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Part of The Circle: Vol. 23 No. 10 - December 6, 1979

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THE
CIRCLE
Volume 23,NumberY
·
.
.
10
December 6, 1979
·
~
·security seeks firebug
.
.
-
the fire had
oeeri
there. The latest fire
.
was
·
.

.
by Diann
_
~ Jones
·
·started December!. One was at 3:30 a.m .
.
,
·
;
·
->

.
s
.
i
a
<r:,riier. •
-
·
·
and anothei:-was at 8
:
00 a.m. The first
.
.
Manst Secunty

15
.
still
.
lookIDg f
.
or
.
the :
0
:d·
.
t
· ··
f
·
d
.
·
-
th.
e .
··
re
·
ar
..
wes-t
·
"
·
·
·
·
·.
·
" Ii
hti
·
fir
-
·
d mci en was
.
oun
_
ID
,
.
person _c;>r
.
.
pei:sons
:c-
g
.
9g
.
~
--
ID an
ta
·
·
'
11
·
d th
.
th
.
was outside Leo.
around
_
Leo
·
H~ll;
_
a~ordmg to Joseph s u-we , 3:n
.
·
e .
0
er
.
.
.
,
.
_
Waters
;
director of safety and security.
-
.
A
po
_
le
.
with a wire at th~ end of it was
'

Th
.
-
~

,
.
.-
ha
•,
.
.-
__
-
b

·.
11
,·.
f•
·
1·t
-:

·
.
·
-
th
found at Leo,
.
but,
.
a~_Qrding
.
_ to Waters,
_

ere
ve

·
een
ires i
.
ID
.
.
·
e
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
th

t

used
to
t
stairwells
of
Leo arid outside the bµilding
"
th~re
is
_no
,
evidence ~ti was
pu
. since
.'"
November 13.
:
Crumbled balls pf paper fir~s througQ windows.
·
.··
.
.
.
·
papef,
:
paper·cups
;"
a pundle of the New

T!te
_
i:e is a-$100
_
cash
_
reward I>E:mg
-
?f- .
·
'
York Tiriles;·•and a cracker box have been- fered ~o anyone
.
who ca!1 provide
.
m-
'
'
used
.
to
:
ignite the
,
fu:es.
'l;'he
:
fires
_
_
W~I'.e
-
form~~i
_
on that
·
lea~ to tn~
arrest
an~
fourid eithefself~tinguished or
,-
w:ete put
·
}on,v:~ction
,
of;the
·
.
perso~ or
·
persons
,
out
by students.
>
·:
'(-

.
·•
<
..
·
·
•• .
·
sta~g the
.
fir~s, according
tp
a Jettei:

·
One fire "which we
.
consider the most . which
:
was
.
maile4 to each
:_
stud(mt
_
on_
dangerous;" says
waters,
is.aJir~ started
CaµtPUS
-'.
.
. .
.
,,
.
.

.
,
.
on
.
tlie.
:
sixth floor
rug
iriLeo
>-
A
.
stugent
T~,ere
1S
no
.-_
evide~ce,.,~ys ~aters,,.that
,
-
fow:id the fire burnigg

~nd put it
·
out, ggys the fe
.
rson or persons
lS
a studen~, and
Waters. The
first
fire was
:
found
·
on
.
I
~on
,
t
_
want
.-
to m~e any_specu~tions at

·
·
NovimtiJr 13
-
afl
.
2: 30
p
:
rii
i
m
the
·.
\vest side Uus pomt. B}-lt,
I
_:will~y this, obviously the
stairwell
,
between
·
fifth and sixth floor. · pe
,
rson
y.'QO
is domgpits needs help, and we
There
'
were .two more fires_ that
.
day, all w
_
o1:1l<i like ~09perat10n fromthe rest
_
of the
started in teo
·
stairwells. Students

found
__
cam.pus to lll_sure the personal sa!ety of a~ -
ashes
·
or
.
~rtially
·
burnt paper incU~ti.-flg
-
the students m the Leo dorm and !ts sta~·

-:-
'
,
'
.
-
"
·~
.
,
.
·_
,
·-
.
......
,
~
.
t
?<f~
s
:
.
-
1
·
·
·

.
_
.-
-
.
f
· ..
:.i
:--'
-
,
·
.


• •·•

•••

.
•.
val'l&aliSnittropS
.
50
Percent
,
(
C,::':;_·
~~
"A
:
a
·
rJri
\
a
·
i
~
s
~
-
-
-
ag
_
cri
-
n
~
._
:
_
_
-
~
-
-
:._
.
£
,.
·.
b
•-
·
.
-•
-
·
·
J

. ·
.
>--
.
.
·
-
·.--::

...
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/
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?::
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.
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:/~
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-
_
. .
·
.
.
·
:_
--
-
- ... --
-
-

·
.,
_
YI>tan~!l
·
on~s
.
·
TherestiUhav,.e
_
beensigriificantactsof
•:.:.\·
-:·
·
~
.. -
-
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:
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:•:(
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~~:- -
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-
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·
F~
,~
-
,~-e~
i
;
·
,ci
~
-
V8tj~8lism~
·
according
··
.tQ
Kelly,.-
but
.
about
-{'
.:..
t-·-
.. ,
-'
·
·.
:.
~
<::
-
by•(;hristqpher,
_
Hoga~
:-
-
\ :-·
··.
~
l'.ttary;t
_.
,cc:~d-
.
'Y8S
,
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il:i,Y
.
~ly!?d ,.__m
_
~
a.
,
tWo:-ca.r:::-
::
:
.
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. ··
_
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, ...
·
-
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>
;_'..:
··
:-
-
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: .
1
:-
~
_
·
- -



.
-


_
50
.
pef<:~nt
-
of _the
,
indiv~dua~ _who
-
.
wer
_
e
·
-,
·
·
·
·.:
-
.::
·
:.
-.
-
·
.
·
·
. --:.:
. -:~-
,'\
c
'o
.
.;;
;,.,,
:
;',.
c,.
,,.
-
,
-:
:
:
.
·
., •
~
colµaj<?,n
_m.
~e,..~~~~t p~rk~g 1ft ~t ,_
- /
r~e :v~dalisJ,n rate
].S
!i.O\\'.D
at :r,ianst by responsible have been
.
1!lentif1ed so
.
.
the
-
.
-
,
,

.
·
...
..
·
· _
.
.:.-:
.-:-. ·-:.
::,::·-,:-
:
'7,7'.::
:
,
f;=·
::.::~
·':'-
:
;
•:
1t,
•"
.
,
·,
:
:•,_
:!!
-
,
0
·
',::
-
"+:,
'-::-:'tlJe
·
same
_
time:the'fir~
,
trucks·arrived.
,
The- · · ~ppi:
_
oumately
,~
50
.•
percent
.,;;
this
t
:,
year
--
:whole
\
floor.....does
:
not
.~
ful.vci:.to.P9,y
~
£or
~
thcoc
·
·~
,·~;~
-•
~-s:!:
,,;,.
:~
~-
--
.
,
_
·-<:" ·
_
•:: .
.
.
/i
>
·:
~\·
..
Appl:'oxlriµlteiy
,
~
.f
~ople
'Y.ei-e
;
uitfaw!l~
::
~
c
,
~!i
.J
'i
~
s
:
~~
t.9
·
st

F.iatjc~
~
H~~~~l
:
~d
~:.;"
cqrn
~
req_
~
~?°l~~t:'yeifr
;
Icf.or,'!~1
n
~
~
<;:~
' :
dam~fg~
::-_:
,,
-
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·-.:--.-;-?
,
)
.,
~
·
:
~:· -
_
:
~:-
.
-.:
·
,
:
-

.
:
,
_
::
:
/; .
-
-.
c:
' .
.
':..Y·-
:"
·
·'
t:
:
·
-~
-
·~
9f
·
a
,
~alse
:'.
~nn
.!
Jo~
;
!5
_.
:
m!nu~El~
:
~ t
_:-·
~
~.:
:
.
·
;_
tj:~~~
:
J
(!r-
;
!P,ll\or
;-
iJ!j~~
:
an~hw~s
:
~tei:
;;_.
:
Kelly
j
-D~~c;tor.-
;
~
fI
~ou~g.
~:~
·
:-'-::7'.
.:
-
.•
--
_· __
:'
~-
-
"2';._
~~dl'.ew
_
-
,-
~~velko,
.

_
phy-sic~l
:
;
plant
_
.-
_ -
-~
·
·
-:
-
· "''-
curred
-
0
last
:-
Ttiesdar
,
attern09n
'
J
n
::-
thtf
'
:2
_
released
t
says
;
Waters
,,
~
-
-:-
_
,
...
:;.
--
.
-~
-.-
~
·
?
-- --
T
~~Vandalism
~
~
-
on
:-,~
elev~tor_s
-~
l!l
-
.
Cham-
~:..c.
direciQr,
=
has
·:
,
also
·
.
:
seen
·
a

significant
_
:- .
.
-
--
_-
.
·.
-
· '.:
campus cen~r
/
Tiie
'
·_
ala~
_
rang
i
~t
:
aboµ!
·
.:,:?
'
'.
!
~
onsider ~ta
probie~'!
·
say~_
Business
:
pa~f
Ha~!_cost' ~0?-
;
JIG
·
s~
,
~~i
~his
y~r/
\
:
decre~5E:
-
.-
in
:
van9a~m
th_is year
.' -
·
·

-
-
··
11:
ao
·
--
a.m .
.
i!}
:
the
.)
~~by
",
of
_
the
-
·
;
campus.
"
9fficer
.
Antho_ny
:
~mpillii.
As·
t~
·_;
how
-
says
·
,
Kelly:
_
._-
"Last
:
se~est~r
.
.
yand~li~m.
. "Up to now w_e
,
'!'ould have had at least a
·
·-
.
center
-
for--about one
_
mml!te.and
.
t~~ a~rm "-.,
_.
serious
:
the -problem
·
'
is,
I
donT know.

I
:·:rep~lts
-
were
·
$782.72.
H
-this

is
:
any
-
m-_"_dazen qoors but th~ y~r we have only had
-,:--=--
:
did
:
riot
:
register
,~
iit
,
:,t~e
:
cafeteria
-,
~u~g ·
·
don't
:
particularly buy theJact that it"~as dicator it means van~lisin
may
~
<1:0~
about
.
one
.
or ·,two/' says P
_
avelko
.
·

~
,
lunch
_
hours
:
_The
.
C8IPP1!~
,
·
c.~nter,
~
a~rm
:
.
~s
:,
_just
'.
dirt
:
tha
.
tma~e
·
the
·
systeill
-
malf1!JlC'-
:
··
by ~bou~ 50 -P.ercel!t
}
n
.
_
the do
_
rms.
_
-
:
.
,
_
.
:
.
:
µotcon!}ected to ~P~~~!l~ll
.
a~dJhe
::
ti1m,''
:?
'
>
,. :

.•
.
.
_;'
:
_
,
-
-.-:
.
·
-
.
.
-
.
-
,,
·-
<
~:trr1a~i~
.
r~t1n~~:fy~t
~
e~ll
:~
:6Yci!~:;i;!~,~~t:ta8fe
st
sfundaiiaA:r~
·.
:
:
~
.
.
.
.
-.
:
-

-
T
.
-
.
-
.r._ u
.
...
:
_-
.
_
.:
s
.::.
-
.
.
·
te
..
·
·.
·
e .
·.
_
_
.S
:.
e

.
-

-
-
-
.
.
y
•·.
·
e
n
·
e
.
·
· ..
w.
·
·
·
.
. ··
·
.
··
.
..
3
_·_
·
_
1arm
. Water_s said-the
a~im
did.11opvork
:
uj
the:_
.
could use $omeupdatilig'.
·
Ile refused to
.
say
-
.
_
cafeteri,~
.
because
:
:
tl}~
~lami
;:'
't!<>nta:ct ·
.
whethel'.,the alarm sy~teritwas a problem
.
::'
·
-
·
.
-
·.:
..
.- ·
.
-
.
·
.
'
·
-
·
.
-
-
.
: :
:"
Points
·
were
·
dusty''
~
iind
:
~~e-ded
,
·
cl~ning:

