The Circle, April 21, 1983.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 28 No. 18 - Apirl 21, 1983
content
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Volume
28,
Numbiir 18
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Mar/sf
College,
Poughkeepsie,
N.Y.
·
·
April
21, 1983
~kJnn.er'sistqri.et
..
of
J8
Special
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.
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by C~stlne Dempsey
,.
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. •·
·
·
from
-
.38 Special: an
.
album that · Route 9 during
his
search, Gerber
·
··•
·
· -•
.. } < ·
. _
·
'
·
•
·.
.
·
reached Billboard's top
·
twenty
picked Skinners, which he said
Sp~ingsteen has Asbury Park,
·
last fall.
.
:
··
,.
.
·
·
>
.
·
. • ·
··.•.
looked like a "college~type bar.
u
-,:
·.
Billy J_~I ha
.
s Allentown, Lynard
•<
The album illustrator;
·
Larry
Although the bar depicted in
.
•
.
Syn
_
a!d
·
~as Alabama and
:
.38
Gerber, Hopeweli Junction, said
the upper right-hand corner of the
!
·•·.
,
)>l>C.~tal
-:!_
~a;
"·
PQughkeepsie
.
. .
that
.
he ""'.ent looking
:
around
.
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build_ing _a~d the
·
~eli
~
tale
_
inan-
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r.
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Gou!{lt~ee~s1
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Poughkeeps1_e for bars that would
"
!lequmJeg m th~ wmdow reveals
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-
~oµgh~eeps1e s
:
very
-
own
·
~e
:
app_ropnate
Jor
-
the cover
:
1~
:
tr':'e identity as
_
Skinners,
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S~mners is
_
featured on the
.
cover
.
.
·
dlustrat1on.
. ..
.
.
•
which 1s not a franchise.
.
.
-
.
;
t-
.,.
_
-
·
ar
_
t
-
~f the .latest albuit( r~lea~e
_.,;
After driving up
_
and down
_
-
-
-
_
S_kinners
was
·
·
not
·
officially
.
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.
~~t1fied of the bar's ap~rance
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Slc:inners
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,
focal
-
busiiies~~s;
.,
both from the
•
·
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~ioes
big tini~ as coverart for
a
top-selliniaibuni.
_
(plioto
b)'
.:
.
-
·
.
.
.
:
Grand
·
:
:
Union
:
mall
·
11
(
Fishkill,
'.
-
Christine Dempsey)
•
>-
-
-
·
said Stew Schantz WP.DH radio
·
-' :~
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stat~
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disc jo,ckey:
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cVertisirig
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a~ency
-
of
_
.,
_A&M
•
portrayed
·
the group's
·
name, .38
_ _
,_
·
•
Gerbei'notoruy confirmed
;_
that·
'
Records
/
·
·
:':_:_:;-
,
,
,
_
.
..
,
..
.
.
Special; on the album
.
cover was
>
-
Ile .
dre\V
/
tl:iese
_:,'.
building~
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but
- •
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.
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ha~
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JO
'.
,
follow certam
·
not intend~d to rese_mble.a gun:
_
In
t!:,c
added
,
that
,
he stibjectively'.picked
spfc•f~~t1on
_
s
,
from
.:.
the album
.
fact, he sa1~ that smce the group
~
:
loi=aLpeopl
_
e
•
right
.
9ff
.
the
.
streets .
.
compani5~;
_
'.
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he saip, !idding that
;
is n~w "going ~.ational," they are
.
forthecover.
-
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·
.,,.:,:_..,
,
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he
_,
was
;
g1ven a prehm111ary rough
·
.
&'trymg
·
to get nd of the southe
,
rn
\<
'"The people
·::c
for the
_
album
,
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sketcb
,
_
.
.wit.h
.:
stick
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.
figures
fo
·
rock image.t'
.·
-
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.
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- ·
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cov.~r
.:
were
,
.
~hot
:
insi<l
,
e
:-
my
:,:
follow.
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Sev~ral
-
cha!1ges were mvolved
..
house,'
t.
~
said Gerber,
_
whcf added•
\ i
The peopJe in the background
·
m the dlus
_
trauon process,- Gerber
that
·
aforie point in
.
·
his artistic
·
ofthe picture are supposed to be
-
said .
.
He added that he drew the
·
,
.
endeavors he had a
~
whole group
.
"rough-looking,"
-
Gerber said.
·
·
scene five different times before it
of models in his
•
house
at
the same
He also said that he picked a gym was right.
,
·.
,
-
time;
· ·
-
-
teactiei: forthe girl whose
_
back is
:
_
. ·
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-- ._
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Gerber said
'
that he got
.
the job
turned
.
to the
~
viewer. '.'They
_<.i
:
Gerber'is continuing his local
_
_
to illustrate the cover of "_Special
(A&M
Records) wanted someone artistry; a ci.lrrefifproject o
,
f his is
.
Forces" tllrough
•
·
his
!
represen-
with a gooci body, ,.
-
Gerber said.
.'
a
·
.
blue-jeans ad for v•hic
,
h
:
his
tative,_ who spoke
.
to
·
the ad-
Gerber also said that the way he
·
models posed on his front lawn
,
-
:
<
~~x-tial
hafassinent:
~
questi9n
of
·
defirtitiOn
"
_
by Ja~quellne Pisani
sexual sugge
.
sti
-
ons
-
.
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j~k~s
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others i!iterviewed for this story
friendly nature and that she
,-
incident changed
:
her
.
entire
.
"-
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. -
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·•
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·.-·
·
directed atthe student because of
·
asked to
_
_
r~_main anonymous,
·
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became dedicated to working for
:
academic career at Marist .
.
;
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c
(:
_
Whe~
·
'as'ked his ~dvice by his
'
_
'
his/tier_gendet.
1
_ •
_._
.
·
·
:
_
recalls
·
the
.
-
time she
-
was
him
:
When she was alooe in his
·
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Another female student told of
.
:
,
:
student, the profess
-
or suggested
At Marist College there are no propositioned by a college of-
office he would comment ori her
·
her mandatory meeting with a
·
that sh~ wear a tight sweater when
·'
verifiable statistics pertaining to
_
ficial. As she recalls_the incident:
looks and personal life;
.
_
·
professor, who appeared to be
·
:
going
'·
on an
:
interview•
A
·
teachers who sexually harass th~ir
"He asked me to go to bed. He
It then went a step further:
intoxicated at the time of the
·
humorous comment or sexual
;
students. According to the Ilev. treated me on his level and didn't
"I was the~e by myself and he
-
incident:
·
-
~
harassment?
·
·
- -
Richard LaMorte, assistant dean talk down to me or threaten me:
It
-
was
·
sitting riex
·
t to
·
me. H~
:
..
We briefly discussed the
·
-
·
:-°
A.college official working on a
·
or studerit affairs, there is not a
-.:.
seemed as if he felt two mature
complained that his back was
group
.
project. He then started
-
committee with a female student
·
great degree of sexual harassment
·
adults
-
were sitting together. •
hurting him. He then walked into
asking
.
questions about our
•
•
asked her if she would be willing
-
on this campus.
.
·
:
'.
.
_
wasn't
a
student
·
to him at that
his office arid laid down on the
personal life
·
especially with
·
to
·
sleep
:
with
.•
.
him.
A
friendly
Gerard Cox, dean of stud~nt point.
.
..
·
,
floor and asked for a back rub. I
regards to relationships with the
proposition
<
-
or
·
sex
-
ual
··
affairs," said, "I wouldn't venture
·
"I was shocked because I had
_
don't know if he was drinking or
·
opposite sex:
·
·
·
·
_
harassment?
: .
.
.
.
.
.
at how widespread the problem is:
.
.
no idea that those thoughts were
.
what was in his
_
head. I just
"I was offended by his attitude
·
An administrator speaking to a
a"
lf
I were to base it on the number on
-
his mind. It bothered me
·
·
walked out .
.
It s::emed to much
and he picked up on this and
studenC inquired
-
if she was
·
of
·
students who
··
came
·
to me because I
am
a student, and the
like a scerie out of the movies. It
started railing me about
.
how
wearing a bra. Acasual comment
personally, I wouldn't say there individual should have respected - makes me nauseous to
.
think
·
uptight I was. I was shocked. I
or sexual harassment?
was
-
a major problem, but I do me not to put me in that
about it.
didn't think he had any right to
According to the President's
recognize that even a small case is situation."
·
_
"The situation scared me. I
carry on that way. It was really
National Advisory Council on
serious."
The student said after this
·
thought, is this the way it's going
·
sleazy."
Women's Education, sexual
incident the individual
-
in question
to be for the rest of my life when I
The student said that any
harassment cari
·
be classified
While no cases of forced sexual apologized but that the situation
work for a man?
_
respect she had for the professor
under
>
four
headings:
•
sexual
relations were discovered by The with him is currently awkward.
·
After this
.
situation, the in-
vanished. She said she was just
crimes, forced
_
sexual relations by
Circle~ several female students
•
Another female student work_ed
di vi dual
·
continued to
_
·
make
glad to get out of his class.
threat of punishment,
.
explicit
.
reported being harassed
_
verbally under
·
an administrator
.
for two
suggestive comments, she said.
It is not unusual for women to
sexual proposition at
·
times
·
by male instructors and ad-
years before an incident of this
He then acted aloof towards her.
avoid
.
discussing the subject of
backed by the promise of a
ministrators.
nature arose
.
She said that she
She did not wish to elaborate on
sexual harassment for -fear
.
of
reward,
_
or any crude, verbal
One student, who like the
.
was impressed by his sincere and
the effects, but she said that the
ConUnu~
_
on page7
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Page
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THE CIRCLE• April21, 1983
_
Ri11gs,
·
race
-
.
highlight
.
·
Weekend
:
Two
··
GOOD
-
-
;
DEALS
.
T·HAT
cA
·
N~r
:
_
ee.·eEAT
·
!
:
by Chris Serafini
::
Approximately 140 juniors will
receive their class rings this
Saturday night during a cer~mony
that
will highlight Parents'
·
Weekend.
.
.
.
.
'
The weekend's activities
·
of-
ficially will start on Friday at
2:15
p.m. with the Annual M
_
emorial
.
Service. The service
will
com-
memorate deceased students of
Marist and will be held at the
g
·
rotto. The ceremony will be
conducted by
Fr.
·
Richard
LaMorte and is sponsored by
Omega ,Society
_
.
·
·
A
student coffeehouse
will then
follow at 8:30 p.m
.
in the Fireside
Lounge. The show, •
.
vhich was
organized by .sophomore Sue
Dolan, will feature student talent.
"The music will all be mellow
.:,,.ith ab
s
olutely no rock arid
.
ron;,•
·
Betty Yeagliit, coordinator
·
of this
weekend's
.
coffeehouse and
dinner-dance; said.
.
Saturday's activities will
·
begin
at 7:30 a.m. with the President's
Cup Regatta
.
to
.
be
.
held at the
.
·
·
waterfront
'.
The"_ Ma~ist crew will
r
.
.·
:
·
:--
.
.
.
.
compete
:
in the regatta, the second
r
. .
. .
·
1argestiri
t
he
.
sfate
:
·
:·
·:.
. . ·
·
Parents visiting the
·
campus this
·
Saturday will be able to do some
shoppirig
'in
thttBookstore, which
will be open from H:OO
·
a.in. to
3:00
p.m.
At
2
:
30
.·
p.m
:
,
·
guests
will be
·
able to visit the residence
halls which will be conducting a
r
series of informal open houses.
r
The afternoon will come to an end
I
with a Mass in the Chapel at 5:30
p.m.
.
The Junior Ring Ceremony will
be conducted in the Chapel at
··
·
7:00
p.m.
Saturday night. Th~
....0
••.• ,:
'
"
"
:
!
.
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..
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.
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_ey~rf.t_
_y;_
as
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g~~~Ei-1:
,
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;
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.
-
.
·.
·
·
·
Class Officers,
_
Gerara
Cox
,
aean
·
·
of
'
Stiideitt
·
Affairs
/
ind .
Grace
Sinisi .
.
The
'
actual ceremony wiil
i
-
be very similar to those
.
of past
years, according to Cox, with the
'
'
one exception being the
_
reception
immediately following. "In the
past, the reception was always
held in the library," Cox said.
"This year, it will be held in the
Campus Center to accommodate
the crowd."
Two separate receptions will be
held at'8:0O
p.m.
The
firstwill
only be for juniors
·
and their
.
guests and
·
wm be held
·
in the
.
Fireside Lounge, The second will
be open to all guests of the college
and will serve as
·
a cocktail hour
before the dinnei-
~
dance. This
reception will be held in the Pub.
Saturday's
activities
"'
will
conclude with the dinner-dance to
be held at
9:00
•
p.m. in
_
the
cafeteria. Over
300 people . are
. expected to attend, according to
Yeaglin. Guests
will
dine on
prime rib dinner while listening to
the music of the band
R
.
P.M.
.
.
·
The weekend's planned events
.wiH conc_lude on Sunday with a
Mass at
11 :00 a.ni. in the Chapel.
"Preparations for this weekend
have been going on all year," Cox
said. "I'm sure it will be a sue-
cess."
Parents' weekend
Friday:
2:15 .. Student
·
Memorial
Service at Grotto
8:30 . . S t u den t
Ta
I en t
Coffeehouse
at
Fireside Lounge
Saturday:
7
:
30 .. President
'
s-
Cup
-
Regatta
al
lhe
Waterfront
5:30 . . Mass at Chapel
7:00 .. Junior
Ring
Ceremony at Chapel
8:00 .
.
Junior Ring Reception
at Fireside Lounge
8:00 . . Cocktail Party at Pub
9:00 .. Dinner
Dance
at
Dining Room
Sunday
:
11:00
.
Mass at Chapel
.
at
·
McD
·
onald
·
s
of-
Hyde
.
Park
.
.
Sundays Specials!
ggc
··
Al·I
-
the
.
Hotc
:
akes
.
.
Voll Call Eat!
PLUS
•
·
is ta
.
kin
·
g application
·
s
·
1or
·
.
·
-
the following:
Committee Chairp8rsoris:
·
Concert
.
Coffeehouse
·
Performing Arts
·
Vide,9tape
·
Film
so
·
cial
·
.:;
·
.
'
;
- .
·
'
Lectt1re
.
.
.
>
.
Marketingl~dvertising
Duties ofCommittee Chairpersons are to direct
all
events
..
within their respective areas; to
_
be re$ponsibl~
.
for
·
.
stimulating and coordinating in conjunction with hisih_er
own committee events, any other authorized organiza-
:
·
tion with events in their respective·areas; to form a com-
_
,
·
mittee
.
to carry out the duties of his /her position
·
anc;t to
.
be
.
responsible tor
.
adhering
.
.
.
to his/her
.
committees•
·
budgetary limitations throughout the year .
.
·
· ·
·
·
·
_
Appllcatlons:
.
,
being
.
accepted through
.
the
.
Coordinator of College
.
Ac-
-
tlvnlas Office. Daadllne for ap-
pllcatlons Is Tuesday Aprll 26,
1983.
''Th, Strength
of
any
·
group
!s
·
:
.
;ii
,
Jts
·peop/8;,
·
'
".'.,,
_
-
/.,
•
::
APPLY
'
TODAYt
}
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:C:
·
:',
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-~-
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::
.
DRINKS
'
- FOOD - MUSIC _11 :00
a.m·. :
4:00
a:m.
SANDWICHES 11
_
:00
a
-
.m. -
8:30
p.m.
Rte. 9 PoUghkeepsie
914-473-4725
•
1
•
•
,
'
r
:
Williams
to retire
-,
.from
Marist
by Maria'Azzolina -
The Rev.
Rhys
Williams,
association professor of religious -
. studies, has -announced. that he
will retire in May, ending 17 years
at Ma_rist.
Williams said that he and his
wife will move to their second -
home in Cape Breton; Nova
Scotia, where they have _
spent
almost ·13 summers. The home is
a 350-acre farm, with 30 acres of
land currently under cultivation.
When Williams is not farming,
he will continue working on a
book he is writing about the New
Testament. The purpose of the
book is to enable the lay-person to
better understand the gospels. In
addition, Williams said lie will
lecture occasionally at a nearby
college, and also do substitute
parish work. "Once you've been a
priest, you never stop,'.• he said.
While some. people view
retirement as an end, Williams
disagrees. "Retirement is•simply a -
.
career change. I see
it
as a new
beginning," he said. "My wife
and I have been looking forward
to this for some time, but you·
have to wait until it's financially
possible," Williams added.
Student Terri Tobin confers with Rev. Rhys Williams, who
will be retiring at the semester's end. (photo by Gina Fran- ·
ciscovich) ·
·Elevator-s to be built
into Campus· Center
by Lynn Gregorski
electric wheel chair into that
space.
Perreira
said
that
An elevator designed for the
Giovannone has
the largest
handicapped will be installed in _
wheelchair on campus, and by
Campus Center in seven to eight
using him they could determine
months, according to Ed\\'.ard
how well a wheelchair can be
Waters, vice president for ad-
manuevered in that space and if
ministration and finance.
there is room for an attendant.
The 4½ 'x 6' elevator cab will
Giovannone said that the first
transport one student in a wheel
model they showed him was very
chair and one attendant to all
impractical because it was small
four levels of Campus Center: the
and cheap. He said after trying
bookstore,
mailroom,
main
out
his
chair within
the
entrance to Champagnat and
measurements they found that
Fireside Lounge levels.
there was no way it would work.
The elevator shaft will be built
Maneuvering
into the L~shaped jag or notch in
The second model Giovannone
the exterior walls of the Campus
was shown had a larger cab size
Center building. The jag can be
which gave more room to
viewed from the far right win-
maneuver his wheelchair, he said.
dows facing the west in the main
The total· cost of the elevator
lobby of Champagnat.
which includes the construction of
The elevator cab, designed by · the elevator shaft closure and the
the Dover Elevator Co., will have
installation, is estimated at
two entry ways and an electric eye - $100,000 to $105,000, according
that prevents the doors from
to Anthony Campilii, business
closing when a wheel chair is
officer. He said that every year
1970. In addition to the scripture
According to Williams, his passing through, said Diane
the college sets aside the budget
courses, over the last 13 years Marist years have changed him Perreira, director of the special
for
major
projects
and
Williams has taught courses on somewhat. "I'm much more services program.
renovations. Campilii said the
Western Religious Traditions, aware of what students go
The elevator will be equipped
cost will be amoratized from the
The History of World Religions,
through in order to learn," he with a tone indicator that signals
project budget over a period of
Theology, or Religious Thought; said. "I'm more conscious now of a person who is visually impafred
three years, costing $35,000 per
and Applied Ethics of Science and th~ learning process and student when the elevator has stopped and
year. He said this enables the
Medicine, just to name a few.
concerns," Williams added.
what floor it is on, she said. The college to do more projects each
In 1966, Williams was rector of
Williams said that lie will miss control panel will have a tactile
year. Campilii said there will be
Christ Church in Poughkeepsie,
Williams said he riever tried to most of all the people that he's numeric system that any person an additional annual cost of
when he came to Marist as a part-
estimate how many hours of his very· fond of at Marist. "I've can understand and use, said
maintenance contract with Dover
time faculty member. Williams
life he has spent teaching. "How formed a lot of good friendships Perreira. Waters said that the Elevator Company for normal
said he was asked to come to
do you measure teaching?" he here, and it will be hard for me to elevator will be accessible only to repairs and preventive main-
Marist to teach courses on The
asked. "As much goes on outside leave," he said.
handicapped students · who will
tenance.
Old and New Testaments, which
the classroom as well as inside,"
There is, however, one thing have keys to use it.
Benefits
were then required of all Catholic
Williams added. He said he has that Williams will be glad to leave
40-foot hole
"I think the college is putting it
freshmen students.
been teaching formally at the
1•
behind. "Committee meetings are
Internal and external con-
in just to benefit the students,"
Williams was asked to become
college and seminary levels for 22 the wor·st . .They're terrible, but struction will take place on every
said Perreira. She said about 12
a full-time faculty. member in
academic years._
. necessary evils," Williams said.
level of the building, according to .. students will be well served by the
...
_
. -
- . .
- . .
.
- . >-., :
·.•
_ , , - ·-,
< _ - .
·· - . . .
Perreira.,.Slle said th_~t fo~r :w~lls : elev_ator-,. but it wiU also ,benefit
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have to be knocked out and a · the general public.
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a 40-foot hole wdl be dug .to·· the past many social events were
accommodate the elevator design._ inaccessible to handicapped
He said that if rock is hit while students, particularly events in
digging, a new elevator design the theater, she said. Perreira said
will
have to be chosen.
she hopes by November,
1983
the
by Laura Reichert
Excessive heat which damaged
clothes and resulted in
a:
fire last
•- ·· month was caused by insulation .
stuck in a vent in Campus €enter
dryers.
The fire occurred March 28
after several students had
complained of having found their
laundry smoldering in the dryers,
said Resident-
Director
Mike
Bowman. The students' -clothes
were destroyed by the fire. There
were
no injuries. ·
Earlier in the semester, after
students complained about the
heat . in -the dryers, Housing
Director Robert Heywood had the
heat settings of the dryers checked
. by-the Sherman Furniture Store;
which supplied the dryers, said
Bowman. The inspectors told
college officials that· the settings .
were within the proper limits, he
said.
Clothing continued to be
damaged and there were about six
more complaints after the in-
spection, said Bowman. When
Sherman Furniture was notified
again, the . owner of the store
blamed the damages on misuse of
the machines. Students were
Word processor
to aid freshmen
blamed for overloading the
dryers, not cleaning them out
properly and drying the '"wrong"
kind of clothes, said Bowman. He
added· that students can't clean
. ·out the dryers because they can't
open the locked doors at the
_bottom of the dryers where lint
collects.
. by Jane M. Scarchilli
·. Eighty freshmen will be taught
basic writing with the' use of the
IBM - word processor_ in an ex-
~
perimeht this fall to help urgrade
students' English, according to
Milton Teichman, professor of
English.
Teichman is responsible for
initiating the experiment.
The word-processing system
enables students to type · their
assignme1_1ts into a computer,
make revisions, and get a printout
at
a
much faster rate than using a
typewriter,
according
to
Teichman.
.
The 80 ·students will be chosen
at -random and an additional 80
will be used as a control group.
The control gn;,up will be given
the same assignments, but will not
be able to use the word processor
to make revisions.
The faculty will compare
results of the two groups to
determine which students showed
better quality in their work. The
faculty, according to i:eichman,
will see which group improved
during the semester.
.
· The reason for trying out a new
system is due to the faculty's
_ complaints that the quality of
writing is ppor, according to
Teichman. "Poor writing is still -
common on this campus; even by
those who have taken the writing
courses," he said.
The printer types at ap-
proximately 500 -words per
minute, according to Tei_chman.
The students are able to remove
and add lines, sentences and
paragraphs in a few seconds
instead of retyping an entire page,
Teichman said. "Teacher time
will be used more · efficiently
because t_hey won't be spending
time with mechanical errors," he
· said. -
-
The system also includes an
electronic proofreading system
which checks _errors in spelling,
grammar, punctuation and word
choice. "The proofreader should
not be used as a crutch by the
students, but as a tool for in-.
_
dependent learning," he said.
"The word - processor enables
students to do easy revisions and
thereby spend more time refining
the content of. their papers,"
Teichman said.
Any full-time Marist student
can currently use the system
to
write and edit their assignments,
according to Teichman. A users
guide is available at
the
bookst.ore.
When still nothing was done to·
fix the machines, Champagnat
house council sent a petition to
residents in Champagnat who had
complaints about. the laundry
service. "We found that almost
everyone had had trouble with the
dryers," said Donna Cashin, a
member
,
of the house council.
The council then sent a letter to
Business
Officer
Anthony
Campilii. 6n the same day that
the letter was sent out, the fire
occurred, said Bowman. This
time the Poughkeepsie Fire
Department was involved so the
store sent inspectors to do another
check on the machines.
Insulation was found wadded
up and stuck in a vent leading out
of the dryers. Excess heat, ~hich
would normally escape through
the vent was trapped inside, said
Bowman. It is not known who put
the insulation there, he said. The
insulation was removed and the
heating setting was turned down.
Mr. Sherman, owner of the
store, has met with Heywood and
is planning to reimburse students
who have had clothing damaged.
So far there are about six people
on the list, said Bowman. There
haven't been any more com-
plaints about the dryers, he
added.
Waters said that the elevator elevator. will be in use and give
has been ordered, but it will be six handicapped students free access
months before it arrives. Ar-
to the Campus Center. She said
chitect Paul -Kanin said· tha~ the hazard of moving
a
Dover • Elevator Company is
wheelchair up the stairs to
working on their own architectual Campus Center will be avoided.
sketche,s for the cab design. He
By spring, 1984, handicapped
said tlfat the company will send students will be able to attend
him a shop drawing which gives . classes in Campus Center, said
technical
and mechanical Perreira. In. past years if a
requirements for construction. -handicapped student was
He said with those measurements registered for a class in Campus
he will design the elevator shaft Center, the class was moved· to
closure which will be an addition Donnelly:
to
the Campus Center building.
He said that it will be more
Handicapped student Emergy convenient to get into Campus
Giovannone assisted members of Center without ha.-ing to be
the administration in selecting the carried upstairs or entering the
appropriate dimensions of the exit door from outside the back of
future elevator cab.
.
the theater.
Giovannone said that about a
"A lot of things should be
month ago he met with Gerard done," commented junior George
Cox, dean of student affairs; Colby, "but it takes the ad-
John Shaughnessy, assistant ministration a Jong time to do
director of physical plant; Daniel anything." Colby has been at
Webber, counselor for special Marist for three years and said
services;
Kanin,
and
a that he feels the voices of the
representative of Dover Elevator handicapped on campus have
Co.
finally been heard.
Perreira said that they took a
"It's · long overdue," said
cab plan measured -out the Frank Sciarretta, who is currently
dimensions on the floor in the in his third semester at Marist. "It
Champagnat
lobby
and will definitely make things much
Giovannone would move his more convenient."
- - - - - - - Correction---------.
Because of a typesetting error, last week's story on the
Student Academic Committee contained an error.
The story should have read: "Freund, a junior who was an
S.A.C. member this academic year and also on the Financial
Board as
a:
representative of the S.A.C., expressed her con-
cern that students' lack of knowledge about the S.A.C. does
not allow the committee to represent the student body
adequately."
f
--Page4-
THECIRCLE-Apr/121,
1983------------,-. :-..
--R-..
~e···
--a"!"'
.
--d"!"'
.•
~e--r-s--w-.-. -~r~i-t ...
e-,~:-·. -
Top priprity
All lette;~ must
~
typed triple space with a 60 space margin, and submitted to the
Circle olllce no later than 1 p.m. Monday. Short letters are preferred. We reserve the
right to edit all letters. Letters must be signed, but names may
be
withheld UP?"
request. Letters will
be
published depending upon avallabluty o!
space . .... · :.
; , .
.-,
-:..
.
,
·
.
•·
~
~.
.
'.'
