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The Circle, February 24, 1983.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 28 No. 14 - February 24, 1983

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,
.
•:,.
·
· . ,
.
RA
-
·
fired,.
·
·
fie$.fl.Inall
·
suSpena,ectiftet
-·braWl
.
. ,
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-
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.
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·
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~
i
.f.·
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:
..
:
-.
'
.
.
.
.
....
by
Lou Ann
Seelig
.
.
Marist for two weeks; .
.
afterwards the other

·
·
four
community
part
·
of our
got in until the moment we left."
·
A fist
.
fight involving
:
five
...
The fight involved freshmen freshmen, the other two R.A.'s
responsibility is to protect
·
the
The freshman R.A:'s decided at
freshmen and
.
three Resident'--
'.
Tim O'Halloran;
.
Chris Hughes,
and
·
Raimo went outside
·
"to
rights ofthose students."
·
.
.
a meeting last Thursday tha
·
t they
Assistants last Tuesday night
.
Bob Fazio, Jeff
·
Friedman
.
and break
·.
it
.
up or
.
1 don't
·
know
·
·
·
LaMorte met with the nine men
·
will demand Clare's reinstatement
·
•·
outside Skinner's has resulted in Rich Frey; freshman
,
R.A.'s what," he said.
·
.
..
· ..
·
involved
.
in the fight on the day
as the 4th-floor
·
Leo R.A., ac-
the firing of one
R.A.
and two- • Clare, Pat Larabee
: .
and· Tom
Frey said that
-
most of those
after it. At this meeting he an-
cording to one source who asked
.
week suspension of one fresh-
Shannon;
ana
'
freshman involved were trying to break up
nounced his decision to fire Clare.
not to
·
be identified.
·
If
this
man.
·

Residence Director James Raimo
.
the fight.
.
·
.
_
.
·
.
Shannon said he was shocked
demand is
·
not
_
met, said the
In a decision made by Rev.
_
Four
·
of the fresf-!inen are under
.
During the

fight
two of
when LaMorte announced his · source, the R.A.'s will not strike,
Richard LaMorte, assistant dean 19, and they walked
·
into the bar
..
Larrabee's teeth were broken and
decision.
·
&<We were given the
but they have not decided what
.
of student affairs, Willy
·
Clare, while the bouncer
.
'Na~ talking to Shannon ripped Fazio's shirt.
·•·
.
wrong end ofit," he said. "Willy
action they will take.
·
s~nior,has been terminated as an someone else, said Frey.
:
According to Frey, everyone
was punished very severely where
One R.A. said that the R
.
A's
·
R.A. in the freshmen area. Clare
Marist student John Germain
involved iri the fight has to pay a
the oiher
·
side was not punished
·
feel their authority is being un-
said that
.
the official letter he witnessed the fight, wh
J
ch he said,
portion of the

bill to repair
~ev~rely at all. We got no support
dermined and that they receive no
received Morida)'·said
.
that if the started between Clare
·
and Hughes
.
Larrabee's teeth, and Sl\annon
from
~
Fr. LaMorte. I respect the
support from anyone higher than
·
director of housing can find him
over something he observed to be
.
must pay $75
for Fazio's
.
man, but we did not gain support
the R
.
D.'s.
·
·
.
an
.
R
.
A. position in Champagriat
.
"like a friendly slap an,Ohe kid
damaged shirt.
.
..
.
_
from
-
him ..
'.
It
·
seems totally
LaMorte said
·
regarding his
he has the option to take that
·
·
(the
.
freshman) .
_
topk
.
it
.
for
LaMorte said he
-
was
-
asked to
urifair.'1
·
decision, "It is certainly not an
position, but that it will be at a something different.'
.
'
-
.
-
review the situation and to make a
.
·
·
According to Gerard Cox,
·
dean · easy
.
thing." He said, "Marist
lower pay rate. Clare said that he
-
Frey said,
"It
wasn't freshman
decision about it. "I have made
o'fstudent'affairs, Clare can make
.
comes from a Judea-Christian
will
appeal
·
the
decision.
verses R.A.; it
.
was
·
a
person
the fairest decision I could make,
his 11ppeal either to a judical
.
tradition and has gone through
..
Freshman R.A.'s, meanwhile, ~ay
against a person.''
.
.-/
. ·
·
given my understanding of the
board chosen by the C.S.L. or to
much to maintain that position,
they will protest the firing.
Germain said that words were
~ituation," he said.
Cpx himself.
.
While many institutions would
Also included in LaMorte's · exchanged, the bounc'eqold Clare
·
He said that Marist "has
.
Shannon said, referring to the
rather not do that, I am very
decision
·
is that Bob Fazio,
to leave
,
and the freshman
·
always had the positio11 that off-
R.
_
A.'s involved
.
in the fight, "We
proud to be a part of an in
-
freshman, will be suspended from followed him outside
.
·
Shortly
campus
.
situations
'.
_ effect the
were provoked from the time we
stitution that does."
·
.
.
THE
,
CJIRCLE
Volume
28,
Number 14
Mar/st· College, l'oughkeepsle, N. Y.
·
February 24; 1983'
~t[spici0us
.
firesstrike
-
at2· local
.
.

·

.•·
.
.
.
.
.
-
-
.
.
:·-..
,
·
.,


p1zz~r1as
b~Mark
'
Stuart
Fairview Fire department again
·. ''There
.
was
-.
a
.
container of gas
Waters,
.
Director of Marist
Italian Pizzeria, could not ~e
·
·.
.
.
·
..
.
.
.
responded to a pizzeria fire. This
.
or somet~jng t
_
!}rown through
·
the
'
Security
;
:. , .
.
-
·
reached for comment.
·
·
.
.
. ·
,:
I-ire last weekend struclc at two
µme
;
hqw~ver, ~he
·
·
m-c was
,
:at
.,:
fro!)t
:.
,
wiP:dow
/
' ~ap~t<>·
O
~id .
.
·
Pfastro

and
·
Gagliano
-
then
/
Jhe dalllage of ~aputo's fire
:./;
·,
: :,:
.
.•
.
.
.
area
:
pizzeria~
:
causing
:.
extensive
:
.
;
Joe's}tali~frl_>izzcria
.
at389Yiolet
_~
.
·
_')1;,t!ce~ ~<?l<>~~v
.
cc,,cktad
_.:

.-
.
'
, · .
.
:_j
radioecl
.~
__t
he
..
Mari~t
·:
dispatche,(
'
'
:
cau~ed
;:
a
tot~
;
loss
·
o
_
f
,
the
_
food
:
Pizzeria_
.
to
_
find
.
.
a small
'
fire
-:
.
Extens1ve
.
0
.
fire
;

da01age
_,
was
.
fu
_
rth~~
.
i11vestig~t1<>n
.
. _
·"t
·
;
·
:
· _
• .
.
Caput~
'
pointed

out
:
one other
..
· scrub_bed do~n
·
and nothmg
.
can
.
.
alr~dyinprogress . .
·
:-:
•··
.
..
caused to
·
the firs~
-
and
-
.
secon~
__ ;
·
:The
:
_
fire
· •
at Caputo'
.
~
>-
":as similarity.
:.
.
·
·
-

..
.
· -.
·
be saved."
·
,
Fire
-
damage was bm1ted to the
,
noors of the two and a halfstory discovered by-
,
_
Manst.
,
.S~unty
.
·,
.
~-

·
.
.
·
·..
.
·
·
·.
·
.
.
·
.
-

·
front
·
aoor,
:
wimiow and
;;
floor,
::,
building.
.
.
.
.
.
:
'.
,:
'
persortnelSupervisor..Paiil
:
Pi,stro
"
C'The place _tha~
·
caught
·
fire
.
·
-
The
/
restaurant- is
.
covered by
.-
but srrioke
·
and
·
watcrdama'ge
.
was
-:.
Nick
.
Caputo,

owner
..
·
or
.
and Tom Gagliano, who
,
w-e
_
~e on
.
O'lf~nda)'
-
;
mornmg) was our old
insurance, but will
.
lose eight to
·
heavy, according
:
to
'
fire depart~
~:
Caputo's saiditappearedthata
·
·
.
patrol on
.
the northern
__
endof
'
ph1ce,
__
bef<>r
,
e we
_
moved here,''.
·
rn
.
days
·
of business.
·
Caputo
'
merit officials
;~
>
.
,
•·
.
·
·
·
·
flammabie liquid was used
fa
the carilpi.ts
··
"visu~lly
_
checking
..
Caputo sai~
.
..
. .
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
expects to
be
open early to the
.
At
d:16
Monday morning,
fire.
·
.
·
·
··
..
neighbors,''
,-
accordi11g
·
to Joe
.
Dean Lucanm, owner of Joe's
middle of next week
.
:
A
.
··
·
·
.
·• ....
...
·
JJ
.··

.
·•

f,

i1
.
:1:n
..

.

.
i
.
l
.
'Yls
.

.

.
f a
.
:··
·
.
.
.
fg
.
n
..
·
·
···.
t
.
···
·.
.
.
;.i:~~::f~:~F.{:t

· ·
·
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
·
gained a pound,'' added
.
Mrs.
<
:
.:
£
.
o
.
.
.. ·
'
· .
l1
.
·tt
l
_
e
..
g
.
·
irl '
.
S
~
Ii
.
if
i!'
-;
{t~~~~-
"]'hey 'A'~re happy abou~
,
J
.
~
,
.
.
.
.
.
·
·
Jennah hasto
·
take medication
by
.
Jolin
Bakke
.
.
.
divers~
.
-ons in the o
_
ffice,·
.
Jennah several times
.
a
-
day,. Quinn said
;
.
.
'' Just like any
·
3-year~old,
.
.
there

.
·.
.
.
.
left quie~ly .
.
She soon located a

are
times
when she's less
'.
than
.
&'Jeilnah,'' she
·
said,
.
when bass drum iri the
.
outer office
,
willing to copP,Crate, but for the
asked what her name was, "J-e~n-
.
area, and the
·
·
"boom,
·
boom,
most part she
.,
s pretty good about
·
n-a-h/' Then she smiled
·
a three-
·
boom"
·
of the drum began to
it
all,''
he said . ."She knows that
year-old's Htile smile and turned provide
a
contrasting l:>ackground
.
'
she has cystic fibrosis;
.
we've told
_.
her attention elsewhere.
:
. ·
.
.
.
to the conversation.
-

;.
.
her that. The waywe've explained
Her father, Assistant Athletic
.
The subject at hand was one
it is that everybody has a problem
-
Director Dick Quinn, said that his sometimes
.
easily
.

discussed .;;.__
..
_ her daddy h
_
as hay fever _ and
·
little daughter is very
·
special to "boom, boom"- but behind the
hers is cystic fibrosis."
.
.
·
him.
·
·
talk about CF was a blonds haired
· _
"We haven~t told her that
.
she
_
.
·
Statistics say that Jennah may

little girl who has to live with the
probably won't live past her 20s,
very \Yell not live long enough to disease day after day, and in a : though,'' said Mrs: Quinn,
·
finish college.
.
_
.
·
way n'? o~e else in th~ office did.
.
"because she might not fully
>
J ennah Quinn has
,
.
cystic She 1sn t
·
as articulate or
h
.
d that· b "des who's
·
fib
·
·
·
h · d ·d•
,
·
h
k
·
l d bl
b
·
t
-
compre en
, es1
,
.
i ros1s, an m ente
.
is~e t. at .. now e ga
.
e
_
a out
~~
ye
-
..
to
say
what wm happen?"
·
..
.
·
affects the 1!1ngs ~nd _d1gest1ve
b~om~ boom, boo~
-
but
·
· Quinn said that his daughter's
.
system. Rel~tively httle
_
is known
.
s~e s th~re, and
.
she
.
1s why !he
_
illness can
be
hard
.
to Jive with
·
Assistant athletic director Dick Quinn~ his wife Kathy and
abou! the ~1sease, but one kn?wn
.
disease: is so hard on people hke
.
sometimes
.
"The toughest part of
their daughter Jennah.
(photo by John Bakke)
fact
IJ
pamfully clear to Qumn, the Qumn~.
· ·
·
it sychologically is the ups and
his wife Kathy, _and all other <;F
·
·
The Qu11?ns first learned about do~ns,'' he said. "One day she'll
-
parents: CF is
-
currently m-
Jennah's disease wh~~ ~he was 1
be doing very well and I'll think
they have by being aggressive and
curable. .
-
_
.
_ .
and had to
.
be h<?sp1tahzed after
..
'Gee, Jennah's really been do
.
i
.
ng
going after it instead of waiting
h
d d
h
h
h d
all thought
for it to come to them.
·
'
.
'T e disease 1s passe
, own w at t
.
ey a ongm
~
. .
·
.
· well lately.' Then the
-
.
very next
·
The Quinns have become in-
from the par~nts, ~nd there _s n~ to be~ bad cold, they s~id._ Qumn
day might be a bad one :- she'll
valved with the Dutchess county
w~y to ~etect if you re a earner,
had. Just accep~ed his. Job at
be coughing heavily, everything.
.
chapter
.
of the Cystic Fibrosis
said Qumn, who added that there Manst and was m the process of That's when it's tough -
when it Foundation, they said
.
Quinn is
is_ no _hi~tory o_f
_
CF in either his or moving to the ~ou~~keep,~
i
e area just turns around on you. It's
in
·
the process
·
of organizing
h1s wifes fam1hes:
.
when Jennah s.
col~
was
worse then unfair."
.
various fund-raisers, while Mrs.
Jennah, who will be 4 m May, diagnosed as cystic fibrosis.
.
,
. .
.
moved about Quinn's office as
.
Since then they have changed
The1
_
r daught~r s afflicti~n
,
9uinn i! currently fo~~ing a
her parents talked. She appeared doctors several times, said Mrs. cause
_
d the Qu!nns to begm
f!~ren!s su_ppon group.
to understand the conversation,

Quinn, and currently take Jennah learning everythm~ they c~uld
W_e d hke to be able to
but chose to occupy herself with to the Westchester Medical Center about
Cf,
ac~ordmg_
!o
Qumn.
·
estabhs~.a networ~ of ~.upport for
things far more fascinating to a at Valhalla about every six weeks,
Mrs. Qmnn said t~at it s not easy
parents,
she said.
Whe~ we
bright little 3-y~r-old girl.
where she undergoes X-rays- and
_
to ~nd informauon, and that
found (!Ut ,that Jennah had 1t -;e
·
.
After
_
cxhausung the supply of
.
evaluations of her
.
progress
.
~
.
.
they ve gotten
.
what knowledge
.
really _d1dn t
_
know
.
where to tun,
.
and
f
think a parents' group
would help other parents who
might be looking for answers to
their questions the way we were."
-
Quinn finds fund raising to be a
constructive
·
way · of doing
-
·
something to combat CF ,he said.
"The way it is now, there isn't
much you can do to fight CF
directly, but raising money for
research and trying to increase
public awareness of the disease
helps you to feel that you're
involved in doing something."
Continued on page 2
'.,
,.

