The Circle, December 3, 1981.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 26 No. 10 - December 3, 1981
content
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Grd'qildti1Ji
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by Domia (:ody;:
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· . owever. Martin(a c~oss-country ru
.
riner for four years, said \hat
",'"I:_ do!1't feel· li~e I'm ·graduatihg,". s~;s J~dy DiScipio . a C~m-.
!~~r~~~~:So,~~~id
Mbea1rntg1·ns~ent __ ~n ~ne sport .. "This hurt _t.he _cit_her
mumcauon Art
·
"Th h d
·
· ·
' ·
·
' ·
·
·
·
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· Ch .
t -·
d:
m~~~r:
e ar est thmg will be going home for
·
· .Martin said that leaving Marist is going to h~rt "I'~ glad I'm
r~s ~3:s 3:n
nowmg I'm not coming back in five weeks."
.
· :
✓
·ge"tting out to·get a start on the job market but· ' l:k
·
'· · · °JScipio is one of appro~imately fifty· Marist students who will be bye to a second family •, he said.
. ' . -.
1
.
1
s ,
1
e _saymg go~~-
gra uat1_ng at_ the e~d of this semester. Th~r_e will be no senior week; ·_' ~~lph Zaccagnino, 'a Political Science ma·or said. th~t he t · i ·
~r~e~dtng cere~ony __ for_.the~e st~d_ents, Just -~ad farewells to close gomf to miss th
7
P;<>ple at Marist. "When ydu !;ave Marist Colf ~ge~
"I'll b. I d, l
.
.•
t~~
commonahty between you··and your friends is gone,, Z .
a'
d th
~
gh a
i1°
eav~ the term l?apers, the f1~als, the eight-thirties, cagnino said. "The chances of you staying in contact are slirri " ac-
n
e i:ng t .c asses, ut everyth~ng ~lse I'll m1SS, '.' said !)iScipio . ., ·
Z_a~cagnino said !liat he.sees the changes at Marist as havi~ b~th
. wa~~f~! ::~~;i~~a~ifti::ut~1~~::~;ii~:1nm~t~~rtl~~~:~;~im-: rei~!1;~r!i~/::}~;!sc~~~i~~~~e~t•:•r~c:-~~~:ge is takingg r~at
co!?t a;ound and I'll k1!~w ~?m no~ coming back. it'~ scary." .
. with other·universities,,, said Zacc~gnino.
m~re compe 1t1ve
ta I went too fast, said Lewis. However, Lewis said that he's
However Zaccagnino sa"d th
i·
h f
· -~
·
·
J
~~~phi htahs t_heboppokrti!r}tLy to_ gra~uate early. "I have a six month ·. ministrati!)~. These proble1.ns
!m
~or~~e~~t~~~~~~s
:i~hez~~-
n e JO . mar et,_. ew1s said.
·.
cagnino "In the·
·
··
'
•
Looking back on his education at M .
.
.
.
.
.
_1.r great excitement about gomg forward, they leave -
schoolwhere you'll get out of
it
what yo/;~sttin~~1~, said, "It's a
~!:~
b~ween wh,~tzthey're _doin~ for the future, and the studen(s .
"It's a no-holds-ba
d · h' I " · "d
·. - .:
·· -: .
.
re ere now,
accagnmo said.
._
. •.·
_
• .
· Marist' you can et w~:t ~u
0,:'
sai . L~w1s.
If Y,ou. push at. ;, The townhouses are a good example of this, said Zaccagnino .
.
you're ~till lost." g
.
Y.
ant. At a big sc_hool, t_f you push
'.fhey _told the campus.community that they were building them fo; .
. Lewis said that the move to Division I
. .
.
. .. . the s~~!ors, and t~e semfrs that they told won't be here when they're
:~:\~~;o~~·~"t~~~~~~~·:
·:.~n~ncial!yt -~t~~rlt~~v~h: ~~~~!~tdC:~f
~
·-. ~i~~thin~aii;;~~~!ni~~~hi~r~;~;~:; .~:o:~:.::1n!~~;1~iict?;. :~ get
enough money from the spor:
.~PS
u1Hon wont go up it they get
On t~e P?,S1t1ye side, Za~cagnmo said that the faculty at Marist is
Dennis Martin a Com
n·
· · ·
· .
·
" . . . · '
fantaStlc.
The faculty
1
s. excel
_
lent, · not. only .because they're
sports is the bigg~st chan;: 1fi!t;~:n1~ti:r~~~rs:.?Je.~~D• D1y1sM1on I
kno~led~~Tabhle, but) they ~eaHy care about. the s. tudents, '
.
' said Zac-
ra
h
.
_ . · ·
.. .. .
1.,
enms
ur~
cagnmo. ·
ey rea Iy get mvolved." _ _
., _
.. _ _
sp~~t~~.~oon as e came m, wanted Mamt recogmzed through the·-
· As a soon to be alumni, Zaccagn_ino said, "I'm trying to enjoy my
"It'_s a good mo_ve for h
lastfewweekshereandgeteverythmgoutofitbeforelleave."
} _e .college as .a whole,'' said· Martin .
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, MarJ.st
College,'Poughkeepsie,
N.
Y.
Volume
26,
Number
10
:-December
3, 1981
Tonight for the second time this semest~r
.. the lights will dim and the curtain will rise
on·an original play
in
the Marist Theatre.
_
''Penny· Stealers," a play by Dean
Gerard .Cox, will be presented tonight,
Fri- ·
• day and Saturday at 8 p.m. ·
·
Cox is optimistic ~bout the play which
.
was. written for· pleasant.entertainment.
"This is a . prime example of a modern
., play," said Cox.•
. There is no admission for the play but
~he producers have asked that anyone .who
attends brings pennies with them. Ttie pen- ·
·
nies
will
be collected and th_~. money·wm be
given to a local children's· organization for
Christmas presen,ts. •
Pi~\~ys·,coI1ti:n.1.le··.i.iJ·loun.ge·•·•·I~h0yatiPns
by
Steve Cronin .
La M6rte said that he'was al~c, Iooki~g
~
.
.
·
·
· into donati9!}s as another way of getting
· A lack ofcommuni~tion and a
.
~c~tcfty
either the sets, or the money to buy the sets ..
of funds seem to
be
0
the major factors \As itis .now, the money for the sets will
-
holding up improvements io be made in the come from the housing budget and through
·LaM_orte out/in.es r;lorm· changes-.
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lounges throughout campus; improvements
fines collected_Jrom students. _..
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promised students almost a year ago. · ;~ .
Seeger said·that if "housing could come
Both housing director Geoff Seeger and across some good buys," then perhaps they
Assistant Dean of Students Fr ::Richard La would purchase the sets. He said that this
Mone said that money is the main factor .main concern is how to make sure the sets
holding back the purchase ofT. V. sets
Joi-
are not stolen: He said that he's looked into
the lounges. La Morte said tliat the type of many : alternatives, . including . an alarm
T.V.'s being investigated, 24" color sets _ system run to security through the campus
would cost about $400. a· piece, not in- ·_ telephone lines, a system employed in many,
eluding the cost of installing them and ar-
motels. -
.
ranging for security measures. ·
-, Another concern is finding T. V.'s that
He said that at the time this makes it dif- --
will
be able to stand of constant usage, he
ficult to purchase the nine sets ne~ded to. said. "A major. concern is will they last."
fill all the lounges. As a way around this,
In the case of the promised ~rtwork, a
La Morte said that he was looking into pur-
lack of communication seems to be the ma·
chasing a few portable T.V-.'s and making jordifficultybeingencountered.
them available .to interested groups· of . "It's all depending _on one meeting,"
students through their R.D/s. Thestude
_
nts · .said Dave Rielly, one of the eight students
could use these sets by attaching them to a
who volunteered to help decorate the
cable hookup found in the lo_unges. '
continued on p·age 12 -
·· Saying that ''making the dorms a Jiv-
ing area," was his major concern, Assis-
tant Dean of Students Fr. Richard La
Morte outlined sC>me of the changes be-
. ing. made",-to make dormitory life more
enjoyable,
. _ .
.
_
Among the' changes already instituted
are the establishment of , an _
exercise
room in the basement of Leo and of
both exercise--and "jam" rooms in the
basement of Champagnat.
< ·
·
La Morte said that although the· exer-
dse room now on
_
Iy contains some mats
and p_11nching bags he is looking irito_a
way of allowing · students who. own
weights to store them there so that they
will have a place to workout. La Morte
· said that the purpose of"the "jam"
room is• to provide student/musicians
. with a place to get together and practice.
Another change• La Morte noted was
the new policy concerning use of the·
lounges.,"If some students want to get
together and -say watch Monday night
football and drink some beers," they
can do it in one of the lounges in their
building. La Morte said that first -the
students would have to see their· R.D.
for permission. He said that then the
students would be responsible for polic-
ing their gathering and· cleaning up
afterwards. La Morte noted that some
groups have already successfully taken
advantage of the new policy.
In the future La Morte said that there
were plans for installing vending
machines in all of the lounges as well as
the T. V. 's
am
artwork that had already
been promised.
---Page 2·
THE CIRCLE·
~ecember3, 1 9 8 1 - - - - - - - - -...
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••• AND
SOMENF.W
·
-rowNl-lOU'SE5
f
OR·.
LI
TTLc
DENN
J'S.
Looking ·ahead
With this, the last issue of the paper for
From th~ beginning of the semester until .
this semester, comes a variety of emotions
now we have stressed how gladly we would ·
from the staff. We would like to express
·accept your suggestions and how we could
these to you now in the hopes that you will
use your help. Our attempts aLbroadening
be· able to understand where we are as we
the scope and variety of campus coverage
look to next semester.
has not been very successful because no
Putting together a paper every week is a
one takes our offer and helps.
·'
. '
big job, but a job that we as a staff have
Recently we received a petition informing
grown to love. We are very pleased with the ·
us 'that students want national and interna-
work that we have done thus far; we are also · tional news in The Circle. We have been
awa~e of the long road to perfection thatlies
·
. debating this idea all semester but one pro-
ahead of us.
• .
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. . .. ·. ·· .·. . blem holds us up.
,.
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. :. , J!.Wo~l9J).~,extr.ei;D.eJy
1
d.ifJiqMlt
fe>(
ypu, ,as}}.•·, ..
Tti~
J:!r<>plerl} l,ies jn\the factthat orce p~o
0. •
. readers; not to acknowledge·.the progress
· pie make a suggestion they drop out of sight
the'.paper has mac:ie
sine~. the first issue in,,. :· a,:id don't stic_k:around t9 help cany it out.
September .. The compliments and·. en-
Your suggestions•and concern _about what
couragement we have received from time to
goes into The Circle. are nice, but having
time were very appreciated by all of us.
-your bodies here.to aid in the production
One thing has failed to change, however,
would be great. ··
·
student participation. We are a student
We can't please everyone if no one is will-
newspaper and we encourage your input.
ing to work with us. As w.e -look ahead. to
We rarely receive any, though, and this
nextsemester, we look forward to your sup-
puzzles us.
port.
Take time
.
. Readers
·Wdte
All letters must be typed trlple spa~~ wltli a 60 space ·margln,'and submitted IC> the_
Circle office no later than 6 p.m. Monday. Short letters are preferred. We reserve the- .
right to edit all letters. Letters must be signed, but names may
be
withheld upon re• ,
.
· que!II. Letters
will
be published depending upon avallablllly of space.
. .
·
.·A-O~K.? Noway
To the Editor:
there something wrong with our
. We are writing in response to qualities? What exactly di.cl they·
the
"A-OK
Freshman Honored" do to show they have this talent?
article. One point we would like
As..for Torie Seeger's comment
to make is, what does Dean Cox
about "it was important for these
consider the remainder of the
individuals to feel some sort of
. freshman .class if we arc not the
accomplishment," do we not
"cream of the· crop?'!·'How is it
deserve some sort of recognition?
that we have not adjusted? Do we
We have taken -this letter as a ·
· .. - spend too little' or too much time._ great insult and we would a p-
in the pub or library? What have · preciatc an explanation.
the ''95" other's done we have
The unadjusted, unaccomplished,
not? As for the comment· about
bottom-of-the barrel?
them being, "the type of
in:. ·
·
Freshmen
dividuals we will have to turn to
P.S. Peter -Amato aren't you
for leadership in the future," is
glad we are here?.
· Apathy· and. Hunger.
To the Editor:
'-
· 1 would like to address all .of
those students who did not attend
the Convocation Day activities.
When I arrived in the morning, I·
did not really know what to ex-
pect, but as the day progressed I
became aware of not only the pro.-
blems of world hunger, but also
the proble_ms of our own student
body! So many students seemed
indifferent to the activities and··
some even refused to attend-the
activities.
In the·discussion groups, it was
noted that there is a problem wJth
public involvement. I feel that
there will be a severe handicap
restraining the progression of
· world development as long as the
public refuses to acknowledge the
problem. It was depressing to find
that so· many students expressed
this lack of invelvement!
So, you,. the stu.dent who did . ·
not show up for. any of the ac-
tivities, I wish that you would be
able to recognize the presence of
problems outside of your own lit-
tle world. The .problem of world
hunger is real and I hope that you
will acknowledge it before it
reaches home. Think of the oil
shortage the world faces now, and
realize the terror of a similar food ·
. shortage! PLEASE,
if . you do
not,hing else,
ponder the fact that
.. the prDblem exists .. ·
..
Thank-you for being concerned
·enough to finish reading this let-
ter (it is a start anyway). ·
Meg Adamski
DearB~rry
To Barry Lewis:
.·· them for second place behind :the
· I.arri not the type
of
person to : first place. Skullriders
6cO-O;
The
. jump on the bandwagon, but for
One~hitters won on a last. minute.
.• · you
UI
m_ake an c,xception; You
touchdown pass, 16-i2.'
· have taken
·
· some heavy verbal
"Th'at paved the way for the best
abuse , for the ''Persuasive · game of the intramural season,
Female" article and rightfully
sq,
The Skullriders vs. The One-
you deserve
it.
It
was· a "silly"
Hitters. There were about 80-100
thil)g to writ.e about; it seemed as
people watching this · game. So,
though you had nothing else to
Batry that must show some in-
write about, and that is where a
terest. The game ended regulation
·
. · lot of guys jump on the band-
.
time in a 7-7 deadlock. The One-
.. wagon. The cause, for your total
Hitterswon in
1
'overiime" 13-7.
ignorance of the flag football in-
The same atmosphere followed
tramurals. You never printed a. t,he next day in the championship
word about it. Instead you ramble · game,betwe¢n The Meres and The
on about girls who watch guys a--
One-Hitters, . and again. Barry
-s at Marist football games,· and
there were almost a hundred peo-
you even give ink to '.'Powder . pie watching'rrom the sidelines; -
Now that Thanksgiving vacation is behind
us, and it's time to look .toward the
Christmas holidays, as everyone's trying to .
crack the books before that dreaded last
Puff."
.
.. .
. In _another excellent game·,.The
schoolwork-is out of the way. It really ls too
Maybe there is a reason why'
One-Hitters heat the Meres 12-6,
bad that by the time the last week rolls. -
there was no ink, but.to tell the
,
: for the.1981.C;U.B. Intramural
around, we all seem to just want to finish
truth I can't think of any .. 1:he
Championship,·..:
•ii'
,
:,,-:·
/>
·::?
week is upon us.
··.·
· .
. .. .
.
·
It's not ·easy to feel the holiday cheer
when finals are staring us in the face, but
it's only fair that we take some time away
from • the· books to remember what
Christmas is all about: people.
.
After spending another semester living,
socializing, and going through classes with
some pretty special people who won't be
with us for the holidays, it's time now -
in
· . these last few weeks -
to get together and
create some holiday spirit of our own before
December 18.
· Everyone's been saying that they can't
"get into" the season until all the
The
Circle
Co-Editors
Associate Editor
Feature Editor
that last exam and tear out of here. But keep
skullridcrs finally lost,
·
- so·· that
·• So_ qack'to tHe_questio11,:''why
in mind that w_e've got five . long weeks ·
might be. a reason, . being that
no :ink?''
·
Barry,·. we. stiU- dqn't
ahead with Mom and Dad, and th~ only time
there are several on the staff, but
know. We won the championship
_.
we have to celebrate in the Marist spirit of
I don't want to say that, because
fair.a_nd square.
'All
I-can say is•(
Christmas is now, in spite of finals week;
they are good guys, and I know . hope your <:overage of future
in.:
they\vould never do such a thing.
tramuraL sports improves. · It
. So don;t let the papersand the finals spoil
But, be~ides this issue, there wa~
might even be better for you; this
the mood -
yes they're there and . they
no coverage before the skullriders
way no girls could make a fool of
won't go.away, but hopefully we can all find
lost.
.
. .
you, it would be playing it safe by
time to get into the spirit. Whether it's com- .
So, due to lack of ink; I will iri-
printing sports instead of gossip.
ing home from the Renaissance at
4
a.m.
form you of how the season went;
That's your job: anyway, right
• singing carols with a wreath around yot.ir
The Meres and the Football Team
Rona ... oops I mean Barry.
head, or blowing off a night of studying to
·
played in the division°one
·
"Johnson" .
· watch "White Christmas," it's that time of
playoff, and the Meres won 19-6.
an inkless OneaHitter ·
year to be around people that you care
In clivision-two, The Out Patients
about and get that old holiday "glow."
·
and The O!'}e-Hitters ef!ded up
with 4-2-0 records, which tied
continued on page 8
News Staff
Jane Hanley
Terri Sullivan.
Sports Editor
Rick O'Donnell
Staff
Theresa Sullivan
. Denise Film, Karyn Magdalen,
John Kraus, Joanne Holdorf, Pal Brady
Barry Lewis
Nancy Brennan, Tim Dearie, .
. Tim Breuer, Pat Cullough,
_Business Manager .
Maggie Browne
MarketinglAdvertising
·
Jeanie O'Rourke
Joann.Buie
Distributio~ Manager
Terri Tobin
Photography
Maggie Browne, Grace Gallagher
Jeanne LeGloahec
Staff
Donna Cody, Christine Dempsey,·
Peter Fredsall, Karen Johnson,
Jean-Marie Mag reno, Joanna Rosato, Patti Walsh,
Copy Editors
. Karen Flood, Denise Film,
John Petacchi, Ken Bohan,
Bill Travers, Dennis Martin
Cartoonists
Ted Waters
Social Editor
Allison McCarthy ..
Janet McNamarc1
Fa_culty Advisor ·
David McGraw
December
3,
1981 - THE CIRCLE· Page 3 - - •
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•
~ehind the scenes
ai
the fashion show
.
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by Julie Donbr6ski ·
·
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' , .
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in many of the heavily made up faces .
.
.
.
On the
,
brightly Ht,
.
stai-k~white
.
plat-
fo~ms
·
and ~•~ep stairways, they· pose,
tw1~l
,
and ~hde
.
to th~ music, modeling
their
-.
outfits,
·
then disappear from the
audience's view, through filmy curtains
into darkened
:
rocims
.
where the facad;
of polished perfection is dropped and
startling contrast to the backstage
disorder. A clutter of clothes
,
bags,
bo~es, accessories and make-up flows
amid the weaving looms, drawing tables
and
·
mannequins usually found in the
Most of the students agree
.that
the
quick changes are "the worst part of the
sho,-.:.'.' One says, "Wheri you have two
·
routines back to back it's
a.'
real pain .
.
H
.
"The last few nights I stayed up sewing
chaos reigns supreme:
·,
•
·
On stage, in their annual fall fashion
show,
.
the sophomore fashion design
students. smile
·
and dance with ease
through rigidly disciplined routines.
:
Backstage
:
another performance in tak-'
ing
:
place; an unrehearsed show of emo-
tions
.
and actions the audience doesn't
see
.
.
: .
·
,
Before the sho~ starts, fashion direc-
tor David Leigh wishes
..
his
.
students
luck; telling them to
·
"break a strati'
(fashion's equivalent
:
to the
·
show
·
business catch phrase
.
"break a leg").
The lights go down, and the silence
backstage is deafening, until the roar of
the music erivelopes the rooms .
.
The blazing emptiness of the stage is a
fashion rooms.
·
·
·
.'
Make-up mirrors provide the
·
only
light, as the students scurry back and·
forth; · casting eerie shadows on the
,valls .
.
.
·
The pace is hectic and tensions run
·
high as the students rush to make their
curtain calls
.
.
."When people are throwing
.
clothes at
'
you, there isn't enough light and your
own outfits have been moved, you just
want to screen," says one student.
A
collage of staccato sentences can be
heard above the beat of the music,
revealing a series of small crises.
·
"Does anyone have a
brush."
·
"Where are my shoes?"
.
"Help, my zip-
per is
.
struck!"
.
_
·
A student sprints by screaming, "Oh,
·
my God, I'm supposed to be in this
.
number." She screeches to a halt at the
.·
stage entrance, smooths her outfit and
·
calmly steps out onto the stage.
.
.
New York DJ shows
tricks of the trade
by Jeanmarie Magri"oo
to television," said Fornatale, in criticism
of media today. He explained that radio is
.
..
Almost everyone that lives in the New· usually the first place people hear the news.
York area and is interested in rock has After they hear the basic details, they turn
heard the name Pete Fornatale. He is one on the TV, and TV
-
coverage is given air the
of the- top DJs in New York and can be credit and glamour.
.
heard on WNEW FM 102.1
::
If
you were
However,
·
December
·
s;
1980 the roles
.:
.listening to WMCR on Monday, November were reversed. Most people heard the news
Meanwhile a voice in the dimness can
be heard saying, "It's not coming off
.
For God's sake, just rip it right off
me.'' A few seconds later a plaid jacket
files through the air · and
·
lands on the
floor.
.
The models fidget as they wait their
turns to go on stage.
"Look how hard I'm shaking," one
girl says as she held up her hand.
"I'm so nervous,
,
J smoked a whole
pack of cigarettes today," another
adds.
One of the students takes a long drag
on a cigarette and passes it along, say-
ing,
"I
just want to get this whole thing
over with.''
A bottle of white wine in a brown
paper bag is silently passed around for
those who feel they
~
need a boost of
.
courage.
"It
calms me down and keeps
me up," a girl explains as she takes a
sip.
The signs of fatigue are clearly etched
,
23 at
.
3
:
30 you would have heard his of John Lennon's murder first, on Monday
"·
_,_
familiar voice. Fornatale took time ciut of night football. Instead of
'
staying tuned to
...
.
his schedule to come up
.
qe~e and spen~l'a _ the,
TY
for
.
the_ details, the peopl~
'in-
.·
.
:.
.
day with the Marist community.
-
,<-
/
...
,
.
·
stim:tively ht:aded for
,
tl,leir radio, to vent
·
·
.
. . < .
.'
,
.
•
.
;;
;
:;
;.:
.
As
,
s9on
.
as
·
hearrived
:
at
·
3:00,Fomatale
-
·
theif
:
frustrations with thenews;
.
music and
-~;
'./_:
r::·:)
;
\fas:tak~µ
·
~ciBpp)llqrman)
_
R,adio
.
Broad~
/
!11¢mories
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casting cfass, ,vhere
:
he gi1ve
·
a brief pr~en~
;:
.
·
..
The ~•children
·
of the Bea ties instinctively'
':t
·
.
-: ..
talion. Then at 3:30, heh~d a live interv,iew tur~ed on radio for help,»said Fornatale,
'.::
'
.
with Bill Palmeri oilWMCR. From 4:30 to
·
Radio
·
still possesses the ability
.
to touch
.
.
·
5:30, Fornatale held
a
seminar forthe
·
staff people
·
s• lives in a way that television can-
,
of
WMCR,
telling them how he entered the not, because radio :Succeeds where doctors,
•
field,,and his experiences as a DJ.
·
technology, and everything else fails .
.
Later that evening there was a presenta-
·
For'natale cited that radio does not get
-
tion in the theatre
.
which was op
.
en
to
alf
•
the recognition it deserves because it.is so
.
•
students, in which Fornatale
·spoke
.-
o(
commonplace.
"It
is everywhere and peo-
·
America's "media-drenched society.'' He pie are constantly listeQing to it without
.
used a promotion
.
al film of the Doors per-
really hearing it," said Fortanale. It gets to
• .
_
forming "The Unknown Soldier"
·
to
ii-
the point, where as unless you are listening
'
lustrate the power the
·
media has.
In.'
this
·
for something specific you do not hear it.
•
case, it kept a band alive that does not exist
Fornatale got his start when· he was in
.
·,
anymore; not oiµy alive, but one
of the top coHege, working on Fordham's radio sta-
.
bestsellers.
.
.
..
tion. From there, he went to WNEW and
.
"Radio plays thernle of sacrificial lamb he has been there for the past 12 years. For
the past two years, besides being one of the
top DJs in New York, he has been busy
writing a book entitled
Radio During the
TVAge~
He said hewas prompted to write
this book out of a sense of frustration. Not
much
·
is known, or written concerning
radio in the·past 30 years, and Fornatale
decided to remedy this.
Fornatale's day
of
presentations and lec-
tures was sponsored by the Lecture Com-
•
my outfits,"
says
one student. Another
admits, "I just finished sewing my
costumes at 6: 15 p.m. today."
An obstacle often encountered by the
students is an inability to retrieve ac-
cessories that have been deposited in
another changing room.
The solution? The boots and belts are
thrown from room to room across
·
a
walkway in plain view of the audience.
Mishaps, such as a boot hitting the wall
and bouncing down the stairs, are com-
mon and such accessories have to be
re_trived by a student sidling out on stage
wtth a cane or crawling out with a coat
hanger to hook the offending article.
As another opening night show ends
and the flurry of excitement dies down,
audible sighs of relief can be heard.
L~igh sits proudly in a corner watching
his students receiving congratulations
from the audience and Susan Moore a
member of the fashion departme~t,
smiles in satisfaction and says,
"One
down, one to go."
mittee of the College Union Board, chaired
by Loretta Kennedy.
Mike Wiese, CUB
president, who was responsible (or showing
Fornatale around campus said, "I was very
impressed by him, he was knowledgeable
and concerned about the life and future of
radio."
Fornatale
.
said he was very impressed
with what he saw at Marist. He said the
hospitality here was excellent.
Faculty Profile
Lou Zuccarello
>
.
. ;:
.
by
~~~e
Hanley
:
_
.
that I learned and
·
accomplished a great
.
.
deal in that.time.''
.
.
.
In
'
the ranks
·
of college administration;
·
Previous to his position
'
as Academic
·
·
where moving up to the top
_
is the name of
·
Vice:..President and Dean, Zuccarello has
.
the ·game,
.Or.
Louis Zuccarello·has
-
bee
.
n
served
:as
·
coordinator
·
of the criminal
there and back
by
his own choice iri:his 16
justice program, and has chaired and serv-
s
years at
_
Marist College.
ed on many organizations, such
·
as the
·
After serving, as
-
Academic
•
Yice-
Coi:nmitJee on Faculty Development, the
President and Dean from 1975 to 1980, as
Academic Policy Committee, the Fa·culty
··
·.
well as Chairman of
.
the' Dep
_
artmerit
.
of
_.
Library Committee, the President's Plann-
,
History and Political Science before that,
.
ing committee, and many other prof es
-
.
.. _
::'..
Zuccarello returned to his "first love" -
sional and academic-oriented committees.
-
•·
full-tfme teaching- in 1980. "It was a per-
He is a recognized political analyst, and
.
-
·:
sonal lifestyle decision," says Zuccarello of
has been awarded many honors, such as the
·
this switch. "I just wanted to do it. I enjoy
"
Presidential
·
Citation
·
Award
for
•
teaching, and I felt that I had accomplished
Distinguished Service at
..
Marist and the
.
what I wanted to as an administrator."
Mccann Foundation Doctoral Fellowship.
As Chief Academic Dean, Zuccarello
Zuccarello, who studied at St. John's
..
·
.
taught one class per semester, in spite of University as an uridergraducffe, and
,'.:.
the wide range of responsibilities and
achieved a Master of Science in Education,
·
·
demands that this position involved.
a Master of Arts in Political Science, as
Arnong thes
.
e responsibilities were the plan-
wett- as a Ph.D. from Fordham University,
ning,
.
implementing,. and control of the
has taught history and political science at
College- Operating Budget, as well as the
.
both high school and college levels. His in-
supervision of the administrative staff; the
terest in public administration extends into
divisional chairmen, the graduate pro-
.
his personal research undertakings, which
gram, the faculty, arid the student body.
he is developing at present.
·
"It
was very demanding and time-
In viewing both his administrative and
consuming," says Zuccarello, "but I feel
teaching experience,
Zuccarello says,
"Both
·
contrioute to the educational pro-
cess, but teaching involves more direct con-
tact with students
.
In teaching, I can rely
more on myself, because the scope of
duties is more controllable. I can do more
academic.things that I have interest in, such
·
as program and curricular development,
and can pursue personal research pro-
jects.''
·
Sixteen years at Marist as both an ad-
ministator and educator have given Zuc-
carello several insights into the changing
conditions at
-
Marist. "The college has
grown,"
·
says Zuccarello, "but in spite of
the changes, basic values remain. One thing
that I admire in the Marist community is
the presence of real human
· -
concern
between its members. There is a general
humanity here that isn't present at all in-
stitutions." This, he feels, lends to the
good academic, administrative, and per-
sonal relationships at Marist that unite the
community.
Zuccarello also cites the flexibility and
innovative quality of Marist as an in-
.
estimable value in the college's develop-
ment. "This college will take risks -
it is,
in a sense, a daring institution
.
We try
things out," he
says,
"and this stimulates
Louis Zuccarello
and encourages the academic climate," a
necessary s.tep in the expansion of a small
college, says Zuccarello.
"In spite of the changes, much remains
the same"- he said in summary. ''The basic
values
·come
through. There is a core that
holds us together as a college."
r
i
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.
.
·
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-_
.
-
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-
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.
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.
f.
I
Tony Cardone, Marvin Sims,
J
.
oe Verrilli, K. Babcock
·
Yes boys, its finally here B-Guido's top
ten bodies on campus, and here they are:
1. Chris Tuite
2. Nancy Wysong
3. Nicolette Filannino
4. Patty Bowls
5.
Kathy Shea
6. Lisa Fegley
7.
Maryann Constantino
8.
Pam McGregor
9. Jeanne Novotony
.
10. Sheryl Bassford
·
Honorable mention - Lisa Rossi, Sue
Shcewchow, Mary Morino, Diane Jackson
and Borinie Mauro
.
With the recent amount of more beams
being put in Champagl}llt, for support,
Seiters has been asked/f o remove the ice
cream machine which has been the cause of
all this!!
-
B-Guido's Christmas
'
List
Tom Shannon-a pair of shackels or a 100
.
ft. chain.
·
Geof & Richard-townhouses.
Patti Bowles-round trip tickets to Kan-
sas
.
Tim Grogan-a date with the beast.
The Freshmen Class-five weeks with no
verbals.
So
.
up Campbell-Ha!
.
Ha! you were a
naughty boy this year.
.
John Higgins-a new
1982
Model
#43801Z mop.
Bob Kaminsky-Bruce Lee's autograph.
Bonnie Mauro-an
8" by
10" picture of
B-Guido's.
John Kurtz-a steel plated cup.
Kevin Babcock-a pair of diapers.
The Wenches-Man;n Sims
for
a
weekend.·
·
.
Carla Morello-one pound of Salt Peter.
Ziggy-a 6'x4' piece of plywood
.
1st Floor Girls-an 8 by
IO
foot
poster of
Kevin Babcock nude.
.
Dick Keelan-a pick from the top ten.
Marvin Sims-a trip to see his idol Gary
Coleman.
Kelly, Karen, Barbara
·
and Bernadette
0
wait till next year.
·
To the Whole Maril!t Community-a safe
trip home and a happy ~oliday! !