. Matt and the military· I · __
To the Editors: ·
·
- ·
Matthew P. Mcinerny•~ denial
of ignorance, which appeared in
the April 14 edition of
The_ Ci~cle,
sounds
rather
convmcmg;
however, American troops are
not currently fighting . in one . of
the four corners of the globe. The
Armed Forces. doesn't exist to
bulge one's muscles and wallet, as
Mr. Mcinerny implies, but to
prepare to war.
.
.
First, let me congratulate
Matthew for his exposure of
Kevin Perez' grammatical error.
Matt, your note that a college is
an "it'' not -a_ "they" was . the
work of genius -
sheer genius. I
compliment you on your mastery
of semantics.
However, the implication that
us pacifists are · stealing money
· from our parents so we can be
educated is tasteless. The Army,
in conjunction with Madison
· Avenue, has come up an ad-'
vertising campaign tailored for
these times of Reaganomics and
unemployment -
MONEY.
In no
other way can a young American
get Federal support for his/her
education without having to pay
it back. Whether one intends to
major in Communications,
.
'
......
Political Science; a
·
language, or ·
even Business, one is not . cori~
sidered to be·serving America. On
the other hand, if one learns how
to .kill for one's country, on!! is
indeed entitled to · a free
education. Is this patriotism?
Mr. Mcinerny also asserts that
900/o of the military's enlisted.
personnel have
.
high .· school
educations. True enough, but let's
not be naive. Most. of the kids
hanging around . ·•.the
.
Army
recruitment table in the high
school . lobby may not be
prospective drop-outs; but they're
not in the National Honor Society
either. Which is precisely why Mr.
Perez and other· Dean's List
freshmen received their. in-
vitations to the
ROTC
course.
The army wants brains to go. with
the brawn.·
I won't quibble · with Mr.
Mclnerny's claim that ·he learned
something about himself while in
the military; however, I will say
that it is a short-sighted view of
the military's goals. In peacetime,
the Armed Forces build
character. In war, the Armed
Forces d~stroy people_. __ ·,. _
Sincerely,
CarFMacGowan
Matt and the military II
To the Editor:
would still like to see some im-
1 read a letter in The Circle last
provements rather than watch this .
week, concerning the letter that I
country . disappear
into . a
✓ had
written two weeks before.
mushroom of radiation. The
This particular letter was from a
point that I was making in ·the
Growth and expansion have once again
dicapped children -
and stu9ents as well,
veteran from the army, who is
Circle a few weeks ago was about
shown themselves high on the priority list at
who gain experience working in the'center.. .
now attending Marist College.-1_ invasion of privacy, not about
. Marist We are faced with yet another
Maybe 33 children and some students don't
compliment . this man who is
people .. like
.
the person who
exarn_P,le of qu·alit'{being pushed .aside.tor · matter as much as 125
-
freshmen and their
. writing for. what he believes in,
received a letter in the mail eight
,
.
quan,t,ty, ;.,.
..
_ .
·
. ,
,
-· ... ,· ,
0 ,....
_, • •
,
tuition. •-·-...... ' ..
.
.:f.
·
... -., ..
, . ;_
..
.
buLl
am.replying ,to his Jetter years.ago informingJ1im of the
... In·•
order·_·to_·
miik~ ·
ro.om .· .. for next,, year's,. . We
.
·,recogiiize .the( need. for ·additional·'.,, sirice he missed the whole point of. O.L bill,. who.·Iet 'themselves
gc:t
freshmen, the'b!d gym
will
be recon- -:housing, but.some-fore~ight was in order.
myletter .. :
-
·
brain-washedbythemilitary.
_ structed. This· means that, after finally
· Did anyone consider .the fate of the pre-
I can understand that this man
Just one more point for this ex-
receiving a New York State license after six
school when the decision was made to
believes in the army and is willing ' military "whiz kid," when I refer
years, the Marist College Pre-school Center
reconstruct the old gym? In the "real world"
·
· to1>e evaporated at the push of a
to "the college,"
I
refer to the
must -be moved, or closed. The ad-
(which we're supposed to be prep~ring for
button by some crazed Kremlin
administration thereof arid not a
ministration says it doesn't know where the
here), giving someone two to three weeks
officer, but, strangely ·enough, I
piece of real estate. I thought that
pre-school will. be located next year, arid
notice to move out is considered pretty
would rather stay at home arid
the military was supposed to give
that there will have to be an assessment of
lousy -
especially when they haven't been
work at my job that earns Jess
you guys the ability to think past
the · value of the pre-school to d13cide . given ·anywhere else to go. Even New York
than a officer in the military just . the ink on th·e. paper. Consider
whether it will continue. That's pretty funny
City doesn't treat its people like that,
for the security of my life.
this another reason that ·1 don't
-,- New York State grants the pre-schooLits
It.
is the responsibility of the college to
Don't get me w~ong, · Dear like "Uncle Sam."
license, _which . generally speaks for the
find -
now -
a permanent an_d acceptable
'former ignorant grunt,' I love .
I guess I'll be reading from you
quality of a program, but Marist has to , relocation site for the pre-school. It would
the United States since.it is one of next week, Matt. ·
decide whether the pre-school is a valuable
be a shame -
no, it, would be downright
the.few countries that I know of
enough service to continue,
pitiful -
if Marist pushes .aside a quality
that would let me get away with
Nice priorities, Marist. The pre-school
program that provides the community
writing a letter like this. But I
Sincerely,
Kevin T. Perez
· Not-so-nice person :
services 33 children
including 11 han-
service we supposedly_value so much.
FOr_ the good
_
of all
·•
....
·
...
·--
-:;
,·_-•
Sexual harassm_erit is not
a·
topic one
Academic Comrn,ittee. They . can also ap-
_
talks about casually in the cafeteria over
proach the harasser's superior and. file a··
dinner. Because there are no available
complaint with him/her. The most important __
statistics, we don't know the magnitude of
thing is that action be taken against the
the problem at Marist. However, if even one
harasser to prevent further incidents.'
·
incident of sexual harassment occurs on
Remaining · silent about
sexual
campus, something should be done abou_t
harassment serves no one. It allows the
it. Students should- be made aware of the
harasser . to get away with inexcusable
channels they must go through
fo
lodge a
behavior, while the_ victim continues to
formal complaint, and encouraged to do so
suffer. While taking the first step in making
if any such incident occurs.
a formal complaint may be difficult, it is the
only way to stop sexual harassment on
If students feel they 'have been the --. campus. We urge students to ·spe~k up if
subject of sexual harassment, they may file
they encounter such situations -
for the
a written complaint with the Student
benefit of all.
·
·
Matt-and the· military III
.
.
-
To the Editor:
edutation" here at Marist College
I feit moved to respond to the
along with "enhancing my
letter from Matthew P. Mcinerny
physical ·ability" as a member of
_
_ which appeared in your April
!4
the. cross country team .. As you
issue. I too received a letter a few·
cari
see, one does not need to join
weeks ago 'from Michael R.
the R.0.T.C; to accomplish these
Pastirik. concerning
Army
things; as Mr. Mcl~er:ny .has
R.O.T;C., as did all "dean's list"
implied.
·
.
.
·
freshmen. Mr. Mcinerny was
.
I
don't want to be· misun-
addressing the wrong group of 'derstood. I feel that the R;O.T.C.
students with his rather unim-
does deserve a place in the Marist
. pressive story. We -the "dean's
community. It should be offered,
list" freshmen- were obviously
though, as an elective privilege, ·
mature enough to make a sue-
not an alternative.
l
am not a
cessful transition to college after
pacifist, ·but I do oppose the
high school. Naturally then, his
government's current militaristic
story holds rio water with us. I do
policies. Students shouldn't have
not feel that my. parents are
to join the military to be able to
."blowing" thousarids of dollars
afford a college education. In-
on my education, nor do my
other words, it is :not the
parents. I am "furthering my
Continued on page 8
.
-
-
...
-
•··
Co-Editors
Rick O'Donnell
Reporters
Lisa Arthur, Marla Azzolina,
Advertising Staff
Tara Scanlon
Cindy Bennedum, Karen Boll,
Lisa Crandall
Patti Walsh
Tim Dearie, Alison Demarest,
Dianne Gallagher
Chris Dempsey, Lori Dyer,
The
Donna Fidaleo, Mike Graney,
Claaslfled
Kevin Shulz
Associate Editors
Karen Lindsay
Lynn Gregorski, Eileen Hayes,
Lou Ann Seelig
Kristine Lawas, Jim Leonard,
Circle
Donna Cody Seelbach
Karyn Magdalen, Paul Murnane.
Cartoonist
Teci'Waters
Karen Nizolek, Susan Pyle,
Frank Raggo, Laura Reichert,
Photography Staff
. Gina Franciscovich, Jeff Kiely,
Sports Editor
Bill Travers
Roger Romano, Jane Scarchllll,
Kyle MIiier, Jeanne LeGloahec
Mark Stuart, Gwen Swinton, .
Advertising Manager
Jim Barnes
Boppln Bob Weinman, Mark Zangari
Joe Dldzlulla.
Faculty Advisor
David Mccraw
Business Manager
Adrienne Ryan
Gene Uannis
I .
.,
(
• '
.
,
·.
.
.
.
.
.
----,-------
,.
--.-i----------------------------------•April
21, 1983- THE CIRCLE·
Pages--•
immensely as they make com~
case anyone doesn't know this is a
ments like, "This food isn't so
crew race. This will be the annual
bad." How about giving the
display by the athletic department
parents a. double helping of the
that they care about something
cold spinach quiche and finding
other than basketball. Is it any
out how they respond? You can
wonder they don't have a tennis
also bet that if BL Ts are served
match instead? .
The
Foolish Fox:
"·Parents~
-
.
weekend-
•
circus
Reel impressions
.
.
Dennis Murray. He will put on his
. by Rick.O'Donnell·
annual show for the parents by
making a public appearance on
Look around you. Why is
campus and making a speech
campus security wearing blazers?
using the word thrust at least five
0
Why is the food so good all of a , times. He'll probably talk- about
su.dden? · Why is everybody's . the Communication. Arts Center
room so clean? Why is everybody
too, but we heard· about that
sleeping in their own room? The
when we applied here, and we've
answer is simple. It's parents'
yet to see it.
this weekend there will be more
So the circus moves on and the
than two strips of bacon on it!
clowns leave campus for yet
. weekend. It's circus time at
In ring three we have assorted
Marist College!
male and female students rubbing
Welcome to the Marist College
cover-up on the their necks to
three-ring circus. As usual, there
cover the hickey from last
will be plenty of excitement for
weekend. How were they sup-
everyone. In ririg one we have Joe
posed to know it would stay that
Waters, Director of Security,
long? Students are also learning
sending out the maroon blazers to . who their roommate is after
the dry cleaners. What would a . spending most of the year in
parents~ weekend be like without
someone else's room.
In ring number two we have
two roommates cleaning out their
room for the first time this
semester. They find old sand-
wiches and one even finds a paper
he thought he passed in at mid-
terms. No wonder he got a D.
They also do the laundry for the
first time this semester. It's not
surprising to see some guys on .
campus time their laundry per-
fectly so it is dried just in time for
Mom to walk in the door and fold
it!
another year. It's hard to believe
how much fun a weekend at
Marist College can be. I wonder
what it would be like if students
did what they usually do on a
weekend, but did it with their
parents. I wonder how Mom
would
like
Rockwell's
or
Brandy's on Thursday nights. Or
walking to the diner at two in the
morning, so we can get food
without being ripped off by the
deli prices. On the other hand I'll
probably take them to a movie
and go to sleep before
l :00. I
security wearing those ugly
Now over in the first ring we
blazers? The last time I saw a
have Seiler's cooking some real
blazer so out of style it was on a
food for· a change. Surprise,
repeat of· the Leave it to Beaver
surprise, it's edible! This is a feat
show.
that not many Marist students
Now performing in ring two is· have seen, but. all parents enjoy
In ring number three we have
can't remember the last time I
·. the President's· Cup Regatta. In
went to a movie!
by Tom Fisher
Running a close second is I'm surprised they didn't get
Halloween
III:
Season of the
sued.
Well, last week we heard all
Witch,
which bore absolutely no
In the worst "Youth Opus"
about the winners in the movie
resemblance to the first two category,
Porky's
was
so
industry at the an.nual Academy
Halloweens.
This one was about overrated that I still can't see
Awards ceremony. But how come
Halloween masks that were made what good anyone saw in it. Alex
we never hear about the losers?
to kill whoever wore them. We see Karras played the hick sheriff
Besides the · fact that many
one boy get killed by one of the with such overwhelming charisma
thought
E.T.
should have won
masks. From out of the mask, or that I can't help but believe he
over
Gandhi
for Best Picture, and
the boy's head, or somewhere, suffered brain damage in his days
whatever other major complaints
come all kinds of snakes, roaches, with the Detroit Lions.
Summer
there were, one element at the
and other live critters. Not only is
Lovers
tried to be kinky without
Academy Awards remained
all this disgusting, it's stupid.
much success, or profits for that
consistent. Through it all, the
Scraping the bile from the matter. A vacationing young
industry came out, as usual,
bottom of the barrel, I'm couple in the Greek Islands meet
was continuously raped by some
unforeseen force in a film that
was neither horrifying nor
suspenseful. Gene Wilder and
Gilda Radner teamed up in a not-
so-funny comedy
Hanky Panky,,
which proved that their reported
ro·mantic chemistry off-screen
could not be equated before the
cameras. Cheech ;and Chong in
their fourth extravaganza,
Thi,ngs
are Tough All Over,
demon-
strated just that, which may be
why nobody bothered to waste
their time and money to see it.
looking flawless. After hearing
reminded of the uninvolving and up with a French woman and
b
II
h
.
h
amateurish song and dance become i·nvolved i·n a 11·ttle
The remaining residue suggests
a out a t e great 1_11ov1es t at
h
h M
· d
s
d
b
numbers
l
·n
Grease
2,
the thre·e-
. Th
h
h
t at t e
arqu1s e a e may e
made the rounds in .. 1982, they
menage a tro1s.
e p otograp y
1.
d
11
d
k"
dimensional splatterfest in
Fr1·day
has
a 11
the
stun n 1· n g a ive an
we
an
ma mg
think we will forget all the turkeys
·
M
l
b
d A
Id
that violated the screen along with
the 13th Part 3 in 3D
(whose cinematography of a below-
movies.
usc e
oun
. mo d
them. So, without further ado,
producers are clearly running out average vacation film shot with · Schdwarzeneggfler . deccapitate
Of new Ways to kl.II) and
Death
•
.
hea s as a re ex m
onan the
here are the losers of this year's
an mexpens1ve Super
8
camera.
d
d h
Academy Awards.
Wish
II,·
Charles Bronson's They get into a little. bondage
Barbarian,
an d"pdrove
efl_wahs
.
And
.
daughter, who was attacked in the while dripping hot candle wax on
tough when he
l
n't eveh~ flmch
In the category of "Worst
first one, gets attacked again in themselves, if that's your bag.
as vultures munched on is es
Sequel,'' I would have to
the sequel. Who can blame
Zapped!
starred Scot Baio and
while he was tied do~n heHlpless.
h I
·
denounce ·J·ust about everything,
Charlie for being a little ticked w·11· A
h
h
Soap opera star Wings
auser
t
0
. .
r
ff?
I IC
ames, w O toget er are
was a pimp in
Vice Squad,
and
e · Se
·.
except maybe
Rocky
III
and
Star
o .
about as macho as .Liberace. Baio
beat his girls with coat hangers if
.
.
. :
·
•
. .
.
. . . · . . .
.
... · ___ Trek II.
At ,the top of the list,<· In <the ''.WorsL_:R~poff''. is a <:hemistry genius,wh? co~es · 'theydidn'tturnaprofit. l wonder
·: ..... ·.··.· ... · ... '
.. ·
.. ··.·1·.
s.> . ·.··, ·. ·.·· .. --.. ·. -.. -·.·. '. ,,.•.•
·
.. ·.•. -.· .... · .. ·
...
Am,i~yvil.
lill'..
;r~':
1:-0:es.
s~~n. was .
cat4:g~.~,
Ho1ne;:o~k.:;_.· tned··· - ·.t~
·.'.'up w_11h
.
.
~
[o.rro:ul.a,!hat_ g~v.~s
.
,h,1m .. :'".
,
jf,he
.
.
. beat. the,product:rs
·a/so?·:Ac"
·
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·
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1,:'.
•SO
.,mept r,~;,;contnv~ ; •e<Jt,,.was,c•
.
capHa ize
'.°
o~-
d
e • ·unexpecte
telekmet1c
powers;·
With •
It, :
he' ·:
the
botforn ·
of
·everybody's list
· •
. ·
•. · embarr~ss!ng. Despite the fact · success of
Private Le_sson~;
and. ·g~es <!rOUJ?d sch~ol· undressmg
was
Videodrome.
Director
David
Friday: On Campus-
Parents' Weekend
.
.
,Annual Memorial
· Service: Grotto .
: . Coffeehouse:
: - Student Talent
. Fireside
8:30p.m.
The Chance-
. Buffet Lunch:
All
you can eat
$3.95from
11:30-2:30
· · 'The Bardavon-
"Bill"
With
special guest
appearance by
Bill
Spackter
whose life is
portrayed in
this Golden Globe
Best Picture.
$4Gen.Adm.
that this 1s. supposed to be the. even. had. Joan Collms. m
.
the girls 'rlth his eyes, ma manner of
Cronenberg (who also foisted
story of_ w~at happened before starrmg_role. The trouble 1s, most speakmg.
,. . , .
Scanners
upon us) again caters to
The Am1t~vtl!e Horror,.
th~ date of the time, the actress who ~as
T~e ~est of the heap 1sn t many
the sadistic populus of the movie
at the begmnmg of
Am1tyvtlle
II supposed to be Joan Co~lms particular category or order.
The
audience and gives us burnings
indicates that it h~ppened af-
was~'t Joan_ Collins. . When
~eduction
wasn't very eroti~, a~d
stickings: stabbings, bashings, ad
Jerwards. To top 1t off, the
Collms was m the movie, her Just proved that Morgan Fa1rch1ld
nauseum.
possessed kid supposedly killed scenes looked like they didn't can't act, on film or on television.
his family because he heard voices
even belong there or, which was Andrew Stevens, as the young
telling him to do
it.
In this film,
·
probably the case, had been man who was infatuated by her,
he hears th~ .voices througJl the spliced in afterwards.
displayed this trait by sweating a
headphones of his Sony Walk-
Running a close second is lot and looking nervous. Maybe
man, a device that is only a recent
Paradise,
which was such an he was thinking about his career.
development.
obvious copy of
Blue Lagoon,
In
The •Entity,
Barbara Hershey
Let's hope next year that
Tinsletown will remember, while
patting themselves on the back,
that all that glitters is not gold,
and that not every cloud has· a
silver lining.
Saturday: On Campus-
President's Cup
Regatta:
7:30 at
the Waterfront
Rehearsal
for
Experimental
Theatre: l p.m.
CC269
Informal Residence
Hall Open House:
l:30p.m.
Mass: 5:30 p.m. ·
Chapel
Junior
Ring
Ceremony: 7 p.m.
Chapel
Junior Ring
Reception: 8 p.m.
Fireside
Cocktail Hour
for students and
parents not
attending the
ring ceremony:
8p.m. Pub
Dinner-Dance:
9 p.m. Dining Room
Sunday: On Campus-
Mass: 11 a.m.
Chapel·
M.C.C.T~A. Board
meeting:
8
a.m-5
p.m; CCl70
Workshop on
Budgeting ·
procedures for
allocations for
Clubs and
Organizations
1983-84: .
3:00 p.m.-6:30 p.m.
Pub
TheChance-
Roger McGuinn the
founding member of
The Byrds and
Aztec Two Step
$6
The Bardavon- ·
The Collingwood
Chamber Players
doing Mozart and
Mendelssohn
7:30p.m.
Tickets $10/$8.50/$7
Monday: On Campus-
The Chance-
Video Night
featuring "Tommy"
and "The
Rocky Horror
Picture Show"
Free Admission
Tuesday: On Campus-
Experimental Theatre
Productions:
Wednesday:
OnCampus-
Experimental Theatre
Productions: 8 p.m.
Theatre
Thursday: On Campus-
Experimental Theatre
Productions: 8 p.m.
Theatre
8 p.rn. Theatre
TheChance-
Comedy Night
featuring Richard
Jeni,Rob
Bartlett and
RonDarian
Admission
$3
The Bardavon•
Bardavon Film
Society presents
"Five Easy
Pieces:"
8
p.m.
General Admission
$2.50, Members SI
TheChance-
AII NewMale
Burlesque Show
featuring
"The Aphrodisiacs"
Coffeehouse:
Student Talent
9p.m.
The Finals of
the Roommate
Game 9:30 p.m.
Pub
TheChance-
T.B.A.
Highlights
Linda Black is well known on the Chicago music
scene for her .creative original music and her talent as an
entertainer and poetess. She plays six and twelve string
guitar, piano, dulcimer and pieces. Her amusing stories
and warm stage personality make her a favorite with
audiences everywhere. Linda will be in the Fireside
Lounge tonight from 9 p.m. to midnight. Her show is
sponsored by the C.U.B. coffeehouse and refreshments
will be served.
-{
J
J
\
\
,
r
'.
- -
-
Page
6
~
THE
CIRCLE -
April
21, 1983
·
Ofcourse
l
--
.
.
by
Adrian Donnelly
and Leo Byrne
We would
-
like to
..
offer our
sincerest compliments to Rick
O'Donnell and the Foolish Fox
for a very clever approach to the
"new courses at Marist" idea.
Though he in the past ran a
column very similar to ours after
the fact, we decided not to
reiterate and elongate the list of
new courses. But if we did, we'd
offer ...
ART
069
-
Basketweaving
(prerequisite: Cale. III)
This i
_
s the course you've heard
so much about. It is newly listed
so that unknowing upperclassmen
can complete their liberal arts
requirements.
SOC 400 Mini Courses in
,
Sociology·
·
·
Social Life 101: A
course
..
for
.
inhibited young students, and
those who have had little q>nt
_
act
with members of the opposite sex
;
The course outline includes
_
-
ice
breakers such as "what's your
major?"
"what's
your sign?"
and "got a place
to
sleep
tonight?" And for the less willing
students the course suggests some
standard blocks such as
·-
"my
:•
sign's No Parking" "that's about
the size of
it"
and
"I'll
be right
back,
my alpaca is
double
parked."
·
'
Bar
Hopping
·
202:
(prerequisite:
Social Life 101
and
positive I.D.) The student is
·
offered the opportunity through
extensive lab study and practical
experience to learn to select the
bars that are most conducive to
his
or
-
her style. Emphasis will
_be
placed
·
upon holding
·
one's liquor
--
-
:
and maihtairiifig•
oiie~s
·
composure
-
duririg"tJie most dru'ii'lceii states.
-:
-
,
CMSC 069 Discrete Structures
.
·
dual listed
as
BIO 269 Boys and
Girls: the difference
(p
'
rerequisite:
_
sexual
_:
-
preference): This
_
course
;
discusses input process; output
with both classroom and practical
lab experience
.
Once a week the
class will meet in the computer
room for graphics and once
.
a
.
-
week wiU meet in the biology lab
for practical demonstrations.
COMM 000 Bureauspeak:
This
.
course is designed to teach the
student the art of superfluous
rhetoric. Topics covered include:
The five-hour meeting, the filler
words
_
for elongating speeches,
and double talk to confuse college
.
students. This course is required
for ariy
:.
student
-
-
desiring
-
•
to
.
.
continue studies in
.
public ad-
.
··
ministration ·and suggested for
,
those considering law school.
-·
.
.
-
. -
However, since we could nofbe
original this week, there will be no
It
Ain't Necessarily So.
,
·
Nice Try...
.
.
.
. to The, C:ircle for jumping the
letters to the editor to page 8 when
they were really hiding th~m on
page 6.
·_
.
••
10
Rick O'D. for his debut as
-
adjunct professor of Pie Eating
308 .
... to the folk group for a
smashing performance Sunday
morning .
... to Tom Cassaro
-
for annoying
the entire cast with his extended
.
disc jockey delights.
Welcome
Marist
parents
Staff and
.
Friends
of
_
The Circle:
You are cordially invited to
the 1983
_
Circle
-.
dinner
-
5
p.m. Sunday May 8
The Pub
_
Awards presentation to follc:>w:
r--------------~----~~
I
:
I
Please return this form to Fontaine 216
or
The
I
Circle Office (CC168)
by
Monday, May 2
.
I'
.
I
Name
I
.:
.:
•-
·
:.
-
_
-
_
__
- - -
__
- - - - - - - - , - - - - -
: Meal Ticket No •. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
I
I
Check
One:
I
I ___
On meal plan (no charge for dinner)
I
I _ _
$3.50
(enclose payment with this coupo~)
l---~--~-~~~-----~-~~~
..
.
.
.
'
.
'
.
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..
,.,.,
,
..
,
.
.....
.
'
_
.
,
,
:,
..
·
·
,
..
-
THE FOURTH ANNUAL
s'ftiDENT
.
J
_
MEMO
:
RIAL
-
-
:
-,:i
-
·
-
..
·
:
.
SERVICE
..
will
be
held
_
Friday,
-
22nd
-
April
·
2:
_
15 p.m.
·
_.
_
...
,
:
·
·.
•
·
.
.
...
.
.
.
,
·
The Stugent Memori~l
-
-
( west of
·
Leonid off Field)
·
.
.
.
·
.·
.
The
.
fol/owing
.
Jnterifships
"
"
•
are
~
.
·
STILL.
:
·
>
available for the Summer:
_
·
_
-
_
.
-_
~
.
...-
Orange
.
County Cablevision
TV Production
·
_
TV
News
-.
.
Marketing
-
Res~arch
Computer Science
_
~
--
-
Sales
·
Dutchess Bank
Controllers
-
Credit Department
Trust Department
-
Northern Dutchess
·
Hospital
Biology
--
-
-
Chemistry
-
-
·
Northwestern Mutual
-
life Insurance
·
,
Sales/Marketing
·
--
Bardavon Op~ra House
Public Relations
.
..
-•
-
Mid-Hudson
-
lnstitut.
_
of Co'11m~nlty
-
.
·
:
·
Design for the
Young, Inc.
:
:
_
_
<
<:'
:.:
\
.
. :"
:
.. :.:::
Public Relations
_
·
-:
-
:
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:··
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.
·
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t
,
.,-
:
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·
'
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'
-
-
-
SENIORS
~
-
.
.,
-
ON-CAMPUS .INTERVIEWS
-
-
.
Friday,
April
-
29th
-·
.
.
.
-
.
.
"When One Dies - It
-
Gives Us All
-
..
~)
United States Air Force.
'
Pause to Consider How
·
We All
Live.
'
''
.
-
In the event of rain, the Memorial will be
held in the Chapel.
·
,
2) Profesccf Corporation,
subsidary of John
-
Hancock.
Marketing financial planning ser-
vice to physicians and
-
other
-
pro-
_.
f
essional practices.
·
·
·
Further lnformatlon and sign-ups In CC180,
Office of Career Development.
..
·
-
-
--
-
··--·
-
-
-
-
-
---
---
-----
-
--
-
·
- - -
- ·
-
-
- - -
,
,
..