.
























































































,,
--..PPage 2 · THE CIRCLE• February 24, 1983
I
.
CF.victims
now
.
· have more .. hope
by
John Bakke
Cystic fibrosis is the number
one genetic killer of children in
the United States, according to
the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
The disease causes the body to
produce an abnormally large
amount of mucus, which ac-
cumulates and interferes with
breathing and digestion.
CF
children, the foundation says, can
actually
suffocate
in· · the
congestion of their own lungs in
severe cases.
There is no cure and there is no
way of testing to. determine if
someone is carrying the disease
and can pass it to his children,
even though he may not actually
have CF himself, according to the.
CF Foundation .. They estimate
that one in
20
Americans carries
the defective CF gene.
"Even if they can't find a cure,
we're hoping they might come up
with something to control it, the
way insulin controls diabetes,"
said Dick Quinn, who first knew
he was · a carrier when doctors
determined that his daughter has.
the disease. There is· currently no
way of controlling CF.
"Twenty-five years .ago, when
the
CF
Foundation
was
· established, few children with CF
lived beyond three years of age,"
says a foundation fund-raising
brochure: "Today, nearly half of
those children born with
CF can
½
~
'
~~
Big
.
Brothers
Big Sisters
Write - Call - Meet an incoming
member of the
·
Freshman Class of '83
, as they apply to· Marist. Help them by
letting. them know somebody.
'expect to live into their twenties."
Fill out the the adJ"acent
form ■
The CF Foundation, by its own
estimates,
raises
millions
of
!
0
1::~~~v~~yl:rn~~~~si;:J~~~~
.
Return in person or by campus
mail
According to the foundation,
75
·.by·
.4.th
M.·
a, rc.h to.:
percent of this money. goes to
. research, medical care, education
F. ·th. . ·r· R' h·ard
·
A LaMorte·
and training programs .· and
a e ·
.. ·
IC
. _.
.
communitY .. service, while,.· the
R. ·
2·aa,..c· o
·
.
BIGiBROTHER/BIG SISTEJI Application.: :
A Big Brother /Big Siste~ will be expe,cted to· participate i~ the follow-
ing activities:
.
.
· : .. · · ..
- planning or organizing efforts of the group during the
fan.
semester
,
·
, . :
··.• . .
.
- writing letters to approximately ten - fifteen Freshmen in ·
late June, early July ·
• .. ·
. · · ·.
· ·
- greeting freshmen as they arrive and assist them in moving .
in beginning at approximately 10 a.m., Saturday, September
3rd
.
- helping to arrange activitie·s during the first two weeks ,or
_
longer which will help Freshmen ~eet people and_become
in-
tegrated into the Marist community
- continuing the refationshp with the Freshmen on an informal ·
basis for at least the Fall semester
- cooperating with the ass.igned Student Life Team ·
Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _
- " - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Expected Year of Graduation, _ _ _
-'--Current GPA.__ _ _
_
P.O.
Box _ _ _ _
.;.__
. Residence· or Address, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
Horne Address, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Phone. _ _ _ _
_
(Street) ·
(City}
(State)
(Zip).
Summer Address, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Phone. _ _ _ _
_
(if different)
(Street)
(City)
(State)
Activities: _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
Names of other current students whom you think might help in this
effort:
,
·
other.
25
.per~ent finances fund-
.
.
. ·· . . : ..
.
•- • · · ··
0,0,ffi
·
. · · .· .... ·• ..
'\·_,.J. •·


raising and administrative costs.
._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
...,..
' The Dutchess County ch·apter
of the CF Foundation is located
on New · Hackensack Road in
Wappingers .. Falls. According to
Katherine Quinn,
an .active
member of the chapter, volun-
teers are always needed
·
·and
welcome to help.
Quinn
Continued from page 1
The ·· 1o~al
CF. Foundation
chapter
·
has b~e.n involved in
various
:
"marathon-type"
fundraisers and has arranged for
lectures at localschools, said Mrs.
Quinn. . "You have to keep
thinking of ideas, and you .have to
not be afraid to ask (for help) .
. That's one thing we've learned -
you've got to.go out and ask.-"··,
, .Quinn said that= there are two
major : local CF-~ f!Jnd-raising
events coming~ up. One· will . be
March 13 at the Mccann .center,
when 'the New York Jets are
scheduled· ·. to play .·, a ·' benefit
basketball game against . a . local
. radio station's team.
The second is "U.S.A. -Team
Tour
1983," in which. eight
people~ are planning to . bicycle
across the United~tates and back.
again tc:>'benefitCF: The.planned·
route is
10,000
miles long, passes
through
26
states as well as the
District of Columbia, and · is
scheduled
to
start
in
Poughkeepsie April·
IO, according
to Tim · Messerich, coordinator
and originator of the tour.
Still, the reality of CF
lies
within children · like Jennah
Quirin, whose lives are still being
shortened by the disease.
· ~•Boom,
boom,
boom."
Jennah was busy again with the
drum. "To me she's special,"
said Quinn, "and not just because
of
CF. I'd
like to think she'd be
just as special even
if
she didn't
have cystic fibrosis.f'
· ·
-
.···_,_,.._
~
-.
,·:
--,
·
··_-:~-,
: ·TWO_·GOOD ,DEALS
.
·
.
.
THAT;'<CAN'T BE BEAT!
.
.

'
..
,
.
'
.
·-
.
at
.
:
McDonalds
-
\.
·i.ot·
:.Hy,cJe ::
Park
SUndayS
Specials!
·99°
~ll :·:
:
th·e:
-
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Otcakes'
·vc,u·.ca
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n
·Eat! ...
PLUS
BUY ONE BIG MAC®
GET ONE FREE!
OFFER GOOD ONLY _AT:
McDonald's Restaurant
.. ~TE. 9~ HYDE PA~K, N.Y .. ·
Foolish
.
·
·

.
Fox·
·
Pub
Nighf
feafurin·g
Jeff Meisner

_
.J ..
February 26th.




























>I
•.

i
--...---------------------------------•February 24, 1983 ·
THE CIRCLE•
Page
3--•
Fire alarm system at Marist passes its exam
by Christine Dempsey
- alarms; pullboxes and warning
· borns on each floor of every
The fire alarm systems in dormitory.
Champagnat Hall, Benoit House,
In addition to a smoke detector
Gregory
House
and
the · and four pullboxes in both Benoit
townhouses ·all
passed
as House and Gregory House which
"operational" during
tests
con-
are largely made of wood, both
ducted Monday and last week by
buildings have a heat detector and
Nichol
Oxygen
Company, a sprinkler in_ each of the
18 .
although an additional smoke rooms plus in public places,
alarm was installed to "enhance according to Waters. .
the current system," according to
Marist College also goes over
Director of Marist Security the state requirements of having
Joseph Waters.
a(
least four firedrills a year in
"Without a question, we have each dorm; one of which should
good fire safety system in our
.
.
dorms at Marist," said Waters.
be at night, by holding five or six
Waters suggested that there was drills a year, Waters said.
not enough smoke to immediately
Under the current alarm
-set off the alarm in the Jan. 30 system, which was installed in
fire in Benoit House, after which,
1980,
there is an ABC telephone
Benoit residents said, the alarm
·
line that runs directly from each
failed to sound until seven or dormitory to the security office in
eight minutes after the fire was Donnelly Hall, which sends a
extinguished.
signal to the anunciator box in the
"Controlled smoke situations" security office as soon as a fire
are also being planned to check alarm circuit in one of. the ·dorms
dorm alarms during the Easter in activated, according to Waters.
vacation.
There are currently smoke
Simultaneously, a signal is sent
via a dedicated line to the Out-
chess
County
Fire
Alarm
Headquarters, which notifies the
Fairview Fire Department.
Meanwhile, the Marist secuity
dispatcher radios the security
guards on duty, so that they may
open the campus gates to allow
the fire trucks to enter, and
immediately report to the
building in which the alarm
sounded, Waters said.
At this point, according to
Waters,
the Fairview Fire
Department is most likely already
on its way to campus, which is
only about two miles away from
the firehouse. Yet one advantage
of the direct line from each dorm
to the security office is that the
security office is notified as soon
as an alarm sounds in one of
the
dorms. Previously, the security
office did not find out about the
alarm sounding until after the fire
department did, and often had to
depend on a phone call from the
scene where the alarm was going
off before being aware of a fire,
Waters said.
In fact, because the current
system allows the security office
to be aware of an alarm sounding,
the security dispatcher is able to
inform County Alarm if it is not a
working fire before the fire trucks
arrive on campus. This way the
fire trucks may be contacted by
County Alarm and told they may
r.:duce their speed, Waters said.
Waters added, however, that once
the trucks leave the firehouse,
there is no turning back.
"It
is the standard operational
policy that once the fire trucks
leave the barn they do not return
until they have reached the scene
and have determined themselves
that it is not a working fire,"
Waters said.
In reference to the observation
that evacuting residents are often
refused immediate re-admittance
into the building in which a false
alarm has sounded. Waters said,
"The fire chief is rightfully not
going to let anyone back in the
building unless he is certain that
there's not a fire therein."
Under the old fire alarm
system, if a fire alarm box was
pulled down, bells would ring for
only 45 seconds and then shut off.
Waters pointed out the danger of
this system with the example of
someone being in the shower and
not even being aware that the
building was on fire.
Although the old system was
fully acceptable at its time,
Waters said he is glad that the
dorms now have loud horns.
which not only continue sounding
until a security worker shuts them
off, but are "more vandal-proof
than the bells."
Waters also added, however
that the vandalism of fire safety
equipment is at a minimum, and
that the dorm residents have been
cooperating during fire
drill
evacuations.
"The student body should be
complimented that they realize
that fire safety is
a
serious matter,
and that they cooperate with
security when they evacuate the
building for fire drill," he added.
The Pinkwaters: Writing for children, teaching adults
by
Lisa Arthur
He's been a sculptor. He's
trained dogs. He says he's never·
had an· ounce of -formal training
in writing fiction.
His name is Daniel Pinkwater,
author of over
30
children's
books, and he
is
currently
teaching a workshop in fiction at
Marist.
His career as a writer began as
the result of a "pure accident."
While exhibiting some of his work
at a museum, he was approached
by someone who told him he
should be illustrating children's
~10oks. He was teaching young
children at the time and said he
admired the honest way in which
they viewed the world. He decided
to give the world of children's
fiction a try. The first book he
Pinkwater sees his role as a had published was "The Terrible
. teacher"_ of fiction as that of _a Roar," which he says he wrote so
"soun_ding board." This is his he'd have something to illustrate ..
first
-
attempt at teaching his craft. .
.. Plnkw~ter's books have
·
been ,~.
''.This is an experiment on·my · called off-beat
to·
downright
part.
"I
don't know how anyone weird. "The Hoboken Chicken
can expect
to
learn anything Emergency," for example, is
about writingin a classroom. The -about a 200-pound-plus fowl who
most that can be done here is that wreaks
havoc,
running
wild
we can encourage each other," he through the streets of Hoboken,
said.
N . J .
"The
Worms
of
Pinkwater, who says that he is
generally impressed -with the
students in his class and their
competency, tells a story of how
his wife, Jill Pinkwater, was told
by a college professor that she
had no future as a writer. The
remark
discouraged
her
for
almost
20
years.
"I," he said, "will never do
Kilkamanjaro"
tell the ad-
ventures of a young · boy who
begins his summer working at his
grandfather's world famous
salami snap fastener factory, and
ends it on a fantastic expedition
searching for an intelligent worm
species in Africa. :
·
.
His latest novel, ''Young Adult
Novel," is a satire of all the
children's problems books~ The·
that to anyone. My wife believed novel tells the story of a teenager
that guy and didn't write again who has problems. Big problems.
Daniel Pinkwater
fo~ almost
~O
y~rs. Now she'.s By the third chapter it is revealed
written a children s novel that ts - that this tragic youth has a drug
the book to his heart
as a devilish
wonderful."
_ · ·problem, an alcohol problem, a
grin spread across his face," the
Pinkwate!'., who said he was mother in a mental hospital, a
13
New York Times called me ob-
also ·-. considered "a · complete year o.ld sister who is a prostitute;
scene."_
washout" in college, has a and that she has become
Pinkwater . has received a
background in the visual arts. He pregnaµt..
. number of ''silly awards," as he
has an art degree from a college
"Young
Adult
Novel,". calls them, over the 14 or so years
he refuses to identify.
Pinkwater _said, was reviewed by , he's been in the business; He
"I
never tell where
I
went," he the New York Times _as being _ refuses to name any of them,
. said.
"I
didn't like the school so
I
profane and obscene.·' · '.·
though.
see no reason to advertise forit."
"I
love it," he said, clutching
"I'm not in this for any awards
or the sake of any system," he
said, "I'm in this for one reason
- to please myself."
Pinkwater said that although
.the chances of being published are
about the same as winning a prize
in the New York State Lottery, he
would not ·discourage anyone
from trying.
"The main thing is your've
really got to enjoy doing
it --,
(photo
by
Gina Franciscovich)
have a _lot of fun doing
it,"
he
said.
Pinkwater's plans
for
the
future include writing
a
novel for
adults and a syndicated comic
strip and should be out in a year.
·And, he says,
if
he ever does stop
having fun as a writer he'll give it
up in a
minute· and . find
something else to do. Maybe even
training dogs again.
·
ComputersJ\$,professors in Marist's future?~
by
Dan Hartman
shown the most interest are the
be seen by the instructor, so the
area.
departments as well
as
the
teacher can keep track of what
Cecil Denney, director of the
It may not be long before learning center.
each student has beeQ doing.
computer center at Marist, says
Marist students go to
a
computer
What the computer does is ask
What is put into the computer
that he has no real goal as to when
l
I
f
h
b.
· d t
· d b
he would like to have CAI
for their c ass essons.
the student questions about the
or eac su ~ect ts e ermme
Y
. The college is currently looking subject being studied and the
the teacher of that subject. The
develop at Marist, but he did say
into the possibility of a c<?mput~r student responds by what he
teacher gives his lesson or lecture
some courses may be using it
assisted instruction proJect, m believes is the right answer. If the
plan to a programmer at the
within a year. One possibility is a
which students interact with. the student
is
correct,
he
is
computer
center
and
the
new nursing program using CAI.
computer as part of drills and congratulated. If he isn't right,
programmer puts
that
in-
Denney explained that it is easier
lessons for certain classes. Chris the computer tells him so,
formation into the computer for
to implement assisted instruction
Hawkinson, student monitor at perhaps gives a hint, _
and the
later use by the students.
into new programs than by
the computer center, has been student is allowed another try.
putting it
into
already developed
communicating with facu!IY
After each drill session, the.
The teacher can use Computed
programs. because · in older
.
members .. to - give them .
in- .
student is told how
well
he
per-_
Assisted Instruction for·.· daily -
programs,
the teacher already has
· ·· ". formation· regarding
the project. · formed. __
The ·
computer abo.
assignments
for
the students or
as a
_dcvelos_,ed metl!.od of teaching.·
.:,· . . ·' He
says
the
c1epanmcJits that have . maintab» a r~ord oft~ st~ts --• remedial help
if
a
student
is , ·
H.
aw·_
i.. ~,-_ .. _--·,
·saicl. _
be
~-ito
·.idea_
: __ modern-
1a·n1ua,e
~lid ,
l?~iff.sJI.
·ovcralLpcrformancc,
which.
may : havin1
diffiaalty in
one
partk:ular
,
• ,_
..
of when
CAI
will
be put into use
at Marist and that it depends on
how many teachers he can get
involved in the project. He said
that if there is enough interest,
"we have a usable product now."
Marist has been getting much
of its information on CAI from
Education Computer Systems of
Maricopa Community College in
Pheonix, Ariz. Maricopa is also
giving
Marist financial assistance
for the project.
Hawkinson
said
he has been working with
Maricopa to .
get · the latest in-
formation on computer
assisted
instruction.
,.-·
)
•1
• I
j
)
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I
••
'
.
--•Page 4 • THE
CIRCLE•
February 24, 1983----------------------------------•
Readers
Write
All letters must be typed triple space with a 60 space margin, and submitted to the
.
Circle office no later than 1 p,m. Monday. Short letters are preferred. "{ie reserve the
right to edit all letters. Letters must
be
signed, but names may be withheld uron
request. Letters will
be
publJshed depending upon avalla,bl
_
llty of space.
_
.
_
New
_
J~rsey
··
To the Editor:
s
1-j
H
I
r
-r
H
I
lJ
1<
t
t4£
R
~
AN ~.A. Comi
IJG
I
For
·
most people who do· not
live in New Jersey, the state is a
place people have to drive
through or fly over to get
somewhere else. To many out of
staters,
·New
Jersey is just a
corridor between New York City
and Philadelphia. Most of us at
Marist can't begin to understand
why New Jersey is referred to as
the Garden State. It
·
is nor-
toriously noted for being a haven
for chemical and factory plants.
-
thirds of the state is

