$3.50), mixe9 drinks are. bus. ·
·
renewed my search for. the perfect . Hudson cruised the river. Folk_s, this $1;25 and the rest' of the prices (with
Poughkeepsie pub.
·
place has just about everything, and · the obvious exception of top shelf and
No easy task (it would have been
what it doesn't have you won't miss. two liquor drinks) are the same.
Althoµgh I will always think of
"Skinners'.' as a sort of, surrogate
"Frank's," my money (at least until
May) wiH be with owner Ed Beck: Con°
easier to get Nietzsche on an Easter From soup to shots and Drambuie
to ·
There is no jukebox, but the sound~
egg hunt), I began my adventure with 'Droids,
"Skinne·rs"
proyides system is fantastic. The tunes are
an enthusiasm that can only be everything for a (day or night) out on
always good; no mellow stuff here.
described as tenacious. Seriously,
the town.
.·
· .
' , The only drawback is having a. table
what could be more fun than looking
For those of you who didn't get . under o_ne of _the speakers late at
for the best Potown has to offer in · enough the night before, ~'Skinners''
night; It's like trying to talk under a
night time entertainment? (I know, I. . opens Monday thru Sunday at 11 a.m.
747. Also, _when "Skinners" is crowded·
could think of a thousand other things· and begins serving some sensational (and it's almost always crowded) it can
-sidering the competition; I would give
. "Skinners"
,
4½ mug. It could. have
been a 5 if it had only had chili dogs.
- Op'en from 11 until 4 a.m., Monday thru
Sunday, (473-4725)' "Skinners" is this
weeks "Place To Be."
.
Dancer(?i_se Going Strong
by Mary Alice Russo
latest members to the class are: Bill arid various spa programs.
.
helpful because there are so· many
Rem rick, Marvin Sims, and Tony Car-
Devlin, who runs the dance section,
members to keep in touch with."
Dancercise, started last semester
done. When Remrick was asked how makes up the dances herself. The
The second idea concerns having
by Ann Marie Calonita and Lauren
he felt about the clas.s he replied, "I <steps used are take[! from routines
Bi-fllont,hly meetings with all of the.
Devlin, is now meeting four nights a
think it is great. And for all of the guys • she has seen- others perform. Four members. These meetings serve as a
week with a membership of about fifty
out there who think it_ is easy they complete routines will be learned by
way to get ideas from everyone and
students.
should try it. Especially Jim William-
the end of the _semester. Right now even any of the gripes they have.
This semester five dollar dues were
son, he could stand to loose a few · they are working on dance number
The latest acquisition by the
collected. According to Judy P.iScipio,
pounds."
_
two.
.
.
members are tee-shirts and shorts
financial manager, "the five dollars
Each 90 minute class is divided into
. This semester two new ideas were
which have the dancercise emblem on
averages out to about twelve cents a
fourty-five minutes of exercising and added to the club. The first is the idea them.
· ·
class which is great. The money is us·
fourty minutes of dance. The girls are of an Executive Board. The board con- ·
Plans for the future include. the plac~-
ed tor expenses such as records. Onc,e
given five minutes in between to take a ·. sis ts of eigh~een. m~mber~ :wh~ .Y'ElrEl . ing 9f
.
mats in .the,9anq_~.;root(l,(th~pks; ..
ttie'Bi-Laws are written hopefully we·.•. breather; ·-:•
-
:·
.,
,, .... -:
·. ~- choosen=, froi:n_ <:the•·enthUS\Bf:lrn -~her· :tq, the~_t,'elp_ tWQl¢.lf5lbif!rj) a_nd
a
trip to··
will get a budget."
·· The routine of the exercise sec.~Ion, .·. showed last se~ester .. The memoers
see the Broadway show "Dancin' ."
The classes are held in the dance
run by Calonita, consists of sixty exer- .... represent .the various on and off cam-
The bus trip will be in early April. Also
· room at the McCann Center and are
cises and are basically the same every ' pus housing facilities. Their' job is to
scheduled Is a beauty demonstration,
open to the entire Marist Community.
week. According to Calonita, "The -assist in th_e running of the club.
given by Mary Kaye Cosmetics, ._on
Classes run Sunday 7-8:30, Monday
girls asked us to concentrate on acer- .. Devlin explains, "they are really very · March 22 in the Fireside Lounge:
9:15-10:30, Tuesday 9:15-10:30, and
tain few areas and some have even
·
·
·
·
Thursday 8-9:30. The majority of the
contributed an exercise they feel is ·
class right now is female, bu! . especially helpful." The majority of the
.
'Le····t· t s C .
t
newcomers are always welcome. The
exercises were taken from magazines
.
er
On _.; ..
The Sound of C-249
By Dawn-Marie Sturtevant
Staff writer
Graffiti. To most of us that word
conjures up an image of subway walls
with obscene language. To David
Heckendorn, a music teacher at
Marist, the word "Graffiti" means a
song.
David Heckendorn, with a B.A. and
M.A. in music composition from New
York University, is now in his second
year of teaching here at Marist. His
classes include Theory Composition,
20th Century music, a survey course
which covers all styles of music from
that time peri9d.
But Heckendorn is more than a
teacher; he is a performer and a com-
poser. Heckendorn was the leader of a
jazz group which performed in the.
Metropolitan area. The group played
many of his original compositions.
Presently, Heckendorn is involved with
a . group that consists of Marist
students. The members of this group
are: George Daly, Chris Novak, Joe
Santacroce, and Mike Moore ..
The group has a very unique name:
C-249. "When we first started playing
together, that was the only room we
could get to practice in." Many of the
songs they perform are Heckendorn
originals, including the song "Graf•
fiti." "I was practicing by the river with
my sax and I got the idea for the song
from a rock with graffiti on
it,"
he says.
·
.
C-249 appears to have a promising
future. Last summe~ ttle group went in•
to
a recording studio to prOduce a ..
tape. They sent the tape to .
SO.fll~
top
recording companies. The tape was
. sent back to them with a request to
hear more. So, during the mid-term
break they'll go back to the studio to
record five new songs written by
Heckendorn.
·
Aside from composing music for the -
group, Heckendorn is in the process of
composing a musical. He hopes the
musical will be produced· here at
Marist. "When I was composing the
musical, I tried to keep in mind the
resources on campus," says Hecken-
dorn.
"There is more talent here than I ex-
pected from. a liberal arts college,
where music is not a major," Hecken-
dorn states. "To me, college should be
a way to find oneself." He feels,
"Music is a way to learn who you are." .
He enjoys teaching musicians and
non-muscicians ... He feels the core
music courses are important because
it helps the non-musicians to "see that -
the world is not just made of com-
puters."
For the future, Heckendorn hopes
he will be able to expand his talents on
the campus. Already he has organized
a pep band and a group that performed
for last semester's production of
"Cabaret." He hopes to work with ·
music and dance. Upcoming in the
spring will be a concert performed by -
his Theory and Composition class.
"The concert
will
contain original
material in all styles of music, com-
posed by the students," says Hecken-
dorn.
Heckendorn feels he was hired "to
c;fevelop music . that was · right for
t,,1arist and to tap resources of the
students.'' Apparently, he has suc•
ceeded .
--.,..;.:.:.
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.
...
Co~tinued
from.
page
2,
column· 4
key?" My answer
was
one
· dollar
tor
the key and fourteen
fifty- to replace the lock. Well,
at least the . price hadn't
changed since freshman year, .
two years ago.
·
I YJas charged freshman
year·_also, although
_1
never
.really lost my ·key. I'm the
· Sultan of Procrastinations:
Why, sometimes I don't go to
the bathroom for days just to
get some color . In my skin.
Anyhow, it was the end of the
year. I was about. to go home
for the_ summer when I ·
remembered that I forgot to
hand in my roomkey. I figured
I'd mail it to them when I got ·
home. Well, I never did, and - .
subsequently was - charged
the fifteen fifty.
'
·
Times passes. Sophomore
year I lived off campus. This
year I returned to. the very _
· room I called home freshman
year, C-517. Being the shrewd
· man that I am, I lost that big
·
"Star Wars" key ·they supplied ·
me with .. Sick over the pro-
spect of paying . another fif-
teen fifty, I looked at my key
chain once more. I found my
key frorri freshman year still
there .• "Vat . the •· hell," I
,thought I thought. I put it in
ttie lock and that baby crack-
- ed. open like the bindings on a
brand new twenty-five dollar
textbook. In other words they
charged me for a new,lock-and
never . replaced the old one.
Now I'm asked to pay it again.
That's thirty-one dollars for
two keys, a real bargain. Let
,.me ask . again, louder this
time, "-W.he're the hell is my
bucks; pal?" If "a penny saved
is a· penny earned" then
fif. ·
teen fifty taken is fifteen fifty
stolen.
-
---
Chow,
Michael Jude Jannuzzi
-Open
Yolir
Eyes
.,,
Dear Members of Chama
7 p.m. These measures
will
pagnat:
..
only be helpful If the residents
Our mutual concern for the
do not prop open these doors
safety of the students of your
_ and if
all guests are signed in,
building and your posses-
· so that the desk person can
sions was very amply brought ·
be accountable. Please, after
out in this past weeks Circle.
7 p.m. enter Champagnat from
_.,, In an attempt to approach
the Main entrance or the rear
th.is situation collectively,
,:J -
loading dock.
would suggest that if you see
The safety and security of
a stranger, eall · campus
our dorms, our. persons, and
security or residence staff.
our possessions depend on all
· Secondly, a security desk will · ·
the eyes, ears and persons
be set up at the rear(loa,ding
,:who live.here.,·,. , ,
: , .
dock)' door; Also/the· carport ·'
·
· · Sincerely,
door · and slde ·. doori:-, to
,:
i_,
:
, -
Rev. Richard A. LaMorte
Leo/Sheahan
will
be
locked at
.
~
.~
.,; -_,:i;,.1.,. •• _-
•
.•
. .
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-
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• • - •
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•
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--•---••---------------------March
5,
1981:
THE CIRCLE·
Page
1 - - •
.
'
i
Sl<i
·
+eam
·
in
<
charTlpidnShips-Travel
TO
Michigan
Peter Jackson riding the slopes and
.
qualifying the team to National Cham-
pl~nshlps.
·
·
Photo
by
Linda Panaio
Sports
Pre
·
view:
Lacrosse
-
on-the Rise
By
Connie Rohe
.
r
·.
Corsetti, along with Larry O'Neil, Steve
Cahil, Roger Coleman and freshman
It is with a combination of dedica-
·
.Ted loughin. In the always important
tion
·
and a necessity to look good on net for the Red Foxes will be another
the field that brings out
30
men
.
day
·
'
second Team All-Conference player,
after day to practice the sport
.
of Tim Anderson.
lacrosse.
·
·
·
.
"The guys were really taught their
.
By
Joan "Schatzle" Gasparovic
·
·
The first-year Marist ski team will be
competing in the NatiOQal Collegiate
·.
Ski Association National Champion-
ships
.
in Marquette, Michigan, this
week,
··
March 5 thru 9. Originally
scheduled for Lake Placid, the com-
petition was moved out to Michigan
because of the poor ski conditions
here in the East. The Marist team
qualified for the meet by placing first
in
.
the Northeastern Collegiate
.
Ski
Conference, a
·
subdivision of the
NCSA.
.
Marist
·
will be furnishing an alpine
as well as a nordic team for the five
day event
.
The alpine team will consist
of Michael Haggerty, John Levy, Peter
Jackson, Rich Kline, and Bill Fit-
zgerald. Kline, Fitzgerald, and Jon Ur-
ban will be representing the nordlc
team. Since they will be racing in both
alpine and nordic events, Kline and
Fitzgerald
.
will be eligible for the
Skimeister award, a presentation
made for the best combined results
from the
.
two categories 9f competi-
tion:
Racer Levy commented, "My goal
for the Nationals is to finish in the top
twenty--there will be top racers from
all over the nation at this meet. More
importantly though, the team should
look to finish in the top ten."
The first two days of the competi-
tion will afford the various teams the
opportunity to ski the mountain and
check out the snow conditions at
Cliffs Ridge Ski Area, the site of the
alpine competition.
'
On Saturday, the
men's giant slalom will take place.
Sunday, March 8, will be the date for
the men's slalom and the 15 kilometer
nordic race. A second nordic race, a 3
by 5 kilometer relay, will be held on
·
Monday.
·
Overall, the Marist ski team is confi-
dent. Acting-coach Haggerty feels that
"we are at a disadvantage since we
haven't been able to practice in the
past two weeks. However, we're op-
timistic that we'll do well." The Marist
ski team is off to its first nation-wide
competition. Hopefully, the national
championships will become an annual
event for the ski racers. Good luck,
guys!
e4eadem~
WINE
&
LIQUOR
·
26 ACADEMY ST .
.