..
.... 0
•
•
-
-
·
-
-
·
••·•
···
-
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----
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·
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<:•o•·•·
-•;:,•::.•.•.:,,•a•·•-~•-··:•;.•~
- - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . A p r i l
21, 1983 · THE CIRCLE· Page
1--•
.. -ra .. es----------------------
'
'
- · Continued from page 1
· tlie highest of all the divisions. He
finds the figur~s useful to look for attributes the drop in-the average
year-to:year. trends,· and he also to a changeover in personnel over
·· · compares the grades of the the years to better qualifed
· , division to the entire institution.
faculty to teach in certain areas.
"The mean- for the Arts and
Donohue
said
that
the ,
Letters Division will tend to be. Humanities .division · also ad-
higher -than other . divisions dressed the problem of inflated
· . because it includes so m,,my in-
grades several years ago. A ·
ternship grades, a problem tha,t · questionnaire was distributed to
will be changed soon," Platt said. see if . the faculty wanted to
"The grades in fashion design, change the catalog statement on
German and Italian.are over 3.0 grading because the grades they
and those are the ones . I'm were giving didn't match that
concerned about/'
-
. standard. But the faculty said that
Platt said that even thougti ... they
endorse
the
catalog
some of the disciplines in· the statement,· and after that the
division have gone down since last grades came down to more dosely
. .
·
year, he is looking for the reasons · approach the catalog statement.
· for the recent. gfade increases in
Donohue said that currently
fashion and languages.
··
there is a · disparity in the
, Regarding the illustrated grade
relationship between the grade
distribution for the Division of distribution · and the catalog
Arts and Letters~ Platt said he is
standard. "Judging · from the
concerned that the mode is "B", catalog standard,- the grades are·
and
380'/o
of the grades were in the inflated," he said.
BIB+ Jange and 2811/o in the
As far as what will result from
CIC+ range. ·
these
grade , distributions:
MANAGEMENT STUDIES
SCIENCE, MATH AND
COMPUTER SCIENCE
ARTS&LmERS
SOCIAL AND
BEHAVIORIAL SCIENCES
HUMANITIES
GRADES BY DIVISION
GRADE
POINT
AVERAGE
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
(Mean)
2.84
3.0
3.5
4.0
"It's difficult to match the Donohue said: · "Statistics raise
grading .standard set in the college questions for me to pursue, but · ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_.
Top graph shows grade point average by division. Below, breakdown by grades in the
Division of Arts and Letters is given as an example.
catalog because the description . they can't make judgements,
for a 'C' in the catalog doesn't people have to do that:- Statistics
mention the work 'average.' The show what is, not what ought to
catalog
descriptions
are be done. Reports are one part of - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
qualitative, whereas the grades · the picture that you need _to
are quantitative," Platt said.
understand, you have to pursue it
The catalog states: "To earn a
to make a judgement."
DIVISION OF
C grade a student must be able to
Platt said that he will be doing
recall the basic elements of a
further analysis to determine if
course, under.stand the essential - 'there are problems of -grade in-
background .· and materials· of a
flation in his division .. "We're
course, make application of the probably not so different from
basic principles -involved and. what happens across the country
express them intelligibly."
there's grade inflation
100
95
90
85
80
75.
ARTS _AN.D LETTERS BREAKDOWN BY GRADES
· -Platt said another reason for everywh_ere," he said.
the high grading could be t)l.at the
According to Academic Vice-
adjunct faculty' may not be as president Andrew Molley, more
concerned with the standard of than 800 students were on the
grading because they don't in-
dean's list last semester.
teract with the full-time faculty.
Hooper said he thinks there are
•But the grades aren't the same too many students on the dean's.
as they were a few years.;~goiin 11st and that gr_ad~s are too high.
most of the divisions: Platt said:
"The reasons for this are difficult
-'{J\
few, ;years~ ago~:when'{I
}Vi!,,S .,
to. ,handle,,. ·but
·.J
hQpe, ,that the
_c;;,·<
head·ofjust.Communication;Arts
>'
grades can·
be
brought down;''
~e
and English, communications was
·
said.-.''ln the long run,. if student$
considered an easy major, At one- graduate with· an index above
meeting I said I was concerned their abilities, it could put them in
with inflatea grades, and after a position they· couldn't handle.
that
the. grades in
com~ · We're doing an injustice to the
munications went down."
.
student by giving them a wrong
Kelly
said that the mean for reading of· their abilities," he
Management Studies used to be said.
·
--•-.
.
--
.
70
65
i
60
I
55
as
50
II.
0
·
45
lz'
40
~
35
a:
30
le, •.
2·5· .
.
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10
5
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p
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*denotes lass than 1
%
w
F
D
D+
C
C+
B
GRADES
·Harassment--------------
Continued
from
page 1
being blamed for provoking the
incident:. Cox said women are.also
reluctant to raise the issue because
they ·. are afraid of retribution
man he has never seen a case in
which a· student was pena\ized for
resisting the sexual advances of
a
professor.
··
·· ·
from the particular profes~or who
ANONYMOUS
·could try to penalize them with
The student lodging the
.
-
tremist wilf see any remark and
term it as sexist, but cultural
attitudes do have to be ad-
dressed." He said that Marist will
not tolerate any form of
.'malicious sexism.
low grades. · "
complaint works in confidence
YALE REVIEW
· PROCEDURE
with. the · harasser's superior.
When a women's group at Yale
Cox said at present Marist
LaMorte said~ "The ·identity of· University
reviewed
the
College has· no formal.grievance
the person making the charge is - university's grievance procedure
procedure for dealing with the
anonymou_s but at a later point · for
sexual
harassment,
it
specific
issue - of sexual th,e name would be revealed to
discovere1 -· that
heightened
harassment. · Cox said, "Status deal with the problem.,,. Kelly
awareness of the problem worked
quo does not have a centralized: .said in certain instances the . to
curtail
occurrences
of
approach for addressing this
administrator or faculty member
harassment. Cox said that the
issue." He said that Ivlarist uses
may realize the identity of that inadvertent
remarks
would·
its administration structure to individual because __ of the par-
disappear from normal. discourse
deal with the problem.
--
ticular situation being described.
once the.issue was raised.
The most effective and direct
- LaMorte said that he tries to .
However, Marist appears to
approach for lodging a complaint
help · the · person lodging · the have done little to educate both
against a professor is to approach complaint clarify the· situation'. itself and its community about the
the harasser's superior,.
Ac~
and to find out what the in-
occurrence of sexual harassment.
cording to LaMorte, the student · dividual is exactly talking about. ·cox said that tire student hand-
must
eventually put his/her Cox classifies the complaints into · pook deals with the grievance
sentiments in writing to formalize categories: some are totally procedu_re, and it also contains a
the complaint.
unfounded cases of sexual directory of where one is to go if
· Dawn Oliver, president of the
harassment; some are interpreted there is a problem.
Student Academic Committee,
as sexual harassment; and others
LaMorte said, "On an ongoing
said that a student could file a
are actual · cases of sexual
basis there is nothing to anticipate
written correspondence form to harassment.
the
problem
of sexual
lodge a complaint. The complaint . Sexual harassment can be-
a:
harassment, but in the past three
would then be sent to Dr. Andrew
complicated issue because men
or four years there has been at
Molloy,
the academic vice and women have different per-
least one occasion when that type
president, and then to the division
ceptions of the same event. Cox
of seminar was given."
chairman.
said most of the cases he has dealt
Roberta Amato, director of
Dr. Jack Kelly, chairman of the with
pertaining
to
sexual
counseling, said that Marist has
Division of Management Studies,
harassment have been based on
no seminars for dealing with
said,· "The idea of the student misunderstandings.
Some sexual harassment with that as a
forms is if the student is worried negative statements · that are
specific title. But she said that a
about retribution he or she would directed at a particular gender
workshop entitled "The Assertive
petitfon the S.A.C. for support."
have been interpreted as sexual
College Student!' could aid a
Kelly said that in his time as a
harassment.
student in how he/she presents
department and division chair-
According to Cox, "An ex-
himself/herself to a teacher.
One of the aforementioned
students brought the issue to the
attention of the S.A.C. when she
was a member. She said, "The
avenues· of action weren't
defined. Actually, they really
weren't there. I was naive about
what to do. I felt that I wouldn't
get very far even if I tried. They
would probably say, 'That's just
the way he is,' or it would be
covered up." She said she was
shocked that people were aware
of the problem and nothing
formally had been done.
-
NATIONAL ISSUE
Sexual harassment emerged as
a national issue in 1977 when four
students
and
an
assistant
professor at Yale pressed charges
against the university for failure
to provide the students with
strong affirmative action in
dealing with sexual harassment
and against some male faculty
members who allegedly harassed
their students.
The group charged Yale with
violating Title IX of the Federal
Education Amendment of 1972,
which
prohibits
sexual
discrimination by educational
institutions receiving public
funds.
The United States Court of
Appeals dismissed the case on the
premise that Yale is a private
institution receiving only some
federal funds.
The case was seen as a
breakthrough, nevertheless, in
that it made it possible for
students to sue an educational
institution for failing to provide a
formal grievance policy dealing
exclusively
with
sexual
harassment.
Many
women's
groups
acknowledge that a satisfactory
grievance procedure is the key to
waging an effective campaign
against sexual harassment. This is
evident at the University of
Washington, where the president
took a hard-nosed approach and
caused the complaints to drop
significantly.
"Ms.'! magazine has set down
guidelines for combatting sexual
harassment indivdually and
institutionally.
"Ms."
suggests
that the student lodging the
complaint allow the harasser to
know she is not interested in his
attention; investigate the
. university's policy and grievance
procedure for sexual harassment;
and document what has occurred.
"Ms." said the university
should develop an explicit policy
for
prohibiting
sexual
harassment; develop a grievance
procedure to handle complaints;
and document the problem with
surveys and public meetings.
One of the students previously
mentioned said she wants
students to be aware that sexual
harassment exists and that they
should be prepared and have the
courage to talk to someone about
it. She said, "I think there should
be an approach -
somewhere
that is for the specific purpose of
sexual harassment -
so that one
doesn't
feel
uncomfortable
discussing the matter."
~
'_.,
':,_;,:,,;.
I· ':. .
I'
'
'
~
.,
,,
I
~
1'.,.·,·.· ......
•· ·.
A(~<,;.'
.
.
/
,,,
i
,
_,
'
, · , piJ~e
8 :
THE
C::IRCLE°~
Aprii
21, 1983 · · ,.- · · .. · · ·
·Mclr1st>-to·
h-ot10i··J•·st.~--~:-FrahCis/-:'
:
,
,
. by'Ja_ne Scarchilli
· <
te-nding, ac~ording
''to.
Anthony discussion groups. and an open·
Cernera; · a
Marist
administrator · question-and-answer period with
. A
symposium . sponsored by -.and coordinator of the sym-
Muller, according to Cernera.
, Marist College and the Mccann · · .. posium.
<: _
·
: . . . . .
The proceedings.will be published .
, Foundation to honor St. Francis
Cernera .. said. · that Manst's and sent to-major opinion will be
· of Assisi will be held on Friday, . interest in St. Francis is due to the . published and sent . to major
April 29;; at Mt. Alvernia Church . college's 'constant effort to ad-
opinion leaders around the·world ..
- in Wappingers Falls. .
1
· ·
dress major social issues of our
In addition to the symposium, .
Robert . Muller, · secretary
time.
the_ college - also hosted a :st:
general of the United Nations for
October 1981 to October 1982 Francis festival day with the
economics and -social develop-
was · designated .·. a , _year
of Italian
American
Cultural
ments, will speak
on
St. Francis'
celebration to commemorate the
.
Foundation· in· Poughkeepsie. A
. , values towards world, peace,
800th'aimiversary of St .. J:rancis.
mass and talk by a Franciscan was
world poverty and ecology.
St. Francis was interested in the offered at the event.
Dennis J. Murray, president of
renewal and rebuilding of the
Fifteen church
leaders;
Marist, three Marist students, and
earth ·and founded the order of national religious ·. leaders and
members of the · faculty and
friars called the Franciscans.
· leaders ·in communications and
· administration will be among ·the
. The symposium will include. a public policy are expected to
_ approximately 40 .·· people at-
speech
by
Muller, .. small attend at the symposium.
-------------More
letters------
Continued from page 4
specifically provides that a school· · afraid that the • job · oL Resident
R.O,T.C. I am opposed to,
it is
may safely provide
what is Director affected
Mike the· same
governmental policies like cutting · termed ''directory information,'' way some air traffic controllers or :
back student Joans or lowering
such personal facts as name, some combat - veterans · are
the minimum wage that I can't
address, telephone number, etc.,
mentally damaged-by. the stress
stomach. .
to third parties without fear of they experience. The inferiority
In contrast to Kevin Perez's
having
its
federal funds with-
complex is just a figment of his .
feelings on the issue, I. don't mind
drawn. The institution providing vivid imagination, very much like
receiving a. letter from Captain
such 'directory · information is
the ·affair he claims to have had
Pastirik. The military has the
required to give public notice of with. Humphrey Bogart. The
unalienable ·r1ght , to advertise
the information it plans to make unfortunate part of Mike's ·1etter
through the mail as does any
available to the general public and · is the fact that he left out the most
group, interest, or organization. . to allow students time to notify essential part of the story.
The dean's list is made public, so
the institution that any or all of
My point can be best expressed
the college has · not released
that information should not be
by making an analogy. Let us
privileged information as Mr.
released. Marist will release at imagine there. is a little .league
Perez implied in his letter in your
various times the following in-
team · and they only have two
March 31 issue. Getting back to · f~rmation unless requested in baseball bats, one being a 2~-inch
the point, it has become com-
writing not to · do so by the bat and the other being a 36-inch
monplace in America to call all
student: student . name, ·address, bat. Still let us suppose that when
forms of postal correspondence
telephone number, date and place the team plays they· only use the
that make an attempt to solicit or
of birth, major field of study, 28-inch bat. No\\'. what good is a
recruit, "junkmail."
It is my
participation
i_n
officially bigger bat if hisn't being used?
pleasure then to inform · Mr.
.recognized. activities and sports,
Let me conclude by quoting aii
Mclnerny that
l
felt it was my
weight and height of members of old New Zealand proverb that
obligation as an American to file
athleti.c team_s, dates of at-
go~$ .. _something like: It's not the
, the Army
.
R.O.T_.C. letter that 1 .•. tendance, · degrees.
·
and :-awards size of the wave but the motion of
,.
~
• ~-;;received· in ·:
the'
same receptacle .. c
-
received< and': the;' m6st'
1
2recent the
'ocean~ .
However,. iri'
M1lre's ·
.:·~tE'thai
T"'filealf']unlcmail!
·ThaiiFYpievious ;'ediicatioiuilt·iii'stitution case it's not
an
ocean
but
a St:a
of,
· you.
· , :
attended by the sJudent; ·.
palms.
· · ·
·
Christian
J.
Morrison
Students must notify the Office
_
-Sincerely,
. Class of
•s~
of the Registrar in writing should
Rich Dougherty
R.A.
they not want information made
available. For purposes of ii:n-
plementirig this , procedure,. the
College will allow thirty days
from date of publication in · the
College newspaper and posting in
conspicuous , places · about the
campus for students to respond.
A form has been developed and
can be obtained from the Office
of the Registrar.
Losing
To the Editor:
Bill Travers' ·. article on how
sports . besides basketball are
neglected is long overdue. Just
look at football; How many times
are the administrators going to
rehire a coach · with a losing
recora? 2 wins, 7 losses again next
year? No thanks.
· ; See you in the stands. Maybe.
Mark Stuart
· Experience -
- · Registrar'.s Office
Essential
part
Crew crew
Dear Circle Editors: .
For seven years, since arriving
at Marist, I have been bugged by
a dull redundancy, a · minor ·
literary sin, that keeps popping up
in your pages, namely the use of
the phrase "crew team."
Since a student newspaper . in
highly reputable schools such as
Marist clearly reflects the literary.·
skills, not only ·of its' student
Dear Editors,
editors and reporters, but also
Yes, the secret is out. The entire mirrors the school's educationar
To the Editor:
.
.
story of the Dougherty-Bowman quality, I am sure that you will
in.
the April 14 issue of the connection
and
.
eventual want to avoid this usage in the
Circle, · there.•· was • an article separation is known. The only future. A crew, after all, is a team
pertaining to next years Council . problem now standing is the fact
of oars people, by definition. You ·
of Studeni Leaders. The two that Mike has only told half of the might as well refer to . our
-current officers that were qu9ted post-surgical story. 1 guess it basketball team group, or to the
in this article both mentioned that could be said I got the short end track team squad gang group etc.
the newly elected officers were of the stick. I don't have an in-
Sincerely, unfeigned, honestly,
inexperienced.
feriority complex, ho~ever. I am etc. yours,
P.H. Chase
I am currently Presi<:lent of the . .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . .
North Campus House Council,
President. of the Communication
Arts Society, and an
·
active
member of both the Inter-House.
Council and the Sophomore Class
Activities Team.
I make a
significant contribution to these
organizations, and ·numerous
others, and consider them only a
fraction of the experience I
possess.
.
I - don't know how Joan
Gasparovic or Gregg Luna define
"experience,"
but
if it means
taking false assumptions, who
needs it!
In closing, · I might add
that
inexperienced was · spelled in-
correctly in the article.
Very Truly Yours,
Mark V. Zangari
Newly Elected
Inter~House Council
President
Privacy
To Marist Students:
The Family Educational Rights
and. Privacy Act of 1974
•-.- >
c•
•
•~,
,
-. •·••' -,-.··• •··-
•
• ~••
•
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-
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• • · · • • • • • •
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-
.
SHOWS IN APRIL
.
22 David Crosby of Crosby Stills & -Nash· in a· rare
club appearance.
~
2 shows - 9
&
11 :30
23 Bobby Bar~ ''Great Country''· - 2 shows
~
9_
~
.11:30
24
~
Chance Double Bill - Roger McGuinri .
.
Leader of the Birds and Aztec Two. Step
25 Video Double Bill - Tommy
&
Rocky Horror _
· 26 Comedy. Night "'.·_.W/three very funny guys
$3.oo· -
Richard Jeni, Bob Bartlett, Ron Darian
27 Bud Beer Blast and the Southern Cross· Ban.d
·. 28 Male Burlesque-~ an.all new show! ·
.. 29 D.C. Star
.
. 30 .Toots and the Maytals W/special guest Winston--·
Grennan
·
·
. · COMING IN MAY
4 Circle Jerks
_
6 David Bromberg with his original band in a rare
reunion appearance - 2 shows - 9
&
11 :30
7 Garland Jeffries
10 Comedy Night
13 Spyro Gyra - 2 shows - 9
&
11 :30
14 Wayland Flowers and Madame - Bring their T. V.
Antics. to the stage - 2 shows - 9
&
11 :30
, 18 George Clinton and the Parliament Funkadelics
- 24 piece band -
22 Benefit for Special Olympics - Auction - River-
bank Banjo Band
The judges' votes are
in
arid the
winners are
(I
to r): Contest win-
ner Jim O'Doherty, first runner-
up Chris
.
Stempsey and second
runner-up Mike Millkoniaµ.
Mr. Marist is crowned
Red/ ord, beware:
O,Doherty,s here
"Poughkeepsie's a helluva town if you don't go to
school here." He added that the girls aren't too nice,
·
"Don't jµdge me as a piece of beefcake" wa~Jim with the exception of the ones who go to Marist.
0'Doheriy's final pleas before becoming
"Mr.
Immediately
·
following the question-and-answer
by Cindy Bennedum
Marist
1983.~'
-
session the judges conferred to choos·e a winner.
O'Doherty was one of
17
Marist
-
men to compete Faculty member
.
Diane Platt, administrator Pat
for the~title Friday night in the first
.
Mr. Marist Tuceling and staff member Fran DeVriescomprised
contest; held in th<c dining
:
room:-':·t
:c.~~·i
>":
:.:c::>
,
.
_
,.:-:_
,.:
"
thetab/e
of judges;
..
_
:-·
· '_-
-
·
-
~
:•'
'
-
·
··
•
·
·
·
,
t
·,"..· /:·
'.
-
'
:
Each contestant showed some leg, showed some
When the judging was over, 0'Doherty, who said
talent and showed some
·
intelligence
·
as he vied for
·
he feels honored to have won, came out $35 richer
Hie title.
·
.
_
·
·
·
·
·
:
for his efforts. When asked how he would spend his
WMCR,
the Marist College radio station, spun prize money, he replied that he would use it wisely.
tunes as
·
tµe men slipped off their robes, dropped "I'm going to put
it
all in the bank, and use it to help
their towels and slithered out of their trou
_
sers while pay for my education and to put a down payment on
.
the· cheering crowd and three judges tried to con~
a
house," he said.
·
centrate on leg evaluations .
. ·
O'DohertY stariding 6'5" took it a step further'as
0'Doherty, a junior, said he found out at 7 p.m;
he danced on the judges' table in a muscle shirt,
Friday that he had been nominated for the I I p.m.
shorts and work boots.
.
competition.
· Round two caused
·
chants and screams as
The competition was organized and sponsored
PY
freshman Pete Asselin popped the button off his
_
the North End
.
House Council. Secretary Barbara
..
shirt and was transformed from Clark
_
Kent into
Joyce said the competition "wasn't a serious thing at
Superman.
··
·
.
.
.
.
all - it was all just for fun."
·
First-runner-up Chris "The Stash" Stempsey,
However, there were problems with the event.
..
dressed in
·
a lamb outfit, amazed the crowd as he
Mark Zangari, president of the North End House
stashed five hotdogsjn his mouth and then juggled
Council, said that although the idea of the contest
three McIntosh apples.
·
·
·
·
was a success, the actuality of it wasn't. He said that
0~Doherty also juggled his way through the talent
tables were broken and fights occurred, causing
competition, using an
.
orange, a golf ball and a
many people to be bounced out of the
_
event.
bowling baHas his props.
·
Zangari
·
added that next year's Mr. Marist
.
During
_
the question-~nd-answer period second-
competition will
.
"definitely" be a nonalcoholic
runner-up .Mike Melkonian was asked which con-
event. Beer was served at Friday's competition.'
testimt he would choose to fix his sister up with. He
.:
Residence Director Barry Jamison, who helped
replied,
''None."
·
•.
·
organize the event, added that next year's contest
Sophomore John Mar was
·
asked to describe
will be more organized and, it is hoped, much im-
-
Poughkeepsie in 25 words or less. He
_
said,
proved.
·
·
Mr. Marist contest winner, Jim O'Doherty displayed his many
talents as he told jokes and juggled a golf ball, an orange and a
bowling ball during the talent portion of Friday night's contest.
(photos by Jeff Kiely)
Ruling cuts tie between draft;
·
student aid
by Laura Reichert
registrants.
The
·
American Civil Liberties
. Students not registered for the Union has interpreted Alsop's
draft will not be denied Federal
.
injunct_ion as applying nationally.
education loans in the 1983-84
There was some confusion in
school year despite a law signed
•
the
_
Education Department over
by President Reagan last Sept. 8.
whether the law should be
_
The law, which was to take honored, said Cathy Deppe, a
effect in May, required male member of the Dutchess Peace
students to sign a statement at the Center, which is
·
housed in the
bottom of their financial aid Trinity Methodist Church in
forms saying they had registered Poughkeepsie.
for the draft. Those who hadn't
registered were to be denied aid.·
In
a
suit filed by six students
who were represented by the
Minnesota Civil Libei:ties Union,
Federal District Judge Donald D.
·
Alsop issued a temporary in.-
junction March
JO barring the
Government from· enforcing the
law. Alsop claimed that the law
could incriminate students who
identified themselves as non-
The Education Department,
which at first thought the law
only applied to Alsop's Min-
nesota jurisdiction, was prepared
to honor the law. According
10
the financial aid
,
news service
"Student Aid
News,"
some
schools had already put up a
widely circulated Selective Service
poster which informed students
they'd have to register for the
draft before rece,vmg aid. The
poster states that the draft clause
is "quick, it's easy, and it's the
law."
The
Justice
Depanment
recently informed the Education
Department that it would be held
in contemptofcourt if any school
tried to carry out the law, said
Deppe.
According to the "Student Aid
News," students
·
who had signed
up for the Pell Basic Educational
.
Opportunity Grant
.had
been
informed that they would have to
comply with the draft clause. The
Education Department is now
trying to counter this in-
formation.
In February, when
Marist
received a notice of proposed
rule-making concerning the law;
the financial aid office replied
that it thought it shouldn't . be
passed. Other financial aid offices
contactea agreed on this, said
Karen
J.
Atkins, director of
financial aid at Marist. It would
be too expensive, time consuming
and confusing, said Atkin.
Financial aid forms that don't
include the draft registration
clause have already been printed
up, she said.
Atkin said that the law would
cause a great deal of confusion
among· students because many
have already filled out financial
aid forms. If new forms were
printed they would have to go
through the process again. They
·
also would not find out whether
they were eligible to receive aid
until very close to the start of the
school year, said Atkin.
Students would have to present
a letter from
·
the government
proving the-v would registered for
the draft if tile d~11se was
enacted. This could cause further
confusion for the students since
the government often doesn't
send the letters out right away,
she said. Students who couldn't
present the letter would be denied
loans. This time delay could cause
students to be too late to receive
aid.
The government might try to
"phase-in" the law during the
1984-85 school yea~
by having the
Selective Service check up on
students
they
register
for
financial aid, said Atkin. For
now, though, the clause
will
not
be included on financial aid
forms.
Page 10 · THE CIRCLE· April 21, · 1983
b~
Fred E. McManus .
Forum
also thinks of himself as an ex- . to prison. Your last rejoiitder)s
ception. He tells himself what a
that ,prison inmates think so· well
hard life he has had, how his
of 'themselves they: often :_don't
victims "had it coming" or that
believe tl,ley deserve to
•
be in
"all women are whores.'·' In this
prison! They actuallyJeeltheyare
way, researchers such as Michael unjustly-imprisoned.
As a
result;
Lillyquist say, criminals can hide
prison by itself does no. more to
the truth about themselves from
rehabilitate an antisocial· person
themselves.
than it would say;' a Russian spy.
Crime and what
to
do about it
is a good, conversational topic.
Either an expensiye picture book
on the cofftie table or mention of
concern about the ·safety of the
streets at night can spark a,lively
discussion' among guests. Here
are two questions guaranteed to
add a new twist
·10
conversations
about crime. First, , what do
crim.inals think of themselves?
A
second · perky tidbit in
conversations about crime is this;
· can criminals be rehabilitated·
using the therapeutic methods
developed to treat neurotics? For
I don't mean to leave either you
or your· guests feeling frustrated.
Catching, convicting and im-
prisoning .an antispcial · person
helps. But, these are only parts of
an ongoing educational . ·cam-
paign; Prison, like other ways of
holding people accountable for
their acts, helps · bring home the
idea that certain behaviors are not
acceptable to society and society
Consider the burglar or robber, example, should a therapist try to
mugger or rapist, thief or mur-
reduce
a criminal's guilts,
derer; what kind of person does frustrations, and inhibitions so
he think he is?. Does he think of • that the ."inner person" will be set
himself as being sneaky, violent, free? Here, you and your guests
dangerous,
untrustworthy, are likely to agree: "No! The
dishonest or even law-violating? criminal needs
more
guilt,
more
Your: guests might say this is frustration,
more
inhibition."
obvious;· that is what criminals The suprise is this: an increasing
are.