still open
'
wi'tti:
lush
.
farmlands,
forests,
mountains, and the Pinelands,
which
·
offers a taste of the
southern swamps. New Jersey's
farmlands, although small and
compact are among the most
productive per acre in the United
States.
Jersey's · agriculture
specializes in poultry, dairy and
vegetgables. And for those who
enjoy the shore,
-
Jersey offers
some
·
of the finest beaches
anywhere and in many areas will
not allow the beaches to become a
·
sea of people.
Students
,
first
However, New Jersey is a state
of surprises. It is only one thirty-
fourths the size of Texas and only
Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii,
and Rhode Island are smaller.
However, New Jersey is one of
the major producers of goods and
services. New Jersey is the leader ·
in pharmaceuticals, second in
chemicals, and in the top ten in
electrical machinery, electronic
equipment,
,
rubber, plastic,
clotheti, and fine china. In ad-
dition to this, a large number of
corporations have moved out to
Jersey because of its attractive.
sites, along with cheaper land and
lower taxes. New Jersey has
emerged as
a
strong competitor in
the Northeast,
·
outdoing New
York,
Massachusetts, Penn-
sylvania, and Ohio in her
.
capital
personal income arid in
·
per-
For those who like en-
tertainment,
.
the recent addition
of casinos· in Atlantic City and the
new Meadlowlands complex are
within easy driving and parking
·
distance.
·
The Meadowlands
offers football,
basketball,
soccer, hockey, horseracing, and
concerts. The Meadowlands
sports
:
complex is considered by
many to be the finest anywhere.
Also, New Jersey has one of the
best amusement parts anywhere,
being Great Adventure.
Last Tuesday evening, an off-campus incident
occurred which has affected the whole campus.
Fights at bars are, unfortunately, not common,
but when they occur between members of the
student body and the residence
.
staff, the
ramifications are serious.
The point of this editorial
_
is not to determine
who started the fight, or who is to blame. As a
result of the incident, the students involved
·
received disciplinary action - all but one, that is,
who was fired from his job as an R.A. in the
freshman area.
·
We understand that R.A's
·
are supposed to be
role models and representatives of Marist.
However, does that mean that they are never."off
duty"? Also, all members of the residence staff
are repeatedly told
.
that they are students first,
·
and R.A.s second. Obviously, this does not apply
in all cases.
··
.
Willy Clare should have been dealt
·
with on
·
a
disciplinary level as would be
.
the case for any
other student. It is a cop-out to say that, because
of the fight, Clare would no longer be able to
perform his job. Clare is being denied the chance
to even try.
The worst part of the whole incident is the
division it has caused among the students.
Rumors
.
have been spread about an R.A.
"strike,"
and there are students who believe they
have won some sort of "victory" over the R.A.s.
R.A.s
are
students, and to sec
·
studei:its
.
pitted
against other students is a sad sight at Marist.:
·
· The residence staff is sµpposc:dJ9
.
_
be a
,
supp~!'t
system for
the
students,·
not
-
some
·
kind
:of~,un-:-
defined enemy.
.
··
.
·.
. .
.
-,,.
LaMorte's decision should be overturned and
Willy
Clare should be reinstated as a
-
freshman
R.A.
if the bad feelings surrounding the incidenct
arc
.
to be dispelled. But there are greater issues
here as well. Perhaps it is
·.
time that the whole
-
decision-making process in the Student Affairs
Office is reviewed.
.
'
centage of population growth.
One of the unique aspects of
New Jersey is that once can be out
of the
·industrial
sector and into
the suburbs or the rural country-
side within minutes. Over two-
New Jersey, with its diversity is
almost like America in minature.
Within two hours, a Jerseyan can
be
at
the mountains, sports
complex,
shore,
pinelands,
farmlands, casinos, and the city.
For those of you who don't know
New Jersey except for driving
through or flying over, get off the
·
highway sometime and you will
be surprised of its diversity.
BobDavies
·
.·:>:,.:.·
:.,_:
;
·,
::D~°iEdit6;:
~-
,_., ,'
.
.
>
J
., :; ·.:
::.:
J:
Ke~ita~teye'
7
o~Fr6i"tfurther
This is to
-
inform everyone that details or ask your local Crew
Monday, March 7, atThe Chance Team member!!!
the Marist College Crew Team
will be holding its annual Crew
We look
·
forward to seeing
Night Auction. Various items EVERYONE there. People under
from local merchants will be
.
.
19 will be admitted, but not
auctioned. Entertainment will be allowed to drink.
provided by WMCR DJs and a
student band composedof Adam,
Pre-mids slump
Billy ... (The whole gang)
_An.honor
Sincerely,
MARIST
COLLEGE
CREWTEAM
The time is just
.
about
-
right;
.
it's two weeks
before mid-terms and students' participation is at
the normal low. Maybe it's the heavy studying
they're all doing-:- professors seem to put a little
pressure on just before exams. Or maybe it's the
weather -
that time of year when it's not quite
winter and it's not quite spring makes many
people feel like during nothing .at all. It happens
every year.
Once mid-terms are over, the weather starts to
get nicer, the
.
work seems
_
to get easier and people
are looking for things to do. It's time
to
par-
ticipate in activities!
There's only one problem with the whole
situation - there aren't many activities!
There's only one problem with the whole
situation -'- there aren't many activities because
·
during the winter when they were being planned,
there wasn't much interest, so many clubs
couldn't hold spring activities.
·
There are more excuses for not getting involved
than reasons for it. Some people are very honest
and just say they aren't interested. That's fine
except that many of these people are the same
ones who complain of being bored. Who are they
Co-Editors
The-
Associate Editors
Circle
Sports Editor
Advertising Manager
Business Manager
trying to kid?

-
.
Mayfests and Dance-a-thons just don't hap-
pen; they require a
·
great deal of planning and
depend on a certain amount
·
of dedication. Even
when participation only involves dropping a slip
of paper in the mail to express
·
an opinion that
could improve tbe school, almost no one
responds.
The Circle ran a coupon in the last two issues,
'~The Best.and Worst of Marisl," and received a
whopping eight returns. Why is it that so many
people complain about professors and courses,
but no one will even clip a coupon
·
to do
soi:nething about it? They have a reason -
they
were "busy."
.
Well, these people wifl have plenty of time on
their hands this spring.
If
the poor attendance at
club meetings and activity planning meetings
continues, there won't be much to do after
Easter.
Perhaps it would be best for The Circle to wait
until spring to run the coupon again. By then
·
.
there won't be much in the way of activities to
distract
people
from
the
issues. There should be a
great response.
To the Editor,
I would like
·
to thank Adrianne
"Ready or Not" Donnelly and
Ann
"What's
a Car Wash" Ryan
-
for
.
nominating me for the
Follower,
the Devoted Fool
Award;
·
It
is an honor to receive a
nomination by these two out-
standing and
.
respected jour-
nalists. I am sure that Mr:
Perrotte and Miss Poe are just as
pleased
in
receiving
their
nominations for Fearless Leader
and Over-Achiever · Awards
respectively.
Just think, we can put these
coveted awards on our resumes;
and really impress
.
prospective
employers. I can add this award
to my long list of honors such as
the Joe Marist Award, the
Irishman of the Month, and of
course the Most Likely to Be a
Prep Award.
Being a member of the SAC, I
was able to obtain a copy of the
Rick O'Donnell
Reporters
Lisa Arthur, Marla Azzollna,
Advertising Staff
Patti Walsh
Cindy Bennedum, Karen Boll,
Tim Dearle, Alison Demarest,
Karen Lindsay
Chris Dempsey, Lori Oyer,
Classified
Lou Ann Seelig
Donna Fldaleo,.Mlke Graney,
Donna Cody Seelbach
Lynn Gregorski, Eileen Hayes,
Cartoonist
Gene Llannls
Kristine Lawas, Jim Leonard,
Fall 1983 Course Advisor. In
reading it, I found two courses
that would make
·
me,-
your
average follower in a crowd into a
fearless leader like Ted Perrotte
within a semester .
.
The first course which is listed
under SOCIALLIFE
·
101, is
entitled How to Be the Life of the
Party.
·
The course descd.ption
.
goes on to say thatthis course is
for the person who attends social
.
functions and tends to put an end
to
·.
the festivities. This course
teaches students things like what
to wear according to the theme of
the party, (IE. On Valentines Day
girls should wear BRIGHT pink
and guys should wear red), what
to say to that wallflower, and
shows the students how to break
the ice with a question
·
·
like
"What's your Major?''.
The second course, which is
listed under COMEDY 304 is
entitled, "The Sixth Sense, The
Continued on page 9
Tara Scanlon
Lisa Crandall
Dianne Gallagher
Kevin Shulz
Ted Waters
Karyn Magdalen, Paul Murnane
Photography Staff
.
Gina FranCISCO'(ICh, Jeff Kiely,
Karen Nlzolek, Susan Pyle,
Kyle Miller, Jeanne LeGloahec
BIil Travers
Frank Raggo, Laura Reichert,
Roger Romano,
Jane Scarchllll,
.
Jim
Barnes
Mark Stuart, Gwen Swinton,
Boppln Bob Weinman, Mark Zangari
Faculty Advisor
David Mccraw
Adrienne Ryan
Joe Dldzlulla






































































February
24, 1983 ·
THE CIRCLE· Page
5
-llenu-
·
The
Foolish Fox:
The
culiµary corner
by
Rick
O'Donnell
I can't imagine what the fruit of
the season would be in the middle
l wanted this week's column to of February). On Wednesday
everyone
was
treated
to
a
have a special appeal to the girls
breakfast
·.
buffet. One
-
student
small pork chop). On Sunday you
also had the option of choosing
the Lentil, lima and rice casserole
(sounds like leftovers to me!)
One feature that every lunch
Breakfast
Choice of Juice
Fare of Fresh Fruit
E&&s to your Order
featuring Scrambled
Egg-Dip Warne w/Syrup
Breakfast Potatoes
Cold Cereal Bar
Fresh Pastry
Selection or Juice
Fruit of the Season
Eggs to your Order
Fried Egg Sandwich
Hot Griddle Cakes
Grilled Home Fries
Gold Cereal Bar
Fresh Baked Pastry
at Marist. l decided that I could
-
who attended this
"buffet"
either write about guys, clothes or described it for
.
me. "They took
food. Food won out.
·
the same old
·
stuff
·
and moved it
This week I am a critic of fine
out into the middle of the
American cuisine in the Mid-
cafeteria." On Thursday they
Hudson Valley. I wanted to
offered "chilled fruit juice" and a
reveiw a good restaurant; so I
~•fresh fruit bar" (sounds like a
and dinner offers is the "Heritage
~
salad bar." I'm not sure what it
'i
has to do with heritage, perhaps
a;
they are referring to Marist's
·
!
"Judeo-Christian heritage." The -""
salad bar can be a great source of
enjoyment for the dieting student.
Breakfast Buffet
made a list of the best restaurants
gay bar
to
me!).
·
in the area. I chose The Mill
House, The Beekman Arms Inn,
The lunch menu seemed to vary
Squires East and The Culinary juSt as much.
-
On Monday,
Institute: After looking the list Wednesday, Friday and Saturday
over
carefully, while taking my they offered a
.
"choice of
college budget into account, I dessert." However, in case you
made my
··
choice
.
_ The Marist.
·
get sick of that, on Thursday they
Coll~ge Dining Hall.
offer "your choice of dessert"
(I
guess on the other days it's
The· prices
were
very
.
someone else's choice.) Some of
reasonable; $3.50 for
·
dinner,
.•
the highlights were the Sauteed
$2.SO
·
for lunch and $2.00 for Ham Brouchette and the Soup du
breakfast. I figured with prices jour (if it sounds French it can't
~
like these either the management taste too bad).
is very charitable or the food
.
is
lousy. The management is far
from charitable.
Dinner provided something a
.
little
different
for
the
discriminating
palate.
On
Monday they served Chicken
After sampling some of the fine
dishes that the Marist College
Dining
.
Hall had to offer I
seriously questioned why so many
of their customers continued to
come back for more. I found out
that if you're on the food plan
you must pay for the full 20 meals
a week, if you're a resient on
campus you must be on the food
plan, if you're a freshman you
must be a resident on campus. So
I guess this is some lcind of
initiation, if you can make it
through Ethics, Rhetoric and the
·
Cafeteria for a year, you've
earned the right to be called an
upper-classman.
I took
a
look-at the menu to see
what
·
the
.
-
unsuspecting diner
_
would get for these low prices.
·
The breakfast menu varies a great
deal. On Monday they offer a
"choice of juice'
.
' and "fare
.
of
fresh fruit". (as opposed to the
"carnival of fresh fruit"). ·on
-
Tuesday they offer "selection of
Croquettes with White sauce (I
I still wonder why they're so
don'.t care what color it is, I just
strict about checking the dining
want to know what's in it). On
service numbers on students'
Wednesday they offered the
1.0.'s, do they think we're
"spaghetti special" (I didn't have
suicidal? We only eat it because
the heart to ask what made
it
so
we have no choice. On the other
special). On Sunday they served a
han.d, maybe someone really likes
"fried pork Choplette" {sounds
,chicken
Croquettes
.
and White
:c
duice•
.
:.andt'.frµit
of.the season" (
.