·
Jokes
-What kind of M & M's
.
does Tatoo eat? De
Plane, De Plane
-
Did you hear about the kids who threw a
rock with a note attached to it into a
McDonald's window? The note said "You
deserve a break today
.
"
·
-How
.
do you stop a charging lion? Take
away his. credit card.
Jean Novotony-a fox trap.
. .
Boo's of
the
Week
·
·
.
Sudsy-one dozen eggs.
·
Boo! to Andy Shea for finally
.
getting
Billy Gillespie-a
.
freshman class to call drunk, at a cost of $70.
.
.
·
his own.
.
.
Boo to all you scrooges, Boo!
Doc Menapace-a lifetime subscription to
.
Boo to
.
B-Guido's for always booing
B-Guidos.
you! Boo!
·
Jim
-
Raimo-an electric chair
·
for people
,
We'd
like to thank everyone
for
a very
with morethan
2
verbals.
.
good time this semester
.
Have a nice vaca~
Barry Jamisonswhat do you need.
tion
.
Next semester 8-Guido's will return
·
Chris Somers-a pair of underwear.
.
and
.
our class enrollment will increase by
Judy Discipio-coal in your shoes.
1507o while the Pub
·
wm cut the number of
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RESTAURANT HOUIS:
.
11 AM 'till 10:30 PM
,
Rt. 9
.
• Hyde Park
229-7969
;i
>-
~
,al------.,---~------~--~-----......
"'
-is
~ ~ ~ ~
WHITE LIE
Thurs., Dec. 3 .
.
..
.. - i s ' - - - - - - - _ . ; . .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
___
j
i}
SURVIVOR
Fri.&Sat.,Dec.4&5
0
.
C
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!
~
HARVEST
Sun., Dec. 6
rl
::i
~
·
i°a\
~!f~~~~!~~~to~;t~
~~~,~~g~fcitil .
.
·
•
·
/e
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it
lets
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.
·•
R.inn
.
~Jt\her y
_
our
$3
.
00
cover charge always includes
1
free drink
.
.
.
.
""
•
., .
.
.
.
-:-
•.
:
:.
·.·
,'
.
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~iii..-~~~iii!i!.---------~---~
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-
•
.
11!11
__
_
_________
~
...
N~t
let!
,
~egarding
··
.
·
•.·.
·
Housing for Winter Intercession
.
Jan.
4, 1982 -
·
Jan.
22
;"
1982
.
AU those interested in being
'
ho
.
used on campus for
the winter 1982 Intercession should
.
come to the
·
·
•
·
Housing Office by
·
·
December to make these
arrangements .
. ·
The Room Rate will be $6.6?/day. The total
_
amovnt, covering the length of time you will be on
campus must be paid to the Business Office prior to
the finalization of any Intercession Assignment~
No Food Services will be provided during the Winter
Intercessions.
QUESTIONS?
Please come to the Housing Office
/
ASSENZA'S
·
.
•.
~
DELI
.
.
131 Washir1gton
St.
COFFEE~SANDWICHES
;
.
.
G
ROCERlES-BEER
.
·
.
··
·
·
·
..
.
·
.
.
·
·
Owned
by $Cll
Asenza
\
Class
·
of
-
'72
.
.
.
•
.
'
.
.
Open
7
DOys
a Week
6
a~m
,
~ -
-
9
-
p.m.
452-4772
i
i
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.
._
,
..
,
,
~
:
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·.....:
·
·
--.----~--..... - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - ; _ _ . . . ; . : _ .
_ _ _
.;.._ December
3,
1981
·
THE CIRCLE· Page
5 - - -
,
,
.
.
M(!lristgriid
:
.·
:
_
·
_
._
:
-·
"a
·
·
z
•·
•
··
•
z
·:
·
le
··
·
;
s-·
-
. :
:,
.. ··.«~
.
.
·
.
.
·
.
.
Bfoadwdy
by Terri Sullivan
.-::
;
Origi·ri~lly produced at the Old Coal
Cabare!
'(the
Jury Room) in Poughkeepsie;
-
and
,
tw1ce and
,
Marist in 1977 and 1979
Mass Appeal opened on Broadway Nov'.
12:
.
.
.
<
Mass Appeal,
a
play written by Marist
alumnus
-
Bill C. Davis; is enjoying a suc-
.cessful
run at the Booth Theatre .
.
In an over-the-phone interview from his
home i_n Connecticut, Davis revealed that
he
·was
nervous when
·
the play
·
operied bu1
was
.
"relieved" when the reviews came out.
.
.
"I felt the play was good," said Davis,
·
"but I didn't know how the critics
.
would
react. The critics ultimately de\ermine the
.
play's run so I was relieved-and pleil'sed-
when !he reviews appeared.''
..
.
Davis, who graduated in 1974, explained
that the response the play received when it
was
.
produced last year at the Manhatiari
Theatre Club, where Davis is an active
member, made it feasible for the piay to bt!
.
taken to Broadway.
.
"The production there was essential for
·
the play
to
go_ to Broadway," said Davis,
"because there it won so much recognition
·
through good reviews."
.
.
.
·
Mass Appeal is the story of Father Tim
Farley (Milo O'Shea) and Mark Dolson
(Michael O'Keefe). Father Tim is an old
Irish priest who loves his material valuables
.
and is not as concerned as he should be
about spiritual matters.
Mark Dolson is
a young, radical
seminarian who frowns upon both his
fellow seminarians and Father Tim for
.
.
their
·
·feigned
religious
dedication
.
.
Although Father Tim warns Mark about
·.
his image al}d does not like his sermons, he
.
.
..
realizes
·
tharMarkhas the vitality
·
and spirit
'
,
,..;
:
,
to
Hmalce
.
the
church alive
:
again
:
';
·: \
~
;
C
;_
,
.
..
:::'-:-
There
"
is both humor
:
and passion in t
.
lteir
.
·
confrontations,
';
winning Mass
·
Appeal
.the
approval ofveterantheatregoers.
.
,
.
.
·.
.
','
The play, showing on
·
Broadway' is ess!!n-
.
tially the
same
as
,
the show
·
performed at
Manhattan
·
Theatre Club~ The only dif-
ference according to Davis, is that Michael
.
O'Keefe replaces Eric Roberts as the young
·.
seminarian .
. ·
"The different actor changes the impact,
.
·.
but· people like it just the same," said
Davis .
.
"People come, they think, they
laugh ..:... in general, just have a really good
time.!
,
'
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
.,
Davis
.
went on. to explain the play has
·
..
undergone certain changes sine¢ it was pro-
·
,
du
'
ced·
'
in Poughkeepsie arid at Marist,
changes that
·
involve the focusing
·
arid
editing.vital to.any
.
play.
.
..
·
.
. .
Davis said, "The first time you write a
.
·
play it's like you·ju~t met som~one;;the se-
.
cond time is like taking a train ride with
them: You b~in
.
to deepen the characters
.
upon the third and fourth revisions, then
.
it's like yoµ've moved right in with them."
.
Davis receptly sold Jhe movie rights
·
to
·
.
Mass Appeal and is eager to begin the
screenplay.
.
"P
1
·
th
. _
_
..
.
.
eop e come,
ey_
·
think;
·
they laugh---in
gel)eral, just have a
good time'
_
'
.
"I thought seliing the rights was great,"
•
said Davis. "Now I have to start at the
beginning and bring all the characters who
were off on the sides into the story and
develop them:"
_
Davis attributed a large part of his suc-
cess to his days at Marist, specifically to the
help he had received from Dean Gera~d
Cox and other instructors.
"The atmosphere at Marist is very
favorable
to
those interested in creating
theatre."
said
Davis. "Dean Cox along
·
·
with (Jeptha) Lanning and (Milton)
Teichman showed incredible interest in my
work . and were very encouraging.
l'm
thank
fut
for that now."
Dean Cox, who had Davis in his theater
courses (the same ones offered today) was
p
..
LAJrB
·
r
.
~ -
~with
.
Davis on opening night of Mass Ap-
peal
.
on Broadway. He explained the
,several
sets of changes the play has gone
.
through from its first days until now. _
..
Cox said, "After it was first done here ft
was taken to New York where Davis receiv-
ed help from theatre people with it.
.
By
the
.
secon
.
d time it was produced here it had
become glib and clever, losing its original
sensitivity and warmth:"
Cox went on to say that after Davis
.worked on it again he got the main focus
back .
.
"Being produced at the Manhattan
Theatre Club and getting
it,
ready for
Broadway deepened the clarification of the
.
two characters," said Cox. "The motiva-
tion is clearer now."
paper,".said Cox. "The young playwrigh1
needs to see his play
to
be able to com-
municate more effectively
with an au-
dience."
·
Metanioa was one such play Davis wrote
and viewed here at Maris!. He has recently
w..ritten the screenplay for this under the
name Internal Combustion:
•
Marist will be sponsoring two bus trips
to Mass Appeal this month. On Sunday,
Dec. 6 the College Union Board
is
sponsor-
ing a trip for students. There are fifty
tickets available for $15 each and students
.
can
·
contact Barbara McMahon or Karen
Mc:Geary for additional information.
The second trip
·
is for faculty and staff
on December
12
for the evening perfor-
"The first time you write a play it's like
you just met someone ... upon the third
and fourth revision, then
-
it's like
.
you'~e moved right in with
_
them''
Davis was one of the reasons Cox started
experimental theatre on campus.
"I
was
convinced that people could learn more
through watching a play on stage then
through
_any
number of revisions on
mance and a reception is being held after-
wards by President Murray.
Davis will be in attendance at both per-
formances and
Dean Cox
sees
the
December 6 showing
·
as an "excellent op-
-
-
-
"I felt the play was
good, but
I
didn't
know how the critics
would react. .. I was
relieved-and
pleased-when
the
reviews appeared."
port unity for students to
meet
and talk to·
Davis."
Davis himself is quite enthusiastic about
the people from Marist attending Mass Ap-
peal. According to Davis, Marist is more
beneficial than even Harvard or Yale for
the theatre minded because of the many op-
portunities for creating and experimenting
the school offers.
"There are so many places on campus ro
put on a show," said Davis, "all you need
is a little imagination."
·
For aspiring playwrights Davis added,"
Take the help and encouragement you are
offered at Marist. Take full advantage of
it.
It
pays off," said Davis.
,
·
,
I
:-
, I
. j
•
j
·•
I
.
j
·-
I
I
·
.
J
,
.
I
r
t
~
:.,,!;.,,; .. ,,
,
.. -, •
_ _ _ Page
6
~
THE CIRCLE·
Dece_mber 3,
1981.: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · · · - - ~ - ·
· - -
The
f Ood problem.at
h.oine:
C3.fetefta.Waiste
'
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
by
Ivan
Navas ·
. three factors multiplied together' gives
the
amount of portions· needed. ·
· . .
.While the Marist community has turned . .. To illustrate he used the chicken meal:
its attention to the issue of world hunger,
l ,000 is the attendance;
1.
7 is. the seconds
Seiler's food service is. fighting a food pro- ·. factor; . 75 is the acceptance factor. The
blem much closer to home-waste.
·
answer, when worked out, is 1,275 .portions
At the Marist cafeteria, 14 to 15 percent
needed.
of the food purchased is wasted, according
To find how many chickens are needed,
to Al Oldmixon, ma1_1ager of Seiler's. That Oldmixon divides by four a quarter of a
compares with a waste factor of 17 to 18
chicken is a portion). Thus, 319 chickens
percent nationwide in · food operations
are needed. Multiplying this figure by
2.5
similar to Seiler's, Oldmixon said.
(weight of chicken) he finds 797 pounds of
To give an idea of the numbers involved
chicken are needed to serve a-meal 'for din-
in an operation such as Seiler's, he said,
ner. . .
"In an average week approximately 2,800
· Oldmixon praised the Convocation Day
quarts of milk are consumed."
emphasis on World hunger.
"It
is an ex-
Trays that ·are returned or -left at the cellent idea which I can see may bring a
table with untouched or half-consumed
positive impact," Oldmixon said. "We
. food are a problem Oldmixon confronts . cannot be pessimistic since·20. years of so.-
everyday. "The problem I see is the· eyes-
meone's lifestyle and habit are not easily
are-bigger-than-the-stomach syndrome,"
changed." He said that if only 20 percent
Oldmixon said. . .
.
of the people become aware it would be
Ways of combatting food waste include
beneficial.
··
a survey or the usual use of control sheets.
Oldmixon gave an example-of what was
A survey given out in the cafeteria was
offered as food service
af
another~college. ·
compiled by the Inter-House Council food
He said, "At Vassar College
h
was the·
committee to find out what foods students
policy to provide a meal without unlimited
liked,
according
to
Oldmix·on.
seconds." Oldmixon said that ide!l is go_q_d
"Preliminary findings show that what
in that the student is forced to eat all that is
students prefer is an American fast food
served, but it is -not realistic·
for
Seiler's .
diet, like hamburgers, french fries, and piz-
community at Marist College .. • · , ·
za, to mention a few," he said.
Marist College students who work as
Oldmixon said that the survey would
servers in the cafeteria often have the best
help cut food waste by,giving .a better idea
view of the waste~,Ed St. John
.cfaip,
"They
of what students want to eat. ·
(students) don't seem to like it or they take
The usual way to combat food waste is
too much and fail to finish it. Or they don't
through quality control and using control
like it and they take it out on us and leave it .
sheets that monitor the number of people on the table."
·
·
who consume a certain amount of food.
. A somewhat similar response came from ·· food as they did before."
foods, he-said. "Some products can be us~
The sheet for a recent dinner showed that
Kathy Crowley, who said, "I think the
According ·
-to
Grace Gallagher, a ed l:mt not hamburgers: being reused for
75 percent·· of the students consumed
students. abuse the food .. They· complain
member of Campus Ministry and the Com-
meatloaf.: It is more expensive to save food
chicken, 20 percent had shrimp fried rice
about the food but they should expect that. ·munication Arts· Society, 25 commuters --than to .use it again." Oldmixon said, ·
and 5 percent had the vegetarian meal.
institutionalized food is never top quality."· and faculty gave money to Oxfam,Nov. 19,
"Economics wins over moral standards."
To determine how much food is needed,
Helene Askine observed what is a basic
while a total of about 620 students signed
He gave a specific example with ham-
three factors must be taken into account:
complaint. "Most people return·theirfood away their dinners .. Campus Ministry, the ~burger meat. He said that. if cooked ham-
attendance, "seconds" and acceptance. -...... .
_
because it's. either unappetizing or cold,"
Spanish Club and the Communication Arts .burgers. stored at 32°F are. recooked at a
The second factor is the number of en-
she said. Jennifer Bohanan observed- that )Society organizecri:he drive_" fqr Oxfam, a temperature to 140°F to kill
•
.. bacteria
.
trees taken by each individual.patron, while C_onvocation Day had .no 1:ffect.:''As
fa!_
as;<· gr<Jup wor~ing to ~~lieve wo~ld ~u11g~r.
_
. , . ·
.
...
·
. ~nd/orflo
_
ra.a third time aro\ind, .the nutri~.~~
·
.· Jhe acceptance fact()t i_s
.
t~(
percent. of : I cansee, the Co!lvocationDay did little o_ri
it
A.sked.why onlX a dollar 1s g1ven to <:)x- :t1~nal_v,~lue of the food is)ost: Oldmixon ,
students who take a given meal. These, -.·no good;" she said. ''People waste as m1,1,ch;, ':\f!tm. for every _mealdonat_ed by a student, said,
-A.ny product that . has ;_, beent:, ··
·
·
)'vis}
G_allagher said _the
.
:manage1J1ent _of • fepfoces~ed must be utilized and cannot be ;;
DEEi
·. Quality Sandwich
Meats
At.·Most
Reasonable Prices
Salads • Soft Drinks • Ice Cream
Open Nightly
1·:
36!).m. - I a.m. -
See us for your floor parties.
Special
·
Platters Available
:Seiler;s,told her thattherest of·the money · reheated fora third usage;'!. ,·
,
: ,_..: ;. , ;·. • ·. , .
· is ;needed to cover overhead, salaries and
OJdmixon saicl;
'·'.i\s
:..a food service we .
other expenses.;-:- -
· • •·
. .
.
.· . · are contracted lo providethe needs of the_
;
· ··
•
·· Sometimes fi1_1ancial corlcerns encourage. students arid it is not encumbent upon us to
·
waste; Oldmi_xon said,;"lt's economical to provide
-
nutrient information education to
.discard
a
1)roduct rather .than to, pay the. the student body.''Basically; he said,
"it
is
;-labor_; to, reprocess· it into· food or ·some :
UI)
to the student to use his/her upbdnging
• foods." The reusing of food is not always to decide what to eat and to make a,wise
the policy and is_ only done with certain decision."
,
·
· -· · -
Sabbath dinneris this Friday
. . .
·
'·
'
.··-.-·
Marist College will hold its first Sabbath consists of wine, · challah (bread);- fish, _. _
dinner on Friday at the Byrne· Residence 'chicken·.· vegetables~;: noodle·. pudding · and
Hall. This event will take place from 5 to - dessert.
On
Saturday afternoon a special ,
7:30 p.m.
·.·
dish called chulent is also served. .
.
.
There will be a charge of
$1.
.
. .
.
.
.,
. .
-
. ,.
The Sabbath is considered a day of rest ·- Everyone stands up _and the man of the •
· for the Jewish people. The Sabbath is · house recite a'blessing on.the-wine; After ·.
welcomed into the home with the lighting everyone has spiritually washed· his' or her
of candles by the woman of the house. The ... hands for bread with the blessing everyone·
family gathers around the table to. watch \sits down and the tn'an says a blessing ov.er
this and when the candles are. lit everyone the· challah and c~ts a -piece for everyone.
wishes each other a good Sabbath.
. ' , . . The meal begins, and the :house is 'very
The family then·goes to services at the tranquil. No.one is in a rush and-during ,
synagogue on .Friday night and Saturday dinner thoughts of the Bible are taught.
afternoon. Atthe conclusion of each· ser-
Persons- interested in attending the din~
vice the family:goes home and .eats one of ner Friday should. contact Elise Linden at
the two traditional' Sabbath meals which the Post Office .
.
·
: ,·
· An excellent haircuttery. · _-.
:
·
Now
featuring
CELLOPHANES,
the new
non-peroxide
haircolor/conditioning system with unlimited color
choices. and excellent sheen.
WAIRCUTTfR-S
·$2.00 Off
With /\Aorist 1.D.
Tlil:
curt1:v,.- -
3 Liberty St, Main Mall, Poughkeepsie• 454-9239 • By app~t only
'
-• - "" - • - ~ .. ......,..,.,_.._, _ _
, _ _
__ « -
w
-,.~r_ --...--•r--n---
~
~
•.•·-~--••··-~.-s-..__,,__.,..,._.. __ -
- - - - - - - - - - ~ _ , . .
.... ....,,... .... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
....;,.;.
··
,
..
·
_ _ _ _ _
....,_
.
December 3, 1981 ·
THE CIRCLE· Page
7 - - -
by
BIH
Palmeri
.
:
the next few years (Billy Squire, Pat
Benatar, Survivor; Loverboy, etc
..
), it was
.
.
-~·
Wdl another week
·
isgone in thecontinu-
only
a
matter of tinie.
iilg history of roe~ and roll, and the Ston~s
. The difference between. progressive
are still
_in
the headlines (Syracuse this
music and Americans is simple. In England
time), but who really cares: In this writers
and most other countries the Bowie/Queen
mind the event of the week as far as Marist single is
'
#
1,
in the U.S. the fourth version
is concernecl was the special visit last Mon-
of Foreigners firsi album is at the top of the
day by Pete Fornatale. Pete who? Thats charts.
·
··
·
·
·
• what I
·
thought you would
.
say, but ma)'be
.
Grand
·
Funk Lives, so thats what the new
if you weren't apathetic,' well lets move on.
,
albuin says.
I
·
know the lyrics are on a sixth
·
I
gµess
l
could give a review of ~is lecture grade level, but people this
.
is the roots of
or his ilew book _but I'll skip that. Why?
_
American Heavy Metal or were you in
·
sixth
Well 1:,ecause if you
·
were interested you
·
grade
·
at the tinie. Oh by the way Ozzy
would have been there. Hey wait a minute
I
Osbourne is making a fool out of Ronnie
didn't know
·
about it .
.
Probably because James Sabbath.
·
·
·
you did not listen to
91.9
or dial ext. 132,
By the way
l
would like to compliment
so just go buy the book.
·
·
.
Loretta Kennedy,
Mike
Weise and whoever
Look for the record industry' to be flood-
else was involved
.
in bringing Pete For-
ed with Led Zeppelin cloned type bands fo_r natale here. Also
I
would like to thank
:
NUNZIO~S PIZZA
-
.
530 MAIN
-
STREET
..
OPEN: 11:30 am-3:00 am
Weekdays
.
.
.
11: 30 a.m.-4:QQ a.ffl.
Weekends
Fast Delivery
SPECIAL-OF.-THE-MONTH
$3.75 Pies
;
.
.
.
.
.
471-0223
.
·
.
~
~
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
c4eGclem~
;
·
WINE
'.
&
LIQ
·
uoR.
26
A.CADE-MY
ST.
·
.
.
PO'IIEPSIE~ N.Y. 12601 ·
-
·
·
-Tel.
-
412
-
-4X.I~
--
•
Park.Discount Beverages
s
ecials
-
This
Week
SCHLITZ Cans
$6.99
Case
Old Milwaukee Cans
$5.99
Case
·
.
Beck
$3.49
6 pack
ALBANY POST ROAD
HYDE PARK
•
Random notes
Barry Lewis for the best sports reporting at
Marist in my four years here, The Circle
and
WMCR
are going to miss you.
What happened to New Wave? Besides
the Police and the Clash every body else
has disappeared or become a one hit ghost
band. If you don't believe me take a look at
the album charts of the past few months,
all veteran rockers (Moody Blues, Rolling
Stones, Genesis,
-
Bob Segar Kinks, San-
tana, shall I continue)
.
The one year anniversary of the John
Lennon Tragedy is upon us again so please
·
don't give in to some money monger trying
to make a buck off of it. (do
I
have to ex-
plain) Please join Frank DiGilio and
myself for a serious John Lennon music
special on the anniversary. Also please try
to give a minute of your time in silence
sometime on December 8
.
WMCR Playlist
TOP ALBUM PICKS FOR THE WEEK
WMCR PLA
YUST
(Compiled from BILLBOARD and ROLLING STONE Magazines)
I.
Foreigner- Waiting for a girl like you, "4"
_
2
.
The Police- Every Little Thing She Does- "Ghost in the Machine"
3. The Rolling Stones- Start Me UP- "Tattoo You"
4. Genesis- No Reply at All- "Abacab"
5.
Genesis-Abacab- "Abacab"
,
6. The Kinks- Destroyer- "Give The People What They Want"
7. Queen and David Bowie- Under Pressure-Queens Greatests Hits
8. The
·
Rolling Stones- Little T and A- "Tattoo you"
9. Journey- Don't Stop Believin'- "Escape"
10. Stevie Nicks- Leather and Lace- "Bella Donna"
NEWLP's
J. Geils, Steve Miller Band, Black Sabbath, Adam and the Ants, Pink Floyd,
AC/DC, U2, Ozzy Osbourne, Neil Young, Joan Jett, David Byrne, Henry Paul
Band, David Bowie .....
.
Upcoming
'MCR
Events ·
TOP
10
COUNTDOWNEVERY TUESDAY PM-w/ Ed Powers
ARTIMUS MID'NT Lightning Every Monday PM
HOLIDAY MCR MESSAGES to your friend or loved one.
REGGAE - EVERY THURSDAY NITE WITH Robyn.
Fone_qu~sts or a h9liday message call EXT 132 WMCRADIO
.
.
-
-
.
.
,··
· ~
.,-
•
----
-
-·
:.
~
-
;
-·•
·
. .
-
.
~
~-
-
-·
-
.
_
.--
..
·
-
,
,
,
,_.
_.
--
HOMESTYLE ITALIAN
MEATBALLS
&
SAUSAGE!
Served hot with peppers, onions,
and melted cheese - if you like -
on afresh foot-long roll. Tastes just
like·you made it at homei
.SU Bfilill[g)~
We've got more taste.
PARK DISCOUNT PLAZA
HYDE PARK
(Next
to
Carvel)
Open
Late
Glamour seeks
10 top students
·
Marist
students
are invited to participate
in GLAMOUR Magazine's 1982 Top Ten
College Women Competition.
Young
women from colleges and universities
throughout the country
will
compete in
GLAMOUR's search for ten outstanding
students. A panel of GLAMOUR editors
will
select the winners on the basis of their
solid records of achievement in academic
studies and/or in extracurricular activities
on campus or in the community.
The 1982 Top Ten College Women will
.
be featured in GLAMOUR's August Col-
. lege Issue and
will
receive a $1,000 cash
·
prize.
Anyone who is interested in entering the
search should contact Chris Lapham, in the
Public Relations Office for more informa-
tion. The deadline for submitting an ap-
plication to GLAMOUR is December 15,
1981.
.
.
.
.
'
·
··
·
t
r
)
•.
·,
s
.
-
·
-
·
-,.
_.·
.
.,
_
._
;,
...
~
,-
...
·
.
.
..
.
.
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•
.
.
-
'
,
... ;
1
,
...
•
... ~.
,
.
f
•
•-
:
..
·
·
-
·
·
•
...
...
.
-
.
..
.....
·
·
•
,
.....
,.
.
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.
'
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.......
,,
..
,
.
.
.
.
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,
.
,
.
.
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...
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..
, . ;
.
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:
.
.
,
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.
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....
....
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· - - - Page 8 -
THE CIRCLE·
December 3, 1981
.
.
.
·
D~~lltS
·
•
,
GQrivoCatiOh
pa~
,
i~
,
~,l
;f::
;~J~j
t@;>/.<
·
.
·
.
S
_
tudentspraise
·.
·
.
. .
.
..
g~oup leade~ in thldis~ssio~s that folio~-
.
Eddie
.
said he hoped
.
the ·convoc~tion:-: &'ltgi"'.es u~ a b~e~tboffr~shair.•:
_:.
:
~
{~
)1
,
0:_
·
· ed convocation. She said such things .were
·
would become iriore than
.
a
.:
lecture. ~•1
.
.
,
·
Casey
.
.
\Vas involved
,
m
the· d1scuss1on
.
. .
.
h
.
t
.•
·
.
discussed as the establishment of radio would like to'see the convocatiori
:
asbeing
:
groups af'tenh~.s~ch
:
alld said theY
:
Were'
;
.
SpeeC
~
OplC
:_\
system with. the coliege
·
students
iii
other
·
the starting pQirit of something; otlierwise,
. ·
excellent .
.
She said
.
5-9itle
·
good
·
i
_
<leas 'Yere
..
.
countries to see
·
what they need and
_
to try it was worthless," said Eddie.
.
.
·
_
...
> .
·
.
generated in
_
her group such as writ\ng let-
to provide thein with what we could. The
There were some negative comments
·
ters to
·
congr~ssmen, urging them to
-
look
,..
.
...
idea of putting a crate in the center of cai:n-
from students. Katherine Bowering, a non-
into
.
the matter .of world
.
. hunger,
.
fo see
When the word "convocation" is men- · pus
.
for donations was also discussed, Har~
traditional! fullstime student,
.
s;iid
.
she
whai is
.
nee~ed. Also, t_he i~ea of preparing
by Susan
Vassallo
tioned, the word "man~atory" generally rison said.
- :
i
·
·
·
.
.
·
.
.
. ·
·
.
thought
_
the speech was too general and
cooked fooii for donauonsmstead of
.
a
qm
follows and the emotional upheayal of
.
T~~
fact that a big lunch was served after that there were no solutions offered.
off the shelf was suggested
~
Casey_said;
.
..
.
distress is o'ften not far behind. With these the convocation discussions did not go over Bowering said she thought the conv
.
ocation
.
.
·
Dean Gerard ~ox tho':Jght the
,
speaker
same sentiments
·and
perhaps a shimmering very
.
well. "Lunch was inappropriate," should
.
have pertained more specifically to
and the speech was most appropriate
_;
~•The
of hope
.
that
this convocation-would be dif-
said Harrison. "Our attention was drawn
Marisi. "We have enough problems here,"
standing ovation,•~ Cox said, "was ample
ferent, faculty, staff, and students enrolled to eating instead of hunger."
said BowerJng. However,. Bowering too,
proof of the student's sen.sitivi!Y to not
.
on-
.
into the
.
gym, some up to
.
a half hour late,
'Harris
.
on, who spent a
_
year abroad,
.
agreed that
·
ignorance' towards world
ly a personal need,
_
but one
.
(hat they
Nov. 18 to see just what was in store for agreed with Dr. Kutzner. "The U.S. is
hunger was widespread. "Students are
.·
recognizeasasodetalileed
·
asweU
-
.'.'
:
.
.
.
•·•··.
'.
them.
.
isolated in thinking and is unaware," said
limited to what they know," said Bower-
C
Cox said th~t:.the tim~ng of the convoca-
Harris
'
on. "We don't realize the extent to
·
•
-
ing. "We've never been hungry.'
.
'
.•
.
.
·
·
.
tion, given the topic, was
.
very appropriate
_
.
To many's surprise, the }llain event of
th~ day turned out to
.
be an attractive, well-
educated woman, Patricia Kutzner, a Stan-
ford University graduate, who spoke about
the world's hunger problem and the United
State's lack of action.
The students appeared very attentive,
and unlike at last year's convocation,
-few
walked out. Quite the contrary, when the
speech was over, she got a standing ova-
tion.
.
·
Several students praised the.day's events.
·
"A lot of good ideas came out of the day,''
said Marianne Harrison, a senior and
which our style of Jiving effects others." . Sentiments among the faculty were
.
very
and f9rtunate. "President Murray
:
was i
_
n
Dr. Kutzner had said that the United States
positive. "The speaker was well chosen,
the. Far
_
East on a government sponsored
and the Soviet Union were on the bottom
dynamic, and_gave a very good presenta-
trip,''
.
said Cox.
-
'~And,
.
we had alrea
_
dy,.
of the list as far as having information
:
tion," said Janice Casey, a faculty member
planned World Hunger Day.for.the follow-
available to them concerning World
of the English Department. Casey said she
.
ing day,
_
" World
i
H\mger Day involved·
.
Hunger.
·
remembered last year when the students
·
students
·
giving up a meal and Seilers, the
Simon Eddie, a senior
.
from London,
walked ouL "The speech was just Jong
·
camus food service, donating one dollar
England, living iri the United States for
enough," said Casey.
"Students
were very
towards
.
world hm1ger.
..
··
·
>··
··
.
• •
...
.
three years riow, said he thought the con-
attentive/'
·
"All in all the day was'·a
;success/'
said
vocation was much
·
better than usual. ·.
Convocation has traditionally been a. MattChandler, a senior.
·
"It's a great
.
feel-
"Lots of students aren'
-
t interested in
time when Marist itself was
-
reviewed and _ing to know that youf school cares enough
discussion," said
.
Eddie. "There is a
new developments were reported to the
.
to try to do something aboufworld hunger
'.
.
general dislike
·
of official school
students, but not this year. "I think
·
it's
.
-I
.
mean, really do
·
·
something,''.
·
said
meetings."
good to bring outsiders in," S!3-idCasey.
Chandler, "ne>t_just
_
talk-about it."
More readers write
Missing courses ·
other students
·
in
.
the same
,
one to explain the absence of such
..
cle,
·
"Marist
to
Launch Major
.
_
entertaining
.
·
and. productive
·
pre<licament.
lt
was turned down.
·
a -course to a potential employee Co-op Program,''
"
Dr .. Florence
.
semester. Our
·;·
special
"thanks
to
To the Editors:
Isn't 25 people sufficient to
as he scans the resume? The op-
Michels
·
was
identified as
.
·
the
·
Management and employees
•
.