PO'ltEEPSIE, N.Y. 12601
The head coach this season is
-
first fundamentals last year, and that's so
year man Ted Peterson, a former assis-
important in this kind of a physical
·
·
tant coach at Albany SJate .who feels game," commented
.
coach Peterson.
that the Marist lacrosse team should "We are very, very competitive and it's
Tel. 45Z - 4~
-
I0
.
not be taken for granted.
~'The
intensi~ an emotional group of
.
guys that know
_
ty
these guys show at
:
the practices whaUttakes to play this
.
game. I was
.
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
pro~es they
·
mean business
.
O1.:fr
.
stlcks
·
surprised
,
Jtiat
,
so
.
m~riy
:
of,~them-,had
.
_
are
:
.
ai ·good
as
'a'ny·
·
tearfi":
:
:.vei'wili"
'
b
'
e
.
· some previous experience with the
.
-
·
0
-
-
s~elrig,'·
·
and:lf
_
the
·
freshman· players sport, as that makes thlngs
·
so
·
much
.
come atorig as I e~pect them to do; it easier-on us all."
·
•
.
will be averyJnteresting season."
·
.
With the season opening on April
·
Marist, which ended
·
last season 1stagairist Kean State ih New Jersey,
.
with a 3-7 mark
·
c3
losses were In 0.T) coach Peterson will not only have to
will
_
be
·
competing in the
°
Knicker-
worry which
·
men to play on the
·
field,
.
bocker conference;
·
Division Ill.
:
The but on which field those men will play;
·
teams opposition will basically
·
be the
-
As o_tnow, Leonidoff Field, will be the
same
··
schools that our
·
basketball home field for Marist, but if the ground
team saw
·
in their Big Apple Con-
crews can't get it ready.by then, alter-
ference games and the
·
schuedule, native sites will have to be ready.
while not a long one is avery"challerig-
Since February 1st when the team
.
Ing one for the squad.
·
·
had to practice indoors at
5:30
in the
..
Returning for the Red Foxes at mid-
moming
_
to the cold-rainy
.
days of
field will be First Team All-Conference March and April, each team member
player Dan Costello; and juniors Bill has come to their practices knowing
·
Ciraulo and Peter Bell
•
Added to this
·
that only 23 of them wlll dress tor away
list of midfielders this year are Charlie games
.
This sacrifice by members on-
.
Downey, Bob Burmeister and Jdhn ly enric:hes the teams desire to prove
Lennon, who was hurt most of
·
last that they wiU- be competitive and
season.
.
challenging in the up90111i
_
ng season.
·
The M
·
aristattack will be led by Se-
cond Team·AII-Conference player Lou
.
'
.
'•
Champagnat, Leo arid Sheahan Hall lounges will
·
become available for various student activities
on a fir.st come,
·
.
first served reservation
.
basis
beginning Monday, March 16th.
.
.
.
this means
_
o lounge may be reserved for a
study group, birthday pcirty, backgammon tour-
nament,· group T:V.
,
viewing
·
(outlets
,gre
. available), or any other' activity your
·
resident
di re~tor okays.
, ,~,,,<.
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.
·TOBY'S
TAVERN
24 Violet Avenue
Toby Secone,
Proprietor
Asserlza's Deli
Owned
&
Operated
.
by
S~I Assenza
Class of '72
Sandwiches - Beer - Groceries
Located at
·
-131
Washington St., Pok.
_-
·
,
·
_
_
.
-
:'
·
_
·.
Thanks lor your patron_a_ie ...
..
·
.
·:
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.
.
·
·
-
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•Dive~; Victorious iri
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The
:::
1980-81
;·
cci~~etit°i~~
:
sea~on
~
.
- Meda1
·
1nthe~riemeterdlvi~·~re~ent.at
•
witnessed a major step in the direcUon
.
th
.
e
:.,
Conference
<
Cha~pionships,
·
.
·
of molding
·
a
.
collegiate Diving Squad
·
establishing
a
,
new conference r,c9rd
-
·
capable of representing Mari st in t~e
of 357,98 points: l;ie then n~rrowly
·
.
.
Collegiate Division I Di~lng level. This
missed
·
anott:ter Gold
_
Medal
in
the
.
year's
-
Squad, comprised entirely
•
of
-
three meter event, settling instead for
freshman recruits under the direction
the
Sliver for second place.
Steve also
·
of Coach Tom
.
Albright, established .
·
earned
_
the distinction
_
of _becoming the
Marist as the School to beat among
first Marist Diver to
_
quahfy for the N!i~
.
the Diving
Programs
.:
of >the
tiohal Division II Championships,_to oe
.
:
:
Metropolitan Conference Schools.
conducted
·
at Youngstown, _9h10
.
on
.
.
·.
Freshmen
_·.·
.
Steve
:-
Maniaci,
·
.
Jeff March 18 to
.
:
24,
Ph,1s
Two
·
Team
··
welch,:Mike Hayden, and Rich Berger _
Recordifo
botn
events. ,
..
combined their efforts
.
to produce a
· At present, the
-
1981:82 squad ap:
_
dual Meet
·
record of 16
·
wins
.
and
·
2 pears ready to take the next step in the
·
.
losses in the Diving events
·
of the Col-
·
.
building Program of Coach
·
Albright,
•
.
•
legiate
.
Swimming - Meets
.
Crowning
.
as
·
four
. ·
highly
·
talented
c
Freshm~n
,
their efforts
-
In the recently completed
.
recruits
·
joln the ranks. Two wotnen
·
of
·
·
Metropolitan Collegiate
-
Swimming
(
National calibre will expand the Pr~
.
-
and Diving Championships, con-
. •
.
gram in the .Famine direction. Joining
ducted here at Ma~ist;
.
they cons
them
:
will be incoming Freshman Chris
_·
tribtited 67 points to Marist's total of Depew,
·
whose High School creden<
147 Team points, outscoring Division I tials place
.
him on a pa(with Maniaci.
rival Iona College, as well as all other Depew
·
·
is
·
-·
a
,
local talent,
·
havirig
Diving competitors in
-
the process.
·
. devefoped his ·diving as part of the
·
:
.
Earning
special.
·
-
recognition,
.
tv'larist A.A.U.Diving Program. He joins
however;
:
was
·
Freshman
.
Steve
.
;
Freshman
.
standout Jeff Welch as the
Maniaci.
Having won
16
.
out of 18 dual secorid diver to come out of the Marist
meet events ttiroughoi.Jt' the Season, A.A.U. farm system.
Steve went on to capture the
Gold
.
Ucf••iurbHr
whit~ t'Oafa
I
Bud
1s
·
e
·
-
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BEERS
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..
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(
.
,
..
·
..
Women's basketball coach Sue Deer _and
.
graduating seniors -Patty
.
Powers;
.
Eileen Carey, Pam Green, Helen Salmon along with assistant coach Linda
Anderson honoring the girls for their years
.
at Ma
.
rlst.
·
·
·
·
·
.
·
·
Photo by Mike Chung
Steve
~_
-
Maniaci
·
a
-
Breaks
·
.
League
.
.
Rec~rds
performance, "I'm very happy with the
·
·
team's performance," stated Cronin,
"We're a very small team and seventh
Last Thursday through Saturday 12
···
place was quite an achievement." "We
·
schools
'
·
all entered
·
.
the Mccann
really swam ·well, Rob Vialez did a
Center
·
for the Metro
·
Conference
tremendous job and Steve Manacia
Championships.
·
.A.fter It was all over was Incredible."
on Saturday, Adelphi emerged as the
overall . victor
•·
with
·
.·
Mari
st placing
Cronin also commented on his own
by
Tim
Breu~r
·
Staff Writer
.
.
seventh. Other schools
·
involved in the. performance. "I qid o.k., I did a lot
~1;3~-
eventwere Manhattan (s
.
econd place),
ter
.
•than
..
J
-
thought I:. would,'' said
WiUiam
.:
_Patterson (third place); and
.
Cronin.
_
proriiri took seventh, eighth,
··
c:c,N.Y.
(fourth place).
:
:
.
:
.
.
..
:· ·
and
.
ninth pla
·
ce respectively
in
the
.
100
-
:.•·
..
In ·-the
·
championship~
:
many con-
:
and 200
.
yard butterfly and
·
in the 200
.
_
_
_
.
d
erence rec
·
ords were broken
·
; Marist's
·
yard tre
·
e
_
style. Rob Vialez took fifth
·
.
own Steve Maniacia broke the league
-:
place
"
irr the 1650 yard
·
freestyle arid a
.
record for the o
·
ne meter dive and in an
_
respectable sixth place in the 500
.
yard
. :;
:
incredible
.
performanc.e;
:
Pablo
-
Val·
-
freestyle
.
·
<
-
•
.
·
_
;
.
'-
..
·
·
doun of C.C.N,Y. broke four records
Captain
·
Steve Cronin also com-
and
'.
was voted
-
Outstani:tlri'{fSwlmmer
.
mented pn the overan championships
of the meet.
_.·. ·
.
.
.
by stating that they were very well run.
-..
·
·
Steve Cronin, Captain of Marist's
Cronin went on to thank Tim Sullivan
swim team commented on the team's
for his help in the meet.
-
·
,
.
Marist Crew Auctiori't:Jight
-
,
..
·
-
.
.
.
,
·
.
· ..
·
--
·.
·
-
·:
·
by
Barry
Le"'!is
·
eluded
:
box sea~s
a't'
a Yankee
•
game,
Sports Editor
.
beer, posters; T-shirts and oars Just to
·
c:.-
·
•
•
. ...
name a few. The fund raiser is for
.
the
·
It's time onc-e:-again for the annual
.
Crews Spring Training finances and
..
Mari st College Crew Auction Night. _On
·
· for any
·
Information concerning dona-
·.
·
.
the weeke!Jd of March 20th (our. first
tions yc;,u can call Andy Mein at Ext .
.
.
·
one back), the Marlst crew team will be
30,5. Maoy were turned back last year,
..
·
auctioning off prizes that you c~11
.
so keep your eyes and ears open for
..
·
.·
cherish anc:t use. Last year
_
s prizes m-
. _
·
the Ume and place. ·
·
By Barry Lewis
.
·.
Wh
-
ile this doesn't happen often, the
;
·
blem,"- commented .
:
Dick
·
Quinn,
season we
,
would take 2-3 hours a day
.
.
.
.
.
-
few
-
times have now added
'
.up ·and
·
building n:ianager and
,
Assistant - and give thatto the team so they could
.
:_
Have.you ever tried to reserve a rac--
.;:
many
.
an
·
gry, hostile· student~ are
••
Ahtletic Directo~. "Wh~n people call
·
practice. We have geared
-
ourselves to
:·
quetball court. I mean walk into
.
the wondering if it wouldn't be easier to
-
on
-
the reservation phone with pro-
an
·
athletic program and even some of
·
Mccann Center, go up to the reserva-
use the facilities in the Center if we
bl ems, they're not
.
talking
.
to the right
ttie professors got-mad. Omf came to
·
.
tions desk and see what happens~
·
·
didn't go here at all.
·
No one is doub-
_
person. If people have complaints, I
me ar:id wanted to know why the gym
.
.
'
because each time is different, and it's ting
_
the reasoning for closing" down
·
wish they would just let
-
me know. We
.
floor was closed
.
J4st because of
.
a
·
. really kind of funny in it's own cynical the courts last Saturday (over-crowded
have policies here, but it doesn't mean
.
·
practice
.'
I told him that he wouidn't
..
way.
-,
·
._
·
·
'
locker
·
rooms, problems of security,
that things can't be
.
changed
.
·
We
want
·
someone playing
,
ping-pong in
·
Last Friday afternoon
·
at 12:00 (the courts needed for half-time meetings),
basically have to geni;trate
·
$125,000
the C':)r
_
ner during one of his lectures."
.
time designated for walk-ins to make but what is
-
armoying to the Marist
·.
worth of income per year to run the
_
_
..:.
-
·
·
•
·
reservations), I tried to get a court
-
for.
,
students is the fact that this is our
.
Center, ~nd we sometimes have
·
to
·
So now that the basketball season·
myself and a young lady for Saturday.- school,
·
so why can't we use our
.
open the building as a Community Col-
.
is over, and the gym floor is free for our
afternoon. The gentleman behind the
·
facilitl
_
es? This also happened to be
lege Center with
·
the ,community in
·
·use,
.
tQurnaments - are· held
·
in
.
the
desk said there were no courts,
_
and I· the last weekend before mid-term
'.
mind."
·
Center. While
.
the tournaments are a
replied "fine, how about in the morn-
break, and a chance to relax our minds
"I don't want it to sound like we are
good way of
.
gaining financial support
.
ing or
_
evening?" "No" he answered,
never hurt anyone, right Mr. Pre~jden~'.?