:.
of
.
:
c.o~d
:
be tei"nltl(i
'
~
.'
sedous:"
•· ...
·
,.
:,.'
·:
:,·:
.
.
·
-
.
·_
hy
_
C'1_ri
_
stoph
:
er
·
Hogan
...
"prellininary
.
finance'' budget and he
_
_-;
Waters added th~t
:
the
a.1allti:
system
·
9oes
"'
:~·;
:
-
/:
'.W
f
re
trying
J
q l<>O~
_
at
-
~YS
to
salvage
·
_
_
".
Co-edilor
=
;
i:•
_
.
-
.
_.
-
expects to present
.
the same
·
budget
with
-
no
(_
ring,:µilt~
-
-
-
it ~
-
:
~.~c
_
tiv~~
,
and
:
t!le
·
_
--,
w~t
-
we·have,
)l
says Campillil
;
·-
~
•~~
-
WSS
:'c·r
_
..
.
-
,
_
<
:
<
.
.
·
:
.
--
.
<
approva~ this
·
week.
,
_
-
:
can1p11S ~enter
.
a~rn,i
:
18,a
;'.
'.sµigle s~st~'
\
.
µisUllled
:
_
wit~ tlle
.
:
~11dards of
-
N~w
,
~o~Jt
'
.
.
:
.
The Boarg.
_
,of
-
'l'rilsteel!
lS
expecte4 to
:
The
_
funds are expected to be drawn from
separate fro:ir C~
_
x:np~~t
-
~a!J
;
-
:
'
.
·
,
>
state
.
:
It
met :standijrdS
:-_
the!'!; and
J
t~ s~m-
·
~I)pr~ye
·
:
a
/
$23,000 pr<>p~l on
·
-
T~u~ay "reserves that the ~o~ege has put away for
-
.
Three Manst
:
Secunty guards and
_
9ne ·meets
-
standards. They maybe
.
_
njiniltial thatwouldcallf9ranewfireala~system non-mortgage buildings
,,
and emergen-
'. student· fire marshall
.
evacuated Cpam-•
-
(standards),,but they work."
:
.
,
:
-
.
·in Benoit
.
and Gregory H9uses; tlie chapel, . des," says Campillii. Campillil said
.
that -
.
_
·-
_
.· ,
j>a~tHallresiden~
:
W.Jthin ~5;111imites
!>Y ,
,
;
waters
;
says
~
:
~hat
-
J
SecuritY,
/
~ystem the
_
_
Ubrary,
'
apd
'.
fontaine_
~~U
r
BusinElss
-
_
the
·
syste~
::
~?uld be installed as soon as
·
-. -:
.
.
_
,
'.
,
banging onJioor~
~
o~
-
rune
_
dorp1_1t~ry flC>O~s
.
_
.
Servi~fis '.'Jo9king
:
in~,, a
:
·
_
new fire alann
:.:,
Officer
<
:
Anthony
,
Campillu
.
~ays
,
t~at

\
possib_letp~ndmg apprQval by the trustees;
·
·
,
Fairviey
(
'
FireDepartment
;.
amved
.
with
,,
system
·
,
tha:t
,
.:
would
...
anow

the
•:
campus
-
.
Director
.
·
of Safety
.
and Secunty
.
Joseph
_
:
C~pillii
• ..
~dded tbat
-
.
he
·
was ''not

at
:
three
·
fire
trucks
·
anft _
num_eroµs
.
civilian center
.
. bells
\
to
·
:
ring,'.
·
cQntiritiotisiy
--
until
:
-
:
Waters and himself presented
,
the
_
pr9posal liberty'" to
.
disclose specific details
_
until
_
'
:vehicles.
In
·
an unrelated incident,
-.
one-
-
turned
off. -"
: .:·
..
'-'.
:
>
. .
.
·
-
-
toaportioil of the Board of Trustees
with
a theproposalwas presented to the tnistees'.
,,.~.,
-;-
·
·-
:--
,

'
~
,,
·
,<:.:;
•_ ...

~
...
.
.
;
'.
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...
-~·
: ..
,
:
,
·
.
·
:·~
~
-;
·
- ,. ,
.,
'
'
.
-
..
.
.
.
-'."
.
.
;
..
.
..
.
.
.
....
-
'
' "
'.





































































































































































by
Dave
Ng
In order to help efficiency
'
Marist
will
also buy a more sophisticated computer
system which
.
would be able to provide
C
IH'd
ir
or
administrators with more accessible daily
•Marist
College has spent approximately updated information ranging from billing
a third of its Title m grant of a
$1
million to a student's academic records.
-
in creating new programs and developing
After expenditures on improving the
·
a more efficient management system of college's administi:ation, the career
the college
since
Marist
received the development office·
-
is
allotted the next
money from the federal government in largest budget from Title
·
m. money at
January, according to John Lahey,
$106,217
to be used until June
1981.
Marist
coordinator of
the
grant.
.
·
has hired Ray Wells, a full-time career
·
Although
.
exact amounts
will
not be counselor
~
to work with Pat Lennahan
known
Wltil
the
college's Title
m
office director of career development, to
expand
finishes
its
yearly report
in
January
1980,
the office which existed before the school
Lahey said Marist bad spent ap-
.
received the federal funds.
-
TITLE
Ill
EXPENDITURES
Program administration*.; •••
-
•••••••• $108,771 _
Planning management •••••.•••

•••••• 108,079
Career development •••••••••••••••••• 106,217
Lecarning center/counseling •••• ;
~-:
~ •••• 101,161
Estaurine Research Center on the Hudson • 96,256
·
CORE
curriculum ••••••••••••


;
•••••••• 81,399
Marist
·
Greenhaven* •••••••••••
·
••••••• •
.
77,915
Public administration* ••••••••••

•••••• 77, 113
·
Media
Center (equipment) •••••
~
••• : •••• 73,130
Communication arts • ; ••••••••••••••• ;. 71,363
·
Juvenile Justice* .

•.•

•••••
.
••
/
•• ; ••••• 60;253
Planning phase (1978) • .•.••

·.
~
•••.•
_
••

• 38,343
$1,000,000
/
proximately
$200,000
by June and has
The learning center and
·
counseling
*~ew p,:ograms
probably spent another
$100,000
by now. offices of the college
:
are budgeted to get .. -:-~-:-""'.""' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.J
The spending would
seem
to be keeping
$101,161
over the same period. Some of that
-
·
pace with the federal government's money has been used to hire two full-time ·
th
e school keep ~e n,~w

programs alive.
Lahey said Title
m
regulations allows
regulation which requires Marist to spend people for the learning center which was
m~er also said,
.
Vfe put
·
3/1
.
-
much colleges to
use
the money to
.
create new
all
·
of the money within its three year previously
run
by one person with student
Y mto a~s where it wo~dn t need to programs or supplement
·
existing ones but
·
"grant'' period which
.
ends in June
1981.
r
help.
.
.
.
~ / ~
0
laced.
A
nel'( comput~r sy~~
-
~?r
·
.
does not
.
penm.t
,
s<;hools to "supplant"
.
~cManis
~ociates, Inc., an outside
Lahey said that
if
the college's nutrition
.
stemllege
_
or ad~g
-
~
.
color televISion
,
fun<ll!
;
ff.e e;pl~med 1twould be. a violation
,agency.
based
_
in Washington,
.
D
.
C.
·
has rate
·
(numbe1:" of stude~ts with~ra~g
~
.
to
th
e , audio-VISual center an~
..
to shift mst1!1.1~onal money from one area
bee~
hired
by the college
.
to examine . from school) decreases, 1t would mdicate
1981
gs
88
t1!3\;Ji°
t n~d to be
.
replaced
iri
of the college
_
and th~n
·
replace the
·
same
Marist's
handling of the funds, The firm the
.
move to allocate large budgets to
.
the
.
.
Titl' llli
·
er
w
O
must
.
app~ove all area with
_
grant
.
money
;
,
·
·.
·•

.
.
will
make a report
'
on their findings to the leai:rung centers and ~ounseling office was
"e,
expen~tures ..
..
.
·
•··
.
..
· ·
·
·
·
''It's (Title
;
m)
purpose
is to add new
federal government, as required by Title a wISe one. He explamed that
.
most
·
of the
.
bud~e1
!
;~i~~Yt !hidp mddin~erm~.t~f the
_
programs
_
which
-
a cliITe
_
nt
-
budget cannot
·
m regulations, in late January.
stud~nts who transfer or ~thdraw from
diff
'
.
.
n a
.
g, i snot afford,'' said Lahey.
.
. .
.
.
.
MarISt leave
because
of either grades or
erentfora~y
_
of tbedep~entshere;'' ·
A
.
bilingual education program for
·
problems
.
with
·
college life and hopefully
American
.
-
hispanic inmates
''
at
-
Upgrading
efficiency
·
the expansion of th~e

areas will help
.
Greenhaven prison is beirlg started by the
The government also requires any students stay at
.
Manst
.
.

.
·
:
federal
·
funds
,
·

Lahey
-
said.
·
.
The new
college or university receiving a Title III
·
-
program
is
designed
-
to help inmates who
grant to spend 10 perceritof the money in
Looking
ahead
·
have the
,
intellect.for a
·
college
'
education
developing and improving management of

but
.
lack the language skills, he said
:.
··
the college, according to Lahey. He stated
"These programs
will
pay for therti-
.
.
state
.
and federal officials are watching
$108,079
will
be
spent during the three yeai
·
selves,'' ~id Lahey, meaning Marist will
Title IIIregula_tions prohibits the use of the
tpe
program's development" as
.
it
.
is
period for management planning
,
and have
to
'pay for these areas itself when the
.
federal money to be used for
-
admissions
·
probably
_
the
·
:
only one of its kind
in
the
another
$108,771
_
.
for program ad- grant period expires'.

.
·

·
fund raising, public relations.
.

.
.
.
·
.
state of country, according to Lahey
:
The
ministration.

·
-He said the college is already planning a
·
. For exapiple, Lahey said he had to tum
bilingual program, which currently
·
in-
The college is expected by the govern-
"replacement funding strategy" to pay. for
d~~
a request from the undergraduate
eludes 2.5 inmates, will receive
;
$77,915
ment
.
to hire a number
·
of
consultant programs that were first started with Title
diVISIOn
_
.
of
.
_
the public administration
from Title III.
.
.
••
'
. .
·
·
·
agencies"
·
to advise the administration on
ill
funds. Marist
w~
1
start
,
paying
·
in part
depllrt!Eent,
.
whic~ \\'as started using Title
·
_According
to
Lahey
~
Marist spent less
how
to
improve its efficiency, said Lalley, for some
.
of the prograQJS
'
next year and
.
111 money,
when
it asked
if
some of.its
TiUe
.
m
-
money than expected in
its
first
and that their fees will be paid for by Title
.
hopefully
·
.
outside
-
grants, increased
budget
·
could
'
be
_
used for
-
IDaking
·
·
a
yearands9me of that money may be
'
tised
III money.
enrollnient, dec
_
reased nutrltiori, will help
brochure
·
about
_
the
'
program.
.··
·
to establish

a
,
computer scienc
·
e major.
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/
Weber:
tr.onces
-
New manager to
improve service
photo by Kevin Kelly
.
By
1Christopher Hogan
.
-
and
Co-
\.'t!
i
tor
Mark Toomey, a special manager from
visions
by
Dave
Ng
the Seller's food service, says he hopes to
Weber. "Many times people
think
they've improve the company's account with
had psychic experiences when they really Marist by raising the cafeteria's ef-
haven't. The
,
things we have
to
accept as ficiency. Toomey replaces Don Card as the
being out of the ordinary are the ones you
_
dining service manager in charge of the
write down or tell something about. Those account at the college.
-
are
the things you felt were so out of the
According to Toomey, Card and Seller's
ordinary that did something out of the mutually agreed the food service's at>-
ordinary about them."
count with Marist would be better serviced
Mark Toomey
"Everybody in
this
room has
been
if
Card
left. Card is also no longer with
hypnotized at one time," says the Duke Seller's, and was not requestE:d
.
to leave
_
by
University graduate .
.
"When you're about the college, said the new dining service
-
"The big thing is
if
a student
has
a
to
-
fall asleep sou're ~lmost in a state of manager.
·
complaint, he must
be
able
to
justify
it. We
-
hypnosis."
Toomey described himself as a offer suitable alternatives,"
said
Toomey
.
·
"H
you make something reality for your "special" manager who is often on t_he
He explained "feedback" is needed on
brain,
itbecomes reality for your body," road and, at Seller's request, works with items liked or disliked by students but an
he says _about the hobby he learned ab.out troubled
·
accounts. However, he said the
"everything stinks" attitude is not con-
from reading books.
_
.
term ''trouble shooter" was not ap-
structive.
·
Weber attempted to hypnotize the plicable.
Since
his
arrival at Marist Nov
.
16,
audience by asking them to close their
Seller's account at Marist is currently at Toomey said he bas rece~ved ap-
eyes
and pretend that their extended anns 75 to 8.5 percent efficient, but it could be proximately six to eight complamts about
were
.
being lifted on the left side by
8
better, said
.
Toomey.
the food or the service and about half of the
helium balloon
·
and weighted down on the
"Our opinion is that while we have complaints were justifiable. The dining
.
right side by
a
heavy dictionary. When the improved, we would like to see greater service is willing
to
answer
-
to rea9?nable
audience openl!d their eyes there were improvements. The account
is
not
where
criticisms
from students, depending on
some with their arms tilted upward and we would like it to be," he said.
their nature, said the manager .
,
Co-ed
i
to
r
others whose :were still
-
straight.
·
'
·
Areas which need improvement are
Toomey said
.
he also hopes to improve
_
, ·
·
"It
'
s virtually impossible to do sanitation contact with students, special the general organization and ad-
Ken Weber does not force anyone to do · something that 5?meone really doesn
~
t events, tr~ining employees, and general ministration of the food service
in
areas of
something they do not want to do. Inst~d, want to do," he &.11d to tha:se wh~se arms · organization, said Toomey who has reserving special events, ordering food,
be travels throughout No1:il1 ~enca dJd not move. .
"It's
mcredible f~r worked with colleges before. He ~id he and staff. The service hires 26 full-time
·
telling "anyone who will listen" a~ut re,laxation. I use it ~use of
_
my hectic hopes to improvft the dining service ef-
workers and approximately 90 students on
·
hypnotism and how
-
to relax.
.
.
-
~hedule of_trav~g. On the plane,_I use ficiency up to 90 percent.
.
. .
a part-time

