Skip to main content

The Circle, November 17, 1983.pdf

Media

Part of The Circle: Vol. 29 No. 8 - November 17, 1983

content

Task fOrceS pref)arefor lvliddle}StateS ·visit.
.
.
'
.
·., b)':Eileen Hayes
allocated
(O
increase' 1he:1i'brai-y . that .. space is a problem, but we
be ·responding to this by training
Dr.·. Milton· Teichman, co-.
·. i :- •: . ·
,. ·
·_>. ,_:
,
. · . . :
holdings for this academic year.
didn't agree with all the con-
library staff and.by budgeting for · chairman of the Core task force

~
;
'·The
Middle States Evaluation - That figure is four , times the_
clusions
·
in the Middle States
development and maintenance of · and-, professor of English, said he
, Team; an accrediting group from
amount that the library· received
report;" Best said.
.
.--
.:
necessary equipment for data - thinks
that
Middle States
: .,. ~he Middle States Association <?f
in previous years. The.library task
.
'.fhe · task • . .force noted _ there
_-
bases and automated systems.
- misinterpreted the . "healthy
. :, ,. c;:oneges and Universities, will be
force is co-chaired by Barbara
should be study space for stude11ts,. -:.Brenner said ; .. an - on~line
controversies" of the faculty at

· , ..
·
returning
to
Marist.at_ the end of Brenner, library director, and Dr. . using the _library's resources, _but- · ·categorizing -system -- is currently
the ._ time of
·
·Marist's
last
· )\this_ month. In its last visit, the Eugene Best, assoicate professor
there should : be study space
being used by the library to speed - evaluation. In the falf of 1981,
· · team criticized the college in three of r eligfous -studies.· "We don't ·outside the library for students · up the categorizing· process.'She
Teichman said the faculty made
. areas:. the library. holdings, af-
know how long that will continue, - using their-uwn resources looking. further said. that. although there
proposals
-
about
the Core
.,- firniative action and the Core but it's a start," said Brenner.
for' a. ·quiet atmosphere •. The are new acquisitions; she is still - curriculum -··ror its
further ..
program.
_
The.' task - force's -- mission,
possibility · of . supe,;vised working with the same size staff,
development. Teichman further
_, Following the November 1981 .according to the task force, is to
classrooms or the cafeteria as
which slows down the process.
said he thinks Middle States
,visit, President Dennis J. Murray
build the library collection· to
possible
alternatives
were · . The task force also suggested
interpreted this to mean · the
requested the creation of co-
support•·· undergraduate and
suggested.
_that a library Collection and
faculty was uncertain of what
'· chaired presidential task forces to graduate-level course work.
- Moving the Learning Center -Development Committee be
Core ·was about. "My impression
be· made up of faculty and ad-
· Middle States suggested Marist
and AV-TV out of the library was
formed with one member from
is the faculty, on - the whole,
ministrators
to
focus on these
increase the library by
10,00Q
·another idea. The learning center each division, in order to insure
understood the Core curriculum,
areas. He asked the task"forces to volumes each year for five years,
would be moved to the campus
that._the current deficiencies do
but we (the task force) took stops
cite progress and make recom-
_with a budget of.
$250,000
per
·
center and the AV-TV would be
not continue into the future.
to insure the faculty were made to
mendations for further steps to be ·· year. The task force agreed that · placed in· the proposed .Lowell
Brenner ·said that students can
understand_ the importance of
taken.
the library should expand by· - Thomas Communications Center.
recommend · books · for
Core and support students going ·
In a press conference
·-
for.
50,000
volumes; put.this increase· -
:.