.
-
closing our doors to
.
the students; as
and outside attention it also hurts
"the
.
racquetball court~ are closed to-
.
'
·
·
.
·
· '.
.
·
·
·
·
.
-
.:
' - -
-
·
we have
·
made accommodations
those of us inside.
'
·
.·
.
. ·
day because
·
·
of
·
the
·
High
-
School
. ·
"We do have a problem of not
·
speci~lly for them~ We
.
have the center
basketball tournaments and the swim-
-
enough courts an~Hoo
·
small a locker
.
open 10-11:00
.
at night Jusr
·-
for
.
the
'
'
Next week, the pay-phone call for
ming and_~iving championships."
·
room, but this isn't really the pro-
students. During
:·.:
the basketball
,
reservations
.
_ .
_
·
.
·
-
.,:.
·
.
__
.
....
25.16.1
25.16.2
25.16.3
25.16.4
25.16.5
25.16.6
25.16.7
25.16.8
•
• - •
--;
•·•- .,,,~
•
·- •-•• .- '•'-: :•-·•••---•-- .... -
..... _...,.,~.~--. ...... .._ .. .,....-•-~~•,••~-- ~•••••- .. • .. •··-•·••-""'•' ., • ,,_..,.•••'--•
:
I•~•.,•••~---":~"- • ,..,,...,, . .__ ,-,• •
~
••· "'::.• ~.-
.
•, .• - •.'': :~.·. ~-:.-; -~ .. •. ,•.., -.•;~•.••
~"I.•.,'
,j,-' . . •-• •: ;• -~• ;•.~::~
I
·. Marist
College P.oughlceepsle,
N.Y._.
Volume
25,
Number 16
~
Mar~h
5;
1981
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.,.,
.
Re·agan'
.
.
.
.
;
.
·
...
·.·
,WMCFt
Marathon:
A
SUCCESS
·· cuts'·Aid ,_ -·
By Monica Finnigan
by.Evelyn Greco
In a small room of Donnelly Hall,'
. .
. .
_
.
,_
- four Marist students sacrificed their
.-
.
Beware students, there may not be a usual weekend plans and instead gave
semester for you_ next September. The of themselves· for a _worthy -cause.
reason
-
for this will ,not be· the usual WMCR, . the ··college
•
· radio . station,·
"lack of a cum," but a lack of funds. ···sponsored their first marathon"for the
According to Karen Atkin, Director of · American Heart Association.
·. ·
Financial Aid; there
will
be many
;,am .
Paimeri, Doug-. Haight, Ed
reductions in the aid students receive, . Powers .and Chris- Barnes, all whom
if the Re~gan Proposal goes thro_l,!gh.
are members ofthe_ WMCR staff, set Ni
Also, It will be much harder to obtain a out:to conduct a marathon in order to \'
Guaranteed Student Loan, the money raise money for the station. "We didn't
r: ..
that
.
95%
of - the students depend
have a large allocation of money so we
.'J;,'N!
upon. . , ·
·
. .
.
.
asked The American Heart Associa-
•F
· If the Proposal is voted in, it wm at-
tion to sponsor us and they agreed"
feet three phases of student aid_:_
1)
Na
0
explains Palmeri. Pledges were made
tio11al Direct Student Loans {NDSL); 2)
from various members· of the Marist
Guaranteed
-
Student-Loans {GSL),
3)
.·community- a·nd~--the proceeds were
Pell Grants. {formerly BEOG), Atkin ex- · split-50/50. WMCR's portion of the pro-
plained that new· ·federal money fitWill be used to build up the station's
_ directed •for NDSL usage would be
record catalogue.
- reduced and that would cut aid to the
The marathon ran for a total of 72
.
,. _
_
1
student by
25%.
When dealing with
hours, with each disc jockey airing six,
the· Guaranteed Student Loans; Atkin
three hour shows. The four spent their _
stated that undergraduates might be
entire weekend eating, drinking and
· L
to
R. Chris Barnes,
Doug
Haigh~, Ed Powers and Bill Palmeri.
.
facea with paying their interest on
sleeping at the station and as Haight
. · ..
. -.
. . .
_
. •.
. - . -.
··
.
_
Photo by Mike Chung
their loans now and poss_ibly not being
commented, "For the station, rest has .
-:--
.. . able to get a loan at all because of stif-
no bounds. We're sponsoring this' for
unusual,''. Palmeri remarks. "We had a
unaware of the financial status of the
fer requirements. One positive note
both the humanistic part and to·
ii- ·
large. amount of requests and the
Marist hockey club, it would have been
· though: the borrowi_ng amount on .the
lustr_ate the power thaCWMCR can . .
.Hstening
.
participation · was great" · good to raise money for them through
GSL's has been raised .from
$7500
to have/' At tirst_·'IIIMCR was a bit hesi- · reported Haight._. Station -identifica-. a marathon."·'
'\
I
i'
,"
~
$12,S0Q
_along with .the interest rate
tant con<?er'nlng · the" icfea · of the Uon_s were. aired __ from-various faculty
The total profit from the marathon
from 7.o/oio
9% .. '. ~\- · .. · ·.··· .
_
--,
.
marathon .
.
''We took
a
:
.
chance and . members 'endorsing the prqgram as . was. approximately .
$600,
.
and when
~..:.~n.'.o.therJyp_1iJ:>Ji!.ii.dAhatwould be ..
lri
,,were'. am~~d._at .hQW:.;well;'
.
it.weri,t,. ,"weJl_,·asfr'pin. Jim Carroll ot'2T6"e
Jim.<' asked.If collectlrig th~
0
pledgedmoney_ -~
,
> .... :_ ..
•::>· __ } '
, · ·
..
.. ,
..
. ,.,tro.ut,f.;fa
.
cAorc!l
ri_g.jo:,,Atrt,nfi~~the:,pell
::eyijiypife\'v<Jas-.~v.efy:c9bpeiattve/'l'
says:--··:
Car'rQI
I'
r:rarrd''
:whi6!i'
p_ei"form·et:r
ati.tfle
·
;
'''vH5u lcF·Jj:Ef taim
cu
It,'
•
.
Pal
rri'.e·ri .
.
.
op:
-
--
Gr!,lf'.lts{Tt:,e"Ft~agan>F?r6po·!3aL)vquld : -paJn:i,ert:
.
,
:
:-
:
-':·:;<~ ~
'
. :: ; · :
:<": :
·
,: .. :
.
·•
·
·
.
>,
Good.Times Cafe. in-f>oughkeepsiEf on .. timistically. replied,' "It.·. shot1ldil't .. be
once·again put theJncomecap limit of ·· ,·In order_tooccupy the long enduring .,·Friday night:
•
·•.£
<·.
i<<
-
·
•
,.::.:.· ...
•
:_too ·tough because ·the peo·pte .who
$25;ooo
onJhe program'. This. means
hours,,/'C_;all
.
Jhat,Cut,'.'._~()pen ~equest
.
, .When asked
if
they would consider
.
pledged are all faculty or friends?
that. parents and .s'tudents who make
lines and live hou~§c:were conducted. -•doing
•
· it. again, - the fo_ur replied,·
Even though it_was a long tiring ex-
$25,000
or more would not be able to · llThese format~ create listeri!l')g par-···: "definitely, everything Was positive." .perience, the enthusiasm and efforts
receive any qf this aid, even if you have ticipa,ti()n, people get to he,ar
_
their
Palmeri also explains th~ possibility of -
-
of the four and WMCR shouJd be com-
eight children in the family-attending
names on the _air which is someth(ng 'doing it again for another club, "I was mended.
·
college_. Also, one's eligibjlity index
.
.
-
-
. .
.
,
-...
-
-
. would-become too high and cause less
,
··· · · ' ·· ·· · · ·
· ·
-
. ·
'
·
·
·
· ·
· -
:•··. !n~):sJ~~
I
~;iri~~
t~
s~opthls pro-
_,
..
-f!oWers
:R~signs:from
fHc.-- -
p:osal from beii:ig passed through Con-
..
-
·
·
·
·
·
gres.s, says Karen.
If
the students are
.
By
TomH_assett
It Is something that I :en]oY,'.·' in ex~ :
;
u1
am totally taking myself out of
coQcernE1d en<>ugf) about being able to
. . ..
·.
,
plaining his Jesignation:· Powers Is
_sh1dent
government · for this
have an _education, th~n t~ey should -~ · Ed Powers has resigned from -his . _ presently-the business manager of the . semester" says Powers. However, he
wr!teJhelr: congrf3ssman before J~ne ,, position a~ president of theJnterho~s~ •
..•. ce>ll_ege radj<> st~tion and Is running for . ·expressed. thclt he. would serve as a
30. The Re.agan Proposal Is not toq
.
far Council. He has also chosen to. resign ,, general m_.mager of· the staticin for
consultant to the Council because he
from·· reality, explained-.Atklr:i,·· as·.the the .council. ·of .Stude_nt Leaders and :: nextsernester'. -· ; ·
.•
,
-:.__ ·
_. -·
doesn't want to-see the:plans and pro-
Jan;
1
cuJ insoqlal security.benefits to -House Council ·of Gregory House as •
Powers had been :a member of the
gress that hal/e been made dropped.
students has sho}Yn.-_
> , .
•
< -·.
well: .
,
.... ·. . . .
.-
. Inter House Council beforeaccepting
· Powers Is putting all
his
:efforts-Into
For furthecliiformation on types of.
· Powers at the beginning of• this : the position as president. "I went to
WMCR for a variety of reasons.
aid orjustori h.ow
10
f!II out your F.AF. semester· replaced . Matt: Chandler f.c:,r ~. the. meetings and saw nothing getting
"Students are not aware that the radio
form, At~ln ·is -avaUable for "on the_ the posl!lon. eowers says, '-'I want to_:
dQrie.
1. saw the . councjl as just a
station is here for them" says Powers.
spot'-' questions or by appointment.' · · ·· pufall
my
efforts Into WMCR ~Eica1,1se <Pacifier forstuderits. Becaus~ they are .. He sites little ·· administrative co-
.
·
·
·
0• · ·
.:
·
nof utlllzlng: the student government : operation for the unpopular status of
;...
·
, · -
.. ; and the house council to Its full ex-
WMCR in
·
the . past. . Powers feels,
·
·
· ··
·
· · · ·
'
·
· · .. · ·
· tent," says Powers:: .
.· ,
..
· •. "More '"emphasis should be m~de. in
Fa.
c· ··1·ng<F•1r· e Facts· -
-
_
_
_.
Plans that Powers had in mind to. · overall. bettermenrof the college not
/
: .
· .:: . . : , . : .
.
·
· carry out while he ,.was pr:esident In-
just in one area such .as_ basketball." --
: > -·. ··
' i
·. ·--
:
•
· ,· .. · ·.
·
.. : ·
... · , _ .
.
. .
,elude a newsletter in the Circle stating
He added, "the college Is a com-
.
By
V•~n~ca
s,taea :• • · :;:
.
around to witness . them " · he notes: . the promises that f:rank Scott, the new
munlcations and busfness
-
-orlented
. ,
.. , --.:
.
-·:
.
·. :
:.
-
.
.
.
.
-
Seeger feels that the trash_ can fires dJnlng services in~nager, made
!Or
im~. c~!lege but little em~hasls is put on
A
$100
r~ward has· been offered t9 : arEt'. all_ - related, but another_ ·. fire provln~ the quality of. food. -- m the
it.
. .
_
..
anyone provldlr:,g "information : t!'laL discovered Friday in - the · first - floor-- cafeteria. As wen~ plans are
l!l
effect
.
Tony Giannone, a member of
the
ln-
feads to the arrest ancf' convl.ction
QC
bathroom was not "It was ,not by the {or a fleld
-
-,day In the spr,mg - ~o-
te_r H.ouse Council from Champagnat,
the person
or
persons who recently SE!t: ·-:-saroe metl:lod," says_ Seeger, "that's_, sponsored by C.U.B. and a more active
w1U repl~ce .Powers ·as president for
. a small flre:on. the- first floor of Leo. :the unfortunate part of it. People start food committee.
the remamderofthesemester.
Hall: .. ,
< :::, :.-
· , ·
-
.·.• ,, · : _
jumping on the bandwagon when they
The fire ~was :discovered at approx-, see all the at_tentlon they can get." ·
imately •· 3:30
-
A.M., :-
·on_ : Saturday,>
·i:
-
The Fairv_iew Volunteer.Fire Depart-
February 2t in the trash can on the
·
ment responds to all Marlst's caUs,
first floor In.
Leo;
According to Geoff · altl:iough an alarmJ,as not been pulled
Seeger,. Resident Director of Leo Hall, . · for all the fires. The bathroom fire was
- three similar fires have been found in
put out by the students who found it ..
the same location, an·d anothe~
111
the.