basis.
Weber spoke to approximately 50 Marist
·
1t
for 15 to
:ID
mmutes to recharge my
Although no
.
one has made specific
"In
my opinion, Marist College could
be
students Monday afternoon ~bout batteryandtogivemetheenergyiusually complaints
.
about the cafeteria's an excellent account for Seller's. It's not
telepathy
-
(mind•to•mind thought), don't have
.
. "
.
.
.
·
.
.
·
.
sanitation the manager said the
dish
room going to change overnight but there are
clairvoyance,.(!tnowledge t_hat no one else
Webe!~as able
to
gw~e the audience m needs to
be
painted and its floor
.
tiled. .
things you have to keep plugging at," said
has), precogmtion (foretelling the future), memon.zmg ten words m sequence both
Toomey said the quality offood served m Toomey who has worked with the State
psycho~esis (mind over matter), and de frontwards al}d backwa~ by what he the cafeteria is good but that it needs some University at Oswego and Assumption
ja' vu' (thinking you have ~n somew
.
here calls "nemomcs
.
.
.
" According to Wehe
.
r
.
, "polishing" in its preparation. He added, -College.
.
. .
before).
·
.
_
.
.
·
.
_
_ nen:ionics allows an individual. to study "Theimageofthe_f~isimpo~nt.Ifitis
Seiler's
is
the college's fourth dining
/
.
.
"There are a ~ot of ID1Sconceptio11;1, about easi~r
-
and faster than most typical study prepared right, it gives the unage we service
in
five years
.
·
,
~P (extra s~ns9ry 1>e~cep~9_19,
_.
SS.Y.S
habits college students have.
_
~c:are:;.·•~•
,
_.;..
·
~
·
...
-
- - - - - - •
·
----~-----------------,
-
-._ .... ,.
·
"·
-
·
·
·

-
.
-~
BEtMDNTE'S
·
Foreign
-
Auto Parts
I
Formula II
-
I
For all
lOU
_
.
1
For Professional
.
I
Import Car Needs
I
Car Repairs and
-
I
.
8
1
Mt.
C~rmel
Pl. Po'
·
k. •
-Service
-
I
-
452-7050
.
p14 Mill St. Po'k.
OFFE'RING:
MARIST COLLEGE
-
DISCOUNTS
_
Roosevelt
.
Theater
-.
Rt. 9 Hyde ParkCA9-2000
)
I
-
--
471-3295
.
,
The
·
J,
Hair Shack
~w.:;:..,~
'.
__>12
;
~=
-
,,
4
71-4383
Latest c~ts from New York
"city
-
'.
•Unisex cutting
_
at its best
Fcir Guys and
.
Gals
·
From $5
.
•His and Her body perm
Curiy or soft wi
_
th cut
From $15
Mon
-
Sat 9:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m .
.
-
THURSDAY· LATE NIGHT
,
17SOU
,
TH HAMiLTON ST
. .
· '
POUGHKEEPSIE
1 ½Block
So
:
of
Main
Mall
NO APPOINTMEN.T ~~CESSARY
THE AYATOLLAH KHOMENI
.
.
.
NIGHT
AFTER PEARL HARBOR
KAM I KAZE PARTY
·
sat. Dec. 8 In The Cafe
9:00
P.M. -
1:00
A.M.
TOP SHELF BOOZE
AT REGULAR
-
PRICES
MIXED
DRINKS
DRAFT
75¢
35¢
OR
3/$1.00
$1.00 AT THE DOOR
·
-
yo
BENEFIT THE FAMILY OF
Ambrose "BERNIE"
Verlin
SPONSORED BY
THE MARIST COMMUNITY
I
(
i
'
I
J
I

















































































































































































- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
-
-
- - - - - - - - - - -
-
-
- -
- -
~
--
-
. ; P a g e 4 - - - - - - - - - - . : . . . - - - - - - - - - T H E C I R C L E
co-editors
copy editor
· -
feature editor
THE
CIRCLE
-
sports editor
ph~togrophy editor
cartoonist
advertising manager
business manager
Christopher Hogon
David Ng
Jone Neighbors
Dionna Jones
Jim Townsend
Kevin
.
Kelly
Bob Whitmore
--Jon
Urban
Fronk Kozokewicz
Stoff: John Moyer, Chris Egon, Bob Sentochnik, Pam Miller, Thomas Hassett.
Aday
.
-
1n
·
the I ife .. •
-
Scott awakens t~ the sound
·
of a rooster
_ since last year and ·places it onto the counter.
cackling in hisbackyard~
His.
room is cold-it
Then he points at a long thick piece of wood
.
,
is ten degrees below zero outside and ten
garnered

with a rich bundle of gree~
·
'
pine
degrees above
zero
inside. He sheds the
.
needles before taking it. The storekeeper·
numerous
.
bl~nkets
-
~nd dirty
'
clothing off
-
nods affirmatively.
_
.
himselland slips on
:
his ,vorn winter jacket.
·
Scott flings the huge tree over his shoulaer
December 6, 1979;_
Readers Write -
All letters must
be
typed triple
space
with o 60 spo<:e morg'ln. ond submitted to the Cirde
offic1t no toter thon 6 p.m. Mondoy.
Short
letten ore preferred. We reserve the right to edit
all letters. letters must
be
signed, but names moy
be
wilflheld upon request. letters
wiU
be
published depending upon CM1ilobility o space.
.
_
·
Results pleasing
'i'o the Editors,
.
On
Thursday, November 29, direction that
Mari.st
is
taking,_
we, the members
of
~ g n a t
and
also the new norm policy.
House III
-
had Dr. Dennis
We were
_
all basically pleased
Murray, president of Marlst
·-
with
the results of the talk. Dr.
College give an µiformal talk in Murray
-""
answered
all
the
our lounge. -
·
questions honestly and directly,
·
We had asked
Dt.
Murray to
-
,
without
giving' us
false,
come
to
the lounge and speak to
·
_
"political'!
,
answers.
_
When
-
Dr.
us because
we had
many
unan-
Murray
.
was
not sure
of
an an-
swered questions about both the swer he told
us
so. We all
-
came
academic and the social aspects away with a better understanding
of school.
We
though
_
t
t ·
that
Dr,'
of what
_
"'- D
_
_
r; Murray
__
h
_
o
_
pes for
Murray would be
_
williitg
to
listen
.
Mari.st,
and also what we hope for
to
our problems and hopefully
,
:
,
ourselves;
,
-
.
.
·
.

-
_.
give us
·
some answers.
_
-.
-
-,,

<·
Wewouldpubliclyllketothank
·
AlLthe members of
.
the house
Dr.
Murray for
listening
to, and
showed th$-

interest
·
by both

·
answering
·
our · prevfously
being there
ana
Iist¢.ning.to
Dr~
-
imanslVered questions~
.
·
.·.
··
. ·
Murray.
Many
·
questions- were
-
.
,
·
·

··
..
.
Signed~
asked and centered around the
-
.
The members of
·
various
°'
sports
· ·.
teams,
the
-
Champagnat
House
ill
.
.
Get
if
.
right
There is four
-
feet of snow barricading the
·
and allows
_
the bulk of the weight
tC>
rest on
front door of his house arid his parents are
his back.
It
is heavy and he grimaces as he
Dear Mr. Faille,
·
Leaders-did
.
not exempt them-
still asleep. He opens the door ajar and kicks
-
leaves tlie store and ,valks back into the cold.
.
Forgive me for responding in
selves
or
anyone else
_
from
.-
the
away the drift.
.
.
.
The trek uphill seems lo
-
nger'and
·
filled with
"
-
this
manner, but~it seems
.
that
·
·
new allocationpolicy. We do not
·
It
js a special day
for
Scott: He wants to
more pain. Ile trips hallway up the
'
incline
·
you:left no forwardiilg·address.
·
.
claim
to
b~
·
ex1:tlted, nor do we
travel do\vn . the
.
mountain to
-
th~ general
and fans ini
.
o the snow;Hi_s torn pants are. : This. would appear
·
to be,
"
8
adhere to the outdated policy
·
of
store.,He slips through
·the ·tiny
opening
-
he
soaked and
>-
the
-
palms
.
of his hands
.
are
ra,v
_
problem with
'
some_ of our

.
Sovereign
irmnuru.ty,
,
a
:
policy
had made in fi:oni of the door and plunges
_
-
from the coarse ,\:oQd. He tells himself
_
that .
.
aluini111s ..
'
Another
·
:
regretable
that
is
as out of
.
date and out of
.
outside amidst the snow.
.
.
-
.
his home
·
is not much further
-
and· picks his·
·
problem that has arisen
.
is that
·
.·.
toucll
as
:
you
·
would appear to be.
He looks up at th~ snow-covered hill~ and
,veary
and achirig lfody
'
up from the
'
ground
many

of our
·
alumni
also
lose
.
Thereisarioldadagethata
·
pplies
.
·
·
·
·
-
touch with what:is g
'
oing on here
·
to you and
.
your actions
_
Mr.
hig
·
h
above
his
._head
a
_
t
the grey and
_
gloomy
and trudge
_
s onward, He falls _t_wo more times.
·
·
·
k
·
·
at Marist. There··
have
been any
,.
·
·
Faille, hopefully you will eep
it
sky. Kentuclfr appears beaut
_
iful
.
despite
.
its
ffhe shack is no_ fon'ger dark when he nears
n~ber of cruu{ges at our School,
:
,
in.mind next
.
time you talk to the
awesome winter. As he· carefully steps
his front
yard: There
is
a
dim light shining
in•
·
hopefullyfortlie best One
_
of the .
.
birds;
_
and
,
_that

is
.
'
.
'look before
·
through the knee-high
snow,
lie takes great
side the window.-His fatJier has j~st placed
-
.
·
changes, or perhapsJshould
_
say
>

you
:
leap.':
J
·
;
_.
·

·
_ --
•·
;
care not to slip and fall.
In
this ,veather he
the last p_iece
_
of fire,voocl onto t~e slllall pot
charges
·
you
:
hav~Jeveled
·:
at the
'::
.
·
Getitr1g~tnexttimeClu:is,
·
..
_
would
.
never make his trek to the general
.· :
belly stove.
..•
_
-
<-'· · .
. _.
·
.
.
. ·_ ..
·
·
·
.
:
_
<
.·.•
..
co110ciL(oFS.tudent
~
~~ers)'
'
is
,
:-:
.
:
.
,;
!aiI>,es~.Kell~h~i'
.
· ·
';"'
'
""
'
=;
,,
;,,¢:.
• .
.
,~., ,;\.~-.:~
,
.
.
~
\
1'e,i~\Ll:J,~
-
d~s
,
11.9t,O:-,Vl:l.
,
gl<lyes~.boot~
{
;:
;,
,
·:
:-:,.~~
~~oJt
:.
Hai;!~ll§,
..
his
;
pace
_
-hf.is:
abpo!it
_
,
_
tlwre
erroneo11s
·
.
_
. arid
:
highly : misiri~
.
.
, .
.
Presidentj College Union Board
./
~ora hat.
'
-
·
.
:
.
·
-'
· . .
·
.
.
·
:'
,
,
·
.
and he gro,vs !mpatierit°fo
'
coni:plete his}otir-
formed.
-
.
The Couiicif
;
of:Studenf
.
..
. .
-..,_.;,,.
,:;.
-~
.;
i, :;
r
_
His feet are already numb
.
ilfter walking
ney.
.
.
-
.
. .
.
.
_
,
_
.
.
~
..
_.
. .
_
.
,,
.
.
.~ ··
.
/
.
>>·
·
-
just a hundred yard& dowri tht
i'
rnountain; He
He enters t~e shack hearing
'
the
lorig
piece
·
·
·
·
·
-
·
-
·
·
.
· ·
..
-
·
,
·
·.
-
·
tells himself thath~ is not co}d
_
so that he will
:
of wc:iod upori his shoulder and_ ~miles at his
High/
ighti
ng
,
co_ncern
_
.
.
be able to complete the journey.
·
parents. He
-
drops the pine_ onto the
_
straw-
-
-'-•
·
He sheds hisjacket aqhe generalstore and
covered floor, and ~th a tearful and soft
hurriedly reaches into his only
.
sewn
pocket.
voice, he say~,
'.'MerrY,ChristmasO'.'