Storage .. space .- is another . a<::quisition. Any suggestion will
through the Core program," he
journalism ·students, Murray said
would be staggered over the years·
consideration·. ·Books that aren't . be taken· into consideration.
said.
the college has made extensive withextrabuild-uponeyearc-nda
.
- .in demand-. may ·.
be
placed-in. Brenner said the libraryis trying_
progress . iri the· three areas .. lesser .-increase~- another.-• :The . storage, leaving shelf space -for
to spend the new money in the
"Overall Marist is well prepared staggering would depend upon
boofa that
ate
used frequ~ntly. _areas desired by students and
for the" Middle States visit;" he
budget and space. The.task force · According to Brenner, theHbrary faculty.
-
".- .
·
said. . .
also suggested the library should· does have a storage facility, but it-· The°(::ore Program
The Library
.
_
have _'the flexibility to . Include· . is riot large enough, and not clos~
In the last_ report, the Middle _
. In its 1981 evaluation; Middle resources other.than books, such
enough to the library.
·.
· States team suggested there be a.
States criticized Marist for. the as films and audi~visual ancl.
tv ·
The task -force. also. recom~ re-evaluation of the Core
inadequate number of volumes in· equipment, in its ·increase· of
·•
· mended that the library keep up program. The Presidential task
the library; .The team suggested · holdings·.-
· ·
·
- with new technology. With the force for the Core program
an increase. in budget and in the . - Space:·· was another noted · technological· revolution, the - f~cused on informing the faculty
holdings with attention given
to
pioblein. · The
task· force ·_ methods of informationthe·ways: about the importance of the Core
the problem of space.
._ suggeste~. a continuation of the
tp achieve them should be part of - program . and· getting faculty
A
bugget of_·
$250,000
was • open-stack concept. "We agreed.. libr~ry f'!,lnctions. Marist should feedback on further develop~ent.
' .Volume
29
Number
8 ,.
.
':c
.'
,
At a colloquium last fall, the
faculty was- able to ask que.stions
and make recommendations for
the ·refinement of Core. Faculty
members had the opportunity to
link foundation and second-level
courses.
_ The task force made
five
recommendations in its final
report.
The first and second recom-
mendations are to reach the
Continued on page 2
November-17, 1983
,.--> .··•.·
(tata11t1-01spure
·enas;
IleW
policies
expected
by
Stev~n
A.
Bergef>-
·
"We will ultibi°at~l-y set a policy
-:_.New
frosh· -·.,.
ho1n:e
-stj// _
needs
phones
- · ·
·--
..
J~•:·-: ., ·
for_hoW.events w(ll bC _spollsOred-
. ·.The semt!Ster-long c0ntroversy and advertised,''.- said Galanti.
over a·- Labor Day party spon-
The -committee
\Viii
comprise
sored by an.: un<>fficial .student CSL · officers, · according · to
group was settled last week when Galariti,
including . himself,
the_ Coiins:i!
·or
Student- L5ader~ : Co)lege 'Union Board President
decided to donate profits from the James Barnes and Stephen Funk, -
party to Marisc ahd .to
fonri
a
~
chairman ofthe Financial Board ..
commitiee to study
:
policies • . . J'h~. CSL . ·agr~ed to use the
·
governing off-campus everitS/' . -
~
profits froin the party to ftind a
. ,• The party at Butterfield's, a
·_
campus cleanup ' this , spring,
local' bar, -was: sponsored by
a
according to Galanti, a member
-
>,
group -calling 'its·elf- Djrt . ·Pit•. but not a: sp_okesman for
Dirf
Pie · -
Manor, whjch>has Jeveral .CSL _ ;M~nor, :
_
officers asjts members. ·:.:, .;'
·,;
Galanti said the amount of
;
_
The Rev. Richard'A .. LaMorte, _money being: giyen was '~in ·the
assistant
dean
of students, .said neighb9rhood of:$900.,. ·
-
·_ ._: •-
the advertisements for" the party
~'\V'e':(the (:SL):. approached ·,
· c - that were_.
,
distributed by CSL. President (Deni)is:J;)Mufray and-. · .. _