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e~t_remely
'
Sauce!
--
-
·,
·
·
·
.
.
..
,
·
·
·
·
·
:-
·•
:
Friday: On Campus
Saturday: On Campus
Meeting: HEOP
.
Open House
CC270, 2 p.m.
Alumni
Office
Meeting
·
:
Theatre, 1 p.m.
Commuter Union
·
Mass: Chapel
D249,1p.m.
6:15p.m.
.
Workshop:
Concert: Marist
Leadership Skills
College Singers
CC249. 2:15 p.m.
Theatre, 8 p.m.
·
WMCR Dinner
·
Men's Basketball
vs
.
Fairleigh
Pub,Sp.m.
Dickinson, 8 p.m.
Film:
"Norma Rae"
Commuter Union
Theatre, 7:30 p.m.
Sliver Anniversary
Semi-Formal
CUB Mixer
Dining Room, 9 p.m.
Dining Room
/
9p.m.
Pub Night with
Jeff Misner, 9 p.m.
Swimming
Metropolitan
Championships
Swimming and Diving
TBA
Championships, TBA
Deadline for
Freshman
incompletes and
Ski Trip TBA
grad changes for
1983 Winter
·
The Bardavon
Intersession
The New Vic
The Bardavon
Theatre of London
Jean Pierre Rampal
presents Chaucer's
and Ransom Wilson,
"Canterbury Tales"
flutists, perform
8 p.m. at the
·
the Vivaldi Flute
1869 Opera House
Concertos with
Tickets $12, $10
Sunday: On
.
Campus
Mass: Chapel
lla.m.
Champagnat
House II
Dinner, Pub, S p.m.
Film:
"Norma
Rae"
Theatre
7&9:30p.m;
Rehearsal:
"The Drunkard"
New Dining Room,
8:30p.m.
Rehearsal:
"Snow White"
Fireside, 9 p.m.
St. Patrick's
Day CejJj
_
and
Gaelic Mass TBA
The Bardavon
"Children of a
Lesser God" winner
of the Tony Award
for Best Play and
The Outer Critics
Circle and Drama
Desks A wards
3&7:30p.m.
Tickers for die
3 p.m. performance
are $14, $12 & $10
Forthe7:30
Monday: On Campus
Rehearsal:
"The
Drunkard"
New Dining Room
9:30p.m.
The Chance
The last episode
M*A*S*H
Free admission
.
Highlights
,
Chilled Frui. tuice
Fresh Fruit Bar
Breakfast Omeleue
Poached Eggs
French Toast
Fried Breakfast Potato
Cold Cereal Bar
Fresh Breakf.ut Pastry
Choice of Juice
Fruits in Season
Eggs to your Order
Piping Hot Warnes
w/Buucr and Syrup
Breakfast Potatoes
Cold Cereal Bar
Freshly
Made Muffins
Selection or Juice
Variety of Fruit
Eggs
10
your
Order
Blueberry Pancakes w/
Hot Butter and Syrup
Home Fries
Cold Cereal Bar
Our Own Pastry
Tuesday: On Campus
Ken Weber
Workshop
Fireside,
3:30 p.m.
Hypnotist
Ken Weber
8:30p.m.
Lunch
Heritage Salad Bar
Kettles or Hot Soup
Sausage
&
Pepper Hero
Chef Salad Bowl
Baked
Macaroni
&
Cheese
Deli Bar w/Sliccd Ham
Hot Vegetable
Choice or Dnsert
Heritage Salad Bar
Steaming Hot Soups
Hamburger on a Roll
Chicken Pot Pie
Cheese Quiche
Deli Bar w/Sliced
Roast Beef
Hot Vegetable
Heritage Salad Bar
Grilled Cheese
Fishwich on a Bun
Beer Stew w/Cornbread
Deli Bar w/Chickcn
Salad
Choice or Dessert
Heritage Salad Bar
Two Hot Soups
Cheese
& Mushroom Pizza
Pepper
&
Onion Omeleue
Sautccd Ham Brouchcttc
Deli
Bar featuring ...
Sliced Turkey Breast
Your Choice or Dessert
Heritage Salad Bar
Chefs Keulc Soups
Breaded Fishsticks
Sloppy Joe on a Bun
Chilled Fruit Salad Plate
Deli Bar w/Tuna Salad
Hot Vegetable
Choice of Dessert
Heritage Salad Bar
Soupdujour
Late Risers Breakfast
with all the Fixin•s
Deli Bar Sandwiches
Cold Cereal Bar
Hot Vegetable
.
Choice of Dessert
Heritage Salad Bar
Choice of Juice
Seasonal
Fruit
Scrambled Eggs
French ToMI w/Syrup
Rasher or Beacon
Home Fries
Cold Cereal Bar
Wednesday
On Campus:
Psychology lecture:
"Child Crisis in the
Classroom"
7 p.m.
Rehearsal
".The
Drunkard"
New Dining Room
9:30p.m.
Dinner
Heritage Salad Bar
Roast Round or Beer
Chicken Croqueucs
with White Sauce
Rice Casserole
Whipped Potato
Garden Sweet Green Peas
Hot Deli Bar
Heritage Salad Bar
Breaded Fried Fish
Grilled Ham Steaks
Hawaiian
Sliced Carrots
Oven Browned Potato
Hot Deli Bar w/Meatballs
Choice of De,sert
Heritage Salad Bar
Oven Roasted Lamb
Spaghetti Special
Parsley Boiled Potato
Hot Deli Bar
Choice of Dessert
Heritage Salad Bar
Oven Fried Chicken Pieces
Veal Cutlet w/Brown Gravy
Creamed Mushroom and
Bean Casserole
Butlered White rice
Mixed Vegetables
Hot Deli Bar
Heritage Salad Bar
Fresh Roast Pork
Eggplant Parmesan
Whipped Potato
Steamed Leaf Spinach
Hot Deli Bar w/Sausage
Choice or Dess<rt
Heritage Salad Bar
Quarter Pounder on
a
Sesame Seed Bun
Rigatoni w/Marinara Sauce
Chefs Choice
French Fried Shoestrings
Buttery Lima Beans
Hot Deli Bar
Heritage Salad Bar
Fried Port Choplettc
Roast Turkey
Lentil, \.ima, and
Rice Casserole
Whipped Potato
Buttered Corn·
HotDe\\Bar
...
'
'-"-
-
-
··

...
:
Thursday: On Campus
"Bus Stop
8p.m.
Coffeehouse
Student Talent
9p.m.
Women's Basketball
Metropolitan
Tournament
Sotisti New York
and$8.S0
Chamber Orchestra,
Ransom Wilson
conducting. 8 p.m.
Tickets S14, S12
performance tickets
are $18, S16 & $14.
There will be an
infared hearing
system
Kim and Reggie Harris describe their performance as
"music
10
hear with closed eyes and an open heart."
It's a beautiful description of beautiful music which is
characterized as soft rock. They are native
Philadelphi~ns who have been performing together for
eight years. Kim and Reggie each play guitar, compose
and arrange their music and harmonize with each other
in a style that is uniquely theirs. The addition of Conrad
Krider has
expanded
their music to
include
keyboards,
horns, vocals and light percussion. They have written
music for television and radio commercials, including
one for a nationally distributed line of greeting cards.
at both
shows
and a
andS8
singer at the 3 pm.
performance.
Kim, Reggie and Conrad
·
will
be performing at the
Fireside Lounge tonight at 9 p.m. for a coffeehouse
sponsored by the C.U.B. Refreshments will be served.






































































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--•·Page
6 • tHE CIRCLE-.Februarj
24;
1983 ·
Reel
in1pressions
The year··
of living
·
danger9~sly
by Tom Fisher ··
When one thinks of Australia,
the images that come to mind are
kangaroos,
.. uncivilized
aborigines, Quantas Airlines and
a popular.tune by Men At Work,
In more realistic terms, that little
continent "down under" has been
turning out some · very high
quality and original pieces of
filmmaking. The Year of Living
Dangerously,
although not the
best release to come
from
Australia, is certainly not the
worst either.
The film stars Mel Gibson
(Mad Max, The Road Warrior,
Gallipoli)
as news journalist Guy
Hamilton.
Hamilton
finds
himself in 1950s Jakarta, In-
doesia to cover the events leading
up to a Communist revolution.
While he's there, he also finds a
romatic interest in the form of
Jill
(Sigourney Weaver). It takes
Hamilton almost the whole film
before he takes his work or his
girl seriously, and, more · im-
portantly, the environment that
he is living in.
- Director Peter
Weir,
who
directed Gibson . in Gallipoli,
creates a moody, claustrophobic,
and gut-wrenching atmosphere.
He shows us only the seamy side
of country that also has some very
beautiful areas. We. feel. the in-
tense heat; the hunger, the pain.
and the· anguish of people who
have_ become mentally and
physically emaciated by ·
a
government that doesn't know or
care. Weir parades dozens of
deformed· people before our eyes
and effectively grabs our sym-
pathies. Along these same lines,
the
most
sympathetic character in
the movie is a dwarf named Billy
(Linda Hunt). Billy keeps files on
everyone in his little bungalow,
where he is surrounded by his
photographs of people with. sad,
staring eyes.
Billy looks up to Guy. He also
idolizes Jill. Billy is constantly
. . searching for .someone to believe .
in. His files grow · thick ,with
information
and
personal
thoughts about the people he
cares about.
.
Hamilton's story takes a
second seat to Billy's. He learns
to understand the way Billy feels,
but he doesn't take these feeling
personally
enough.
Hamilton
comes to represent the Westerner
as he is, blind to what is really
happening
in
places
like
Southeast Asia.
He doesn't
understand Communism enough,
either. During · the attempted
revolution, Hamilton nearly gets
killed trying
to
get a · story,
thinking that "freedom of the
press" is an international
amendment.
The
Year
of
Living
Dangerously
offers some stan-
dout performances by Gibson (in
a very. different role from Mad
. Max),
Sigourney Weaver (very
good as a British envoy), and
,
Linda Hunt. The dark, soft focus
cinematography of location
scenes shot in Manila and
Australia is emotionally realistic.
This movie can be very dismal
and depressing, and almost makes
you feel as if you've been wat-
ching a two-hour commercial for
CARE.
I would have to . recommend
this movie for the experience,
. . because it most definitely .will
· move
you. My only major qualm
with.this
picture is that it moved a
little
bit
too slowly at times, and
\probably .
should have. been
. shorter
by
about twenty mmutes.
The following Internships are available for Sum-
mer
&
Fall:
·
·
·
TECH WRITIN.G
&
P.R.
I.B.M.
Kingston
I.B.M. Poughkeepsie
· I.B.M. Owego
· N.Y.S. Assembly
TV-PROD
WNBC-TV-"Prime of Your _Life," N.Y.C.
WCBS-TV-"Two on the Town;" N.Y.C.
XICOM-TV Production, Texedo, N.Y.
BUSINESS, Marketing, Advertising & Sales

DCD
Technologies·
Mike Bolgek, Inc. Advertising
Northerwestern Sales
Heubline, Inc. of Hartford
There are MANY more avallablel
See us
in
0230 for more information.
There
will
be a seminar for anyone Interested In _
ATTENTION
CIRCLE
ADVERTISERS
·
·
Next week's
Circle will be the last un-
-til
March 31. Deadline is by Monday,
1
p.m.
ROOSEVELT THEATRE
Rtl.
9,
Hyde Park, N.Y.
TEL. CA9-2000
Now Playfng Friday Feb. 18,
through Thursday March 16
*********************************
There
is
one cadet
about to expose the system ••.
THE TRUTH:
IT -WAS All A LIE.
1'11F. 1.CIRDS
Cir■
DISCIPI.IIIF.
becoming an intern
on
Thursday, March
3,
at
.. ,, , ~-
,,,.-,S,nttht~
~d and. _- .
'
>•
•.
7
~~7.~~,,L -
11 :20
(free
slot) iil··D211. ·;
u\<; ::
i,~/
;;):>,iRece/ve
Oire,Dall~r ""{(;,
;;'::,::
:·;;i'i\
i: ·:; .:;.-,;;,;:
f;';;;;
.
-· ,,.
.
/,,, .. ',,. .
*********************************
)
)A
~a~~
.
~
"
,,.
c!:
.
.
ROCk\o\"t:L.L'S
DANCE
PLAY POOL
or
JUST MINGLE
.
Marist Coffee
ShOP
·I
.
BELONG -TO-
THE· IVIARIST
MUNCH BUNCH
.
'
~
.
-Commuters
&
Residents:
.
Save
10%
Check
out cou~n
booklet. Good in
: Coffee
Shop,
Deli
_
and Dining ~II
Coffee Shop -S·pecial
Hot
_
Dog an~. S_oda
$1.00
Purchase of booklets
may be made in
Food Service-Office
-
~
- o·h
r;w·se itisworthse.eingonce
..:·,:. ·~ •·
t
\_\t :(- .::,. ~-.,, ::-..

._,._,_~:--.,.>~;:' ., ·
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--11111!1-------------------------------------•February 24, 1983 ·
THE CIRCLE·
Page
7 -
A
Place
to.gro
w
',
.
by
John
Bakke
·
or in another agency," said
Bainbridge.
"They are
·
here
There's a playground, a ball
.
because they come from an
field, a big gray gymnasium right abusive family, - we work with a
in the back yard,
-
and there's lot of abused children and abusive
always somebody around to play family situations. Also, children
with.
·. ·
.
. ·
.
. ,
are put here because they need
Residents of the Poughkeepsie adoptive placement."
·
Children's Home have quite a bit
About 65
percent of the
available to them; you might even children treated are from Out:.
say they've got everything a kid chess County, although the home
.
might want.
serves Westchester, Orange,
Except their families.
,.
.
.
Rockland and Columbia counties
Founded
in
1847,
·
the aswell,accordingtoBainbridge.
Children's Home is now located
.
Catherine E. Hexel, social
on Fultori Street in Poughkeepsie.
.
work supervisor at the home, said
It
currently houses 45 children that the Children's Home is
ranging in age from 6 to 16. The classified as an institution and as
children at the home are not such is categorically the most
·
orphans, but childi;-en whose restrictive setting for treating
parents are for one reason or children. "The children that have
another unable
to
care for them.
the most problems come to in-
at the home has become much
more disturbed," Hexel said,
speaking of changes she's seen in
the four years she has been at the
home.
·
"The kinds of problems
that the children are presenting
are much more severe."
Hexel attributes the worsening
·
conditions of children needing
treatment to recent state direc-
tions
concerning · child care.
According to Hexel, the state has
altered. the amount
·
of children
receiving therapy that.need it. She
said that state agencies are more
hesitant to recommend more
restrictive treatment for children
and because of this many children
who might need a more restrictive
atmosphere go without it until
their problems become very
severe.
In the
·
past the Children's stitutions; those that don't have
Home has cared for a wide variety
.
as many problems go
.
to group
"I think there's such a
of chiidren, according to Dr. Paul
-
homes or foster homes," she said.
·
tremendous push on now to have
Bainbridge, program director at
.
According
to
Bainbridge, there
kids serviced in their own home
the home. "There was a time are similarities among many of that the children that might have
when they had infants
.
here," the children who come to the
come into care aren't coming into
Bainbridge said. "There was
l!-
home.
"What most of the
care, and those that are, are so
time when
·
the kids were mainly children share is a background of severely disturbed that they need
adolescents here and
·
a time when
.
failure in school, failure in living
intensive work,'' said Hexel. "We
the kids were orphans. Our goals skills-in the sense that
··
they
used to get kids at a young enough
are to provide what were capable
·
haven't fit into a family setting,
age that we
·
could do something.
of providing to the community, to and they usually have failed with
Now they're coming in older and
fill the needs that the ~ommunity their peers,"
.
he
:
said. "That by then the damage is so severe
presents us with.,,
·.·
.
covers most of the bases if you're that there's not a whole Jot that
·
d
·
you can do."
Right now those nee s require a kid.
u
'
the home to care primarily for
,
.
·
.
.
The
:
Children's Home employs
dependent, neglected or
.
abused
Th~
·
atmosphere
:
at
.
,
the a sizeable, full-time staff of work
children. "Children are
·
here Children's Home has. undergone
.
with
children. There are 21 .
because they are unmanageable in several· changes during ,its 135
workers at the
-
main
their own home, in a foster home, years
'
of
service~
:
,
,~:rhe·population
their job is to care for
:
··.
' .
.
' :
:
"
·
;
. .
,
.
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.
.
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·