-
He clumsily pulls out the dollar he has saved
.
.
.
.
.
.
...
..
To the editors,
.
,
an adult
·
response- and
~
good
.
Thank you for highlighting
·
our vision on the
part
of all of us.
concern for the success of
.
the
·
I
-
look
:',
forward to
.
the
freshman
,
students. I appreciate
.
suggestions
.
Oiat
.
these
·
~uticles
.
-
-
G.
d
,
B
-
·
-
f
l
o
·-
·
your attempt and that of the
--
will
encourage, so that
.
we II18Y
oo· -
ye
0.
·
y
.
ea
_
r
.
..
·_·
s
·
,_
interviewees to come to.grips
·
allimproveourefforts.
_
'--c
,
.
·
with tlie problems involved in this
·
.
.
Siric~r~Y.
-------,----a.-----,------'---------------,----,----
-
program.
It
certainly
will
require
RichatdA. LaMorte
.
1t
only happens once every ten years; we
.
raging social issues; America ,vas
·
changing.
.
Letters ce>"ntinued oft page 5
say good-by'to a decade.
·
-
It
will be interesting to hear about the ?O's in
In
approximately three .weeks, during an
the 1980s. What will they, those who gro~v up
undefinable unit of time separating one day
in the next decade, say about .Carter, John
in December and another in January, we will
Paul II,
·
or Rocky? We are still a young .
.
part with
·
the
.
1970s
-
and welcome
.
in the
nation by any other countries sta_ndards, still
'..
1980s. All that has been associated for
·
the
growing. There has been a lot of change;
.pa'st ten years
will
be the subject of historical

there will be a lot more.
analysis, social commentary, and an-
Marist hasn't stayed th
_
e same. As a school
thropological discussio
_
n. People all
.
over the · . we have only recently see~ a college president
world will stop, however momentarily,
·
to
-
of 21 years step down and into private life. A
reflect
·
on what life has brought to them over
young energetic one replac~d him, pro~ising
the course of the
·
·
1970s.
·
The• erid of
the studepts vast improvements and
a
:_
n~w
·
something -
_
a
_
college ca~~e
·
r,
.
a
·
serious
'
direction as a new decade approaches. Where
·
relationship, or even a. human life - propels
there was once a dirt parking lot, a cemetery,
meri and women
·
.
to look and reflect with a
ther
_
e now stands a $3
.
million dollar
certain type of humble hindsight that seld~m
_
recreational complex. The meri's basketball
·
occurs in the hectic world of day-to-day
team, playing in some now forgotten con~
.
existence.
It
is the end, o·r
_
the coming of it,
ference, practiced iri a bricF gymn
·
asium
--
that forces us to see ·what has preceded this
hand-built from th·e Marist brothers who·,
moment of departure.
·
·
founded this '-College. The other night t~e
As a nation, we
.
have seen the
:
war in Viet-
men's. team defeated a reputable
·
·
NC-AA
nain come to an end that was too prolonged
.
.
Division II school l:>y
a
comfortable margin.
And the President who ended that wadorced
,
There
·
are comnitinication arts students
into resignation
before h~
.
faced
im-
thr:iving~ business majors growing ~hil~
peachment. There were the three Americans
language and. hum'anities interests seems to
·
_
who made the first transatlantic
_
:
flight
,
_
to
...
·
have declined. The bottom floor of Fontaine
France in a balloon named Dot~ble Eag~e II
'
,~as once the
.
living qt~arters for
an
era of
and Skylab
.
came crashing
.
down to
·
earth.
students ~t Marist;
'
today it
:
is our library.
·
Countries around the world sent elaborate
·
Maybe
.
the
<
contrasts
,C
of
·
change aren'.t
"
as
gifts to America
'
whi~h was
.
celebrating its
magn~
'
nifoo1~s put they' are no
·
Jess significant -
200th
.birthday
as a symbol
·
of democracy.
. ·
!hap!~(_)se,e1:1en~ in
_
A!11e~ica·1}hi~tory. 'r~ey
More recently Irani.ans used t}Jis nation's
flag
·
-
:
md
_
1ca~e
"
change;
-
a desire and
,
self-preser\'.mg
to
_
~rry out trash from'a siegedemhassf
'
·
~
:-
.
.
·
__
,.
,vant
i<>
'
grow.
.
' '
,;;~
-'-
-
.

,•
.
,,
:
PeopJe were
still
talking abo,ut the
1960s;
:
·
.
·
:
:
It's i(fasfgrowing
clicne
_
-
ofchange:
>
Yoii
-:
about Kennedy, King, _:_rnd Arm~trong. That
,
:
. sttirt saying hello hi.saying good~by.
·
·
·
.
.
was s11pposedly ihc decade
.
of
conflict. arid'
. ·.
. -~ .
·
.
.
...
·
.
:.:.. ·
.
.
·
_.,.
_. '
\'
.
>
·: :•
.
-
.
·
.
.
·
.
·'
,
,.·.,~
.
.
'
·,
.
'
~
-
-
:.
.-
.
~

·
.
'
,
r






















































!
!
I
I
i
!
1
·
J
Foy honored at testimonial
BY Christopher Hogan
Co-cdih)f
President Jimmy Carter, New York
.
Governor Hugh Carey, and United States
·
Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan would
not attend but they sent congratulatory
letters last Sunday night as more than 200
people attended a testimonial dinner for
former Marist president Dr. Linus Foy.
Foy, who was president for
21
years before
resigning last spring for advancement of
his
career, was presented with an
honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters
from president Dennis Murray and was
tributed with the announcement of the
Linus R. Foy Chair
in
Computer Science,
inspired through an anonymous gift and
matching grant from the James J. Mc-
Cann Foundation totaling
$100,000.
Foy was also presented with Marist's
first presidential medallion, the an-
nouncement that an oil painting 'Of himself
would be painted and placed in a
prominent
·
position on campus, and a
Board of Trustees scholarship for his two
children, Peter, 6, and Bridget, 4, to Marist
College .
.
"He set forth a dream today, and today
we livethat dream," said Academic Dean
- Louis
Zuccarello. "Today we reflect his
beliefs in us all."
said alumnus and Board of Trustees
Treasurer Richard Cole. "He provided
them with the equipment for sound
citizenship. He challenged students to take
risks. He never condemned students for
failure."
"The leader of a liberal arts college
must be, at heart, an educator," said
Division of Natural Sciences professor
Richard LaPietra speaking for the faculty
and the administration. "As president, you •
were vitally committed to the education of
the students at the college. A good leader
encourages growth, strength, and in-
dependence. Though you no longer serve
this community as president, the signs
that you served the community are
evident. We know that we
will
miss you, as
we even
miS::i
you now, God speed."
Board of Trustees Secretary Gary Smith
citeu that Foy was
_
the man that built
Marist and said that 40
·
out of 110 higher
educational institutions will die within the
next decade.
"The Board of Trustees does not intend
that Marist
.
College
will
be one of those
,
40," Smith said proudly.
"I never met a person I didn't learn
from," said Foy after receiving a standing

ovation from his guests. "And in
21
years
in Poughkeepsie, I've learned an awful lot
from a lot of people. There are so many
.. Captured in a light moment in a meeting in the President's office in 1960, Dr. Foy
·
pauses from
his
work, of developing the college's objectives for the new decade. Dr. Foy
was given a
-
testimonial dinner on
-
Sunday night.
·
·
"You have laid a very strong foun-
d~tion," said Murray about Foy. "And it is
up to me to build upon this foundation," he
added before the invocation by Father
Richard LaMorte.
"Students were
_
always his top priority,"
.
people that are willing to give so much of
themselves. I don't know what the
problems
will be
in the year 2000, but I
want the students of Marist College to be
prepared for these problems. What Marist
has is you people out there. What Marist
needs is more stability."
Le
-
tters continued from page 4
being backed up by the ad-
ministration," which was

what
The
,
Circle said,
.
but he left out
::~
;
__ ..

.
,,·

.'·\>.
-,,~
:
::,/ ·
tnat.Iaddedthattherewasalack
·-~
To the editors
·
:
·
:
·
,;_
c:if
,
conununication.,WhenJspoke
·
·
:_
·
-
This letter
;
is
in
response
to
a
to
Dave Ng after .our
.
residence
-
lette
f
>
appearing
in
your
-
staff
metting
_
I explained that
They are: I. The right t<i sleep, 2.
off~base.
three
·
students dismissed from
The right to study and 3. The
As
for
his
third mistake, Mr.
·-
Marist entirely,
-
five students
.
right to socialize." According to
Fowler said, "No one tQ my dismissed from the residence
the student rights
_
and
,
respon~
knowledge has been kicked off
·
halls, six xnore
.
pending
final
.
sibilities' ":{avaHable -.:in
.
each
campus
.
.
even though there have
.
review by the Dean
·
ot
·
Studeiit's
Marist Handbook), there are 19
.
been numerous· incidents of offic~, and 28 more students
rights listed and no mention of
vandalism thissemester," which
currently (,)n probation.
·
which · right
takes
inore
led him to the conclusiori
·
t.tiat,
If Mr. Fowler, or any other
"priority"
.
than the other.
.
"Indeed, it is my impression that student who feels that their rights
Although the right to sleep and
up
.
to now, administration has
-
to sleep, study and socialize are
study are mentioned in one of
failed to back the
RA's
or for that being infringed upon, rather
than
those rig~ts. the right to socialize
matter the Security Depart-
complain about it he
·
should do
is never even mentioned. And,
if
.
ment."
something about it
.
himself,
or
Mr. Fowler believes that these
I must respond with a letter I
help the RA's and administration
three rights that he has men-
received from Dean Gerard Cox fulfill the responsibility of
tioned are the only rights that the
which I received a few days after "<fonsidering Marist College to be
administration's disciplinary The Circle came out.
It
was an academic institution."
-
November
15
issue of The Circle some of the RA's were concerned
. that'lmust respond to. The letter with this problem, but I un-
is
off-base and shows that Mr.
-
derstood the problem to be a lack
Stephen Fowler has not' done his of communication. I definitely
homework.
.
believe that the administration is
There were three
- '
major
.
backing the RA staff.
mistakes in Mr. Fowler's
·
letter
·
Mr. Fowler's second mistake is
which gives it no validity at
all.
when he said
·
that the ad-
First of all, I was quoted in his ministration's policy in regard to
letter as saying that "there was'a discipline "lists three rights of
question of-whether RA's, were
·
the resident in order ofpriority.
action depends on, he
is
totally • reported that there
.
have been
Dave Shaw
Embarrassmen
·
t
regarding our social situation.
That we are not wasting away our
·
period of confinement alone
,
·
denionstrates our
.
determination
fur Fellow Human Beings,
predicates the examination and and should speak for itself - it is
·
Just recently, an issue
·
of
treatment of criminal causation. no easy
.
task to study for classes
_
paramount
.
concern has been Ideally, one
·
does riot ask has a

and conduct research for
.
:
brought to my attention.
It
seems crime been c,;>Ininitteed,
,
but why assignments in
.
an environment
,
that the Marist-Oreen Haven
has the criine been committed. · no different than a zoo.
i'.,
prograII_l has for
_
some _ time
-
Realisitically however, almost • One of the most . ridiculous
·
-
_:
represented somewhat of an
-
.
.
after
·
lOO yearS of suggesting the arguments I've 'heard for the
embarrassment to those who are substitution
·
of reimbilitation for discontinuance
of
college
·
affiliated
'.
with
,
Marist
·
College
in
punishment/it
is
rather difficult -·programs in prison is that
_
w~ are
.
one capacity
;,
·
cir
-
another
.
-
a
.
.
to Jocate
>-
the concepts
.
of
receiving a free education with
·
,
blemish
-
on an
·

otherwise un-
:
rehabilitation and all too easy to· tax-dollars that could better well
.
touched
··
surface,.:..Frequen~ly,