-
--
officers.were ;•~in vjolation-o( the ·· he agreed
to
match the moriey," .-. · · : ·
- ·.·present guidelines of solicitation"
:said
Galanti~ "We hope to gather
··
_a,nd · he -· threatened · to take
.soo
people. We want the stt1dents
discipHnary action against CSL _ to
,take
pride
iii
the school.and·
President Keith GalaritL.
,.
-- where they live. Each class would.
.
':
The formation· of the
-
corn-
plant a tree in -its part. of the
miuee
!S
an attempt to_ address the campus," he said.
.
,
issue .of where liabilities '- or
"Wh~n.)t com.es -to landscape
:
_.FashiQO
show
participants
work
:on
choreography
for
their
Nov.>,
legairesponsibilities -- rest in the work~ $1800 doesn't gc, far,"· ... 17
and
18
show,.'!Fall Innovations."
sponsoring and advertising ofoff-. Galanti ·addecL "If-the studellts ·
--•
(photo
by
Mago Kucich)
campus events.
·
help put the ·trees in tile grnund,
•-
7'/#
·• · , · · · ·
·
l. l
·

-r /'-.• ·. ·

cte?na.la:;r.:~~~e~er~Wai~;-c;~i. }~:~~l~/JJSes:t~t~:1sb~iJ:f
:1.,_~ar,an
·:rfa•
.
0JJ
1cia ..
contact, Marist attorneys Cor~ main-tenance can do the heavy
.
· · · ·
.
--
, · · - •
·· -
-
.
-
-
-
baHy,. Gartland and Rappleyea,'' work," he said;.
-
.
.
The MaristCollege board of trustees SatUrday approved Marian
who will answer any qu~stions the
LaMorte and Galanti.have met
Hall as the official naine of the new freshman dormitory, said
newly-formed committee has ·several times in_ recent. weeks.
Gerard A. Cox, dean ofstudent affairs· ..
·-·
·
·
while evaluating the _
present LaMorte said no · ct;sciplinary
·
-
.-
According to
Cox,
the name Marian Hall was proposed because
situation regarding off-campus action . would be taken against
-of the location· of the building, its structural design and symbolic
events.
Continued on page
10
value.
-·_ ·-
·
·
-
· - -
-
The building is adjacent to what used to be the Marian Building,
No
Circle·
next
week
Next issue: Dec. 8
the college's original classroom building.
_-
_
_.
Marian Hall has .been built from the structure of the old gym-
nasium - the first building constructed by the Marist Brothers.
Cox said that Marian Hall commemorates the original four~year
college on this campus, known· then as Marian College. According
io Cox, honoring the foundations of the college reminds us that in
time future gen~rations will look back on the Marist College of
:, today..
·
_
.
A plaque with the dorm's official name will be placed in the front
staircase of the dorm, on a column of bricks, which was originally
part of the old gym, Cox added,
by
Donna Piper
The ·Residen~·e Hall continues
to be without pay telephone
service primarily as a result of the
building's construction schedule,
according
to
Anthony
V.
Campilji, college business officer.
Campilii said that because
ground for construction was not
broken unti(June, phone service
preparation took a les_ser priority
to the . housing of students .
. "Because the dorm was built in
suc)l a short period of time, there
were priorities," said Campilii.
"The main one• was
to
get the
building - constructed and the
students in
it."
When work did begin on "the
phones,
mechanical
probiems
· arose; said Campilii. When the
wiring • reached Donnelly , Hall,
enrouteto the main switchboard,
the existing wire was found to be
deteriora~ing and : had to . be
replaced, he said:
There. were also problems with
coordiriation
between
-the
telephone · · company · and_ . the
school, Campilii said. Because the ·
phone company had split, . the
scho_ol could no longer deal with
one company. Because the
companies themselves were going
through a redefinition of jobs,
dete~mining where the respon-
sibility lay became difficult.
"People were passing the buck.
In the meantime, the phones
never got in," he said.
Additional problems that
prolonged
the
delay included the
August telephone strike - and
misplacement
of parts,
said
Campilii. "Everything that could
have gone wrong with the phone
system went wrong," he said.
Paul Canin, who designed the
building, pointed out that there
Contin~ed on page 13
,,
'
l
l
f
)
-._ .I
'
_I
,,1
.-t
~.
'{
,:
'"'
-·:,-~
1
































