This letter is in response to the consider scheduling the course?
tion available is to take the course representing the "Psychology and
of Sielers
;
for their cooperation
spring schedule of 1982. There are Last semester I took a course that
at another college
...
if they have Sociology
.
Division:" The correct
.
.
during those enjoyable
WMCR
·
many seniors like myself who had
5
students in it. This semester
it.
-
title of the Division is Social and
Put? Nights.
_
We would like to
need a marketing research class to I'm in a class with only 3
I feel that if a student is going Behavioral Sciences
.
and it in-
_
wish everyone a healthy and hap-
graduate. Unforturiately, the students.
to pay over $20,000 for an educa-
eludes Criminal Justice.•
. ··
·
PY Holiday and look forward to
course is
not offered next
Although it has been made
tion, the school has
·
a commit-
.
Thank
-
you.
.
seeing you in the semester to
semester. I can't understand why known to me that I have the op-
-
menlto at least prepare an effi-
Barbara A. Lavin
·
_
come. -i:hrough music,
.
news, in-
a mandatory course such as this tion of taking another course in
cient schedule, and not to
·
print
-
·
formati<;>n
.
on and about campus
·
one will not be offered next another conc
_
entration
·
(i:e:, the
misleading
·
information in the
·
,
we
·
are here to ser'{e you in many
semester. The Marist College labor
,
relations investment
.
·
catalogue.
·
.
·
·
·
WMCR
:
·
--
ways, so get involved and listeii.to
catalo~ue specifically
'
·
states that
.
analysis course) inorderto suffice
·
·
·
· ·
'
Ferg Foley
·
your college
•
radio station,.
Marketing Researchis
.
offered in graduation requfreinents . .l
can't
,
w·
.
·
-
~:
·
:·
·
·
· ..
;
TO:CircleEditor:
:
.
.
.
. .
.
WMCR.
.
-..:
·
.
·:.
·
.
both the fall and spring. So where stress
.
the importance of this par-
.,
·
.·
·
.
fOilg-1).atne
~:.
:
,
·
.
<
The staff of-WMCR would'like
~-
-
.
· ·
-
..
.
HAPPY HOLIPAYS,;;
.,
is
it? One
"
sfodent submitted a
'
ticufar course as a key concentra~
.
'
.
.,,
,::.:
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';
·.
·
.
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·
.
i_
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,
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to
·thank
its--dedicated
·
·
lis'teiiers'
.-.-
.
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,._
.
,,.·
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~d
.
Rower
_
s-Prog
!'·
DirectorfiJ
..
.
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\
MARIST
.·
COLLEGE
~
'
.
.
'
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"
.
·
BOOKSTORE
'
.
.
.
''Wishes
¥ou
Happy
Holidays
.
'
_
'
.
· YOUR
COLOR Pic'TIJRES
:
DESERVE THE BEST
• •
•
#
•
•
•
•
•
:
·
:
DAILY PICK-UP
&
DELIVERY
OPEN 10-5 MON-FRI
We~l'e
.
more
than a bookstore.
-·-~··-
,
;·-:..:: ~..:;;."":' .
.:..: . ..:.·.;:.:.;~:.'-..~!;' ..
:';.,":;!~~~ ..
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/
---~~~~-~--------------------------------December~,
1981- THE CIRCLE• Page
9
.. AfftliOt
deqrieStreiltment of Crime victims
.
.
'
.
by
.John
Kraus.
· A gtinman_enters a small store in a City.
He confronts an· 85-year-old woman who is
· the cashier of the store. ·
.. . The gunman demands that the woman
. '~Ncf crime~ are senselses~ When
a
gunman··
blows an old lady away, · it's a · power-
play/'
_
.. , .
.
-
· · give him all the money in tile ·cash register.
Crime Victim's Book was published in
who are most likely to commit crimes."
Handing_ over the
$35
that was in the
1979, spoke:to
a
group of Psychology ~d
Bard said that all crimes, ranging from
regist~r, the ~oman asks if she can keep a
Criminal Justice students in the Fireside
thefts to homicides, can be viewed on a
dollar for her subway fare home;·
. Lounge at Marist on Nov. 18.
·
continuum. Crimes on the left of this con-
The gunman shoots the woman dead.
"No crimes are senseless," Bard said.
tinuum, such as theft and burglary, violate
A
senseless crime, right?
"When a gunman blows an old lady away,
the victim's external self, according to
Not according to Dr. Morton Bard, pro- - · it's a power-play.
0A
criminal gains a sense · Bard.
fessor of psychology at the City University
of pQwer and control through his crimes,
Crimes on the right of the continuum,
· of . Ne'-".· Yprk. Bard, whose book,
The
he said. "It's t_he powerless of our society
such as rape and homicide, violate the vic-
r----~----------------------•-----.tim's
internal self, Bard said. "The victims
of all crimes, even· property crimes, speak
-
.
.
.
.
.
. . ·..
i
.
·· .•
····'.i"•·...
'
'"(SUPER
NEW YORK
CUTS)
..............
•
. at
· 49
Ac_a.demy Street
.
(Near
"Good
Times Ccife"
. Ample Custom•r Parking·
Hl1
ancl Her
·aoov·PERM
SHAMPOO-· CUT
I
.
.
,
.... $35.00.
·•1910
OPEN ..
G.
SPECIAL
AND BLOW DRY
From$
5~
0 -
Open
Dallr
10-8·
No Appointment Nec-.sary
of the· feeling of being dirtied or violated.''
Bard
said
that · until . recently
psychologists have had little interest in the
area of crime victimization. "Crimes are
looked upon as competitive encounters,"
he said. "The crime victim is viewed as the
·loser. Th~re's been a denial of the victim as
a person."
The criminal justice system has also fail-
ed to recognize the crime victim, according
to Bard. "The state (any state) wants. to
preserve only the public order," he said .
"But the individual wants to preserve his
personllood." Bard said that the state's
voice dominates over the victim's voice in
the court room.
. .
Bard added, however, that 32 states now
have laws which enable a crime victim to
hire his own private prosecutor. "But the
private prosecutor must work under the
public prosecutor," Bard said. "This is a
step in the right direction, but more is need-
ed and I don't see another step coming for
quite some time," he said.
The treatment that police give to crime
victims· is often inadequate, according to
Bard. "The police are often the first
authority figures to arrive at the· scene of a
crime," he said. "The crime victim looks at
the policeman as
a
parent symbol. If one of
the first things a policeman asks a robbery.
victim js, 'why didn't you scream?', he's
going to increase the psychic harm done to.
the victim."
·
Bard said that the police do well when it
comes to treating social disorder, but that
they're inept when-it comes to treating the
psychic needs of persons in crisis situa-
tions.
Bard served with the emergency services
division of the New York City Police
Department. He said he worked in hostage
negotiations and suicide prevention.
"If
I
learned anything, it was that. in order to
regulate behavior, you have to understand
it," he said. "We're not teaching cops how
to handle people in crisis,"
Younger and better educated pe_ople are
entering the Jaw enforcement system than
ever before, according to Bard. "Hopeful-
ly, they'll have an impact e>n the system
before they're corrupted," he said.
Regarding how a crime victim should be
treated after the crime, Bard said that they
should be given lots of emotional support.
"They should be listened to and be allowed
to vent their experience," he said.
The first two weeks after the crime are
critical, according to Bard. Even a purse
snatching will. cause some people signifi-
cant psychological harm, he said.
"If
the
victim needs it, he should get specialized
counseling. There are crime victims
porgrams and agencies available," he said.
Bard said that there is nothing anyone
can do to prevent being a victim of a crime.
"You can reduce the risk of being mugg-
ed,'' he said, "but there's no prevention .
It's just the matter of being in the wrong
place at the wrong time.''
. · ·
For Appo_lntlMnt,
call
As,t-HM
Circle Reviews
· ~Commlltel'S: Save 20%
·check
out
m.eal
.
/
-
~
·-
-
,
. ticket plan-good in
Dining Hall. On-ly:
Commuters
&
Residents:
Save
10%
Check out coupon
-
---:-...:..,
.-
-
.
.
· booklet. Good in
.
.
·
Coffee :Shop,
.
Deli
. and Dining Hall
·
Purchase of booklets
may be-made in
Food Service Office
Hillm~n
a~d
Roberts
Here's yet another review from one of
Poughkeepsie's best rock and roll clubs,
The Chance. Thursday, November 19-, was
definitely a night to · remember as the
acoustical team of Chris Hillman and Rick
Roberts performed a sweet repertoire of
classic tunes .
Hillman, starting the evening on a 12-
string guitar, and Roberts harmonized
beautifully in their mellow, somewhat
country-style voices. Best known separate- ·
ly, Chris Hillman was once with the Byrds,
and then joined Gene Clark and Roger
McGuin to form McGuin, Clark and
Hillman back . in the mid-70's. Rick
Roberts' unmistakable voice can be heard
as the lead vocals on any of the Firefall
albums.
Not more than· halfway through the
show Hillman pulled out his famed man-
dolin and gave Roberts the 12-string. They
broke into a wonderful version of
"Colorado' by request, followed by
"White Line Fever," "Devil In Disguise"
and "Livin' ls Easy." The small, but elated
·crowd was pleased until all of a sudden the
curtain closed after only an hour long per-
formance.
With a standing ovation
Hillman and Roberts came back for one
encore, ending the evening with their ver-
. sion of the popular Everly Brothers hit
"Wake Up Little Suzy." The audience was
extremely pleased with the quality of the
show, but discontented with the length.
Playing for about an hour before
Hillman and Roberts was the Eddie
Kirkland Band, a mean blues band.
Kirkland, formerly with Otis Redding and
Johnny Lee Hooker, played as a true
master of the blues guitar. with a drummer,
bass, and guitar as backups, the band
mellowed the audience with typical blues
tunes and then pumped out a series of jam-
min' songs featuring Kirkland on the har-
monica. "Kansas City/Bad Whisky" got
the crowd wound up for a dynamic ending
as Kirkland jumped from the stage onto the
dance floor where there were two· fans
boogying. He proceeded to play his guitar
in a Chuck Berry likeness, crawling on his
knees and actually lying on his back. The
crowd.appreciated the excellent musician as
a showman too.
The Chance offers nightly entertain-
ment. The Chance is located on
6
·crannell
Street on the Main Mall in Poughkeepsie.
Ginny Luciano
' _
Forest Haus Res·taura"i1t
For those of you who are looking for an
unexpected pleasure in Hudson Valley din-
ing,
and want a change from steakhouse or
Italian fare, a meal at the Forest Haus
Restaurant in Wappingers Falls is a not-to-
be-missed experience. ·
The main entree choices focus on Ger-
man cuisine, but you don't have to be Ger-
man to love it. Bratwurst, Weisswurst,
Knockwurst, Sauerbrauten, German-style
pot roast, and many other combinations
crowd the reasonably priced menu. Accom-
panying the main course is
a
choice of
"spaetzels,"
or,
homemade · noodles.
vegetables,
potato pancakes,
potato
dumplings and good old American home-
fries:
The menu also carries a superb choice of
steaks, roasts, and seafood for the less dar-
ing diner. However, the real ''piece de
resistance" was the never-ending salad bar
that can come dangerously close to filling
you up if you don't save room for dinner:
Tuna salad, macaroni salad, real German
potato salad, relishes, vegetable combina-
tions, sausage patties, as well as brown,
rye, and pumpernickel bread to accompany
a hearty German potato soup, crowd the
salad bar, and once you've chosen from
this selection, no salad bar will _ever com-
pare.
There is also a small bar that stocks the
best German beers, stouts, and ales to
satisfy individual taste. These are served in
hearty ale mugs that make one want to sing
German drinking songs (if we only knew
some).
The decor of the Forest Haus is a perfect
setting for
a German meal: outside. the old
German-style house is adorned with statues
of yodlers and drinkers, and inside, the ·
cheerful, homey dining room combines
elegance with a certain European appeal.
A
meal in these surroundings would not
be complete without
a selection from the
dessert tray, which boasts such favorites as
Black Forest cake, cheese cake, apple-
cheese struedels, custard horns, and carrot
cake, all made in the kitchen and served hot
· by the German-born owners.
.
The prices range from
$8-$14
for the en-
trees, and all in all, it is a reasonable bill
for this escape from the ordinary.The food
choice and content is practically flawless,
as well as filling.
'.I
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10-
THE CIRCLE•
December 3, 1981--.---------------------------------
.
Bar patrons disturb
The Inquiring Photographer
North Road:residellts·
'
.
"
.·
·-_,
.
,..
.
by
Debra Borger
have admiration and respect for the in-
stitution as a whole, and I do use the chapel
occasionally," Mrs. Greer said. "Students
seem friendly when on campus, but
somethirig happens when they are in a
Marist students have recently been accus~
ed of disorderly,, conduct during the early
hours of the morning by concerned
residents of North Road, Poughkeepsie.
group coming home from the bar." .
.,
· Students leaving Skinner~s, between the
hours of 3 and 4 a.m., are causing distur-
bances as they return to campus said some
residents of North Road.
· .
·
Most of our neighbors across the street
have lived
fo
their homes· for years· and
years without any problems from Marist
College students. Residents said that the
college brings employment and prestige to
the area, but rowdy students are beginning
to destroy its reputation.
'.'We are concerned not only with our
safety but with the safety of the students,".
.said Mr. and Mrs. Casseta, 69 North Road.
"There is constant noise and hollering .
around 4 a.m. almost every weekend."
Mrs. Casseta said, "My mailbox has
"I have been living in my home for the
past 35 years and I've watched it grow,"
said Grace Freeer, 77.North Road. "We've
had disturbances in the past, but lately it
has been getting worse and worse."
been knocked over a few times and if we
don't have a mailbox, the mailman won't
leave our mail. I can't accuse all Marist
students because my granddaughter attends
Marist College and
I know her and her
friends wouldn't dream of destroying the
property of others.
It is a shame that a few
rotten apples have spoiled the reputation of
L.
the school 'with its neighbors along North.
isa Maggio, sophomore:
~•We're not pay-
Road.,,
ing $7000 to have them put, us out in the
Mrs. Freer said, "My mailbox has been
knocked over twice and beer bottles are
continually found on my front lawn. In-
considerate shouting has awoken me from
a deep sleep on many occasions, especially
on Friday and S~turday nights. It's
Four Marist students also reside on - streets for Thanksgiving.,,
.
frightening."
/
Although Mrs. Greer has little affiliation
with Marist College presently, her son
graduated in 1964, as a Biology major.
"I
North Road djrectly across from the
school. Dee Nell, a senior, 63 North Road,
said, "Our mailbox was broken once, but
we had it repaired and it has never been
touched again. We haven't had any trouble
with noise, but we do Jive further away
from Skinner's than any ·of our
neighbors."
Profile: Sister Eileen
by
Richard Sommer
said she has helped prepare for are: a
December 8th Penance service, December
Talk. Look around and that's just what 8th table talks, at which Marist Brother
you'll see. Teachers teaching, students·ex-
Andenberg will speak about social justice
pressing new learned knowledge and what with an emphasis on American Indians,
they can achieve. But who will listen and and a December 12th midnight mass.
even more important who will listen and
Sr. Eileen said she .was pleased to see a
care?
·
large turn out of people foi: the two en-
One such person that listens and cares is counter weekends, this fall and · that
Sr. Eileen Halloran. Sr. Eileen said · that another one is beil)g planned for the spring·,
she's .been tempted to put a map of Byrne
SL
Eileen said that she was optimistic
Reside.nee
in each students' mailbox. "I that
word of mouth
:
will .
increase .. the
feel very welcome," .said Sr .
.
Eileen .. number of people coining..to the·s.ervices
''Students. are very opeff and naturally . offered. Only six people attended a semi_nar
warm people."
.
in Fireside Lounge which dealt with ex-
Sr. Etleen has planned Advent prayer periences that different religions take on to
service programs, and has also helped in deal with death.
planning the Sabbath dinner that will take
Sr. 'Eileen said her most rewarding ex-
. place December 4th at Byrne Residence.
perience since she's been here has been "the
Other upcoming events which Sr: Eileen personal contact with individuals that have
·
developed." • ·
··
.
.
Ll.br.ar.y p. r· e· .se·rves
Sr. Eileen said .that she grew. up .in-
. Manhattan, and after becoming a Fran-
p
oug.hkeepsl• e past
ciscan sister, taught
3
years in grammar
school. She then became assistant director,
by
Grace Genova
In 1963, Adrian Perrault, a member of
the Marist library staff, saw the necessity
for preserving the history of Marist, l:>ut
it
wasn't until about seven or eight years ago
that he finally started the Local History·
Room in the library.
The Local History Room, located next to
the Learning Center, has three categories
of material: material concerning the Marist
Brothers, material concerning the his_tory
of Marist College itself, and material con-
cerning Dutchess County and the surroun-
ding counties.
.
·
,
and then director . of admissions at
. Ladycliff College until it closed. Sr. Eileen
said she then took a year off to pursue her
masters in religious education and is now in
the process of completing her degree at
Fordham University.
I
Classifieds
Michael, -
Thanks for making such a tough year so
great.
1aini
Ride needed to Red Hook -from Marist.
Contact John, Ext. 145
Rom Diinmie, junior:
"It's
'·not
fair
because people who live far away find it
difficult to get home for just a few days . .,
/
Pat Brady~ ;ophomore:
"No. n
defi~itelv ·
isn't."
.-
· ·
· · - ·
Question: · Do. you· think.
u'
is fair' for
students who live far away or have no ride
home to be forced out of the .dorms?
.
Dan Spuhler, freshman:·
"No because
if
they find it hard to get home 'they should be
allowed to stay.''
'
.
John Berzal; sophomore:
"If
they had a
Chevy they could leave any time · they ·
wanted.''
.,
_
.
more:
"Who the hell
re
is
what l want to
. This material is in the form of books, ,
pamphlets, and leaflets. The type of books
that are in the history room are books by or
about the Marist Brothers, especially those
connected with the college.
The
.
second category of books are those.
about Marist that students and/or pro-
fessors have written. The material that the
students print include the Circle and the
Mosaic. The b'ooks that teachers have writ•
ten include Dr. Drenin'.s thesis, a book by
Dr. Belanger, and a book by Dr.
J.J.
McMahon, an alumnus and former, faculty
member. His book is entitled, "Between
You and You."
Maryann
Why can't we go to Skinners? The Palace is
boring.
A-1 Florist.
&
·
The Local History. Room is available to
all students at Marist and offers a wide
. variety of information about Marist and
the surrounding areas. One of the items
that just arrived is the records of a famous
resort hotel near New Paltz, Lake Mohonk
Mountain House.
.
.
· At the moment these items are being
· catalogued so that they can be studied in
·different areas .. For instance, how much it
cost
to rent the horses that pulled the bug-
. gies, how much it cost to stay
a
night, etc.
Balding Wild Women
Happy Pint Night!!!
To my rooinie:
.
Congratulations on a job well done and
good luck in the job ahead .. Just remember
one fact, through it all you're still a whack!
Soup:
Mmmm ... Mmmmm
prefer the . bottom
"Keeling" over.
For Sale:
Love,
Your roomie.
Good! Richard,
I
bunk to . keep from
7th heaven KTB
2 snows - F78-14. Used 4 months, last
winter. $60 - call 691-8609 - Paul .
To the Moony-Whacks:
Thanks for putting up with me on Sunday
and Monday nights. It's over!
H.H.
· -Garden-Center
·
,
·
192 Washi~gton S
_
t.
Poughkeepsie
·
; N.Y. 12601
9-14-471-5700.
10% DiSC!JUnt with Student ID
I
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - December
3,
1981 · THE CIRCLE· Page 1 1 - - -
'l!elt!visioribeC()mes teacher/or two courses
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by .Michael
Sciannamia .
. TV
series are . "Cosmos," written and _world: religions produced by the BBC. The
• - .
· •
·
. hosted by Dr .. Carl Sagan, and "The· Long course offered next semester is being taught
· Two.courses being offered next semester . Search," a 13 part' series created by the by Professor Rhys Williams of the
promise to .. give students
·a
different
BBC.
·
·
Religious Studies department.
pe_rspective in learning; ·
·.
• •. - The "Cosmos" course, listed as a special. .
"The. subject matter is. very basic in
They are not just "textbook" courses. · project in Science, is being taught.by.Prof. · structure. The course wUI help the student
They are classes in which the. teacher is not
Paul DiMarco. This course is designed for learn about some of the different religions
the main focal point. The_.«tcachers" of students to. explor~
the . relationship of the world, and their relationship to the
these courses are two television sets and
a
between Earth,. its inhabitants, and the cultures of all the peoples throughout the
series ofvi9eotapes.
.
universe that surrounds them.
world," said Prof. Williams.
The spring schedule. lists these two
_ "Students are expected to view the pro-
The course can be• taken for credit or
the course.
"There are two reasons why I believe this
course should be offered," said Prof.
Williams. "One is that the curriculum
needs more elective courses. Secondly, the
video itself is stimulating. The students ac-
tually see what they're learning about."
. Prof. Williams said that some of the
course objectives are: l. to present a study
of :he world's religions, 2. to examine
religious practices that exist in other
societies, and 3. to explore the impact of
religious
beliefs
on individuals
and
courses as two· self-paced independent
grams, read the textbook "Cosmos" (also . non-credit: Students en complete the course
study courses that use TV series. The two
written by Sagan) and do supplementary at their own pace, but it is planned to cover
·work in the Reader/Study Guide," said a normal semester time period. There are
Prof. DiMarco.
,
four required materials; three textbooks,
.. cultures.
The
Jury
Room, 51 Market Street,
·
Poughkeepsie, New
York, 452-929p
.
·
Dec.4-·
· Professor DiMarco added that the class one which is a stl.ldent handbook written by
is not an introductory course in astronomy. · Prof. Williams, and the 13 TV programs.
Rather it.is ·•_•an interdisciplinary study of
According to Prof. Williams, there will
general science, put in a humanist point of be three scheduled exams for students tak-
view," DiMarco said.
ing the course. Following each exam; the
"The Long Search-A Study of World student must make an appointment with
Religions",is a 13 episode documentary.on
Prof. Williams to discuss their progress in
Upward Bound marks 15th
year
The Upward Bound Program at Marist ·· motivation necessary for success in college.
Coll~ge was formed 15 years ago and has
·upward Bound recruits 115 to 150 high
become very _successful.
school students from Orange, Dutchess
'
Project Director Joseph Parker said,
and - Ulster counties. Upward· Bound
900Jo of all students who complete the pro-
students are usually admitted after com-
gram are admitted to universities around pleting the ninth or tenth grades. The pro-
the country.
gram is conducted during the summer as
Upward Bound was developed as a result
well as during the academic year. Par-
of the Johnson-Kennedy Era. In the 1960s ticipants generally live at Marist College
there was a need to address the problems of during the summer sessions and take part
the _poor. According to ·Parker, Upward in a variety of academic, social and cultural
Bound ..yas a "Bandaid att~mpt to address activities.
the needs of these low income students."
Upward Bound Project Staff selects
The Upward Bound.Program is .funded students · on the recommendations of
on the federal level. Parker said $156 teachers, counselors, social service agen-
million is. allocated to 1,000 national in-
cies, or others who are well acquainted with
stitutions. One founder said the program them. Upward Bound seeks to help youths
will have a ripple effect and Marist College who have academic potential but who have
is the. outgrowth of this philosophy, Parker not had the preparation, motivation or op-
indicated.
·
portunity to realize or demonstrate their
. Parker. said- Upward Bound helps high talents.
.
_
school students from families meeting low-
Upward Bound also offers a "Bridge
· income .criteria to develop the skills and
~
. Summer.'.' _Here~ the stude_nt takes college
..
.
C()UTSeS for credit and stays with
other.
col~ '
...
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· _ , . ;
Iege·
students· while s(iJJ
participating -in ·
many of the projects nonacademic ac- ·
tivities.
Upward Bound usually stops at the col-
lege gate, but the staff eases the students in-
to college
life.
The · staff members work
with college admissions officers, financial
aid personnel and others to provide in-
dividualized service to assist the student in
his college career.
According to a former Upward Bound
. student, "Upwar.d Bound enables the stu-
dent to see himself in the past, the present,
and the future.,,.
• Charlie Brown
Paralegal program
seeks recognition
Dec. 5 - --_
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"
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·. · Second·Wind (Jazz/Fusion)
.
_Dec •
.
] 1: -
-~oy_A~kinson (get in free w/_M~rist ID)
.
,
.
Dec~ 12-
-- T.B.A. ·(get in free
·
w1M
·
arist ID)
Happy Hour. 4~ - 7
•Ladies
buy
1
.
~
get
·l
free ·
-✓
•Anyone els_e reduc-~d pric~s
.
.
Monday~ Vodka Night - 75¢ drinks
Tuesday - Gin Night - 75¢ ·drinks
Wednesday - Beer night 50¢
Michelob Mugs
S~rving Food till ~-Wee~ Nights; 1:00-Fri.
&
Sat.
""At
lh1•Jury_R110111
you don"t haw to
lw
a
lawyer- to lw a memlwr of th,· Bar.""
by
Diana L. Galioto
Gaining recognition in the community
from the legal professions, arid lack of
publicity from the college are two problems
that the Paralegal Program at Marist is fac-
ing, according to Dr. Carolyn Landau.
Dr. Landau, Director of the Paralegal
Program since 1974, said, "The program is
· constantly expanding but we are not
reaching enough , students and we must
educate the legal professions about the
paralegal and their capabilities," said Dr.
Landau.
.
The program consists of sev_en required
courses, plus three electives chosen-from
14
legal specialties. There are also · two
Paralegal-Internships offered. You need a
total of 36 credits to receive the Paralegal
Certificate. You must have a major field of
study. The 36 credits are applicable to a
baccalaureate degree.
The majority of the instructors are prac-
ticing attorneys in the Poughkeepsie area .
.
Eugene Rizzo who teaches Introduction to
Legal Research and Writing said," my in-
itial reaction from meetings I have attended
is that the program has the ability and
potential to be successful," Rizzo said.
Required courses are offered every year.
In the spring of 1982, four required courses
will
be offered and four elective classes,
plus and internship.
"To date, the Paralegal Program is not
publicized enough in any of the Marist Col-
lege literature," Dr. Landau said.
Dr. Landau is available to talk to any
students who have any questions about the
program. Her office is located in Fontaine, .
314.
.
Student reaction to the courses was
generally favorable. One student in par-
ticular, Tony Formato, said,
"I
saw about
six of ''The Long Search" programs on my
own. I thought they were good. I learned
about different religions and value systems
throughout the world. If you are motivated
enough, you will learn a great deal."
Frank Scott
Pub institutes
new··iiiide1Ines ··- ·
·
by
Maria Pascarelli -
There are a number of changes that have'
taken place in the Pub over the past year
which fall under the category of guidelines
issued to Seiler's by Fr. Richard LaMorte,
Dean Gerard Cox and Betty Yeaglin of stu-
dent activities.
"The Pub has absolutely no-atmosphere
at all," said Fr. LaMortc.
According to him, this is a major pro-
blem. "I don't think it's conducive as a
place where people can meet and talk," he
said .
Fr. LaMorte pointed out that there are
two tangible elements of any bar, lighting
and sound.
The lighting previous to the guidelines,
according to Fr. LaMorte, was fine if you
were familiar with brail.
The sound, according to Fr. LaMorte,
was counter-productive. The music would
be so loud that Pub goers would not be able
to communicate, he said.
By requesting more lighting and a softer
sound he said he hoped to create a better at-
mosphere in the Pub.
Frank Scott, Director of Seiler's, pointed
out that according to the guidelines he can-
not run specials in the Pub.
·
. According to Fr. LaMorte, a special is a
form of marketing whose sole reason is to
make money. They draw people in to get
them to drink more so the bar could make
more money.
"It's pure bald economics," said Fr.
LaMorte. "It's a come-on,-it's a come-on
in the worst way.''
l.D.
checks were also instituted in the
new guidelines.
Fr. LaMorte said this requirement was to
ensure any non-student is accompanied by
a Marist student.
According
to
Fr. LaMorte, this is done
to protect the student.
He said the guidelines "arc to balance
both sides of the picture."
According to Fr.
LaMorte,
the
guidelines are an attempt to protect
students from outsiders; to protect them
from the members of their own community
who are under the influence of alcohol; and
to try and control the natural tendency to
view the situation as money-making.
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12 ·
THE CIRCLE
;.Dec;mbet 3, 1981
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_Gasp!
Smokers kick
itfor
_
aday
by
Dominic DINardi .
·.·.
Dutchess Community
.
College, the Culinary Institute of America,
along with Bard and Vassar colleges," she said..
.
.
.
. .
_
Every year ~imops of peopie participate
.
in the Americ~n
.
:
Ms. Blum said that the Smokeoi.u was very successful.. "Many
Cancer Society's Great American Smokeout and the students of
of the students were very enthusiastic and I was s·urprised at such
Marist College were no'exception.
·.
· ·
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a
large turn out," she said.
·
·
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Marist College smokers were urged to pledge a·day of freedom
'
Ms.
Blum; who is a Marist student intern at
·
the American
·.
·
·from cigarettes this past Thursday. November
·
19; The campaign
.
·
Cancer Society, also
.
said
-
the results
·
from
.
Marist- were positive,
·
•
~hich
.
was sponsored by the Dutc~ess County Unit
.
of the
·
as was true with the other colleges in the.area.
·
·
·
·
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American Cancer Society was aimed at
·
getting
·
pledges from
.
the
·
,
Ms.
·
Blum's job is to _devel_op programs, to send out literature;
.·
50 students who participated. These pledges were meant to insure
and to contribute ideas to all the crisis centers located throughout
that the students went the entire day without smoking
.
·
.
Dutchess county. As far as problems with the Smokeout, she said
The Donnelly Commuter Lounge and the Campus Center were
the inajor one was trying to get an honorary chairman who
the two crisis centers set up that day. According to Jim
.
would attract media attention.
.
.
.
Muzikowski, Marist College Student Government' President and
The Marist Sriiokeout was organized by the Student Govern-
coordinator of the drive, "Our goal was to show students they
mem office who encouraged eating by supplying free carrot and
can quit, and to increase awareness that .smoking is un-
.
cel~ry sticks while trying to discourage smoking.
necessary," he said.
.
A~cordin·g to one Marist stµdent,
"I
really wanted
10
par-
"We are trying to ·emphasize that in a short period of time peo-
.
ticipate
in
the Smokeout because statistics show that lung cancer
pie can stop smoking," said Muzikowski. "In the long run, they
is on the rise and 80 percent of cancer in men has been attributed
can overcome the psychological dependency," said Muzikowski.
to smoking."
.
.
.
.
Muzikowski
·
also stressed the importance
·
of having these
·
.,
·
Statistically, close to
18
million on the national scale have been
Smokeout events because they stimulate awareness and
-
reaction.
reported as having stopped smoking for tharday and
6
.
7
percent
"The idea always made good sense to me," Muzikowski said.
of that figure still will not be smoking one year from know.
• ·
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Most smokers are overwhelmed by the prospect
of
quitting
.
Most Marist students agreed thal'the Smokeout was
.
a success
outright. The American Cancer S9cie1y is creating an opportuni-
·
and a?reed that as a result
?f
this event they would probably stop
tyro try the quitting process for just one day at a time,"
_
he said.
.
smok11Jg for good. According to one Marist freshman, "I think I
·
Joan. Blum of the Dutchess
.
County Unit of the American
wiH be able to
.
stop smoking, but
I
don't know if carrot or celery
Cancer Society said she was very pleased with the results: "Over sticks will play a part in thatdeci~ion,"
·
lie said.
·
90
businesses and schools participated in the Smokeout including
SAC
creates link betWeen students,f(l.Clllty
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Did you ever want 10 complain about a
policies, bul didn't quire know how
ro
go
professor
that
you thought was ui!fair? Or about doing it?