>
find the
_
punishmimt.
-
:
_
be spent. Please don't fall prey to
_justifications to
..
discontinue, or
.The goal of rehabilitation is not this disillusionment because only
-✓
-
eveli
· ..
·
worse;
·
disl'eg8rd
-
"the
·
_
_
:
to punish
·
_
but to reforµi;
.
not to God
·
knows
i~
not
free
.
-
we are
.
program's exis~ence are
;
the
·
d~tory
.
the essence ofa p~,;sop's
_:
paying with our lives.
.
results
·
of
·
m1sconceptlons,
.
_
bemg,
.
but
.
to develop
_
his pur-
For those
.
of you who are still
.
,
-
erroneous
,
information
-
~nd
,
p
.
osefulness; rioL to
·
physjcally embarrassed and-or feel. in-
conditioned negative
:
attitudes
.
and
.
mentally -
_
degrade the
in~
different
O
about educating . us,
toward people
:
in prison.
' .
· ·
.
·
dividual; butt~ uplift his Worth so there remains ~n ~m~ense
The
,
question of
.
whether to
, __
that he may become a more sadness coupled w1th
_
p1ty m"my
punish or rehabilitatethose who
·
productive D1ember in society. _heart, for you do not know how
have violated Jaws implemented
_
,_Would this not be what you would wropg you are. But for those who
by sorjety
·
have
·•_
·beeri con-
-
~nt
.
if
.
your OWll_ $ldren were
-.
do care and indeed support the
·
templated
-
and argued by ~any mvolve~?
.
. .
_
.
-
·
_ _
.
program,
I
~rg~
you to contact
scholars. Clearly, the inception of
The s1gruf1cance of the Manst- the
comm1ss1oner
.
of
the
·
rehabHit'ative
·
mechanisms Green
: ·
Haven
_
.
:
program
,
Department of Corrections in
.
~
reflect
:
·
a···
progressive s~c~ety
:
represen~ a great d
_
eal to th~

Albany and voice y_our co_ntinuing
_
·
while on
-
the other
,
hand pumsh-
students mvolved
.
It
means an . support.
-
A few wntten lines and
ment
._
connotes
__ .
_
regressiveness. education
.
thaf
'
we
__
pr~viously
. ·
_three mi,n,utes of your time will be

,_ :
,
:
When an ind1vidual such as lacked.which can be utilized as
'
a worth the effort; perhaps one day
__
....
.
..
yourself ·becopies ~
,
sic~
.
~rid
.
,
'.
vehicle~o futur~
_
~mployajent and the concept
·
of priso~
;
wil~ consist
/'
subsequently

seeks
,
·
med1cat ec~nom1c · stability
_
-.
-
.s
_
o~ething
_
_of 24 hours of rehabilitation
-
each
.
_
::'.
attention~ the
:
physician. doesn't
·
that with all pr~bab~ty ..
.
90 p~r ..
;
day
.
rather th!in the 2½
_
hours t~t
-
~·,\
me
,
l'.ely
gi~e
yo1r
a. cu~e so ~he cent of the pn~on popula_ti~n
,
presently: exIS~s. , .
.

. ..
·
·
·
.
·-·
.
illness
·
.
:
wllL subs1de,
,.,,
but a
,,,
t~i:oughoutthe
Um~ed
States
IS
in
_
,
.
Paul.Kirsch
.
.
medicine
·
>
;
which
.
will _
_
,
hopefully need of.
_It
mJans that U~~
.

'
Also known by the
.
:

'
prevent that
same illness'
from
·
: likelihood of returning to prison
:.
·
State Department of
Than~ you
After 55 issues of The Circle, Editor David Ng would like to
thank the following: Chris Hogan, Jim Townsend, Diana Jones, Jon
Urban, frank Kozakewicz, Bob Whitmore, Kevin Kelly, Mimi McAn•
drew, Bob Norman, Gerry Cox, Gerry Kelly, Gerry Breen, Joe
_
Waters, Joe Beleanger, Paul Burke, Mike Fraher,
'
Gail Bloomer, Gigi
Bir'das, Andy Meyn, Bonnie lust, all the switchboard operators,
and all the secretaries who make appointments for Circle reporters
with administrators.
He would also like to thank: Dave Powers, Ken Powers, Kim-
berly Fylstra, Lisa Arcuri, Bob Lynch, John Mayer, Jack Timmons .
Bill Deeken, Larry Stri!lgel, Yves Gelin, Kenny Sullivan, Wayne
·
-
Schimdt, Rich Bachmann, Pete Rickard,
.
David Potter, Beth
Weaver, Beth Rossi, Gerry McNulty, Mike Teitelbaum, Xavier Ryan,
Rich LaMorte, and Mrs. Maria Ng.
Th~nk
you
..
;,
·
,
Circle
.
editor Chris Hogan thanks the following for making this
semester bearable: Jane, Mimi McAridrew, Bonnie Tust, Bob Nor-
man, Sue Lawrence, Dan Benoit, Steve Fowler, Jim Muzikowski,
Jim Townsend, Dianna Jones, Bob Whitmore, Kevin Kelly, Mary
Ryan, Marisa Simone, John Mayer, Dean Cox, Dave Shaw, Janell
Teubner,-Kathleen, Mrs. Mildred Hogan, and all the other people
who had the patience to put with ine.

~
:'.
recurring:
:Afid
s'o,itis:with
'.'
crinie.
·
,::<
·
has
·
been
•:
reduced
;
_
through

;the
.
-
·
1
Corrections as
··
TheQret~cally
/
.
·rehabilitation
.
attainment of val1:1e. P':inciples
PRISONER NUMBER
77-A.;1508 ...
......
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
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·l•
:;:
by Jim Townsend
Sr,llrts editor '
The goal of
many
college and other
athletes
is
to . get a gold medal
in.
the
Olympics. One~ Mal:'ist student, :Mike .
Hirschman, achieved that . goal this
summer while playing
in
the Macaabian
games·
in
Mexico· City,
--
· ·
The Macaabian games are
~rt
of
:the ·
Pan-American games for Jewish athletes ..
-Hirschm.a~_played fpr the Jewish Nati~~al ·.:
team .which wa~ ·.· coa,ch,ed . by ,MarISt
· assistant coach Dan"Bernstein. The
team-
.. included\athletes;,from< all· over,Jhe .
country;· They played all Latin Amen.can
·
·teams ·.'including: Mexic·o,:•:Ecuador:·:and ,
. Venezriela.•In theJirst··gameof_the'.tour-:
·
· nament; -the· United· States .Jeam:·,-~t.
Venezuela 113-37;
an4
beat Mexico fo(the -
.
'•
. . ,;-:-
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. . .
~t~;~~~~~~---·~-_.., .. :~·~~-··--"--~-~~
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DIVISION
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~e push is·tlj¢re, our freshma~
d, a good/ team but we just
it
together/t says Hirschman.
:
eels that this year's fr~lun&n
~-'
. .
''/.;:..
·
.
'•
.;
. .
·
. .
. .
n°also.feels that:the new fast
f
ins¥tute~~yassistant coach
jlielpmg.the'.teanrimmeM,ely.
~
that the institution of the two
aches:a\oijg'with head coach · ..
leis
·helped. the. team and will
l
:;3_·
r:
.
it
'
i:: . . .. . ':·
.
1oriai:~oals,~Hirs.chinan,~ays
it
_c
~e pe~onafgoals 'fodtimself · ·
·
·
~t'he:wowd·;like to,be:-able:to .
Marist
F.a.~ .. ·:
Cheering.

·
· Red.Foxes
·
Henrick: the-singing
rebounder
by
1
Christopher Hogan ·
Co-ediror
At
1 :35
left in the game a Hartwick
player misses a crucial free throw with
Marist leading 88-82. Junior transfer
student Bil "Jackie" Renrick grabs the
rebound off the
rim.
He is hwnming. With
1:03
remaining Renrick nabs an offensive
11)bound and lays the ball in the basket to
give the
Red
Foxes a seven point lead. He
is.·
hwnming. And with :49 seconds
remaining Renrick stands a~ . the free
throw line and stares intensely at the hoop.
He sinks both shots. Renrick is humming.
· Humming music has enabled Red Fox
fotward.Renrick to lead his team with
36
·'·rebounds and average 13.0 points per
game as Marist boosted its record to
2-1
. Monday night against Hartwick College.
"Music has always been something with
me '' . says th·e ·
6'7!' 195
lb., Champlain
J~ior College graduate. "With me,
it
keeps the· adrenalin flowing. It just gets
you.
going.
It
doesn't matter whether its
rock, disco, or jazz it just has to have some
sort of meaning
to
me. lknow I'm going to
. •
.. do something bad if
I'm
not humming or
sitjging a song like Billy·Joel's Stranger.
The other night, when
I
was rebounding, I
,was singing."
. .
Renrick< ·says he· does not consider
himself
to -
be like ·other. typical forwards
who rebound. He says that often his lack of
· · · ·
bulk and his ·rebounding strategy is
dif-.
. ferent from. accepted basketball stan- .
dards. As a forward·at Champlain Junior
College in Burlington, Vt., he was ranked
third
nationally.although he says he never
lifted weights until he came to Marist ·
"I
think
you need it to a point,''• says the
to anyone else. There's no way to practice
rebounding. The best thing to do
is to keep
moving and just try to fake the other guy
out."
Renrick, a native Virgin Islander who
lived in Boston for
13
years, had been of-
fered scholarships upon graduation from
junior college from Boston University and
st.
Michael's College in Vermont. He says
he elected to go to Marist after receiving
letters informing him about the basketball
program and he accept.ed
a
full-paid
athletic scholarship.
-
"I
want.ed to get away from the city," he
says about the Boston area. "I went to
Vermont because it was the country.
Everyone thinks it's like icelands up there•
it
is.
But
I
like that. And
it
was a small
college community with
a .
nice at-
mosphere. I guess that's one of the reasons
why
r
came here. It's small. When lgot out
of high school I-get a few halfway decent
offers from schools like North ·Adams
State, Mass., and Uoivers1ty
of
Massachusetts at Boston. But I wanted to
getaway from the atmosphere I was in."
· Throughout Monday night's game
Renrick was responsible for pressing the ·
Hartwick offense with full court presses
and hustling down court with the Red Fox
fast breaks. Renrick says that·the Marist
basketball strategy
is
not easy to conform
- to.
criminal . justice, major from Boston, : ·._
. .
1111111
_
11111111
. . .
_ _
_
Mass.,
about muscle ..
"You've got to be· ·
. physically strong.
If
you're in the rough
positions and you're tired it hurts. I, get
pui.lleti around a lot but Ido. thfsame,tlling ·
"I'd be tired as anything," he says with
a
laugh. "It's (full court press) a key to our
offense. It's good to use to just slow the
other team down. It slows them down and
we can do what we want to them. I think
I'm different from a lot of people.
I
think
it's obvious in my physical size.
I
don't
concentrate the way other players
say
they concentrate. Some ,guys say they .
don't hear anything else when . they're
playing.
I
can hear the people talking
in
the stands. I think I'm totally aware of
everything going on around me.,,. .
Bil.Remick
•--· Studelltsprovide pep
By
1
Christopher Hogan
.
.
.7
Co-editor '.
Head basketball coach Ron Petro and
assistant coach Danny Bernstein wanted ,
to "rejuvenate,.the crowd
this
year. Part-
time · Champagnat Houseniaster Bob
Lynch responded by organizing a Marist
pep band to play !JlUSic and march songs
for its rookie Division
II
basketball team.
"Petro and Bernstein wanted the crowd
' to
really
be a part
of
the sport this year,".
said Lynch who has played in a rock band.
"l
guess
they ~juvenated the spirit of the
team.
It
seems we're being accept.ed. We
are looking for other members."
;. Lynch said that Petro and Bernstein
· asked·
himself
to 'form a band and he
responded with the aid of sophomore
Lisa
Arcuri who organized a saxophone player,
a ,trumpet player,
a:,~
drummer, flute
·-:player, a bass drummer_. Lynch added that
president Murray ''wants more students to
get involved in the game" and there is a
possibility the band may receive ad-
ditional instruments in the future.
"The students have given a lot of time,"
said Lynch. "They want
to
perform and
· they're showing a really dynamite spirit."
. The band dressed in Marist t-shirts and
basketball caps that were donated by the
basketball team before the. game: Lynch
says there is a possibility that a "Kazoo
Night" will
be held at the next home
opener in which students would march on
the court playing
kazoos.
Lynch says that the band is hoping to get
some new music such as the theme from
"Rocky" and "Star Wars" to broaden its
selection.
"They just made the whole spirit of the
game a lot lighter and more supportive,"
Lynch added.
h
thEfiiext.Macaabian:games .: ·.
Jllf~l~~f\ici'f/!C·,·._ ...... ____________________________________________ .,
:..,-,
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-------------------'------'----
THE'CJRCLE
~~~~~~
-
~
~
~·~
-
-
~~~~~~~~;~~~~;~~~~~~;
Dec/mber 6,1979;;
~
-
-
-
':"
·
.
;-.
-
·~
Teachertrie'stOfree
.
.
flusbarid ...
by Marisa Simone
S1affwri1er
things in motion. We would like to hav~ a
decision by the end
Of
the year, but we re
really not using ~ t kind of tim~ frame.,,
Marist
journalism
instructor
Joel Dinnerstem, a coordinator of
Marguerite Culp may soon reach the end volunteer seivices
in
the prison system
of her five-year struggle to see her said "I am one of
a
group of Green Haven