--•Page2-THECIRC.LE-November11, 1983
Visit-· - - -
Continued from page 1
common
goal
of
general
education by creating a more
progressive sequence of Core
courses. For this, the Academic
Affairs Committee's
Ad
hoc
Committee on - Core/General
Education was· called into being
by the Faculty Executive Com-
mittee at the end of last semester.
The
committee is in the process of
making a preliminary proposal to
broaden the framework of Core.
The third task force recom-
mendation is that the college
should take a close look .at the
evaluation of Core courses and
consider different
evaluations
from non-Core courses.
A
director was ·assigned to the
college writing program. This
position focused on a revising of
the course syllabus, working
toward a common final exam and
achieving a standard grading
procedure.
The final
recommendations
were to continue to inform new
faculty members about the Core
program and, on a regular basis,
events should be held for faculty
to discuss issues relating to Core
and general education.
The result of the task force,
according to Teichman, was that
"the faculty affirmed the.place of
the
Core
curriculum
and
suggested the college go ·even
further to attain the . common
experience of . a liberal arts
education," he said.
Affirmative Action
The evaluation team suggested
Marist continue its attention to
the recruitment of women and
minorities to the staff and
faculty.
_
Personnel Director Mark Adin
said he and the task force worked
very
hard
to
create a
heterogenous mix on the staff
since his arrival in Dec. 1981.
In l 981, the faculty had 13 full-
time. females and 67 full-time .
males. Now there are 24 full-time
females and 65 full-time males,
which is an increase of 84 percent
females.
In 1983, 58 percent of all new
hires were femal_e and 17 percent
were minorities. Minorities now
have a
5
percent representation on
the faculty.
In the administration, 44
percent are female, compared
with 38 percent in 1981. Over the
past year 53 percent of ad-
ministrative positions. were filled
by women,
i
7 · per.cent were
minority, and 71
percent of
promotions were females. Arlin
sajd he tried to create positions
for clerical workers to move up to
the administrative staff. "One of
my personal priorities was · to
increase the upward mobility of
the clerical staff,"-he said.
The task force recommended
_ that search committees, people
· who interview prospective em-
ployees, be heterogenous.
It
said
an all-white male staff would tend
to hire white males. Also, a
personnel coordinator is going to
be hired s_oon for aggressive
·external recruitment.
I'n
the past,
Marist has just advertised in the _
newspaper about an available
position. "We need different
people of various cultural and
ethnic backgrounds," said Adi11.
"The greater the diversity, the
better off we will be and the more
we
will
be able to offer students."
Adin said it is hard for Marist
to
compete in the larger markets ,
for personnel. He hopes to make
a continual advancement in the
area of Affirmative Action, and
was pleased with _
this year's
figures
which exceeded the
national average.
·
NOTICE:_ ::REGARDING
HOUSIN·G FOR
.WINTER- INTERCESSION
January 2, 1984-January 20, 1984
All those. interested in.being housed on cam-
- pus for the 1984 _Winter Intercession should
come to the Housing Offic~ by- December
9,
1983 to make these ,arrangements.
The Room Rate will be $8.00/day. The total
_ amount covering the length of time you will
be on campus must be paid to the Business
Office prior to the finalization of any Interces-
sion Assignment.
NO FOOD SERVICES WILL BE PROVIDED
DURINq THE WINTER INTERCESSIONS.
QUESTIONS?
PLEASE COME TO THE HOUSING OFFICE
.
.
· . .
..
.
:
.
)
T
H
E
D
I
S
T
I.
N
G-
U
S
ARI
YOU. SMART ENOUGH·_
TO· SAVE YOUR PARENTS :
-
.THE COST OF COWG~?
,~•1101~'-"·
if
\·l•ll
win an :\rm,·
Rl )l(.: ,(ht1L1r,hiJ"· \\'h1.·~,
v,•u
,,·111
l
1
1"-"_'~f
,iur
••(~ll
1
br:_
,hiJ"'-.
\\'l'
J'OI\' ,·,
,ur
tuiti,
'11. '"'-.
,b .. bh
I~-.....
;Uhl
l
,tlwr
;1'-'ihi1.·1111_,·
l'\l'-'tl""4.''·
\\1.·
JI
._,J .....
1
!!f\"c• ,-,
•ll
lll" h,
::"-I.\\\"
a v,•;tr
l"Xtra.
A11'l wlwn
\'t
,u t:r.1,luatl'. ,n:
I~
makl· _,-, ,u ,Ill
.-\r,m,·
t
•ltll
0
l:r-
l\ut
,·,,u han·
ll'
hl· n1t•r1.·
1h;m -..r.,art
h'
win.
\\l·
II
l·t
1
1\~h.il'r
,·,,u.r
l'~tr.1\.·~1rr1,ular.
l\.•,1,ft.•r.-hir
an,f :uhl..·ti._· ;.h."tivitk,-:-..
:\rkl
if,-,
,u rt.·arh
tfw
tin;1I,.
,n·
II
m~·vr u·nh n
t{J
f(
1
r ~,
('\'r.-.c
•nal
intl'f\"i1..
0
\ \ " .
.