.
voice your opinion on some of the college's
Dealing with these types of problems is
Lounge
Rielly, one of the stud
.
cnts asked, sug-
gested that rather than buy prints students
in the art department could donate some of
their time and create some original work.
.
La Morte said that he decided
to
go ahead
with Rielly's plan since not only would it
·
save money, but it would also generate stu-
dent invol
v
ement.
·
La Morte said that now the major dif-
ficulty is arranging
a
meeting with himself
and the student volunteers
.
Rielly, who now lives off campus, said
. continued from page I
that so far eight meetings have been arrang-
ed, but au have been cancelled "for some
reason or another." Rielly said that .the
problem of
gelling eight students 10ge1her
at one time and La Morte's busy
.
s
_
chedule
·
have been the main factor in these cancela-
tions.
.
.
La Morte said that he hoped to arrange a
meeting after "I:hanksgiving and hopes to
see the artwork in the ,lounges sometime
.
next semester.
DRINKS~FOO
_
D~MUSIC
··
1
l:OO
a.m.
4:oo:a.,m.
SUNDAY BRUNCH.
.
·
11 8
p.m
.
.
914-473-4725
Rte. 9 Poughkeepsie
·
just one aspect of whar
the Student
·
luncheon was very successful with approx-
.
Academic
'
Committee is all about. Second
imately
·
100
students and
35
.·
faculty
year president, Lisa Arcuri said, "S
.
A
.
C.
members attending. S.A.C. is planning tb
.
.
forms the link between the student body
sponsor another luncheon in the spring
.
·
and the faculty. This is accomplished
.
-
S.A.C. deals with ·many student com-
through student representatives in each ma-
pJ!lints and sometimes when
·
a r
_
eal difficult
jor field of study, based proportionaJly on
problem arises, Miss Arcuri said, she can
the number of students
.
enrolled in each
always go and speak to Dr. Molloy and ask
major."
.
. .
his advi
.
ce
.
·
·
·
·
·
Miss Arcuri said the representatives at-
Miss Arcuri said, "The students on the
tend the departmental meetings for each
committee work very hard and give up a lot
·
major and
.
bring suggestions and com-
of personal time
-
to go to meetings. These
.
.
plaints of the student body, as well as pros
.
people
.
:
are very dedicated and they're
mote academic
'
policies
.
Miss Arcuri also
always accessible."
-
Because there are so
said Dr. LaPietra recently asked S.A.C. to
many meetings for
,
the representatives to
send representatives to sit in on the Core
•
attend,-sometimes the.meeting
will
conflict
Development Committee meetings
·
so
.
they with
·
their
·
class schedules.
·
When
.
.
the
ca11 voice the ideas and opinions of the stu~ .
..
representatives can't make it to a meeting,
dent body about the Core program. There they will go to the head of the dep
.
artmem
are also representatives currently sittirig in and get the minutes of the.mee;:ting so they
on the meeting$ of the Academic Affairs can be aware of what was discussed.
•·
·~
·:
Committee, dea)jng with the development
·
::
Miss
.
Arcuri said
.
last spring S;A,
.
C
.
up-
.
·-
orapolicy on honesty.
i>
.
i
..
.
.
.
'
·
·.
·
.
·
• _:·
elated
-
its constitution,.but
it
will have to J;,e
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updated again; ''Now that ihe majors have
·
·
•.
'
The S;A.C ~as b<;>th afo
_
rrpal and an m
e
•
.
·.
been assigned to divisions there
wm
havefo
.
form~I r(!le, said Mt~s A
_
rcun.
:
On the ~or-
be a change in
-
the constitution because
mal std~, they deal ~t!h.stu
_
dcnt c<>m~lamts
.
there are
,
five majors-in each division and
.
I
and V~>1ce st~j:lt;nr OJ)l~tons.
,_
~n the mfor-
can't ieci!IY send
a
group of 10 people to a
mal _side, th~y.
·
sponsor socials
_ ,
for each
.
..
divisionalmeeting
;
"
.
•
·
.
·
·
•
.
·
:,
department g1vmg the faculty and stud~nts
·
·
Miss Arcuri said she thinks that S.A.C
.
a chance to meet and talk
_
casuaHy, away is doing much to maintain communication
fr.9~ the
.
more formal
.
atmosphere of the lines between the students and the faculty.
classroom.
·
·
.
_
:
..
·
·.·
•·
· ..
.
"I think it's very.successful; the people on
.
Recently S.A.C. sponso~ed the Take a
the committee work hard and are very
Prof to Lunch"
.
event which was held on
,
dedicated and
·
that helps to
.
make it sties
Fr
.
iday, November
20.
M
_
iss Arcuri said the cessful. '.'
·
UPennj
Ste8
.
lel'$''
>
- an
original play
_
by
·:
~erard Cox
:
·
oec.
3 •.
4,-
-
s
·
-
8p.n,.,
·
nappy.
HOiidays
froni
·
the
Circle Staff
''
I
December 3, 1981 ·
THE CIRCLE• Page
13
·
LEAVE
·
SO YOU CAN
·
COME BACK!
.
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The college residence halls will dose and
110
services will be available from December 18 to
.
Jan~ary 24, 1982
·
·
·
·
·
The ~eside~ce haJis will_ ~lose atl 1:00 p.m. on Decembfr 18, 1981
The last meal of the· term will be lunch on December 18. pi~ner will be served on Sunday.
January 24, 1982
On or before Decembe·r
18, rooms must be cleaned; all belongings must be taken home, except furniture or those items that can
be left in a dresser drawer or in the closet.The college will not assume any liability for lost or stolen or damaged,items. (Note:
2, 3, 4 floors
in
Chainpagnat have received a special memo). Your departure directly affects the ability of students and profes-
sional residence staff to complete their work and move toward their own holiday plans: therefore, you are to leave the
·
residence halls in an orderly fashion on the day of your last
exam.
Remember that the following factors will.be central to any
decision
.
on allowing a student to occupy a room in Marist residence halls for next semester even if you have registered:
1. Disciplinary Record
~
2. Academic Standing
3. Vacating of room on day of their last exam.
4. Condition of room at departure (cleanliness and lack of damage).
Students who have been denied a room for next semester will be notified by January 8, 1982,
if
they
have registered.
If you do not intend to return to the residence halls in January, or if you have been assigned to
a
different,room, please be sure
to return your key to the resident director.
·
,...
.
...
..
Failure to leave your room in a clean state can result in a $25.00 fine .
.
.
'
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.
.
.
Failure to leave on the day of your last exam can result in low housing priority for
fall 1982. As well, an unauthorized early
return to the dorms can also result in low priority.
House meetings will take place on Wednesday, December
9,
1981, to clarify these expectations and more procedures. Please
watch for announcement.
.
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--
,.
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'•"
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\
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Each R.A. must inspect each room, file the room inspection form. Students must make an appointment with
.
their R.A. to
have their room inspected. Upon leaving, you must secure the room
·
(lights off, appliances disconnected, curtains closed and
.
doorlocked). Trash bags
will
be distributed by the R.A. to each resident on December 13 and 14.
The following
i;
the special garbage pick-up schedule for the residence halls during the period from Thursday, December /
7
thru Friday, December 18 though students are encouraged to bring garbage to tfie dumps~er themselves:
Champagnat Hall
Leo Hall
Sheahan Hall
,
·
Benoit/Gregory
.
Oakwood
&
Hyde Park
Thursday
12/17
Friday
12/18
·
Thursday
12/17
Friday
12/18
Thursday
12/17
.
Friday
12/18
Thursday
12/17
Friday 12/18
Floors 1, 2, 3 l0A.M. and 2 P.M.
Floors
4,
5,
6 11 A.M.
'
and
3 P .l'vL
Floors 7, 8, 9 12 Noon and 4 P .M.
(Saine)
+
pick up at 6, 7, 8 P .M.
Floors l; 2 9 A.M. and 2:30 P.M.
Floors 3, 4 10 A.M. and 3:30 P .M.
Floors 5,611 A.M. and 4:30 P.M.
(Saine)
+
pick up at 6:30, 7:30 and 8:30
P
.M.
Floor 1 8:30 A.M. and 1 :00 P .M.
Floor 2 9:30
A.M.
arid 2:00 P .M.
·
Floor 3 10:30 A.M. and 3:00 P.M.
(Same)
+
pick-up at 7:30 P .M.
10:00
A.M.
and
3:9() P.M.
(Same)
+
pick-up at 8:00 P.M.
will coordinate pick-ups with the R.A.'s and/or R.C.
We encourage you to do your part to make this period enjoyable for all!
.
.
.
The best floors in each building will be ranked for cleanliness and will be awarded $50. Champagnat will have 3 best floor
awards, Leo 2, Sheahan 1, Gregory, Benoit, Oakwood and Hyde Park will have
J.
A wards will be announced next term.
On behalf of all the residence hall staff, we wish you a safe, enjoyable and Happy Holiday Season, and offer our Best Wishes
for the coming New Year.
See you in_January!
·
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r
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feCturi
,
119
,
Th
,
e
GOocl
·
Rats
.
·
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~
and
.
..
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Friday -
Decemb~r 18 ·
·
:
-,
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Jn the
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Suiii;ar,
C~lflmu~ity
_
Coll~9e
'
F
i~lcfhc)use
.
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•
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,
•
•
:,
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...7'
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P,.esented by the
.
SullivallCoun,'.tf
Cf!llege
.
·
student
Government
Assoc
.
iation
.
-. ::
:
.·
:·
.
.
·
·.
_
;~
:··.·
_-:
·:
·
_.:.
.
.:
General
·'
Admission: $7-~00
.·
.··.
_
..
,
-
.
.
Tickets Available at the Book& Record on Main Street in Poughkeepsie
.·
•
:
.
.
-.
_
_
_
_
,,
.
.
-
· ..
j
,
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·-Must be over 16toattend-
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-.c.-
,
)'-.
.
·
~.
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-
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....
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.
.
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Directions:
take 87 (Th
_
ruway) South to 1
i.West -
get off at Exit
l
00.
At
end of
ramp
tvr-n
.
left. At light turn right. Follow Route 52 appro
,
ximately
4.8
miles. Tu~n right
:
into
~
college.
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l
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/
- - - - - -.... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..... ~ - - - - - December 3,
1981 · THE CIRCLE· Page
15 - - •
'
women endNovemberwith
3-2
mark
Face
_
tough
Dec.
schedule
.
by Stephen Heddei'lon
~he Marist C~llege Women:s B~sketball
·
team opened the 1981-1982 season with two
consecutive routs. Purchase was the first
•
victim of the new season, as the Red Foxes
crushed the Panthers 81-24, in front of th
_
e
.
opening day Mccann Center crowd.
The game began an hour late, as both the
Purchase team
·
and the referees were late.
Ron Ryan and Bill Cooper stood in for the
refs, and did an outstanding job. The delay
·
didn't seem
.
to bother the Red· Foxes; as
they opened up with a full court press on
.
· ·
defense. The press worked well, forcing the
·
·
Purchase women to make numerous costly
mistakes. At the 12:15 mark
-
of the first
quarter, the Marist offense had all it's
:
_
starters.score at least 1 point
.
It was also at
this point that coach Deer began removing
.
.
her
'
starters, replacing them with equally
, ·
talented substitutes. One of these
substitutes was Ursala Winters
.
Ursala led
the Foxes with a game high 17 points and
.
12 rebounds. Mary Pat Sherwood added 14
points coming off the bench.
The Red Foxes once again devoured it's
opponent, this time the Cortland State
-
.
women were the prey. Marist
.
won easily
Preparing for a tough 6 games in 12 days December sched~le are the women Red Foxes.
-
83°71 in Cortland. Laurie Hrebenak
poured in 22 points, while FreshmanLynne
Griffin chipped in 19. Junior Diana Jones
ripped down 11 rebounds and Griffin 10 to
·
lead the Foxes;
.
·
,
-
College, led the Marist team with 15 points.
·
Lynne Griffin and Diana Jones added 14
points each. Jones also led the Foxes with
l
O
rebounds.
The team then traveled to Manhattan
College for the Manufacturer's Hanover
Trust Invitational. The Red Foxes came
.
away with
a
third place finish
,
after losing
·
to host Manhattan in the first game 73-57.
.
Twenty six Manhattan points in the final
five minutes broke a 47-47
.
tie, enabling the
Lady Jaspers to win.
Marist bounced back the following day,
defeating
·
the
·
women from Fordham
University 86-62. Offensively the Red
Foxes were again led by Mary Zuvic
,
who
hit for 21 points
.
Diana Jones added
16
points. Lynne Griffin grabbed 10 rebounds
for Marist.
. ,
·
Mary Zuvic; a transfer from Immaculata
The women then returned to the Mccann
Center to face the Lady Knights of West
PLAYER
,
OF
·
THE
.
WEEK
In the player profile of the Womens
Basketball teams prospectus for the I 981-
.
1982 season,
·
less than tw~ lines are given
for senior Lois Ann
.
Hayes
:
"Co-
.
Cap
_
tain
i
.,Gives
lOOOJo ...
Good
·
Shooter ..• Unselfish
court
·
leader.
;
.Remarkably
.
consistent." Simple
and to the point works every time.
·
·
At 5-8
,
foward Lois Ann Hayes from
Middletown, N.Y. is every coaches dream
player. One of only 4 women to have
played in all 31 games for the Red Foxes
.
last season, Hayes consistency and heads-
up style of play has made
_
her the model
performer from whom Head coach Susan
Deer wants all her players to emulate
.
With only three players returning from
last seasons squad, Hayes exp~rience and
understanding of the game makes her posi-
tion on the squad even more valuable this
·
year. In the teams first 4 games of the
_
young season in which they are 2-2, Hayes
has averaged I l points a game.
.
-
While others
·
on
.
the team might score
more points and
·
grab more rebounds,
_
while others might be the quickest down
the court and sure handed with the passes,
Lois
.
Ann Hayes does all this arid more.
·
Her talent on the court is far more valuable
than any box-score could show, and for
this Lois Ann Hayes is this weeks
.
CIR-
CLE, "PLAYER OF THE WEEK."
.
.
.
Lois Ann Hayes
RIVER DISTRIBUTING CO.
Noxon Road
Poughkeepsie, New York
PLAYER OF THE WEEK
SPONSORED BY THE MILLER BREWING COMPANY
Point. It was a game that saw Marist make
a complete U-turn from their first home,
game. Sloppy inaccurate passes, and forced
plays were both common and frequent dur-
ing the first half. Defensively, Marist lack-
ed the full cour
.
t press that stymied the Pur-
chase women so well in their home opener.
pulling them
to
within six points at one
point in the second half.
Despite the 66-56 loss, bright spots for
Marist were Lois Ann Hayes (18 points)
and Diana Jones (10 points).
the second half saw Marist start reboun
-
ding effectively at both ends of the court,
The 3-2 Foxes will return to the McCann
to face St. Thomas Aquinas this Sunday (a
game that will be covered by WMCR), and
Hofstra on Tuesday.
.
_
ScOre
·
·
and
_
win
-
·
·
Now wasn't that easy. I'm just sorry that
·
everyone couldn't win the Red Fox jer
s
eys
or the other valuable prizes that were given
away in the CIRCLE contest, SCORE
AND WIN.
each and every one that did win didn
'
t
spend too much time looking up the
ans,vers to the questions.
The final winner is Michael Zuccarello
,
who answered four out of five questions to
become the last winner of SCORE AND
Congratul
a
tions
to
winners
Dirk
McMahon, Michael Zuccarello, Ed Kenny,
Bryan Malon
e
y and all tho
s
e that did have
some fun in playing SCORE AND WIN.
.
WIN
.
I would like to thank everyone that
.
.
tried their best in the contest, and hope_ that
· Men's basketball
Fri. D
e
c
e
mber 4
Maris! Invitational
Sat. December 5
Man hat tan-Fairleigh
Dicksinson-Wesl Che
s
ter
Sr.
.
Fri. December
18
*Fairleigh-Dickinson Univ .
·
Wed. December 23
*Siena
·
Mon. January 4
Hofstra
Wed
-
. January 6
Drexel
Fri. January 8
Fairfield Invitational
Sat. January 9
Loyola (Md
.
)-Lehigh
Wed. January 13
*St. Franci
s
(Pa.)
.
Sat. January 16
*St. Franci
s
(N.Y
.
)
Tues. January 19
Temple
Thurs. January 21
_•Wagner
Sar. January 23
*Fairleigh o
·
ickinson Univ.
Tues
.
January 26
St. Peter'
s
Thurs. January 28
*Robert Morris
Sat. January 30
*Long Island Univ.
$at
.
February 6
Colgate
Mon
.
February 8
Univ. of Maine
Thurs. February 11
*Towson State
Sat. February 13
*Univ. of Baltimore
Wed. February 17
*St. Francis(N.Y.)
Sat. February 20
*Loyola (Md.)
Wed. February 24
Univ. of Vermont
Sat. February 27
*Long Island Univ.
*ECAC League Game
-
Barry Lewi
s
·
Sports Editor
\,
Home
7:00&
9:00
Awa
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Home
8:00
Home
8:00
Home
8:00
Away
T.B.A.
Home
8:00
Home
8
:
00
Home
8:00
Home
8:00
Home
8:00
Awa
y
8:00
Home
8
:
00
Home
8:00
Home
8:00
Home
8:00
Awav
8:00
Away
7:30
Away
8:00
Home
8:00
Away
8:00
Away
7
:
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,·
.
by
·
Paul ~aim~(
misses to keep and exp~nd their lead
)o
the .
·· -'~
final margin of-victory 92-84. : ..
.
; ·
·
.,
The Marist :-c~ileg~ Men's
.
Basketbali
Game high honors wentto Ljubojevic
·
'
team opened its initial season in
i
Division I who had 26
·
for Zagreb; Also Steten Dt!ric
. •
play on two rather sour riotes".
--
First,
.
with
.
and
.
Nenad Slavica combined for foiiy
_
an opening
.
night loss in an
·
·
exhibition to more to pace Zagreb. Marist was led by
~
·
•
Zagreb;
·
Yugoslavia
·
•
and
'
. ihen
.
this past
-•
Steve Smith's
·
25
with Keith
.
Denis hitting
·
.
Saturday atJhe hands of. league foe
.
Siena
_
.·
an inipres~ive
-
18 while seeing only limited
·•
·.
College:
:.
,
·
(;;:f:;>
:'-"c~
/<, .:_
..:
.
·
,;.
,
·
;-
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actioil .
.
._Marist was out rebounded 40-19 py
.
~:
:
•
In the Zagreb ganie the difference was
in .
:
the
·
ta.Her Yugoslavfans ana also Maristled
missedfoul-'sllc>ts.
'
Marist failed
to
fake ad-
.
in turnovers
-
18-JO
:
Saturday
-
night though
.
.
.
vantage oL
.
the
.
opportunities from
--
the it was'
a
different story as Marist tookon
·
.
·
charity stripe··while Zagreb
:
·
did use the Sie!}a College and almost walked away
0:
gifts. Overall'.
-
it was Marist
·
shoo
.
ting a with the win.
.
..
. .
.
.
. · · .
. ,
·
.-483 %"from the foul line while
.
Zagreb· shot
> In
a game that saw Mari st leading by as
at a .565 pace. Many of the
·
mi~ses ,for inuch as -17 points in the first then trail by
··
.
Marist came on the first end of
1
and 1 . as niuch
'
as 7in-the second half once again
:
.
chances thus
_
eHminating the possibility of
•.
the high scorer for Mari~t was Steve Smith. .
two points forJhe Foxes.
.
.
.
.
.
:
·
In the beginning it was Siena drawing
:
.
In the ho
.
rri
.
~ exhibition opener it was the blanks against a
.
tough Marist club
'
~hich
.
.
. visiting
:
'Yugos.lavians who
·
decid~d
to
set
·
allowed
.
them only
-
five
·
baskets in the ·first
.·
·
·
the early pace
.
<>f
the game.They employed· fifteen
·
minutes and
_
Mar.ist built a surpris-
:
-
a patient, passing offense and a tough
.
re-
•.
iiig 38-21 lead. The score at half time was
.
bot1nding defense to stymie the Marist
·
· ·
38-23 with Marist leading in rebounds as
•
arives. The taller, older ~agreb
·
showed a well 27-14. A help to rriadst
·
was Siena's 8-
bit more poise in some of the situations• 25 showing from the field. The Red Foxes
that was evidently lacking in Marist. In the got 14 first half points from Daryl Powell
first half Zagreb led by as much as 15 arid
10
from Smith; The real catalyst for
·
points,32-17.thanks tosome sloppy pass-
Marist in
·
the •first half once again
-
was
.
.
ing and cold shooting for Marist. Par-
BruceJohnson
·
who finished with 10 points
ticularly
·
impressive, · however was the and 5 assists
.
He was the'key to Marists ef-
quickness Qf
:
.·
freshman guard
·
Bruce fective press and running game offense.
Johnson who tried to lead the Marist attack
The
·
second half however Siena woke up
·
·
but often times things just didn
!
t click. The
.
and starting playing ball
.
The Indians ig-
.
score at half~time was Zagreb 52 Maris! 39 ..
·
nited a transiti9n _in
·
the
.
second half by
One.of the
-
more
:
interesting facts of the
·
··
operating their offense the way that they
.
half-time stats apart from the foul shooting· . could.
·
Siena had a run of )4~0 to get their
.
percentages was the number of turnovers " first lead in the game at the 14:34 mar.k, 43- ·
.
·
committed. Marist lost the ball 14 times·to 42;
·
-··,
. ':
·
..
·•
.
·
'
.
·
·
•
/'.
•
.. :
,
their opponents 5!
.
.
.
.
-••·.·
.
:.
·
Marist howevef\vas
_
not about to.let this
·
.
:
.
,·
:
®.
···
·
.
.
.
~
.
.
.
I
.
.·.
.
.
,c,
_
. .
.
.
-
;;...
-
-
,_.
__ _
.
•
·•••
•
The secon_d half though
·
things looked a one slip away itiat easiiy though
_
as
.
Moose
··
.
..
·
.
.. /.o'.
)iftlc:brigJ1te_1:Jor_ the M!lrist ¢ause·as the · Tirribei:lake gave the Foxes back the leadaL
'
,.
;.
:
:\:
Foxes came Ollt ready
_
toplay and it_Jooked
.
9:4}:With
:
aJayup; only to have Siena real
·
{
-
·
-~ -
.·
.·
for a while like they now had
•
finally found
~ off.inother spurt
of
eight
io
make the
·
score
:
"
:
'
•··
·
, ·
·
tlleir groove:
.
A
.
tenacious full court~press
·
51-44
,
Siena.
-
Undaunted
·
.
by this Marist's
:,
:
~:_:
.
:_
..
·_. ·.
.
and the speedy Bruce Johnson helped Steve Smith caine back with four baskets of
,
,
.
:
Marist dose to withiri 8 points at the 14:44
·
·
his
_
9wn bringiiigMarist back to within one
:
\).
·
markand forcingZagreb to t~ke a
.
timeout. at-55-54. But once again it was
-
Siena get-
.
But on~e agairi}he fail me of Marist to hit
.
ting four
:
unanswered points
.
before Keith
..
·
•
the freethrows cost them several chances at Denis made three of four from the foul line
really getting back
_
into the game a9d tak
0 .
around a Bruc.e Johnson steal,to once again
·
.
ing
a
possible lead. Junior transfer Daryl ·. give Marist the lead, .Two Siena turnovers
:_:
'
Powell's two.freethrows again cut the lead against the
-
press got Marist the lead.
:
Eirst
down to 7 and Keith Denis hit to cut it
to'
5
it. was Smith tyingjt at 5_9 all then Powell
·
forc;ing Jugoslavia to call it's
.
second time made
·
one of iwo
_
from the line giving
·
·
out of the half hoping to
.
kill the niomena Marisi a lead at the 3:04 mark60-59.
·
··
_
__
_
-.
Tourney-pairings
.
.
.
..
.
-
;
-
..
-
.
.
.
. Greater Poughkeei:_>sie
·
Auto Dealers
Classic
·
·-.-
·
·
~
·
~ECOND ROUND:
SATURDAY NIGHT AT 7:00 · CON
-
SOLATION GAME
FiRST ROUND:
.·
·
..
'.
·
·
."
-
.
SATUR.bA Y NIGHT AT 9:00 - CHAM-
:
FRIDAY NIGHTAT
.
7:00
~
MANHAT- PIONSHIP GAME
-
T AN VS. FAIRLEIGH DICKERSON···
-cc
FRIDAY NIGHT AT 9:00 - MARIST
VS. WEST CHESTER
.
.
:
.
..
·
All the games will be broadcast by the
station that follows the fox on the Marist
campus, 9L9 WMCRFM
•'
tum Marist had gained; This time it didn't-
·
.
·
Kevin McGraw gave Siena b
'
ack the lead
,
::
seem to work
.
as Marist came back onto the
,
with
:
a completion of
a
one-and~one then
court and prQceeded to
'
sink another hoop
.
Marist
,
got it's final lead of the contest 62-
·
·
.
affd trail by only 3 at the 8:16 inark of the 61 on Powells short.turnaround bank with
.
second ilalL
-
•~
:·
t .
.
.
·
_
.'
·
,
.
.
. .
.
·
2:08 left_. Marist ho,vever, as in the earlier ~--
-
-
.
-
.
~
--
- -
- .
-
.
-
.
-
.
-
.
- - - - ~ - - - - - - - . . ; _ - ~
_ _ _
...;.....,...;. _ _
...;.,_...;.. _ _ _
_,
· .
.'
,
·
After trading
.
,
baskets and
'-
missing game; wasted it's final chances on two tur-
.
20-
·
as
.
was
•
Mai:is
·
t
·
witli
·
Steve
·
Smith's 20
the return of Senior Moose Timberlake. He
•·
freethrows fxlarist
'
stil_l
.
manag~d to find
-
·
novers and a missed layup. Still the Foxes
'.•
Daryl Powell addedi!ffor the Foxes.
.
. had
.
been a question mark due to a knee in-
.
itself in a
.
threatening
·
position. At the 4 . managed to
.
claw back to within
•
7_0-68
:
The next contest for
·
Marist will be at
·
fury.
-
.
.
. .
minute_ mark it was Denis
-
again this time
.'c
before
·
RogerRenrick threw down a dunk
·•
their home tournament this
\
veekend. Dec.
,
bringing -Marisf as dose
as
..
they would ·. at the buzze_r
.
to_ice itfor Siena n-68.
·
:
'•
·.
·
·
..
.
4 & 5. as they :host; Fairleigh~Dickinson>
Against
_
Zagreb:
.
The Foxes shot .565%
.
cpme ~t-_78~ 76. But
.
~ag~eb kept cal111_ and
R~boundmg 111 the second half belonged
.
West Chester and
_
Mantiattan College.
·
·
. from the field. Also they managed
10
shoot
·
·
.
kept h1ttmg the
:
outs1de shots to
.
keep pace
-
to Siena as they but rebounded Marist 19-
·
·
·
.
. 563% from the line in half number two of
wi
_
th Marist_.
_
Zivko Ljubole:vic and Nenad 14, while Marist shota poor 13 of,38 in the
:
BANK SHOTS
the Zagreb game.
·
.
·
s1avicapaced Zagreb
_
down
.
the
.
stretch as second half.
.·
.
.
.
·
..
:
,
.--
f
·
·
·
.
Auendance at the opener for Marist was
<
they used accurate shooting
·
and Marist
..
S_iel!_a was paced by Vernon Asquith
_
with
·
In the
·
garrie
.
,
ag~\nst S~eh~,
_
Marist saw hsted at 1396.
..
·
.
.
.
.
_
....
:-:
.
·
~-----
.
--!!!!!!!!!""!""'~-----------~-----....
----------------------~~
,
~-ii•
By Barry Lewis
..
·
•,
.
.
.
,-.
·
.
Each Thursday
·
afternoon, piles of THE
Cann Center. Thanks to Dick
.
Quinn for all and not w.ith their own spirit and en-
•
CIRCLE
_
are placed all across the M:arist
-..
his t
_
ime, Ron:Petrofor his generosity and thusiasm for the school and its teams .
•
:
uBoy, this"job is iometimes rough."
campus, and to many, it is nothing more
.
c:specially Jay Williams and his staff for an
.
.
.
Idon'tknowhow
·
manytimesl'veheard
.
thanaquickreadingtopassthetimeaway.
Jhestatsmyheartdesires.
~-- ·
·
,
.
·.
In a short time (and believe me, time
·
·
·
myself, and others exclaim ju~t
_
how
,
~-
This i~ not the ca~e for the inany people in-
·
Many
·
things have changed in the short does fly), you too will be saying good-bye
.
frustrating their work really is. Since tak~
·
volved who comptle the spo~ts section of of
·
.
time that I have taken over the rein
'
s as to old friends
_
and new acquaintances, and
ing over as Sports Editor fpr THE CIR-
your school newspaper. An -excellent staff Sports Editor"last year, such as the basket-
will have wished that you had taken more
.
CLE. It has been my sound policy to bring
of writers:
.
Paul Palmer, John Petac
_
chi,
ball teams move
:
towards Division I, and of a part in the school's athletic program .
.
sometimes interesting, sometimes con- . Bill Travers, Karen Flood, Tim Breuer,
hopeful
·
prominence in the collegiate
Last of all, I wish to .thank you·, the
troversial -sometimes humorous
but
Ken Bohan, Stephen Hedderton, Pat Mc-
athletic world. Others stay the same, such
readers of THE ~IR CLE for making our
·
_
·
always different settings to my weekly col-
Cullough and Denise Film each week put
as a disappointing year by our Red ·Fox
time and effort worthwhile. Though it is
,,,.....
·
·
umn.
into words the excitement that our Red Fox
football squad, who showed grandeur in
true that we are students, and that the
I can not honestly say that I never once .... teams bring.
·
.
,
September, and obscurity in November.
. papers function is to be a learning ex-
wanted to give up all that frustration for
·
··
The
·
staff of photographers: Grace
.
..
.
perience tool, it is also true that our
.the simple peace and quiet that my readers
.
Galligher,
•
Chris
'
Demps~y and Je.m~e
What I do hope will
.
change, is the ·· satisfaction comes from your comments
·
.
sometimes have. When departing Sports
LeGl_oachec who capture J~st a second •~
animosity that you, th~ students, the true about our writing. Personally I would like
·
_
Editor Mike McCarthy said to me last year,
-
the hfe of each sport. Whtie these people
fans of Marist College show in your own
.
to wish everyone a happy h9liday, and best
·
"It!s all yours, Good
·
Luck," I said "thank
are
t~~
heart and s?ul of my staff, it would
classmates. I
·
still
·
find it very sad that the of luck to you all in the future .
.
you" at first, but soon realized that it is not
.
_
be nd1culous
.
to give tha~ks to everyone,
mass of this institution sJill must be bribed
•
"It's all yours Bill Travers, Good luck."
all mine.
·
·
and leave out
_
f!ly_good friends at the Mc-
into coming to sports events with T-shirts,
26.10.1
26.10.2
26.10.3
26.10.4
26.10.5
26.10.6
26.10.7
26.10.8
26.10.9
26.10.10
26.10.11
26.10.12
26.10.13
26.10.14
26.10.15
26.10.16
Grd'qildti1Ji
· seliiofSSiiy ·
·• fctreWeH
.
·
to4years
•
,
.....
:·
,
.''
...
by Domia (:ody;:
H . .
. . - . .
.
. . . -··
•
. .
_ ,- .: ,,
,'.'· , ..
,
. .. ;·: _
. . . _
· . owever. Martin(a c~oss-country ru
.
riner for four years, said \hat
",'"I:_ do!1't feel· li~e I'm ·graduatihg,". s~;s J~dy DiScipio . a C~m-.