Here you say, "Norman Berg number of psychologists are·
found that antisocial persons beginning to agree with you and
think quite well of themselves. your guests.
· is strong. Most children learn
this;_ the antisocial· person does
not because he actively fights
against the realization. This puts
the burden on us;· we have· to
continue to judge and hold ·the·.
criminal accountable .. Your guests
may greet this statement with·
While the idea that change enthusiasm:
Punishment!
But
comes from within is old, the what I am describing is a united
realization that criminals resist
front demonstrating our opinion
change because they are not to the criminal. Receiving con- ·
sufficiently dissatisfied with sistent negative social feedback
themselves is new. People can't be for his criminal acts is the only
helped unless they feel something way the _ criminal can come to
is wrong within themselves and question his current high self-
the antisocial person · tends to
opinion. Sigmund Freud would
think he is fine (it is the world that
turn over in his grave at hearing
They think of. themselves as
daring,
adventurous, clear-
thinking, outspoken, warm-
hearted, and unselfish." (Uproar
of objections to be expected at
this point.) You point out you
didn't say criminals
were
nice
people; you said they
thought
of
themselves as nice people. People
deceive
themselves
about
themselves. While each criminal
tends
to
think of
other
criminals
as sneaky, violent, dangerous,
untrustworthy and so forth; he
is wrong). Here, your guests · this!
.
might protest that a criminal must
Fred
~cManus
teaches
be dissatisfied when cri.me leads
psychology at Marist.
Want Some Cheap Thrills?
· Do~'t Forget
MAYFES'T _, "83"? --
RIDE · NEEDED: Mon.-Thurs.
Fishkill to St. Francis area. Leave
at approx.
8:30
a.m. Will share
expenses,
896-5348.
Also need
ride back to Fishkill from St.
Francis area at
3:45
p.m.
FOR SALE: BSR fully automatic
record changer.
$15
or best offer.
See Kevin 1n
G-108,
ext
148.
. Mr. Weekend,
Did you get your
$10
from you
last keg party?
Leo 1
Rosie:
The pig pen will be cleaned by
Thursday or Friday. By the way
have you seen my keys?
Mini
Lou
Kitty:
We made it
72
hours without
sleep and we are still normal.
Well, at least I am.
Love,
M.L.
D.M.
Get the package? There's a lot
more where that came from. Did
you make a wish?
Mr. Postman
SoftbaJJ·
,
..
• -~at
"r\}i
ot
.
,
,
IFIED6
Brink
They're coming to take me
away ... HAHA...
Don't
be
"punny"!
!
It's "jest" in fun.
. A fellow_Iunatic
Lois-
How was the flight with
superman? Is Clark Kent really
mild mannered? Could he please
. break out of the phone booth by
4
.
•
?
.
a.m. next ume .
Slugs,
Signed,
The Daily Planet
Next time we clean up your
messes we expect some payment.
LSD and MO
Spiker,
You're my Mr. Marist!!
Your Babe-!
Slinky,
My exercise class starts soon!
Practice sit-up at my place.
You know who
Dear Sinatra and Diver,
The new P.F. 's - We love you.
Dear P.F.'s,
I'm glad _it's settled -
I can't
live without you guys!
Love Ya Lots,
J.M.
Nicki,
- You were the greatest. Have
fun c;itching up!
P.C.
Lindy,
You
were the greatest
Christabel! Happy Anniversary
and GOOD LUCK with the
Fashion Show.
Giuf
Holly2:
What can
l
say: you are
as good
as you said you were: But it's
much better · with Peter and
Sharon.
J.C
DD:
I
left Skinner's straight.
D.C.
Rag, Rag, Rag, Rag, Rag, Rag,
Rag, Rag,
Love, the Rag Team
Congratulations, Mike -
The
Residence Staff
Kev,
How are you're circles, squares
and triangles? l miss you.
• Love
The girl who's
always smiling
sth-.Annu~,-
-
:· CUliTURAL-·-:-
,
__ DINNER
·
·
oANCE
DATE: Fridc1y, April 29, 1983
,
. PLACE: Marist College Dinin·g Hall
TIME:·a:oq
p.rn. -
1:00
a.rn. ·
TICKET PRICE: $5, $8
For Couples
Contact: -Karen ,Williams
(914) 486-9460- RIJl. 225
Sponsored
By Black Students'
Union
R~!~:!!!-!
tHEAT111
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
EXCLUSIVE
Dutchess County
Area Showing
·ACADEMY A WARD
WINNER
Ben Kingsley
.
Ill
Harold Pinter's
BETRAYAL(R).
· ,-'. _., "~-"-
.
'
,- ;;_-:.-
•
;
:-;;: J
·-
·
.,. ;
..
. :.~
·t ·· •
,
,:· ·; .
,.,:
.
::n. . . . ,
t • ....,
WRITERS
.
WANTED
The .
·
circle
is·
now :accepting
ap-
·pUcatio9-s for, the following posi-
. tions
f
ot
1983~84;
-:-
·
_Humor Columnist
Concert/Music Columnist
-
Club/Restaurant· Columnist
Interested ·students should submit
a sample col um~ of not more than
500 words to ·Christine Dempsey,·
Box Cl09,,by May 5. Applicants
should include on-ca_mpus address
with samples.
I
I
i
I
r
_
.... _lill!-----------------------------------•
.
April
21, 1983 ~
_
THE CIRCLE· Page 1 1 - - •
·WMCR·._radiothon
clears
$J,
000
Tnark
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
.
..
.
...
...
·
.
:
·.
.
by
M~rk
Stuart
·
_
The
.
goal set by
.
WMCR of
·
·
·
$1,200 is $200 more than last
-
"Y oung at heart."
year's donations, but less than the
.
.
"You'ye gotta. have heart."
·
original
_
goal of $1,500
.
set
·
''Weve got the beat."
previously
thi
,
s year.
.
·
The
·
above are all songs you
-
·
"We changed
it
to\ $1,200
probably could have heard last. because we
·
didn't think we'd get
Thursday through Sunday night.
·
it ($1,500)-,.' said Davis. •~we
on
WMCR.
-·
·.
·
·.
·
·
.
were a little over optimistic
.
"
.
_
.
.
For 9
i
.9 continuous hours last
_
Davies expects donations from
.
weekend, four disc jockeys from
faculty and organizations this
·
-.
WMCR ·91.9 FM .played music
_·
week. The
.
sophomore and junior
anl informed
::
listeners
·
of the
classes have
.
agreed to donate
effects of heart diseases while
.
money as well
:
as the Gaelic
raising money.
-
·
·
Society and. the Marist College
The
··
.
Marist College
.
·
radio
Knights
of
Columbus.
The
station
.
raised $930
-
in
·
donations
·
amount of money to
.
be donated
·
through
•
·
.
pledges
and
ap-
·
by each group has not yet been
.
proximately $70 through can-
.
specified.
nister
·
donations in its third an-
·
The money raised will go
.
to
-
nual
·
radio
·
marathon for the
three main areas, according to
Heart Association, according to Murray, who served as the 1982
co-chairmen Bob Davies and Dan
.
.
Dutchess
County
Heart
Hartman. ·
.
_
_
.
Association chairman. Some
WMCR staff members
(I
to r): Bob Davies, Jay Stone, Paul Beckerle, Lou Goidel, Jack
Graffing, Paul Palmer and Dan Hart'!'len. (photo by Gina
_
Franciscovich)
The
-•
radiothon featured in-
funds will go to
_
emergency heart
terviews
·
with
·
New York State attack equipment while other
Health Commissioner
-
David
funds will provide educational
Axelrod
-
and
·
Marist
.
College
services from the corporate level
President Dennis Murray,
·
who
·
to the public schools to increase
serves on the Dutchess
.
County
community
-·
awareness of what
Hear[ Association's Advisory
heart disease is.
·
Committee on fundraising
,
·
The third area of importance,
.
The
.
four DJ's were Paul
'
Murray said, is research.
Palmer, Lew Goidel, Jay
.
Stone
,
.
"Many people are alive today
and Paul Beckerle.
because of the research done by
. the Heart Association, like the
bypass operations we hear of,'' he
aid .
.
"We are making progress in
dealing with the treatment of
heart disease and also the
prevention of heart disi;ase. ''
The radiothon had an
in-
formative purpose besides just
raising money.
"Heart facts" were
·
read oc-
casionally and informed the
listeners as to the effects of heart
disease and how to prevent heart
problems.
In his interview with Beckerle,
Murray said "People can control
·
or alleviate heart disease in their
·
lifetime with proper diet, taking
proper care of themselves, and
a-voiding things that can lead to
heart disease.''
·
The marathon meant a lot to
Hartman, whose .father died of
heart disease four years ago at the
age of 51.
"The marathon showed how
people can pull together for a
good cause and· there's not as
much student apathy as ad-
ministrators say," he said. "Even
though I'll never really know how
much
.
good this will do, I feel
good that I let students become
aware and
hopefully
they'll
remember more than 'here's a
dollar, leave me alone'."
Game room Jo be renovated into social area
by Grace Tejada
socialize was needed on campus.
alternative. The ideas turned into administrators in Student Affairs,
The new area· will serve as an
a
.
definite project which
.
will begin
it seems that the lack of classroom
.
The Champagnat game room, ice cream parlor and
.
coffeeshop.
during the summer and is ex-
space would deter any. alternate
deli and weight
_
room
will be "The Marist Musicians Club will
pected to be completed by the Fall
plans for the room.
renovated for next semseter into a provide live entertainment," said
semester of 1983," said Andrew
The two doors in front of the
socializing area where alcohol is Gerard Cox, dean of student
Crecca, president of the freshman
deli will be closed. There will be a
not served.
.
-
·
..
·
affairs. The College Union Board
class and chairman of
-
the food
service window on the wall that
·
·
.•
.
.
•
coffeehouse will also be con-
-
committee,
connects both the game room and
,
·
oue to t~e raised drinking age, ducted there.
.
·
,
the deli. The electronic games will
.
·
the Marist ~dministrat~n and the
,.
...
. .-
.
·
. -
..
·
.
-
According to Crecca, his first be moved into the weight room,
·
••
.
·
.
·
:
·
·
•
,
:
}nter-~<>use
•
·
_
_
C0!,1!!
7
11
, .
J
oo
_
~
·
-
--
~~W~cn
the 1<:1_ea
.
<=a!1,1~ upa~out
.
)dea was to convert room C::C249
,
.
and where the games are now wiH
<
'
~
'f·
.::
'-'
·
'
~mm1t.tee
'
decided-a• new
~
non-
·
·
usmg
,
-
the
:
-
Champagnat weight
.
i
iilt'i'.>
:
a
·
·
non:.:aJcoh~lic
·
area;
_
~e
usecf
a's
tliitsittirig
area:
·
<
:
·
.
,:
!
-
alcohohc area for students to room area 1t seemed to be a good
however, after speakrng to the
:.. .
Seiler's will'provide
-
tables arid
chairs which
will
seat ap-
proximately 60 to 80 people,
according
·
to Frank Scott,
manager of Seiler's Food Service .
.
"As a whole the area will ac-
commodate about 125 people,"
said Scott.
This area will
provide a
soundproof ceiling to prevent
noise from traveling to the first
floor
.
Champagnat.
· _
•
;
·
The
cost of renovating the .irea
-
-
·
has
'
not yet been estimated.
Fashion
..
readies spTing show
.
\
.
.
--
-
.
·
·
_
lf
·n
the Picture •..
.
Put
Yourse
1
_
-
,
-
Makeit Hap~n T~s Summer!
'
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o
n
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l'<,uilflkc,:psie•~52c5050
llorkinl!
this Summer? ,ILL SPORT
is
op.'71
i da)~
and
•"'el'.'
"
ewnins! for
)11\Jr
con,-roieoce.
by Gwen Swinton
'.'Busy" is the word as fashio
·
n
·
majors currently prepare for their
spring fashion show, which will
, be
.
held from April 27 through
April 30 in the fashion depart-
ment at Donnelly Hall.
·
·
The theme of this year's
production is
"A
Fashion Ac-
clamation'~
and will
feature
outfits ranging from casual to
dressy daywear and eveningwear.
·
Clothes in every shade of the .
rainbow will be modeled, but the
dominant colors will be red, white
and black. The scenes will be
coordinated to feature outfits in
Theater to feature students' work
by Daniel P. McCormick
train station. It was written by
.
sophomore Meg Adamski.
Five student-written plays are
·
"Sisters" offers a view of the
scheduled to be
-
performed at 8
intimate relationship among three
p.m. April 26, 27 and 28 as a part
.
sisters and their mother. The
of the · experimental theater
drama is directed by Nancy
workshop headed by Dean of Keschinger, a Marist sophomore.
Student
Affairs Gerard A
.
Cox
.
It was written by junior Karyn
The plays will be performed in
M ai;tdalen
.
the Campus Center Theatre.
"The Bonds of Obedience,"
"A Moment of Silence,"
written by Alex Smyle, assistant
directed by student Jeanne Fahey,
registrar and recent graduate,
fo<;uses on a 17-year-old male
presents a view of the problems
who experiences a series of day-
facing a group of college students
dreams pertaining to the teenage
who reside in a fraternity house.
problems of many
J
7-year-olds. It
It is directed by freshman John
was written by Ted
·
Waters, a
Henry Griffiths.
junior at Marist.
Set design for the five plays will
"Thicker Than Water," centers
.
.
on a typical American family that
must deal with the daily
challenges that family living
provides.
It
is directed by
Christopher Serafini, also a
student~ at Marist from a script
written by senior Jon McBride.
Susan Fleming, a
Marist
junior, directs, "Taking It to the
Streets," a play that deals with
the consequences of a crime at a
·
minimal.
"Experimental theater gives
Marist students a chance to learn
from their successes as well as
their failures," said Cox. "An
educational
institution. should
provide opportunities for trial
and error."
Cox also said the experimental
theater plays might provide the
motivation
for other Marist
students to attempt the same
kinds of challenges themselves.
Psi Chi inducts new members
The Marist College Chapter of
Psi Chi, a national honor society
in psychology, recently inducted
seven new members.
·
Initiated were graduate student
Ronald Kiveo, graduate ~rndent
Yvonne Poley, senior Guy Jacob,
senior Jacqueline Conti, senior
Roger Sala, junior Susan DiUglio
and junior Fiona Perrone. Also
to be inducted are graduate
students Stephanie Clancy and
Susan Buckner.
these shades;
Rehearsals for this year's show
began early last February under
the direction of David Leigh,
director of ttie .fashion depart-
ment. Ev
_
eryone involved in the
show was
.
required to
.
attend
mandatory
Monday-night
rehearsals.
and
additional
rehearsa_ls during the week.
The show comprises a total of
24 scenes in which each fashion
major is required to make and
model at least four outfits. Music
featured during t}le scenes will be
by such artists as George Benson,
Abba, and Earth, Wind and Fire.
As in previous shows, second and
third-year fashion majors will
each be required to do scenes
called the Sophomore and Junior
numbers.
Despite growing pressures as
the show draws nearer, combined
with work from their other
classes, fashion majors remain
excited and optimistic about their
upcoming show.
·
"It's a way for fashion majors
to express their creativity," said
senior Donna Leonard.
·
"We tend to go all out on stage
and really put our hearts into it,
because
not
only are
we
representing the school, we're
representing ourselves," she said.
Senior fashion major Ann
Reisig said that doing a show is
not only a way of acquiring poise
and confidence in front of people,
.
but it also helps to round out their
experience.
.
"It
teaches us every aspect of
the work, not just what you're
working on," she said.
A design major is required to
participate in a total of three
fashion shows before she can
complete her fashion curriculum
at Marist. Tickets for this up-
coming show can be purchased
from Mr. Leigh in the fashion
department.
·
.
.
.
..
·
-
-
.
.
.
.
-----------
;
'
,·
'
'.
r \
~
\
.
f<
.
,
R()Wt~rS
look
.t(f
recapt\.lre · President'
S
Cup
~
~
.•
'
~
.
.
...
-
-
By
Jim
Leonard . . .
·
. . ..
~rlast year's performaric~. ··. ·.
.
. _Marist College. c~ew. ·will :at-
· "In .order. to· win'first Pl!lce ·
tempt to recapture the President!s
overall,''. said Davis, "'we would:-
Cup Saturday when ii faces 13 · have to "'.in first plac_e: in almost.
other colleges:: iii : the .• annual ,: every event we enter:· Since we
President's Cup _Rega!ta ·· at the don't· have a . women's· varsity.
Hudson River· waterfront starting eight boat or a ·men's' varsity'
at
s
a.m, •·
.- ..
..
_
lightweight eight boat this year,-it
.
. Marist bst the Cup by a single - will be tough." · ·
· .
point last yearfo LaSalle College, . -.. _The regatta _is run on a points
after winning_in
198L
· system basis; Each team-receives a
·· According to .. Head Coach . certain amount o~ points for_a
Larry · Dav~s, ¥arist ·witr have. a._. !°irst,sec~md, or third place ~_msh
.. tough • time winning this year
m a particular_ race with-a higher
because the team· will row off .· nur!}ber of pomts awarded for a
•
·
·against· "some ~qf its s_trcingest · fi~st place finis~ than a second or.
.
.
competition in . years-'. at··. this , th1~d: place fimsh. At. the ~nd. of -
.
'I' •
regatta."·.• . c'..d
<
:
.
-:.._,:,,,
·
::-:<-::::
t~e regatta, the col!ege w!th ~he
5&:::7 '. -~ ._ ..
.. Davis said the· University 'of :h1gh
7
st t?taLof. pomts wms t~e - ~ - · . -.,_
. Rhode lslarid men's team and.the :· Pre_s1dent s Cup.
>
.
· . _
,-
.. · women's teains from th;
.
United,:-
_:A
-team can.- win,_the regatta ·
·sta_tes Naval Acade~y
and'
Coast. 'without wiim~ng ,a·: first })lace in· - ~
.
Guard Academy wdl be. among
any race, but1t must,hav~ a large
the most powerful to beat.
.
n_ui_nber of second and third place
·~~{~;~~x~~~I;J
~lWr~;:m~~~}~F~~·
t?-~~k~~=:T.~·•~·~=-c__C•~·l<:5· ·.
;~~~d~~~·~:u~~~~,'~;
r=t~;~t~r:;E!:~rif!;;;
:-=- ·~. ::_
,~--~-==--;(~:~~~~.;::'~
Rochester, -·Lowe_ll
University,
four), and ~me _third place fimsh - - - -
-
_,.:·~·-·--"·,;,•: .•
,lJf;;-:---:-:
·· - · - -.... · ..
·
~--
·
·••.!!Wl
'.2.:.:tt
=~
SUNY Maritiine the Merchant
(men s varsity eight). . .
-
- '
~~
·
-
-,"~"--"'-· .
" - - - · · ·
=.
'
. Marine Academy' (King's Point),
Davis said heis please_d with ~he
,..:'.::::.:
<,.....,.___
.
_
,
__ .
·--~-.,~
St. John's (Staten Island), St.
men and worne~ novice_s (f1rst
Women's Cr~w takes to the Hudson: The prestigious Pres~dent's Cup Regatta
will
be held
Joseph's College (Philadelphia),
year rowers) this ~eason, but
Saturday. (~hoto by Gina F~nciscovich)
·
.
.
Stockton
State
Sk:idmore
added he · would hke to see
Manhattan, and 1o'na College .... '
.
stro'!ger_. per~o~mances · by . !he
Davis said he is sure Maristwill
varsity rowers
m
•the_ upcommg .
.
''hold their own"~against the top · races. ·"If_ we _continu
7
to work
schools but he is uncertain
if
the . hard, Manst
WIii
surprise a lot of
team can rep'eatits .1981 sh_owing, ·_. colleges this
_
season," Davis _s,aid.
Marist signs two to hoop team-
·
By Mike Graney
School. Wynn chose Marist over
Another candidate to sign was
By Bill Travers ·
It's not -easy rooting for. your
-
favorite team in the playoffs ·
anymore: You have to decide
which one is your absolute
favorite. I'm what you call a local
rooter -
Mets, Giants, Islanders
and Knicks. But that's now.
Before I got ·season tickets for
the Giants in 1978, I was a Jets
fan. And before the Islanders
were formed I was the biggest
Rang<:rs fan (even bigger than you
Jeanne). Plus, way back when the
American Basketball Association
was around~ I supported the Nets.
The Mets have been the only
~onstant.
So, what do I do now that the
Rangers are playing the lslande_rs
Tennessee St.
.
Wes Fuller, a
6'5" forward from
· Two standout · high school
Shamely is a 6'6" forward
Camden High School in New
basketball players have signed
from Woodlands High School in
Jersey. He chose not to go to
lettersof intent _and will join the
White
·
Plains, the. school --All-
Marist and took his talents to
Red Foxes next season, according
American Steve Smith attended.· . Northeastern University: He had
to . Ron Petro, . :athletic director . Shamely is . an All-Westchester
his. ··• deci~iorr down
•
.· to .···· Nor- -
and
head
basketball coach;
... ·.··· •. County selection:
.
. :·:"
.. .','' : '.
theastem;Drake,
and_Maiist.
Charles. ;
:
Wyrin,· and
.
Mark ·· · Johnson; a_ 6'3''.' guard from
:Petro is stillhoping to,sign one
·. , Shameii-have chosen
Jo
play at
Philadelphia,
·
Pa., was a first
of the following players for next
Marisf/,while Marques Johnson
team All-City ·selection at West · year: Peter McGee, a 6'10" center
· probably · will sign in the near
Catholic High School. Along with
from Ewing High School in New
future. ..
·
· .. · . ·
. . l)1arist, Johnson is still ·con-
Jersey; · Mike Milliqg,
-.6'7t'
Wynn, a-6'4"' swingman from
sidering Wagner and Utica.
forward
from. Dunbar High
Camden, N.J .; averaged over. 20 -· Marist is looking to fill _ the
School in Washington, D.C., or
. points a game while gaining All-
shoes of departing seniors. Steve Anthony Moye, a 6'2" guard
South Jefsey·honors•in his senior
Smith, Keith Denis, and Rufus
from Wilbur Cross High _School
vear at Woodrow Wilson -High
Cooper.
in Connecticut.
·
Foxes bomb Bard,'face Siena next
-
•_,
'
•
'
• , •
•
' ' -
-
; I
• •
.
' Marist's Bob Sherer went three
Tue~day's game against Ramapo
· sets . against Bard's Matt Con.:
and wm face Siena in a home .
.. zanetti before prevailing 5-7, 7~5,·
match tomorrow.
~-' 6-4; as the Red Foxes blanked · · Marist . has· been "pfayng'.its
Bard, 9-0, in a home tennis match
home matches at the new court,
Friday at· the Dutchess Racquet
because the ·old courts on campus
.
Club.
(
.
are condemned. •.
.
The numb.er three singles inatch
• -"The main problem with the
between Sherer and Conzanetti · Dutchess Racquet Club," · said
. was the closest of the day as Bill · ~ophomorr Pat McCullough, "is
. Flood, . Jeremy. Shokham; Pat
. that the fa.ns just -can't get there
·. McCullough and Joe Giuliani
for.the matches.-'· ·
won easily while Larry Giuffre
The.Racquet Club is located on .
. won by default.
.
.
· · Salt Point Road near the Heritage
Marist was 1-2-1 going into
Gardens apartments ....
Friday
Sat.
Mon •
Wed.
. Sports
schedule.
T Siena (home)
L
Steven's
Tech
(away)
C
President's
Cup
Regatta
(home)
T · Quinnipiac
(away)
L
Drew
(away)
T-Tennis L-~ Lacrosse C- Crew.
S,ports Shorts·
.
.
.
-
:
.
:
'
.
~
in the National Hockey League little easier. I like the Nets, always
playoffs and the Nets are battling • did, even wlten, they played_ in the
the Knicks in the_ National .,old :island Garden. But 1t was
Basketball Association playoffs?
possible to like· the ,Knicks at· the ·
Let's attack the problem on the sam1: time because they were in
ice first.
the l'-tB.A. ·
·
If you're like me you are an
Islander fan but down deep you
still love the Rangers, I. was there
when the Islanders were born and
have been loyal ·ever since. And
I'm from Long Island.
..
On the other hand, ttie Rangers
deserve a break because they have
waited so long for the Cup to
return and'the Islanders have won
three in a row.
I'm greedy -~ let'_s
·
go Islan-
ders!
Now a decisioh has to be made
about basketball. This one's a
But now it's different. There is
no more
A..B.A., and a choice has .
to be made, It's the Knicks. I still
don't like the · fact the · Nets
dumped Julius Erving before 'the -
move to Jersey.
·
·
•••••
I know I've said this before,
but you have to feel sorry for the
New-York Mets. I am probably
the biggest diehard Mets fan
around. ·But· take a good look at
the team. As hard as it is for me
to say;,Jhey are terrible.
At best, they are a bunch of
..,,
· inediocre ballplayers. · It's_ very
·
frustrating to watch them lose all
the _time .. Dave Kingman causes
more harni (strikeouts) than good
(home r~ns);. there is no steady
shortstop who can hit· and field;
Hubie Brooks shows promise but
his hitting and fielding are in-
consistent;
George Foster is
proven, but remember last year?;.
Mookie Wilson doesn't bunt
enough. The list goes on ..
. · There are niany ·promising
young ballplayers -
especially
pitchers -
on the farm team, so
.. that's one plus.
Wait 'til next year ..... or the
·
year after?
.,.
•••••
Chalk one up for the women
this week. Despite blisters and a
cramp that struck midway .
through the race, Joan Benoit (no
relation ·to· the infamous dorm)
.
shattered '. the women's. world
record in _ the ·. 87th Boston ,
Marathon. -
.
__ .
· .. .
·
The Boston University track
coach finished the 26-mile course
in 2:22:42 -
more than, two :
minutes faster than any woman in
history. I can't imagine what it
must be like-to run 26 miles.·
•
••••
Congratulations goes to Dick
Quinn, Marist assistant athletic
director, and Glen Marinelli,
Marist trainer, who raced in the
.Marathon.
•••••
Rumor . has it the . Marist
basketball team will be moving ,
into a new Conference next year.
More on that later.
-
·
28.18.1
28.18.2
28.18.3
28.18.4
28.18.5
28.18.6
28.18.7
28.18.8
28.18.9
28.18.10
28.18.11
28.18.12
.
·
.
,....,11
.
·
·
·
·
•
··.
,
V
\
01
:
·
bj""'fj
,
F
.
-
.
I.:
:>.
· ·
·
D
!.:A
-
-
-
1.:t
U L ~
,.
•
.
.
........
~
.
:
---
.
·
\
.
.
·
<
·
·
·
·.·
Volume
28,
Numbiir 18
.
.
....
-
. .
Mar/sf
College,
Poughkeepsie,
N.Y.
·
·
April
21, 1983
~kJnn.er'sistqri.et
..
of
J8
Special
/" '
.