Ft-,r
n\t
,rt•
int~ ,rm,ni,
,n
ah ,ut
h, ,,,.
1t,
an
•i1..I, ,,·,•rl,tm.11..·nin!.! ,·,
,ur
p;m•nb
It
1
r
tfw
lll'Xt
r;,ur,l•a~.(llllt,h."t:
~LUOR H,\KIL\lv'\ Wl!\{:An:. :?12-295-]S"Jj
(t(ll:l.fCTl.
,...:~
·,.
~
i;
:.:f
'r
2"". Year Scholarships available
for Sophomores· and 3-year for
Freshmen. Current · enrollment
in ROTC not required.
GET THE
LOOK·
.
.
'
.
THAT GETS
.
.
.
-
.
.
THE LOOKS
At CLIPSO INTERNATIONAL,·
we have a very simple concept •..
we let our talent bring out the
best in
you.
.
.
Total Hair, Skin,
Nails and,_ Cosmetics
Special Marist Pricing
No Appointment Necessary
H
E:
D
• Open¥ onday
The task force co-chairmen
stated that their purpose was just
to
make
recommendations
following .study and research.
What
is
done with these proposals
is up to the president and his
staff. Some of these suggestions
have been agreed upon and action ·
has been taken, while others are
still under consideration or have
been riegatecl.
clipso
iNTERNATiONAI ltAiR SALON
- through Saturday
• 2 Qlocksfrom Vassar
• La Grange A venue 473-4404























































------•---•--•--•----------------111!11111--November
17,
1983 ·
THE CIRCLE· Page
3--•
Marist
eyes
,
u~W)plat1
for education courses
.
.
,.
.
·.
·•:.
_....
.
·:
.
'.