"
,
Marist communityJends
a
hand
by
John Bakke


Since the mid-1960s Marist
College has played a part in the
community support of
·
the
Children's Home, according to
Margaret Gold, former executive
director of the home.
Gold, now a professor· at
Marist, said that originally the
Marist brothers volunteered their
time at the home, located just a
mile from Marist, and provided
needed male companionship and
role models for the children. "At
one time it was hard to get men
into institutions such as the
Children's Home, so the brothers
were especially appreciated," she
said.
Today
.
Marist
students
volunteer their time as part of
social work courses and also
outside
of any
course
requirements.
·
According to
Catherine
·
Hexel, social · work
supervisor at the home; student
volunteers have been involved in
superv1smg children in such
things
as playground activities,
and have also been used as tutors.
There are currently four Marist
students working part time at the
home; three are volunteering as
part of the "Social Work
Methods I" course, while the
other is on an internship. Nancy
Cleveland, a junior, is one of the
volunteer workers currently at the
Children's Home.
"We've been helping out with
the kids generally -
everything
from
helping
with· their

homework to just talking with
them," said Cleveland. Yvette
Sheard, another volunteer from
Marist, said, "We've only been
there a week, so it's hard to say
much about it, but it's been
enjoyable so far."
Anne Patterson,
placement
coordinator at the home, said that
the Marist volunteers spend their
time at Children's Home working
directly with the children. "They
help in study halls, they help put
the children to bed," she said.
"We look for people who can
function as role models for
·
the
children, because often they
haven't had any before."
According to Hexel, volunteers
are usually needed at the home
and anyone interested in the
possibility of spending some time
at the Children's Home should
contact John VanDyke, child care
coordinator at the home.
the children on a day-to-day
home and will state 'lwant to b1.
basis.
home." But they're not unhappy,
Jay McGinnis, currently the
they're very actively involved in
special interest coordinator at the
living their lives, in getting a
home, used to be a child-care
better sense of themselves as
worker and is
aware
of the
individuals."
hardships of the job. "It's a hard
Within the main home the
job because it involves a lot of
children are separated into
·
a
time. They're on for two or three
boys' department and a girls'
days at a time, and they sleep
department, with a child-care
here,"
he
said.
"They're
staff for each. The children are
responsible for getting the kids up
enrolled in public schools and this
in the morning and getting them
plays a large part in their lives.
·
dressed. They eat all the meals
There is a mandatory study hall
with the kids; they're directly
every night and tutors to help the
responsible for them. It takes a
children with schoolwork.
certain kind of personality to be a
In addition to that said
child-care worker. You have to be
Bainbridge, there are other things
able to give a lot and not need a
to
·
keep the children busy.
lot in return."
"Annually we go camping at
Among the entire staff, no
Mystic with about 12 kids for two
gro~P.
i~
\>ropably m~re imp<;>rtant
weeks. We get kids from the age
to the progress of the children
of 14 up a job in the summer,"
than the six social workers. As
Bainbridge said. "We have a
social work supervisor, Hexel is
Christmas here for the kids, we
responsible for dealing with state
have
.
an Easter, we have a
guidelines and mandates,
in
Valentine's day, we have all of
addition to supervising her five
that."
co-workers.
Approximately 51 percent of
"Although we're a private,
the children chat come to the
non-profit organization the state
home are eventually returned to
Department of Social Services
their own families saicl Hexel.
oversees us because they oversee
Most of the others go on to other
all the child-care institutions in
institutions or foster homes, or
the state," said Hexel. "There are
are prepared for adoption.
certain guidelines for operating
Although the home does not
which are contingent with our
actually
make
·
any
adoptive
licensure and it's my respon-
placements, there are an average
siblitity to see that we're meeting
of about ten children at any time
them in our everyday operation."
who are being prepared for
Hexel said that the goals of the
adoption, according to Hexel.
social. workers are the
Other children stay at the home
rehabilitation of
·
the
family
so
far longer than
the
average two-
that the child can return home.
year period according to Bain-
"Our format is family therapy,"
-
bridge, and remain until they
she said. "We approach the child
begin their adult lives. These are
in treatment as part of a family in
generally the older adolescent
treatment. You can't treat a child
children and for the most part
without treating his family
they live in two "group homes"
because they're a part of the
in Hyde Park.
.
problem."
The group homes are ex-
Success
of
·
treatment
is
tensions of the Children's Home
measured in different ways,
and each has a staff of child-care
according to Hexel. "Success is
workers, said Hexel. However,
really dependent on the goals you
the group homes are licensed as
establish for the
.
child and
foster homes rather than in-
whether or not the child is able to
stitutions and do not officially
reach those goals," she said.
offer the same level of care as the
Progress, doesn't come easily
main house.
Hexel said. "The growth process
As
for the future,
the
is very slow. If you get a neglected
Children's Home will most likely
child in, you might see some
"remain
in
the
children
things right away. YO\rgive him
business," according to Hexel,
good solid meals long enough and
"but we may offer other kinds of
he puts on weight and he starts to
programs."
look healthy. You see those kinds
Regarding far-reaching future
of improvements-health im-
pans, Bainbridge said, "We're
provements-immediately."
planning to increase our potential
"But the damage to the child's
for offering out-patient services
personality is usually pretty severe
to the community. This type of
by the time we get them," she
service might involve placing a
said. "The rehabilitation process
child at the Children's Home for
in dealing with an ego-damaged
a weekend, a week or a month at a
kid is slow, very slow."
time rather than for the 18
The active, stable atmosphere
months that is initially requested
of the home is benefical for many
now."
of the children said Hexel. "Most
·
Currently the Children's Home
kids do not like being away from
staff continues to care for a large
home," she said, "but there's so
and diverse group of children. "It
much discord at home that the
can be pretty frustrating," said
kids come in very relieved to be
McGinnis about the constant
away from the chaos for a while.
work required, "but it has its
Most ki"s ;here long to be back
·
moments.''
. :
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11,~_~f!-8:,:!H~_q1~~~~;
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IiitetrRSlii}.t
:O:
gtitti'Iig Chcirige
.
ca.use.S
controversy
.
,
;
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'
·
·
1
-
The/·chatige
·
of
i;,
the
,
:
grading
:
·•.from Massapequa Park (Ny)
Some students feel that a letter
Malone; N.Y., who has a
15-
they have a good student they
.
~¥.s~einJ~)~e com~unication a:rts
\
\vho
is
in~c:frning at Poughke~p;i; grade is more satisfying. "I don't
credit internship as assistant
·
co-
want to re
.
ward him," Norman
~te~nsh1p
:
p~ogram·from a letter
:,
Cable Television said,
"If
I
knew feel that the pass/fail grade is
.
op/internship director s
,
aid:
"I
said.
:
.
·
..
·
·
.
.
'
·
gra,de
:.
,:.
t9
/
a:
:
pass-•with::.
·
that I was getting a letter grade worth it because if you put a lot
don't agree with the pass/fail
Freund suggested that the com-
honor/pass/failgrade has caused
.
I'd work harder; it's an incen-
into the internship you should get
system, bufpass-with-honors is a
pany that is sponsoring the intern-
a controversy with. many of the tive."
·
.
something more out of it than
good idea. There should also be
ship evaluate their intern better
s~udents:
·
·
.
.
,,;
·. . ,
. ·
.
.
.,
.
·
.
Kerry
:
Guerin, Junior from
·
pass/fail. A letter grade is more
.
some .kind of certificate that. and have a stricter standing
.
of.
-
•-·
Many
-
stu~
_
ents said they feel
Tilson, N.Y., said,
"I
would want rewarding," said Barbara Bellan-
·
states your grade.''
.
.
grading.
"I
think it was an easy
.
·
tt)at a letter
grade
system worked
·
a grade because I'm doing work.
I
toni, Junior from Monroe
Seniors are claiming that
·
the
way out (for the employers), in-
.
&§,
an incentive in making the wouldn't want to get the same
.
Township, N.J.
new grading system
.is
unfair
stead of evaluating
.
the student

·
·
._·
.
.
·
·.
·
·
'
..
.
·

.
.
.
·
.
.
Ac~ording to Rob~rt Norman,
because it is stated in the catalog
and then giving a grade they were
Car.'
·ca
·
·
tche1ci
fi1
re
on
cam'
nus
associate professor of com-
that a letter grade is optional to.· just handing out A's and B's,"
.
.
.
.
·
. ·
,
.
.
.
t,:,
.
I '
·
-y
.
munications and director of com.:
.
the students, said Norman. Healy
said Fruend ..
·
.
.
.
:
.
·
. ·
·
··
. ·
.
.
·
.
-
municat
.
ion in~ernships, the
agreed that she "wouid like to
Healy suggests that the intern-
.
.
A car owned by Camillo
afternoon.
.
.
·
·
change was
ma~e to . deter
have the option" on a letter grade
ships be made harder by adding a
Magliaro, a Marist College dining
While he sat in his
1969
blue students from takmg an mtern-
or a pass/fail grade.
·
project for the students to do
service employee; caught fire in
Dodge Dart smoking a cigarette, ship in order to raise t~eir grade
Norman said that he
is
asking
which
:
would give the employet
Champagnat parking lot Friday
a pi~ce of tissue ~ught f!re,
_pomt
average
..
Jumor Paul
the Academic Affairs Committee,
something
·
substantial
-
to· grade
·
Magbaro told Manst
.
security. Beckerle, Pearl River, N.Y., who
a group of.faculty member~ who
them on.
"I
have an independent
M •
t
Magliaro said he left the car, has a news internship at WKIP
review academic changes, to
.
project where
I apply all of the
aflS
.
names
thinking that the fire was ex-
Radio Station said, "I'd rather be
postpone the change in grading
techniques that I learn at the in~
.
honor
.
students
tinguished, according to security.
given a grade because it would
untHSeptember~ Junior ~argaret
.
ternship,"
_
H_ealy said
;
:
<'l_f.
i!'S
"The hot ash must have fallen boost my cum, but that's not the
Fruend of Mexico who had an in-
good quality it has the poss1b1hty
between the seat cushion," said only reason why
I
took an intern-
·
ternship at the Dutchess Bank
·
of being put on the ~ir.
I
tbink
Marist has inducted 41 students Joseph Waters, director of securi-
ship. The pass/fail grading
Controller Office, said, "You are
that I should get a letter grade on
into the Alphi Chi, the campus ty.
system didn't affect my decision
supposed to
.
have an option on
it.''
·.
honor society.
The smoldering front seat was on taking one, no matter what, an
any courses
·
that are listed in the
Beckerle feels that even though
.
Al phi Chi selects its members first discovered
by
Jim O'Keefe,
a
internship is the best way for me
catalog as an elective."
students are not happy with

the
on the basis of accomplishments, resident of Champagnat Hall, to get on hand experience."
According
·
to Norman, the
change it shouldn't affect their
interest and participation in cam-
who threw snow on the seat of the
Some students agree· that cum
·
communication arts internships
decision on taking an internship.
·
pus activities. Its name derives car and phoned security. ·
boosting is
a
problem and
are listed as electives, which
"Practical experience gained dtir-
from the initial letters of the
Security
Supervisor
Robert something should be done to pre-
qualifies them for the option of a
ing
··
the
internship
should
Greek words ALETHEIA and Moore and student guard Larry vent it. Healy said,
"It
makes
pass/fail grade or a letter grade.
outweigh the disadvantages 9f
CHARAKTER, meaning truth Cheatham completely extinguish-
sense that something be done,
Supervisors of the internships,
_
getting or nor getting a letter
and character.
ed the fire, according
to Waters.
however I don't think that the
said Norman, were against the
_
·
grade.''
.
Alphi Ch
_
i admits junior and . .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - • - - - - - - - - - - - - •
senior students of good character
who rank at least in the upper
tenth of their classes. The follow-
ing Marist students were selected:
From
New
York:
Kim
Elizabeth Betros, Susan Marie Di
Uglio, Denise M. Fitzpatrick,
Martha Madeline Mcconaghy,
and Laurie Ann Washburn, all
from Hyde Park; Ann Marie
DiMarco, Deborah Salerno and
Steven Pafumi, all from Wapp-
ingers Falls.
Anthony Formato, Debra
'
A.
Kesselmafk, Susan Gayle

Macy,
Merrilee
.
Jayne
·.
Murin
Osterhoudt, Janice G. Peterson
and Patricia A
:
Whitesell, all
from Poughkeepsie; Robyn
M.
Durett, Glens Falls; Keith
L
Galanti, Baldwin; Donald F.
Gately,
Brooklyn; Margaret
Gaughran, Carmel; Bernadette
Grey, Commack; Jane Elizabeth
Hanley, Westbury; Thomas A.
Hasset, Bronx; John Kemmerer,
Stanfordville.
Lisa A. King, Brooklyn; Grazia
E. LoPiccolo, Newburgh; Joseph
Nichols,
Brooklyn; Stephen
O'Grady, East Northport; Susan
Pecoraro,
Highland;
Michael
Peters, Waterford; Jacqueline
Catherine Pisani, Hewlett; Lt.lane
Remsburger, Pine Plains; Ennio
V.
Sartori, New
..
Windsor;
_
Nicholas A. Schettino, Jr.,
Beacon; Donna
.
Cody Seelbach,
Staatsburg; Veronica Shea,
Brooklyn; Mark G. Skinner, Slate
Hill; Michael Volpe, Jr., Salt
~oint; Joan~e Wynne, North
Merrick.
.
.
.
.
·
Also: Margaret Freund, Lomas
DeChapultepec, Mexico; Brian
Hanley,
Wallingford,
Conn.;
.
Ann C. Knapp, Fair.field, Conn.;·
Kyle Elaine Miller,
Denver,
Colo.; Shawna Mary Walega,
Manchester, N.H.
Lecture March 3
Dr. Andrew Weintraub, a
visiting professor of economics at
Marist, will speak on "Disarma-
ment: Economic Alternatives" at
11 :30 a.m. March 3 in Donnelly
243.
Weintraub's speech is the se-
cond lecture in a series sponsored
by the Faculty Lecture Committee
on the theme Global Awareness:
Peace:
Weintraub, on a one-year
leave from Temple University,
holds a
·
Ph.D. from Rutgers
University. He is
.
the author of
numerous articles on such topics
as
labor negotiations,
the
economics of the arts and
unemployment.
·
WE'LL PAY YOU TO GET INTO
SHAN THIS SUI. ER.
.
J
~

t
'
\
l
I
.:
: -
,
Ifyou
have
.
~tleJst
.
·
.
two years of college left,
·.
you can ~pend six weeks at
·
our Army ROTC Basic
.
Camp
thi$
summer
and
earn
approximately
$600.
·
_
_
.
,
,
Andif.you qt1alify;_you
can-enter the
-
Rare 2-.
Year Program this.fall
arid
.
.
:
receive up to $1,000
a
year .
.
··
.
But the big payoff
·
.
.
.
·
·
happens
on
graduation
day.
That's when youreceive
an officer's commission. ·
·
So get your body
in
·
shape (not to mention your
·
bank account).
~
~iit:
·
· -~
· .
For more information, call
~j
·
212-295-3533 (collect) and
f
talk with Captain Pastirik.
~t
ARMY ROTC.
,
•,,•
Information also available
on 2 and 3 year scholar.
ships at Marist.
For information, call
Captain Wingate
(212-295-3533)

























