.
-~
\~
:
;
~
;/:.::
;
·->~
:
~ .
.
~-~
·
.
..
·.
. -
~-
-
.
.
'
.'
:
.
' -
-
:
by C~stlne Dempsey
,.
-
.
.
. •·
·
·
from
-
.38 Special: an
.
album that · Route 9 during
his
search, Gerber
·
··•
·
· -•
.. } < ·
. _
·
'
·
•
·.
.
·
reached Billboard's top
·
twenty
picked Skinners, which he said
Sp~ingsteen has Asbury Park,
·
last fall.
.
:
··
,.
.
·
·
>
.
·
. • ·
··.•.
looked like a "college~type bar.
u
-,:
·.
Billy J_~I ha
.
s Allentown, Lynard
•<
The album illustrator;
·
Larry
Although the bar depicted in
.
•
.
Syn
_
a!d
·
~as Alabama and
:
.38
Gerber, Hopeweli Junction, said
the upper right-hand corner of the
!
·•·.
,
)>l>C.~tal
-:!_
~a;
"·
PQughkeepsie
.
. .
that
.
he ""'.ent looking
:
around
.
\
build_ing _a~d the
·
~eli
~
tale
_
inan-
.
r.
_
.
•
:ii.ii~
_
..
_
.
.
..
..
:.
Gou!{lt~ee~s1
_
~- . ;
.
-
.
.
. .
-
. •
.
:,
.
Poughkeeps1_e for bars that would
"
!lequmJeg m th~ wmdow reveals
_
f,
;)"1'"":,
'
'
-
, · <
'
..
·:
:'.
-
~oµgh~eeps1e s
:
very
-
own
·
~e
:
app_ropnate
Jor
-
the cover
:
1~
:
tr':'e identity as
_
Skinners,
L
\
;,
-:,_
.•
\::.
__
'.
_
·
\_ :,--
>
:
.
:
S~mners is
_
featured on the
.
cover
.
.
·
dlustrat1on.
. ..
.
.
•
which 1s not a franchise.
.
.
-
.
;
t-
.,.
_
-
·
ar
_
t
-
~f the .latest albuit( r~lea~e
_.,;
After driving up
_
and down
_
-
-
-
_
S_kinners
was
·
·
not
·
officially
.
l-1
·-,
i7':'
?}
\
-·
·
-
-
"
.
~~t1fied of the bar's ap~rance
-
E,
.
.
. :
1
t'J~{M
:';
1
:;m~~rr
:
~
-
::~t~f,
.
¥!
.
:,
j
·
-
:•
-,.·
;,'i
f~s.t/;Nicljj)l
l
s
"
"d
;
Slc:inners
:'
did'fiof':I.:
iifi~ilii
~
,
~;
~~t
,
~,}
L
~
, ..
.
.
.
.
.
. .
.
..
,
focal
-
busiiies~~s;
.,
both from the
•
·
..
••
~ioes
big tini~ as coverart for
a
top-selliniaibuni.
_
(plioto
b)'
.:
.
-
·
.
.
.
:
Grand
·
:
:
Union
:
mall
·
11
(
Fishkill,
'.
-
Christine Dempsey)
•
>-
-
-
·
said Stew Schantz WP.DH radio
·
-' :~
.
·
:
.
_-
..
<
,
-
·
·
•,
stat~
:
disc jo,ckey:
;
\
,.
,;,
,
:-
-/~·
.
,
•
·
'.
cVertisirig
'
\
a~ency
-
of
_
.,
_A&M
•
portrayed
·
the group's
·
name, .38
_ _
,_
·
•
Gerbei'notoruy confirmed
;_
that·
'
Records
/
·
·
:':_:_:;-
,
,
,
_
.
..
,
..
.
.
Special; on the album
.
cover was
>
-
Ile .
dre\V
/
tl:iese
_:,'.
building~
/
\
but
- •
'.'~
.
'
ha~
/
JO
'.
,
follow certam
·
not intend~d to rese_mble.a gun:
_
In
t!:,c
added
,
that
,
he stibjectively'.picked
spfc•f~~t1on
_
s
,
from
.:.
the album
.
fact, he sa1~ that smce the group
~
:
loi=aLpeopl
_
e
•
right
.
9ff
.
the
.
streets .
.
compani5~;
_
'.
_.
'
.:
he saip, !idding that
;
is n~w "going ~.ational," they are
.
forthecover.
-
.•
,._
·
~
·
.,,.:,:_..,
,
:
,:·: ·,
he
_,
was
;
g1ven a prehm111ary rough
·
.
&'trymg
·
to get nd of the southe
,
rn
\<
'"The people
·::c
for the
_
album
,
\
"_'
sketcb
,
_
.
.wit.h
.:
stick
:
.
figures
fo
·
rock image.t'
.·
-
-
'
.
.
.
- ·
.
cov.~r
.:
were
,
.
~hot
:
insi<l
,
e
:-
my
:,:
follow.
---
.
- .
·
•:
.'
.'
.
<
:
C
,
:
;
:
Sev~ral
-
cha!1ges were mvolved
..
house,'
t.
~
said Gerber,
_
whcf added•
\ i
The peopJe in the background
·
m the dlus
_
trauon process,- Gerber
that
·
aforie point in
.
·
his artistic
·
ofthe picture are supposed to be
-
said .
.
He added that he drew the
·
,
.
endeavors he had a
~
whole group
.
"rough-looking,"
-
Gerber said.
·
·
scene five different times before it
of models in his
•
house
at
the same
He also said that he picked a gym was right.
,
·.
,
-
time;
· ·
-
-
teactiei: forthe girl whose
_
back is
:
_
. ·
·
-.
·
·
-- ._
·.
_
·
. _'
.
'
Gerber said
'
that he got
.
the job
turned
.
to the
~
viewer. '.'They
_<.i
:
Gerber'is continuing his local
_
_
to illustrate the cover of "_Special
(A&M
Records) wanted someone artistry; a ci.lrrefifproject o
,
f his is
.
Forces" tllrough
•
·
his
!
represen-
with a gooci body, ,.
-
Gerber said.
.'
a
·
.
blue-jeans ad for v•hic
,
h
:
his
tative,_ who spoke
.
to
·
the ad-
Gerber also said that the way he
·
models posed on his front lawn
,
-
:
<
~~x-tial
hafassinent:
~
questi9n
of
·
defirtitiOn
"
_
by Ja~quellne Pisani
sexual sugge
.
sti
-
ons
-
.
6r
'
j~k~s
-
others i!iterviewed for this story
friendly nature and that she
,-
incident changed
:
her
.
entire
.
"-
"
·
. -
·
·•
·
·
·.-·
·
directed atthe student because of
·
asked to
_
_
r~_main anonymous,
·
-
became dedicated to working for
:
academic career at Marist .
.
;
·
c
(:
_
Whe~
·
'as'ked his ~dvice by his
'
_
'
his/tier_gendet.
1
_ •
_._
.
·
·
:
_
recalls
·
the
.
-
time she
-
was
him
:
When she was alooe in his
·
-
Another female student told of
.
:
,
:
student, the profess
-
or suggested
At Marist College there are no propositioned by a college of-
office he would comment ori her
·
her mandatory meeting with a
·
that sh~ wear a tight sweater when
·'
verifiable statistics pertaining to
_
ficial. As she recalls_the incident:
looks and personal life;
.
_
·
professor, who appeared to be
·
:
going
'·
on an
:
interview•
A
·
teachers who sexually harass th~ir
"He asked me to go to bed. He
It then went a step further:
intoxicated at the time of the
·
humorous comment or sexual
;
students. According to the Ilev. treated me on his level and didn't
"I was the~e by myself and he
-
incident:
·
-
~
harassment?
·
·
- -
Richard LaMorte, assistant dean talk down to me or threaten me:
It
-
was
·
sitting riex
·
t to
·
me. H~
:
..
We briefly discussed the
·
-
·
:-°
A.college official working on a
·
or studerit affairs, there is not a
-.:.
seemed as if he felt two mature
complained that his back was
group
.
project. He then started
-
committee with a female student
·
great degree of sexual harassment
·
adults
-
were sitting together. •
hurting him. He then walked into
asking
.
questions about our
•
•
asked her if she would be willing
-
on this campus.
.
·
:
'.
.
_
wasn't
a
student
·
to him at that
his office arid laid down on the
personal life
·
especially with
·
to
·
sleep
:
with
.•
.
him.
A
friendly
Gerard Cox, dean of stud~nt point.
.
..
·
,
floor and asked for a back rub. I
regards to relationships with the
proposition
<
-
or
·
sex
-
ual
··
affairs," said, "I wouldn't venture
·
"I was shocked because I had
_
don't know if he was drinking or
·
opposite sex:
·
·
·
·
_
harassment?
: .
.
.
.
.
.
at how widespread the problem is:
.
.
no idea that those thoughts were
.
what was in his
_
head. I just
"I was offended by his attitude
·
An administrator speaking to a
a"
lf
I were to base it on the number on
-
his mind. It bothered me
·
·
walked out .
.
It s::emed to much
and he picked up on this and
studenC inquired
-
if she was
·
of
·
students who
··
came
·
to me because I
am
a student, and the
like a scerie out of the movies. It
started railing me about
.
how
wearing a bra. Acasual comment
personally, I wouldn't say there individual should have respected - makes me nauseous to
.
think
·
uptight I was. I was shocked. I
or sexual harassment?
was
-
a major problem, but I do me not to put me in that
about it.
didn't think he had any right to
According to the President's
recognize that even a small case is situation."
·
_
"The situation scared me. I
carry on that way. It was really
National Advisory Council on
serious."
The student said after this
·
thought, is this the way it's going
·
sleazy."
Women's Education, sexual
incident the individual
-
in question
to be for the rest of my life when I
The student said that any
harassment cari
·
be classified
While no cases of forced sexual apologized but that the situation
work for a man?
_
respect she had for the professor
under
>
four
headings:
•
sexual
relations were discovered by The with him is currently awkward.
·
After this
.
situation, the in-
vanished. She said she was just
crimes, forced
_
sexual relations by
Circle~ several female students
•
Another female student work_ed
di vi dual
·
continued to
_
·
make
glad to get out of his class.
threat of punishment,
.
explicit
.
reported being harassed
_
verbally under
·
an administrator
.
for two
suggestive comments, she said.
It is not unusual for women to
sexual proposition at
·
times
·
by male instructors and ad-
years before an incident of this
He then acted aloof towards her.
avoid
.
discussing the subject of
backed by the promise of a
ministrators.
nature arose
.
She said that she
She did not wish to elaborate on
sexual harassment for -fear
.
of
reward,
_
or any crude, verbal
One student, who like the
.
was impressed by his sincere and
the effects, but she said that the
ConUnu~
_
on page7
..
'<,.
;
.
.
.
,•
.
.
.
.
,
.
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THE CIRCLE• April21, 1983
_
Ri11gs,
·
race
-
.
highlight
.
·
Weekend
:
Two
··
GOOD
-
-
;
DEALS
.
T·HAT
cA
·
N~r
:
_
ee.·eEAT
·
!
:
by Chris Serafini
::
Approximately 140 juniors will
receive their class rings this
Saturday night during a cer~mony
that
will highlight Parents'
·
Weekend.
.
.
.
.
'
The weekend's activities
·
of-
ficially will start on Friday at
2:15
p.m. with the Annual M
_
emorial
.
Service. The service
will
com-
memorate deceased students of
Marist and will be held at the
g
·
rotto. The ceremony will be
conducted by
Fr.
·
Richard
LaMorte and is sponsored by
Omega ,Society
_
.
·
·
A
student coffeehouse
will then
follow at 8:30 p.m
.
in the Fireside
Lounge. The show, •
.
vhich was
organized by .sophomore Sue
Dolan, will feature student talent.
"The music will all be mellow
.:,,.ith ab
s
olutely no rock arid
.
ron;,•
·
Betty Yeagliit, coordinator
·
of this
weekend's
.
coffeehouse and
dinner-dance; said.
.
Saturday's activities will
·
begin
at 7:30 a.m. with the President's
Cup Regatta
.
to
.
be
.
held at the
.
·
·
waterfront
'.
The"_ Ma~ist crew will
r
.
.·
:
·
:--
.
.
.
.
compete
:
in the regatta, the second
r
. .
. .
·
1argestiri
t
he
.
sfate
:
·
:·
·:.
. . ·
·
Parents visiting the
·
campus this
·
Saturday will be able to do some
shoppirig
'in
thttBookstore, which
will be open from H:OO
·
a.in. to
3:00
p.m.
At
2
:
30
.·
p.m
:
,
·
guests
will be
·
able to visit the residence
halls which will be conducting a
r
series of informal open houses.
r
The afternoon will come to an end
I
with a Mass in the Chapel at 5:30
p.m.
.
The Junior Ring Ceremony will
be conducted in the Chapel at
··
·
7:00
p.m.
Saturday night. Th~
....0
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-
.
·.
·
·
·
Class Officers,
_
Gerara
Cox
,
aean
·
·
of
'
Stiideitt
·
Affairs
/
ind .
Grace
Sinisi .
.
The
'
actual ceremony wiil
i
-
be very similar to those
.
of past
years, according to Cox, with the
'
'
one exception being the
_
reception
immediately following. "In the
past, the reception was always
held in the library," Cox said.
"This year, it will be held in the
Campus Center to accommodate
the crowd."
Two separate receptions will be
held at'8:0O
p.m.
The
firstwill
only be for juniors
·
and their
.
guests and
·
wm be held
·
in the
.
Fireside Lounge, The second will
be open to all guests of the college
and will serve as
·
a cocktail hour
before the dinnei-
~
dance. This
reception will be held in the Pub.
Saturday's
activities
"'
will
conclude with the dinner-dance to
be held at
9:00
•
p.m. in
_
the
cafeteria. Over
300 people . are
. expected to attend, according to
Yeaglin. Guests
will
dine on
prime rib dinner while listening to
the music of the band
R
.
P.M.
.
.
·
The weekend's planned events
.wiH conc_lude on Sunday with a
Mass at
11 :00 a.ni. in the Chapel.
"Preparations for this weekend
have been going on all year," Cox
said. "I'm sure it will be a sue-
cess."
Parents' weekend
Friday:
2:15 .. Student
·
Memorial
Service at Grotto
8:30 . . S t u den t
Ta
I en t
Coffeehouse
at
Fireside Lounge
Saturday:
7
:
30 .. President
'
s-
Cup
-
Regatta
al
lhe
Waterfront
5:30 . . Mass at Chapel
7:00 .. Junior
Ring
Ceremony at Chapel
8:00 .
.
Junior Ring Reception
at Fireside Lounge
8:00 . . Cocktail Party at Pub
9:00 .. Dinner
Dance
at
Dining Room
Sunday
:
11:00
.
Mass at Chapel
.
at
·
McD
·
onald
·
s
of-
Hyde
.
Park
.
.
Sundays Specials!
ggc
··
Al·I
-
the
.
Hotc
:
akes
.
.
Voll Call Eat!
PLUS
•
·
is ta
.
kin
·
g application
·
s
·
1or
·
.
·
-
the following:
Committee Chairp8rsoris:
·
Concert
.
Coffeehouse
·
Performing Arts
·
Vide,9tape
·
Film
so
·
cial
·
.:;
·
.
'
;
- .
·
'
Lectt1re
.
.
.
>
.
Marketingl~dvertising
Duties ofCommittee Chairpersons are to direct
all
events
..
within their respective areas; to
_
be re$ponsibl~
.
for
·
.
stimulating and coordinating in conjunction with hisih_er
own committee events, any other authorized organiza-
:
·
tion with events in their respective·areas; to form a com-
_
,
·
mittee
.
to carry out the duties of his /her position
·
anc;t to
.
be
.
responsible tor
.
adhering
.
.
.
to his/her
.
committees•
·
budgetary limitations throughout the year .
.
·
· ·
·
·
·
_
Appllcatlons:
.
,
being
.
accepted through
.
the
.
Coordinator of College
.
Ac-
-
tlvnlas Office. Daadllne for ap-
pllcatlons Is Tuesday Aprll 26,
1983.
''Th, Strength
of
any
·
group
!s
·
:
.
;ii
,
Jts
·peop/8;,
·
'
".'.,,
_
-
/.,
•
::
APPLY
'
TODAYt
}
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::
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DRINKS
'
- FOOD - MUSIC _11 :00
a.m·. :
4:00
a:m.
SANDWICHES 11
_
:00
a
-
.m. -
8:30
p.m.
Rte. 9 PoUghkeepsie
914-473-4725
•
1
•
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,
'
r
:
Williams
to retire
-,
.from
Marist
by Maria'Azzolina -
The Rev.
Rhys
Williams,
association professor of religious -
. studies, has -announced. that he
will retire in May, ending 17 years
at Ma_rist.
Williams said that he and his
wife will move to their second -
home in Cape Breton; Nova
Scotia, where they have _
spent
almost ·13 summers. The home is
a 350-acre farm, with 30 acres of
land currently under cultivation.
When Williams is not farming,
he will continue working on a
book he is writing about the New
Testament. The purpose of the
book is to enable the lay-person to
better understand the gospels. In
addition, Williams said lie will
lecture occasionally at a nearby
college, and also do substitute
parish work. "Once you've been a
priest, you never stop,'.• he said.
While some. people view
retirement as an end, Williams
disagrees. "Retirement is•simply a -
.
career change. I see
it
as a new
beginning," he said. "My wife
and I have been looking forward
to this for some time, but you·
have to wait until it's financially
possible," Williams added.
Student Terri Tobin confers with Rev. Rhys Williams, who
will be retiring at the semester's end. (photo by Gina Fran- ·
ciscovich) ·
·Elevator-s to be built
into Campus· Center
by Lynn Gregorski
electric wheel chair into that
space.
Perreira
said
that
An elevator designed for the
Giovannone has
the largest
handicapped will be installed in _
wheelchair on campus, and by
Campus Center in seven to eight
using him they could determine
months, according to Ed\\'.ard
how well a wheelchair can be
Waters, vice president for ad-
manuevered in that space and if
ministration and finance.
there is room for an attendant.
The 4½ 'x 6' elevator cab will
Giovannone said that the first
transport one student in a wheel
model they showed him was very
chair and one attendant to all
impractical because it was small
four levels of Campus Center: the
and cheap. He said after trying
bookstore,
mailroom,
main
out
his
chair within
the
entrance to Champagnat and
measurements they found that
Fireside Lounge levels.
there was no way it would work.
The elevator shaft will be built
Maneuvering
into the L~shaped jag or notch in
The second model Giovannone
the exterior walls of the Campus
was shown had a larger cab size
Center building. The jag can be
which gave more room to
viewed from the far right win-
maneuver his wheelchair, he said.
dows facing the west in the main
The total· cost of the elevator
lobby of Champagnat.
which includes the construction of
The elevator cab, designed by · the elevator shaft closure and the
the Dover Elevator Co., will have
installation, is estimated at
two entry ways and an electric eye - $100,000 to $105,000, according
that prevents the doors from
to Anthony Campilii, business
closing when a wheel chair is
officer. He said that every year
1970. In addition to the scripture
According to Williams, his passing through, said Diane
the college sets aside the budget
courses, over the last 13 years Marist years have changed him Perreira, director of the special
for
major
projects
and
Williams has taught courses on somewhat. "I'm much more services program.
renovations. Campilii said the
Western Religious Traditions, aware of what students go
The elevator will be equipped
cost will be amoratized from the
The History of World Religions,
through in order to learn," he with a tone indicator that signals
project budget over a period of
Theology, or Religious Thought; said. "I'm more conscious now of a person who is visually impafred
three years, costing $35,000 per
and Applied Ethics of Science and th~ learning process and student when the elevator has stopped and
year. He said this enables the
Medicine, just to name a few.
concerns," Williams added.
what floor it is on, she said. The college to do more projects each
In 1966, Williams was rector of
Williams said that lie will miss control panel will have a tactile
year. Campilii said there will be
Christ Church in Poughkeepsie,
Williams said he riever tried to most of all the people that he's numeric system that any person an additional annual cost of
when he came to Marist as a part-
estimate how many hours of his very· fond of at Marist. "I've can understand and use, said
maintenance contract with Dover
time faculty member. Williams
life he has spent teaching. "How formed a lot of good friendships Perreira. Waters said that the Elevator Company for normal
said he was asked to come to
do you measure teaching?" he here, and it will be hard for me to elevator will be accessible only to repairs and preventive main-
Marist to teach courses on The
asked. "As much goes on outside leave," he said.
handicapped students · who will
tenance.
Old and New Testaments, which
the classroom as well as inside,"
There is, however, one thing have keys to use it.
Benefits
were then required of all Catholic
Williams added. He said he has that Williams will be glad to leave
40-foot hole
"I think the college is putting it
freshmen students.
been teaching formally at the
1•
behind. "Committee meetings are
Internal and external con-
in just to benefit the students,"
Williams was asked to become
college and seminary levels for 22 the wor·st . .They're terrible, but struction will take place on every
said Perreira. She said about 12
a full-time faculty. member in
academic years._
. necessary evils," Williams said.
level of the building, according to .. students will be well served by the
...
_
. -
- . .
- . .
.
- . >-., :
·.•
_ , , - ·-,
< _ - .
·· - . . .
Perreira.,.Slle said th_~t fo~r :w~lls : elev_ator-,. but it wiU also ,benefit
,_. v.D,l · -•
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have to be knocked out and a · the general public.
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a 40-foot hole wdl be dug .to·· the past many social events were
accommodate the elevator design._ inaccessible to handicapped
He said that if rock is hit while students, particularly events in
digging, a new elevator design the theater, she said. Perreira said
will
have to be chosen.
she hopes by November,
1983
the
by Laura Reichert
Excessive heat which damaged
clothes and resulted in
a:
fire last
•- ·· month was caused by insulation .
stuck in a vent in Campus €enter
dryers.
The fire occurred March 28
after several students had
complained of having found their
laundry smoldering in the dryers,
said Resident-
Director
Mike
Bowman. The students' -clothes
were destroyed by the fire. There
were
no injuries. ·
Earlier in the semester, after
students complained about the
heat . in -the dryers, Housing
Director Robert Heywood had the
heat settings of the dryers checked
. by-the Sherman Furniture Store;
which supplied the dryers, said
Bowman. The inspectors told
college officials that· the settings .
were within the proper limits, he
said.
Clothing continued to be
damaged and there were about six
more complaints after the in-
spection, said Bowman. When
Sherman Furniture was notified
again, the . owner of the store
blamed the damages on misuse of
the machines. Students were
Word processor
to aid freshmen
blamed for overloading the
dryers, not cleaning them out
properly and drying the '"wrong"
kind of clothes, said Bowman. He
added· that students can't clean
. ·out the dryers because they can't
open the locked doors at the
_bottom of the dryers where lint
collects.
. by Jane M. Scarchilli
·. Eighty freshmen will be taught
basic writing with the' use of the
IBM - word processor_ in an ex-
~
perimeht this fall to help urgrade
students' English, according to
Milton Teichman, professor of
English.
Teichman is responsible for
initiating the experiment.
The word-processing system
enables students to type · their
assignme1_1ts into a computer,
make revisions, and get a printout
at
a
much faster rate than using a
typewriter,
according
to
Teichman.
.
The 80 ·students will be chosen
at -random and an additional 80
will be used as a control group.
The control gn;,up will be given
the same assignments, but will not
be able to use the word processor
to make revisions.
The faculty will compare
results of the two groups to
determine which students showed
better quality in their work. The
faculty, according to i:eichman,
will see which group improved
during the semester.
.
· The reason for trying out a new
system is due to the faculty's
_ complaints that the quality of
writing is ppor, according to
Teichman. "Poor writing is still -
common on this campus; even by
those who have taken the writing
courses," he said.
The printer types at ap-
proximately 500 -words per
minute, according to Tei_chman.
The students are able to remove
and add lines, sentences and
paragraphs in a few seconds
instead of retyping an entire page,
Teichman said. "Teacher time
will be used more · efficiently
because t_hey won't be spending
time with mechanical errors," he
· said. -
-
The system also includes an
electronic proofreading system
which checks _errors in spelling,
grammar, punctuation and word
choice. "The proofreader should
not be used as a crutch by the
students, but as a tool for in-.
_
dependent learning," he said.
"The word - processor enables
students to do easy revisions and
thereby spend more time refining
the content of. their papers,"
Teichman said.
Any full-time Marist student
can currently use the system
to
write and edit their assignments,
according to Teichman. A users
guide is available at
the
bookst.ore.
When still nothing was done to·
fix the machines, Champagnat
house council sent a petition to
residents in Champagnat who had
complaints about. the laundry
service. "We found that almost
everyone had had trouble with the
dryers," said Donna Cashin, a
member
,
of the house council.
The council then sent a letter to
Business
Officer
Anthony
Campilii. 6n the same day that
the letter was sent out, the fire
occurred, said Bowman. This
time the Poughkeepsie Fire
Department was involved so the
store sent inspectors to do another
check on the machines.
Insulation was found wadded
up and stuck in a vent leading out
of the dryers. Excess heat, ~hich
would normally escape through
the vent was trapped inside, said
Bowman. It is not known who put
the insulation there, he said. The
insulation was removed and the
heating setting was turned down.
Mr. Sherman, owner of the
store, has met with Heywood and
is planning to reimburse students
who have had clothing damaged.
So far there are about six people
on the list, said Bowman. There
haven't been any more com-
plaints about the dryers, he
added.
Waters said that the elevator elevator. will be in use and give
has been ordered, but it will be six handicapped students free access
months before it arrives. Ar-
to the Campus Center. She said
chitect Paul -Kanin said· tha~ the hazard of moving
a
Dover • Elevator Company is
wheelchair up the stairs to
working on their own architectual Campus Center will be avoided.
sketche,s for the cab design. He
By spring, 1984, handicapped
said tlfat the company will send students will be able to attend
him a shop drawing which gives . classes in Campus Center, said
technical
and mechanical Perreira. In. past years if a
requirements for construction. -handicapped student was
He said with those measurements registered for a class in Campus
he will design the elevator shaft Center, the class was moved· to
closure which will be an addition Donnelly:
to
the Campus Center building.
He said that it will be more
Handicapped student Emergy convenient to get into Campus
Giovannone assisted members of Center without ha.-ing to be
the administration in selecting the carried upstairs or entering the
appropriate dimensions of the exit door from outside the back of
future elevator cab.
.
the theater.
Giovannone said that about a
"A lot of things should be
month ago he met with Gerard done," commented junior George
Cox, dean of student affairs; Colby, "but it takes the ad-
John Shaughnessy, assistant ministration a Jong time to do
director of physical plant; Daniel anything." Colby has been at
Webber, counselor for special Marist for three years and said
services;
Kanin,
and
a that he feels the voices of the
representative of Dover Elevator handicapped on campus have
Co.
finally been heard.
Perreira said that they took a
"It's · long overdue," said
cab plan measured -out the Frank Sciarretta, who is currently
dimensions on the floor in the in his third semester at Marist. "It
Champagnat
lobby
and will definitely make things much
Giovannone would move his more convenient."
- - - - - - - Correction---------.
Because of a typesetting error, last week's story on the
Student Academic Committee contained an error.