_ «The -<?oncern of
t~~
stud!3nts has
trash can on the third floor, since the
been a big help t? ~s, expl~ms Ch!ef
beginning of the spring semester. "We - - Decker of. the Farrvrew Volunteer Frre
feel that they were all set," ~xplains
Depa~ment, <lln the lat~ ... 60's and ear-
Seeger, ''the reason b~lng t_hat in all
ly 70 s, we WOIJ!d receive·3
to}
false
·
cases, we,foi.Jnd a waym which It.was alarms from Mansteveryweek.
-set, such as matches laying around
T_he.re h~ve been about_ three false
the trash can." _
<>
.
-:
-
• . ·, .
alarms-this year In Champagnat Hall ..
Seeger explains that It is very;•_dif-
·
The most· recent one was witnessed .
ficult to firid the person responsible
and the .. offender arrested and placed
for the fires. "At the hour tJ:iey've ~een
.
Continued
on
P.
3 ·
,
happening, there are, · few people
Page 2 •
THE CIRCLE•
March 5, .1981
The
-Circle
coeditors
associate editor ·
news editor
feature editor
sports editor
photography editors
copy editor
contributing editor
· business manager
advertising manager
distribution manager
cartoonist
Faculty advisor
. · .. Loretta Kennedy .
· Marybeth Kearney · ·
.
.
.
.
)
Judy DiSciplo
. Veronica Shel
· , Tom Hassett
Barry Lewis
Michael Chung
Michael Hellijas
Jane Hanley
Michael McCarthy
Dave Barraco
Pegian Reynolds
Thomas Rooney
. Tom Hassett
Mary Keelan
staff: Christia:n Bastian, Tim Breuer, Carol Bu;ke, An~e Marie Calonita; Chris
Campbell, Monica Finnegan, Peter Fredsall, Joan Gasparovic,Donald Gately,
Grace Gallagher, Evelyn Greco, . Lisa Marchesano, Bil Renrick, Mary Alice
Russo, Cece Scanlon, Dawn-Marie Sturtevant Ruth Warren
.
Why
No E~ceptions?
· ·]teaders
Write
· All lell~I'$ mu,,
·
.,. typed triple spocewlth o 60
,pace
margin, ond submitted
to
the
Circl~ ·
olflce no loter than 6 p.m: Monday. Short letteri are prelerred._W• , ...
...,., the right to edit
all lellel'$. lellers inust be.signed. but names may
a,.
withheld upon requ;,11. letters will
. , be
published depending
upon avoUability alspoce.
·
· ,Touchy'S1;1bject .
:
<
: .
,·
.
.,
..
Dear Editor,
. .
· · same touchy'subjectO She. did;
This past S_aturday after- . making statement's such as "I
noon I listened to• a Marist ·am very disappointec;I in her,"
athlete being interviewed on a
·
and stated reasons· why· she
local radio station. She was believed the player did some
asked to do the· interview of the things she did and!why
because
of
·
her
ac-
shethoughttheplayerwasin
compllshments in her athletic .-the · wrong in ·· ·certain in-
. field in her tour years here. · stances: I do
not
commend ·
She was asked about her fami-
her on· her decision .
.. . IY, her reasons
tor
coming to .
When the Interviewer was
· Marist, and her ·career goals done talking with the coach
among other topics; It was a · she switched . back to the
very goo~ interview;
·. player and. asked her if she
When the interviewer asked
now had any additional com- ··
her though, about her relation-
ments to make, and she said, ·
ship· with her coach and the "No. That's it.''
conflicts the two of them have.·
I
would like ·to congratulate
had, she. refused to com_ment
this player, not for all she has
qn
I
this "touchy subject"
accomplished at
Marist, ·
but
because . she felt that as a . for having · acted in . such a
representative of this college . mature and responsible man-
that it would not be proper to
ner during that interview.
I
just
·· bring up the personal . pro-
wish that the coach could
-----------------'----------'----...;...----=-;,..-·..;.·_
.. ...:.·:...:.··
·
blemsbetween a player and;a
have acted in -as professional
coach on the air: I commend
a manner as the player :did.
her on thatdecision.
After al(, she is the profes-
At the end of this week,. when some
stay at the homes of their off-campus
students will be lounging in their com-
teammates, but feel that they might be
fortable homes, and others will be on
imposing. Their only.other alternative is
their way to 1the sunny beaches of
to sleep on the
,
floor otthe boathouse, a
Florida, the Marist College crew team
prospect which does not sound too in-'-
The interviewer then switch- · sional.
·
ed to a telephone interview
with this player's coach and
• asked her- to comment on the .
.
'
The lcEfAge
Sincerely,
Maureen Kenney
will be gearing up for a grueling workout
viting to a person·who is about to _em-
in West Virginia. Plans for the trip have
bark upon a week-long wo_ rkout.
·
·,
I
I
·
h
Greetings Frorn Alaska:
. .
told there was nothing that
gone re ative
Y
smoot , with one major
It
is reasonable to expect that the ad-
(E
9th Fl
could be done and in a sense
exception.
ministratio·n is eager
to
begin- its vacaa ...
Gi~~~~i~~)
we mean
oor we· &houldn't compiain since
The resident, members of the team . tion as. well. ljowever,.the small matter
.Again for what. seems like
we chose
to
live in the_rooms!
. ··• e.
ar~.,required to find altematemeans of
c:'.9fa·
few hours ,irLa,,comfortable
:
bed,> .an "ice,age'' (jur, rooms are._
.We
f~el w~were
.
1~cky to geta
.
: , -.'..:: -\•locigi':'9 ?11
;Friday. night .be~ause, the
,
... without-~so·,!TIUCh'·as the•·requ~sttora :~·.': .freezliig_:·,Y'(~:~a.ve·ri~f ha~ :a:ny;'\ rooT with tt.i~'~fl!OUh\of_p~o-
>- .
Hous_mg.Off1ce· w1II n~t permrt them to
meal appears
tq
be
a
rather petty'is~ue::.: .· heat for;most ofth.e s~mest_er, , -_pie ,_that ,~er~_-ta~e,:i. In 1~st
remarn- on campus without charge• It
s··
h .. • ·ti, . 1·.· _., · t··
0
-
t ··th .. .
. -and . .we-are,sick-and tired of
semester'. We Justwante~~o
:- ._
.
.
.. · . .
. ·
uq.
lnJUS
ce s
?
0
n._(~ry o ···-~- com_-
belng•passed from office to
let you know thatwe.feel 1t 1s,
s~ems unfarr that a tea!11 ~h1ch has so
pet1J1ve level Mar,st 1s now trying . to
office and receiving no help.
very unfair and we are literally
aptly represe~ted ~anst .
m
the p_ast
achieve. If a teams' members are spen-
-we -are happy . to see that
"sick" (colds, flu, etcL.) over
should be denied a simple request to re-
ding
$50.00
each for a trip that will, In·.· - Marist is in the process of ex- ·: it. We certainly. know where
main on·campus until
5:30
a.m. Satui'-
· essence benefit the school and 'its
panding<and -·becoming
we won't be living next year
day.
reputation why can't the school show
known, but we· feel that pre-
and we ~ope that anyone th~t
Some members have the option to
•t
· ·
. · t·
f
· ·h·. .
·
?
..
sent problems should be solv
0
moves rnto these rooms 1s
1 s app~ecra ion or sue support·
ed before advancing to other · prepared to wear ten extra
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , . , - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - things. For . the. amount of
layers of clothes along with a
'
Empty
Pockets
money we are paying to. go
few extra blankets to keep
here, we feel it is very unfair· warm. We kno.w there. is an
that we should be deprived of
energy crisis, but we feel.that.
something as basic as heat.· having no heat is taking mat-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - " - - - - - - .. we cannot study, sleep or just . ters a bit too_ far, Thanks!
Each year a significant number of up- .
. For those lucky enough to receive .. relax in our rooms due to the ,
·
.
. .. 9th Floor Girls ..
perclassmen do not return
to
Marist.
government,· private,. or college finan:
excessive co!dnes~: We ,we~e
,
.
Some find that college was not what
<?ial ·aid, it:is of tenth: deter'minatipn .of,. • . -~
-
> . . .
'
.. :
:Meanir)g"fu I
Marathon
they were seeking. Others transfer to
. Y{hether or not he will attend college. . .
. :.· .
.
, . : ;, .
.
:...:.,.
.
. .
< .
·.
another college, decide to work, or take
vy1th· l?ans; ra_tes increasing ~and .:infla-._ . D~a'(Listen·er~, ·. ··
.
· Vic~-~nno·unter'!tents, security.
time off to pursue other interests.
t1on drmintshmg the awar~ one may
.
When I arrived at this fine for ,their ·patience and late .
Beyond these personal reasons; there is
have rec~ived freshman year; even· the ,. establishmenta little overtwo night engineering, ~II at the
· one more factor that is quickly rising to
aid ascertairted becomes more expen-
-and
a
half years ago,
'I
ex-
Good Times Cafe, Frank Scott
predominate:-money.
sive. Reagan proposes to cut govern-
pected !O' go ~hrough. some . and friends from .the food ser-
Lack .of financial resources has
ment and state aid and make loans .. pre!tY wild and rnt~restrng·ex-
vice, for endless cups of~cof-
always s_ eemed.·. to be. one of tt:ie
.· more difficu1t to obtain _ while the cost, .... penences .. ~ut, I would· trade fee and deli shacks; all of the
.
· .
.
rn .every srngle
one
(well, ex-
administration for · making
foremost problems concerning the-co1,:-
of college continues to increase.
cept one) to go .through · marathon ID's,
The Circle
for
. lege student They work summer jobs
Student s_upport is needed to block
another like I had 'this the . best advertising _ and
and during the academic year to save
the president's action. Letters to our
wee1<e11d. As you
··
a11 know,
coverage,on campus (besides
for their tuition. Parents often·. con-
congressman are the first stage i.n mak-
from noon. February
27,
MCR-ha ha!), .~lso we cannot
tribute towards their child's education, .
ing our voices ~eard. Financially speak-
throug_h no<;>n March
2,
WMC_R forget our No.
1
listeners ~oh
but the burden most often rests upon ·
ing - Will your plans be changed next
held its fir~t annual r,~d•o . Baby •
.
(Jeanette)_, . El~me,.
the_ student. Fi·nally, as
8
hopeful but
year?
·
/
marathon to raise
·
money for . Sharon, .Carla, and Diane,
·
the Heart Assqciation and Diana the girls. of Cham-
last resort, i.s financi.al aid.
Marist College Radio:
'
·
· pagnat 5th an
.
understanding
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .. Well if you haven't heard by · bunch of listeners in Gregory,
: now,
I
'wou!~Hike· to tell you it Benoit, Leo, Sheehan, and
No one likes to have
a
bad reputation.
Recently, two fires were set in Leo.
According to the Fairview Fire Depart-
Why? What sort of person sees delight
ment, in their eyes Marist students are
in setting fire to a garbage pall, smok-
far from "peachy keen." This is nothing
.
ing out the building, and making good,.
to boast about.
,,,
faithful· .. men .have - to
extinguish
Within the atmosphere of "fun" oftE3n
· something that should never have been
• was a total success thanks to Champagnat, and finally every
a countless number
of
people.; person who took the time to
Unfortunately, there is only so b'ring us some. food · or
much space so
I
will thank as · beverage, sign a pledge sheet,
many as
I
can.
or dial our eitension.
First of all
I
would like to
Nothing but love and thanks,
thank
.
Ed · Powers, -chris
.
.
Bill Palmeri
Branes, and. Doug·Halght for
·
·
GM-WMCR ·
au ,heir time, understanding, P.S. Thanks, most Importantly.
and dedication, WPDH for to the staff of WMCR.
· · . news, weather, and public ser- ·
times fire alarms -are "accidentallt'
.
. set in_ the first place? O~vlously,
~
sick
- . .
. :_. ·
Locking Up
Mciney· .. '•
; .
' -
pulled.
We do not
live In the
city where - • -mind. It is•not funny,.n9~ fun, 9or,n~~d- -:, : "-:~.:-•-;. _··;'•··
· . ,. ·
·
·· , , - ·.. ,
.
:
-
·
;- ./·.: ·,. ;_, , ~,._firert:1en .are on call· at .the ~t!l~i<?n
.2~ ... · ..
ed.
P.le~se
~t~P
.
. It
r:iow
~efor,e: Marl~t's
~/o~~tFri;~is".:).;i-~
·
~;t;
:=. , ..
intelllQel'!t:··yet:-. unorganized.
.
,
r
_.: :: .. - . .; .
_.hours a day._ Oftery_ times al~_rms_pull.~h.e ..