·
~
.
:
.
~
· by
P~ul
B~ckerle
decision to· disiontinue _the · af- ... education certification at tite other college."
.~
filiation with Marist." · . ;
Mount.
According to Nolan, Marist
Marist · is in the process of - Nolan said she speculates that
. According to Nolan, a proposal would add four new courses in
She also added that it is a good
move because it meant that the
students won't have to travel so
far to get to class.
.
revamping its program in special
Mount St. Mary officials may
for a jointly approved program in. psychology and education. There
education
and.
elementary have thought cooperation with special education and elementary . • will also · be student teaching
education in the wake of Mount
Marist hurt its ability to attract education with another . local supervised by Marist; also, more
St .. Mary College's decision to
students who are trying to decide
college has been in the working.
faculty will be added in special
stop providing courses for Marist
between the two schools.
Nolan said that the final approval education.
Maureen Hall, a junior, who is
enrolled in the program said she
feels that
it is unfortunate that
Marist won't lie affiliated with
Mount St. Mary, but she thinks
that bringing the courses closer to
Marist will help
to
allievate the
transportation problem.
education majors.
from both ,colleges has not yet
. One student who is currently
According to Eliubeth Nolan,
"We did a research project on been obtained, and that is why she enrolled :n the program at Mount
director of teacher education; the
this two or three -years into the is withholding the name ·of the St. Mary, a senior who wished to
change is necessary because of
program," said Nolan, "but the other participating school.
·
remain anonymous, said she had
what she said was Mount St.
survey showed that the students
'· ·
mixed
feelings
about
the
Mary's unexplained decision to
wh'o came to Marist would not . Nolan said the program being proposal.
"Though I've heard that the
reputation of the · program at
Mount St. Mary's is an excellent
one, and the courses that l am
enrolled in are good, the tran-
sport.ation problem in some cases
can be inconvenient. Perhaps if
the program is moved more
locally then the transportation
can be supplied by Marist," Hall
said .
end its cooperative program with
have choosen Mou'nt St. Mary's.· designed now will have more of
"It's bad that Marist is leaving
Marist.
It
has always been a bone of the required courses at Marist.
because Mount St. Mary's has a
"Last year Mount St. , Mary
notified Marist that they no
longer wished · to continue the
arrangement,"
said 'Nolan.
"There was no explanation. They
just said they had made the
Office trailer
ready tq open
by Kathleen Driscoll
Parked behind the row of cars
in the.Donnelly Parking lot in the·
corner of Leonidoff Field are the
modular unit offices now ready
for occupation for some Marist
College faculty.
Unattractive from the outside,
the modular trailer is constructed
of beige .aluminum· with two
wooden ramps. The interior holds
nine carpeted and paneled rooms,
one of which is a store room.
Anthony Tarantino, the new
director of physical plant and
growth said, "There is adequate
room for
a
comfortable office,
the smallest room being S'xll':"
Each room has storm windows
and is both heated and air con-
ditioned.
The modular unit will be a
temporary. building for_ needed
office space.
"It
is only an ex
0 •
pedience to ·satisfy an
-
immedi.atc
need," · said Tarantino. He also
said that the trailer was built to
· create · office space that was
replaced by classrooms. "Offices
have. been . converted
to
classrooms due to the growth in
. the
student · body,"
said
Tarantino. ,
-
The major reason for the trailer
was the.cost factor.
·
Rtyer group
plans suit._
by Jeffrey DeSantis
· · The
Hudson
River.
Fisherman's Association is
suing Exxon . Corp.
for
allegedly polluting the Hudson
River by dumping ballast from _
the lower Hudson in the area
near Hyde Park.
_ Ballast is a heavy material
-
placed in the hold of a ship to
keep it low in the water.
-·. The Association claims· that
Exxon needs two permits for·
its
operations.
The State
Pollutant
Discharge
_ Elimination · System (SP DES)
-permit would allow it
to
make
. discharges, and the water
supply permit is for the taking
of fresh water.
Nicholas A.
Robinson,
deputy commissioner of the
state Department of En-
vironmental Conservation,
said, "No corporation may:_
acquire or distribute water for
public water supply purposes ·
without a permit."
If Exxon
tankers are
.- discharging just ballast, they
do not need a permit. Ac-
. cording to Robinson,
the
discharge from the cargo tanks
would require a SPDES
· permit.
.
The U.S, Attorney of the
Southern District of New York ·
is investigating the charges of
the Association.
contention · with
t.heir
ad-
"The student from the. other really good program and a great
ministration office."·
college would come here for some reput~tion for education, but it is
The program, which has been
courses, and our student will go good that we are getting out
operating for 10 years, has
12
there for some courses," said because we were paying Marist
Marist students· enrolled. The
Nolan. "The program would be for our classes, and they were
current sophomore class will be·'. jointly registered under Marist as charging more tften . what Mount
the last cl~ss< :, tq
,>
, .com pl
it~. ,.-...
welJ_ as being registered under· the St. Mary's is charging," she said.
.
~-
....
--·~---·,
._.
'.
:~;-.::~:
·~·-·
~
;:
The trailer cost approximately
$33,000 according· to Edw·ard P.
Waters, vice -president for ad-
ministration and finance. "The
modular unit was - only
$15
a
square foot as opposed to
$60
or
$70
a square foot that a new
building would · cost," said
ma
II