The story should have read: "Freund, a junior who was an
S.A.C. member this academic year and also on the Financial
Board as
a:
representative of the S.A.C., expressed her con-
cern that students' lack of knowledge about the S.A.C. does
not allow the committee to represent the student body
adequately."
f
--Page4-
THECIRCLE-Apr/121,
1983------------,-. :-..
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e-,~:-·. -
Top priprity
All lette;~ must
~
typed triple space with a 60 space margin, and submitted to the
Circle olllce no later than 1 p.m. Monday. Short letters are preferred. We reserve the
right to edit all letters. Letters must be signed, but names may
be
withheld UP?"
request. Letters will
be
published depending upon avallabluty o!
space . .... · :.
; , .
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. Matt and the military· I · __
To the Editors: ·
·
- ·
Matthew P. Mcinerny•~ denial
of ignorance, which appeared in
the April 14 edition of
The_ Ci~cle,
sounds
rather
convmcmg;
however, American troops are
not currently fighting . in one . of
the four corners of the globe. The
Armed Forces. doesn't exist to
bulge one's muscles and wallet, as
Mr. Mcinerny implies, but to
prepare to war.
.
.
First, let me congratulate
Matthew for his exposure of
Kevin Perez' grammatical error.
Matt, your note that a college is
an "it'' not -a_ "they" was . the
work of genius -
sheer genius. I
compliment you on your mastery
of semantics.
However, the implication that
us pacifists are · stealing money
· from our parents so we can be
educated is tasteless. The Army,
in conjunction with Madison
· Avenue, has come up an ad-'
vertising campaign tailored for
these times of Reaganomics and
unemployment -
MONEY.
In no
other way can a young American
get Federal support for his/her
education without having to pay
it back. Whether one intends to
major in Communications,
.
'
......
Political Science; a
·
language, or ·
even Business, one is not . cori~
sidered to be·serving America. On
the other hand, if one learns how
to .kill for one's country, on!! is
indeed entitled to · a free
education. Is this patriotism?
Mr. Mcinerny also asserts that
900/o of the military's enlisted.
personnel have
.
high .· school
educations. True enough, but let's
not be naive. Most. of the kids
hanging around . ·•.the
.
Army
recruitment table in the high
school . lobby may not be
prospective drop-outs; but they're
not in the National Honor Society
either. Which is precisely why Mr.
Perez and other· Dean's List
freshmen received their. in-
vitations to the
ROTC
course.
The army wants brains to go. with
the brawn.·
I won't quibble · with Mr.
Mclnerny's claim that ·he learned
something about himself while in
the military; however, I will say
that it is a short-sighted view of
the military's goals. In peacetime,
the Armed Forces build
character. In war, the Armed
Forces d~stroy people_. __ ·,. _
Sincerely,
CarFMacGowan
Matt and the military II
To the Editor:
would still like to see some im-
1 read a letter in The Circle last
provements rather than watch this .
week, concerning the letter that I
country . disappear
into . a
✓ had
written two weeks before.
mushroom of radiation. The
This particular letter was from a
point that I was making in ·the
Growth and expansion have once again
dicapped children -
and stu9ents as well,
veteran from the army, who is
Circle a few weeks ago was about
shown themselves high on the priority list at
who gain experience working in the'center.. .
now attending Marist College.-1_ invasion of privacy, not about
. Marist We are faced with yet another
Maybe 33 children and some students don't
compliment . this man who is
people .. like
.
the person who
exarn_P,le of qu·alit'{being pushed .aside.tor · matter as much as 125
-
freshmen and their
. writing for. what he believes in,
received a letter in the mail eight
,
.
quan,t,ty, ;.,.
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,
tuition. •-·-...... ' ..
.
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.
buLl
am.replying ,to his Jetter years.ago informingJ1im of the
... In·•
order·_·to_·
miik~ ·
ro.om .· .. for next,, year's,. . We
.
·,recogiiize .the( need. for ·additional·'.,, sirice he missed the whole point of. O.L bill,. who.·Iet 'themselves
gc:t
freshmen, the'b!d gym
will
be recon- -:housing, but.some-fore~ight was in order.
myletter .. :
-
·
brain-washedbythemilitary.
_ structed. This· means that, after finally
· Did anyone consider .the fate of the pre-
I can understand that this man
Just one more point for this ex-
receiving a New York State license after six
school when the decision was made to
believes in the army and is willing ' military "whiz kid," when I refer
years, the Marist College Pre-school Center
reconstruct the old gym? In the "real world"
·
· to1>e evaporated at the push of a
to "the college,"
I
refer to the
must -be moved, or closed. The ad-
(which we're supposed to be prep~ring for
button by some crazed Kremlin
administration thereof arid not a
ministration says it doesn't know where the
here), giving someone two to three weeks
officer, but, strangely ·enough, I
piece of real estate. I thought that
pre-school will. be located next year, arid
notice to move out is considered pretty
would rather stay at home arid
the military was supposed to give
that there will have to be an assessment of
lousy -
especially when they haven't been
work at my job that earns Jess
you guys the ability to think past
the · value of the pre-school to d13cide . given ·anywhere else to go. Even New York
than a officer in the military just . the ink on th·e. paper. Consider
whether it will continue. That's pretty funny
City doesn't treat its people like that,
for the security of my life.
this another reason that ·1 don't
-,- New York State grants the pre-schooLits
It.
is the responsibility of the college to
Don't get me w~ong, · Dear like "Uncle Sam."
license, _which . generally speaks for the
find -
now -
a permanent an_d acceptable
'former ignorant grunt,' I love .
I guess I'll be reading from you
quality of a program, but Marist has to , relocation site for the pre-school. It would
the United States since.it is one of next week, Matt. ·
decide whether the pre-school is a valuable
be a shame -
no, it, would be downright
the.few countries that I know of
enough service to continue,
pitiful -
if Marist pushes .aside a quality
that would let me get away with
Nice priorities, Marist. The pre-school
program that provides the community
writing a letter like this. But I
Sincerely,
Kevin T. Perez
· Not-so-nice person :
services 33 children
including 11 han-
service we supposedly_value so much.
FOr_ the good
_
of all
·•
....
·
...
·--
-:;
,·_-•
Sexual harassm_erit is not
a·
topic one
Academic Comrn,ittee. They . can also ap-
_
talks about casually in the cafeteria over
proach the harasser's superior and. file a··
dinner. Because there are no available
complaint with him/her. The most important __
statistics, we don't know the magnitude of
thing is that action be taken against the
the problem at Marist. However, if even one
harasser to prevent further incidents.'
·
incident of sexual harassment occurs on
Remaining · silent about
sexual
campus, something should be done abou_t
harassment serves no one. It allows the
it. Students should- be made aware of the
harasser . to get away with inexcusable
channels they must go through
fo
lodge a
behavior, while the_ victim continues to
formal complaint, and encouraged to do so
suffer. While taking the first step in making
if any such incident occurs.
a formal complaint may be difficult, it is the
only way to stop sexual harassment on
If students feel they 'have been the --. campus. We urge students to ·spe~k up if
subject of sexual harassment, they may file
they encounter such situations -
for the
a written complaint with the Student
benefit of all.
·
·
Matt-and the· military III
.
.
-
To the Editor:
edutation" here at Marist College
I feit moved to respond to the
along with "enhancing my
letter from Matthew P. Mcinerny
physical ·ability" as a member of
_
_ which appeared in your April
!4
the. cross country team .. As you
issue. I too received a letter a few·
cari
see, one does not need to join
weeks ago 'from Michael R.
the R.0.T.C; to accomplish these
Pastirik. concerning
Army
things; as Mr. Mcl~er:ny .has
R.O.T;C., as did all "dean's list"
implied.
·
.
.
·
freshmen. Mr. Mcinerny was
.
I
don't want to be· misun-
addressing the wrong group of 'derstood. I feel that the R;O.T.C.
students with his rather unim-
does deserve a place in the Marist
. pressive story. We -the "dean's
community. It should be offered,
list" freshmen- were obviously
though, as an elective privilege, ·
mature enough to make a sue-
not an alternative.
l
am not a
cessful transition to college after
pacifist, ·but I do oppose the
high school. Naturally then, his
government's current militaristic
story holds rio water with us. I do
policies. Students shouldn't have
not feel that my. parents are
to join the military to be able to
."blowing" thousarids of dollars
afford a college education. In-
on my education, nor do my
other words, it is :not the
parents. I am "furthering my
Continued on page 8
.
-
-
...
-
•··
Co-Editors
Rick O'Donnell
Reporters
Lisa Arthur, Marla Azzolina,
Advertising Staff
Tara Scanlon
Cindy Bennedum, Karen Boll,
Lisa Crandall
Patti Walsh
Tim Dearie, Alison Demarest,
Dianne Gallagher
Chris Dempsey, Lori Dyer,
The
Donna Fidaleo, Mike Graney,
Claaslfled
Kevin Shulz
Associate Editors
Karen Lindsay
Lynn Gregorski, Eileen Hayes,
Lou Ann Seelig
Kristine Lawas, Jim Leonard,
Circle
Donna Cody Seelbach
Karyn Magdalen, Paul Murnane.
Cartoonist
Teci'Waters
Karen Nizolek, Susan Pyle,
Frank Raggo, Laura Reichert,
Photography Staff
. Gina Franciscovich, Jeff Kiely,
Sports Editor
Bill Travers
Roger Romano, Jane Scarchllll,
Kyle MIiier, Jeanne LeGloahec
Mark Stuart, Gwen Swinton, .
Advertising Manager
Jim Barnes
Boppln Bob Weinman, Mark Zangari
Joe Dldzlulla.
Faculty Advisor
David Mccraw
Business Manager
Adrienne Ryan
Gene Uannis
I .
.,
(
• '
.
,
·.
.
.
.
.
.
----,-------
,.
--.-i----------------------------------•April
21, 1983- THE CIRCLE·
Pages--•
immensely as they make com~
case anyone doesn't know this is a
ments like, "This food isn't so
crew race. This will be the annual
bad." How about giving the
display by the athletic department
parents a. double helping of the
that they care about something
cold spinach quiche and finding
other than basketball. Is it any
out how they respond? You can
wonder they don't have a tennis
also bet that if BL Ts are served
match instead? .
The
Foolish Fox:
"·Parents~
-
.
weekend-
•
circus
Reel impressions
.
.
Dennis Murray. He will put on his
. by Rick.O'Donnell·
annual show for the parents by
making a public appearance on
Look around you. Why is
campus and making a speech
campus security wearing blazers?
using the word thrust at least five
0
Why is the food so good all of a , times. He'll probably talk- about
su.dden? · Why is everybody's . the Communication. Arts Center
room so clean? Why is everybody
too, but we heard· about that
sleeping in their own room? The
when we applied here, and we've
answer is simple. It's parents'
yet to see it.
this weekend there will be more
So the circus moves on and the
than two strips of bacon on it!
clowns leave campus for yet
. weekend. It's circus time at
In ring three we have assorted
Marist College!
male and female students rubbing
Welcome to the Marist College
cover-up on the their necks to
three-ring circus. As usual, there
cover the hickey from last
will be plenty of excitement for
weekend. How were they sup-
everyone. In ririg one we have Joe
posed to know it would stay that
Waters, Director of Security,
long? Students are also learning
sending out the maroon blazers to . who their roommate is after
the dry cleaners. What would a . spending most of the year in
parents~ weekend be like without
someone else's room.
In ring number two we have
two roommates cleaning out their
room for the first time this
semester. They find old sand-
wiches and one even finds a paper
he thought he passed in at mid-
terms. No wonder he got a D.
They also do the laundry for the
first time this semester. It's not
surprising to see some guys on .
campus time their laundry per-
fectly so it is dried just in time for
Mom to walk in the door and fold
it!
another year. It's hard to believe
how much fun a weekend at
Marist College can be. I wonder
what it would be like if students
did what they usually do on a
weekend, but did it with their
parents. I wonder how Mom
would
like
Rockwell's
or
Brandy's on Thursday nights. Or
walking to the diner at two in the
morning, so we can get food
without being ripped off by the
deli prices. On the other hand I'll
probably take them to a movie
and go to sleep before
l :00. I
security wearing those ugly
Now over in the first ring we
blazers? The last time I saw a
have Seiler's cooking some real
blazer so out of style it was on a
food for· a change. Surprise,
repeat of· the Leave it to Beaver
surprise, it's edible! This is a feat
show.
that not many Marist students
Now performing in ring two is· have seen, but. all parents enjoy
In ring number three we have
can't remember the last time I
·. the President's· Cup Regatta. In
went to a movie!
by Tom Fisher
Running a close second is I'm surprised they didn't get
Halloween
III:
Season of the
sued.
Well, last week we heard all
Witch,
which bore absolutely no
In the worst "Youth Opus"
about the winners in the movie
resemblance to the first two category,
Porky's
was
so
industry at the an.nual Academy
Halloweens.
This one was about overrated that I still can't see
Awards ceremony. But how come
Halloween masks that were made what good anyone saw in it. Alex
we never hear about the losers?
to kill whoever wore them. We see Karras played the hick sheriff
Besides the · fact that many
one boy get killed by one of the with such overwhelming charisma
thought
E.T.
should have won
masks. From out of the mask, or that I can't help but believe he
over
Gandhi
for Best Picture, and
the boy's head, or somewhere, suffered brain damage in his days
whatever other major complaints
come all kinds of snakes, roaches, with the Detroit Lions.
Summer
there were, one element at the
and other live critters. Not only is
Lovers
tried to be kinky without
Academy Awards remained
all this disgusting, it's stupid.
much success, or profits for that
consistent. Through it all, the
Scraping the bile from the matter. A vacationing young
industry came out, as usual,
bottom of the barrel, I'm couple in the Greek Islands meet
was continuously raped by some
unforeseen force in a film that
was neither horrifying nor
suspenseful. Gene Wilder and
Gilda Radner teamed up in a not-
so-funny comedy
Hanky Panky,,
which proved that their reported
ro·mantic chemistry off-screen
could not be equated before the
cameras. Cheech ;and Chong in
their fourth extravaganza,
Thi,ngs
are Tough All Over,
demon-
strated just that, which may be
why nobody bothered to waste
their time and money to see it.
looking flawless. After hearing
reminded of the uninvolving and up with a French woman and
b
II
h
.
h
amateurish song and dance become i·nvolved i·n a 11·ttle
The remaining residue suggests
a out a t e great 1_11ov1es t at
h
h M
· d
s
d
b
numbers
l
·n
Grease
2,
the thre·e-
. Th
h
h
t at t e
arqu1s e a e may e
made the rounds in .. 1982, they
menage a tro1s.
e p otograp y
1.
d
11
d
k"
dimensional splatterfest in
Fr1·day
has
a 11
the
stun n 1· n g a ive an
we
an
ma mg
think we will forget all the turkeys
·
M
l
b
d A
Id
that violated the screen along with
the 13th Part 3 in 3D
(whose cinematography of a below-
movies.
usc e
oun
. mo d
them. So, without further ado,
producers are clearly running out average vacation film shot with · Schdwarzeneggfler . deccapitate
Of new Ways to kl.II) and
Death
•
.
hea s as a re ex m
onan the
here are the losers of this year's
an mexpens1ve Super
8
camera.
d
d h
Academy Awards.
Wish
II,·
Charles Bronson's They get into a little. bondage
Barbarian,
an d"pdrove
efl_wahs
.
And
.
daughter, who was attacked in the while dripping hot candle wax on
tough when he
l
n't eveh~ flmch
In the category of "Worst
first one, gets attacked again in themselves, if that's your bag.
as vultures munched on is es
Sequel,'' I would have to
the sequel. Who can blame
Zapped!
starred Scot Baio and
while he was tied do~n heHlpless.
h I
·
denounce ·J·ust about everything,
Charlie for being a little ticked w·11· A
h
h
Soap opera star Wings
auser
t
0
. .
r
ff?
I IC
ames, w O toget er are
was a pimp in
Vice Squad,
and
e · Se
·.
except maybe
Rocky
III
and
Star
o .
about as macho as .Liberace. Baio
beat his girls with coat hangers if
.
.
. :
·
•
. .
.
. . . · . . .
.
... · ___ Trek II.
At ,the top of the list,<· In <the ''.WorsL_:R~poff''. is a <:hemistry genius,wh? co~es · 'theydidn'tturnaprofit. l wonder
·: ..... ·.··.· ... · ... '
.. ·
.. ··.·1·.
s.> . ·.··, ·. ·.·· .. --.. ·. -.. -·.·. '. ,,.•.•
·
.. ·.•. -.· .... · .. ·
...
Am,i~yvil.
lill'..
;r~':
1:-0:es.
s~~n. was .
cat4:g~.~,
Ho1ne;:o~k.:;_.· tned··· - ·.t~
·.'.'up w_11h
.
.
~
[o.rro:ul.a,!hat_ g~v.~s
.
,h,1m .. :'".
,
jf,he
.
.
. beat. the,product:rs
·a/so?·:Ac"
·
•.·-•---.~
·
~·-~-""
·.' ..•.• · ·. ::/.
•
.-
..... e .
,
,.,.:; ;,.,.;,
.
,,J-';S,
>
1,:'.
•SO
.,mept r,~;,;contnv~ ; •e<Jt,,.was,c•
.
capHa ize
'.°
o~-
d
e • ·unexpecte
telekmet1c
powers;·
With •
It, :
he' ·:
the
botforn ·
of
·everybody's list
· •
. ·
•. · embarr~ss!ng. Despite the fact · success of
Private Le_sson~;
and. ·g~es <!rOUJ?d sch~ol· undressmg
was
Videodrome.
Director
David
Friday: On Campus-
Parents' Weekend
.
.
,Annual Memorial
· Service: Grotto .
: . Coffeehouse:
: - Student Talent
. Fireside
8:30p.m.
The Chance-
. Buffet Lunch:
All
you can eat
$3.95from
11:30-2:30
· · 'The Bardavon-
"Bill"
With
special guest
appearance by
Bill
Spackter
whose life is
portrayed in
this Golden Globe
Best Picture.
$4Gen.Adm.
that this 1s. supposed to be the. even. had. Joan Collms. m
.
the girls 'rlth his eyes, ma manner of
Cronenberg (who also foisted
story of_ w~at happened before starrmg_role. The trouble 1s, most speakmg.
,. . , .
Scanners
upon us) again caters to
The Am1t~vtl!e Horror,.
th~ date of the time, the actress who ~as
T~e ~est of the heap 1sn t many
the sadistic populus of the movie
at the begmnmg of
Am1tyvtlle
II supposed to be Joan Co~lms particular category or order.
The
audience and gives us burnings
indicates that it h~ppened af-
was~'t Joan_ Collins. . When
~eduction
wasn't very eroti~, a~d
stickings: stabbings, bashings, ad
Jerwards. To top 1t off, the
Collms was m the movie, her Just proved that Morgan Fa1rch1ld
nauseum.
possessed kid supposedly killed scenes looked like they didn't can't act, on film or on television.
his family because he heard voices
even belong there or, which was Andrew Stevens, as the young
telling him to do
it.
In this film,
·
probably the case, had been man who was infatuated by her,
he hears th~ .voices througJl the spliced in afterwards.
displayed this trait by sweating a
headphones of his Sony Walk-
Running a close second is lot and looking nervous. Maybe
man, a device that is only a recent
Paradise,
which was such an he was thinking about his career.
development.
obvious copy of
Blue Lagoon,
In
The •Entity,
Barbara Hershey
Let's hope next year that
Tinsletown will remember, while
patting themselves on the back,
that all that glitters is not gold,
and that not every cloud has· a
silver lining.
Saturday: On Campus-
President's Cup
Regatta:
7:30 at
the Waterfront
Rehearsal
for
Experimental
Theatre: l p.m.
CC269
Informal Residence
Hall Open House:
l:30p.m.
Mass: 5:30 p.m. ·
Chapel
Junior
Ring
Ceremony: 7 p.m.
Chapel
Junior Ring
Reception: 8 p.m.
Fireside
Cocktail Hour
for students and
parents not
attending the
ring ceremony:
8p.m. Pub
Dinner-Dance:
9 p.m. Dining Room
Sunday: On Campus-
Mass: 11 a.m.
Chapel·
M.C.C.T~A. Board
meeting:
8
a.m-5
p.m; CCl70
Workshop on
Budgeting ·
procedures for
allocations for
Clubs and
Organizations
1983-84: .
3:00 p.m.-6:30 p.m.
Pub
TheChance-
Roger McGuinn the
founding member of
The Byrds and
Aztec Two Step
$6
The Bardavon- ·
The Collingwood
Chamber Players
doing Mozart and
Mendelssohn
7:30p.m.
Tickets $10/$8.50/$7
Monday: On Campus-
The Chance-
Video Night
featuring "Tommy"
and "The
Rocky Horror
Picture Show"
Free Admission
Tuesday: On Campus-
Experimental Theatre
Productions:
Wednesday:
OnCampus-
Experimental Theatre
Productions: 8 p.m.
Theatre
Thursday: On Campus-
Experimental Theatre
Productions: 8 p.m.
Theatre
8 p.rn. Theatre
TheChance-
Comedy Night
featuring Richard
Jeni,Rob
Bartlett and
RonDarian
Admission
$3
The Bardavon•
Bardavon Film
Society presents
"Five Easy
Pieces:"
8
p.m.
General Admission
$2.50, Members SI
TheChance-
AII NewMale
Burlesque Show
featuring
"The Aphrodisiacs"
Coffeehouse:
Student Talent
9p.m.
The Finals of
the Roommate
Game 9:30 p.m.
Pub
TheChance-
T.B.A.
Highlights
Linda Black is well known on the Chicago music
scene for her .creative original music and her talent as an
entertainer and poetess. She plays six and twelve string
guitar, piano, dulcimer and pieces. Her amusing stories
and warm stage personality make her a favorite with
audiences everywhere. Linda will be in the Fireside
Lounge tonight from 9 p.m. to midnight. Her show is
sponsored by the C.U.B. coffeehouse and refreshments
will be served.
-{
J
J
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r
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-
Page
6
~
THE
CIRCLE -
April
21, 1983
·
Ofcourse
l
--
.
.
by
Adrian Donnelly
and Leo Byrne
We would
-
like to
..
offer our
sincerest compliments to Rick
O'Donnell and the Foolish Fox
for a very clever approach to the
"new courses at Marist" idea.
Though he in the past ran a
column very similar to ours after
the fact, we decided not to
reiterate and elongate the list of
new courses. But if we did, we'd
offer ...
ART
069
-
Basketweaving
(prerequisite: Cale. III)
This i
_
s the course you've heard
so much about. It is newly listed
so that unknowing upperclassmen
can complete their liberal arts
requirements.
SOC 400 Mini Courses in
,
Sociology·
·
·
Social Life 101: A
course
..
for
.
inhibited young students, and
those who have had little q>nt
_
act
with members of the opposite sex
;
The course outline includes
_
-
ice
breakers such as "what's your
major?"
"what's
your sign?"
and "got a place
to
sleep
tonight?" And for the less willing
students the course suggests some
standard blocks such as
·-
"my
:•
sign's No Parking" "that's about
the size of
it"
and
"I'll
be right
back,
my alpaca is
double
parked."
·
'
Bar
Hopping
·
202:
(prerequisite:
Social Life 101
and
positive I.D.) The student is
·
offered the opportunity through
extensive lab study and practical
experience to learn to select the
bars that are most conducive to
his
or
-
her style. Emphasis will
_be
placed
·
upon holding
·
one's liquor
--
-
:
and maihtairiifig•
oiie~s
·
composure
-
duririg"tJie most dru'ii'lceii states.
-:
-
,
CMSC 069 Discrete Structures
.
·
dual listed
as
BIO 269 Boys and
Girls: the difference
(p
'
rerequisite:
_
sexual
_:
-
preference): This
_
course
;
discusses input process; output
with both classroom and practical
lab experience
.
Once a week the
class will meet in the computer
room for graphics and once
.
a
.
-
week wiU meet in the biology lab
for practical demonstrations.
COMM 000 Bureauspeak:
This
.
course is designed to teach the
student the art of superfluous
rhetoric. Topics covered include:
The five-hour meeting, the filler
words
_
for elongating speeches,
and double talk to confuse college
.
students. This course is required
for ariy
:.
student
-
-
desiring
-
•
to
.
.
continue studies in
.
public ad-
.
··
ministration ·and suggested for
,
those considering law school.
-·
.
.
-
. -
However, since we could nofbe
original this week, there will be no
It
Ain't Necessarily So.
,
·
Nice Try...
.
.
.
. to The, C:ircle for jumping the
letters to the editor to page 8 when
they were really hiding th~m on
page 6.
·_
.
••
10
Rick O'D. for his debut as
-
adjunct professor of Pie Eating
308 .
... to the folk group for a
smashing performance Sunday
morning .
... to Tom Cassaro
-
for annoying
the entire cast with his extended
.
disc jockey delights.
Welcome
Marist
parents
Staff and
.
Friends
of
_
The Circle:
You are cordially invited to
the 1983
_
Circle
-.
dinner
-
5
p.m. Sunday May 8
The Pub
_
Awards presentation to follc:>w:
r--------------~----~~
I
:
I
Please return this form to Fontaine 216
or
The
I
Circle Office (CC168)
by
Monday, May 2
.
I'
.
I
Name
I
.:
.:
•-
·
:.
-
_
-
_
__
- - -
__
- - - - - - - - , - - - - -
: Meal Ticket No •. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
I
I
Check
One:
I
I ___
On meal plan (no charge for dinner)
I
I _ _
$3.50
(enclose payment with this coupo~)
l---~--~-~~~-----~-~~~
..
.
.
.
'
.
'
.
_,
..
,.,.,
,
..
,
.
.....
.
'
_
.
,
,
:,
..
·
·
,
..
-
THE FOURTH ANNUAL
s'ftiDENT
.
J
_
MEMO
:
RIAL
-
-
:
-,:i
-
·
-
..
·
:
.
SERVICE
..
will
be
held
_
Friday,
-
22nd
-
April
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The Stugent Memori~l
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( west of
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Leonid off Field)
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The
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fol/owing
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Jnterifships
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available for the Summer:
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Orange
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County Cablevision
TV Production
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TV
News
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Marketing
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Res~arch
Computer Science
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Sales
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Dutchess Bank
Controllers
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Credit Department
Trust Department
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Northern Dutchess
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Hospital
Biology
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Chemistry
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Northwestern Mutual
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life Insurance
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Sales/Marketing
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Bardavon Op~ra House
Public Relations
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Mid-Hudson
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lnstitut.
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of Co'11m~nlty
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Design for the
Young, Inc.
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SENIORS
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ON-CAMPUS .INTERVIEWS
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Friday,
April
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29th
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"When One Dies - It
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Gives Us All
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United States Air Force.
'
Pause to Consider How
·
We All
Live.
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''
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In the event of rain, the Memorial will be
held in the Chapel.
·
,
2) Profesccf Corporation,
subsidary of John
-
Hancock.
Marketing financial planning ser-
vice to physicians and
-
other
-
pro-
_.
f
essional practices.
·
·
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Further lnformatlon and sign-ups In CC180,
Office of Career Development.