·
-· reputation is ruln~.-~lso,
g_r,oW.UJ?;,
t~ls. ,: .•
<.·:/Ori
Ji: l'ecent~-m~
·:tb·
the
studen1s · ask_,
"Ho~ ;much
.
'.· ;< :. \
0
_·
·}men·,_literally out.of their
beds.;
This,
is··;•· iscol~ege! • ~. :;-:):::· · · ; . · ·, · - ··,-:
·t'JarislSe<iuri(yof_ttee;HlSked
~-~,s}t~~~t-~or~place"~room .\ , •
., .. ,.. -·· :,notonlyunfair•it'saelflsh.
, .-....
-.".;c';··;:,·•
. . .
--
.
· - · •.-·,·:,;
.
~-
· :
__
tbeqyestioOtnltmG1tbfQPJ_x.;.·
.
---•·.::..·.~,.-.. _~~c;.nL.P.1· :· .:, :
r,,~ ..
~",..--1!~
4.;,,,,, l9:.:-_ ....
_:~~~2~::~· -
~
...
~~-:-.:.:-'It~
•.,:.-o
..;c:,.,;·!· ,--~ -
~:
·
~:i_.t>_ ...... ., -: ~-
8" .....
·:,.,;,,. · -
~ ~ ~
~,.~~--:.!'
N-1'-,.~ ........ ~-..
~~:~~,..r :""~,~ -~':·;.~ -~,-----...
~~-
..
~
.. ~:-,' ~,,., __ ., .:. ,'::. ..
:'«.~ .. ~--,.:....
.. ....
~
... - ~-- ..
<--'
~
....
•'=-
r
.,, .. ,_
~
....... -.
~
..,
-..<,, _,
-~ --~-
~ ~ •,., .... .; •- •• -;
._l,
~~
t
--.
-.
-
·
-
.
-
-:--
.
-·
.
.
,
'
-
~_
--
.
-
.
-
...
.
-
-
,
·
-
.-
-
. Time
·
Out
-
For the
Lord
>
-·
..
.
.
...
-
..
.
.
.___
Rockpile
•
·
By
Mark
R.
Wegg
.
The other side of the shoulder was met
.
.
.
.
·
·
·.
•
•.
•
.
•
with
a
barb-wired fence which enclos-
On December 2 four-Catholic mis~
:
ed countless acres of coffee trees with
slonary women--three
·
of whom were . near-ripe beans as far as the eye could
by Diane Loiacono
"Ransom/' their name has recently
sisters,. one a
-
lay.
,
volunteer--were
see. These poor El Salvadorians lived
-
been changed to C-249,
in
reference to
murdered in El Salvador, a small Cen-
.
on a space no
_
t wider than 10 feet in
·
.
Last Thursday night about thirty or the Campus Center room where much
.
tral American country. Evidence
·
width. Some· of their
.
"habitations"
fourty people were treated to some
of ·their rehearsing takes place. C-249
points to a political motive
for
these
_
were made out of the garbage rem-
.
fine entertainment at the Fireside
is a combination of students, alumni
brutal slaylngs as thesewomen•s
·
lives
.
nants of the
.
rich: cardboard
,
plastics,
Lounge by members of the Marist and faculty. Music professor Dave
were in.Jeopardy because they worked
.
and flattened tin cans wtiichwere con-
.
community
.
·
Heckendorn does much of the writing,
·
·
·
with the poor. and lived
_
their \Yhole
structed · in such
·
a way . to make
·
The show began with an acoustic plays keyboards, sax and sings most
.
lives for
.
Jesus Christ by
_
carlng for the
"walls" for
.
huts.
It
appeared· that
guitar set by Judy Norn~an; Her ch~ice
to the tunes. Marist graduate, Joe San-
rights for the oppressed
.- ·
ro serve
.
·
..
these huts,
.
which
.
were no more than
of ~ongs range? from Jim Croce to the tacroce a.k.a. "Uncle Joe " is the
those of need in many
_
third world na-
·
10 ft. x
10
ft., served as a dwelling for Police. Following Judy was a newly guitarist along with junior
Mike
tions is
--:
conslde'red subversive, com-
.
. whole families ~hich could comprise
.
formed
·
campus band. Bill Nolan, Moore. George Daly takes care of the
munity activity. In fact, to preach the
·
a
dozen. or more members.
·
I saw
.
Adam_Puglia, and George Daly had on-
,
drumming and demonstrated his skill
Gospel
.
of Jesus--charity,
._
fraternity
:
·
c~ildren . di_rty,
·_
.
b~usi~d, naked and
ly decided the previou~ night to play _at
in a stirring solo. C-249's repertoire ex-
and
.
sorority, conversion to God and
diseased with bellies like basketballs,
the Coffee House. The_ir act was ma!n• tends from fast-paced pounding guitar
love for fellow humans-~is
so
contrary . frolicking in the mud--near the barb-
.
.
ly hard-rock covers which were convm-
riffs in "Graffiti" to Billy Joe-style pop
to the selfish, tyrannical g!)vernr:nents
wir~d fence of these plantati~ns-from
cinglX executed._ Pugli~, who has had
tunes.
that anyone
.
who preaches Chnst
·
as
whIch
_
they '!'ere r:nost emphatically ex-
expenence touring with bar bands,
the one who has come to the poor of
·
eluded and
m which guards stood with took lead vocals. The next spot was
thls
·
earth
"'
rs immediately marked
_
an
automatic gunnery to
·
check any
...
fi!led by
Mike
•~nt?sca who displayed
enemy of the State.
·
.
. ·
.
•
trespasser's approach onto the
his tale~t as a pianist.
.
Presently the
.
U.S .
•
government pro-
property-less the poor
.
steal a few
T~~
fmal act _was
0!1~
that Is very
ports documentation tha!
,
.
a
Com-
.
beans. Many of the rich people
c¢>·
fam11tar to Manst. Originally named
munist. plot is
·
underway to
.
overthrow
parently wen
_
t to church on Sunday
All the acts were received en-
thusiastically and hopefully more
students will be discovered at the Cof-
fee Houses sponsored by the Inter-
House Council.
the present government of El Salvador.
and most assuredly
·
recieved the .
.
.
Whether that documentation be tru
_
e
blessing · of the priest--probabiy to
e>r fal
_
sified, I.do not knoYJ. Personally, I
_
assuage their consciences. One thing
suspect It to be partially true. Bu~)
..
they may not have received
-
-the bless-
Fire Facts
Cont. ..
have also seen firsthand the living
ing of God.
.
.
•·
Continued from
page
1,
column
2
conditions of the poor in E,I
.
Salvador
.
,:he situatio_n in El Salvador and
under psychiatric
·
observation in an in-
and Nicaragua.
·
They are abhorrent--
.
·
such similar countries remind me of
stitution. If and when this student
which might be the primary cause and
·
the parable which Jesus told about the
returns to Marist, "we are 90% sure he
instigation for such a plot.
.
·
·
rich man and the poor man. The rich
will not be residing in a campus facili-
.,
Several years ago before any upris-
.
man put himself out of the love of God
·
;
ty," says Bob Kaminski, Resident
ings
,
began, I visited El S'alvador to do 'by his lifelong· hardness of heart to
Director of Champagnat Hall.
some work with parish communities recognize his
"
selfishness against the
Because of the frequency of false
especially
·
connected
·
with
the poor for whom he would not give even
alarms and small fires on the Marist
charismatic renewal. It was a beautiful
.
crumbs. (Luke 16:19-31)
campus, both Kaminski and Seeger
journey, though a difficult one, of be-
The situation in 'El Salvador also
fear
apathy
among
residents.
ing led by the Spirit of God.
-
In El
remind~ me that anyone who believes
"Students think an alarm is a joke and
can fires reached the sixth floor"
adds Seeger, "There is a gross lack
bt
awareness as to how serious it could
get."
In Decker's 30 member department,
only
4
or
5
are willing to respond
to
a
call from Marist. "The rest are getting
disgusted with it," he explains,
"holding back for a progress report
from myself or an assistant." Depen-
ding on the time of day, and the traffic
situation, Fairview can respond to a
call in two or three minutes.
·
Salvador though
-
I had many life-
that Jesus is the Christ, the way, the
there's no reason to leave," notes
enhancing encounters with these peo-
truth and the life~-is also called to be
Kaminski.
pie of a completely different culture, I Christ to others especially to the sick,
"There's too much of an attitude
Marist is not charged for the Fair-
often cried at the human suffering and the abandoned, the homeless, the Im·
that nothing can
.
burn in these view service; it is supported by the tax-
misery
·
1
beheld. A very small percen-
prisoned, the suffering, and the poor
·
buildings," believes Seeger, "but in
9
payers. But, as Chief Decker asks, "Do
tage of the population c:>wned 90-95% (Matthew 25
:
31-46). Perhaps in El
-
·
of 10 cases, smoke will kill, not fire. you remember the story of the boy who
of the
.
wealth,
:I
was tol
_
d.
I
saw thou-
_
Salvador there
.
will be more f-.merican
.
The smoi..e
from
one of the Leo trash cried, 'Wo\f'?"
.
·
.
_
san9 up
_
on
:
thqusandspf a
,
cres of Jus.h,
,
..•
rna_rty
_
rs.
.
. f~r
•
ti'!~
;'!,,..9fQ
,
Jes1:1
,
s
~
•m,a~¼'i-s
_
-
r~,.....--!"---------------....: ........... ________ .....;,.;...;. __ ..;__;__
cultivated
.::c,
.:
coJfee
<
trees
:·
,
while
,-
a:
who
·
rnay:fmd·
.
themselves unprotected
thousands upon thousands of persons
-
·
and
_
unsupported even
·
-
by their own
lived.on the fringes
-
of this terrain. One government and people who have
'
Sunday, while
I
was going through the been
.
.
blessed with freedom
.
The
·
•
countryside with
a group of
·
Church
.
Church in the first few centu
,
ries after
·
freinds
-
~veering up the side of a small Christ was built on the blood of such
·
mountain which showed
-
a volcanic · martyrs. So the
Church
oOhe future
_
crater, I saw groves and groves of : (and a new civilization I believe)
will
be
homeless people whose llvihg spaces
.
bullt
;
on the blood
_
of those 4 martyrs
consisted of the
-
shoulders of the dlrt
i
and others, whose vallant, humble
-
mud vi~ on which we rode as
·
we acts of love mingle with the ashes of
ascended the slopes of the mountain. the poor and will bear witness to the
·
·
resurrecUon of Jesus even in this pre-
sent age.
.
_
·
PARK
·
:
·
DISCOUNT
BEVERAGE
.
.
Rt. 9, Hyde
Park·
J.R.
is
Back ,;,
-
•1~ 19
Six
Pack
OPEN DAILY TIL 9:00
·
SUNDAY
12:00-5:00
HAJRCl.IlTERS
Open
·
•
,
·
Mott.SaL
-
'
.
/(},6
Thurs. 11
·
9
.
J
Libtt!y
St.
Mo
i
n Moll
~ 4 5 4
-
!12.39
'
Sluiktw.Ducounts
.
.
'
'
·
-
..
:---
l'Servlng
Mu.i.t
put
eight
years."
(The Spanish Club and Campus
.·
Ministry are jointly sponsoring a Lee•
:
ture
..
on El
-
.
Salvador and Latin
American situation on March
.
30, Mon-
day, 8:00 p.m. In the Theater. This is an
opportunity for us to hear a missionary
firsthand. And I hope you can make it.)
,
CLASSIFIED ADS
Wanted: Attractive females
to
clean
bachelor pad. Good pay and excellent
benefits.
Call
473-1863.
Preferably
devoted fans, of lax and crew.
Happy Birthday
Sprawls!
Good Luck, Mike.
R~!~~c~~,!
THEATIII
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
Bonnie
PLAYING IS
RUN FRI. 3/6
THRU r.,ARCH
26
PRESENT
THIS
ADWITH
COLLEGE
1.D.
&
RECEIVE
ONE DOLLAR
.
OFF
.
THE
REGULAR
ADMISSION
. ~RICE
11\quiring Photographer
How do you feel about Marist Col-
lege Security?
·
Donna O'Shaughnessy (Soph):
"They're fools, because they didn't
hire me.
~1
Meg Wright (Freshman):
As proved
by last weekends incident, security
should be a little tighter.
.
Mark
.
'
.
Fingar
(Junior): "Given the
situation, they're
-
doing the best
they
can."
Susan
Vasallo (Soph): "I
do my
job."
.
David Riley (Soph): Tow Joe Waters
and stick Willie Clare at the helm. '
BIiiy
.
Paimeri
(Junior): "What securi-.-
ty?"
,
.
··
.
.
,;
- - -
·
Page
.