!~~r~~~~:So,~~~id
Mbea1rntg1·ns~ent __ ~n ~ne sport .. "This hurt _t.he _cit_her
mumcauon Art
·
"Th h d
·
· ·
' ·
·
' ·
·
·
·
'
· Ch .
t -·
d:
m~~~r:
e ar est thmg will be going home for
·
· .Martin said that leaving Marist is going to h~rt "I'~ glad I'm
r~s ~3:s 3:n
nowmg I'm not coming back in five weeks."
.
· :
✓
·ge"tting out to·get a start on the job market but· ' l:k
·
'· · · °JScipio is one of appro~imately fifty· Marist students who will be bye to a second family •, he said.
. ' . -.
1
.
1
s ,
1
e _saymg go~~-
gra uat1_ng at_ the e~d of this semester. Th~r_e will be no senior week; ·_' ~~lph Zaccagnino, 'a Political Science ma·or said. th~t he t · i ·
~r~e~dtng cere~ony __ for_.the~e st~d_ents, Just -~ad farewells to close gomf to miss th
7
P;<>ple at Marist. "When ydu !;ave Marist Colf ~ge~
"I'll b. I d, l
.
.•
t~~
commonahty between you··and your friends is gone,, Z .
a'
d th
~
gh a
i1°
eav~ the term l?apers, the f1~als, the eight-thirties, cagnino said. "The chances of you staying in contact are slirri " ac-
n
e i:ng t .c asses, ut everyth~ng ~lse I'll m1SS, '.' said !)iScipio . ., ·
Z_a~cagnino said !liat he.sees the changes at Marist as havi~ b~th
. wa~~f~! ::~~;i~~a~ifti::ut~1~~::~;ii~:1nm~t~~rtl~~~:~;~im-: rei~!1;~r!i~/::}~;!sc~~~i~~~~e~t•:•r~c:-~~~:ge is takingg r~at
co!?t a;ound and I'll k1!~w ~?m no~ coming back. it'~ scary." .
. with other·universities,,, said Zacc~gnino.
m~re compe 1t1ve
ta I went too fast, said Lewis. However, Lewis said that he's
However Zaccagnino sa"d th
i·
h f
· -~
·
·
J
~~~phi htahs t_heboppokrti!r}tLy to_ gra~uate early. "I have a six month ·. ministrati!)~. These proble1.ns
!m
~or~~e~~t~~~~~~s
:i~hez~~-
n e JO . mar et,_. ew1s said.
·.
cagnino "In the·
·
··
'
•
Looking back on his education at M .
.
.
.
.
.
_1.r great excitement about gomg forward, they leave -
schoolwhere you'll get out of
it
what yo/;~sttin~~1~, said, "It's a
~!:~
b~ween wh,~tzthey're _doin~ for the future, and the studen(s .
"It's a no-holds-ba
d · h' I " · "d
·. - .:
·· -: .
.
re ere now,
accagnmo said.
._
. •.·
_
• .
· Marist' you can et w~:t ~u
0,:'
sai . L~w1s.
If Y,ou. push at. ;, The townhouses are a good example of this, said Zaccagnino .
.
you're ~till lost." g
.
Y.
ant. At a big sc_hool, t_f you push
'.fhey _told the campus.community that they were building them fo; .
. Lewis said that the move to Division I
. .
.
. .. . the s~~!ors, and t~e semfrs that they told won't be here when they're
:~:\~~;o~~·~"t~~~~~~~·:
·:.~n~ncial!yt -~t~~rlt~~v~h: ~~~~!~tdC:~f
~
·-. ~i~~thin~aii;;~~~!ni~~~hi~r~;~;~:; .~:o:~:.::1n!~~;1~iict?;. :~ get
enough money from the spor:
.~PS
u1Hon wont go up it they get
On t~e P?,S1t1ye side, Za~cagnmo said that the faculty at Marist is
Dennis Martin a Com
n·
· · ·
· .
·
" . . . · '
fantaStlc.
The faculty
1
s. excel
_
lent, · not. only .because they're
sports is the bigg~st chan;: 1fi!t;~:n1~ti:r~~~rs:.?Je.~~D• D1y1sM1on I
kno~led~~Tabhle, but) they ~eaHy care about. the s. tudents, '
.
' said Zac-
ra
h
.
_ . · ·
.. .. .
1.,
enms
ur~
cagnmo. ·
ey rea Iy get mvolved." _ _
., _
.. _ _
sp~~t~~.~oon as e came m, wanted Mamt recogmzed through the·-
· As a soon to be alumni, Zaccagn_ino said, "I'm trying to enjoy my
"It'_s a good mo_ve for h
lastfewweekshereandgeteverythmgoutofitbeforelleave."
} _e .college as .a whole,'' said· Martin .
. -
·--. ,. .
-~~
·-: :.:---
I
......
,
_
_
_
.
, MarJ.st
College,'Poughkeepsie,
N.
Y.
Volume
26,
Number
10
:-December
3, 1981
Tonight for the second time this semest~r
.. the lights will dim and the curtain will rise
on·an original play
in
the Marist Theatre.
_
''Penny· Stealers," a play by Dean
Gerard .Cox, will be presented tonight,
Fri- ·
• day and Saturday at 8 p.m. ·
·
Cox is optimistic ~bout the play which
.
was. written for· pleasant.entertainment.
"This is a . prime example of a modern
., play," said Cox.•
. There is no admission for the play but
~he producers have asked that anyone .who
attends brings pennies with them. Ttie pen- ·
·
nies
will
be collected and th_~. money·wm be
given to a local children's· organization for
Christmas presen,ts. •
Pi~\~ys·,coI1ti:n.1.le··.i.iJ·loun.ge·•·•·I~h0yatiPns
by
Steve Cronin .
La M6rte said that he'was al~c, Iooki~g
~
.
.
·
·
· into donati9!}s as another way of getting
· A lack ofcommuni~tion and a
.
~c~tcfty
either the sets, or the money to buy the sets ..
of funds seem to
be
0
the major factors \As itis .now, the money for the sets will
-
holding up improvements io be made in the come from the housing budget and through
·LaM_orte out/in.es r;lorm· changes-.
---.
.
·,
~
.•
·:
-
-
lounges throughout campus; improvements
fines collected_Jrom students. _..
.
·
promised students almost a year ago. · ;~ .
Seeger said·that if "housing could come
Both housing director Geoff Seeger and across some good buys," then perhaps they
Assistant Dean of Students Fr ::Richard La would purchase the sets. He said that this
Mone said that money is the main factor .main concern is how to make sure the sets
holding back the purchase ofT. V. sets
Joi-
are not stolen: He said that he's looked into
the lounges. La Morte said tliat the type of many : alternatives, . including . an alarm
T.V.'s being investigated, 24" color sets _ system run to security through the campus
would cost about $400. a· piece, not in- ·_ telephone lines, a system employed in many,
eluding the cost of installing them and ar-
motels. -
.
ranging for security measures. ·
-, Another concern is finding T. V.'s that
He said that at the time this makes it dif- --
will
be able to stand of constant usage, he
ficult to purchase the nine sets ne~ded to. said. "A major. concern is will they last."
fill all the lounges. As a way around this,
In the case of the promised ~rtwork, a
La Morte said that he was looking into pur-
lack of communication seems to be the ma·
chasing a few portable T.V-.'s and making jordifficultybeingencountered.
them available .to interested groups· of . "It's all depending _on one meeting,"
students through their R.D/s. Thestude
_
nts · .said Dave Rielly, one of the eight students
could use these sets by attaching them to a
who volunteered to help decorate the
cable hookup found in the lo_unges. '
continued on p·age 12 -
·· Saying that ''making the dorms a Jiv-
ing area," was his major concern, Assis-
tant Dean of Students Fr. Richard La
Morte outlined sC>me of the changes be-
. ing. made",-to make dormitory life more
enjoyable,
. _ .
.
_
Among the' changes already instituted
are the establishment of , an _
exercise
room in the basement of Leo and of
both exercise--and "jam" rooms in the
basement of Champagnat.
< ·
·
La Morte said that although the· exer-
dse room now on
_
Iy contains some mats
and p_11nching bags he is looking irito_a
way of allowing · students who. own
weights to store them there so that they
will have a place to workout. La Morte
· said that the purpose of"the "jam"
room is• to provide student/musicians
. with a place to get together and practice.
Another change• La Morte noted was
the new policy concerning use of the·
lounges.,"If some students want to get
together and -say watch Monday night
football and drink some beers," they
can do it in one of the lounges in their
building. La Morte said that first -the
students would have to see their· R.D.
for permission. He said that then the
students would be responsible for polic-
ing their gathering and· cleaning up
afterwards. La Morte noted that some
groups have already successfully taken
advantage of the new policy.
In the future La Morte said that there
were plans for installing vending
machines in all of the lounges as well as
the T. V. 's
am
artwork that had already
been promised.
---Page 2·
THE CIRCLE·
~ecember3, 1 9 8 1 - - - - - - - - -...
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
••• AND
SOMENF.W
·
-rowNl-lOU'SE5
f
OR·.
LI
TTLc
DENN
J'S.
Looking ·ahead
With this, the last issue of the paper for
From th~ beginning of the semester until .
this semester, comes a variety of emotions
now we have stressed how gladly we would ·
from the staff. We would like to express
·accept your suggestions and how we could
these to you now in the hopes that you will
use your help. Our attempts aLbroadening
be· able to understand where we are as we
the scope and variety of campus coverage
look to next semester.
has not been very successful because no
Putting together a paper every week is a
one takes our offer and helps.
·'
. '
big job, but a job that we as a staff have
Recently we received a petition informing
grown to love. We are very pleased with the ·
us 'that students want national and interna-
work that we have done thus far; we are also · tional news in The Circle. We have been
awa~e of the long road to perfection thatlies
·
. debating this idea all semester but one pro-
ahead of us.
• .
. . · .
.
.
. . .. ·. ·· .·. . blem holds us up.
,.
.
.
-.
..
. :. , J!.Wo~l9J).~,extr.ei;D.eJy
1
d.ifJiqMlt
fe>(
ypu, ,as}}.•·, ..
Tti~
J:!r<>plerl} l,ies jn\the factthat orce p~o
0. •
. readers; not to acknowledge·.the progress
· pie make a suggestion they drop out of sight
the'.paper has mac:ie
sine~. the first issue in,,. :· a,:id don't stic_k:around t9 help cany it out.
September .. The compliments and·. en-
Your suggestions•and concern _about what
couragement we have received from time to
goes into The Circle. are nice, but having
time were very appreciated by all of us.
-your bodies here.to aid in the production
One thing has failed to change, however,
would be great. ··
·
student participation. We are a student
We can't please everyone if no one is will-
newspaper and we encourage your input.
ing to work with us. As w.e -look ahead. to
We rarely receive any, though, and this
nextsemester, we look forward to your sup-
puzzles us.
port.
Take time
.
. Readers
·Wdte
All letters must be typed trlple spa~~ wltli a 60 space ·margln,'and submitted IC> the_
Circle office no later than 6 p.m. Monday. Short letters are preferred. We reserve the- .
right to edit all letters. Letters must be signed, but names may
be
withheld upon re• ,
.
· que!II. Letters
will
be published depending upon avallablllly of space.
. .
·
.·A-O~K.? Noway
To the Editor:
there something wrong with our
. We are writing in response to qualities? What exactly di.cl they·
the
"A-OK
Freshman Honored" do to show they have this talent?
article. One point we would like
As..for Torie Seeger's comment
to make is, what does Dean Cox
about "it was important for these
consider the remainder of the
individuals to feel some sort of
. freshman .class if we arc not the
accomplishment," do we not
"cream of the· crop?'!·'How is it
deserve some sort of recognition?
that we have not adjusted? Do we
We have taken -this letter as a ·
· .. - spend too little' or too much time._ great insult and we would a p-
in the pub or library? What have · preciatc an explanation.
the ''95" other's done we have
The unadjusted, unaccomplished,
not? As for the comment· about
bottom-of-the barrel?
them being, "the type of
in:. ·
·
Freshmen
dividuals we will have to turn to
P.S. Peter -Amato aren't you
for leadership in the future," is
glad we are here?.
· Apathy· and. Hunger.
To the Editor:
'-
· 1 would like to address all .of
those students who did not attend
the Convocation Day activities.
When I arrived in the morning, I·
did not really know what to ex-
pect, but as the day progressed I
became aware of not only the pro.-
blems of world hunger, but also
the proble_ms of our own student
body! So many students seemed
indifferent to the activities and··
some even refused to attend-the
activities.
In the·discussion groups, it was
noted that there is a problem wJth
public involvement. I feel that
there will be a severe handicap
restraining the progression of
· world development as long as the
public refuses to acknowledge the
problem. It was depressing to find
that so· many students expressed
this lack of invelvement!
So, you,. the stu.dent who did . ·
not show up for. any of the ac-
tivities, I wish that you would be
able to recognize the presence of
problems outside of your own lit-
tle world. The .problem of world
hunger is real and I hope that you
will acknowledge it before it
reaches home. Think of the oil
shortage the world faces now, and
realize the terror of a similar food ·
. shortage! PLEASE,
if . you do
not,hing else,
ponder the fact that
.. the prDblem exists .. ·
..
Thank-you for being concerned
·enough to finish reading this let-
ter (it is a start anyway). ·
Meg Adamski
DearB~rry
To Barry Lewis:
.·· them for second place behind :the
· I.arri not the type
of
person to : first place. Skullriders
6cO-O;
The
. jump on the bandwagon, but for
One~hitters won on a last. minute.
.• · you
UI
m_ake an c,xception; You
touchdown pass, 16-i2.'
· have taken
·
· some heavy verbal
"Th'at paved the way for the best
abuse , for the ''Persuasive · game of the intramural season,
Female" article and rightfully
sq,
The Skullriders vs. The One-
you deserve
it.
It
was· a "silly"
Hitters. There were about 80-100
thil)g to writ.e about; it seemed as
people watching this · game. So,
though you had nothing else to
Batry that must show some in-
write about, and that is where a
terest. The game ended regulation
·
. · lot of guys jump on the band-
.
time in a 7-7 deadlock. The One-
.. wagon. The cause, for your total
Hitterswon in
1
'overiime" 13-7.
ignorance of the flag football in-
The same atmosphere followed
tramurals. You never printed a. t,he next day in the championship
word about it. Instead you ramble · game,betwe¢n The Meres and The
on about girls who watch guys a--
One-Hitters, . and again. Barry
-s at Marist football games,· and
there were almost a hundred peo-
you even give ink to '.'Powder . pie watching'rrom the sidelines; -
Now that Thanksgiving vacation is behind
us, and it's time to look .toward the
Christmas holidays, as everyone's trying to .
crack the books before that dreaded last
Puff."
.
.. .
. In _another excellent game·,.The
schoolwork-is out of the way. It really ls too
Maybe there is a reason why'
One-Hitters heat the Meres 12-6,
bad that by the time the last week rolls. -
there was no ink, but.to tell the
,
: for the.1981.C;U.B. Intramural
around, we all seem to just want to finish
truth I can't think of any .. 1:he
Championship,·..:
•ii'
,
:,,-:·
/>
·::?
week is upon us.
··.·
· .
. .. .
.
·
It's not ·easy to feel the holiday cheer
when finals are staring us in the face, but
it's only fair that we take some time away
from • the· books to remember what
Christmas is all about: people.
.
After spending another semester living,
socializing, and going through classes with
some pretty special people who won't be
with us for the holidays, it's time now -
in
· . these last few weeks -
to get together and
create some holiday spirit of our own before
December 18.
· Everyone's been saying that they can't
"get into" the season until all the
The
Circle
Co-Editors
Associate Editor
Feature Editor
that last exam and tear out of here. But keep
skullridcrs finally lost,
·
- so·· that
·• So_ qack'to tHe_questio11,:''why
in mind that w_e've got five . long weeks ·
might be. a reason, . being that
no :ink?''
·
Barry,·. we. stiU- dqn't
ahead with Mom and Dad, and th~ only time
there are several on the staff, but
know. We won the championship
_.
we have to celebrate in the Marist spirit of
I don't want to say that, because
fair.a_nd square.
'All
I-can say is•(
Christmas is now, in spite of finals week;
they are good guys, and I know . hope your <:overage of future
in.:
they\vould never do such a thing.
tramuraL sports improves. · It
. So don;t let the papersand the finals spoil
But, be~ides this issue, there wa~
might even be better for you; this
the mood -
yes they're there and . they
no coverage before the skullriders
way no girls could make a fool of
won't go.away, but hopefully we can all find
lost.
.
. .
you, it would be playing it safe by
time to get into the spirit. Whether it's com- .
So, due to lack of ink; I will iri-
printing sports instead of gossip.
ing home from the Renaissance at
4
a.m.
form you of how the season went;
That's your job: anyway, right
• singing carols with a wreath around yot.ir
The Meres and the Football Team
Rona ... oops I mean Barry.
head, or blowing off a night of studying to
·
played in the division°one
·
"Johnson" .
· watch "White Christmas," it's that time of
playoff, and the Meres won 19-6.
an inkless OneaHitter ·
year to be around people that you care
In clivision-two, The Out Patients
about and get that old holiday "glow."
·
and The O!'}e-Hitters ef!ded up
with 4-2-0 records, which tied
continued on page 8
News Staff
Jane Hanley
Terri Sullivan.
Sports Editor
Rick O'Donnell
Staff
Theresa Sullivan
. Denise Film, Karyn Magdalen,
John Kraus, Joanne Holdorf, Pal Brady
Barry Lewis
Nancy Brennan, Tim Dearie, .
. Tim Breuer, Pat Cullough,
_Business Manager .
Maggie Browne
MarketinglAdvertising
·
Jeanie O'Rourke
Joann.Buie
Distributio~ Manager
Terri Tobin
Photography
Maggie Browne, Grace Gallagher
Jeanne LeGloahec
Staff
Donna Cody, Christine Dempsey,·
Peter Fredsall, Karen Johnson,
Jean-Marie Mag reno, Joanna Rosato, Patti Walsh,
Copy Editors
. Karen Flood, Denise Film,
John Petacchi, Ken Bohan,
Bill Travers, Dennis Martin
Cartoonists
Ted Waters
Social Editor
Allison McCarthy ..
Janet McNamarc1
Fa_culty Advisor ·
David McGraw
December
3,
1981 - THE CIRCLE· Page 3 - - •
.
•
~ehind the scenes
ai
the fashion show
.
:
:•I
~
,'
'.
.
.
.
'
,
.
.
-
.
~
'
by Julie Donbr6ski ·
·
.
' , .
.
.
·
. .
in many of the heavily made up faces .
.
.
.
On the
,
brightly Ht,
.
stai-k~white
.
plat-
fo~ms
·
and ~•~ep stairways, they· pose,
tw1~l
,
and ~hde
.
to th~ music, modeling
their
-.
outfits,
·
then disappear from the
audience's view, through filmy curtains
into darkened
:
rocims
.
where the facad;
of polished perfection is dropped and
startling contrast to the backstage
disorder. A clutter of clothes
,
bags,
bo~es, accessories and make-up flows
amid the weaving looms, drawing tables
and
·
mannequins usually found in the
Most of the students agree
.that
the
quick changes are "the worst part of the
sho,-.:.'.' One says, "Wheri you have two
·
routines back to back it's
a.'
real pain .
.
H
.
"The last few nights I stayed up sewing
chaos reigns supreme:
·,
•
·
On stage, in their annual fall fashion
show,
.
the sophomore fashion design
students. smile
·
and dance with ease
through rigidly disciplined routines.
:
Backstage
:
another performance in tak-'
ing
:
place; an unrehearsed show of emo-
tions
.
and actions the audience doesn't
see
.
.
: .
·
,
Before the sho~ starts, fashion direc-
tor David Leigh wishes
..
his
.
students
luck; telling them to
·
"break a strati'
(fashion's equivalent
:
to the
·
show
·
business catch phrase
.
"break a leg").
The lights go down, and the silence
backstage is deafening, until the roar of
the music erivelopes the rooms .
.
The blazing emptiness of the stage is a
fashion rooms.
·
·
·
.'
Make-up mirrors provide the
·
only
light, as the students scurry back and·
forth; · casting eerie shadows on the
,valls .
.
.
·
The pace is hectic and tensions run
·
high as the students rush to make their
curtain calls
.
.
."When people are throwing
.
clothes at
'
you, there isn't enough light and your
own outfits have been moved, you just
want to screen," says one student.
A
collage of staccato sentences can be
heard above the beat of the music,
revealing a series of small crises.
·
"Does anyone have a
brush."
·
"Where are my shoes?"
.
"Help, my zip-
per is
.
struck!"
.
_
·
A student sprints by screaming, "Oh,
·
my God, I'm supposed to be in this
.
number." She screeches to a halt at the
.·
stage entrance, smooths her outfit and
·
calmly steps out onto the stage.
.
.
New York DJ shows
tricks of the trade
by Jeanmarie Magri"oo
to television," said Fornatale, in criticism
of media today. He explained that radio is
.
..
Almost everyone that lives in the New· usually the first place people hear the news.
York area and is interested in rock has After they hear the basic details, they turn
heard the name Pete Fornatale. He is one on the TV, and TV
-
coverage is given air the
of the- top DJs in New York and can be credit and glamour.
.
heard on WNEW FM 102.1
::
If
you were
However,
·
December
·
s;
1980 the roles
.:
.listening to WMCR on Monday, November were reversed. Most people heard the news
Meanwhile a voice in the dimness can
be heard saying, "It's not coming off
.
For God's sake, just rip it right off
me.'' A few seconds later a plaid jacket
files through the air · and
·
lands on the
floor.
.
The models fidget as they wait their
turns to go on stage.
"Look how hard I'm shaking," one
girl says as she held up her hand.
"I'm so nervous,
,
J smoked a whole
pack of cigarettes today," another
adds.
One of the students takes a long drag
on a cigarette and passes it along, say-
ing,
"I
just want to get this whole thing
over with.''
A bottle of white wine in a brown
paper bag is silently passed around for
those who feel they
~
need a boost of
.
courage.
"It
calms me down and keeps
me up," a girl explains as she takes a
sip.
The signs of fatigue are clearly etched
,
23 at
.
3
:
30 you would have heard his of John Lennon's murder first, on Monday
"·
_,_
familiar voice. Fornatale took time ciut of night football. Instead of
'
staying tuned to
...
.
his schedule to come up
.
qe~e and spen~l'a _ the,
TY
for
.
the_ details, the peopl~
'in-
.·
.
:.
.
day with the Marist community.
-
,<-
/
...
,
.
·
stim:tively ht:aded for
,
tl,leir radio, to vent
·
·
.
. . < .
.'
,
.
•
.
;;
;
:;
;.:
.
As
,
s9on
.
as
·
hearrived
:
at
·
3:00,Fomatale
-
·
theif
:
frustrations with thenews;
.
music and
-~;
'./_:
r::·:)
;
\fas:tak~µ
·
~ciBpp)llqrman)
_
R,adio
.
Broad~
/
!11¢mories
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casting cfass, ,vhere
:
he gi1ve
·
a brief pr~en~
;:
.
·
..
The ~•children
·
of the Bea ties instinctively'
':t
·
.
-: ..
talion. Then at 3:30, heh~d a live interv,iew tur~ed on radio for help,»said Fornatale,
'.::
'
.
with Bill Palmeri oilWMCR. From 4:30 to
·
Radio
·
still possesses the ability
.
to touch
.
.
·
5:30, Fornatale held
a
seminar forthe
·
staff people
·
s• lives in a way that television can-
,
of
WMCR,
telling them how he entered the not, because radio :Succeeds where doctors,
•
field,,and his experiences as a DJ.
·
technology, and everything else fails .
.
Later that evening there was a presenta-
·
For'natale cited that radio does not get
-
tion in the theatre
.
which was op
.
en
to
alf
•
the recognition it deserves because it.is so
.
•
students, in which Fornatale
·spoke
.-
o(
commonplace.
"It
is everywhere and peo-
·
America's "media-drenched society.'' He pie are constantly listeQing to it without
.
used a promotion
.
al film of the Doors per-
really hearing it," said Fortanale. It gets to
• .
_
forming "The Unknown Soldier"
·
to
ii-
the point, where as unless you are listening
'
lustrate the power the
·
media has.
In.'
this
·
for something specific you do not hear it.
•
case, it kept a band alive that does not exist
Fornatale got his start when· he was in
.
·,
anymore; not oiµy alive, but one
of the top coHege, working on Fordham's radio sta-
.
bestsellers.
.
.
..
tion. From there, he went to WNEW and
.
"Radio plays thernle of sacrificial lamb he has been there for the past 12 years. For
the past two years, besides being one of the
top DJs in New York, he has been busy
writing a book entitled
Radio During the
TVAge~
He said hewas prompted to write
this book out of a sense of frustration. Not
much
·
is known, or written concerning
radio in the·past 30 years, and Fornatale
decided to remedy this.
Fornatale's day
of
presentations and lec-
tures was sponsored by the Lecture Com-
•
my outfits,"
says
one student. Another
admits, "I just finished sewing my
costumes at 6: 15 p.m. today."
An obstacle often encountered by the
students is an inability to retrieve ac-
cessories that have been deposited in
another changing room.
The solution? The boots and belts are
thrown from room to room across
·
a
walkway in plain view of the audience.
Mishaps, such as a boot hitting the wall
and bouncing down the stairs, are com-
mon and such accessories have to be
re_trived by a student sidling out on stage
wtth a cane or crawling out with a coat
hanger to hook the offending article.
As another opening night show ends
and the flurry of excitement dies down,
audible sighs of relief can be heard.
L~igh sits proudly in a corner watching
his students receiving congratulations
from the audience and Susan Moore a
member of the fashion departme~t,
smiles in satisfaction and says,
"One
down, one to go."
mittee of the College Union Board, chaired
by Loretta Kennedy.
Mike Wiese, CUB
president, who was responsible (or showing
Fornatale around campus said, "I was very
impressed by him, he was knowledgeable
and concerned about the life and future of
radio."
Fornatale
.
said he was very impressed
with what he saw at Marist. He said the
hospitality here was excellent.
Faculty Profile
Lou Zuccarello
>
.
. ;:
.
by
~~~e
Hanley
:
_
.
that I learned and
·
accomplished a great
.
.
deal in that.time.''
.
.
.
In
'
the ranks
·
of college administration;
·
Previous to his position
'
as Academic
·
·
where moving up to the top
_
is the name of
·
Vice:..President and Dean, Zuccarello has
.
the ·game,
.Or.
Louis Zuccarello·has
-
bee
.
n
served
:as
·
coordinator
·
of the criminal
there and back
by
his own choice iri:his 16
justice program, and has chaired and serv-
s
years at
_
Marist College.
ed on many organizations, such
·
as the
·
After serving, as
-
Academic
•
Yice-
Coi:nmitJee on Faculty Development, the
President and Dean from 1975 to 1980, as
Academic Policy Committee, the Fa·culty
··
·.
well as Chairman of
.
the' Dep
_
artmerit
.
of
_.
Library Committee, the President's Plann-
,
History and Political Science before that,
.
ing committee, and many other prof es
-
.
.. _
::'..
Zuccarello returned to his "first love" -
sional and academic-oriented committees.
-
•·
full-tfme teaching- in 1980. "It was a per-
He is a recognized political analyst, and
.
-
·:
sonal lifestyle decision," says Zuccarello of
has been awarded many honors, such as the
·
this switch. "I just wanted to do it. I enjoy
"
Presidential
·
Citation
·
Award
for
•
teaching, and I felt that I had accomplished
Distinguished Service at
..
Marist and the
.
what I wanted to as an administrator."
Mccann Foundation Doctoral Fellowship.
As Chief Academic Dean, Zuccarello
Zuccarello, who studied at St. John's
..
·
.
taught one class per semester, in spite of University as an uridergraducffe, and
,'.:.
the wide range of responsibilities and
achieved a Master of Science in Education,
·
·
demands that this position involved.
a Master of Arts in Political Science, as
Arnong thes
.
e responsibilities were the plan-
wett- as a Ph.D. from Fordham University,
ning,
.
implementing,. and control of the
has taught history and political science at
College- Operating Budget, as well as the
.
both high school and college levels. His in-
supervision of the administrative staff; the
terest in public administration extends into
divisional chairmen, the graduate pro-
.
his personal research undertakings, which
gram, the faculty, arid the student body.
he is developing at present.
·
"It
was very demanding and time-
In viewing both his administrative and
consuming," says Zuccarello, "but I feel
teaching experience,
Zuccarello says,
"Both
·
contrioute to the educational pro-
cess, but teaching involves more direct con-
tact with students
.
In teaching, I can rely
more on myself, because the scope of
duties is more controllable. I can do more
academic.things that I have interest in, such
·
as program and curricular development,
and can pursue personal research pro-
jects.''
·
Sixteen years at Marist as both an ad-
ministator and educator have given Zuc-
carello several insights into the changing
conditions at
-
Marist. "The college has
grown,"
·
says Zuccarello, "but in spite of
the changes, basic values remain. One thing
that I admire in the Marist community is
the presence of real human
· -
concern
between its members. There is a general
humanity here that isn't present at all in-
stitutions." This, he feels, lends to the
good academic, administrative, and per-
sonal relationships at Marist that unite the
community.
Zuccarello also cites the flexibility and
innovative quality of Marist as an in-
.
estimable value in the college's develop-
ment. "This college will take risks -
it is,
in a sense, a daring institution
.
We try
things out," he
says,
"and this stimulates
Louis Zuccarello
and encourages the academic climate," a
necessary s.tep in the expansion of a small
college, says Zuccarello.
"In spite of the changes, much remains
the same"- he said in summary. ''The basic
values
·come
through. There is a core that
holds us together as a college."
r
i
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.
.
·
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.
-
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-
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=-·
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.
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1
.
i.
I
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.
f.
I
Tony Cardone, Marvin Sims,
J
.
oe Verrilli, K. Babcock
·
Yes boys, its finally here B-Guido's top
ten bodies on campus, and here they are:
1. Chris Tuite
2. Nancy Wysong
3. Nicolette Filannino
4. Patty Bowls
5.
Kathy Shea
6. Lisa Fegley
7.
Maryann Constantino
8.
Pam McGregor
9. Jeanne Novotony
.
10. Sheryl Bassford
·
Honorable mention - Lisa Rossi, Sue
Shcewchow, Mary Morino, Diane Jackson
and Borinie Mauro
.
With the recent amount of more beams
being put in Champagl}llt, for support,
Seiters has been asked/f o remove the ice
cream machine which has been the cause of
all this!!
-
B-Guido's Christmas
'
List
Tom Shannon-a pair of shackels or a 100
.
ft. chain.
·
Geof & Richard-townhouses.
Patti Bowles-round trip tickets to Kan-
sas
.
Tim Grogan-a date with the beast.
The Freshmen Class-five weeks with no
verbals.
So
.
up Campbell-Ha!
.
Ha! you were a
naughty boy this year.
.
John Higgins-a new
1982
Model
#43801Z mop.
Bob Kaminsky-Bruce Lee's autograph.
Bonnie Mauro-an
8" by
10" picture of
B-Guido's.
John Kurtz-a steel plated cup.
Kevin Babcock-a pair of diapers.
The Wenches-Man;n Sims
for
a
weekend.·
·
.
Carla Morello-one pound of Salt Peter.
Ziggy-a 6'x4' piece of plywood
.
1st Floor Girls-an 8 by
IO
foot
poster of
Kevin Babcock nude.
.
Dick Keelan-a pick from the top ten.
Marvin Sims-a trip to see his idol Gary
Coleman.
Kelly, Karen, Barbara
·
and Bernadette
0
wait till next year.
·
To the Whole Maril!t Community-a safe
trip home and a happy ~oliday! !
·
Jokes
-What kind of M & M's
.
does Tatoo eat? De
Plane, De Plane
-
Did you hear about the kids who threw a
rock with a note attached to it into a
McDonald's window? The note said "You
deserve a break today
.