husband Gary McGivern released from staff people who are acting as private
citizens to recommend to
·
the governor that
Pt~iivern and co-defendant Chuck Gary be released. Gary's rehabilitation
Culhane were tried three times for
the
1968
should be acknowledged. He is mature and
.
~
.
.
killing of a Westchester deputy sheriff. not at all bitter. In fact,
.
many maximum
The two men were serving sentences for' a
security prisons
.
are
fairly
·
free
_
..
of
gas station holdup at the time,~and were disturbances because of inmates like
being
_
taken from Auburn prison to a
Gary
.
He has been a leader. ~nd. a
·
hearing in White Plains via the New York moderating force.
It
would be an mJustice
Thruway. Both said the officer w~s killed to
·
keep him behind bars."
.
·
·.
b R b rt B
rman another prisoner
Culp s
_
ays her husband
_
has bee
_
n very
Y
O
e
owe
'
acti
·
ve as
·
an m
·
mate. He was
.
one of three
who also
died
in
the shootout.
·
·
After he was convicted and sentenced to inmates selected out of the
21,000
prisoner
life
.
imprisonment, McGiverri has insisted system to seive on the Task Force to Set
on his innocence for the past 11 yea~. He Standards and Goals for
.
the Criminal
._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ . was joined
in his
fight
J>y
_
Culp in
1974,
Justice System .
.
He has
.
.
organized
h
·
h · te ·
d him'd · g her days
.
prisoners' communications
aµ<L
poetry
.
Marist College
·
Journalism instructor Margurite Culp getting her husband's
·
Prisoner w ens em iviewe
-
-
·
-
_urm
· ·
_
workshop
·
_
s, be
·
e
_
·
n
_
e
_
lected
_
by
his
_
_
·
ce
_
11
_
-bloc
_
_
k
_
· ·

,
·
'
_
-
'
as a reporter and
.
co-editor for "The
Gary McG1vem s,
_
side of the story.
.
-
WoodstoclcTimes." Culp and McGivern
,
ihteetifoesfoserveon
,
thelnmateLiaison
became friends and were
·
married in
·
Committee,
·
arid· is now
:
working
·
on
·
a
'
·n .. ,.ve
ye
'
ar ..
,-gh
t
September
1978
.
-
.
veterans' self-help project.
_
He has been
• • •
I
1
·
I
i
·
Culp appealed to New-Yqrk Lt. Governor enrolled as A Marist student in the Marist-
,
·
Mario Cuomo oil McGivern's behalf. On Green Haven HEOP, and has applied for
,
Marguerite Culp has been involved in a includes writing letters, visits
.
to Green Novembej
-
12, 19?9
at
,
Cuorno's
·
_
r~quest; acceptance as a ful.Mime
-
:Marist student
five
~
year struggle both public and private Haven, and as much media coverage
~
as McGivern
-
took_ an~ passed a {~ur-ho~r for next year.
_
.
·
_
,;
that reached its culmination earlier this she can handle.
·
.
_
.
_
·
series of lie-detector
.
tests. The results of
"We are ~illing to d~
-
whatever
is
month
.
-
Culp
is
fighting to gain release for
·
_
McGivern•~
_
case has been ~overe~ by these
_
polygraph
·
tests are

the principal
·
necessary
to
get Gary
/
released," Culp
.
her husband,
.
G~ry McGivern, from
_
his Alba-"!y telev1:51on, all local
ra4io
stations, pieces of evidence in
-
-
M:cGivern's appeal,
_
said. "We are fortunate to have a lot of
confinement at Green Haven Correctional the wrre services, and several n~wspapers which will soon go before Governor Hugh people in
the.
·
prison
'.
system behind us.
-I
Facility. "The whole thing is coming to a thro1;1~hout the state. 1:he appeal has
:
.
Carey of New York, says Culp.
_-
_
·
don't Imow: of any other case in
.
which
head now," said the Marist journalism
_
received supp_ort fr~m a list of
_
mor~
t!mn
Frank Piturro, aide to Cuomo, said "The corrections officers have spoken out
_
in
_
.
instructor, in reference to the most recent 300 sponsors, mcl~ding colummst
.
William
·
Lt. Governor sees his role as that of an behalf of an inmate
;
If
Gary ge~ rel~ased
-
.
developments in the
.
case.
·
·
F
.
Buclc~ey, Jr,, smger Pete _
_
Seegei:, poet ombudsman~ The evidence will be it will
,
give
_
hope to a lot of people in
his
.
_
"One
of
the biggest adjustments
I've
had A111:n Ginsberg
~n~
Dr. R1c~r~ Platt, presented
:
to the
_
governor, and the
·
situation
;
"
-
-
-
·
·
to make
is
learning to be interviewed
in-
cha1rman of Manst s commurucation arts
..
executive clemency bureau is now
.
~etting
stead of
·
doing the
·
inteiviewing," said department.
·
·
Culp, who has been employed several
years as a
.
reporter. "It's been
.
a very
demanding experience for me;
-
·
I spend
·
hours on the telephone with local
newspapers and
.
ra,dio stations. The whole
thing takes up so much time
·
and energy
that l find it hard.
to
mark
·
all the
·
jour-
campaign
_
in
her husband's behalf.
_
-
Tµls
.
''in
.
a situation
·
-
_
like
.
this, you either
crumble or rise to the occasion," she said
:
Food comfflittee
~
meets
,
·>·
' \
"The
_
experience has tested
.
'everything
I
'
ve
·
ever learned .
.
It's been painful;
·
at
·
times even hopeless, but I've met a lot of
·
incredibly beautiful ·people
·
and
,
I've
lear_ned a hell of a lot. -
·
·
·
R.A:
APPLICATIONS
,
FOR
1980
-
1981
SCHOOL YEAR
WiUbe
Accepted
until
·
Thursday
.
.
··
af
<
UQU$irlg Off ice
·

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representatives
of
a
15
member
-
food
·
.
~etaken to a.void t4e cong~stion
;
of re&i<lent
~,:
,
Cl>~{~~e
<
~!*Tljµrsd~~
;
to
:..
wscuss
;_
the
i
~~stud~J_!ts
?
t~
t ·-
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{
~
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·
·
Chr1Stifi!3S dfuner anct
~
varieo/ of items
_
Thanksgiv1:fi~
:
>tfiime
_
r
~
!h~i:
L
!9ng
,
l~es
-
·
co~cernmg the cafetena. Greg Flinch~ a fore¢
..
_
waits
:
up to
·
30
.
mJJ1µt~s. Flinch
.
.
Seller's manager; also met with the suggested that students
.
be adniittedto the
.
student
·
committee
_
which is supposed
.
to
_
,
caf ~terj
_
a
_
on a
_
class~status basis,
·
!Deariiilg
provide the dining service with feedback s
_
e~«;>rs would be
_
allO\ved ih first.
.
from students
_
on the ~ood and se~ice.
·
Flinch also said stuffed cornish game
. The c?mnuttee said the Christmas hens would probably be the main
.
entree
dinner will probably be sc9eduled during for the dinner .
.
the week
_
of Dec.
14
and certain steps will
·
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J
ot~•·••Y
::
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HAPPY
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WIN,B
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conta
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Tom•Hammond:
"a
last
hurrah"
Tom Hammond ·
By-Christopher
Hogan
'Co-editor
ministration major with a concentration in
marketing; "You can make your
.dreams
come true. You can
dream
it up in your
Being
rejected has enabled Tom head and put it up on stage. That's the
Hammond
to
''live
his·dreams" and look magic in theater,,, he added with a smile.
.forward to a "last hurrah" at Marist '.'I guesss my
dream
is to own
my
own
. College
S(?O~
when the
Marist
College theater group when I get out
of
here. But
Council on Theatrical
Arts
(MCCTA)
when I first get out, I'll probably work in
presents "A Midsummer'ij Night Dream." retailing,,, he added with a laugh.
Hammond, the play's producer who has
Afterworkinginproductionlike "Winnie
worked in 10 theater productions in four the Pooh" as' house manager, Hammond
years at Marist, says
this
Silakespearean continued
his
theatrical career in "Plaza
production will
be
his last one.
··
·
Suite," "The Miracle Worker," "The
"A Midsummer's Night Dream", Wizard of Oz," "A streetcar Named
directed by part-time communications art
Desire," "Double Bill," "Jungle Book,,,
instructor Donald Anderson, will be -and acted as a bellboy in "I Remember
performed on Dec. 6 and 7 at 8 p.m., Dec. 8 Mama." He also has been business
at 7 p.m., and Dec. 9 at 1 p.m.
manager of the Theater Guild for 'the past
"It's sort
of
like my last hurrah here," two years.
says Hammond who ha·s worked in various
"It's like a family," he said as he looked
phases of production, house managing, ahead with a daze. "We're all in it
· lighting, publicity, and acting. "I first got together. It's just those natural feelings
involved in theater when I was a freshman that gives that special attachment."
and I was trying to get involved in Student
Hammond says that drama "has come a
Government; But I got turned down.and long way" at Marist since he was a fresh-
my RA (Resident Advisor) sent me down man. After MCCTA was formed from the
to
the theater and I got hooked."
Alumni
Theater Group, the Theater Guild,
"You can make things . happen· in,. and Children's Theater "everyone works
___ theater," says the senior Business Ad-
together in all the plays."
"A Midsummer's Night
Dream" will be
performed by Steve Porath, Jay
DeCesare,
Barbara
_Cherello, and Cindy
Davis. Hammond says that there are
many important characters, including
freshman Laurie
Ann
Washburn .
"We had a problem with the play at first
because there's a language barrier,"
Hammond says about
the
first
Shakespearean play to be performed at
Marist since the 1950's when some actors
were communications art professor
Jeptha Lanning and Division
m
Notu.-
0
.1
Sciences Professor Richard LaPietra ,.
"It's not like your everyday talk, but
they've gotten over that hump now."
"Shakespeare has to
be
one of the
dir-
tiest things ever written," he says about
the comedy. "There's a lot
of things and
symbolism. For instance, death in
Shakespeare truly means sex," he added
with a chuckle.
"It's a love story, but actually it's four
love stories inside of one," he says.
"There's a play within a play, a sword
fight, and even a tragedy in one part. But
at the end, everyone lives happily ever
after."
·
.
Psych conf
ere nee held
.By Jim To~nsend
by . both Scileppi and Kathie Grady,
Sports editor
' '
president of the Psychology Club. There
. Beta,. Alpha; Theta, and Delta; no, these
were 22 high schools participating at· the
· aren't Just letters ·
of the. Greek alphabet,
conference which Scileppi called "the best
but
types
of brain~ves that.· affect yet.''
·
relaxation;, This and · · many o\her
Grady says that there was a good tur- .
demonstrations were
~rt .
of . the sixth nout but added that she would have liked to
_annual, Unde'rgraduate. Psychology see more Marist students present even
if
Conference-held at Marist..
..
.. .
.the confer~nce was geared towards high
· The . conference, ·held December . 30, school students. Grady says that the
attracted more than 450 high school, conference is "uriique because it is geared
. students and administrators from as far as . towards high school students," while
·Rockland County, according to Dr. John many other conferences gear their papers
Scile.ppi of the Psych~l,ogy department .
.
.. towards other undergraduates and
·. The ~~nference was deeIIle<f a success · professors.