'
Febiuary 24, 1983 · THE CIRCLE· Page
9, _ _
_
-------More
letters---
Continued from page 4
·
Mary Poppins impressions. I also
sc'~se of Humor. In this par-
like to talk to people who think
ticular course, people
will
learn that Paris is a social establishment
how
.
to improve their sense of
.
in New Paltz.
humor
by
learning how to make
In
reference to b~ing
·
the
fun of other people, how to tell founder of the Manst Auto
those side-splitting jokes, and yes, Club ... Nice Try.
I
was one of the
even shows you what kind of cofounders of this organization.
material· to write for It Ain't The other founders were Jerry
Necessarily
.
So. The
-
·
course Acunto, John Cardis and Steve
description goes on to say that Pucci.
I
thought that the two
this is the course for people who recipents of the Enquirer A ward
have a vague sense of humor, or for outstanding reporting would
lack
it
thereof.
be more careful in doing their
·
research
and
verifying
their
I would like to say that
I
do sources. Thanks anyway for the
agree with statement about the Publicity.
follower talking to anybody
·
for
Once again
I
would like to
.
hours. For examples,
l
do talk to thank you Miss Donnelly and
my friends and professors about
.
Miss Ryan for the nomination.
I
issues that are happening in am sure that this award will make
today's world.
I
also like to
·
talk my family very proud of me. To
to people who wear BRIGHT
quote a fellow Irishman, James
pink sweatsuits and try to do Cagney: "My mother thanks you,
my father thanks you, my sisters
thank you and
I
thank you.
Sincerely yours
Donald Eustace
P.S.
Nice try goes to you two for
trying to do what is a poor B-
Guido
impression.
Speak out.
To the Editor:
With the drinking laws New
York has, when is the legal age
for somebody to be considered an
adult? I thought it was 18 until
Dec.
4
of last year when this state
in its infinite wisdom raised it to
19.
This is an example of the
growing apathy I see here at
Marist.
If enough
freshman
would speak on this issue, maybe,
just maybe, this law would be
changed .
.
Despite all the statistics,
it has been my experience that in
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
95% of the cases, 18 year old
THE HAIR
·sHACK
males and
·
females can drink
.
·
.
.
.
·
responsibly. If we have the right
to vote at 18, shouldn't we have
-
OPEN 24 HOURS
473-1576
-PALACE
(Super New York Cuts)
th
~~~:~
1
~i;i;~~thyisgrowingis
located at
because people are afraid to speak
their minds. They might be
.
,
.
-
49 ACADEMY STREET
considered a redical and be
"black listed." But tell me what is
so radical about speaking your
mind.
DINER
& RESTAURANT
Breakfast -
·
Lunch - Dinner
Fresh Seafood - Steaks - Chops
Cocktails
~
Baking on Premises
(NEXT
.
TO
·
ALL SPORT)
Show your co/legs ID and get a FREE
..
Glass of
Beer
with your
meal/
.
·
7% DISCOUNT
194- WASHINGTON STBE~ti/,
,,,
.
·
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW
YBFH(
-.
.
·
·
(Next to
Brandy's Two)
Ample
Customer
·
Parking
His and Her
BODY PERM
Reg. $35.00
Special
$18.50
Shampoo,
Cut
and
Blow Dry
From
$5.00
Open
Daily
10-6 -
No Appt. Necessary
FOR APPOINTMENT, CALL

486-9883
"
SPRING BREAK
-
INFO:
.
.
.
NOTICE
-
TO RESIDENTS
Please be ~dvised that the Residence Halls will be closed and no meals will be served
fromfriday March 11th, 1983at 11 :00 p.m. through Sunday ~arch 20, 1983 at 10:00
a.m.
·
·
The lastmeal on Friday March 11th will be lunch and the first meal on Sunday March 20
will be dinner.
·
NO ONE WILL BE PERMITTeD TO REMAIN IN THE RESIDENCE HALLS DURING THIS
PERIOD.
Please see that all windows are closed, lights are out, plugs are unplugged and doors
are locked before you leave.
Should you have questions regarding this policy you should report to the Housing Office
·
no later than Friday, March 4, 1983.
·
Your cooperation in this matter will be greatly appr~ciated.
Enjoy the Break!
·
P.S. You will receive notice shortly regarding the 4 day long weekend
In
April. Please do
not confuse the two.
There is a growing buildup in
this country for the reduction of
nuclear weapons in this country.
I'm all for this because unlike the
60's protest, they're going about
this in a very logical way. A lot of
the Marist faculty are against the
buildup of nuclear weapq,ns, but
despite this, Marist decided to
allow the ROTC to come in. That
.
can only make Marist look like a
school which has the attitude that
"Anything the military does is
right," The apathy here is
so
great that the Marist community
·
on the
whole accepts the
ROTC
without
question.
The apathy here is very un-
fortunate and I wish people
would start speaking out on
things that concern them. Marist
is a great college and I like it a lot,
but I hope it doesn't suffer an
apathy disease.
Martin Ramunno
Mixer
To the Editor:
On behalf of the Sophomore
Class Activities Team I would like
to once again give my sincerest
thanks to everyone
involved
(including Mother Nature) in
making our Mardi Gras Mixer
one of the best to date.
The band, "Starrfire," put on
a great show and they were well
worth their cost.
We would especially like to
thank Dr. Bob Meadowcroft, Jim
Raimo, Bernadette Cosner, class
members Tom
Fahey,
John
Fedoro, Kelly Stith, Kevin Schulz
and all the many others who pull-
ed through for us and were in-
strumental in seeing the show go
on and off with a bang.
We hope to continue to see
positive events like these go for-
ward and succeed in the near
future .
.
Sincerely,
Roger Romano
President, Sophomore
Class Activities Team
Bill Rand, Treasurer
IRA and St. Pat
Dear Editors:
The New York Times reported
(February
18, 1983,
p.B2, c.5)
that this year's St. Patrick's Day
parade will be, according to the
grand marshal Michael Flannery,
"a pro-I.R.A. parade."
If
such is indeed the case,
Marist College must seriously
reconsider its participation this
year.
Fraternally,
Bro. Joseph L.R. Belanger




























































































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Page
,
J~
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THE
:
'
CIRCLE
.
-
'
February
24,
1983
_
.
.
_
__
.
, .
.
.
.
_
.
,
.
.,
tce;,COld
ShoWers ca.Used
by
student overload
by
Kris
Lawas

throughout
.the
dorm.
\
According
·"'
to Jack Shaughnessy, assistant
·•·
You've j"!st
_
awoken

from
·
a director of the physical plant, the
sound sleep. You grab your towel problem is not being caused by
an~ ~ead_ for th~ showers. You_'re .any maintenance malfunction but·
·
ant1c1patmg a mce, hot!
relaxma.,
by a constant drain on the system.
shower. But what's
_
commg out or
~'There is nothing wrong with
the shower isn't hot, it's freezing!
the boilers. We've checked the
So, you yell some obscenties and system thoroughly;" commented
grit your teeth ... again.
·
Shaughnessy
.
who said that he was
Sound familiar'?
made "officially" aware of the
It
is the residents of
_
Cham-
problem by Director of Housing
pagnat Hall. Recently, students Robert Heywood at the Feb. 15
have been complaining about the maintenance
meeting.
on-going lack of hot water "However," said Shaughnessy,
Campus· leaders join
for convention
by Bob Weinman
Representatives from 35 in-
dependent colleges from all across
New York State descended on
Poughkeepsie Saturday to discuss
financial aid, alcohol abuse and
other impc;,rtant issues during the
first annual Independent Student
Coalition (I.S.C.) meeting at
Mai-ist.
·
Executive director of I.S.C.,
Michael Caruso, explained that
the main thrust of the organiza-
tion is representation in Albany
when decisions are being made
that could affect the future of the
independent colleges of New York
State. He also told of how the
I.S.C. is just beginning to gain
respect and credibility from of-
ficials in the state capital.
President Dennis Murray sees
the I.S.C. as a vital tool for in-
dependent
institutions
to have.
"I
think student involvement and
help as well as fiancial backing is
very important so that we will be
clearly represented when
.
public
policy is being made;'' Murray
·
said. Last year Marist's
'contribu-
tion was $1,000 and this
year
they
will contribute $1,200.
_,
During
part of the day,
students talked about their in-
stitution's problems concerning
financial aid. Caruso explained
that when costs increase at
S. U.N.
Y. colleges, the state simp-
ly absorbs it. "When this happens
at an independent institution like
Marist, the cost must be passed
on to the students
in
the form of
tuition hikes," he said. Most in-
dependent colleges are
over
550/o
·
dependent on tuition income
·
for
meeting their operating
·
costs
while at S.U.N.Y., only about
15
0/o
·
of the cost comes from tui-
·
tion. A publication put out by the
New York State Higher Educa- ·
tion Department called "The Bot-
tom Line" states that
N. Y. tax- ·
payers will provide in
I 982-83 an
average $6,502 a year for each
full time student at S:U.N.Y. and
will
only
·
provide $840
for
students who attend independent
colleges.
The problem of alcohol abuse
was also addressed at the meeting.
About half of the schools atten-
ding including Marist,
_
·
thought
that their
-
-
campus~s had an
alcohol problem
.
-
Ca'ruso
_
said the
I.S.C. strongly believ~d there will
be another increase
·
in the legal
drinking age
.
from
19
to
21.
Students were asked what they
thought about the increase. Jim
"I've been aware of the problem
.
'
.
'By
·
misusing, l meari. by not
Shaughnessy also indicated that
for some time. I( has nothing to
-shutting
·
the faucets or jamming
the problem is also caused by the
do with
.
maintenance, I've per-
them. This causes a constant pull
·.
cold
.
winter ':"eather ·
_
·
sonally checked that."
·
on the hot water system " said -·
"The boilers have to
5
':1PP1Y
Shaughnessy explained that
Shaughnessy.
'
·
heat ener~ as well as hot_ water.
there are certain factors that are
·
·
To avoid problems like· this,
-:
It's runnmg at full capacity and
causing the lack of hot water. The
Heywood suggested that residents
cannot possibly accommodate
system was built 20 years ago to
try
to
adjust their showering time.
everyone taking showers at the
accommodate a certain amount
"lt is a normal situation. Too
same time as well as supply the
of people with a certain amount
many people taking a shower at
hea!,"
.
replie~ Shaughnessy·
of hot water. Shaughnessy in-
·
the same time will drain the hot
"With the drau~ on the
.
sySt
~?1•
dicated that the problem is being
water," Heywood
.
replied. "It's
one ofthe_two will beJessened. .
caused by too many students us-
an
·
on-going
·
thing that will have
Accordmg to Shaughnessy, if
ing showers at the same time and
·
to
be
accepted. Students
will
have
~tuden~s want hot water, they are
also by "misusin~" them.
·
to try to adjust to the situation."
Just gomg to have to cooperate.
Two representatives of the Independent Student Coalition
al Saturday's meeting.
It
was the first I.S.C. meeting e".er held
al Marist.
(photo by Gina Franciscovich)
Galvin, President of the Inter-
talking, they are working· for us,"
House-Council at Marist, said:
he said.
"Our main emphasis should be
on the people who need to drink
Joan Gasporavic, president of
to have fun and socialize. We
the C.S.L., explained that the day
had gone just as she wanted. "We
shouldn't be attempting to catch
wanted
it
to be as open and infor-
them on the highways after they
·do
it. we should find out why
mal
as possible so students should
Program gets
a
'
facelift
by Donna
_
Fidaleo
,
A
$4
'million
Title 3 Grant
·
has
allowed Marist to update and ad~
vance the Medical Technology
program,
said
Catherine
Newkirk, director of medical
technology.
·
Newkirk, Marist's first full-
time medical technology director,
said the grant, which will be
distributed throughout a five-year
period, will be used to build a stu-
dent laboratory on campus and
add faculty to the program. "The
money will be used to equip a stu-
dent laboratory with hospital
equipment, instrumentation and
supplies," said Newkirk. "The
student lab will allow the students
to have an exposure to medical
technology before they actually
go out to the hospital."
they do it and work on that pro-
have their views
·
expressed. We
blem." Caruso describes the topic
had a good turnout seeing that it
-
was the first time it has been done
According to Newkirk,
·
the
as being one of the most pressing
.
here. Hopefully it
will become an
.
structure
.
of
the
medical
social issues of our time and that
ann
_
_
ual event," she said.·
-
technology program has been
it concerns all the people.
,
d
f
h
1
Overall the day was thought of
-
Caruso said the turnout was the
·
change
rom a t ree-p us-one
b ·
·
b
·
· f h
best 1't has been 1·n three year
·
s.
·
"I
program to an integrated pro-
as emg a success y most o t. e
.
people
,
~ho
.
a
_
Ue_nded. "Galyi _
_
f!
wn
very em:ouraged· by -the: in-
·
gram.
d
--
· ·
·
·
d
· '" .,
.. ·
·
·
·
· ·
·
b' M ·
.
'
·
In
,
the integrated program
._esciibed
·
the
~
ay
as. verY,u,1,~~
·
crease m
·
,
part1c1pat1on y, anst.
.
Maristis directly affiliated with a
teresting. <'Today was a·· very
It is
very
important that students
hospital, Newkirk said .
.
This
good indication that students are
at Marist keep on top of all the
allows a student to spend his
involved in these very important
important issues concerning their
senior year at the hospital if he
issues. LS.C. is obviously not just
·.
college," he said.
·
meets the 2.5 grade point average
DannyMa
-
requirement in Math and Science.
R
-
d
1
, I
d
. ·
·
·
·
1
·
-
·
·
d
-
_
·
·
·
· ·
"As Jong as
-
a student meets his
-
rom a
u-
·f!Op
O egg rop
_
-
-
~f.;t;;:e~
1
~~:;~:.ss::tti~fi1;!~
by Gwen Swinton
Just three short months ago, Ma was carrying out the duties of
registrar, at Marist. Today, he is part owner and manager of the
Canton Restaurant, located on Rt.
9,
Wappingers Falls.
.
. .
About his decision to leave Marist. Ma said. "Yes,
I
was kind of
uncertain and fearful, as to whether or
not I made the right choice."
The biggest difference, he said, is the amount of responsibility in the
financial aspects of the business.
-"I take care of the whole
budgetary process, and
I feel that btirdeQ
.
the most
,
How well this
place does will affect the whole
-
fortune of the family." While at
Marist, Ma said, he was involved with the success of the college, but
at the same time he was not so involved that
it
would affect him on a
day-to-day basis.
·
'

_
·
_
·
·
Ma first started in the restaurant business during his college days.
"My wife's family has always been in the restaurant business," he
said.
"I
got through college, my undergraduate studies, by working
in their restaurant. So I've been doing this since 1969
.
on and off."
The Canton has been in Ma's wife's family fo(many years.
It
was
first opened in the city of Poughkeepsie by her grandfather in 1938.
Because of urban renewal,
_
the family
.
was asked to move the
restaurant to another location. This is how they arrived at their pre-'