"
·
-How
.
do you stop a charging lion? Take
away his. credit card.
Jean Novotony-a fox trap.
. .
Boo's of
the
Week
·
·
.
Sudsy-one dozen eggs.
·
Boo! to Andy Shea for finally
.
getting
Billy Gillespie-a
.
freshman class to call drunk, at a cost of $70.
.
.
·
his own.
.
.
Boo to all you scrooges, Boo!
Doc Menapace-a lifetime subscription to
.
Boo to
.
B-Guido's for always booing
B-Guidos.
you! Boo!
·
Jim
-
Raimo-an electric chair
·
for people
,
We'd
like to thank everyone
for
a very
with morethan
2
verbals.
.
good time this semester
.
Have a nice vaca~
Barry Jamisonswhat do you need.
tion
.
Next semester 8-Guido's will return
·
Chris Somers-a pair of underwear.
.
and
.
our class enrollment will increase by
Judy Discipio-coal in your shoes.
1507o while the Pub
·
wm cut the number of
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RESTAURANT HOUIS:
.
11 AM 'till 10:30 PM
,
Rt. 9
.
• Hyde Park
229-7969
;i
>-
~
,al------.,---~------~--~-----......
"'
-is
~ ~ ~ ~
WHITE LIE
Thurs., Dec. 3 .
.
..
.. - i s ' - - - - - - - _ . ; . .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
___
j
i}
SURVIVOR
Fri.&Sat.,Dec.4&5
0
.
C
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!
~
HARVEST
Sun., Dec. 6
rl
::i
~
·
i°a\
~!f~~~~!~~~to~;t~
~~~,~~g~fcitil .
.
·
•
·
/e
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it
lets
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.
·•
R.inn
.
~Jt\her y
_
our
$3
.
00
cover charge always includes
1
free drink
.
.
.
.
""
•
., .
.
.
.
-:-
•.
:
:.
·.·
,'
.
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~iii..-~~~iii!i!.---------~---~
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-
•
.
11!11
__
_
_________
~
...
N~t
let!
,
~egarding
··
.
·
•.·.
·
Housing for Winter Intercession
.
Jan.
4, 1982 -
·
Jan.
22
;"
1982
.
AU those interested in being
'
ho
.
used on campus for
the winter 1982 Intercession should
.
come to the
·
·
•
·
Housing Office by
·
·
December to make these
arrangements .
. ·
The Room Rate will be $6.6?/day. The total
_
amovnt, covering the length of time you will be on
campus must be paid to the Business Office prior to
the finalization of any Intercession Assignment~
No Food Services will be provided during the Winter
Intercessions.
QUESTIONS?
Please come to the Housing Office
/
ASSENZA'S
·
.
•.
~
DELI
.
.
131 Washir1gton
St.
COFFEE~SANDWICHES
;
.
.
G
ROCERlES-BEER
.
·
.
··
·
·
·
..
.
·
.
.
·
·
Owned
by $Cll
Asenza
\
Class
·
of
-
'72
.
.
.
•
.
'
.
.
Open
7
DOys
a Week
6
a~m
,
~ -
-
9
-
p.m.
452-4772
i
i
l
.
._
,
..
,
,
~
:
~/i
·.....:
·
·
--.----~--..... - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - ; _ _ . . . ; . : _ .
_ _ _
.;.._ December
3,
1981
·
THE CIRCLE· Page
5 - - -
,
,
.
.
M(!lristgriid
:
.·
:
_
·
_
._
:
-·
"a
·
·
z
•·
•
··
•
z
·:
·
le
··
·
;
s-·
-
. :
:,
.. ··.«~
.
.
·
.
.
·
.
.
Bfoadwdy
by Terri Sullivan
.-::
;
Origi·ri~lly produced at the Old Coal
Cabare!
'(the
Jury Room) in Poughkeepsie;
-
and
,
tw1ce and
,
Marist in 1977 and 1979
Mass Appeal opened on Broadway Nov'.
12:
.
.
.
<
Mass Appeal,
a
play written by Marist
alumnus
-
Bill C. Davis; is enjoying a suc-
.cessful
run at the Booth Theatre .
.
In an over-the-phone interview from his
home i_n Connecticut, Davis revealed that
he
·was
nervous when
·
the play
·
operied bu1
was
.
"relieved" when the reviews came out.
.
.
"I felt the play was good," said Davis,
·
"but I didn't know how the critics
.
would
react. The critics ultimately de\ermine the
.
play's run so I was relieved-and pleil'sed-
when !he reviews appeared.''
..
.
Davis, who graduated in 1974, explained
that the response the play received when it
was
.
produced last year at the Manhatiari
Theatre Club, where Davis is an active
member, made it feasible for the piay to bt!
.
taken to Broadway.
.
"The production there was essential for
·
the play
to
go_ to Broadway," said Davis,
"because there it won so much recognition
·
through good reviews."
.
.
.
·
Mass Appeal is the story of Father Tim
Farley (Milo O'Shea) and Mark Dolson
(Michael O'Keefe). Father Tim is an old
Irish priest who loves his material valuables
.
and is not as concerned as he should be
about spiritual matters.
Mark Dolson is
a young, radical
seminarian who frowns upon both his
fellow seminarians and Father Tim for
.
.
their
·
·feigned
religious
dedication
.
.
Although Father Tim warns Mark about
·.
his image al}d does not like his sermons, he
.
.
..
realizes
·
tharMarkhas the vitality
·
and spirit
'
,
,..;
:
,
to
Hmalce
.
the
church alive
:
again
:
';
·: \
~
;
C
;_
,
.
..
:::'-:-
There
"
is both humor
:
and passion in t
.
lteir
.
·
confrontations,
';
winning Mass
·
Appeal
.the
approval ofveterantheatregoers.
.
,
.
.
·.
.
','
The play, showing on
·
Broadway' is ess!!n-
.
tially the
same
as
,
the show
·
performed at
Manhattan
·
Theatre Club~ The only dif-
ference according to Davis, is that Michael
.
O'Keefe replaces Eric Roberts as the young
·.
seminarian .
. ·
"The different actor changes the impact,
.
·.
but· people like it just the same," said
Davis .
.
"People come, they think, they
laugh ..:... in general, just have a really good
time.!
,
'
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
.,
Davis
.
went on. to explain the play has
·
..
undergone certain changes sine¢ it was pro-
·
,
du
'
ced·
'
in Poughkeepsie arid at Marist,
changes that
·
involve the focusing
·
arid
editing.vital to.any
.
play.
.
..
·
.
. .
Davis said, "The first time you write a
.
·
play it's like you·ju~t met som~one;;the se-
.
cond time is like taking a train ride with
them: You b~in
.
to deepen the characters
.
upon the third and fourth revisions, then
.
it's like yoµ've moved right in with them."
.
Davis receptly sold Jhe movie rights
·
to
·
.
Mass Appeal and is eager to begin the
screenplay.
.
"P
1
·
th
. _
_
..
.
.
eop e come,
ey_
·
think;
·
they laugh---in
gel)eral, just have a
good time'
_
'
.
"I thought seliing the rights was great,"
•
said Davis. "Now I have to start at the
beginning and bring all the characters who
were off on the sides into the story and
develop them:"
_
Davis attributed a large part of his suc-
cess to his days at Marist, specifically to the
help he had received from Dean Gera~d
Cox and other instructors.
"The atmosphere at Marist is very
favorable
to
those interested in creating
theatre."
said
Davis. "Dean Cox along
·
·
with (Jeptha) Lanning and (Milton)
Teichman showed incredible interest in my
work . and were very encouraging.
l'm
thank
fut
for that now."
Dean Cox, who had Davis in his theater
courses (the same ones offered today) was
p
..
LAJrB
·
r
.
~ -
~with
.
Davis on opening night of Mass Ap-
peal
.
on Broadway. He explained the
,several
sets of changes the play has gone
.
through from its first days until now. _
..
Cox said, "After it was first done here ft
was taken to New York where Davis receiv-
ed help from theatre people with it.
.
By
the
.
secon
.
d time it was produced here it had
become glib and clever, losing its original
sensitivity and warmth:"
Cox went on to say that after Davis
.worked on it again he got the main focus
back .
.
"Being produced at the Manhattan
Theatre Club and getting
it,
ready for
Broadway deepened the clarification of the
.
two characters," said Cox. "The motiva-
tion is clearer now."
paper,".said Cox. "The young playwrigh1
needs to see his play
to
be able to com-
municate more effectively
with an au-
dience."
·
Metanioa was one such play Davis wrote
and viewed here at Maris!. He has recently
w..ritten the screenplay for this under the
name Internal Combustion:
•
Marist will be sponsoring two bus trips
to Mass Appeal this month. On Sunday,
Dec. 6 the College Union Board
is
sponsor-
ing a trip for students. There are fifty
tickets available for $15 each and students
.
can
·
contact Barbara McMahon or Karen
Mc:Geary for additional information.
The second trip
·
is for faculty and staff
on December
12
for the evening perfor-
"The first time you write a play it's like
you just met someone ... upon the third
and fourth revision, then
-
it's like
.
you'~e moved right in with
_
them''
Davis was one of the reasons Cox started
experimental theatre on campus.
"I
was
convinced that people could learn more
through watching a play on stage then
through
_any
number of revisions on
mance and a reception is being held after-
wards by President Murray.
Davis will be in attendance at both per-
formances and
Dean Cox
sees
the
December 6 showing
·
as an "excellent op-
-
-
-
"I felt the play was
good, but
I
didn't
know how the critics
would react. .. I was
relieved-and
pleased-when
the
reviews appeared."
port unity for students to
meet
and talk to·
Davis."
Davis himself is quite enthusiastic about
the people from Marist attending Mass Ap-
peal. According to Davis, Marist is more
beneficial than even Harvard or Yale for
the theatre minded because of the many op-
portunities for creating and experimenting
the school offers.
"There are so many places on campus ro
put on a show," said Davis, "all you need
is a little imagination."
·
For aspiring playwrights Davis added,"
Take the help and encouragement you are
offered at Marist. Take full advantage of
it.
It
pays off," said Davis.
,
·
,
I
:-
, I
. j
•
j
·•
I
.
j
·-
I
I
·
.
J
,
.
I
r
t
~
:.,,!;.,,; .. ,,
,
.. -, •
_ _ _ Page
6
~
THE CIRCLE·
Dece_mber 3,
1981.: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · · · - - ~ - ·
· - -
The
f Ood problem.at
h.oine:
C3.fetefta.Waiste
'
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
by
Ivan
Navas ·
. three factors multiplied together' gives
the
amount of portions· needed. ·
· . .
.While the Marist community has turned . .. To illustrate he used the chicken meal:
its attention to the issue of world hunger,
l ,000 is the attendance;
1.
7 is. the seconds
Seiler's food service is. fighting a food pro- ·. factor; . 75 is the acceptance factor. The
blem much closer to home-waste.
·
answer, when worked out, is 1,275 .portions
At the Marist cafeteria, 14 to 15 percent
needed.
of the food purchased is wasted, according
To find how many chickens are needed,
to Al Oldmixon, ma1_1ager of Seiler's. That Oldmixon divides by four a quarter of a
compares with a waste factor of 17 to 18
chicken is a portion). Thus, 319 chickens
percent nationwide in · food operations
are needed. Multiplying this figure by
2.5
similar to Seiler's, Oldmixon said.
(weight of chicken) he finds 797 pounds of
To give an idea of the numbers involved
chicken are needed to serve a-meal 'for din-
in an operation such as Seiler's, he said,
ner. . .
"In an average week approximately 2,800
· Oldmixon praised the Convocation Day
quarts of milk are consumed."
emphasis on World hunger.
"It
is an ex-
Trays that ·are returned or -left at the cellent idea which I can see may bring a
table with untouched or half-consumed
positive impact," Oldmixon said. "We
. food are a problem Oldmixon confronts . cannot be pessimistic since·20. years of so.-
everyday. "The problem I see is the· eyes-
meone's lifestyle and habit are not easily
are-bigger-than-the-stomach syndrome,"
changed." He said that if only 20 percent
Oldmixon said. . .
.
of the people become aware it would be
Ways of combatting food waste include
beneficial.
··
a survey or the usual use of control sheets.
Oldmixon gave an example-of what was
A survey given out in the cafeteria was
offered as food service
af
another~college. ·
compiled by the Inter-House Council food
He said, "At Vassar College
h
was the·
committee to find out what foods students
policy to provide a meal without unlimited
liked,
according
to
Oldmix·on.
seconds." Oldmixon said that ide!l is go_q_d
"Preliminary findings show that what
in that the student is forced to eat all that is
students prefer is an American fast food
served, but it is -not realistic·
for
Seiler's .
diet, like hamburgers, french fries, and piz-
community at Marist College .. • · , ·
za, to mention a few," he said.
Marist College students who work as
Oldmixon said that the survey would
servers in the cafeteria often have the best
help cut food waste by,giving .a better idea
view of the waste~,Ed St. John
.cfaip,
"They
of what students want to eat. ·
(students) don't seem to like it or they take
The usual way to combat food waste is
too much and fail to finish it. Or they don't
through quality control and using control
like it and they take it out on us and leave it .
sheets that monitor the number of people on the table."
·
·
who consume a certain amount of food.
. A somewhat similar response came from ·· food as they did before."
foods, he-said. "Some products can be us~
The sheet for a recent dinner showed that
Kathy Crowley, who said, "I think the
According ·
-to
Grace Gallagher, a ed l:mt not hamburgers: being reused for
75 percent·· of the students consumed
students. abuse the food .. They· complain
member of Campus Ministry and the Com-
meatloaf.: It is more expensive to save food
chicken, 20 percent had shrimp fried rice
about the food but they should expect that. ·munication Arts· Society, 25 commuters --than to .use it again." Oldmixon said, ·
and 5 percent had the vegetarian meal.
institutionalized food is never top quality."· and faculty gave money to Oxfam,Nov. 19,
"Economics wins over moral standards."
To determine how much food is needed,
Helene Askine observed what is a basic
while a total of about 620 students signed
He gave a specific example with ham-
three factors must be taken into account:
complaint. "Most people return·theirfood away their dinners .. Campus Ministry, the ~burger meat. He said that. if cooked ham-
attendance, "seconds" and acceptance. -...... .
_
because it's. either unappetizing or cold,"
Spanish Club and the Communication Arts .burgers. stored at 32°F are. recooked at a
The second factor is the number of en-
she said. Jennifer Bohanan observed- that )Society organizecri:he drive_" fqr Oxfam, a temperature to 140°F to kill
•
.. bacteria
.
trees taken by each individual.patron, while C_onvocation Day had .no 1:ffect.:''As
fa!_
as;<· gr<Jup wor~ing to ~~lieve wo~ld ~u11g~r.
_
. , . ·
.
...
·
. ~nd/orflo
_
ra.a third time aro\ind, .the nutri~.~~
·
.· Jhe acceptance fact()t i_s
.
t~(
percent. of : I cansee, the Co!lvocationDay did little o_ri
it
A.sked.why onlX a dollar 1s g1ven to <:)x- :t1~nal_v,~lue of the food is)ost: Oldmixon ,
students who take a given meal. These, -.·no good;" she said. ''People waste as m1,1,ch;, ':\f!tm. for every _mealdonat_ed by a student, said,
-A.ny product that . has ;_, beent:, ··
·
·
)'vis}
G_allagher said _the
.
:manage1J1ent _of • fepfoces~ed must be utilized and cannot be ;;
DEEi
·. Quality Sandwich
Meats
At.·Most
Reasonable Prices
Salads • Soft Drinks • Ice Cream
Open Nightly
1·:
36!).m. - I a.m. -
See us for your floor parties.
Special
·
Platters Available
:Seiler;s,told her thattherest of·the money · reheated fora third usage;'!. ,·
,
: ,_..: ;. , ;·. • ·. , .
· is ;needed to cover overhead, salaries and
OJdmixon saicl;
'·'.i\s
:..a food service we .
other expenses.;-:- -
· • •·
. .
.
.· . · are contracted lo providethe needs of the_
;
· ··
•
·· Sometimes fi1_1ancial corlcerns encourage. students arid it is not encumbent upon us to
·
waste; Oldmi_xon said,;"lt's economical to provide
-
nutrient information education to
.discard
a
1)roduct rather .than to, pay the. the student body.''Basically; he said,
"it
is
;-labor_; to, reprocess· it into· food or ·some :
UI)
to the student to use his/her upbdnging
• foods." The reusing of food is not always to decide what to eat and to make a,wise
the policy and is_ only done with certain decision."
,
·
· -· · -
Sabbath dinneris this Friday
. . .
·
'·
'
.··-.-·
Marist College will hold its first Sabbath consists of wine, · challah (bread);- fish, _. _
dinner on Friday at the Byrne· Residence 'chicken·.· vegetables~;: noodle·. pudding · and
Hall. This event will take place from 5 to - dessert.
On
Saturday afternoon a special ,
7:30 p.m.
·.·
dish called chulent is also served. .
.
.
There will be a charge of
$1.
.
. .
.
.
.,
. .
-
. ,.
The Sabbath is considered a day of rest ·- Everyone stands up _and the man of the •
· for the Jewish people. The Sabbath is · house recite a'blessing on.the-wine; After ·.
welcomed into the home with the lighting everyone has spiritually washed· his' or her
of candles by the woman of the house. The ... hands for bread with the blessing everyone·
family gathers around the table to. watch \sits down and the tn'an says a blessing ov.er
this and when the candles are. lit everyone the· challah and c~ts a -piece for everyone.
wishes each other a good Sabbath.
. ' , . . The meal begins, and the :house is 'very
The family then·goes to services at the tranquil. No.one is in a rush and-during ,
synagogue on .Friday night and Saturday dinner thoughts of the Bible are taught.
afternoon. Atthe conclusion of each· ser-
Persons- interested in attending the din~
vice the family:goes home and .eats one of ner Friday should. contact Elise Linden at
the two traditional' Sabbath meals which the Post Office .
.
·
: ,·
· An excellent haircuttery. · _-.
:
·
Now
featuring
CELLOPHANES,
the new
non-peroxide
haircolor/conditioning system with unlimited color
choices. and excellent sheen.
WAIRCUTTfR-S
·$2.00 Off
With /\Aorist 1.D.
Tlil:
curt1:v,.- -
3 Liberty St, Main Mall, Poughkeepsie• 454-9239 • By app~t only
'
-• - "" - • - ~ .. ......,..,.,_.._, _ _
, _ _
__ « -
w
-,.~r_ --...--•r--n---
~
~
•.•·-~--••··-~.-s-..__,,__.,..,._.. __ -
- - - - - - - - - - ~ _ , . .
.... ....,,... .... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
....;,.;.
··
,
..
·
_ _ _ _ _
....,_
.
December 3, 1981 ·
THE CIRCLE· Page
7 - - -
by
BIH
Palmeri
.
:
the next few years (Billy Squire, Pat
Benatar, Survivor; Loverboy, etc
..
), it was
.
.
-~·
Wdl another week
·
isgone in thecontinu-
only
a
matter of tinie.
iilg history of roe~ and roll, and the Ston~s
. The difference between. progressive
are still
_in
the headlines (Syracuse this
music and Americans is simple. In England
time), but who really cares: In this writers
and most other countries the Bowie/Queen
mind the event of the week as far as Marist single is
'
#
1,
in the U.S. the fourth version
is concernecl was the special visit last Mon-
of Foreigners firsi album is at the top of the
day by Pete Fornatale. Pete who? Thats charts.
·
··
·
·
·
• what I
·
thought you would
.
say, but ma)'be
.
Grand
·
Funk Lives, so thats what the new
if you weren't apathetic,' well lets move on.
,
albuin says.
I
·
know the lyrics are on a sixth
·
I
gµess
l
could give a review of ~is lecture grade level, but people this
.
is the roots of
or his ilew book _but I'll skip that. Why?
_
American Heavy Metal or were you in
·
sixth
Well 1:,ecause if you
·
were interested you
·
grade
·
at the tinie. Oh by the way Ozzy
would have been there. Hey wait a minute
I
Osbourne is making a fool out of Ronnie
didn't know
·
about it .
.
Probably because James Sabbath.
·
·
·
you did not listen to
91.9
or dial ext. 132,
By the way
l
would like to compliment
so just go buy the book.
·
·
.
Loretta Kennedy,
Mike
Weise and whoever
Look for the record industry' to be flood-
else was involved
.
in bringing Pete For-
ed with Led Zeppelin cloned type bands fo_r natale here. Also
I
would like to thank
:
NUNZIO~S PIZZA
-
.
530 MAIN
-
STREET
..
OPEN: 11:30 am-3:00 am
Weekdays
.
.
.
11: 30 a.m.-4:QQ a.ffl.
Weekends
Fast Delivery
SPECIAL-OF.-THE-MONTH
$3.75 Pies
;
.
.
.
.
.
471-0223
.
·
.
~
~
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
c4eGclem~
;
·
WINE
'.
&
LIQ
·
uoR.
26
A.CADE-MY
ST.
·
.
.
PO'IIEPSIE~ N.Y. 12601 ·
-
·
·
-Tel.
-
412
-
-4X.I~
--
•
Park.Discount Beverages
s
ecials
-
This
Week
SCHLITZ Cans
$6.99
Case
Old Milwaukee Cans
$5.99
Case
·
.
Beck
$3.49
6 pack
ALBANY POST ROAD
HYDE PARK
•
Random notes
Barry Lewis for the best sports reporting at
Marist in my four years here, The Circle
and
WMCR
are going to miss you.
What happened to New Wave? Besides
the Police and the Clash every body else
has disappeared or become a one hit ghost
band. If you don't believe me take a look at
the album charts of the past few months,
all veteran rockers (Moody Blues, Rolling
Stones, Genesis,
-
Bob Segar Kinks, San-
tana, shall I continue)
.
The one year anniversary of the John
Lennon Tragedy is upon us again so please
·
don't give in to some money monger trying
to make a buck off of it. (do
I
have to ex-
plain) Please join Frank DiGilio and
myself for a serious John Lennon music
special on the anniversary. Also please try
to give a minute of your time in silence
sometime on December 8
.
WMCR Playlist
TOP ALBUM PICKS FOR THE WEEK
WMCR PLA
YUST
(Compiled from BILLBOARD and ROLLING STONE Magazines)
I.
Foreigner- Waiting for a girl like you, "4"
_
2
.
The Police- Every Little Thing She Does- "Ghost in the Machine"
3. The Rolling Stones- Start Me UP- "Tattoo You"
4. Genesis- No Reply at All- "Abacab"
5.
Genesis-Abacab- "Abacab"
,
6. The Kinks- Destroyer- "Give The People What They Want"
7. Queen and David Bowie- Under Pressure-Queens Greatests Hits
8. The
·
Rolling Stones- Little T and A- "Tattoo you"
9. Journey- Don't Stop Believin'- "Escape"
10. Stevie Nicks- Leather and Lace- "Bella Donna"
NEWLP's
J. Geils, Steve Miller Band, Black Sabbath, Adam and the Ants, Pink Floyd,
AC/DC, U2, Ozzy Osbourne, Neil Young, Joan Jett, David Byrne, Henry Paul
Band, David Bowie .....
.
Upcoming
'MCR
Events ·
TOP
10
COUNTDOWNEVERY TUESDAY PM-w/ Ed Powers
ARTIMUS MID'NT Lightning Every Monday PM
HOLIDAY MCR MESSAGES to your friend or loved one.
REGGAE - EVERY THURSDAY NITE WITH Robyn.
Fone_qu~sts or a h9liday message call EXT 132 WMCRADIO
.
.
-
-
.
.
,··
· ~
.,-
•
----
-
-·
:.
~
-
;
-·•
·
. .
-
.
~
~-
-
-·
-
.
_
.--
..
·
-
,
,
,
,_.
_.
--
HOMESTYLE ITALIAN
MEATBALLS
&
SAUSAGE!
Served hot with peppers, onions,
and melted cheese - if you like -
on afresh foot-long roll. Tastes just
like·you made it at homei
.SU Bfilill[g)~
We've got more taste.
PARK DISCOUNT PLAZA
HYDE PARK
(Next
to
Carvel)
Open
Late
Glamour seeks
10 top students
·
Marist
students
are invited to participate
in GLAMOUR Magazine's 1982 Top Ten
College Women Competition.
Young
women from colleges and universities
throughout the country
will
compete in
GLAMOUR's search for ten outstanding
students. A panel of GLAMOUR editors
will
select the winners on the basis of their
solid records of achievement in academic
studies and/or in extracurricular activities
on campus or in the community.
The 1982 Top Ten College Women will
.
be featured in GLAMOUR's August Col-
. lege Issue and
will
receive a $1,000 cash
·
prize.
Anyone who is interested in entering the
search should contact Chris Lapham, in the
Public Relations Office for more informa-
tion. The deadline for submitting an ap-
plication to GLAMOUR is December 15,
1981.
.
.
.
.
'
·
··
·
t
r
)
•.
·,
s
.
-
·
-
·
-,.
_.·
.
.,
_
._
;,
...
~
,-
...
·
.
.
..
.
.
:.ZI
•
.
.
-
'
,
... ;
1
,
...
•
... ~.
,
.
f
•
•-
:
..
·
·
-
·
·
•
...
...
.
-
.
..
.....
·
·
•
,
.....
,.
.
..
.
'
,
.......
,,
..
,
.
.
.
.
,,
,
.
,
.
.
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...
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..
, . ;
.
.
:
.
.
,
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.
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....
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· - - - Page 8 -
THE CIRCLE·
December 3, 1981
.
.
.
·
D~~lltS
·
•
,
GQrivoCatiOh
pa~
,
i~
,
~,l
;f::
;~J~j
t@;>/.<
·
.
·
.
S
_
tudentspraise
·.
·
.
. .
.
..
g~oup leade~ in thldis~ssio~s that folio~-
.
Eddie
.
said he hoped
.
the ·convoc~tion:-: &'ltgi"'.es u~ a b~e~tboffr~shair.•:
_:.
:
~
{~
)1
,
0:_
·
· ed convocation. She said such things .were
·
would become iriore than
.
a
.:
lecture. ~•1
.
.
,
·
Casey
.
.
\Vas involved
,
m
the· d1scuss1on
.
. .
.
h
.
t
.•
·
.
discussed as the establishment of radio would like to'see the convocatiori
:
asbeing
:
groups af'tenh~.s~ch
:
alld said theY
:
Were'
;
.
SpeeC
~
OplC
:_\
system with. the coliege
·
students
iii
other
·
the starting pQirit of something; otlierwise,
. ·
excellent .
.
She said
.
5-9itle
·
good
·
i
_
<leas 'Yere
..
.
countries to see
·
what they need and
_
to try it was worthless," said Eddie.
.
.
·
_
...
> .
·
.
generated in
_
her group such as writ\ng let-
to provide thein with what we could. The
There were some negative comments
·
ters to
·
congr~ssmen, urging them to
-
look
,..
.
...
idea of putting a crate in the center of cai:n-
from students. Katherine Bowering, a non-
into
.
the matter .of world
.
. hunger,
.
fo see
When the word "convocation" is men- · pus
.
for donations was also discussed, Har~
traditional! fullstime student,
.
s;iid
.
she
whai is
.
nee~ed. Also, t_he i~ea of preparing
by Susan
Vassallo
tioned, the word "man~atory" generally rison said.
- :
i
·
·
·
.
.
·
.
.
. ·
·
.
thought
_
the speech was too general and
cooked fooii for donauonsmstead of
.
a
qm
follows and the emotional upheayal of
.
T~~
fact that a big lunch was served after that there were no solutions offered.
off the shelf was suggested
~
Casey_said;
.
..
.
distress is o'ften not far behind. With these the convocation discussions did not go over Bowering said she thought the conv
.
ocation
.
.
·
Dean Gerard ~ox tho':Jght the
,
speaker
same sentiments
·and
perhaps a shimmering very
.
well. "Lunch was inappropriate," should
.
have pertained more specifically to
and the speech was most appropriate
_;
~•The
of hope
.
that
this convocation-would be dif-
said Harrison. "Our attention was drawn
Marisi. "We have enough problems here,"
standing ovation,•~ Cox said, "was ample
ferent, faculty, staff, and students enrolled to eating instead of hunger."
said BowerJng. However,. Bowering too,
proof of the student's sen.sitivi!Y to not
.
on-
.
into the
.
gym, some up to
.
a half hour late,
'Harris
.
on, who spent a
_
year abroad,
.
agreed that
·
ignorance' towards world
ly a personal need,
_
but one
.
(hat they
Nov. 18 to see just what was in store for agreed with Dr. Kutzner. "The U.S. is
hunger was widespread. "Students are
.·
recognizeasasodetalileed
·
asweU
-
.'.'
:
.
.
.
•·•··.
'.
them.
.
isolated in thinking and is unaware," said
limited to what they know," said Bower-
C
Cox said th~t:.the tim~ng of the convoca-
Harris
'
on. "We don't realize the extent to
·
•
-
ing. "We've never been hungry.'
.
'
.•
.
.
·
·
.
tion, given the topic, was
.
very appropriate
_
.
To many's surprise, the }llain event of
th~ day turned out to
.
be an attractive, well-
educated woman, Patricia Kutzner, a Stan-
ford University graduate, who spoke about
the world's hunger problem and the United
State's lack of action.
The students appeared very attentive,
and unlike at last year's convocation,
-few
walked out. Quite the contrary, when the
speech was over, she got a standing ova-
tion.
.
·
Several students praised the.day's events.
·
"A lot of good ideas came out of the day,''
said Marianne Harrison, a senior and
which our style of Jiving effects others." . Sentiments among the faculty were
.
very
and f9rtunate. "President Murray
:
was i
_
n
Dr. Kutzner had said that the United States
positive. "The speaker was well chosen,
the. Far
_
East on a government sponsored
and the Soviet Union were on the bottom
dynamic, and_gave a very good presenta-
trip,''
.
said Cox.
-
'~And,
.
we had alrea
_
dy,.
of the list as far as having information
:
tion," said Janice Casey, a faculty member
planned World Hunger Day.for.the follow-
available to them concerning World
of the English Department. Casey said she
.
ing day,
_
" World
i
H\mger Day involved·
.
Hunger.
·
remembered last year when the students
·
students
·
giving up a meal and Seilers, the
Simon Eddie, a senior
.
from London,
walked ouL "The speech was just Jong
·
camus food service, donating one dollar
England, living iri the United States for
enough," said Casey.
"Students
were very
towards
.
world hm1ger.
..
··
·
>··
··
.
• •
...
.
three years riow, said he thought the con-
attentive/'
·
"All in all the day was'·a
;success/'
said
vocation was much
·
better than usual. ·.
Convocation has traditionally been a. MattChandler, a senior.
·
"It's a great
.
feel-
"Lots of students aren'
-
t interested in
time when Marist itself was
-
reviewed and _ing to know that youf school cares enough
discussion," said
.
Eddie. "There is a
new developments were reported to the
.
to try to do something aboufworld hunger
'.
.
general dislike
·
of official school
students, but not this year. "I think
·
it's
.
-I
.
mean, really do
·
·
something,''.
·
said
meetings."
good to bring outsiders in," S!3-idCasey.
Chandler, "ne>t_just
_
talk-about it."
More readers write
Missing courses ·
other students
·
in
.
the same
,
one to explain the absence of such
..
cle,
·
"Marist
to
Launch Major
.
_
entertaining
.
·
and. productive
·
pre<licament.
lt
was turned down.
·
a -course to a potential employee Co-op Program,''
"
Dr .. Florence
.
semester. Our
·;·
special
"thanks
to
To the Editors:
Isn't 25 people sufficient to
as he scans the resume? The op-
Michels
·
was
identified as
.
·
the
·
Management and employees
•
.