. ·
. ·
Some of the papers and exhibits included
films
on alcohol and mental illness as well
as active participation workshops. There
were 11 student papers chosen from a total
of 25 to
be
presented, says Grady. The
papers were chosen by a review com-
mittee consisting of five people involved in
psychology. According to Grady, the
papers that were given were also part of
the students' classwork. Equipment used
in psychology laboratories were also
shown to the students to enhance their
overall view of psychology, says Grady.
Grady says that the number of students
· attending was so large that they had to
have the presentations in two rooms this
year instead of having it just
in
the theater
as in previous years.
.
The conference was sponsored by the
psychology club which has 20 active
members, says Grady. Grady added that it
is possible that some of the student papers
presented at this conference could be
presented at an undergraduate conference
at Binghamton this spring.
Scileppi noted that the conference was
not just for the psychology student to
present papers but to allow .the high school
students to look at careers in psychol<;>gy
as well as listening to the papers.
·.· · ·1He
CUB Concert and Social Committees
-
'
present:'
A
.
1950's
Mixer
featuring
Jc,hnny
AVerage :and the Falcons
Admission: ·$1.00
Prizes will
be giVen
for costumes;, danci11g,
alld t~e first 50 people at the door.
.
.
~~
.
-
. FJi~ay, Dec .. 1-· ---9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
-:---·
..
--
'
.
.
..







































































































































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:»ecember6,
J9M~i~,
,~e~r ~to~
.
.
~s~p~o~ns~o~r~--
~~
THE CIRCLE
~w~~
-
~o~
·
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.
~~e~=n~~,~
.
o~~s~e~~
Page 11
~
f
competition at
opener
El
-
baske
·
tba11
·
.
gam
.
es
By Jim Townsend
portforthewomen'steambeasmuchasit

S
portscdi1or
was for the men's team Monday night.
&~
The Marist College women's basketball
Deer says the score of Monday night's
':
__
:
_
~
--
_.
::~
·
-
,
.
·
.
-.~.~.
L
.f
.
.
by·BobSentochnick
ripped down the same day they
·
were put · team -&pened their
1979-80
season with a game was not indicative of the game. She
. ::
Sporisw,i1<,
up.'~ Deer says that Dutchess County
loss
to C.W. };1ost College by a score
of
84- noted that C. W. Post scored
15
points in the
~
w
Only seven people have entered the one-
Community College
is
running the same 54, Monday night.
last five minutes to wrap up the game.
~
:
on
·
one basketball contest
to
be held at contest and they have over 50 contestants.
Head coach Sue Deer attributes the loss Deer feels that the women were hurt by a
f@
halftime of the
.
men's and women's home
The original deadline for registration
to
"first
game/"itters" and thinks that the sporadic offense, a good defense by C.W.
~
basketball games says Kevin Sneeden, co-
was
to
be December 3 but was moved to game will bene it the team because it gave Post, and a total of 39 turnovers for the
I
supervisor of the event along with Paul December 9 because of the lack of par-
the freshmen experience
·
at the college team.
Pless.
.
·
ticipants.
level.
The women were trailing by ten points at
The contest
is
being sponsored by both
The competition
will
commence at
Deer says that the women got beaten halftime but fell apart in the second half.
the intramural department and the Miller halftime of the game December
15
against physically and must begin to play a more High scorer for the Red Foxes was Lynn
Brewing Company says Susan Deer, w~o
Dowling.
<. ·
aggressive game if
-
they are
to
win. Deer' Eaton-Fogg
with 18
points. Barbara
-
-
is running the event.
T-shirts as well as tube socks
will
be noted that the women must play very
.
Torres picked off 12 rebounds for a game
The competition is broken into two . given out to the first
1.5
winners. The top
.
aggressive against a very "physically and high.
.
~yision's. The women· will play at ha~-
four finishers
will
each receive a trophy
mentally tough" West Point team tonight.
After the game against West Point the
t$e of the women's games and the mens
·
and the two winners
will
each receive a
Deer calls the g~me against West Point, Red Foxes travel to Ramapo College and
division~ play athalft~e of the n:ien's
·
$20()
scholarship says Deer.
.
·
"one of the biggest of the season" and then return home Tuesday December
13
·
games. During ea
.
ch halftone thel'e will be
.
Registrationforms can
be
picked up at added that she would like
to
see the sup- against William Patterson.
four games played.
·
.
. '
.
. .
·
·
the-Intramural office, located in room
·
201C
Sn_~den
,
~ttrl.bt1tes. the)ow
·
tume>ut
,
of of the Mccann Center, and can be picked
entnes _due to
;
~~.f11ct th~t
/
'people just
.
lip at any time.
-

didn't see
:
~he
'
ads
.
because
·
they were
·
·
·
,
lril:rafflllral
.round-uP
intramural racquetball championship.
by Jiµi Townsend
·
There are three divisions for the men and
Sp
o
r1,·ectitor
.
there
·
is
.
a double elimination tournament
Mr.
Peter's Revenge;
.
the

defending
in
each division.
·.
-
.
·
champion, won the intraIIlural soccer
In the womens racquetball intramurals
--
h
·o hi
b
·
b
tin
·
'
Phi T
·
·
there
·
are 12 participants. There are two
c ampi ns
P
Y
·
ea g
appa divisions in the double elimination tour-
Kegga
2--1
in a shootout. There were seven
·
teams
·
·
in
the
.
double elimination tour-

~~:i~·
are
'
ten tea
·
·
· ·
ms left in the men;~ 3
nament. In winning the title,
Mr.
Peter's
Revenge played only four games as they
·
o_n 3
.
basketball plaroffs
froni
.
8
starting
beat Taiwan-On in the first round, fi
,
eld of
.
fourteen.
.
·
.
.
..
.
.
...
Warheads
in
the second; Ace Headsfathe
Rosters
.
for
.
. 5 on 5_ basketball a~e bemg
third round,
1
and finally beat Phi Tappa
-
accepted!)OW m the mb:am!lfal 0~1ce. TJ}e
K
.
egga for tl)e championship .
.
·
:
.
.

sea~on will start as soon a~ possible after
·
-
The!'El

are
·
26 men
·
entered
.
in this years gettmg back from the ~tmas break .
..
Men's
.
_Basketball Scheaule
·
Sat.
· ,
Dec. 8
Southhampton·
Wed.
'
oec:
12
Pace
·
Fri.
.
.
-
~
P~~;i~·~
;';
i
:.
};
~PRAlt
;~
;
.i
.
,
. Seit
:
·
Dec
.
1 5
·.
·
·
DOWLING
.
Wed.
Wed.
Wed.
Sat.
·
·
·
·
·
(Poughkeepsie vs. Lehman)
Dec.
'
19
C.W. Post
.
·
·
·-
.
Jan.
2
Montclair St.
Jan.
9
Fairfield Univ
,
Jan. 12
MONMOUTH
·
Mon
:
Jan. 14
Rollins
Wed.
_
Jan. f6
Florida Inst
.
Tech
,
Mon.
Jan
.
21
Fordham
'
Wed.
Jan. 23
Dowling
·
Sat.
Jan. 26
Boston Univ.
-
Mon.
Jan. 28
LOYOLA (MD.)
.
Wed
.
Sat.
Thurs
.
Sat.
Mon.
Wed.
Sat.
Jan.
30
Feb.2
Feb.7
Feb
.
9
Feb
.
11
Feb.
13
.
Feb.
16
-
Mon.
· .
.
Feb. 18
Wed
:
Feb. 20
(John Jay vs. Gorton)
SOU
.
THAMPTON
·
PACE
(Middletown vs. Newbu
·
rgh)
,-
Pratt.
. \
·
SACRED HEART
· -
Siena
Adelphi
C.W.
Post
(Alumni Game)
N.Y. TECH
Monmouth
8:00
.
P.M.
8:00 P.M~ ·
.
.
,
,
,
:;gg ;:~
/
\
:
6:00 P.M
.
8
:
00 P.M .
8:00 P.M:
8
:
00 P.M.
8:00 P.M.
7
:
30P.M
.
7:30 P
.
M.
7:30 P.M.
8:00 P:M.
7
:
30 P.M.
8:00 P.M
.
6
:
00 P.M.
8:00 P
.
M.
8
,
00 P.ly\.
6:00 P;M.
8:00 P.M.
8:00 P.M
.
8:00P
.
M.
8:00 P.M.
8
:
00 P.M.
8
:
00 P.M.
8:00 P.M.
Assenza's
·
Deli
owned
& operated
·
..
·
by
Saf
Assenz~
·
·
T.J.'s TJ/s T.J.'s
PIZZA
class of '72:
__
Than
-
ks for
.
.....
.
.
.
.
Your Piltronag~~
OPEN
TUES
.
•SUNDAY·TILL
M
.
IDNIGHT
DEL
.
IVERY IN 30
MINS.
Collect l.0 T.J; Coupons
.
and get o
FREE PIZZA
_,,.

.
·.
_-.
·.
PHOl)IE:
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\ · •
·

. 471-1·131
.
..
.
.
595Main
s1
>
.
,
,
:
.

·
.
Poughkeepsie
1979
Intramural Soccer champions-
Mr.
Peter's Revenge.
PUTA
FOOT
IN
YOUR
MOUTH
and
.
..

\.
·
1
en1oy_!
Fam
.
ou• Giant
·
Foot-Long
sandwich•■
803
Main
Street
.
Worth the Trip Across Town
.
\J
L
-
Washington
St
·
-
'.
452-'4772
:'."
·
· ·
.
·
.
.._ _________
__. ' - - - -
·
·
.
DPEN
L~TE
.
7
DAYS
_
A
WEl;K--_,.,,
I
....





































































































































December6, 1979~
Men. i111preSsive in Win over Hartwick
Marist
was
playing
without the use of
By
:
Jim
Townsend
starting
.
ceµter Bill DeWinnet who was
Sports ed
i
tor
hurt with about
15
:00 to play m the
ha~
..
Equipped
with a new theme S!Jng,_a pep
Mike Martin filled
in
fotDeWinne
_
and did
·
band;
cheerleaders, and a startmg line-up
"a
great job controlling the
boards
for
us,''
which bad two
freshman,
·
one sophom
_
ore,
says Petro.
.
··
.
, ·
· ···
.
·
one transfer,
.
and a junior, the
Marist
·
The Red Foxes
·
had their biggest lead of
.
College basketball teamppened it's 1979-80
the night after an eight point streak with
home season
·
with a•
win
over
.
Hartwick
two baskets from Hasler, one from ~eer,
College
96-a?.
-
_-
.
.
-
.
.
·
.
-
.
andonefroinMartin.Theleadatthatbme
Hartwick came off a
win
over Utica by a
was
48-31.
· ·
·
·
·
_
·
·
·
score
of
83-65.
Lasryeaf they were
22-5
arid
·
Hartwick
-
came back
to
score
eight
went to
>
the
. ·
.
Eastern
:
Regional NCAA
straight points but ~!-1st held on to tilke a
Division II playoffs last year befor~ losing
54-41
l~d
_
_
~t halftime.
:
·
-
.
·
to Cheyney
·
State.
This
year's ~rtw.tck
_
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
team
had four of.it's five starters from 1~
•·
:
Jerry Fulmer led
all
_
scorers
_
a~ halftune
-
year's team as well as four of their:five.top with
-
22
i
points
_
·
while
·
-
Todd
-
_Hasl~r
_
·
led
·
scorers .
.
. ·

.
.
:
:
.
...
--
.
·
·
-
Maristwith 21- points at
·
halftune.
-
·
·
.
Marist
·
.
came
_
off a
_
third place finish in
·
:
Marist continued

to
·
leadthe game by a
.
the
_
'
c'
Poc
·
Jacobs Classic'.'inyermol!t
-
last fairly wide inargbJ_
-
:w,ith the
:
clo
_
sestHart-
·
.
we~end
;
·
They lost
;
to St
;
·
Michaels
m the wick
·
cani1f in
.
the
::
second
·
~If
:
was
·
88-83
.
·
·
·
first round
·
of
.
thi
i°"
townament 61~1
-
·
bµt
-
with
t:391eft
ih
thej~ame.
,
F'ourpoints by
_
·
rebounded to beatl'~delphia Textile 71.;
._
:
Bill
.•
Rerirlck
'
stopped
.
~t:f
~rtW1,ck. ieam
fr/;
-
.
.
.
.
:
-
:
-
-