4
~
THE CIRCLE~
Marcti 5, 1981---------------•• •._ •-•-•-•-•
.. •-•-•-•••-•-"'---•-•-•-•---•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•• •-•-•-. •
.. •-•-•-
•-.lljl-. •-•~ •-. •-•--.,
Marist
Cr8¥i
.
,
,:-.
.
·
.
'i
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,
.
:
'
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:
.
Cofflill'gSoon!
.
·
·
Don't Miss the Action!
!
!
.
·.
.
.
.
,
"';
·
-~
Date
&
Time:
·
ro
be
Announ
·
ced
·
.
.
J)onnelly Hall
Comllluter
.
·
CZ:offee
·
.
.
:
·
.
~'
-: ..
·
'.
-
:
_
>
,
-
LOU1lge
-
-
Beverages •
Chips
&
Snacks
Luncheon Special Daily
Open from 8 a.m . .; 9 p.m. Mon.~Thurs.
Fri. 8 a.m. - 2 p.m .
.
(
.
.
campus
Announ
·
cements
'
-
.,
.
,
•
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•
.
-
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.
. . .
...
-
.
.
.
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.
.
-
-
~:
~
-
·
-.-..
·
.. :
:
\
·:
·;
:,
r~
-:-
:
·
l-:
~
·;~.:.'.·
-'~
:.:-
~:1:
:
~_.;
··(.-
/
.
THURSDAY, March 5
• .
.
:
.. .
.,
·,
:
·
,,
_,
._,
.:.·,
".,",:'.:
·
:
.
.
-
_
J1:20a.m_.Upward8ound•CC270.
,:·
·':
:.
,~.:;~
-
-
~
,·.-.~.
·'.,··~•::
----
..
·•.'
.
·
_
11:30
a.m.
HEOP
mNtlng •
Fireside lp~
~
.
.
~
.
- ·.
·
:·' ...
~
·
-:
: : .·
·
3:00
p.m.
MO~IC
meeting
__
•
fl,-.slc:te
Lge:
: .. .
·
·
·
.
.
. '
· · ·
8:00
p.m.
Special A~ctemlc
Prog. •
~-ndellght
·
,
·
•
7:00
p.m.
Fly
Fishing &
.
Fly
.
Tylng-~C~49
...
:
.
.
. .
.
..
.
_
'
.
.
.
•
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'_
~
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,'
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:
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· <
'
FJIIDAY,Ma~h
,
8
·
.
, •
.
/~-
.·
.
.
~,,-
~
i
'.
_,
:,,..:•
..
·.·-<
,·:
.
'
J~
p
_
.111,
Reslde"c.,
tfall•
Close
.
for ~prl~
~ec•._
·
.
_
SATURDAY,March7
..
-
--
-
·
. .
.
·
·
,
.
.
.
··:
.
..
8:00 a;m. Sl Mary•• Swim MNt · Mcca,.n POOL CLOSED
·
·
,
·
·•·:;:
8:00p.m.Po_ugh~••Psle Clvl~ Ballet~
•
rheatef'Ev•n!ng of pontem•
-:-.
-
·:.,
.
porary & Cla11lcal
QaJtce''
,
.
·
.
.
·
·
:,
..
.
.
_
·
.
.
·
,
.
.
'
SATURDAY~ March 7-SATURDAY, March 14 SPRING RECESS
·: .
,....
....
.
·
-
SUNDAY, March 15
.
. .
,; :
12~00 Noon Residence Halls reopen
.
~
.
.
.
·.-
.::
..
·
·
NOTES
:
:
.
.
l
~ ·•
-
·
.:.
·
:...
.
..
·
.
•
-
·
-
Program: American Red Cross First Aid Certification Course
and
.
Advanced Certification
-
Course sponsored by M~rlst
·
Health Ser-
.
--
vices.
NO CHARGE ~PR THE
-
COURSE (2.50 for the textbook) Star•
.
·
~
-
Ing March 4, (Wednesday) and every Wedensday thro~gh May 3,
'81 at 7:00 p.m. In Campus Center Room 248
.
;
·
·
· -
·
WIii Leo
·beat
Champagnat or wlll Oakwood take
.
It
·
·
all? WIii
.
the
commuters place or win? Who wlll be the winner of the first annual
field day sponsored by Inter-house council? There
will be tugs of
war, volleyball, softball, an obstacle cou~e
·
and
·
fun for all.
·
.
Commuters-contact
:
Joe Smith
·
to
participate
and
Residents-see
your R.A.'s. Details In the next edition of the Circle
••
_.
.
_,,.
,
.
'
.'
.
.
....._
_
.
.
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/
___
_
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-·
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·
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------••
··
----------------March 5, 1981 ·
THE CIRCLE·
Pages--
.
.
:
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•
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·
... ; ... :
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• ....
~
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:
..... 1.75
.
_
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:~
;
~
~=~~-~-~~
.-~
:
-
,
:::
~
-~
:·
.
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:
.'._
,
_
:
_:
~:
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~
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:
:
:
:
•;
~
.·
H
..
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.
~
..
·_1.to
•··
·.
,,
j .
lettuce,
-
Tomato, Chips
and
Pidde
.
.
_
.•
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;,_
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..... H .
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,
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::, ~
:
......
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.....
~
<
...
·
1.95
·:
.
:
Two
.
strips
Bacon,
:
lettuce, Tomato, Chips
ond
Pickle
·.
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.
.
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h( . ; ~ ~ . . ; _
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1.10
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flal . . .
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• • •
•
• • • • •
.
• • • •
-
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• • •
:
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ldtuce, Tomato, Chips
ond
Pidcle
-
.
.
.
.:
"
·
.,
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·
:,_
.
·.
}
-
:
~ two
Egs
Rolls
wlth
·
.,:_dc
S.Uc:a : .. ~;.
:
·
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:
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. :; ..
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~
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:
..... : .. ·:
1.15
·
== :: :
: :: : ;: :::'.
::
:;: :::::
\
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::
::::\ :
.
:
:.1::
~ t
Spcdll ~
-
..
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.
:-
....
.
.
;
:
•........
.
.....
...
.........
·
1.50
:~
·
Served
from
12
p
.
m.
_
to
2
a
.
rri
.
.
.
_
.
.
.
:
..
.
· ..
_
·:
·· .
'
T'vYO
Eggs
any
style,
_
French Fries
;
Bacon,
Orange
Juice or Tomato
·
Juice, Toast
~
.
.
·
.
.
:
-
-
-.
.
.
.
.
:
:
'
.
~
.
.
Griil
open
from
7
p
:
m
.
to
12:30
a.m.
Mond~
thr6ugh
Thursd<JY,
. .
·
Friday and Saturday 7
p.m. to
2
o
.
m
.
·
·
.
•·
.
:
&t,
'
Drlftk:i1itdBe
,
Merrj,,
.
.
.
·
.
_
·
.
:.
at
·
-
FOOLISH FOX PUB
.
.
:
·
.
.
·
•
._.
,
,
·
Be
Nl_e~ry.J-.
~
·
.
·
,
.,.
_
_
_
_
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-
•
,
·
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'
,-
-~-
:
.·
......
;,_
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.
... come
Celel>iate
·
·
sr.PATRICK'S DAY
'
.
•
•
·
•
·••
'
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•
•
•
•
•
.
1
_
-
•
•
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J
-
· .
·
·The
·
Foolish Fox Pub
DELI
1.:
•
..
1
;
QuiilitY
siirtdwich
Meats
At
:
Most
,
•
.
-
·
Reas
.
onahle Prices
Salads • Soft Drinks • Ice Cream
Open Daily 8 a.m.-2: 30 p.m.
7 p.m. - I a.m.
:
See us for your floor parties
.
:
Special Platters A vailahle
· ·
;
Dinner Theatre Spring Festival
presenting
·
5 ONE ACT PLAYS
.
FRIDAY, MARCH 27 - 7:30
SATURDAY, MARCH 28- 7:30
_
SUNDAY, MARCH~- 2:00
_
DINNER/THEATRE -
$5.00
·
GENERAL ADMISSION
·
-
$1.00
TICKET RESERVATIONS
Contact: Tom Hassett
1/\onica Finnigan
C-623
·
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'•.
--•Page6-
THECIRCLE-March5, 1981_
... ,
... _
.. ,
. , , .............. , ..
This
.
.
Week'S
Pla~e:Tc,
.
Bec(~,~
~
{lw'WJ",.
.
.
'
.
-
-·
---
..
too, but who can afford the Bahamas _ lunches soon after.·
For.
Popeye fans , be an
·
ordeal getting to the bar, so your
this time of year?) Scouring the • .'there's
a
Skinn'erburger (c'nion,- take a besf bet is
to
get
your drinks'from a
Every piece of really-great literature streets, I _f~und a place as dearto my · chance), and for those of you with only · waitress .. Thi~ bar·is alw~ys al_lve_ and
. has inherent within it a sort of h~art as it 1s to my bed: So boys and
modest· · ·_- daring-do;
·
:- ·· the·· the decor is ,:iot only attracUve, it has a
motivating force; the philosophy of its girls, without further ado, I introduce . _bacon/cheeseburger .is the best thi_ng ·. philosophy au its own, For. all of the
'by Greg Sydor ·
author. This column is no exception. to you·"Sklnners."
- east of the cafeteria. The pric;_e,
a
coed
electronic game addicts, this.is one of
Perhaps the words of. Mark Twain can
_
.c·conscious $1.95.-Club sandwiches are _· the ·best ·bars in·· town. ''Space_· .In-
give. these humble paragraphs the
Being an upperclassman, let me just •. a mellow $2._50 and once you've ·fried ·· .. vaders," ·11Asteroids'.'_.- and·. ''Rip,-Off"
· metaphysical backbone so necessary take this one short paragraph to pay . them you can't help but go back for_· are _a few of'the games th~t wiU eat
. when conveying the essentials .of life tribute to the greatest of institutions; . more_ (parUcularly. if
you
Uve on cam~
your quarter~- ·as fastas you can get ·
itself. Throughout the years, his words
You seniors know what I'm talking· pus). The menu goes on· to include
them. The 'food, the tunes,rthe ga·me~
have given hope to those mature about A place that gave u~ more than soup de, jour, chef's. salads and fries; ..... and• the people all help to put· l'_Skih- ·
enough to practice what he preached. just a hangover, it gave us tradition.
•1t
all of which are reasonable in· price,
·
·ner.s" in a class by itself (at least as far
At last, in 1981, it is safe to say that is with a heavy heart that I say> delicious and fresh; something we col•
as Potow_n_pubs are concerned).
Twain's . ideas and the -"motivating "farewell"· to · "Frank's;'' for· those. lege kids rarely see away from home. .
_ To•get to "Skinners," hang a right
force" behind this article, can be ex-
memories (foggy as -they are) will re-
' . Bar prices are average for the area·, _ when you get to the Chapel, walk
pressed in his following words, "Never. main as dear to. our hearts as·. the but . the atmosphere is . always con- · across the field, cross Rt. 9 and take a
let your studies interfere with your bygone days of quarter drafts. -- ._·
ducive towards a good time. Bud is _ left. If you can't find it after that, d()
educaton." And so, with these words
Empirically speaking, "Skinners". is· $1.00 a bottle, pitchers are
·
$3;00
yourself a favor, and step ifffroht of a
on my lips and their spirit in my heart, I the best thing to hit Potown · since (Michelob is _$3.50), mixe9 drinks are. bus. ·
·
renewed my search for. the perfect . Hudson cruised the river. Folk_s, this $1;25 and the rest' of the prices (with
Poughkeepsie pub.
·
place has just about everything, and · the obvious exception of top shelf and
No easy task (it would have been
what it doesn't have you won't miss. two liquor drinks) are the same.
Althoµgh I will always think of
"Skinners'.' as a sort of, surrogate
"Frank's," my money (at least until
May) wiH be with owner Ed Beck: Con°
easier to get Nietzsche on an Easter From soup to shots and Drambuie
to ·
There is no jukebox, but the sound~
egg hunt), I began my adventure with 'Droids,
"Skinne·rs"
proyides system is fantastic. The tunes are
an enthusiasm that can only be everything for a (day or night) out on
always good; no mellow stuff here.
described as tenacious. Seriously,
the town.
.·
· .
' , The only drawback is having a. table
what could be more fun than looking
For those of you who didn't get . under o_ne of _the speakers late at
for the best Potown has to offer in · enough the night before, ~'Skinners''
night; It's like trying to talk under a
night time entertainment? (I know, I. . opens Monday thru Sunday at 11 a.m.
747. Also, _when "Skinners" is crowded·
could think of a thousand other things· and begins serving some sensational (and it's almost always crowded) it can
-sidering the competition; I would give
. "Skinners"
,
4½ mug. It could. have
been a 5 if it had only had chili dogs.