This letter is in response to the consider scheduling the course?
tion available is to take the course representing the "Psychology and
of Sielers
;
for their cooperation
spring schedule of 1982. There are Last semester I took a course that
at another college
...
if they have Sociology
.
Division:" The correct
.
.
during those enjoyable
WMCR
·
many seniors like myself who had
5
students in it. This semester
it.
-
title of the Division is Social and
Put? Nights.
_
We would like to
need a marketing research class to I'm in a class with only 3
I feel that if a student is going Behavioral Sciences
.
and it in-
_
wish everyone a healthy and hap-
graduate. Unforturiately, the students.
to pay over $20,000 for an educa-
eludes Criminal Justice.•
. ··
·
PY Holiday and look forward to
course is
not offered next
Although it has been made
tion, the school has
·
a commit-
.
Thank
-
you.
.
seeing you in the semester to
semester. I can't understand why known to me that I have the op-
-
menlto at least prepare an effi-
Barbara A. Lavin
·
_
come. -i:hrough music,
.
news, in-
a mandatory course such as this tion of taking another course in
cient schedule, and not to
·
-
·
formati<;>n
.
on and about campus
·
one will not be offered next another conc
_
entration
·
(i:e:, the
misleading
·
information in the
·
,
we
·
are here to ser'{e you in many
semester. The Marist College labor
,
relations investment
.
·
catalogue.
·
.
·
·
·
WMCR
:
·
--
ways, so get involved and listeii.to
catalo~ue specifically
'
·
states that
.
analysis course) inorderto suffice
·
·
·
· ·
'
Ferg Foley
·
your college
•
radio station,.
Marketing Researchis
.
offered in graduation requfreinents . .l
can't
,
w·
.
·
-
~:
·
:·
·
·
· ..
;
TO:CircleEditor:
:
.
.
.
. .
.
WMCR.
.
-..:
·
.
·:.
·
.
both the fall and spring. So where stress
.
the importance of this par-
.,
·
.·
·
.
fOilg-1).atne
~:.
:
,
·
.
<
The staff of-WMCR would'like
~-
-
.
· ·
-
..
.
HAPPY HOLIPAYS,;;
.,
is
it? One
"
sfodent submitted a
'
ticufar course as a key concentra~
.
'
.
.,,
,::.:
.>
';
·.
·
.
A
·
.
i_
,.:;,.:
/•i
,
,
:
c;
·
,,
.;
to
·thank
its--dedicated
·
·
lis'teiiers'
.-.-
.
.
,._
.
,,.·
.
~d
.
Rower
_
s-Prog
!'·
DirectorfiJ
..
.
>-:
i
-
.
::
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;:;
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~e~~i~;itt
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<-·
.
\
MARIST
.·
COLLEGE
~
'
.
.
'
'
.
'
'
"
.
·
BOOKSTORE
'
.
.
.
''Wishes
¥ou
Happy
Holidays
.
'
_
'
.
· YOUR
COLOR Pic'TIJRES
:
DESERVE THE BEST
• •
•
#
•
•
•
•
•
:
·
:
DAILY PICK-UP
&
DELIVERY
OPEN 10-5 MON-FRI
We~l'e
.
more
than a bookstore.
-·-~··-
,
;·-:..:: ~..:;;."":' .
.:..: . ..:.·.;:.:.;~:.'-..~!;' ..
:';.,":;!~~~ ..
~-
.4-:.,,,~:.,~:::.;.:,.,.~~·.1••: ·~-,.~:; .• ;._.•) •. •..: .~:.;,-,-.. :.-....... ,:.."::.~~...:1,.:-t ................ ·~;.• ••
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/
---~~~~-~--------------------------------December~,
1981- THE CIRCLE• Page
9
.. AfftliOt
deqrieStreiltment of Crime victims
.
.
'
.
by
.John
Kraus.
· A gtinman_enters a small store in a City.
He confronts an· 85-year-old woman who is
· the cashier of the store. ·
.. . The gunman demands that the woman
. '~Ncf crime~ are senselses~ When
a
gunman··
blows an old lady away, · it's a · power-
play/'
_
.. , .
.
-
· · give him all the money in tile ·cash register.
Crime Victim's Book was published in
who are most likely to commit crimes."
Handing_ over the
$35
that was in the
1979, spoke:to
a
group of Psychology ~d
Bard said that all crimes, ranging from
regist~r, the ~oman asks if she can keep a
Criminal Justice students in the Fireside
thefts to homicides, can be viewed on a
dollar for her subway fare home;·
. Lounge at Marist on Nov. 18.
·
continuum. Crimes on the left of this con-
The gunman shoots the woman dead.
"No crimes are senseless," Bard said.
tinuum, such as theft and burglary, violate
A
senseless crime, right?
"When a gunman blows an old lady away,
the victim's external self, according to
Not according to Dr. Morton Bard, pro- - · it's a power-play.
0A
criminal gains a sense · Bard.
fessor of psychology at the City University
of pQwer and control through his crimes,
Crimes on the right of the continuum,
· of . Ne'-".· Yprk. Bard, whose book,
The
he said. "It's t_he powerless of our society
such as rape and homicide, violate the vic-
r----~----------------------•-----.tim's
internal self, Bard said. "The victims
of all crimes, even· property crimes, speak
-
.
.
.
.
.
. . ·..
i
.
·· .•
····'.i"•·...
'
'"(SUPER
NEW YORK
CUTS)
..............
•
. at
· 49
Ac_a.demy Street
.
(Near
"Good
Times Ccife"
. Ample Custom•r Parking·
Hl1
ancl Her
·aoov·PERM
SHAMPOO-· CUT
I
.
.
,
.... $35.00.
·•1910
OPEN ..
G.
SPECIAL
AND BLOW DRY
From$
5~
0 -
Open
Dallr
10-8·
No Appointment Nec-.sary
of the· feeling of being dirtied or violated.''
Bard
said
that · until . recently
psychologists have had little interest in the
area of crime victimization. "Crimes are
looked upon as competitive encounters,"
he said. "The crime victim is viewed as the
·loser. Th~re's been a denial of the victim as
a person."
The criminal justice system has also fail-
ed to recognize the crime victim, according
to Bard. "The state (any state) wants. to
preserve only the public order," he said .
"But the individual wants to preserve his
personllood." Bard said that the state's
voice dominates over the victim's voice in
the court room.
. .
Bard added, however, that 32 states now
have laws which enable a crime victim to
hire his own private prosecutor. "But the
private prosecutor must work under the
public prosecutor," Bard said. "This is a
step in the right direction, but more is need-
ed and I don't see another step coming for
quite some time," he said.
The treatment that police give to crime
victims· is often inadequate, according to
Bard. "The police are often the first
authority figures to arrive at the· scene of a
crime," he said. "The crime victim looks at
the policeman as
a
parent symbol. If one of
the first things a policeman asks a robbery.
victim js, 'why didn't you scream?', he's
going to increase the psychic harm done to.
the victim."
·
Bard said that the police do well when it
comes to treating social disorder, but that
they're inept when-it comes to treating the
psychic needs of persons in crisis situa-
tions.
Bard served with the emergency services
division of the New York City Police
Department. He said he worked in hostage
negotiations and suicide prevention.
"If
I
learned anything, it was that. in order to
regulate behavior, you have to understand
it," he said. "We're not teaching cops how
to handle people in crisis,"
Younger and better educated pe_ople are
entering the Jaw enforcement system than
ever before, according to Bard. "Hopeful-
ly, they'll have an impact e>n the system
before they're corrupted," he said.
Regarding how a crime victim should be
treated after the crime, Bard said that they
should be given lots of emotional support.
"They should be listened to and be allowed
to vent their experience," he said.
The first two weeks after the crime are
critical, according to Bard. Even a purse
snatching will. cause some people signifi-
cant psychological harm, he said.
"If
the
victim needs it, he should get specialized
counseling. There are crime victims
porgrams and agencies available," he said.
Bard said that there is nothing anyone
can do to prevent being a victim of a crime.
"You can reduce the risk of being mugg-
ed,'' he said, "but there's no prevention .
It's just the matter of being in the wrong
place at the wrong time.''
. · ·
For Appo_lntlMnt,
call
As,t-HM
Circle Reviews
· ~Commlltel'S: Save 20%
·check
out
m.eal
.
/
-
~
·-
-
,
. ticket plan-good in
Dining Hall. On-ly:
Commuters
&
Residents:
Save
10%
Check out coupon
-
---:-...:..,
.-
-
.
.
· booklet. Good in
.
.
·
Coffee :Shop,
.
Deli
. and Dining Hall
·
Purchase of booklets
may be-made in
Food Service Office
Hillm~n
a~d
Roberts
Here's yet another review from one of
Poughkeepsie's best rock and roll clubs,
The Chance. Thursday, November 19-, was
definitely a night to · remember as the
acoustical team of Chris Hillman and Rick
Roberts performed a sweet repertoire of
classic tunes .
Hillman, starting the evening on a 12-
string guitar, and Roberts harmonized
beautifully in their mellow, somewhat
country-style voices. Best known separate- ·
ly, Chris Hillman was once with the Byrds,
and then joined Gene Clark and Roger
McGuin to form McGuin, Clark and
Hillman back . in the mid-70's. Rick
Roberts' unmistakable voice can be heard
as the lead vocals on any of the Firefall
albums.
Not more than· halfway through the
show Hillman pulled out his famed man-
dolin and gave Roberts the 12-string. They
broke into a wonderful version of
"Colorado' by request, followed by
"White Line Fever," "Devil In Disguise"
and "Livin' ls Easy." The small, but elated
·crowd was pleased until all of a sudden the
curtain closed after only an hour long per-
formance.
With a standing ovation
Hillman and Roberts came back for one
encore, ending the evening with their ver-
. sion of the popular Everly Brothers hit
"Wake Up Little Suzy." The audience was
extremely pleased with the quality of the
show, but discontented with the length.
Playing for about an hour before
Hillman and Roberts was the Eddie
Kirkland Band, a mean blues band.
Kirkland, formerly with Otis Redding and
Johnny Lee Hooker, played as a true
master of the blues guitar. with a drummer,
bass, and guitar as backups, the band
mellowed the audience with typical blues
tunes and then pumped out a series of jam-
min' songs featuring Kirkland on the har-
monica. "Kansas City/Bad Whisky" got
the crowd wound up for a dynamic ending
as Kirkland jumped from the stage onto the
dance floor where there were two· fans
boogying. He proceeded to play his guitar
in a Chuck Berry likeness, crawling on his
knees and actually lying on his back. The
crowd.appreciated the excellent musician as
a showman too.
The Chance offers nightly entertain-
ment. The Chance is located on
6
·crannell
Street on the Main Mall in Poughkeepsie.
Ginny Luciano
' _
Forest Haus Res·taura"i1t
For those of you who are looking for an
unexpected pleasure in Hudson Valley din-
ing,
and want a change from steakhouse or
Italian fare, a meal at the Forest Haus
Restaurant in Wappingers Falls is a not-to-
be-missed experience. ·
The main entree choices focus on Ger-
man cuisine, but you don't have to be Ger-
man to love it. Bratwurst, Weisswurst,
Knockwurst, Sauerbrauten, German-style
pot roast, and many other combinations
crowd the reasonably priced menu. Accom-
panying the main course is
a
choice of
"spaetzels,"
or,
homemade · noodles.
vegetables,
potato pancakes,
potato
dumplings and good old American home-
fries:
The menu also carries a superb choice of
steaks, roasts, and seafood for the less dar-
ing diner. However, the real ''piece de
resistance" was the never-ending salad bar
that can come dangerously close to filling
you up if you don't save room for dinner:
Tuna salad, macaroni salad, real German
potato salad, relishes, vegetable combina-
tions, sausage patties, as well as brown,
rye, and pumpernickel bread to accompany
a hearty German potato soup, crowd the
salad bar, and once you've chosen from
this selection, no salad bar will _ever com-
pare.
There is also a small bar that stocks the
best German beers, stouts, and ales to
satisfy individual taste. These are served in
hearty ale mugs that make one want to sing
German drinking songs (if we only knew
some).
The decor of the Forest Haus is a perfect
setting for
a German meal: outside. the old
German-style house is adorned with statues
of yodlers and drinkers, and inside, the ·
cheerful, homey dining room combines
elegance with a certain European appeal.
A
meal in these surroundings would not
be complete without
a selection from the
dessert tray, which boasts such favorites as
Black Forest cake, cheese cake, apple-
cheese struedels, custard horns, and carrot
cake, all made in the kitchen and served hot
· by the German-born owners.
.
The prices range from
$8-$14
for the en-
trees, and all in all, it is a reasonable bill
for this escape from the ordinary.The food
choice and content is practically flawless,
as well as filling.
'.I
~
...
s
~WJ~-'-
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Page
10-
THE CIRCLE•
December 3, 1981--.---------------------------------
.
Bar patrons disturb
The Inquiring Photographer
North Road:residellts·
'
.
"
.·
·-_,
.
,..
.
by
Debra Borger
have admiration and respect for the in-
stitution as a whole, and I do use the chapel
occasionally," Mrs. Greer said. "Students
seem friendly when on campus, but
somethirig happens when they are in a
Marist students have recently been accus~
ed of disorderly,, conduct during the early
hours of the morning by concerned
residents of North Road, Poughkeepsie.
group coming home from the bar." .
.,
· Students leaving Skinner~s, between the
hours of 3 and 4 a.m., are causing distur-
bances as they return to campus said some
residents of North Road.
· .
·
Most of our neighbors across the street
have lived
fo
their homes· for years· and
years without any problems from Marist
College students. Residents said that the
college brings employment and prestige to
the area, but rowdy students are beginning
to destroy its reputation.
'.'We are concerned not only with our
safety but with the safety of the students,".
.said Mr. and Mrs. Casseta, 69 North Road.
"There is constant noise and hollering .
around 4 a.m. almost every weekend."
Mrs. Casseta said, "My mailbox has
"I have been living in my home for the
past 35 years and I've watched it grow,"
said Grace Freeer, 77.North Road. "We've
had disturbances in the past, but lately it
has been getting worse and worse."
been knocked over a few times and if we
don't have a mailbox, the mailman won't
leave our mail. I can't accuse all Marist
students because my granddaughter attends
Marist College and
I know her and her
friends wouldn't dream of destroying the
property of others.
It is a shame that a few
rotten apples have spoiled the reputation of
L.
the school 'with its neighbors along North.
isa Maggio, sophomore:
~•We're not pay-
Road.,,
ing $7000 to have them put, us out in the
Mrs. Freer said, "My mailbox has been
knocked over twice and beer bottles are
continually found on my front lawn. In-
considerate shouting has awoken me from
a deep sleep on many occasions, especially
on Friday and S~turday nights. It's
Four Marist students also reside on - streets for Thanksgiving.,,
.
frightening."
/
Although Mrs. Greer has little affiliation
with Marist College presently, her son
graduated in 1964, as a Biology major.
"I
North Road djrectly across from the
school. Dee Nell, a senior, 63 North Road,
said, "Our mailbox was broken once, but
we had it repaired and it has never been
touched again. We haven't had any trouble
with noise, but we do Jive further away
from Skinner's than any ·of our
neighbors."
Profile: Sister Eileen
by
Richard Sommer
said she has helped prepare for are: a
December 8th Penance service, December
Talk. Look around and that's just what 8th table talks, at which Marist Brother
you'll see. Teachers teaching, students·ex-
Andenberg will speak about social justice
pressing new learned knowledge and what with an emphasis on American Indians,
they can achieve. But who will listen and and a December 12th midnight mass.
even more important who will listen and
Sr. Eileen said she .was pleased to see a
care?
·
large turn out of people foi: the two en-
One such person that listens and cares is counter weekends, this fall and · that
Sr. Eileen Halloran. Sr. Eileen said · that another one is beil)g planned for the spring·,
she's .been tempted to put a map of Byrne
SL
Eileen said that she was optimistic
Reside.nee
in each students' mailbox. "I that
word of mouth
:
will .
increase .. the
feel very welcome," .said Sr .
.
Eileen .. number of people coining..to the·s.ervices
''Students. are very opeff and naturally . offered. Only six people attended a semi_nar
warm people."
.
in Fireside Lounge which dealt with ex-
Sr. Etleen has planned Advent prayer periences that different religions take on to
service programs, and has also helped in deal with death.
planning the Sabbath dinner that will take
Sr. 'Eileen said her most rewarding ex-
. place December 4th at Byrne Residence.
perience since she's been here has been "the
Other upcoming events which Sr: Eileen personal contact with individuals that have
·
developed." • ·
··
.
.
Ll.br.ar.y p. r· e· .se·rves
Sr. Eileen said .that she grew. up .in-
. Manhattan, and after becoming a Fran-
p
oug.hkeepsl• e past
ciscan sister, taught
3
years in grammar
school. She then became assistant director,
by
Grace Genova
In 1963, Adrian Perrault, a member of
the Marist library staff, saw the necessity
for preserving the history of Marist, l:>ut
it
wasn't until about seven or eight years ago
that he finally started the Local History·
Room in the library.
The Local History Room, located next to
the Learning Center, has three categories
of material: material concerning the Marist
Brothers, material concerning the his_tory
of Marist College itself, and material con-
cerning Dutchess County and the surroun-
ding counties.
.
·
,
and then director . of admissions at
. Ladycliff College until it closed. Sr. Eileen
said she then took a year off to pursue her
masters in religious education and is now in
the process of completing her degree at
Fordham University.
I
Classifieds
Michael, -
Thanks for making such a tough year so
great.
1aini
Ride needed to Red Hook -from Marist.
Contact John, Ext. 145
Rom Diinmie, junior:
"It's
'·not
fair
because people who live far away find it
difficult to get home for just a few days . .,
/
Pat Brady~ ;ophomore:
"No. n
defi~itelv ·
isn't."
.-
· ·
· · - ·
Question: · Do. you· think.
u'
is fair' for
students who live far away or have no ride
home to be forced out of the .dorms?
.
Dan Spuhler, freshman:·
"No because
if
they find it hard to get home 'they should be
allowed to stay.''
'
.
John Berzal; sophomore:
"If
they had a
Chevy they could leave any time · they ·
wanted.''
.,
_
.
more:
"Who the hell
re
is
what l want to
. This material is in the form of books, ,
pamphlets, and leaflets. The type of books
that are in the history room are books by or
about the Marist Brothers, especially those
connected with the college.
The
.
second category of books are those.
about Marist that students and/or pro-
fessors have written. The material that the
students print include the Circle and the
Mosaic. The b'ooks that teachers have writ•
ten include Dr. Drenin'.s thesis, a book by
Dr. Belanger, and a book by Dr.
J.J.
McMahon, an alumnus and former, faculty
member. His book is entitled, "Between
You and You."
Maryann
Why can't we go to Skinners? The Palace is
boring.
A-1 Florist.
&
·
The Local History. Room is available to
all students at Marist and offers a wide
. variety of information about Marist and
the surrounding areas. One of the items
that just arrived is the records of a famous
resort hotel near New Paltz, Lake Mohonk
Mountain House.
.
.
· At the moment these items are being
· catalogued so that they can be studied in
·different areas .. For instance, how much it
cost
to rent the horses that pulled the bug-
. gies, how much it cost to stay
a
night, etc.
Balding Wild Women
Happy Pint Night!!!
To my rooinie:
.
Congratulations on a job well done and
good luck in the job ahead .. Just remember
one fact, through it all you're still a whack!
Soup:
Mmmm ... Mmmmm
prefer the . bottom
"Keeling" over.
For Sale:
Love,
Your roomie.
Good! Richard,
I
bunk to . keep from
7th heaven KTB
2 snows - F78-14. Used 4 months, last
winter. $60 - call 691-8609 - Paul .
To the Moony-Whacks:
Thanks for putting up with me on Sunday
and Monday nights. It's over!
H.H.
· -Garden-Center
·
,
·
192 Washi~gton S
_
t.
Poughkeepsie
·
; N.Y. 12601
9-14-471-5700.
10% DiSC!JUnt with Student ID
I
'
'
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - December
3,
1981 · THE CIRCLE· Page 1 1 - - -
'l!elt!visioribeC()mes teacher/or two courses
'
.
·~··
...
.
.
,
.
-..
.
.
·'
'
.
'
.
by .Michael
Sciannamia .
. TV
series are . "Cosmos," written and _world: religions produced by the BBC. The
• - .
· •
·
. hosted by Dr .. Carl Sagan, and "The· Long course offered next semester is being taught
· Two.courses being offered next semester . Search," a 13 part' series created by the by Professor Rhys Williams of the
promise to .. give students
·a
different
BBC.
·
·
Religious Studies department.
pe_rspective in learning; ·
·.
• •. - The "Cosmos" course, listed as a special. .
"The. subject matter is. very basic in
They are not just "textbook" courses. · project in Science, is being taught.by.Prof. · structure. The course wUI help the student
They are classes in which the. teacher is not
Paul DiMarco. This course is designed for learn about some of the different religions
the main focal point. The_.«tcachers" of students to. explor~
the . relationship of the world, and their relationship to the
these courses are two television sets and
a
between Earth,. its inhabitants, and the cultures of all the peoples throughout the
series ofvi9eotapes.
.
universe that surrounds them.
world," said Prof. Williams.
The spring schedule. lists these two
_ "Students are expected to view the pro-
The course can be• taken for credit or
the course.
"There are two reasons why I believe this
course should be offered," said Prof.
Williams. "One is that the curriculum
needs more elective courses. Secondly, the
video itself is stimulating. The students ac-
tually see what they're learning about."
. Prof. Williams said that some of the
course objectives are: l. to present a study
of :he world's religions, 2. to examine
religious practices that exist in other
societies, and 3. to explore the impact of
religious
beliefs
on individuals
and
courses as two· self-paced independent
grams, read the textbook "Cosmos" (also . non-credit: Students en complete the course
study courses that use TV series. The two
written by Sagan) and do supplementary at their own pace, but it is planned to cover
·work in the Reader/Study Guide," said a normal semester time period. There are
Prof. DiMarco.
,
four required materials; three textbooks,
.. cultures.
The
Jury
Room, 51 Market Street,
·
Poughkeepsie, New
York, 452-929p
.
·
Dec.4-·
· Professor DiMarco added that the class one which is a stl.ldent handbook written by
is not an introductory course in astronomy. · Prof. Williams, and the 13 TV programs.
Rather it.is ·•_•an interdisciplinary study of
According to Prof. Williams, there will
general science, put in a humanist point of be three scheduled exams for students tak-
view," DiMarco said.
ing the course. Following each exam; the
"The Long Search-A Study of World student must make an appointment with
Religions",is a 13 episode documentary.on
Prof. Williams to discuss their progress in
Upward Bound marks 15th
year
The Upward Bound Program at Marist ·· motivation necessary for success in college.
Coll~ge was formed 15 years ago and has
·upward Bound recruits 115 to 150 high
become very _successful.
school students from Orange, Dutchess
'
Project Director Joseph Parker said,
and - Ulster counties. Upward· Bound
900Jo of all students who complete the pro-
students are usually admitted after com-
gram are admitted to universities around pleting the ninth or tenth grades. The pro-
the country.
gram is conducted during the summer as
Upward Bound was developed as a result
well as during the academic year. Par-
of the Johnson-Kennedy Era. In the 1960s ticipants generally live at Marist College
there was a need to address the problems of during the summer sessions and take part
the _poor. According to ·Parker, Upward in a variety of academic, social and cultural
Bound ..yas a "Bandaid att~mpt to address activities.
the needs of these low income students."
Upward Bound Project Staff selects
The Upward Bound.Program is .funded students · on the recommendations of
on the federal level. Parker said $156 teachers, counselors, social service agen-
million is. allocated to 1,000 national in-
cies, or others who are well acquainted with
stitutions. One founder said the program them. Upward Bound seeks to help youths
will have a ripple effect and Marist College who have academic potential but who have
is the. outgrowth of this philosophy, Parker not had the preparation, motivation or op-
indicated.
·
portunity to realize or demonstrate their
. Parker. said- Upward Bound helps high talents.
.
_
school students from families meeting low-
Upward Bound also offers a "Bridge
· income .criteria to develop the skills and
~
. Summer.'.' _Here~ the stude_nt takes college
..
.
C()UTSeS for credit and stays with
other.
col~ '
...
··~--
·
•
,,
.
· _ , . ;
Iege·
students· while s(iJJ
participating -in ·
many of the projects nonacademic ac- ·
tivities.
Upward Bound usually stops at the col-
lege gate, but the staff eases the students in-
to college
life.
The · staff members work
with college admissions officers, financial
aid personnel and others to provide in-
dividualized service to assist the student in
his college career.
According to a former Upward Bound
. student, "Upwar.d Bound enables the stu-
dent to see himself in the past, the present,
and the future.,,.
• Charlie Brown
Paralegal program
seeks recognition
Dec. 5 - --_
- .
.
..
"
.
.
.·.
.
.
.
·.
.
·. · Second·Wind (Jazz/Fusion)
.
_Dec •
.
] 1: -
-~oy_A~kinson (get in free w/_M~rist ID)
.
,
.
Dec~ 12-
-- T.B.A. ·(get in free
·
w1M
·
arist ID)
Happy Hour. 4~ - 7
•Ladies
buy
1
.
~
get
·l
free ·
-✓
•Anyone els_e reduc-~d pric~s
.
.
Monday~ Vodka Night - 75¢ drinks
Tuesday - Gin Night - 75¢ ·drinks
Wednesday - Beer night 50¢
Michelob Mugs
S~rving Food till ~-Wee~ Nights; 1:00-Fri.
&
Sat.
""At
lh1•Jury_R110111
you don"t haw to
lw
a
lawyer- to lw a memlwr of th,· Bar.""
by
Diana L. Galioto
Gaining recognition in the community
from the legal professions, arid lack of
publicity from the college are two problems
that the Paralegal Program at Marist is fac-
ing, according to Dr. Carolyn Landau.
Dr. Landau, Director of the Paralegal
Program since 1974, said, "The program is
· constantly expanding but we are not
reaching enough , students and we must
educate the legal professions about the
paralegal and their capabilities," said Dr.
Landau.
.
The program consists of sev_en required
courses, plus three electives chosen-from
14
legal specialties. There are also · two
Paralegal-Internships offered. You need a
total of 36 credits to receive the Paralegal
Certificate. You must have a major field of
study. The 36 credits are applicable to a
baccalaureate degree.
The majority of the instructors are prac-
ticing attorneys in the Poughkeepsie area .
.
Eugene Rizzo who teaches Introduction to
Legal Research and Writing said," my in-
itial reaction from meetings I have attended
is that the program has the ability and
potential to be successful," Rizzo said.
Required courses are offered every year.
In the spring of 1982, four required courses
will
be offered and four elective classes,
plus and internship.
"To date, the Paralegal Program is not
publicized enough in any of the Marist Col-
lege literature," Dr. Landau said.
Dr. Landau is available to talk to any
students who have any questions about the
program. Her office is located in Fontaine, .
314.
.
Student reaction to the courses was
generally favorable. One student in par-
ticular, Tony Formato, said,
"I
saw about
six of ''The Long Search" programs on my
own. I thought they were good. I learned
about different religions and value systems
throughout the world. If you are motivated
enough, you will learn a great deal."
Frank Scott
Pub institutes
new··iiiide1Ines ··- ·
·
by
Maria Pascarelli -
There are a number of changes that have'
taken place in the Pub over the past year
which fall under the category of guidelines
issued to Seiler's by Fr. Richard LaMorte,
Dean Gerard Cox and Betty Yeaglin of stu-
dent activities.
"The Pub has absolutely no-atmosphere
at all," said Fr. LaMortc.
According to him, this is a major pro-
blem. "I don't think it's conducive as a
place where people can meet and talk," he
said .
Fr. LaMorte pointed out that there are
two tangible elements of any bar, lighting
and sound.
The lighting previous to the guidelines,
according to Fr. LaMorte, was fine if you
were familiar with brail.
The sound, according to Fr. LaMorte,
was counter-productive. The music would
be so loud that Pub goers would not be able
to communicate, he said.
By requesting more lighting and a softer
sound he said he hoped to create a better at-
mosphere in the Pub.
Frank Scott, Director of Seiler's, pointed
out that according to the guidelines he can-
not run specials in the Pub.
·
. According to Fr. LaMorte, a special is a
form of marketing whose sole reason is to
make money. They draw people in to get
them to drink more so the bar could make
more money.
"It's pure bald economics," said Fr.
LaMorte. "It's a come-on,-it's a come-on
in the worst way.''
l.D.
checks were also instituted in the
new guidelines.
Fr. LaMorte said this requirement was to
ensure any non-student is accompanied by
a Marist student.
According
to
Fr. LaMorte, this is done
to protect the student.
He said the guidelines "arc to balance
both sides of the picture."
According to Fr.
LaMorte,
the
guidelines are an attempt to protect
students from outsiders; to protect them
from the members of their own community
who are under the influence of alcohol; and
to try and control the natural tendency to
view the situation as money-making.
l
1
_
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I
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·.
- - - Page
12 ·
THE CIRCLE
;.Dec;mbet 3, 1981
··
•
·
- - ~ - - - - - - - - . . . . , ; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - -
_Gasp!
Smokers kick
itfor
_
aday
by
Dominic DINardi .
·.·.
Dutchess Community
.
College, the Culinary Institute of America,
along with Bard and Vassar colleges," she said..
.
.
.
. .
_
Every year ~imops of peopie participate
.
in the Americ~n
.
:
Ms. Blum said that the Smokeoi.u was very successful.. "Many
Cancer Society's Great American Smokeout and the students of
of the students were very enthusiastic and I was s·urprised at such
Marist College were no'exception.
·.
· ·
·
·
· . '
. ·
.
'
·
a
large turn out," she said.
·
·
·
Marist College smokers were urged to pledge a·day of freedom
'
Ms.
Blum; who is a Marist student intern at
·
the American
·.
·
·from cigarettes this past Thursday. November
·
19; The campaign
.
·
Cancer Society, also
.
said
-
the results
·
from
.
Marist- were positive,
·
•
~hich
.
was sponsored by the Dutc~ess County Unit
.
of the
·
as was true with the other colleges in the.area.
·
·
·
·
·
American Cancer Society was aimed at
·
getting
·
pledges from
.
the
·
,
Ms.
·
Blum's job is to _devel_op programs, to send out literature;
.·
50 students who participated. These pledges were meant to insure
and to contribute ideas to all the crisis centers located throughout
that the students went the entire day without smoking
.
·
.
Dutchess county. As far as problems with the Smokeout, she said
The Donnelly Commuter Lounge and the Campus Center were
the inajor one was trying to get an honorary chairman who
the two crisis centers set up that day. According to Jim
.
would attract media attention.
.
.
.
Muzikowski, Marist College Student Government' President and
The Marist Sriiokeout was organized by the Student Govern-
coordinator of the drive, "Our goal was to show students they
mem office who encouraged eating by supplying free carrot and
can quit, and to increase awareness that .smoking is un-
.
cel~ry sticks while trying to discourage smoking.
necessary," he said.
.
A~cordin·g to one Marist stµdent,
"I
really wanted
10
par-
"We are trying to ·emphasize that in a short period of time peo-
.
ticipate
in
the Smokeout because statistics show that lung cancer
pie can stop smoking," said Muzikowski. "In the long run, they
is on the rise and 80 percent of cancer in men has been attributed
can overcome the psychological dependency," said Muzikowski.
to smoking."
.
.
.
.
Muzikowski
·
also stressed the importance
·
of having these
·
.,
·
Statistically, close to
18
million on the national scale have been
Smokeout events because they stimulate awareness and
-
reaction.
reported as having stopped smoking for tharday and
6
.
7
percent
"The idea always made good sense to me," Muzikowski said.
of that figure still will not be smoking one year from know.
• ·
·
·
' 1
Most smokers are overwhelmed by the prospect
of
quitting
.