••
Modular office awa-its arrival of faculty members.
Waters.
When asked if there were any
other alternatives, Waters · said
that this was the only possibility.
. "You make a judgement based ori
aH the evidence, the trailer is very
efficient, -very· effective and least
expensive," said Waters.
(photo by Margo Kucich)
Waters quoted Frank Lloyd
Wright saying that, "beauty come
from function." Waters said,
"If
they ever wanted to get rid of the
trailer they can just call a tractor
to come take it away."
The trailer will be used tern-
~
■I
if
'.
i
....
_.
,
:
r,
-~
porarily until the Lowell-Thomas
Center is built. According to
Waters,
the trailer, which
originally belonged to the Exxon
Corporation, was a good in-
vestment. "The market value will
hold if we ever decide to sell,"
said Waters.
Exxon faces protests over river d~mping
man's As~ociation is correct, the
human carcinogen.
by Je!frey Desantis
water you drink inay be polluted
The City of Poughkeepsie used
An Exxon tanker from Aruba because of the dumping.
12
million gallons of Hudson
is docked in the lower H u d s o n - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The Hudson River Fisherman's
Association, an organization of
sports and commerical fishermen,
is suing Exxon for allegedly
River near the ports in New York
and New Jersey .. It releases its
ballast of salt water which keeps .
the ship low in the water., The ship
refills with water from the lower
Hudson.
The ship then heads up the river
towards the stretch by Hyde
Park, where it dumps its ballast.
It refills its tanks with water
considered drinkable by the state
department of
·
Environmental
Conservation, and sails to Aruba.
If
the Hudson River Fisher-
jlndustries and municipalities
poM~!~; t~eo~p~ds:;· ceased its
l
·n t"he'
Uu·
dson y,ralle•u have
Hudson River operation and is
..1.-i.
1
Y
I

looking for an alternate water
spent
a
fortune trying to clean
sor::~n Corp. has been taking
h
CJ
d
, ,
the water, using it at their Aruba
Up
f
e
£J.
U SOn.
plant and selling the excess to the
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . A r u b a government.
The
River water a day for· about
Carribean island has a water
68,000 residents, according co
shortage problem due to the break
John DeZuane, city engineer.
down of several desalinization
Marist College also used this
plants in July. According to the
water.
Continued on page 10
The assoc1auon charged that
the salt water discharged from the
Exxon tankers contains excessive
levels of benxene," ethyl benzene,
touluene· and xyline. Benxene is a
New·· advertising credits create confusion
by Christopher Serafini
While some students may have
been surprised by their mid-term
grades,
approximately
100
students. received an . additional
surp(ise two weeks ago .vh.cn they
opened . their envelopes and
looked at the computer print-outs
inside.
The
upper-level
Com-
munication courses they had been
taking since September were now
listed in their mid-term transcripts
as lower-level courses for the new
Advertising minor.
The Introduction
to Ad-
vertising and Retail Sales and
Promotion courses,
originally
listed _as Communication c;mirses
in
300
and 400 levels respecti\'.ely,
appeared· on the mid-terms as
courses for the Advertising minor
in the 100 and 200 levels.
"We·
signed up for Com-
munication
courses,''
said
Maureen Lynch, a sophomore
Communication Arts major. "I
needed those credits (in upper-
level Communication courses) to
go abroad next year and to
graduate. I thought I had them,
but l guess I do not."
Lynch
and
other
Com-
munication majors in Advertising
-courses need not worry, ac-
cording to Registrar Dr. Elizabeth
Ross. Despite the way their
transcripts read, the students
enrolled in these courses this
semester_ may keep the original
Communication credits, or they
short time ago, and we had no
may opt to declare an advertising
time
to
work out all the bugs.
minor, if they choose.
Mistakes were bound to be
"We were unaware of student
made."
bewilderment
concerning
this
Beginning with regisfration this
situation,"
Ross
said.
"We
week, all advertising courses will
thought the division would have
be listed as part of the advertising
informed the students of the new
minor and may not be used as
listings and of their option to
credits in communication arts.
keep the Communication credits.
Both Ross and Rebcook said they
At
least the credits can be used
were uncertain these advertising
either way; no one really suf-
courses would ever be dual-listed
fers."
as both a advertising and com-
Gene Rcbcook, the instructor
munitions.
for these courses, said that the
Courses in advertising, offered
change should not have been
1his semester as liberal arts
made on the registrar's computer \:ourscs, will be· considered non-
until next semester.
liberal arts next semester, with the
"The registrar just jumped the
possible
exception
:>f
In-
gun on this thing," Rebcook said.
troduction to Advertising, ac-
. ''.The mino! _\~~)l!S!..~ep~gv~d a __ - cording to Rcbcook.
:I
• I
,
__
......
'
.
'
