sent location in Wappingers Falls, Mil said.
_.
·
_-
.
.
. __
,
, :
.
-
But
-
as
-
luck
.would
.have it, the
.
first restaurant built their was
destroyed by fire.The new Canton restaurant is the second one built
on that site.
.
.
·
·
·
_

.
·

.
Before
.
coming to Marist, Ma was
.
the assistant registrar at Out~
semeSter
.
senior year," said
chess Community College.
"I
was looking
·
for a jcib not as much in
Newkirk.
the restaurant, but in the field I studied in undergraduate school,
A
degree
in
m~dical
which was mathematics and statistics," he said.
·
-
technology; the-
study
.
·
of
While still
.
working at Dutchess, Ma p.eard
.
of the opening at
laboratory medicine, will allow a
Marist for registrar, and also an opening forthesame position.at the
student to work in a hospital
Culinary Institute of America.Cll got boih ofthosejobsand actual-
.
laboratory, med
_
ical industry or
.
ly said yes to CIA, and I was
·
going to be
·
their registrar; But after
:
medical research, said Newkirk.
some conversation with the people at Marist, they convinced me to
··
After a student
.
_
graduates;
come and work for Marist, "he said.
-
·
.
·
-
-
.
·
. . · .
. _
·
·
Newkirk said, he will be eligil:)le
Ma was the registrar at Marist for four years before deciding to
.
to take the national
·
certifying ex-
·
leave to take over management of the Canton. While admitting that
·
am in medical technology, which
he has mixed feelings, he adds, "Without change, there cannot
be
is optional
·
but is accepted
improvements."
·
throughout the United
.
States •
..
Whereas before he worked eight hours a
.
day, five days a week; he
"The exam is to the students ad-
now workq3 hours a day, six days a week. However, it seems to be
vantage because most hospitals
_
worth it because business is doing very well, he said ..
·
-
.
.
acknowledge them.- It gives
.
the
.
-
As
for
any plans of returning to Marist in the future, Ma said,
.
student a license to
,
work
-
all
"There's always the possibility, but it would not be in the immediate
.
·
over," said t{e:wkirk.
_
·
;
:
future'.
I
thought the college was very nice to me, and that it
.
,
was a
Newkirk~
,
originally from
-
.
_
very good place for most people working there. I think they tried to
Milford, Conn.~ worked as· an
_
_
be nice to everyone;
It think
·1
left with very good feelings." As for
.
_
education
;
coordinator at St.
the new registrar, Ma said he hopes she likes her job and enjoys t~e.
_
-
.
Vincents Hospital
·
in Bridgeport,
_
experience:
·
:
.
.
.
.
-
.
-
-
·

-.
. •
,
·
·conn.,
before starting the job
at
"By the
·
way~ no, Marist doesn't get any discounts: I think Marist
Marist this December.
·
should_pay double," laughs.Ma.
·
.
·
·
,
Plafari&d Parenthood
,
13.uds
'squeallJaw
ruling
By
Eileen Hayes
Sho~ld parents have the right to
know if their children are using
contraceptives'?
Planned Parenthood Federa-
tion of New York says no.
New York Judge HenrY Werker
vices
·
, and were scheduled to go teenagers surveyed would not at-
said.
Judge Werker's decision will set a
into effect Feb.
25.
·
·
tend
birth control counseling
if
Ann
·
O'Brien, co-director of
·
precedent in other federal courts.
Judge Werker of the Federal their parents
were
to
be notified.
Birth-Right in Poughkeepsie, said
·
The regulations
were
intended
District Court in Manhattan Only two percent said they would
of the "Squeal" law,
"I
can't to bring families ,closer together
blocked the "squeal" law for abstain from having sex.
make a statement for the whole
and to reduce the amount of
New York state ori Feb.
14.
Executive director for the Out-
organization, but I'm con-
teenagers having sex.
"We had a fear of the regula-
chess/Ulster Planned Parenthood
servative and l feel
·
that the
tion getting passed because we felt Steve White sa!d about 1,300
parents should be informed if
"We agree famiJies should
it would lead to an increase in teenagers, -
J7 years old and
h

-
communicate," Klein said. "We
says no.
·
,
·
t e1r daughter is pregnant."
.
1
They say no to the new regula- · teenage pregnancies and abor-
under -
would
bP. affected each
_
Birth-Right, a
non-profit offer· counseling_ to he
p
t~n'!gers
tions that
·
would have required tions~" said Robin Klein, public ,
_
year in Dutchess/Ulster Counties,
organization at St. Francis ~mm
1
unicaalt~ Wlhth their 1anuJi~.
federally supported family- - affairs coordinator for Planned if the new regulations went into
H
. 1 .
n
d h
I
ea so re 1ze t at teenagers give
Paren
-
·1hood
of
nu
'
tchess
·
/Ulster effect.
_
This estimate was accor-
-
ospita ; is pro- 1 e an
e
ps
a
in to peer pressure, and we offer
planning
clinics
to
-
notify parents
girl through
a
''crisis preanancy"
1

-
of minors receiving prescription counties.
.
di~~ to the
1982 figures.
-
.
.
.
by en~ouraging
her not to abort counse mg on peer pressure too."
·
contraceptives.
.
·
~lanned Pare~thood based
_
. Any'?o"y
.-
who has.~er work~
.
and
supplying
her
with
"We believe in
'
deterring
These
rcaulatioils,
_
also.
_
known
_
their ar~ent aaa,nst the
reguJa. -
~
m
_

.
~nh ~~tr~I c
_
lmit
!or.~me
.
-
c:ounselin,,
·
maiermty clothes
and
teena,crs
_
from havins
sex," said
-
•·
·
as
tbc
"squeal" law, wercpropos-
tions
on
astudy
"°"'
by
the Alan
week would
reabze
·
-
that thb
·
is
·
.
-
apr:CIJ)aM)'tcst.
·
·
·
·
·
·
Klein.
Quotina
·
Planned Paren-
·
cd
by
ahe
United
SCates
Depart;.
,
G u t t ~
lnstjuac.
-
The_stucty
·
~realiJ:tic/;
_
said:~.
·
°Kids
.
· Am>rdi111
_10
·
Klein, Plllmicd
.
tbood's motto/she
:
said,
0
Jt's,
·
-
mn1
of Health ud Humaa
Ser-
·
re,alcd 11111 2J
perCC8I
of'
the
wtU
sto,
•mt
birtla
control.'' •
·
Parent~
or
New
Yort
·
thinb
'
O.k.
to say no."
·


















































































\
'
,
Dave Luber
:
leads divers
by
Tim Dearie
Tradition runs deep on this
team. Over the past few
.
years it
put together ·a string of 34
consecutive
.
league victories,
including this year's record of six
wins and· one loss. This success
story is
.
the Marist CoUege diving
team.
The team is
.
led by freshman
standout Dave
·
Luber from
Angola
·
High School
.
in Angola,
N. Y.
Luber has started a tradition
of his own by winning every meet
that he's competed in this year on
both the one and three meter
boards. He has also quaiified for
the NCAA Division
·
I Pre-
Qualifying Meet that will be held
at Harvard University
.
This feat
was also accomplished by
.
two
.
previous Marist d
i
ve
.
rs.
.
·
Fourth year
.
coach, Tom
-
Albright, said; "Dave is without a
doubt the best diver we've ever
had here at Marisc He's shattered
every.pool and school record that
we have here. He's a hard worker
who gets ·out of the sport what he
puts into it."
Rounding out the team are
Todd Squillaro and Maria
. Kanzler, both freshman and
incidentally, both walk-ons.
Squillaro had no diving ex-
.
perience at Shenendehowa High
School in Clifton Park, N
.
Y., but
firids himself the
·
number two
diver on the squad and improving
every week.
''There was a meet earlier this
year when Dave was sick and
couldn't dive," said Albright,
"Todd stepped in when our
unbeaten streak was on the line
and won both
.
boards. His
progress has been phenomenal
this year."
The team competes in the B
division of the Metropolitan
Swimming and Diving Con-
ference, which they won last year.
Th
i
s year they will be going for
another Metropolian cham-
pionship which will be held at the
Mccann Center today through
Sunday.
·
In the past their main com-
petition has come from Iona,
CCNY, and Ramapo College.
The team dominates this division
and eagerly awaits the stiff
competition of the A division
schools. The team will find this
competition when they travel to
Annapolis Mo. for the Eastern
Seaboard Championship. They'll
be diving against teams like
Army, Navy, Yale
,
Princton, U.
.
of Virginia, and other Ivy League
schools
.
From Annapolis,
.
Luber
will
travel to Harvard University for
the NCAA Div
.
I pre-qualifing
meet. It was because of his
outstanding performance against
Ramapo that Luber qualifed for
this meet on both the I-meter and
3-meter boards. In order to make
the NCAA finals Luber must
place in the top three of this meet.
When
asked
about
the
possibilities of making the
nationals Luber said:
"I'm
confident and I hope to make it.
I've been working harder each
week for it. We'll see what
happens."
Coach Albright added: "We've
set goals for ourselves. It would
be a pleasure for Dave to make
the nationals, if not, he'll be very
close and will have further
established the reputation of the
college."
Marist fed tearo def eats Marist white team in tourney
by
Frank
Raggo
six minutes gone by, freshman with a victory or a loss were also
Mark Adams blasted a 25 foot there. "We should have won. We
Eight teams
.
were involved in
shot by goalie Heinz Warmhold had so many chances to score,"
the Marist College Indoor Soccer
to give the White a 1-0 lead .
..
T
·
h"
· S d
A
The teams were divided into two
_
ournament t 1s past un ay. s
.
But as the seconds ticked away,
· d
d t
groups:
_
one included Albany
1t
rew to an en , wo teams
··
the experience of the upper-
qualified for the tournament
.
classmen began to show on the State, Fordham University, Kean
championship. And both those
court. With 12 minutes left, College and the Marist "Red"
.
teams were from Marist.
sophomore Wayne Cargill pulled
.
squad. The other group saw
Marist entered two teams into goalie John Malatestinic out of
R.P.I.,
C.W. Post, Southern
h
.
o
II
d
Connecticut State and the Marist
·
t 1s tournament.
ne team ca e
the net with an a
_
ttempted shot,
d •
·
b
·
d
"White" squad.
'' Mari st
.
.
Re '
com me
then booted one into
·
the empty
sophomores, juniors, and senior
.
net, tying the score at 1-1.
·
Each team played the other
Tore Udahl. The other
.
team
;

teams in their respective groups,
"Marist White," was comprised
Cargille gave the "Red" squad
·
with the top two teams of each
Of
.
all fresh
.
men .and
_
sophomore
·
a 2~1 lead with 7:02 left in the
.
h
1
ff
B h
M .
game with assists
·
from Tim entering t e
P
ayo s
.
ot
·
arist
:
goalie John Malatestinic. So, as
Buchanon and Joe Vasile
-
Cozio a
.
teams won their th~
_
~e games to
both
.
teams entered the final
hold
.
. the. first place spot in their
gilm~;
'
bragging rights were on
:
the
.
.
)ead
,c
Jhat.._.was
.
.
·
never
.
·
.
:
·
to
:,:
.
be gfoups;·. Albariy'
·
State was
.
·
the
· ·
11·ne to s
·
ee
·
·
who
·
was the dom1·nant
relinquished.
h
·
f
G
ot er representative or
·
roup
-
class in Marist soccer

Tlie only other chance that the One while R.P
.I.
was the other
.
As both sides stood face to face
freshman .troops had occurred representative for Group Two.
·
at
·
mid
~
field on the indoor court
·
with a minute left as Adams
The first semi-final match saw
for the coin
toss
,
smiles quickly
blasted
a
direct kick from 20 feet the "White" squad shut-out
·
.
evaporated from the faces and out on net, but Warmhold was Albany State 4~0 as Adams scored
·
expressions of intensity
,
and
· ·
there this time with the hand save,
.
two of his eight goals of the day,
determination were showri
·
on
.
thus secudrig the victory

for the one as a result of a penalty kick.
each player's face.
·
upperclassmen'.
The other semi-final game
·
As the crowd· looked on, most
·
·
As the final buzzer sounded pitted R.P
.I.
against the "Red"
·
of, them pulling. for the "White . ending the 20 minute contest, all squad.
Sophomore
Timmy
squad," the freshmen troops
.
players congratulated each other Buchanon scored the lone goal of
dominated the early minutes of on
·
the fine abilities that were the game to set up the all
_
-Marist
this
.
championship match. With displayed. But the feelings that go final.
Tito Dia-z in action
(photo
by Gina
Franciscovich)
:-
Skiteam
·
meinbers reildy
_
for regionals
·
.
·.·
.
·-
·
'
.
:
.
-'
.
.
·-
~
.
:
· ·:\
·
The
·
entire women's ski team
·.
.
·
anci Kevin Samolis and Rich Klein
of the men's ieam travel to New
Hampshire this
.
weekend to
compete in the regional cham-
.
·
pionships and national qualifi~rs.
Cevasco, and Christine O'Dwyer
.
finished in the top 15 individually
Sports in brief
The team
·
finished third
·
·
last
and will continue
;
weekend, just three points ahead
"Kevin really has a
.
good
of
·
Yale, to
·
gain entry to the
·
chance to make it to the nationals
regionals.
said Morehouse, captain of this
The Marist

Hockey Team
skated to a 10
-
6 victory over
Kings Point last Wednesday
before a large crowd at the
McCann Ice Arena.
Nancy Morehouse leads the
women team which is comprised
.
The men's team finished fourth
year's team. "He just has to put a
overall
·
last weekend,

knocking
··
few good runs together
.
"
.
of
Nora
.
Mangione,
Beth
·
theni out of contention as a team.
·
Morehouse,
.
who

ended up
But, Kline and
-
Sam
_
olis both leading the McBrian League of
The first period was low on
·
· ·
·
·
'
·
·
·
the New England
'
Intercollegiate
goal scoring with Kings Point the
·
·
.
·
·
·
·
1)6
.
· ·
sk
·
1· Con
·
re
·
re
.
nee
·
1n po1·nts thi
·
s yea
·
r
first to score.
·
-Marist came back
· ·
_
.
.
:
-
--
~ f
IE
.
.
.
·
_
_
·
:
·.
:
with 158, and Samolis skiied in
two minutes

later with Rob
.
. the
:
regionals last
.
year but just
Trabulsi scoring his first of his
..
missed the nationals. Morehouse
·
five goals
.
He was assisted by Tim
.
finished 12th and Samolis
·
caine in
Graham
;
Trabulsi
·
again scored
·
17th. The'top 10 make it.
.•
assisted by Jini McDonald to give
MCM -
Happy, happy to you!
·
·
Hey Party Animals
·
(Gabe and
Love always, NEH
:
Gina)
.
- Why does your weekend
._
·
.. .
.
.
.
.
start on; Wedn~day and end on
·

Th
,
e bu~ wilt be
.
stoppm one week. Tuesday? D<;>n't you even .rest pn
··
from today. Good luck ~st and Sunday?
·
.
,
·
crew of "Bus Stop.
-the
Directors
Yo Adrienne- Women might be
better than girls
,
·
but where can
you find women on the Marist
campus? - Buu fuu you too-T

Buff -
·
How many pennies do
.
you have now? I hope it's worth
it!
To the follower D
.
E. -
I love
you, I want you. You are so
interesting. -
your sweetheart,
Ann Donnelly
·
·
Leo-I -At least the only women I
bring into my room are LADIES
(as opposed to some of yours)!-
Kevin Burke -
Keep the 26th of
???
·
March open. More details to
.
.
.
11
T"ff
.
come. - a secret admirer.
.
Good Luck at Waterv1 e.
.
1 1s
No.I GOGOGO!
.

.
.
.
Dad --- Thanks for always being
·
·
there
·
when
I
·
need you. Love,
Nise, Kate, Michele
·
-
Get any Broomie 20/20
hooch this weekend, girls?
.
.
.
H
.
p
.
·
.
.
Th k
~
b
.
NJM -
Thanks for everythmg.
·
ey
-
atu -
an
s 1or
emg
KAH
·
such a super
·
R.A.! Love, Bucko
-_....;
·
'-----'-'--'---'-_;:.;
•:
.
-
~
·
.-r--<..__
··
·
.,f,
.-
-,..,·
.,
·
-
.
·
-~-
·-
.
-
~
--
~-.:,.

:...
-

:
,
_
.•
.
~ ,
:
~
--
-

·
11

·
..
•·.
·
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
· Marist a period ending lead of 2-
Ih the regional
-
qualifiers
-
last
·
·
I.
· · •·
·
"
·
·
·
·
·
·- ·
··
weekend the women fared better
than· the men. In the gian
f
slolom,