- Op'en from 11 until 4 a.m., Monday thru
Sunday, (473-4725)' "Skinners" is this
weeks "Place To Be."
.
Dancer(?i_se Going Strong
by Mary Alice Russo
latest members to the class are: Bill arid various spa programs.
.
helpful because there are so· many
Rem rick, Marvin Sims, and Tony Car-
Devlin, who runs the dance section,
members to keep in touch with."
Dancercise, started last semester
done. When Remrick was asked how makes up the dances herself. The
The second idea concerns having
by Ann Marie Calonita and Lauren
he felt about the clas.s he replied, "I <steps used are take[! from routines
Bi-fllont,hly meetings with all of the.
Devlin, is now meeting four nights a
think it is great. And for all of the guys • she has seen- others perform. Four members. These meetings serve as a
week with a membership of about fifty
out there who think it_ is easy they complete routines will be learned by
way to get ideas from everyone and
students.
should try it. Especially Jim William-
the end of the _semester. Right now even any of the gripes they have.
This semester five dollar dues were
son, he could stand to loose a few · they are working on dance number
The latest acquisition by the
collected. According to Judy P.iScipio,
pounds."
_
two.
.
.
members are tee-shirts and shorts
financial manager, "the five dollars
Each 90 minute class is divided into
. This semester two new ideas were
which have the dancercise emblem on
averages out to about twelve cents a
fourty-five minutes of exercising and added to the club. The first is the idea them.
· ·
class which is great. The money is us·
fourty minutes of dance. The girls are of an Executive Board. The board con- ·
Plans for the future include. the plac~-
ed tor expenses such as records. Onc,e
given five minutes in between to take a ·. sis ts of eigh~een. m~mber~ :wh~ .Y'ElrEl . ing 9f
.
mats in .the,9anq_~.;root(l,(th~pks; ..
ttie'Bi-Laws are written hopefully we·.•. breather; ·-:•
-
:·
.,
,, .... -:
·. ~- choosen=, froi:n_ <:the•·enthUS\Bf:lrn -~her· :tq, the~_t,'elp_ tWQl¢.lf5lbif!rj) a_nd
a
trip to··
will get a budget."
·· The routine of the exercise sec.~Ion, .·. showed last se~ester .. The memoers
see the Broadway show "Dancin' ."
The classes are held in the dance
run by Calonita, consists of sixty exer- .... represent .the various on and off cam-
The bus trip will be in early April. Also
· room at the McCann Center and are
cises and are basically the same every ' pus housing facilities. Their' job is to
scheduled Is a beauty demonstration,
open to the entire Marist Community.
week. According to Calonita, "The -assist in th_e running of the club.
given by Mary Kaye Cosmetics, ._on
Classes run Sunday 7-8:30, Monday
girls asked us to concentrate on acer- .. Devlin explains, "they are really very · March 22 in the Fireside Lounge:
9:15-10:30, Tuesday 9:15-10:30, and
tain few areas and some have even
·
·
·
·
Thursday 8-9:30. The majority of the
contributed an exercise they feel is ·
class right now is female, bu! . especially helpful." The majority of the
.
'Le····t· t s C .
t
newcomers are always welcome. The
exercises were taken from magazines
.
er
On _.; ..
The Sound of C-249
By Dawn-Marie Sturtevant
Staff writer
Graffiti. To most of us that word
conjures up an image of subway walls
with obscene language. To David
Heckendorn, a music teacher at
Marist, the word "Graffiti" means a
song.
David Heckendorn, with a B.A. and
M.A. in music composition from New
York University, is now in his second
year of teaching here at Marist. His
classes include Theory Composition,
20th Century music, a survey course
which covers all styles of music from
that time peri9d.
But Heckendorn is more than a
teacher; he is a performer and a com-
poser. Heckendorn was the leader of a
jazz group which performed in the.
Metropolitan area. The group played
many of his original compositions.
Presently, Heckendorn is involved with
a . group that consists of Marist
students. The members of this group
are: George Daly, Chris Novak, Joe
Santacroce, and Mike Moore ..
The group has a very unique name:
C-249. "When we first started playing
together, that was the only room we
could get to practice in." Many of the
songs they perform are Heckendorn
originals, including the song "Graf•
fiti." "I was practicing by the river with
my sax and I got the idea for the song
from a rock with graffiti on
it,"
he says.
·
.
C-249 appears to have a promising
future. Last summe~ ttle group went in•
to
a recording studio to prOduce a ..
tape. They sent the tape to .
SO.fll~
top
recording companies. The tape was
. sent back to them with a request to
hear more. So, during the mid-term
break they'll go back to the studio to
record five new songs written by
Heckendorn.
·
Aside from composing music for the -
group, Heckendorn is in the process of
composing a musical. He hopes the
musical will be produced· here at
Marist. "When I was composing the
musical, I tried to keep in mind the
resources on campus," says Hecken-
dorn.
"There is more talent here than I ex-
pected from. a liberal arts college,
where music is not a major," Hecken-
dorn states. "To me, college should be
a way to find oneself." He feels,
"Music is a way to learn who you are." .
He enjoys teaching musicians and
non-muscicians ... He feels the core
music courses are important because
it helps the non-musicians to "see that -
the world is not just made of com-
puters."
For the future, Heckendorn hopes
he will be able to expand his talents on
the campus. Already he has organized
a pep band and a group that performed
for last semester's production of
"Cabaret." He hopes to work with ·
music and dance. Upcoming in the
spring will be a concert performed by -
his Theory and Composition class.
"The concert
will
contain original
material in all styles of music, com-
posed by the students," says Hecken-
dorn.
Heckendorn feels he was hired "to
c;fevelop music . that was · right for
t,,1arist and to tap resources of the
students.'' Apparently, he has suc•
ceeded .
--.,..;.:.:.
.
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-
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...
Co~tinued
from.
page
2,
column· 4
key?" My answer
was
one
· dollar
tor
the key and fourteen
fifty- to replace the lock. Well,
at least the . price hadn't
changed since freshman year, .
two years ago.
·
I YJas charged freshman
year·_also, although
_1
never
.really lost my ·key. I'm the
· Sultan of Procrastinations:
Why, sometimes I don't go to
the bathroom for days just to
get some color . In my skin.
Anyhow, it was the end of the
year. I was about. to go home
for the_ summer when I ·
remembered that I forgot to
hand in my roomkey. I figured
I'd mail it to them when I got ·
home. Well, I never did, and - .
subsequently was - charged
the fifteen fifty.
'
·
Times passes. Sophomore
year I lived off campus. This
year I returned to. the very _
· room I called home freshman
year, C-517. Being the shrewd
· man that I am, I lost that big
·
"Star Wars" key ·they supplied ·
me with .. Sick over the pro-
spect of paying . another fif-
teen fifty, I looked at my key
chain once more. I found my
key frorri freshman year still
there .• "Vat . the •· hell," I
,thought I thought. I put it in
ttie lock and that baby crack-
- ed. open like the bindings on a
brand new twenty-five dollar
textbook. In other words they
charged me for a new,lock-and
never . replaced the old one.
Now I'm asked to pay it again.
That's thirty-one dollars for
two keys, a real bargain. Let
,.me ask . again, louder this
time, "-W.he're the hell is my
bucks; pal?" If "a penny saved
is a· penny earned" then
fif. ·
teen fifty taken is fifteen fifty
stolen.
-
---
Chow,
Michael Jude Jannuzzi
-Open
Yolir
Eyes
.,,
Dear Members of Chama
7 p.m. These measures
will
pagnat:
..
only be helpful If the residents
Our mutual concern for the
do not prop open these doors
safety of the students of your
_ and if
all guests are signed in,
building and your posses-
· so that the desk person can
sions was very amply brought ·
be accountable. Please, after
out in this past weeks Circle.
7 p.m. enter Champagnat from
_.,, In an attempt to approach
the Main entrance or the rear
th.is situation collectively,
,:J -
loading dock.
would suggest that if you see
The safety and security of
a stranger, eall · campus
our dorms, our. persons, and
security or residence staff.
our possessions depend on all
· Secondly, a security desk will · ·
the eyes, ears and persons
be set up at the rear(loa,ding
,:who live.here.,·,. , ,
: , .
dock)' door; Also/the· carport ·'
·
· · Sincerely,
door · and slde ·. doori:-, to
,:
i_,
:
, -
Rev. Richard A. LaMorte
Leo/Sheahan
will
be
locked at
.
~
.~
.,; -_,:i;,.1.,. •• _-
•
.•
. .
-
---
-·
----
-
--
-
--------------,------------------------------------
.
'
.
• • - •
·
·
•
·
·
·
•
•
•
·
·
•
·\
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•
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·
•
·
·
•
·
--•---••---------------------March
5,
1981:
THE CIRCLE·
Page
1 - - •
.
'
i
Sl<i
·
+eam
·
in
<
charTlpidnShips-Travel
TO
Michigan
Peter Jackson riding the slopes and
.
qualifying the team to National Cham-
pl~nshlps.
·
·
Photo
by
Linda Panaio
Sports
Pre
·
view:
Lacrosse
-
on-the Rise
By
Connie Rohe
.
r
·.
Corsetti, along with Larry O'Neil, Steve
Cahil, Roger Coleman and freshman
It is with a combination of dedica-
·
.Ted loughin. In the always important
tion
·
and a necessity to look good on net for the Red Foxes will be another
the field that brings out
30
men
.
day
·
'
second Team All-Conference player,
after day to practice the sport
.
of Tim Anderson.
lacrosse.
·
·
·
.
"The guys were really taught their
.
By
Joan "Schatzle" Gasparovic
·
·
The first-year Marist ski team will be
competing in the NatiOQal Collegiate
·.
Ski Association National Champion-
ships
.
in Marquette, Michigan, this
week,
··
March 5 thru 9. Originally
scheduled for Lake Placid, the com-
petition was moved out to Michigan
because of the poor ski conditions
here in the East. The Marist team
qualified for the meet by placing first
in
.
the Northeastern Collegiate
.
Ski
Conference, a
·
subdivision of the
NCSA.
.
Marist
·
will be furnishing an alpine
as well as a nordic team for the five
day event
.
The alpine team will consist
of Michael Haggerty, John Levy, Peter
Jackson, Rich Kline, and Bill Fit-
zgerald. Kline, Fitzgerald, and Jon Ur-
ban will be representing the nordlc
team. Since they will be racing in both
alpine and nordic events, Kline and
Fitzgerald
.
will be eligible for the
Skimeister award, a presentation
made for the best combined results
from the
.
two categories 9f competi-
tion:
Racer Levy commented, "My goal
for the Nationals is to finish in the top
twenty--there will be top racers from
all over the nation at this meet. More
importantly though, the team should
look to finish in the top ten."
The first two days of the competi-
tion will afford the various teams the
opportunity to ski the mountain and
check out the snow conditions at
Cliffs Ridge Ski Area, the site of the
alpine competition.
'
On Saturday, the
men's giant slalom will take place.
Sunday, March 8, will be the date for
the men's slalom and the 15 kilometer
nordic race. A second nordic race, a 3
by 5 kilometer relay, will be held on
·
Monday.
·
Overall, the Marist ski team is confi-
dent. Acting-coach Haggerty feels that
"we are at a disadvantage since we
haven't been able to practice in the
past two weeks. However, we're op-
timistic that we'll do well." The Marist
ski team is off to its first nation-wide
competition. Hopefully, the national
championships will become an annual
event for the ski racers. Good luck,
guys!
e4eadem~
WINE
&
LIQUOR
·
26 ACADEMY ST .
.
PO'ltEEPSIE, N.Y. 12601
The head coach this season is
-
first fundamentals last year, and that's so
year man Ted Peterson, a former assis-
important in this kind of a physical
·
·
tant coach at Albany SJate .who feels game," commented
.
coach Peterson.
that the Marist lacrosse team should "We are very, very competitive and it's
Tel. 45Z - 4~
-
I0
.
not be taken for granted.
~'The
intensi~ an emotional group of
.
guys that know
_
ty
these guys show at
:
the practices whaUttakes to play this
.
game. I was
.
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
pro~es they
·
mean business
.
O1.:fr
.
stlcks
·
surprised
,
Jtiat
,
so
.
m~riy
:
of,~them-,had
.
_
are
:
.
ai ·good
as
'a'ny·
·
tearfi":
:
:.vei'wili"
'
b
'
e
.
· some previous experience with the
.
-
·
0
-
-
s~elrig,'·
·
and:lf
_
the
·
freshman· players sport, as that makes thlngs
·
so
·
much
.
come atorig as I e~pect them to do; it easier-on us all."
·
•
.
will be averyJnteresting season."
·
.