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- - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . A p r i l
21, 1983 · THE CIRCLE· Page
1--•
.. -ra .. es----------------------
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- · Continued from page 1
· tlie highest of all the divisions. He
finds the figur~s useful to look for attributes the drop in-the average
year-to:year. trends,· and he also to a changeover in personnel over
·· · compares the grades of the the years to better qualifed
· , division to the entire institution.
faculty to teach in certain areas.
"The mean- for the Arts and
Donohue
said
that
the ,
Letters Division will tend to be. Humanities .division · also ad-
higher -than other . divisions dressed the problem of inflated
· . because it includes so m,,my in-
grades several years ago. A ·
ternship grades, a problem tha,t · questionnaire was distributed to
will be changed soon," Platt said. see if . the faculty wanted to
"The grades in fashion design, change the catalog statement on
German and Italian.are over 3.0 grading because the grades they
and those are the ones . I'm were giving didn't match that
concerned about/'
-
. standard. But the faculty said that
Platt said that even thougti ... they
endorse
the
catalog
some of the disciplines in· the statement,· and after that the
division have gone down since last grades came down to more dosely
. .
·
year, he is looking for the reasons · approach the catalog statement.
· for the recent. gfade increases in
Donohue said that currently
fashion and languages.
··
there is a · disparity in the
, Regarding the illustrated grade
relationship between the grade
distribution for the Division of distribution · and the catalog
Arts and Letters~ Platt said he is
standard. "Judging · from the
concerned that the mode is "B", catalog standard,- the grades are·
and
380'/o
of the grades were in the inflated," he said.
BIB+ Jange and 2811/o in the
As far as what will result from
CIC+ range. ·
these
grade , distributions:
MANAGEMENT STUDIES
SCIENCE, MATH AND
COMPUTER SCIENCE
ARTS&LmERS
SOCIAL AND
BEHAVIORIAL SCIENCES
HUMANITIES
GRADES BY DIVISION
GRADE
POINT
AVERAGE
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
(Mean)
2.84
3.0
3.5
4.0
"It's difficult to match the Donohue said: · "Statistics raise
grading .standard set in the college questions for me to pursue, but · ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_.
Top graph shows grade point average by division. Below, breakdown by grades in the
Division of Arts and Letters is given as an example.
catalog because the description . they can't make judgements,
for a 'C' in the catalog doesn't people have to do that:- Statistics
mention the work 'average.' The show what is, not what ought to
catalog
descriptions
are be done. Reports are one part of - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
qualitative, whereas the grades · the picture that you need _to
are quantitative," Platt said.
understand, you have to pursue it
The catalog states: "To earn a
to make a judgement."
DIVISION OF
C grade a student must be able to
Platt said that he will be doing
recall the basic elements of a
further analysis to determine if
course, under.stand the essential - 'there are problems of -grade in-
background .· and materials· of a
flation in his division .. "We're
course, make application of the probably not so different from
basic principles -involved and. what happens across the country
express them intelligibly."
there's grade inflation
100
95
90
85
80
75.
ARTS _AN.D LETTERS BREAKDOWN BY GRADES
· -Platt said another reason for everywh_ere," he said.
the high grading could be t)l.at the
According to Academic Vice-
adjunct faculty' may not be as president Andrew Molley, more
concerned with the standard of than 800 students were on the
grading because they don't in-
dean's list last semester.
teract with the full-time faculty.
Hooper said he thinks there are
•But the grades aren't the same too many students on the dean's.
as they were a few years.;~goiin 11st and that gr_ad~s are too high.
most of the divisions: Platt said:
"The reasons for this are difficult
-'{J\
few, ;years~ ago~:when'{I
}Vi!,,S .,
to. ,handle,,. ·but
·.J
hQpe, ,that the
_c;;,·<
head·ofjust.Communication;Arts
>'
grades can·
be
brought down;''
~e
and English, communications was
·
said.-.''ln the long run,. if student$
considered an easy major, At one- graduate with· an index above
meeting I said I was concerned their abilities, it could put them in
with inflatea grades, and after a position they· couldn't handle.
that
the. grades in
com~ · We're doing an injustice to the
munications went down."
.
student by giving them a wrong
Kelly
said that the mean for reading of· their abilities," he
Management Studies used to be said.
·
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.
70
65
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55
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*denotes lass than 1
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w
F
D
D+
C
C+
B
GRADES
·Harassment--------------
Continued
from
page 1
being blamed for provoking the
incident:. Cox said women are.also
reluctant to raise the issue because
they ·. are afraid of retribution
man he has never seen a case in
which a· student was pena\ized for
resisting the sexual advances of
a
professor.
··
·· ·
from the particular profes~or who
ANONYMOUS
·could try to penalize them with
The student lodging the
.
-
tremist wilf see any remark and
term it as sexist, but cultural
attitudes do have to be ad-
dressed." He said that Marist will
not tolerate any form of
.'malicious sexism.
low grades. · "
complaint works in confidence
YALE REVIEW
· PROCEDURE
with. the · harasser's superior.
When a women's group at Yale
Cox said at present Marist
LaMorte said~ "The ·identity of· University
reviewed
the
College has· no formal.grievance
the person making the charge is - university's grievance procedure
procedure for dealing with the
anonymou_s but at a later point · for
sexual
harassment,
it
specific
issue - of sexual th,e name would be revealed to
discovere1 -· that
heightened
harassment. · Cox said, "Status deal with the problem.,,. Kelly
awareness of the problem worked
quo does not have a centralized: .said in certain instances the . to
curtail
occurrences
of
approach for addressing this
administrator or faculty member
harassment. Cox said that the
issue." He said that Ivlarist uses
may realize the identity of that inadvertent
remarks
would·
its administration structure to individual because __ of the par-
disappear from normal. discourse
deal with the problem.
--
ticular situation being described.
once the.issue was raised.
The most effective and direct
- LaMorte said that he tries to .
However, Marist appears to
approach for lodging a complaint
help · the · person lodging · the have done little to educate both
against a professor is to approach complaint clarify the· situation'. itself and its community about the
the harasser's superior,.
Ac~
and to find out what the in-
occurrence of sexual harassment.
cording to LaMorte, the student · dividual is exactly talking about. ·cox said that tire student hand-
must
eventually put his/her Cox classifies the complaints into · pook deals with the grievance
sentiments in writing to formalize categories: some are totally procedu_re, and it also contains a
the complaint.
unfounded cases of sexual directory of where one is to go if
· Dawn Oliver, president of the
harassment; some are interpreted there is a problem.
Student Academic Committee,
as sexual harassment; and others
LaMorte said, "On an ongoing
said that a student could file a
are actual · cases of sexual
basis there is nothing to anticipate
written correspondence form to harassment.
the
problem
of sexual
lodge a complaint. The complaint . Sexual harassment can be-
a:
harassment, but in the past three
would then be sent to Dr. Andrew
complicated issue because men
or four years there has been at
Molloy,
the academic vice and women have different per-
least one occasion when that type
president, and then to the division
ceptions of the same event. Cox
of seminar was given."
chairman.
said most of the cases he has dealt
Roberta Amato, director of
Dr. Jack Kelly, chairman of the with
pertaining
to
sexual
counseling, said that Marist has
Division of Management Studies,
harassment have been based on
no seminars for dealing with
said,· "The idea of the student misunderstandings.
Some sexual harassment with that as a
forms is if the student is worried negative statements · that are
specific title. But she said that a
about retribution he or she would directed at a particular gender
workshop entitled "The Assertive
petitfon the S.A.C. for support."
have been interpreted as sexual
College Student!' could aid a
Kelly said that in his time as a
harassment.
student in how he/she presents
department and division chair-
According to Cox, "An ex-
himself/herself to a teacher.
One of the aforementioned
students brought the issue to the
attention of the S.A.C. when she
was a member. She said, "The
avenues· of action weren't
defined. Actually, they really
weren't there. I was naive about
what to do. I felt that I wouldn't
get very far even if I tried. They
would probably say, 'That's just
the way he is,' or it would be
covered up." She said she was
shocked that people were aware
of the problem and nothing
formally had been done.
-
NATIONAL ISSUE
Sexual harassment emerged as
a national issue in 1977 when four
students
and
an
assistant
professor at Yale pressed charges
against the university for failure
to provide the students with
strong affirmative action in
dealing with sexual harassment
and against some male faculty
members who allegedly harassed
their students.
The group charged Yale with
violating Title IX of the Federal
Education Amendment of 1972,
which
prohibits
sexual
discrimination by educational
institutions receiving public
funds.
The United States Court of
Appeals dismissed the case on the
premise that Yale is a private
institution receiving only some
federal funds.
The case was seen as a
breakthrough, nevertheless, in
that it made it possible for
students to sue an educational
institution for failing to provide a
formal grievance policy dealing
exclusively
with
sexual
harassment.
Many
women's
groups
acknowledge that a satisfactory
grievance procedure is the key to
waging an effective campaign
against sexual harassment. This is
evident at the University of
Washington, where the president
took a hard-nosed approach and
caused the complaints to drop
significantly.
"Ms.'! magazine has set down
guidelines for combatting sexual
harassment indivdually and
institutionally.
"Ms."
suggests
that the student lodging the
complaint allow the harasser to
know she is not interested in his
attention; investigate the
. university's policy and grievance
procedure for sexual harassment;
and document what has occurred.
"Ms." said the university
should develop an explicit policy
for
prohibiting
sexual
harassment; develop a grievance
procedure to handle complaints;
and document the problem with
surveys and public meetings.
One of the students previously
mentioned said she wants
students to be aware that sexual
harassment exists and that they
should be prepared and have the
courage to talk to someone about
it. She said, "I think there should
be an approach -
somewhere
that is for the specific purpose of
sexual harassment -
so that one
doesn't
feel
uncomfortable
discussing the matter."
~
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8 :
THE
C::IRCLE°~
Aprii
21, 1983 · · ,.- · · .. · · ·
·Mclr1st>-to·
h-ot10i··J•·st.~--~:-FrahCis/-:'
:
,
,
. by'Ja_ne Scarchilli
· <
te-nding, ac~ording
''to.
Anthony discussion groups. and an open·
Cernera; · a
Marist
administrator · question-and-answer period with
. A
symposium . sponsored by -.and coordinator of the sym-
Muller, according to Cernera.
, Marist College and the Mccann · · .. posium.
<: _
·
: . . . . .
The proceedings.will be published .
, Foundation to honor St. Francis
Cernera .. said. · that Manst's and sent to-major opinion will be
· of Assisi will be held on Friday, . interest in St. Francis is due to the . published and sent . to major
April 29;; at Mt. Alvernia Church . college's 'constant effort to ad-
opinion leaders around the·world ..
- in Wappingers Falls. .
1
· ·
dress major social issues of our
In addition to the symposium, .
Robert . Muller, · secretary
time.
the_ college - also hosted a :st:
general of the United Nations for
October 1981 to October 1982 Francis festival day with the
economics and -social develop-
was · designated .·. a , _year
of Italian
American
Cultural
ments, will speak
on
St. Francis'
celebration to commemorate the
.
Foundation· in· Poughkeepsie. A
. , values towards world, peace,
800th'aimiversary of St .. J:rancis.
mass and talk by a Franciscan was
world poverty and ecology.
St. Francis was interested in the offered at the event.
Dennis J. Murray, president of
renewal and rebuilding of the
Fifteen church
leaders;
Marist, three Marist students, and
earth ·and founded the order of national religious ·. leaders and
members of the · faculty and
friars called the Franciscans.
· leaders ·in communications and
· administration will be among ·the
. The symposium will include. a public policy are expected to
_ approximately 40 .·· people at-
speech
by
Muller, .. small attend at the symposium.
-------------More
letters------
Continued from page 4
specifically provides that a school· · afraid that the • job · oL Resident
R.O,T.C. I am opposed to,
it is
may safely provide
what is Director affected
Mike the· same
governmental policies like cutting · termed ''directory information,'' way some air traffic controllers or :
back student Joans or lowering
such personal facts as name, some combat - veterans · are
the minimum wage that I can't
address, telephone number, etc.,
mentally damaged-by. the stress
stomach. .
to third parties without fear of they experience. The inferiority
In contrast to Kevin Perez's
having
its
federal funds with-
complex is just a figment of his .
feelings on the issue, I. don't mind
drawn. The institution providing vivid imagination, very much like
receiving a. letter from Captain
such 'directory · information is
the ·affair he claims to have had
Pastirik. The military has the
required to give public notice of with. Humphrey Bogart. The
unalienable ·r1ght , to advertise
the information it plans to make unfortunate part of Mike's ·1etter
through the mail as does any
available to the general public and · is the fact that he left out the most
group, interest, or organization. . to allow students time to notify essential part of the story.
The dean's list is made public, so
the institution that any or all of
My point can be best expressed
the college has · not released
that information should not be
by making an analogy. Let us
privileged information as Mr.
released. Marist will release at imagine there. is a little .league
Perez implied in his letter in your
various times the following in-
team · and they only have two
March 31 issue. Getting back to · f~rmation unless requested in baseball bats, one being a 2~-inch
the point, it has become com-
writing not to · do so by the bat and the other being a 36-inch
monplace in America to call all
student: student . name, ·address, bat. Still let us suppose that when
forms of postal correspondence
telephone number, date and place the team plays they· only use the
that make an attempt to solicit or
of birth, major field of study, 28-inch bat. No\\'. what good is a
recruit, "junkmail."
It is my
participation
i_n
officially bigger bat if hisn't being used?
pleasure then to inform · Mr.
.recognized. activities and sports,
Let me conclude by quoting aii
Mclnerny that
l
felt it was my
weight and height of members of old New Zealand proverb that
obligation as an American to file
athleti.c team_s, dates of at-
go~$ .. _something like: It's not the
, the Army
.
R.O.T_.C. letter that 1 .•. tendance, · degrees.
·
and :-awards size of the wave but the motion of
,.
~
• ~-;;received· in ·:
the'
same receptacle .. c
-
received< and': the;' m6st'
1
2recent the
'ocean~ .
However,. iri'
M1lre's ·
.:·~tE'thai
T"'filealf']unlcmail!
·ThaiiFYpievious ;'ediicatioiuilt·iii'stitution case it's not
an
ocean
but
a St:a
of,
· you.
· , :
attended by the sJudent; ·.
palms.
· · ·
·
Christian
J.
Morrison
Students must notify the Office
_
-Sincerely,
. Class of
•s~
of the Registrar in writing should
Rich Dougherty
R.A.
they not want information made
available. For purposes of ii:n-
plementirig this , procedure,. the
College will allow thirty days
from date of publication in · the
College newspaper and posting in
conspicuous , places · about the
campus for students to respond.
A form has been developed and
can be obtained from the Office
of the Registrar.
Losing
To the Editor:
Bill Travers' ·. article on how
sports . besides basketball are
neglected is long overdue. Just
look at football; How many times
are the administrators going to
rehire a coach · with a losing
recora? 2 wins, 7 losses again next
year? No thanks.
· ; See you in the stands. Maybe.
Mark Stuart
· Experience -
- · Registrar'.s Office
Essential
part
Crew crew
Dear Circle Editors: .
For seven years, since arriving
at Marist, I have been bugged by
a dull redundancy, a · minor ·
literary sin, that keeps popping up
in your pages, namely the use of
the phrase "crew team."
Since a student newspaper . in
highly reputable schools such as
Marist clearly reflects the literary.·
skills, not only ·of its' student
Dear Editors,
editors and reporters, but also
Yes, the secret is out. The entire mirrors the school's educationar
To the Editor:
.
.
story of the Dougherty-Bowman quality, I am sure that you will
in.
the April 14 issue of the connection
and
.
eventual want to avoid this usage in the
Circle, · there.•· was • an article separation is known. The only future. A crew, after all, is a team
pertaining to next years Council . problem now standing is the fact
of oars people, by definition. You ·
of Studeni Leaders. The two that Mike has only told half of the might as well refer to . our
-current officers that were qu9ted post-surgical story. 1 guess it basketball team group, or to the
in this article both mentioned that could be said I got the short end track team squad gang group etc.
the newly elected officers were of the stick. I don't have an in-
Sincerely, unfeigned, honestly,
inexperienced.
feriority complex, ho~ever. I am etc. yours,
P.H. Chase
I am currently Presi<:lent of the . .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . .
North Campus House Council,
President. of the Communication
Arts Society, and an
·
active
member of both the Inter-House.
Council and the Sophomore Class
Activities Team.
I make a
significant contribution to these
organizations, and ·numerous
others, and consider them only a
fraction of the experience I
possess.
.
I - don't know how Joan
Gasparovic or Gregg Luna define
"experience,"
but
if it means
taking false assumptions, who
needs it!
In closing, · I might add
that
inexperienced was · spelled in-
correctly in the article.
Very Truly Yours,
Mark V. Zangari
Newly Elected
Inter~House Council
President
Privacy
To Marist Students:
The Family Educational Rights
and. Privacy Act of 1974
•-.- >
c•
•
•~,
,
-. •·••' -,-.··• •··-
•
• ~••
•
·•
-
_
_
, , _
h
• • · · • • • • • •
-THE HAIR SHA€K
(Super New York Cuts)
· located
at . ·
·49 ACADEMY STREET
(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
.
.
.
,
..•..
~-
...
··- ·---...--
-·
•··-·-
, -
•..
~----••··
.,
___
,
-----~-
--•-•--·•···--
·•
.
,..,
..
. · . ,·An
excellent haircuttery.
.~ Now -featu_ring CELLOPHANES, the new non~
peroxide haircolor/conditioning .· system-with
. unlimited color ct:ioices ~nd excellent sheen.
Serving
$2.00
Off
With Mori st.
I.D.
-
Marist College
. Since 1_915
_. · Tlil: CUTTl:1:2.,,-
3 Liberty
st.;
Main Mall, Poughkeepsie
454-9239.
By Appointment Only
. OPEN 24 HOURS
473-1576
<
PALACE
DINER.& RESTAURANT
Breakfast ..:. Lu'nch
·
.;... Dinner.
Fresh Seafood. --- Steaks
Chops
Cocktails - Baking on Premises
(NEXT TO ALL SPORT)
.· Show your collsgs ID and gst a FREE
Glass of Bssr with your msalt
-- 7%
DISCOUNT ..
·.194:.wAsH1NGroN_
sfBEf;T:.:-.·
POUGHKEEPSIE(NEWYORK.~
-
.
SHOWS IN APRIL
.
22 David Crosby of Crosby Stills & -Nash· in a· rare
club appearance.
~
2 shows - 9
&
11 :30
23 Bobby Bar~ ''Great Country''· - 2 shows
~
9_
~
.11:30
24
~
Chance Double Bill - Roger McGuinri .
.
Leader of the Birds and Aztec Two. Step
25 Video Double Bill - Tommy
&
Rocky Horror _
· 26 Comedy. Night "'.·_.W/three very funny guys
$3.oo· -
Richard Jeni, Bob Bartlett, Ron Darian
27 Bud Beer Blast and the Southern Cross· Ban.d
·. 28 Male Burlesque-~ an.all new show! ·
.. 29 D.C. Star
.
. 30 .Toots and the Maytals W/special guest Winston--·
Grennan
·
·
. · COMING IN MAY
4 Circle Jerks
_
6 David Bromberg with his original band in a rare
reunion appearance - 2 shows - 9
&
11 :30
7 Garland Jeffries
10 Comedy Night
13 Spyro Gyra - 2 shows - 9
&
11 :30
14 Wayland Flowers and Madame - Bring their T. V.
Antics. to the stage - 2 shows - 9
&
11 :30
, 18 George Clinton and the Parliament Funkadelics
- 24 piece band -
22 Benefit for Special Olympics - Auction - River-
bank Banjo Band
The judges' votes are
in
arid the
winners are
(I
to r): Contest win-
ner Jim O'Doherty, first runner-
up Chris
.
Stempsey and second
runner-up Mike Millkoniaµ.
Mr. Marist is crowned
Red/ ord, beware:
O,Doherty,s here
"Poughkeepsie's a helluva town if you don't go to
school here." He added that the girls aren't too nice,
·
"Don't jµdge me as a piece of beefcake" wa~Jim with the exception of the ones who go to Marist.
0'Doheriy's final pleas before becoming
"Mr.
Immediately
·
following the question-and-answer
by Cindy Bennedum
Marist
1983.~'
-
session the judges conferred to choos·e a winner.
O'Doherty was one of
17
Marist
-
men to compete Faculty member
.
Diane Platt, administrator Pat
for the~title Friday night in the first
.
Mr. Marist Tuceling and staff member Fran DeVriescomprised
contest; held in th<c dining
:
room:-':·t
:c.~~·i
>":
:.:c::>
,
.
_
,.:-:_
,.:
"
thetab/e
of judges;
..
_
:-·
· '_-
-
·
-
~
:•'
'
-
·
··
•
·
·
·
,
t
·,"..· /:·
'.
-
'
:
Each contestant showed some leg, showed some
When the judging was over, 0'Doherty, who said
talent and showed some
·
intelligence
·
as he vied for
·
he feels honored to have won, came out $35 richer
Hie title.
·
.
_
·
·
·
·
·
:
for his efforts. When asked how he would spend his
WMCR,
the Marist College radio station, spun prize money, he replied that he would use it wisely.
tunes as
·
tµe men slipped off their robes, dropped "I'm going to put
it
all in the bank, and use it to help
their towels and slithered out of their trou
_
sers while pay for my education and to put a down payment on
.
the· cheering crowd and three judges tried to con~
a
house," he said.
·
centrate on leg evaluations .
. ·
O'DohertY stariding 6'5" took it a step further'as
0'Doherty, a junior, said he found out at 7 p.m;
he danced on the judges' table in a muscle shirt,
Friday that he had been nominated for the I I p.m.
shorts and work boots.
.
competition.
· Round two caused
·
chants and screams as
The competition was organized and sponsored
PY
freshman Pete Asselin popped the button off his
_
the North End
.
House Council. Secretary Barbara
..
shirt and was transformed from Clark
_
Kent into
Joyce said the competition "wasn't a serious thing at
Superman.
··
·
.
.
.
.
all - it was all just for fun."
·
First-runner-up Chris "The Stash" Stempsey,
However, there were problems with the event.
..
dressed in
·
a lamb outfit, amazed the crowd as he
Mark Zangari, president of the North End House
stashed five hotdogsjn his mouth and then juggled
Council, said that although the idea of the contest
three McIntosh apples.
·
·
·
·
was a success, the actuality of it wasn't. He said that
0~Doherty also juggled his way through the talent
tables were broken and fights occurred, causing
competition, using an
.
orange, a golf ball and a
many people to be bounced out of the
_
event.
bowling baHas his props.
·
Zangari
·
added that next year's Mr. Marist
.
During
_
the question-~nd-answer period second-
competition will
.
"definitely" be a nonalcoholic
runner-up .Mike Melkonian was asked which con-
event. Beer was served at Friday's competition.'
testimt he would choose to fix his sister up with. He
.:
Residence Director Barry Jamison, who helped
replied,
''None."
·
•.
·
organize the event, added that next year's contest
Sophomore John Mar was
·
asked to describe
will be more organized and, it is hoped, much im-
-
Poughkeepsie in 25 words or less. He
_
said,
proved.
·
·
Mr. Marist contest winner, Jim O'Doherty displayed his many
talents as he told jokes and juggled a golf ball, an orange and a
bowling ball during the talent portion of Friday night's contest.
(photos by Jeff Kiely)
Ruling cuts tie between draft;
·
student aid
by Laura Reichert
registrants.
The
·
American Civil Liberties
. Students not registered for the Union has interpreted Alsop's
draft will not be denied Federal
.
injunct_ion as applying nationally.
education loans in the 1983-84
There was some confusion in
school year despite a law signed
•
the
_
Education Department over
by President Reagan last Sept. 8.
whether the law should be
_
The law, which was to take honored, said Cathy Deppe, a
effect in May, required male member of the Dutchess Peace
students to sign a statement at the Center, which is
·
housed in the
bottom of their financial aid Trinity Methodist Church in
forms saying they had registered Poughkeepsie.
for the draft. Those who hadn't
registered were to be denied aid.·
In
a
suit filed by six students
who were represented by the
Minnesota Civil Libei:ties Union,
Federal District Judge Donald D.
·
Alsop issued a temporary in.-
junction March
JO barring the
Government from· enforcing the
law. Alsop claimed that the law
could incriminate students who
identified themselves as non-
The Education Department,
which at first thought the law
only applied to Alsop's Min-
nesota jurisdiction, was prepared
to honor the law. According
10
the financial aid
,
news service
"Student Aid
News,"
some
schools had already put up a
widely circulated Selective Service
poster which informed students
they'd have to register for the
draft before rece,vmg aid. The
poster states that the draft clause
is "quick, it's easy, and it's the
law."
The
Justice
Depanment
recently informed the Education
Department that it would be held
in contemptofcourt if any school
tried to carry out the law, said
Deppe.
According to the "Student Aid
News," students
·
who had signed
up for the Pell Basic Educational
.
Opportunity Grant
.had
been
informed that they would have to
comply with the draft clause. The
Education Department is now
trying to counter this in-
formation.
In February, when
Marist
received a notice of proposed
rule-making concerning the law;
the financial aid office replied
that it thought it shouldn't . be
passed. Other financial aid offices
contactea agreed on this, said
Karen
J.
Atkins, director of
financial aid at Marist. It would
be too expensive, time consuming
and confusing, said Atkin.
Financial aid forms that don't
include the draft registration
clause have already been printed
up, she said.
Atkin said that the law would
cause a great deal of confusion
among· students because many
have already filled out financial
aid forms. If new forms were
printed they would have to go
through the process again. They
·
also would not find out whether
they were eligible to receive aid
until very close to the start of the
school year, said Atkin.
Students would have to present
a letter from
·
the government
proving the-v would registered for
the draft if tile d~11se was
enacted. This could cause further
confusion for the students since
the government often doesn't
send the letters out right away,
she said. Students who couldn't
present the letter would be denied
loans. This time delay could cause
students to be too late to receive
aid.
The government might try to
"phase-in" the law during the
1984-85 school yea~
by having the
Selective Service check up on
students
they
register
for
financial aid, said Atkin. For
now, though, the clause
will
not
be included on financial aid
forms.
Page 10 · THE CIRCLE· April 21, · 1983
b~
Fred E. McManus .
Forum
also thinks of himself as an ex- . to prison. Your last rejoiitder)s
ception. He tells himself what a
that ,prison inmates think so· well
hard life he has had, how his
of 'themselves they: often :_don't
victims "had it coming" or that
believe tl,ley deserve to
•
be in
"all women are whores.'·' In this
prison! They actuallyJeeltheyare
way, researchers such as Michael unjustly-imprisoned.
As a
result;
Lillyquist say, criminals can hide
prison by itself does no. more to
the truth about themselves from
rehabilitate an antisocial· person
themselves.
than it would say;' a Russian spy.
Crime and what
to
do about it
is a good, conversational topic.
Either an expensiye picture book
on the cofftie table or mention of
concern about the ·safety of the
streets at night can spark a,lively
discussion' among guests. Here
are two questions guaranteed to
add a new twist
·10
conversations
about crime. First, , what do
crim.inals think of themselves?