·
Morehouse finished first with a
109.77, Mangione finished 13th at
132. I 9 and Cevasco ended at
168
.
60 in 21st place .
Jim
C
McDpnald opctned
_
up· the ·
scoring
.
in
.
:
the seconcV period
.
·
assisted
·
by
·,
Tony Cardone, but
Kings Point scored three minutes
later. Rob Caldiero scored late in
the second for Marist assisted by
Al Pette putting Marist on top 4-
2.
In
the sialom, Morehouse again
led with 70.22
,
Mangione came in
ninth at 83
.
08, O'Dwyer finished
16th with 91.75, followed by
The third period was marked
Cevasco's 103.35 for 20th place.
by end-to-end action. Marist got
In the men's giant slalom, Kline
three goals only seconds apart. At
finished 10th with 106
.
27, Bruce
2: 19 Rob Trabulsi scored assisted
McKean finished 27th at 124.61
by Tim Graham. Six seconds
and Scott Decker ended in 20th
later, Tim Graham
·
scored on
· h
118
10
s
r
f
n ·
passes from Brian Foley and Rob
place wit
· ; amo is e ·
Trabulsi. Then; 10
.
second later,
In the slalom, Marist finished
·
Rob Trabulsi scored
.
again
fourth, seventh,
·
17th and 20th.
The order of finish for the Foxes
assisted by Brian Foley.
was Samolis, Kline, McKeon and
For ·
the next several
.
.
weeks,
·
necker
'
respectively.
·
• ..
· -
/
:''
·
,
·Marist College students will have
_.
~
,.,:_;
t
_
;
.
••

,.
·
·.·
;
~...;
;'I.
·
,
.
-
·
.
..
_.
:

-

· ... ;,,
.
.
·
;
,

~
-,:.-
.
_•t
·
_
-
_!
;..-.-
'
::. ·~
,
--
~
;
,•.
~-
-
:
;,'.
S •
.
_

• .,.
.
·

--
the
.
opportunity to "bowl" over
any dilemmas that might surface
during the semester in the Marist
CoHege
·
Intramural bowling
league .
The league
·
consists of
po
·
members
··
of the Marist corn-
munity.
·.
There are 30 different
teams, with each team consisting
of four members.
·
The bowling takes place at Hoe
bowl on Route 9G in Hyde Park,
every Thursday night from 9:30 -
12:30. Hoe Bowl has ~greed
to
clear out
.
all its

lanes every
Tuesday night.
i
"We are
·f
working on school
provided transportation· at the
moment," said Treasurer Tom
Morton.
·
The cost of $3.50 includes three
games and a pair of bowling
shoes
.
Fifty cents out of that fee
will go into a pot that will sponsor
the awards banquet at the end of
the year.
Last Tuesday was the league's
first night
.
..
of bowling. The high
triple for the men was recorded by
sophomore John Marson
·
with a
558. High
·
triple for a
,
girl was
.
544, rolled by Stacey Renwick.
Freshman mentor
·
Bob Lynch
rolled the high game
·
of the
·
·
evei:iin$ wit~ a
-
223;
··

,,,















































































i
'(
'{
...
,
i
f
·,
~
t
·~
'
i
·~
.
_,.
. ,• .. :P'1• 1~-·.
TH_E C_IRCLE •
:Februar, ..
24,
.1983-----------------~----------~-~--~ ... ---
J:,i;()}S:.~s
Jly~ng~
Ios~;
<
women .
Sfilit1i
n~ars 2
000 .
ii:fie
2 .
.
· '
.·.
.
. .
·
.
·
.
'
.
.
.
b)'JoeDlilziulls:· ·
·
dunks two'ofthem within the last
1,
.·,•n·
•.. ·. ·-·a·.·
.
:,o••w•
_
·

.
.
•·.··
.
··
'
· . . · ·
minute- of play .. His last dunk, a
,., .
v.'
.: The M11risrRed Foxes-M.bnday picture~perfect reverse,. earned
avenged . their .. loss earlier · this
him

technical foul for hanging
-month to the St. Frands Terriers on to the rim. Terrier Edger
· by pulling otit a 66-61 decision in DeLaRosa could not convert the
an ECAC Metro basketball game.
technical foul shot and the game
-Marist's record is now 10-13 · ended Marist 66, St. Francis 61.
and
S~6
in the Metro conference.
Last Saturday . the. Marist Red ··
St. Francis ,~rops to 5-6 in_ the
Foxes· basketball team defeated
Metro while having a 8-15 record
the Loyola Greyhounds· in a
o.verall. : ,. .:.-. . _
'
. brawl-filled game i~ Maryland
Marist
·•
will play its . home
77-65. Steve Smith led all scorers
season's last game at 8 p.m.
with 22 .points while Ted Taylor
Saturday
against
Farleigh
led under the boards with 10
Dickinson.
.
·
rebounds.. Dave Urban paced .
Senior Steve Smith, who had
toyola with 16 points and Kevin
1,966 career points going into last
House chipped in 8 rebounds for
night's game against Vermont, ..is
the losers.
expected to top the 2,000-point
· Marist controlled the tip-off
mark Saturday.
· and at the . 18:28 mark .Chris
Smith · led the Red Foxes
Metcalf made a
.
lay-up
to
put
Monday with 19 points and
11
Marist in the lead for good. In
rebounds. Tom Meekins . and
less than five minutes Marist
Keith Denis chipped in 12 points
established a 9 .point lead, and
each while .. Ted Taylor pulled
with six· minutes left.in the half
down 8 under the · boards.
the Red Foxes. had upp.ed tlie lead
Lorenzo . Distant . paced . the to 17. · By the
tirne
the half ended
Terriers with· 20 points · and
7 .
Loyola managed to trini the lead
rebounds while ·Julian McKelly
down to 10 but not before Keith
scored 14 and rebounded 14.
Denis slam-dunked twice in• the ·
The first half saw both teams
finatsix minutes of play in .the
get the lead only to lose it. Marist
half. At the half Marist led 34-24.
built up a 6-2 lead early on only to
. Iri the first
hiilf
Marist shot
have St, Francis .lead 18-11 eight
61.50/o from the field compared to
minutes later. Marist managed to Loyola's 27.60/o. From the line
keep things close arid by the time Marist was 2-4 while the
the half had ended St. Francis led
Greyhounds·were8-12.
by one, 26-25.
Loyola attempted a come-back
Keith Dennis slams two points In recent Marist game.
In the second half the Red
in the early second half and
Foxes, in · the words of Marist
managed to cut the Red Fox lead
Head Coach Ron Petro, "came down _to
5.
But a three-point play
final buzzer the score was Marist
out smoking." After a slightly lax
by Steve Smith killed the 77 and Loyola 65.
second half start, · the Foxes Greyhound rally and Marist soon
Overall Marist was 32~56 from
picked up momentum and were
had a
comfortable margin · the field, 13-21 · from the line,
exchanging the lead with the ranging from
10
to 19 points.
there were -38 team rebounds and
Terri ors. · Marist 'managed to
At the -14:50 • margin, Loyola's
4 deadball rebounds. Loyola was
break away from St. Francis and Steve Rossiter and Marist's Chris
25-65 from the field, 15-21 from
stretch the lead to five points.
Metcalf were ejected from the
the.· line; there were .33 . team
In the last five and ·one-half . game for fighting. But tlie scuffle
rebounds
and
3
deadball
(photo
by
John Bakke)
Boxscore:
St. Francis, N\' (61)
DeLaRosa 2-0-4,
Washington S-1-11,
Distant 9-2-20, Graham 1-0-2, Jackson S-0-
10, McKclly 5-4-14.
Marist(66)
Meekins 5-2-f2, Denis 6-0-12, Johnson 3-2-
8, Smith 9-1-19, Taylor 1-0-2, Donovan
2-
3-7, Me1calf3-0-6.
minutes ofp,l~y;penis m1td.e_tht'ee· sparked the Red Fox~:and at the .. · rc;bo~nds. ,,:•.'
:-
~
..
coach.
r.eady
t0Jiea1
1clCroSse
team
froUbies
. by
Mike
Graney
iot of spirit and dedication in the
kids," said Riklin. "And for a
The Marist College lacrosse
non-scholarship school, we have a
team was feeling
ill
about the · lot of talent."
upcoming season until a certain
Last years disappointing·--4-7
person decided to make
.
a ·.record seemed to stem from poor
hbusecall.
performances
by
Marist
Jeff · Riklin,
a physicians goaltenders. This year freshman
assistant at nearby Green Haven · PaulEttera will be in the riet for
Prison, is the new head··coach for
the Red Foxes, and what Coach
.the 1983 season.
Riklin has seen -
he likes. "Paul
Rikliri; 32, will be dealing with
shows good movement; a keen
a. relatively inexperienced,squad, .. knowledge of.the game, and most
. thanks tc:> the Joss .· of twelve
importantly, he has no fear of the
pl~yers who graduated last year. .
ball/' said Riklin. ··.
·
·
· Riklin
sees
the inexperience as a
· Riklin has five years of lacrosse
plus nota disadvantage:
"I
see a
coaching already :under his belt.
His first two years· were as the
assistant varsity coach at Rye
High School during the 1974 and
1975 seasons.· He then moved on
to another assistant position, but
this· was at Boston University.
After two years -at B.U., he was
named the· head coach for
women's lacrosse - at.· Cornell
University in 1980.
He stayed at Cornell for one
season, then was out
.
of the game
for tw<> years. On February 1,
1983, he was officially named
head lacrosse coach at Marist.
Helping out Riklin in his initial
campaign
will
be a graduate of
last years team, Pete Jackson.
Jackson points out how he likes
the fact that Riklin is stressing
fundamentals. . "He (RikHn)
. knows he inherited a very young
. team, . so he is starting from the
beginning, -
fundamentals,"
explained Jackson.
The 20~man . squad practices
- every night at the Mccann Center
,
for two hours. Coach Riklin has
five weeks to preparefor his first
. game, which
will
be. on March 28
against visiting City College .of
New York.
by Holly Sneel
'
,.
,On Saturday, February 19, the
Marist Women's basketball team
facedMonmotith College in a key
Cosmopolitan Conference battle,
but was handed a 67-40 loss and
lost the home-court advanfage for
the first · round. of the upcoming
playoffs.:
.
. . .·
· .
As a result, . the Marist Red
Foxes dropped to :fifth place,
sporting an 11-13, 2-3 record thus
far in the season.
The game was marked by poor
shooting-from the·outside as well
as under the basket, with less than
half of all the field goal attempts
successfully being completed.
With 12 points under her belt in
the game, Ursula Winter was the
high scorer . against' Monmouth,
hitting more than her
10.3
average points per game.
· Lynne Griffin had
10
points,
and is currently the leader of the
Red· Foxes in scoring with an
average of 14.0 points, 4.6 assists
and 3.2 steals per game.
Three nights earlier the women
dropped another crucial league
game to Wagner, 85-69, at
Wagner's Sutter Fieldhouse. The
game was a shootout between
Wagner's Dierdre Oglesby and
Marist's Lynne Griffin. Oglesby
won by a shot, with a game-high
31 points, ll-for-16 shooting
from the field, and 17 points in
the second half. Griffin was right
behind with 29 points, including
13 from the floor, and a vicious
fusillade of
10
straight points in
the second half.
The She-hawks took the early
lead on the strength of 22
unanswered · points in the first
half, giving them a 37-13 lead
with 5:21 left in the half. Marist
then outscored'Wagner;·
11~6;
to
make it43-30 at halftime.
In the second half, thanks to a
12--0 spurt keyed mostly by
Griffin's rapid-fire heroics, the
Red Foxes· . drew within five
points, 49-44, with 13:43 left.
MARIST(89)
Jones 4 2-2, 10, Winter 8 8-918,
Sliva 3 1-2 7, Griffin 13 3-3 29,
· Hrebenak 0
0-0
0, Walega O 1-1
1,
lacullo 0 ·0-0 0, Stempsey 2 0·0 4.
Totals 2813-17 89.
WAGNER(85)
Bonforte 8 4-8 20, Foster 5
O·O
10,·Paterno 4 7•915, McCormick 0
4-4 4,
Oglesby 119-1131, Jackus 0
0-1 O, Carmody 21·2 5, Butler 0 0-0
o.
Totals 30 25-33 85.
Halftime score: Wagner 43,
Marlst30.
·
Foxfire
Every<>ne's been waiting forthe
moment . when the Red Foxes
really come alive. There have
been · some brief instances along
the way 6ut nothing like this. This
time it's for real. The· Red Foxes
are on fire.
· You could see it against St.
Francis Monday night in the
McCann Center.
y
OU
could see it on the bench as
Adam Cohen jumped up and
cheered a bucket by Tom
Meekins. You could see it on the
court midway through the second
half as John Donovan grabbed a
rebound, smothered the ball and
twisted emphatically as if to say,
"noone is getting this ball from
me." He had fire in his eyes. ·
Then just seconds later, you
could see it as Ted Taylor raced
full court and slapped an easy two
points away; before crashing to
the floor. And then you could see
it as Keith Denis slam-dunked
three times to preserve the vie-
throwing objects~ but that showed
tory.
,
a spirit. ·
· ·
· ..
But most of all you could see it· · The pep band· was. becoming a
and feel it in the stands. The fans band without the pep. And · the
have been waiting for something cheerleaders
-
couldn't · solve ··• the
to cheer about. You can sense it problem; Even the season ticket
and it shows.
holders were leaving seats vacant.
• t
Lack of enthusiasm and ex-
Everyone · Just· waiting for .. a
citement has been missing from reason to attend ..•. something to_
the McCann Center this season. happe1_1. _The band can't do.it, nor:
Only 768 fans showed up for the the cheerleaders nor the Fox.
It
St. Francis game. That's one of had to happen on the court .•. and
the smallest of the season. Last · it finally has.. -
· ·
year a game against St. Francis
Last week Keith Denis got into
packed the stands. But this year
a:
scuffle with. one of the Rider
it's different.
. College players.·
It
was an or-
The team is having problems dinary scuffle. No· punches
and the fans wait for them to be thrown, just a lot of words; Denis
solved. Some just can't wait.
calmly walked away (no ·wonder
Slowly the crowds are getting -
the guy was 6'5;', 250) and ·
smaller and the excitement and without realizing it then, lit the
spirit is diminishing. There is a
Red Fox fire.
noticeable lack of attendance.by·
The crowd roared with en-
the students. And what happened thusiasm as . Meekins converted
to the Zoo Crew?
·
the technical fouls and Marist
Even the traditional tossing of \rolled to victory. Then, a few
toilet paper after Marist's first nights later, fire struck again.
basket is gone. I don't condone
't,.farist was soundly beating
)
·Loyola,
44-31
with
14:50
remaining in the game when.two
brawls broke out.
Marist's Denis had just fouled
Loyola's Kevin Hicks when.Chris
Metcalf suddenly began fighting
with the • Greyhounds Steve
Rossiter. As the two benches
cleared,
including
players,
coaches and
.
team managers
running onto the court, the of-
. ficials broke up the fighfand both
players were ejected . from the
game. But that was'only the
beginning.
·.
·
· ·
. The teams returned to their
respective benches; which were
the first row of the bleachers. But
just when the Marist players were
ready to sit down, another fight
broke out this time · between
Marist players and fans seated
right behind.
Apparently a fan tried to make
his way between Gil Padilla and
Rufus Cooper who were seated.
As the fan pushed through, the
fight broke out. Players squared
off with · fans and the brawl
· pushed into the group of Marist
cheerleaders. During the fight,
Jim Norman, theMarist Red Fox,
had his fox head taken.
Again, like in the Rider game,
Marist stormed its way to victory.
Then came St. Francis Monday
night, and now the fire still burns.
The fire is new, but it looks
genuine. The Foxes have to prove
they can beat the teams they may
face in the upcoming playoffs,
which are the top teams in the
Metr~South Conference.
They're proven they _can beat
St. Francis. Now they must defeat
Fairleigh Dickinson on Saturday
night in McCann.
. There is no excuse for the spirit
to be missing from the Mccann
Center anymore. The fans have
been waiting and now the time
has come. The Foxes have lit the
fire, they just have to keep it
burning.


28.14.1
28.14.2
28.14.3
28.14.4
28.14.5
28.14.6
28.14.7
28.14.8
28.14.9
28.14.10
28.14.11
28.14.12