.
·,
,.
·
-
.
.
.
- .
arid Marist"led 9U,3 with
~
49 left m
_
·
the
•·
Tood
:
Hasler
;
and
·
Itufus C.oopei:-
:
led
;
the
,
-
game~
·
The_gameerid~
ahdl\1:arj!Jt
walk
_
ed
way
..:.
.fo
_
r
.
Manst
in
;
Qte
,
g~_me agamst
..

away with~a
96-8Twm
;
-. ·
;
.
-
·
·
.
.
·
-
-
.
Hartwick.Haslerhad33
·
pointsan~Cooper
_
-

:
:

: --
·::
.
.
..
.
.
.
,
.

ll,
·
\
: _
_-
-
'.
,
;
:
/
:
-

_
/;'
<
·
:
/:
::
.
,
-,
:
:
-
?
-,:~-:
."·
.
·:
.
coach'Petrt
f
thoµg~t
.
cine
:
ofJh~ bjggest
.
• .
·
·
11,
i
\
l
:
Manst 9p_ened the gan:>:e wi~h a press~g
_
:
.
advantage:f of the
:
game was that ~he
,
?
:
/
J
·
d~ellS~ which
.
c_o~
_
ch Ron
·
P,etr<>
§~JS
will
·
_
:
Marist guards overwllelmed the ~artwick
.
·
...... {
:
;;:t
,;t,:
be
';
_
used
:-_-
throughout.:
,.
the
-_·
sea~on.
,_
;
After
·
guards
.
coopetand
·
Hasle,r combmed
_
for
•~·
-
;. -
~g,
,
a
;
lead
.
;
after the
,
o_penmg
·
tip-off,
.
53
:
points
·
while
LatTY
Carp~nter and Jeff
·
.
__
Manst fell be~d
.
b11tJhe game went b~ck
-
Higgins accounted for 8 pomts
.
fm; Hart-
andJortti untiltheyJook
.
_
a lead 2H9
:
on
~
\
wick •
.
::

_.;;
.
-
·
'::c

" ..
'.
.
-
·
..
.
.
:
drive
.
:,:
~y
:
stevA
-.
~ith
'.
_:;
Marist
_

·
.
ne:vei:-
,
. <'
Petro
· .
called the
:
win "the biggest in the
re}mquisl;i~ ~hel~d aner
.
that.
•.
:
<
<
_'.
,,
:
history of the school.''

-
.
.
·
·:
With
-
.
_
_
Todd
,
Hasle
_
r.:,
-
._
hitting
.

Jro1n
,
-
He
·
a:iso added
:
that
'\
this
win establishes
'
ey~rywhere
·
!)11:.,
,.
f:be.
/
c~ur,t
f
·
and
=-
.
Rufus
·
.
.
in
·
-
Division
'
ll,
'
especially after we beat
.
qooper
i
sliooting from.}hE!
.
.
toP
.
~
of t~e
·
f9ul
Pliiladelphi~
:
'l'extile; ''
:
. ,
. .
.
.

···
Rufus Coo~r
shoo~
jum~~r agalilst
_
Hart\vlck
:;
-
.
· .·:
-
·
:
cll'cle, th~ Red Fox~ mc
_
r~se~theU"Jead
·
·
,
·
-
i
Petro
;
cited
.
tne play
of
.
Mike Martin
,
·
·
·
·
>".
~
-i
·
· ·
·
qo ~29 with~
:
10 left mt~
_
e flI'St half,
Reririck, and Smith as ~ell a~ ~ooper and
·
"-
-
-
, _
:
<
.
'
·
,
,...
.
Hasler
.
as
contributing heavily
.
to the
--
~
-
-
-
1
·
·
~>
~
team's
win;
:
Renrick,
-=
smith, and Martin
-
-
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:
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with
o_ther
,
!3um~er..on~playE!rs
_
a,nd•aga~
t.
.
~enter
c'
Do~

.McAllister w1th}Jllle
.
pom~. -
.
_
:
'
:
·-what first year head coach Swiari Peer
.
4i
:
;

.
,
StiµJiere Jlowey~r:
·
{ire ~ve,n yetE!r~;
_:
}ive
,
.
.
or. six o~per. g~
:
playe~ .
.
'l'.herefo!e,
_
-
. ,
¥ter
.

Coopec
·
!3nd

Hasler,
,
~e
.
-1~<1.ing
.
·
;
_
. ·
•·
:
:";
hoping
•:
will keep
,•
the M,
_
arist Women's
_
mcJudin~ the startmg
;,
frontcow.t
:
-
fr(!m
:
a
:
she
,
sar~, the~ mt~1ty of ~011ce~trati~>n
:.
scorer§
.
_for. M,arist
-
_
were ~ennck
;
with _16
·
. Basketball team "competitive'
-
'
-
in
,.
the
.
YE;Srago.~ophom(?
_
r.e~~r~raTor;res
J
~
·
must
be
thl;lt m~ch better.
_
.
-
,.
·
;
"

~d
-
Stn1th
_
with_14. D~Wµme, Mike Hir~
. -•·
-
197~
·
_
season
,.
despite the
.
·
loss
.
of
:;t
ast
.
··.
will once, again.
be
a~
.
~nt_er,
:
while Ju.:riiors
->
·
An~ther situat1o_n that Deer. ~ys
~
gomg
..
'..
$Chman, an
_
d ¥artin .each
_
had ~~ur points.
year's top two scorers and
.
.
an
.
upgraded

Mauree_n.Mor,ro:w
.
_
(~11)
.
~l!_d P~~Y._l?owe
,
r_s
.
t? m~e
;
her j!)~ even mor_e difficult
is
that

.-
P~~o
_
also cited
.
that he was
.
extremely
·
schedule.
. _
.
_
·
-
-···· --
(5-o)
~ill~

.
aUlie for\V8rds.

-
--:;.
:.
·
·
"
.
-
·
·
s_mce it IS
·
he~ first season
_
she hasn't been

pl~sed'
'.:
with
,
Jhe
.
turnout
-
of
.
Marist
·
·
"It's like working with all freshmen;" . Semor: Lynn Eaton-F
,
ogg
(5:-8)
~n~
turuor
--:-
able to
. _
see
··
h~r opponents play
.
and s~udents and their enthusiasm at the game
says Deer, the
third
,
coach in
as
many
_
-
Helen Salmon.
(5:4)
are ~xpected to~ the theref?re_ doesn t ~ow what to expect .
.
an~ added
that
he hopes it
will
continue
y~rs. "Ir has to be
·
tough_for th~ up-
:
va~ted
~~~g
guai'.d. jo~ .. Deer-IS a~o
-
Deer mdicated __ sp~c1aLcon~em for
_
C.W.
_-
"
thr~ughout the season. ·
perclassmert
-
who have ~d to
-
adjust
-
to a
~
hop~g they ~ill _take ~ver the leadership Post,
_
West Pomt,
-
Fo~~•
_
Syracuse,
_
: _

,
.
new coach, and also to the fact that there
ii(
positi~n~, -'Y~ch 1~ _s9methirig ~~
-
feels th~ Iona, . Long
-
Island Univers1~y and
St.
--
Th~ next ame is
Saturda
Dec~ber 8
no longer a superstar on the team ....
·
.
team
.
_
J.S nussmg
_
nght
_
no_w .
.
:
. :
.
.
_
FranCIS, all of whom ~
_
e
_
co_nSiders highly
-
.
.
_
g
_
Thy, R d
.
F
·
-
Dee
th t sh · t
·
t
t th
·
Other returnees
;
,
are juruors
·
Eileen talented teams.
·
.-
-
-
aga~ SoutJiba~pton.
e e_
oxes
r ~ys
8
e
~
·
rymg
O
ge
·
e Carey
(5-8)
and
.
Pam Green (5-9), who will
"It's a tough schedule, but I'm looking
-
follow~~ with hvo ~ome games
_
ma row.
r:yerst~tog~ pllys~ca\sh:r-
-
~nd keep
.
-
beused
·
atthe guard and fcirwardpositions
-
forward to a good year," says Deer. "By
·
On Friday December 14 they fa_ce Pratt
·
em_ ll ertk r;:ui ~u
;
.
sea~o~r respectively
;
·
-
.
·
---
· ·.
.
.
.
thatlmeangoipg.500forthesea~on."
--
.:
andthefollowiI!.RnightfaceDowling.Both
·
~=g~rogr~.
-f
~
-
~
=
0
.~
8
.
~~
!
;
!
-:
.
-
Also
_
p~vid~g be~ch.
·
str~ngth will
:
~e
:-
·
Helping~eeroutthissea~onis
·
ass~nt' .gamesstart_!lt8:QO .
.
T
tablish·
·
"tal
dis·
lin _
hi
h freshqien~UeenKrzemmsk1(5-11),
-
Leslie
.
coachBonrueMay,whobes1deshelpmgat
_
-
-
·
_
~
-
P~~ts
_
~
0 ~
m~ -t
.
h c;ip tli ~•
i:
c
·
Goyan (~)
,-
Robin Gillson "(5-7) and junior practice, is
·
expected to recruit, scout, an_d
· ·
As
a
_
new
_
~wist
to the ~o'!'erage ~f the
·
er ~ys wa~
_
a
.
n
_
"'. en
__
e P yers
_
·
-
trarisfer
.
Monica
.
Cruse
-
(5-l0Lin the for-
--
help
-
analize during the games.
-
·
baslu~tball season, we are mtroducmg a
s~rted pr_a1ticmg,
~h~
has m~de
g:e
~
ward
slots while freshmen
'
Lolita Silva
,
(~
-
.
·
In an
·
ertort to improve communication "player
. _
of the game" award. The students
.
,
more
_
compex,
8
!1
s
-_
ma e l' earn
_.
0)
_
and'B~th Newhard (5-7):backup at- within
.
·
tlie team
-
Deer has
·
named two
_
willbeabletopickthewinner.Theperson
remem~~~ 0!f~~ive
~~d
-~4:!~~iv~
-
play
·
center and ~ard
'
iespectively.
·
_
_

captain~whomsh~ish9pingwillbeableto with the most p_layer of-t~e
·
ga~e awards
PB.t}Thms
_._
h
d
t
ia
1 st
·
·
·
,,
·
· - -
"We have
·
a lot of_depth,"-"according to relate well both to her
.
and the rest ~f the atthe. end of
th~
season will receive a case
·
·
.
_
~Y
~
se P ys
_
8
.
year, says Deer, '
-
'but the problem is lack of playing
:
players.
·
.
-
_
_ ·_
. _
-
·
-
of Hemeken beer. Votes can be forwarded
.
geeria b~t
~
:e, gam':8
~e~
wo~d e~1JP
.---..,
expe~erice. One o( my·goals
this
season
is
-
.
-
-
Lynn .
-
EatQil-Fog(
'!ilr
!eP,~e~ent
-,
~e
_.
to B
.
o~
~
and must~ in before~~ next
seie-
1
a;°~f,~
:
·
::-
~
·
_
re
~~~~
-
0
-
~
-

.-
-
~
. .
-
~
_
~
;
seE:
~
tha
_
t
·
,
thes~
;
p_laye!.5 g~
_
t ~t- game
:
upperclassmen,
-
while
.
_
Uohta
:
Silva
.
lVill
,
~ome ~~~e
.-
Ortly
·
home
_
ga~es
_
will count
.
-
G~n{from
-
last season
.
are
_
the-potent:l'xperi:~rce.'
~
-,
:
,
:
:··.
-
_, _ _. ..
<
,~
-
-
•_-.
·
-
.
,
..
_
representth~fr~hmen.
_
~-
_ -.
,
.
m
_
~e _play
_
erof
-
theg~me contest.
-backcourt combination of Kris McDonald,
·
:-
))eer
;
f~~t._~n
_,
\
0
,
_
ad,d
:
t~t
__
a _
_
lot of ~
-
e
-
--
·
_
_
·
--
.
.
.
.
_
_
·
_
-:- _
_
.
-
.
·

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.
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--
-
~-
.
--
'
.


23.10.1
23.10.2
23.10.3
23.10.4
23.10.5
23.10.6
23.10.7
23.10.8
23.10.9
23.10.10
23.10.11