With the season opening on April
·
Marist, which ended
·
last season 1stagairist Kean State ih New Jersey,
.
with a 3-7 mark
·
c3
losses were In 0.T) coach Peterson will not only have to
will
_
be
·
competing in the
°
Knicker-
worry which
·
men to play on the
·
field,
.
bocker conference;
·
Division Ill.
:
The but on which field those men will play;
·
teams opposition will basically
·
be the
-
As o_tnow, Leonidoff Field, will be the
same
··
schools that our
·
basketball home field for Marist, but if the ground
team saw
·
in their Big Apple Con-
crews can't get it ready.by then, alter-
ference games and the
·
schuedule, native sites will have to be ready.
while not a long one is avery"challerig-
Since February 1st when the team
.
Ing one for the squad.
·
·
had to practice indoors at
5:30
in the
..
Returning for the Red Foxes at mid-
moming
_
to the cold-rainy
.
days of
field will be First Team All-Conference March and April, each team member
player Dan Costello; and juniors Bill has come to their practices knowing
·
Ciraulo and Peter Bell
•
Added to this
·
that only 23 of them wlll dress tor away
list of midfielders this year are Charlie games
.
This sacrifice by members on-
.
Downey, Bob Burmeister and Jdhn ly enric:hes the teams desire to prove
Lennon, who was hurt most of
·
last that they wiU- be competitive and
season.
.
challenging in the up90111i
_
ng season.
·
The M
·
aristattack will be led by Se-
cond Team·AII-Conference player Lou
.
'
.
'•
Champagnat, Leo arid Sheahan Hall lounges will
·
become available for various student activities
on a fir.st come,
·
.
first served reservation
.
basis
beginning Monday, March 16th.
.
.
.
this means
_
o lounge may be reserved for a
study group, birthday pcirty, backgammon tour-
nament,· group T:V.
,
viewing
·
(outlets
,gre
. available), or any other' activity your
·
resident
di re~tor okays.
, ,~,,,<.
'.(
\.;
ik}~~·
h~1iJQi
,
!lueiti9,11s:
·
•
oi
\~~1d{~u
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.
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..
.
;
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·.
:
_
.
·TOBY'S
TAVERN
24 Violet Avenue
Toby Secone,
Proprietor
Asserlza's Deli
Owned
&
Operated
.
by
S~I Assenza
Class of '72
Sandwiches - Beer - Groceries
Located at
·
-131
Washington St., Pok.
_-
·
,
·
_
_
.
-
:'
·
_
·.
Thanks lor your patron_a_ie ...
..
·
.
·:
:,:
.
.
·
·
-
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•Dive~; Victorious iri
,5
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JtC~nf:
Ch,mPi9rl,
;
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The
:::
1980-81
;·
cci~~etit°i~~
:
sea~on
~
.
- Meda1
·
1nthe~riemeterdlvi~·~re~ent.at
•
witnessed a major step in the direcUon
.
th
.
e
:.,
Conference
<
Cha~pionships,
·
.
·
of molding
·
a
.
collegiate Diving Squad
·
establishing
a
,
new conference r,c9rd
-
·
capable of representing Mari st in t~e
of 357,98 points: l;ie then n~rrowly
·
.
.
Collegiate Division I Di~lng level. This
missed
·
anott:ter Gold
_
Medal
in
the
.
year's
-
Squad, comprised entirely
•
of
-
three meter event, settling instead for
freshman recruits under the direction
the
Sliver for second place.
Steve also
·
of Coach Tom
.
Albright, established .
·
earned
_
the distinction
_
of _becoming the
Marist as the School to beat among
first Marist Diver to
_
quahfy for the N!i~
.
the Diving
Programs
.:
of >the
tiohal Division II Championships,_to oe
.
:
:
Metropolitan Conference Schools.
conducted
·
at Youngstown, _9h10
.
on
.
.
·.
Freshmen
_·.·
.
Steve
:-
Maniaci,
·
.
Jeff March 18 to
.
:
24,
Ph,1s
Two
·
Team
··
welch,:Mike Hayden, and Rich Berger _
Recordifo
botn
events. ,
..
combined their efforts
.
to produce a
· At present, the
-
1981:82 squad ap:
_
dual Meet
·
record of 16
·
wins
.
and
·
2 pears ready to take the next step in the
·
.
losses in the Diving events
·
of the Col-
·
.
building Program of Coach
·
Albright,
•
.
•
legiate
.
Swimming - Meets
.
Crowning
.
as
·
four
. ·
highly
·
talented
c
Freshm~n
,
their efforts
-
In the recently completed
.
recruits
·
joln the ranks. Two wotnen
·
of
·
·
Metropolitan Collegiate
-
Swimming
(
National calibre will expand the Pr~
.
-
and Diving Championships, con-
. •
.
gram in the .Famine direction. Joining
ducted here at Ma~ist;
.
they cons
them
:
will be incoming Freshman Chris
_·
tribtited 67 points to Marist's total of Depew,
·
whose High School creden<
147 Team points, outscoring Division I tials place
.
him on a pa(with Maniaci.
rival Iona College, as well as all other Depew
·
·
is
·
-·
a
,
local talent,
·
havirig
Diving competitors in
-
the process.
·
. devefoped his ·diving as part of the
·
:
.
Earning
special.
·
-
recognition,
.
tv'larist A.A.U.Diving Program. He joins
however;
:
was
·
Freshman
.
Steve
.
;
Freshman
.
standout Jeff Welch as the
Maniaci.
Having won
16
.
out of 18 dual secorid diver to come out of the Marist
meet events ttiroughoi.Jt' the Season, A.A.U. farm system.
Steve went on to capture the
Gold
.
Ucf••iurbHr
whit~ t'Oafa
I
Bud
1s
·
e
·
-
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BEERS
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.
.
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,
_.
'
;
.
..
.
(
.
,
..
·
..
Women's basketball coach Sue Deer _and
.
graduating seniors -Patty
.
Powers;
.
Eileen Carey, Pam Green, Helen Salmon along with assistant coach Linda
Anderson honoring the girls for their years
.
at Ma
.
rlst.
·
·
·
·
·
.
·
·
Photo by Mike Chung
Steve
~_
-
Maniaci
·
a
-
Breaks
·
.
League
.
.
Rec~rds
performance, "I'm very happy with the
·
·
team's performance," stated Cronin,
"We're a very small team and seventh
Last Thursday through Saturday 12
···
place was quite an achievement." "We
·
schools
'
·
all entered
·
.
the Mccann
really swam ·well, Rob Vialez did a
Center
·
for the Metro
·
Conference
tremendous job and Steve Manacia
Championships.
·
.A.fter It was all over was Incredible."
on Saturday, Adelphi emerged as the
overall . victor
•·
with
·
.·
Mari
st placing
Cronin also commented on his own
by
Tim
Breu~r
·
Staff Writer
.
.
seventh. Other schools
·
involved in the. performance. "I qid o.k., I did a lot
~1;3~-
eventwere Manhattan (s
.
econd place),
ter
.
•than
..
J
-
thought I:. would,'' said
WiUiam
.:
_Patterson (third place); and
.
Cronin.
_
proriiri took seventh, eighth,
··
c:c,N.Y.
(fourth place).
:
:
.
:
.
.
..
:· ·
and
.
ninth pla
·
ce respectively
in
the
.
100
-
:.•·
..
In ·-the
·
championship~
:
many con-
:
and 200
.
yard butterfly and
·
in the 200
.
_
_
_
.
d
erence rec
·
ords were broken
·
; Marist's
·
yard tre
·
e
_
style. Rob Vialez took fifth
·
.
own Steve Maniacia broke the league
-:
place
"
irr the 1650 yard
·
freestyle arid a
.
record for the o
·
ne meter dive and in an
_
respectable sixth place in the 500
.
yard
. :;
:
incredible
.
performanc.e;
:
Pablo
-
Val·
-
freestyle
.
·
<
-
•
.
·
_
;
.
'-
..
·
·
doun of C.C.N,Y. broke four records
Captain
·
Steve Cronin also com-
and
'.
was voted
-
Outstani:tlri'{fSwlmmer
.
mented pn the overan championships
of the meet.
_.·. ·
.
.
.
by stating that they were very well run.
-..
·
·
Steve Cronin, Captain of Marist's
Cronin went on to thank Tim Sullivan
swim team commented on the team's
for his help in the meet.
-
·
,
.
Marist Crew Auctiori't:Jight
-
,
..
·
-
.
.
.
,
·
.
· ..
·
--
·.
·
-
·:
·
by
Barry
Le"'!is
·
eluded
:
box sea~s
a't'
a Yankee
•
game,
Sports Editor
.
beer, posters; T-shirts and oars Just to
·
c:.-
·
•
•
. ...
name a few. The fund raiser is for
.
the
·
It's time onc-e:-again for the annual
.
Crews Spring Training finances and
..
Mari st College Crew Auction Night. _On
·
· for any
·
Information concerning dona-
·.
·
.
the weeke!Jd of March 20th (our. first
tions yc;,u can call Andy Mein at Ext .
.
.
·
one back), the Marlst crew team will be
30,5. Maoy were turned back last year,
..
·
auctioning off prizes that you c~11
.
so keep your eyes and ears open for
..
·
.·
cherish anc:t use. Last year
_
s prizes m-
. _
·
the Ume and place. ·
·
By Barry Lewis
.
·.
Wh
-
ile this doesn't happen often, the
;
·
blem,"- commented .
:
Dick
·
Quinn,
season we
,
would take 2-3 hours a day
.
.
.
.
.
-
few
-
times have now added
'
.up ·and
·
building n:ianager and
,
Assistant - and give thatto the team so they could
.
:_
Have.you ever tried to reserve a rac--
.;:
many
.
an
·
gry, hostile· student~ are
••
Ahtletic Directo~. "Wh~n people call
·
practice. We have geared
-
ourselves to
:·
quetball court. I mean walk into
.
the wondering if it wouldn't be easier to
-
on
-
the reservation phone with pro-
an
·
athletic program and even some of
·
Mccann Center, go up to the reserva-
use the facilities in the Center if we
bl ems, they're not
.
talking
.
to the right
ttie professors got-mad. Omf came to
·
.
tions desk and see what happens~
·
·
didn't go here at all.
·
No one is doub-
_
person. If people have complaints, I
me ar:id wanted to know why the gym
.
.
'
because each time is different, and it's ting
_
the reasoning for closing" down
·
wish they would just let
-
me know. We
.
floor was closed
.
J4st because of
.
a
·
. really kind of funny in it's own cynical the courts last Saturday (over-crowded
have policies here, but it doesn't mean
.
·
practice
.'
I told him that he wouidn't
..
way.
-,
·
._
·
·
'
locker
·
rooms, problems of security,
that things can't be
.
changed
.
·
We
want
·
someone playing
,
ping-pong in
·
Last Friday afternoon
·
at 12:00 (the courts needed for half-time meetings),
basically have to geni;trate
·
$125,000
the C':)r
_
ner during one of his lectures."
.
time designated for walk-ins to make but what is
-
armoying to the Marist
·.
worth of income per year to run the
_
_
..:.
-
·
·
•
·
reservations), I tried to get a court
-
for.
,
students is the fact that this is our
.
Center, ~nd we sometimes have
·
to
·
So now that the basketball season·
myself and a young lady for Saturday.- school,
·
so why can't we use our
.
open the building as a Community Col-
.
is over, and the gym floor is free for our
afternoon. The gentleman behind the
·
facilitl
_
es? This also happened to be
lege Center with
·
the ,community in
·
·use,
.
tQurnaments - are· held
·
in
.
the
desk said there were no courts,
_
and I· the last weekend before mid-term
'.
mind."
·
Center. While
.
the tournaments are a
replied "fine, how about in the morn-
break, and a chance to relax our minds
"I don't want it to sound like we are
good way of
.
gaining financial support
.
ing or
_
evening?" "No" he answered,
never hurt anyone, right Mr. Pre~jden~'.?
.
-
closing our doors to
.
the students; as
and outside attention it also hurts
"the
.
racquetball court~ are closed to-
.
'
·
·
.
·
· '.
.
·
·
·
·
.
-
.:
' - -
-
·
we have
·
made accommodations
those of us inside.
'
·
.·
.
. ·
day because
·
·
of
·
the
·
High
-
School
. ·
"We do have a problem of not
·
speci~lly for them~ We
.
have the center
basketball tournaments and the swim-
-
enough courts an~Hoo
·
small a locker
.
open 10-11:00
.
at night Jusr
·-
for
.
the
'
'
Next week, the pay-phone call for
ming and_~iving championships."
·
room, but this isn't really the pro-
students. During
:·.:
the basketball
,
reservations
.
_ .
_
·
.
·
-
.,:.
·
.
__
.
....
25.16.1
25.16.2
25.16.3
25.16.4
25.16.5
25.16.6
25.16.7
25.16.8