A
second · perky tidbit in
conversations about crime is this;
· can criminals be rehabilitated·
using the therapeutic methods
developed to treat neurotics? For
I don't mean to leave either you
or your· guests feeling frustrated.
Catching, convicting and im-
prisoning .an antispcial · person
helps. But, these are only parts of
an ongoing educational . ·cam-
paign; Prison, like other ways of
holding people accountable for
their acts, helps · bring home the
idea that certain behaviors are not
acceptable to society and society
Consider the burglar or robber, example, should a therapist try to
mugger or rapist, thief or mur-
reduce
a criminal's guilts,
derer; what kind of person does frustrations, and inhibitions so
he think he is?. Does he think of • that the ."inner person" will be set
himself as being sneaky, violent, free? Here, you and your guests
dangerous,
untrustworthy, are likely to agree: "No! The
dishonest or even law-violating? criminal needs
more
guilt,
more
Your: guests might say this is frustration,
more
inhibition."
obvious;· that is what criminals The suprise is this: an increasing
are.
Here you say, "Norman Berg number of psychologists are·
found that antisocial persons beginning to agree with you and
think quite well of themselves. your guests.
· is strong. Most children learn
this;_ the antisocial· person does
not because he actively fights
against the realization. This puts
the burden on us;· we have· to
continue to judge and hold ·the·.
criminal accountable .. Your guests
may greet this statement with·
While the idea that change enthusiasm:
Punishment!
But
comes from within is old, the what I am describing is a united
realization that criminals resist
front demonstrating our opinion
change because they are not to the criminal. Receiving con- ·
sufficiently dissatisfied with sistent negative social feedback
themselves is new. People can't be for his criminal acts is the only
helped unless they feel something way the _ criminal can come to
is wrong within themselves and question his current high self-
the antisocial person · tends to
opinion. Sigmund Freud would
think he is fine (it is the world that
turn over in his grave at hearing
They think of. themselves as
daring,
adventurous, clear-
thinking, outspoken, warm-
hearted, and unselfish." (Uproar
of objections to be expected at
this point.) You point out you
didn't say criminals
were
nice
people; you said they
thought
of
themselves as nice people. People
deceive
themselves
about
themselves. While each criminal
tends
to
think of
other
criminals
as sneaky, violent, dangerous,
untrustworthy and so forth; he
is wrong). Here, your guests · this!
.
might protest that a criminal must
Fred
~cManus
teaches
be dissatisfied when cri.me leads
psychology at Marist.
Want Some Cheap Thrills?
· Do~'t Forget
MAYFES'T _, "83"? --
RIDE · NEEDED: Mon.-Thurs.
Fishkill to St. Francis area. Leave
at approx.
8:30
a.m. Will share
expenses,
896-5348.
Also need
ride back to Fishkill from St.
Francis area at
3:45
p.m.
FOR SALE: BSR fully automatic
record changer.
$15
or best offer.
See Kevin 1n
G-108,
ext
148.
. Mr. Weekend,
Did you get your
$10
from you
last keg party?
Leo 1
Rosie:
The pig pen will be cleaned by
Thursday or Friday. By the way
have you seen my keys?
Mini
Lou
Kitty:
We made it
72
hours without
sleep and we are still normal.
Well, at least I am.
Love,
M.L.
D.M.
Get the package? There's a lot
more where that came from. Did
you make a wish?
Mr. Postman
SoftbaJJ·
,
..
• -~at
"r\}i
ot
.
,
,
IFIED6
Brink
They're coming to take me
away ... HAHA...
Don't
be
"punny"!
!
It's "jest" in fun.
. A fellow_Iunatic
Lois-
How was the flight with
superman? Is Clark Kent really
mild mannered? Could he please
. break out of the phone booth by
4
.
•
?
.
a.m. next ume .
Slugs,
Signed,
The Daily Planet
Next time we clean up your
messes we expect some payment.
LSD and MO
Spiker,
You're my Mr. Marist!!
Your Babe-!
Slinky,
My exercise class starts soon!
Practice sit-up at my place.
You know who
Dear Sinatra and Diver,
The new P.F. 's - We love you.
Dear P.F.'s,
I'm glad _it's settled -
I can't
live without you guys!
Love Ya Lots,
J.M.
Nicki,
- You were the greatest. Have
fun c;itching up!
P.C.
Lindy,
You
were the greatest
Christabel! Happy Anniversary
and GOOD LUCK with the
Fashion Show.
Giuf
Holly2:
What can
l
say: you are
as good
as you said you were: But it's
much better · with Peter and
Sharon.
J.C
DD:
I
left Skinner's straight.
D.C.
Rag, Rag, Rag, Rag, Rag, Rag,
Rag, Rag,
Love, the Rag Team
Congratulations, Mike -
The
Residence Staff
Kev,
How are you're circles, squares
and triangles? l miss you.
• Love
The girl who's
always smiling
sth-.Annu~,-
-
:· CUliTURAL-·-:-
,
__ DINNER
·
·
oANCE
DATE: Fridc1y, April 29, 1983
,
. PLACE: Marist College Dinin·g Hall
TIME:·a:oq
p.rn. -
1:00
a.rn. ·
TICKET PRICE: $5, $8
For Couples
Contact: -Karen ,Williams
(914) 486-9460- RIJl. 225
Sponsored
By Black Students'
Union
R~!~:!!!-!
tHEAT111
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
EXCLUSIVE
Dutchess County
Area Showing
·ACADEMY A WARD
WINNER
Ben Kingsley
.
Ill
Harold Pinter's
BETRAYAL(R).
· ,-'. _., "~-"-
.
'
,- ;;_-:.-
•
;
:-;;: J
·-
·
.,. ;
..
. :.~
·t ·· •
,
,:· ·; .
,.,:
.
::n. . . . ,
t • ....,
WRITERS
.
WANTED
The .
·
circle
is·
now :accepting
ap-
·pUcatio9-s for, the following posi-
. tions
f
ot
1983~84;
-:-
·
_Humor Columnist
Concert/Music Columnist
-
Club/Restaurant· Columnist
Interested ·students should submit
a sample col um~ of not more than
500 words to ·Christine Dempsey,·
Box Cl09,,by May 5. Applicants
should include on-ca_mpus address
with samples.
I
I
i
I
r
_
.... _lill!-----------------------------------•
.
April
21, 1983 ~
_
THE CIRCLE· Page 1 1 - - •
·WMCR·._radiothon
clears
$J,
000
Tnark
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
.
..
.
...
...
·
.
:
·.
.
by
M~rk
Stuart
·
_
The
.
goal set by
.
WMCR of
·
·
·
$1,200 is $200 more than last
-
"Y oung at heart."
year's donations, but less than the
.
.
"You'ye gotta. have heart."
·
original
_
goal of $1,500
.
set
·
''Weve got the beat."
previously
thi
,
s year.
.
·
The
·
above are all songs you
-
·
"We changed
it
to\ $1,200
probably could have heard last. because we
·
didn't think we'd get
Thursday through Sunday night.
·
it ($1,500)-,.' said Davis. •~we
on
WMCR.
-·
·.
·
·.
·
·
.
were a little over optimistic
.
"
.
_
.
.
For 9
i
.9 continuous hours last
_
Davies expects donations from
.
weekend, four disc jockeys from
faculty and organizations this
·
-.
WMCR ·91.9 FM .played music
_·
week. The
.
sophomore and junior
anl informed
::
listeners
·
of the
classes have
.
agreed to donate
effects of heart diseases while
.
money as well
:
as the Gaelic
raising money.
-
·
·
Society and. the Marist College
The
··
.
Marist College
.
·
radio
Knights
of
Columbus.
The
station
.
raised $930
-
in
·
donations
·
amount of money to
.
be donated
·
through
•
·
.
pledges
and
ap-
·
by each group has not yet been
.
proximately $70 through can-
.
specified.
nister
·
donations in its third an-
·
The money raised will go
.
to
-
nual
·
radio
·
marathon for the
three main areas, according to
Heart Association, according to Murray, who served as the 1982
co-chairmen Bob Davies and Dan
.
.
Dutchess
County
Heart
Hartman. ·
.
_
_
.
Association chairman. Some
WMCR staff members
(I
to r): Bob Davies, Jay Stone, Paul Beckerle, Lou Goidel, Jack
Graffing, Paul Palmer and Dan Hart'!'len. (photo by Gina
_
Franciscovich)
The
-•
radiothon featured in-
funds will go to
_
emergency heart
terviews
·
with
·
New York State attack equipment while other
Health Commissioner
-
David
funds will provide educational
Axelrod
-
and
·
Marist
.
College
services from the corporate level
President Dennis Murray,
·
who
·
to the public schools to increase
serves on the Dutchess
.
County
community
-·
awareness of what
Hear[ Association's Advisory
heart disease is.
·
Committee on fundraising
,
·
The third area of importance,
.
The
.
four DJ's were Paul
'
Murray said, is research.
Palmer, Lew Goidel, Jay
.
Stone
,
.
"Many people are alive today
and Paul Beckerle.
because of the research done by
. the Heart Association, like the
bypass operations we hear of,'' he
aid .
.
"We are making progress in
dealing with the treatment of
heart disease and also the
prevention of heart disi;ase. ''
The radiothon had an
in-
formative purpose besides just
raising money.
"Heart facts" were
·
read oc-
casionally and informed the
listeners as to the effects of heart
disease and how to prevent heart
problems.
In his interview with Beckerle,
Murray said "People can control
·
or alleviate heart disease in their
·
lifetime with proper diet, taking
proper care of themselves, and
a-voiding things that can lead to
heart disease.''
·
The marathon meant a lot to
Hartman, whose .father died of
heart disease four years ago at the
age of 51.
"The marathon showed how
people can pull together for a
good cause and· there's not as
much student apathy as ad-
ministrators say," he said. "Even
though I'll never really know how
much
.
good this will do, I feel
good that I let students become
aware and
hopefully
they'll
remember more than 'here's a
dollar, leave me alone'."
Game room Jo be renovated into social area
by Grace Tejada
socialize was needed on campus.
alternative. The ideas turned into administrators in Student Affairs,
The new area· will serve as an
a
.
definite project which
.
will begin
it seems that the lack of classroom
.
The Champagnat game room, ice cream parlor and
.
coffeeshop.
during the summer and is ex-
space would deter any. alternate
deli and weight
_
room
will be "The Marist Musicians Club will
pected to be completed by the Fall
plans for the room.
renovated for next semseter into a provide live entertainment," said
semester of 1983," said Andrew
The two doors in front of the
socializing area where alcohol is Gerard Cox, dean of student
Crecca, president of the freshman
deli will be closed. There will be a
not served.
.
-
·
..
·
affairs. The College Union Board
class and chairman of
-
the food
service window on the wall that
·
·
.•
.
.
•
coffeehouse will also be con-
-
committee,
connects both the game room and
,
·
oue to t~e raised drinking age, ducted there.
.
·
,
the deli. The electronic games will
.
·
the Marist ~dministrat~n and the
,.
...
. .-
.
·
. -
..
·
.
-
According to Crecca, his first be moved into the weight room,
·
••
.
·
.
·
:
·
·
•
,
:
}nter-~<>use
•
·
_
_
C0!,1!!
7
11
, .
J
oo
_
~
·
-
--
~~W~cn
the 1<:1_ea
.
<=a!1,1~ upa~out
.
)dea was to convert room C::C249
,
.
and where the games are now wiH
<
'
~
'f·
.::
'-'
·
'
~mm1t.tee
'
decided-a• new
~
non-
·
·
usmg
,
-
the
:
-
Champagnat weight
.
i
iilt'i'.>
:
a
·
·
non:.:aJcoh~lic
·
area;
_
~e
usecf
a's
tliitsittirig
area:
·
<
:
·
.
,:
!
-
alcohohc area for students to room area 1t seemed to be a good
however, after speakrng to the
:.. .
Seiler's will'provide
-
tables arid
chairs which
will
seat ap-
proximately 60 to 80 people,
according
·
to Frank Scott,
manager of Seiler's Food Service .
.
"As a whole the area will ac-
commodate about 125 people,"
said Scott.
This area will
provide a
soundproof ceiling to prevent
noise from traveling to the first
floor
.
Champagnat.
· _
•
;
·
The
cost of renovating the .irea
-
-
·
has
'
not yet been estimated.
Fashion
..
readies spTing show
.
\
.
.
--
-
.
·
·
_
lf
·n
the Picture •..
.
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this Summer? ,ILL SPORT
is
op.'71
i da)~
and
•"'el'.'
"
ewnins! for
)11\Jr
con,-roieoce.
by Gwen Swinton
'.'Busy" is the word as fashio
·
n
·
majors currently prepare for their
spring fashion show, which will
, be
.
held from April 27 through
April 30 in the fashion depart-
ment at Donnelly Hall.
·
·
The theme of this year's
production is
"A
Fashion Ac-
clamation'~
and will
feature
outfits ranging from casual to
dressy daywear and eveningwear.
·
Clothes in every shade of the .
rainbow will be modeled, but the
dominant colors will be red, white
and black. The scenes will be
coordinated to feature outfits in
Theater to feature students' work
by Daniel P. McCormick
train station. It was written by
.
sophomore Meg Adamski.
Five student-written plays are
·
"Sisters" offers a view of the
scheduled to be
-
performed at 8
intimate relationship among three
p.m. April 26, 27 and 28 as a part
.
sisters and their mother. The
of the · experimental theater
drama is directed by Nancy
workshop headed by Dean of Keschinger, a Marist sophomore.
Student
Affairs Gerard A
.
Cox
.
It was written by junior Karyn
The plays will be performed in
M ai;tdalen
.
the Campus Center Theatre.
"The Bonds of Obedience,"
"A Moment of Silence,"
written by Alex Smyle, assistant
directed by student Jeanne Fahey,
registrar and recent graduate,
fo<;uses on a 17-year-old male
presents a view of the problems
who experiences a series of day-
facing a group of college students
dreams pertaining to the teenage
who reside in a fraternity house.
problems of many
J
7-year-olds. It
It is directed by freshman John
was written by Ted
·
Waters, a
Henry Griffiths.
junior at Marist.
Set design for the five plays will
"Thicker Than Water," centers
.
.
on a typical American family that
must deal with the daily
challenges that family living
provides.
It
is directed by
Christopher Serafini, also a
student~ at Marist from a script
written by senior Jon McBride.
Susan Fleming, a
Marist
junior, directs, "Taking It to the
Streets," a play that deals with
the consequences of a crime at a
·
minimal.
"Experimental theater gives
Marist students a chance to learn
from their successes as well as
their failures," said Cox. "An
educational
institution. should
provide opportunities for trial
and error."
Cox also said the experimental
theater plays might provide the
motivation
for other Marist
students to attempt the same
kinds of challenges themselves.
Psi Chi inducts new members
The Marist College Chapter of
Psi Chi, a national honor society
in psychology, recently inducted
seven new members.
·
Initiated were graduate student
Ronald Kiveo, graduate ~rndent
Yvonne Poley, senior Guy Jacob,
senior Jacqueline Conti, senior
Roger Sala, junior Susan DiUglio
and junior Fiona Perrone. Also
to be inducted are graduate
students Stephanie Clancy and
Susan Buckner.
these shades;
Rehearsals for this year's show
began early last February under
the direction of David Leigh,
director of ttie .fashion depart-
ment. Ev
_
eryone involved in the
show was
.
required to
.
attend
mandatory
Monday-night
rehearsals.
and
additional
rehearsa_ls during the week.
The show comprises a total of
24 scenes in which each fashion
major is required to make and
model at least four outfits. Music
featured during t}le scenes will be
by such artists as George Benson,
Abba, and Earth, Wind and Fire.
As in previous shows, second and
third-year fashion majors will
each be required to do scenes
called the Sophomore and Junior
numbers.
Despite growing pressures as
the show draws nearer, combined
with work from their other
classes, fashion majors remain
excited and optimistic about their
upcoming show.
·
"It's a way for fashion majors
to express their creativity," said
senior Donna Leonard.
·
"We tend to go all out on stage
and really put our hearts into it,
because
not
only are
we
representing the school, we're
representing ourselves," she said.
Senior fashion major Ann
Reisig said that doing a show is
not only a way of acquiring poise
and confidence in front of people,
.
but it also helps to round out their
experience.
.
"It
teaches us every aspect of
the work, not just what you're
working on," she said.
A design major is required to
participate in a total of three
fashion shows before she can
complete her fashion curriculum
at Marist. Tickets for this up-
coming show can be purchased
from Mr. Leigh in the fashion
department.
·
.
.
.
..
·
-
-
.
.
.
.
-----------
;
'
,·
'
'.
r \
~
\
.
f<
.
,
R()Wt~rS
look
.t(f
recapt\.lre · President'
S
Cup
~
~
.•
'
~
.
.
...
-
-
By
Jim
Leonard . . .
·
. . ..
~rlast year's performaric~. ··. ·.
.
. _Marist College. c~ew. ·will :at-
· "In .order. to· win'first Pl!lce ·
tempt to recapture the President!s
overall,''. said Davis, "'we would:-
Cup Saturday when ii faces 13 · have to "'.in first plac_e: in almost.
other colleges:: iii : the .• annual ,: every event we enter:· Since we
President's Cup _Rega!ta ·· at the don't· have a . women's· varsity.
Hudson River· waterfront starting eight boat or a ·men's' varsity'
at
s
a.m, •·
.- ..
..
_
lightweight eight boat this year,-it
.
. Marist bst the Cup by a single - will be tough." · ·
· .
point last yearfo LaSalle College, . -.. _The regatta _is run on a points
after winning_in
198L
· system basis; Each team-receives a
·· According to .. Head Coach . certain amount o~ points for_a
Larry · Dav~s, ¥arist ·witr have. a._. !°irst,sec~md, or third place ~_msh
.. tough • time winning this year
m a particular_ race with-a higher
because the team· will row off .· nur!}ber of pomts awarded for a
•
·
·against· "some ~qf its s_trcingest · fi~st place finis~ than a second or.
.
.
competition in . years-'. at··. this , th1~d: place fimsh. At. the ~nd. of -
.
'I' •
regatta."·.• . c'..d
<
:
.
-:.._,:,,,
·
::-:<-::::
t~e regatta, the col!ege w!th ~he
5&:::7 '. -~ ._ ..
.. Davis said the· University 'of :h1gh
7
st t?taLof. pomts wms t~e - ~ - · . -.,_
. Rhode lslarid men's team and.the :· Pre_s1dent s Cup.
>
.
· . _
,-
.. · women's teains from th;
.
United,:-
_:A
-team can.- win,_the regatta ·
·sta_tes Naval Acade~y
and'
Coast. 'without wiim~ng ,a·: first })lace in· - ~
.
Guard Academy wdl be. among
any race, but1t must,hav~ a large
the most powerful to beat.
.
n_ui_nber of second and third place
·~~{~;~~x~~~I;J
~lWr~;:m~~~}~F~~·
t?-~~k~~=:T.~·•~·~=-c__C•~·l<:5· ·.
;~~~d~~~·~:u~~~~,'~;
r=t~;~t~r:;E!:~rif!;;;
:-=- ·~. ::_
,~--~-==--;(~:~~~~.;::'~
Rochester, -·Lowe_ll
University,
four), and ~me _third place fimsh - - - -
-
_,.:·~·-·--"·,;,•: .•
,lJf;;-:---:-:
·· - · - -.... · ..
·
~--
·
·••.!!Wl
'.2.:.:tt
=~
SUNY Maritiine the Merchant
(men s varsity eight). . .
-
- '
~~
·
-
-,"~"--"'-· .
" - - - · · ·
=.
'
. Marine Academy' (King's Point),
Davis said heis please_d with ~he
,..:'.::::.:
<,.....,.___
.
_
,
__ .
·--~-.,~
St. John's (Staten Island), St.
men and worne~ novice_s (f1rst
Women's Cr~w takes to the Hudson: The prestigious Pres~dent's Cup Regatta
will
be held
Joseph's College (Philadelphia),
year rowers) this ~eason, but
Saturday. (~hoto by Gina F~nciscovich)
·
.
.
Stockton
State
Sk:idmore
added he · would hke to see
Manhattan, and 1o'na College .... '
.
stro'!ger_. per~o~mances · by . !he
Davis said he is sure Maristwill
varsity rowers
m
•the_ upcommg .
.
''hold their own"~against the top · races. ·"If_ we _continu
7
to work
schools but he is uncertain
if
the . hard, Manst
WIii
surprise a lot of
team can rep'eatits .1981 sh_owing, ·_. colleges this
_
season," Davis _s,aid.
Marist signs two to hoop team-
·
By Mike Graney
School. Wynn chose Marist over
Another candidate to sign was
By Bill Travers ·
It's not -easy rooting for. your
-
favorite team in the playoffs ·
anymore: You have to decide
which one is your absolute
favorite. I'm what you call a local
rooter -
Mets, Giants, Islanders
and Knicks. But that's now.
Before I got ·season tickets for
the Giants in 1978, I was a Jets
fan. And before the Islanders
were formed I was the biggest
Rang<:rs fan (even bigger than you
Jeanne). Plus, way back when the
American Basketball Association
was around~ I supported the Nets.
The Mets have been the only
~onstant.
So, what do I do now that the
Rangers are playing the lslande_rs
Tennessee St.
.
Wes Fuller, a
6'5" forward from
· Two standout · high school
Shamely is a 6'6" forward
Camden High School in New
basketball players have signed
from Woodlands High School in
Jersey. He chose not to go to
lettersof intent _and will join the
White
·
Plains, the. school --All-
Marist and took his talents to
Red Foxes next season, according
American Steve Smith attended.· . Northeastern University: He had
to . Ron Petro, . :athletic director . Shamely is . an All-Westchester
his. ··• deci~iorr down
•
.· to .···· Nor- -
and
head
basketball coach;
... ·.··· •. County selection:
.
. :·:"
.. .','' : '.
theastem;Drake,
and_Maiist.
Charles. ;
:
Wyrin,· and
.
Mark ·· · Johnson; a_ 6'3''.' guard from
:Petro is stillhoping to,sign one
·. , Shameii-have chosen
Jo
play at
Philadelphia,
·
Pa., was a first
of the following players for next
Marisf/,while Marques Johnson
team All-City ·selection at West · year: Peter McGee, a 6'10" center
· probably · will sign in the near
Catholic High School. Along with
from Ewing High School in New
future. ..
·
· .. · . ·
. . l)1arist, Johnson is still ·con-
Jersey; · Mike Milliqg,
-.6'7t'
Wynn, a-6'4"' swingman from
sidering Wagner and Utica.
forward
from. Dunbar High
Camden, N.J .; averaged over. 20 -· Marist is looking to fill _ the
School in Washington, D.C., or
. points a game while gaining All-
shoes of departing seniors. Steve Anthony Moye, a 6'2" guard
South Jefsey·honors•in his senior
Smith, Keith Denis, and Rufus
from Wilbur Cross High _School
vear at Woodrow Wilson -High
Cooper.
in Connecticut.
·
Foxes bomb Bard,'face Siena next
-
•_,
'
•
'
• , •
•
' ' -
-
; I
• •
.
' Marist's Bob Sherer went three
Tue~day's game against Ramapo
· sets . against Bard's Matt Con.:
and wm face Siena in a home .
.. zanetti before prevailing 5-7, 7~5,·
match tomorrow.
~-' 6-4; as the Red Foxes blanked · · Marist . has· been "pfayng'.its
Bard, 9-0, in a home tennis match
home matches at the new court,
Friday at· the Dutchess Racquet
because the ·old courts on campus
.
Club.
(
.
are condemned. •.
.
The numb.er three singles inatch
• -"The main problem with the
between Sherer and Conzanetti · Dutchess Racquet Club," · said
. was the closest of the day as Bill · ~ophomorr Pat McCullough, "is
. Flood, . Jeremy. Shokham; Pat
. that the fa.ns just -can't get there
·. McCullough and Joe Giuliani
for.the matches.-'· ·
won easily while Larry Giuffre
The.Racquet Club is located on .
. won by default.
.
.
· · Salt Point Road near the Heritage
Marist was 1-2-1 going into
Gardens apartments ....
Friday
Sat.
Mon •
Wed.
. Sports
schedule.
T Siena (home)
L
Steven's
Tech
(away)
C
President's
Cup
Regatta
(home)
T · Quinnipiac
(away)
L
Drew
(away)
T-Tennis L-~ Lacrosse C- Crew.
S,ports Shorts·
.
.
.
-
:
.
:
'
.
~
in the National Hockey League little easier. I like the Nets, always
playoffs and the Nets are battling • did, even wlten, they played_ in the
the Knicks in the_ National .,old :island Garden. But 1t was
Basketball Association playoffs?
possible to like· the ,Knicks at· the ·
Let's attack the problem on the sam1: time because they were in
ice first.
the l'-tB.A. ·
·
If you're like me you are an
Islander fan but down deep you
still love the Rangers, I. was there
when the Islanders were born and
have been loyal ·ever since. And
I'm from Long Island.
..
On the other hand, ttie Rangers
deserve a break because they have
waited so long for the Cup to
return and'the Islanders have won
three in a row.
I'm greedy -~ let'_s
·
go Islan-
ders!
Now a decisioh has to be made
about basketball. This one's a
But now it's different. There is
no more
A..B.A., and a choice has .
to be made, It's the Knicks. I still
don't like the · fact the · Nets
dumped Julius Erving before 'the -
move to Jersey.
·
·
•••••
I know I've said this before,
but you have to feel sorry for the
New-York Mets. I am probably
the biggest diehard Mets fan
around. ·But· take a good look at
the team. As hard as it is for me
to say;,Jhey are terrible.
At best, they are a bunch of
..,,
· inediocre ballplayers. · It's_ very
·
frustrating to watch them lose all
the _time .. Dave Kingman causes
more harni (strikeouts) than good
(home r~ns);. there is no steady
shortstop who can hit· and field;
Hubie Brooks shows promise but
his hitting and fielding are in-
consistent;
George Foster is
proven, but remember last year?;.
Mookie Wilson doesn't bunt
enough. The list goes on ..
. · There are niany ·promising
young ballplayers -
especially
pitchers -
on the farm team, so
.. that's one plus.
Wait 'til next year ..... or the
·
year after?
.,.
•••••
Chalk one up for the women
this week. Despite blisters and a
cramp that struck midway .
through the race, Joan Benoit (no
relation ·to· the infamous dorm)
.
shattered '. the women's. world
record in _ the ·. 87th Boston ,
Marathon. -
.
__ .
· .. .
·
The Boston University track
coach finished the 26-mile course
in 2:22:42 -
more than, two :
minutes faster than any woman in
history. I can't imagine what it
must be like-to run 26 miles.·
•
••••
Congratulations goes to Dick
Quinn, Marist assistant athletic
director, and Glen Marinelli,
Marist trainer, who raced in the
.Marathon.
•••••
Rumor . has it the . Marist
basketball team will be moving ,
into a new Conference next year.
More on that later.
-
·
28.18.1
28.18.2
28.18.3
28.18.4
28.18.5
28.18.6
28.18.7
28.18.8
28.18.9
28.18.10
28.18.11
28.18.12