Most Marist students agreed thal'the Smokeout was
.
a success
outright. The American Cancer S9cie1y is creating an opportuni-
·
and a?reed that as a result
?f
this event they would probably stop
tyro try the quitting process for just one day at a time,"
_
he said.
.
smok11Jg for good. According to one Marist freshman, "I think I
·
Joan. Blum of the Dutchess
.
County Unit of the American
wiH be able to
.
stop smoking, but
I
don't know if carrot or celery
Cancer Society said she was very pleased with the results: "Over sticks will play a part in thatdeci~ion,"
·
lie said.
·
90
businesses and schools participated in the Smokeout including
SAC
creates link betWeen students,f(l.Clllty
-
-
-
'
.
'··
.
.,
Did you ever want 10 complain about a
policies, bul didn't quire know how
ro
go
professor
that
you thought was ui!fair? Or about doing it?
.
voice your opinion on some of the college's
Dealing with these types of problems is
Lounge
Rielly, one of the stud
.
cnts asked, sug-
gested that rather than buy prints students
in the art department could donate some of
their time and create some original work.
.
La Morte said that he decided
to
go ahead
with Rielly's plan since not only would it
·
save money, but it would also generate stu-
dent invol
v
ement.
·
La Morte said that now the major dif-
ficulty is arranging
a
meeting with himself
and the student volunteers
.
Rielly, who now lives off campus, said
. continued from page I
that so far eight meetings have been arrang-
ed, but au have been cancelled "for some
reason or another." Rielly said that .the
problem of
gelling eight students 10ge1her
at one time and La Morte's busy
.
s
_
chedule
·
have been the main factor in these cancela-
tions.
.
.
La Morte said that he hoped to arrange a
meeting after "I:hanksgiving and hopes to
see the artwork in the ,lounges sometime
.
next semester.
DRINKS~FOO
_
D~MUSIC
··
1
l:OO
a.m.
4:oo:a.,m.
SUNDAY BRUNCH.
.
·
11 8
p.m
.
.
914-473-4725
Rte. 9 Poughkeepsie
·
just one aspect of whar
the Student
·
luncheon was very successful with approx-
.
Academic
'
Committee is all about. Second
imately
·
100
students and
35
.·
faculty
year president, Lisa Arcuri said, "S
.
A
.
C.
members attending. S.A.C. is planning tb
.
.
forms the link between the student body
sponsor another luncheon in the spring
.
·
and the faculty. This is accomplished
.
-
S.A.C. deals with ·many student com-
through student representatives in each ma-
pJ!lints and sometimes when
·
a r
_
eal difficult
jor field of study, based proportionaJly on
problem arises, Miss Arcuri said, she can
the number of students
.
enrolled in each
always go and speak to Dr. Molloy and ask
major."
.
. .
his advi
.
ce
.
·
·
·
·
·
Miss Arcuri said the representatives at-
Miss Arcuri said, "The students on the
tend the departmental meetings for each
committee work very hard and give up a lot
·
major and
.
bring suggestions and com-
of personal time
-
to go to meetings. These
.
.
plaints of the student body, as well as pros
.
people
.
:
are very dedicated and they're
mote academic
'
policies
.
Miss Arcuri also
always accessible."
-
Because there are so
said Dr. LaPietra recently asked S.A.C. to
many meetings for
,
the representatives to
send representatives to sit in on the Core
•
attend,-sometimes the.meeting
will
conflict
Development Committee meetings
·
so
.
they with
·
their
·
class schedules.
·
When
.
.
the
ca11 voice the ideas and opinions of the stu~ .
..
representatives can't make it to a meeting,
dent body about the Core program. There they will go to the head of the dep
.
artmem
are also representatives currently sittirig in and get the minutes of the.mee;:ting so they
on the meeting$ of the Academic Affairs can be aware of what was discussed.
•·
·~
·:
Committee, dea)jng with the development
·
::
Miss
.
Arcuri said
.
last spring S;A,
.
C
.
up-
.
·-
orapolicy on honesty.
i>
.
i
..
.
.
.
'
·
·.
·
.
·
• _:·
elated
-
its constitution,.but
it
will have to J;,e
'
-
·
-
0 _.,
· ·
.
.
·
.
.
:
·
'
' · ,·
.
·
.
.
.
'
,•
~
.•.
updated again; ''Now that ihe majors have
·
·
•.
'
The S;A.C ~as b<;>th afo
_
rrpal and an m
e
•
.
·.
been assigned to divisions there
wm
havefo
.
form~I r(!le, said Mt~s A
_
rcun.
:
On the ~or-
be a change in
-
the constitution because
mal std~, they deal ~t!h.stu
_
dcnt c<>m~lamts
.
there are
,
five majors-in each division and
.
I
and V~>1ce st~j:lt;nr OJ)l~tons.
,_
~n the mfor-
can't ieci!IY send
a
group of 10 people to a
mal _side, th~y.
·
sponsor socials
_ ,
for each
.
..
divisionalmeeting
;
"
.
•
·
.
·
·
•
.
·
:,
department g1vmg the faculty and stud~nts
·
·
Miss Arcuri said she thinks that S.A.C
.
a chance to meet and talk
_
casuaHy, away is doing much to maintain communication
fr.9~ the
.
more formal
.
atmosphere of the lines between the students and the faculty.
classroom.
·
·
.
_
:
..
·
·.·
•·
· ..
.
"I think it's very.successful; the people on
.
Recently S.A.C. sponso~ed the Take a
the committee work hard and are very
Prof to Lunch"
.
event which was held on
,
dedicated and
·
that helps to
.
make it sties
Fr
.
iday, November
20.
M
_
iss Arcuri said the cessful. '.'
·
UPennj
Ste8
.
lel'$''
>
- an
original play
_
by
·:
~erard Cox
:
·
oec.
3 •.
4,-
-
s
·
-
8p.n,.,
·
nappy.
HOiidays
froni
·
the
Circle Staff
''
I
December 3, 1981 ·
THE CIRCLE• Page
13
·
LEAVE
·
SO YOU CAN
·
COME BACK!
.
.
.
',
The college residence halls will dose and
110
services will be available from December 18 to
.
Jan~ary 24, 1982
·
·
·
·
·
The ~eside~ce haJis will_ ~lose atl 1:00 p.m. on Decembfr 18, 1981
The last meal of the· term will be lunch on December 18. pi~ner will be served on Sunday.
January 24, 1982
On or before Decembe·r
18, rooms must be cleaned; all belongings must be taken home, except furniture or those items that can
be left in a dresser drawer or in the closet.The college will not assume any liability for lost or stolen or damaged,items. (Note:
2, 3, 4 floors
in
Chainpagnat have received a special memo). Your departure directly affects the ability of students and profes-
sional residence staff to complete their work and move toward their own holiday plans: therefore, you are to leave the
·
residence halls in an orderly fashion on the day of your last
exam.
Remember that the following factors will.be central to any
decision
.
on allowing a student to occupy a room in Marist residence halls for next semester even if you have registered:
1. Disciplinary Record
~
2. Academic Standing
3. Vacating of room on day of their last exam.
4. Condition of room at departure (cleanliness and lack of damage).
Students who have been denied a room for next semester will be notified by January 8, 1982,
if
they
have registered.
If you do not intend to return to the residence halls in January, or if you have been assigned to
a
different,room, please be sure
to return your key to the resident director.
·
,...
.
...
..
Failure to leave your room in a clean state can result in a $25.00 fine .
.
.
'
'
.
.
.
.
Failure to leave on the day of your last exam can result in low housing priority for
fall 1982. As well, an unauthorized early
return to the dorms can also result in low priority.
House meetings will take place on Wednesday, December
9,
1981, to clarify these expectations and more procedures. Please
watch for announcement.
.
-
--
,.
-
'
'•"
'-
\
'\
_
~
~
Each R.A. must inspect each room, file the room inspection form. Students must make an appointment with
.
their R.A. to
have their room inspected. Upon leaving, you must secure the room
·
(lights off, appliances disconnected, curtains closed and
.
doorlocked). Trash bags
will
be distributed by the R.A. to each resident on December 13 and 14.
The following
i;
the special garbage pick-up schedule for the residence halls during the period from Thursday, December /
7
thru Friday, December 18 though students are encouraged to bring garbage to tfie dumps~er themselves:
Champagnat Hall
Leo Hall
Sheahan Hall
,
·
Benoit/Gregory
.
Oakwood
&
Hyde Park
Thursday
12/17
Friday
12/18
·
Thursday
12/17
Friday
12/18
Thursday
12/17
.
Friday
12/18
Thursday
12/17
Friday 12/18
Floors 1, 2, 3 l0A.M. and 2 P.M.
Floors
4,
5,
6 11 A.M.
'
and
3 P .l'vL
Floors 7, 8, 9 12 Noon and 4 P .M.
(Saine)
+
pick up at 6, 7, 8 P .M.
Floors l; 2 9 A.M. and 2:30 P.M.
Floors 3, 4 10 A.M. and 3:30 P .M.
Floors 5,611 A.M. and 4:30 P.M.
(Saine)
+
pick up at 6:30, 7:30 and 8:30
P
.M.
Floor 1 8:30 A.M. and 1 :00 P .M.
Floor 2 9:30
A.M.
arid 2:00 P .M.
·
Floor 3 10:30 A.M. and 3:00 P.M.
(Same)
+
pick-up at 7:30 P .M.
10:00
A.M.
and
3:9() P.M.
(Same)
+
pick-up at 8:00 P.M.
will coordinate pick-ups with the R.A.'s and/or R.C.
We encourage you to do your part to make this period enjoyable for all!
.
.
.
The best floors in each building will be ranked for cleanliness and will be awarded $50. Champagnat will have 3 best floor
awards, Leo 2, Sheahan 1, Gregory, Benoit, Oakwood and Hyde Park will have
J.
A wards will be announced next term.
On behalf of all the residence hall staff, we wish you a safe, enjoyable and Happy Holiday Season, and offer our Best Wishes
for the coming New Year.
See you in_January!
·
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Th
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Rats
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and
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Friday -
Decemb~r 18 ·
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:
-,
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Jn the
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Suiii;ar,
C~lflmu~ity
_
Coll~9e
'
F
i~lcfhc)use
.
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•
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,
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...7'
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P,.esented by the
.
SullivallCoun,'.tf
Cf!llege
.
·
student
Government
Assoc
.
iation
.
-. ::
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.·
:·
.
.
·
·.
_
;~
:··.·
_-:
·:
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_.:.
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.:
General
·'
Admission: $7-~00
.·
.··.
_
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-
.
.
Tickets Available at the Book& Record on Main Street in Poughkeepsie
.·
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.
.
-.
_
_
_
_
,,
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.
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j
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·-Must be over 16toattend-
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-.c.-
,
)'-.
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.
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Directions:
take 87 (Th
_
ruway) South to 1
i.West -
get off at Exit
l
00.
At
end of
ramp
tvr-n
.
left. At light turn right. Follow Route 52 appro
,
ximately
4.8
miles. Tu~n right
:
into
~
college.
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/
- - - - - -.... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..... ~ - - - - - December 3,
1981 · THE CIRCLE· Page
15 - - •
'
women endNovemberwith
3-2
mark
Face
_
tough
Dec.
schedule
.
by Stephen Heddei'lon
~he Marist C~llege Women:s B~sketball
·
team opened the 1981-1982 season with two
consecutive routs. Purchase was the first
•
victim of the new season, as the Red Foxes
crushed the Panthers 81-24, in front of th
_
e
.
opening day Mccann Center crowd.
The game began an hour late, as both the
Purchase team
·
and the referees were late.
Ron Ryan and Bill Cooper stood in for the
refs, and did an outstanding job. The delay
·
didn't seem
.
to bother the Red· Foxes; as
they opened up with a full court press on
.
· ·
defense. The press worked well, forcing the
·
·
Purchase women to make numerous costly
mistakes. At the 12:15 mark
-
of the first
quarter, the Marist offense had all it's
:
_
starters.score at least 1 point
.
It was also at
this point that coach Deer began removing
.
.
her
'
starters, replacing them with equally
, ·
talented substitutes. One of these
substitutes was Ursala Winters
.
Ursala led
the Foxes with a game high 17 points and
.
12 rebounds. Mary Pat Sherwood added 14
points coming off the bench.
The Red Foxes once again devoured it's
opponent, this time the Cortland State
-
.
women were the prey. Marist
.
won easily
Preparing for a tough 6 games in 12 days December sched~le are the women Red Foxes.
-
83°71 in Cortland. Laurie Hrebenak
poured in 22 points, while FreshmanLynne
Griffin chipped in 19. Junior Diana Jones
ripped down 11 rebounds and Griffin 10 to
·
lead the Foxes;
.
·
,
-
College, led the Marist team with 15 points.
·
Lynne Griffin and Diana Jones added 14
points each. Jones also led the Foxes with
l
O
rebounds.
The team then traveled to Manhattan
College for the Manufacturer's Hanover
Trust Invitational. The Red Foxes came
.
away with
a
third place finish
,
after losing
·
to host Manhattan in the first game 73-57.
.
Twenty six Manhattan points in the final
five minutes broke a 47-47
.
tie, enabling the
Lady Jaspers to win.
Marist bounced back the following day,
defeating
·
the
·
women from Fordham
University 86-62. Offensively the Red
Foxes were again led by Mary Zuvic
,
who
hit for 21 points
.
Diana Jones added
16
points. Lynne Griffin grabbed 10 rebounds
for Marist.
. ,
·
Mary Zuvic; a transfer from Immaculata
The women then returned to the Mccann
Center to face the Lady Knights of West
PLAYER
,
OF
·
THE
.
WEEK
In the player profile of the Womens
Basketball teams prospectus for the I 981-
.
1982 season,
·
less than tw~ lines are given
for senior Lois Ann
.
Hayes
:
"Co-
.
Cap
_
tain
i
.,Gives
lOOOJo ...
Good
·
Shooter ..• Unselfish
court
·
leader.
;
.Remarkably
.
consistent." Simple
and to the point works every time.
·
·
At 5-8
,
foward Lois Ann Hayes from
Middletown, N.Y. is every coaches dream
player. One of only 4 women to have
played in all 31 games for the Red Foxes
.
last season, Hayes consistency and heads-
up style of play has made
_
her the model
performer from whom Head coach Susan
Deer wants all her players to emulate
.
With only three players returning from
last seasons squad, Hayes exp~rience and
understanding of the game makes her posi-
tion on the squad even more valuable this
·
year. In the teams first 4 games of the
_
young season in which they are 2-2, Hayes
has averaged I l points a game.
.
-
While others
·
on
.
the team might score
more points and
·
grab more rebounds,
_
while others might be the quickest down
the court and sure handed with the passes,
Lois
.
Ann Hayes does all this arid more.
·
Her talent on the court is far more valuable
than any box-score could show, and for
this Lois Ann Hayes is this weeks
.
CIR-
CLE, "PLAYER OF THE WEEK."
.
.
.
Lois Ann Hayes
RIVER DISTRIBUTING CO.
Noxon Road
Poughkeepsie, New York
PLAYER OF THE WEEK
SPONSORED BY THE MILLER BREWING COMPANY
Point. It was a game that saw Marist make
a complete U-turn from their first home,
game. Sloppy inaccurate passes, and forced
plays were both common and frequent dur-
ing the first half. Defensively, Marist lack-
ed the full cour
.
t press that stymied the Pur-
chase women so well in their home opener.
pulling them
to
within six points at one
point in the second half.
Despite the 66-56 loss, bright spots for
Marist were Lois Ann Hayes (18 points)
and Diana Jones (10 points).
the second half saw Marist start reboun
-
ding effectively at both ends of the court,
The 3-2 Foxes will return to the McCann
to face St. Thomas Aquinas this Sunday (a
game that will be covered by WMCR), and
Hofstra on Tuesday.
.
_
ScOre
·
·
and
_
win
-
·
·
Now wasn't that easy. I'm just sorry that
·
everyone couldn't win the Red Fox jer
s
eys
or the other valuable prizes that were given
away in the CIRCLE contest, SCORE
AND WIN.
each and every one that did win didn
'
t
spend too much time looking up the
ans,vers to the questions.
The final winner is Michael Zuccarello
,
who answered four out of five questions to
become the last winner of SCORE AND
Congratul
a
tions
to
winners
Dirk
McMahon, Michael Zuccarello, Ed Kenny,
Bryan Malon
e
y and all tho
s
e that did have
some fun in playing SCORE AND WIN.
.
WIN
.
I would like to thank everyone that
.
.
tried their best in the contest, and hope_ that
· Men's basketball
Fri. D
e
c
e
mber 4
Maris! Invitational
Sat. December 5
Man hat tan-Fairleigh
Dicksinson-Wesl Che
s
ter
Sr.
.
Fri. December
18
*Fairleigh-Dickinson Univ .
·
Wed. December 23
*Siena
·
Mon. January 4
Hofstra
Wed
-
. January 6
Drexel
Fri. January 8
Fairfield Invitational
Sat. January 9
Loyola (Md
.
)-Lehigh
Wed. January 13
*St. Franci
s
(Pa.)
.
Sat. January 16
*St. Franci
s
(N.Y
.
)
Tues. January 19
Temple
Thurs. January 21
_•Wagner
Sar. January 23
*Fairleigh o
·
ickinson Univ.
Tues
.
January 26
St. Peter'
s
Thurs. January 28
*Robert Morris
Sat. January 30
*Long Island Univ.
$at
.
February 6
Colgate
Mon
.
February 8
Univ. of Maine
Thurs. February 11
*Towson State
Sat. February 13
*Univ. of Baltimore
Wed. February 17
*St. Francis(N.Y.)
Sat. February 20
*Loyola (Md.)
Wed. February 24
Univ. of Vermont
Sat. February 27
*Long Island Univ.
*ECAC League Game
-
Barry Lewi
s
·
Sports Editor
\,
Home
7:00&
9:00
Awa
y
Home
8:00
Home
8:00
Home
8:00
Away
T.B.A.
Home
8:00
Home
8
:
00
Home
8:00
Home
8:00
Home
8:00
Awa
y
8:00
Home
8
:
00
Home
8:00
Home
8:00
Home
8:00
Awav
8:00
Away
7:30
Away
8:00
Home
8:00
Away
8:00
Away
7
:
30
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,·
.
by
·
Paul ~aim~(
misses to keep and exp~nd their lead
)o
the .
·· -'~
final margin of-victory 92-84. : ..
.
; ·
·
.,
The Marist :-c~ileg~ Men's
.
Basketbali
Game high honors wentto Ljubojevic
·
'
team opened its initial season in
i
Division I who had 26
·
for Zagreb; Also Steten Dt!ric
. •
play on two rather sour riotes".
--
First,
.
with
.
and
.
Nenad Slavica combined for foiiy
_
an opening
.
night loss in an
·
·
exhibition to more to pace Zagreb. Marist was led by
~
·
•
Zagreb;
·
Yugoslavia
·
•
and
'
. ihen
.
this past
-•
Steve Smith's
·
25
with Keith
.
Denis hitting
·
.
Saturday atJhe hands of. league foe
.
Siena
_
.·
an inipres~ive
-
18 while seeing only limited
·•
·.
College:
:.
,
·
(;;:f:;>
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·
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.
._Marist was out rebounded 40-19 py
.
~:
:
•
In the Zagreb ganie the difference was
in .
:
the
·
ta.Her Yugoslavfans ana also Maristled
missedfoul-'sllc>ts.
'
Marist failed
to
fake ad-
.
in turnovers
-
18-JO
:
Saturday
-
night though
.
.
.
vantage oL
.
the
.
opportunities from
--
the it was'
a
different story as Marist tookon
·
.
·
charity stripe··while Zagreb
:
·
did use the Sie!}a College and almost walked away
0:
gifts. Overall'.
-
it was Marist
·
shoo
.
ting a with the win.
.
..
. .
.
.
. · · .
. ,
·
.-483 %"from the foul line while
.
Zagreb· shot
> In
a game that saw Mari st leading by as
at a .565 pace. Many of the
·
mi~ses ,for inuch as -17 points in the first then trail by
··
.
Marist came on the first end of
1
and 1 . as niuch
'
as 7in-the second half once again
:
.
chances thus
_
eHminating the possibility of
•.
the high scorer for Mari~t was Steve Smith. .
two points forJhe Foxes.
.
.
.
.
.
:
·
In the beginning it was Siena drawing
:
.
In the ho
.
rri
.
~ exhibition opener it was the blanks against a
.
tough Marist club
'
~hich
.
.
. visiting
:
'Yugos.lavians who
·
decid~d
to
set
·
allowed
.
them only
-
five
·
baskets in the ·first
.·
·
·
the early pace
.
<>f
the game.They employed· fifteen
·
minutes and
_
Mar.ist built a surpris-
:
-
a patient, passing offense and a tough
.
re-
•.
iiig 38-21 lead. The score at half time was
.
bot1nding defense to stymie the Marist
·
· ·
38-23 with Marist leading in rebounds as
•
arives. The taller, older ~agreb
·
showed a well 27-14. A help to rriadst
·
was Siena's 8-
bit more poise in some of the situations• 25 showing from the field. The Red Foxes
that was evidently lacking in Marist. In the got 14 first half points from Daryl Powell
first half Zagreb led by as much as 15 arid
10
from Smith; The real catalyst for
·
points,32-17.thanks tosome sloppy pass-
Marist in
·
the •first half once again
-
was
.
.
ing and cold shooting for Marist. Par-
BruceJohnson
·
who finished with 10 points
ticularly
·
impressive, · however was the and 5 assists
.
He was the'key to Marists ef-
quickness Qf
:
.·
freshman guard
·
Bruce fective press and running game offense.
Johnson who tried to lead the Marist attack
The
·
second half however Siena woke up
·
·
but often times things just didn
!
t click. The
.
and starting playing ball
.
The Indians ig-
.
score at half~time was Zagreb 52 Maris! 39 ..
·
nited a transiti9n _in
·
the
.
second half by
One.of the
-
more
:
interesting facts of the
·
··
operating their offense the way that they
.
half-time stats apart from the foul shooting· . could.
·
Siena had a run of )4~0 to get their
.
percentages was the number of turnovers " first lead in the game at the 14:34 mar.k, 43- ·
.
·
committed. Marist lost the ball 14 times·to 42;
·
-··,
. ':
·
..
·•
.
·
'
.
·
·
•
/'.
•
.. :
,
their opponents 5!
.
.
.
.
-••·.·
.
:.
·
Marist howevef\vas
_
not about to.let this
·
.
:
.
,·
:
®.
···
·
.
.
.
~
.
.
.
I
.
.·.
.
.
,c,
_
. .
.
.
-
;;...
-
-
,_.
__ _
.
•
·•••
•
The secon_d half though
·
things looked a one slip away itiat easiiy though
_
as
.
Moose
··
.
..
·
.
.. /.o'.
)iftlc:brigJ1te_1:Jor_ the M!lrist ¢ause·as the · Tirribei:lake gave the Foxes back the leadaL
'
,.
;.
:
:\:
Foxes came Ollt ready
_
toplay and it_Jooked
.
9:4}:With
:
aJayup; only to have Siena real
·
{
-
·
-~ -
.·
.·
for a while like they now had
•
finally found
~ off.inother spurt
of
eight
io
make the
·
score
:
"
:
'
•··
·
, ·
·
tlleir groove:
.
A
.
tenacious full court~press
·
51-44
,
Siena.
-
Undaunted
·
.
by this Marist's
:,
:
~:_:
.
:_
..
·_. ·.
.
and the speedy Bruce Johnson helped Steve Smith caine back with four baskets of
,
,
.
:
Marist dose to withiri 8 points at the 14:44
·
·
his
_
9wn bringiiigMarist back to within one
:
\).
·
markand forcingZagreb to t~ke a
.
timeout. at-55-54. But once again it was
-
Siena get-
.
But on~e agairi}he fail me of Marist to hit
.
ting four
:
unanswered points
.
before Keith
..
·
•
the freethrows cost them several chances at Denis made three of four from the foul line
really getting back
_
into the game a9d tak
0 .
around a Bruc.e Johnson steal,to once again
·
.
ing
a
possible lead. Junior transfer Daryl ·. give Marist the lead, .Two Siena turnovers
:_:
'
Powell's two.freethrows again cut the lead against the
-
press got Marist the lead.
:
Eirst
down to 7 and Keith Denis hit to cut it
to'
5
it. was Smith tyingjt at 5_9 all then Powell
·
forc;ing Jugoslavia to call it's
.
second time made
·
one of iwo
_
from the line giving
·
·
out of the half hoping to
.
kill the niomena Marisi a lead at the 3:04 mark60-59.
·
··
_
__
_
-.
Tourney-pairings
.
.
.
..
.
-
;
-
..
-
.
.
.
. Greater Poughkeei:_>sie
·
Auto Dealers
Classic
·
·-.-
·
·
~
·
~ECOND ROUND:
SATURDAY NIGHT AT 7:00 · CON
-
SOLATION GAME
FiRST ROUND:
.·
·
..
'.
·
·
."
-
.
SATUR.bA Y NIGHT AT 9:00 - CHAM-
:
FRIDAY NIGHTAT
.
7:00
~
MANHAT- PIONSHIP GAME
-
T AN VS. FAIRLEIGH DICKERSON···
-cc
FRIDAY NIGHT AT 9:00 - MARIST
VS. WEST CHESTER
.
.
:
.
..
·
All the games will be broadcast by the
station that follows the fox on the Marist
campus, 9L9 WMCRFM
•'
tum Marist had gained; This time it didn't-
·
.
·
Kevin McGraw gave Siena b
'
ack the lead
,
::
seem to work
.
as Marist came back onto the
,
with
:
a completion of
a
one-and~one then
court and prQceeded to
'
sink another hoop
.
Marist
,
got it's final lead of the contest 62-
·
·
.
affd trail by only 3 at the 8:16 inark of the 61 on Powells short.turnaround bank with
.
second ilalL
-
•~
:·
t .
.
.
·
_
.'
·
,
.
.
. .
.
·
2:08 left_. Marist ho,vever, as in the earlier ~--
-
-
.
-
.
~
--
- -
- .
-
.
-
.
-
.
-
.
- - - - ~ - - - - - - - . . ; _ - ~
_ _ _
...;.....,...;. _ _
...;.,_...;.. _ _ _
_,
· .
.'
,
·
After trading
.
,
baskets and
'-
missing game; wasted it's final chances on two tur-
.
20-
·
as
.
was
•
Mai:is
·
t
·
witli
·
Steve
·
Smith's 20
the return of Senior Moose Timberlake. He
•·
freethrows fxlarist
'
stil_l
.
manag~d to find
-
·
novers and a missed layup. Still the Foxes
'.•
Daryl Powell addedi!ffor the Foxes.
.
. had
.
been a question mark due to a knee in-
.
itself in a
.
threatening
·
position. At the 4 . managed to
.
claw back to within
•
7_0-68
:
The next contest for
·
Marist will be at
·
fury.
-
.
.
. .
minute_ mark it was Denis
-
again this time
.'c
before
·
RogerRenrick threw down a dunk
·•
their home tournament this
\
veekend. Dec.
,
bringing -Marisf as dose
as
..
they would ·. at the buzze_r
.
to_ice itfor Siena n-68.
·
:
'•
·.
·
·
..
.
4 & 5. as they :host; Fairleigh~Dickinson>
Against
_
Zagreb:
.
The Foxes shot .565%
.
cpme ~t-_78~ 76. But
.
~ag~eb kept cal111_ and
R~boundmg 111 the second half belonged
.
West Chester and
_
Mantiattan College.
·
·
. from the field. Also they managed
10
shoot
·
·
.
kept h1ttmg the
:
outs1de shots to
.
keep pace
-
to Siena as they but rebounded Marist 19-
·
·
·
.
. 563% from the line in half number two of
wi
_
th Marist_.
_
Zivko Ljubole:vic and Nenad 14, while Marist shota poor 13 of,38 in the
:
BANK SHOTS
the Zagreb game.
·
.
·
s1avicapaced Zagreb
_
down
.
the
.
stretch as second half.
.·
.
.
.
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..
:
,
.--
f
·
·
·
.
Auendance at the opener for Marist was
<
they used accurate shooting
·
and Marist
..
S_iel!_a was paced by Vernon Asquith
_
with
·
In the
·
garrie
.
,
ag~\nst S~eh~,
_
Marist saw hsted at 1396.
..
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.
.
.
.
_
....
:-:
.
·
~-----
.
--!!!!!!!!!""!""'~-----------~-----....
----------------------~~
,
~-ii•
By Barry Lewis
..
·
•,
.
.
.
,-.
·
.
Each Thursday
·
afternoon, piles of THE
Cann Center. Thanks to Dick
.
Quinn for all and not w.ith their own spirit and en-
•
CIRCLE
_
are placed all across the M:arist
-..
his t
_
ime, Ron:Petrofor his generosity and thusiasm for the school and its teams .
•
:
uBoy, this"job is iometimes rough."
campus, and to many, it is nothing more
.
c:specially Jay Williams and his staff for an
.
.
.
Idon'tknowhow
·
manytimesl'veheard
.
thanaquickreadingtopassthetimeaway.
Jhestatsmyheartdesires.
~-- ·
·
,
.
·.
In a short time (and believe me, time
·
·
·
myself, and others exclaim ju~t
_
how
,
~-
This i~ not the ca~e for the inany people in-
·
Many
·
things have changed in the short does fly), you too will be saying good-bye
.
frustrating their work really is. Since tak~
·
volved who comptle the spo~ts section of of
·
.
time that I have taken over the rein
'
s as to old friends
_
and new acquaintances, and
ing over as Sports Editor fpr THE CIR-
your school newspaper. An -excellent staff Sports Editor"last year, such as the basket-
will have wished that you had taken more
.
CLE. It has been my sound policy to bring
of writers:
.
Paul Palmer, John Petac
_
chi,
ball teams move
:
towards Division I, and of a part in the school's athletic program .
.
sometimes interesting, sometimes con- . Bill Travers, Karen Flood, Tim Breuer,
hopeful
·
prominence in the collegiate
Last of all, I wish to .thank you·, the
troversial -sometimes humorous
but
Ken Bohan, Stephen Hedderton, Pat Mc-
athletic world. Others stay the same, such
readers of THE ~IR CLE for making our
·
_
·
always different settings to my weekly col-
Cullough and Denise Film each week put
as a disappointing year by our Red ·Fox
time and effort worthwhile. Though it is
,,,.....
·
·
umn.
into words the excitement that our Red Fox
football squad, who showed grandeur in
true that we are students, and that the
I can not honestly say that I never once .... teams bring.
·
.
,
September, and obscurity in November.
. papers function is to be a learning ex-
wanted to give up all that frustration for
·
··
The
·
staff of photographers: Grace
.
..
.
perience tool, it is also true that our
.the simple peace and quiet that my readers
.
Galligher,
•
Chris
'
Demps~y and Je.m~e
What I do hope will
.
change, is the ·· satisfaction comes from your comments
·
.
sometimes have. When departing Sports
LeGl_oachec who capture J~st a second •~
animosity that you, th~ students, the true about our writing. Personally I would like
·
_
Editor Mike McCarthy said to me last year,
-
the hfe of each sport. Whtie these people
fans of Marist College show in your own
.
to wish everyone a happy h9liday, and best
·
"It!s all yours, Good
·
Luck," I said "thank
are
t~~
heart and s?ul of my staff, it would
classmates. I
·
still
·
find it very sad that the of luck to you all in the future .
.
you" at first, but soon realized that it is not
.
_
be nd1culous
.
to give tha~ks to everyone,
mass of this institution sJill must be bribed
•
"It's all yours Bill Travers, Good luck."
all mine.
·
·
and leave out
_
f!ly_good friends at the Mc-
into coming to sports events with T-shirts,
26.10.1
26.10.2
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26.10.4
26.10.5
26.10.6
26.10.7
26.10.8
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26.10.16