Page
4 · THE CIRCLE· November
17, 1983
. r--1
ub
r,-i
i.tied. ·
s::;o~ ·
. j
::)ou ... r .~ppYo'l'al .... :~-
d
-~\~°"t\\)~e.
,
,.
,,.
I
r'
'
r
I
\_
\
':-'-,,
,
.....
__
,
'
trd.:.u
-(:he.
\
0
0
·o
Yle:"cit-'
~ul..:w--e
fi ..
n~hst·~" ...
oonneH~
Han
Readers Write
All letters must be typed triple space with a 60 space margin, and submitted to the ·
Circle office no later than
t
p.m. Monday. Short letters are preferred. We reserve the
right to edit all letters. Letters must be signed, but name~ may be withheld upon
request. Letters will be published depending upon availability of space.
Joy Ufema
To The Editor:
On behalf oi the Development
Committee, we
would like to take
this opportunity to express our
graditude to all those who assisted
with the financial efforts of
bringing Joy Ufema to . our
Campus.
.
· ·
· We also would like to thank the
faculty, . staff, student_s and
members of the Community who
supported our efforts· to have a
lecture on the issue of Death and
Dying. The fact that students,
staff and faculty could pull
together and address . a fun-
damental issue like Death is
something we can be proud of.
Those of you who were unable
to attend may call Ext.
149
or
275
and· make arrangements to view
the video tape· of the lec~ure. :-
Thank .you
Fred Gainer/
Sister Eileen Halloran
Convocation Day
Dear Editors:
Degr~ding
This is to congratulate the
administration for "freeing up"
the Dean's Convocation Day
process and for providing such an ·
excellent speaker. This is also to
congratulate all of the many
students who volunteered their
time
to
hear
Dr.
Wee's
stimulating and
dramatic
presentation on human rights.
Their attendance · stem.med,
presumably, from a sincere in-
terest in the issues which, cer-
tainly in the case of individual
rights are rooted in the basic value
of respect for the individual -
a
value
not
revealed by those who
noisily· walked out during the
final number by the Marist
Chorus. I was shocked at this
unbelieveably crude display of
disrespect, not only . for . the
singers and their director; ·but for
those who wished to hear. Can a
democracy. survive if
it
rests,on
the shoulders of the selfish?
Philip Chase, Ph.D.
Throughout the past week, the topic of
midterm grades has been the focus of a lot
of conversations. Some students simply
refuse to talk about them, while others
have
launched complaints as to the gifts they
received from their professors.
Such
complaints . ranged
from
generalities like "If midterm grades don't
count, then why. do we have them?" to the
more spec/fie dissatisfactions of having
received a "blanket
C"
for the course, in-
dicating that the student is no smarter than
any of his fellow classmates, nor holds any
distinguishing intellectual qualities. In-
stead, every student appears as a lifeles~,
emotionless body, Who has been slumped
m
his seat for the last seven weeks, staring ·
straight ahead but · seeing nothing. Who ·
even wants to know his grades, knowing the
professor has no desire to grade you as an-,
individual, but rather as a blob?·
Perhaps the most distressing and urgent
complaint heard during the week was that
of a female student. Prior to receiving her
grades she arranged for a meeting with a
male professor of a class she fea_red she
Editorials are hard to write.
It's not only the actual act of composing
words for an editorial that is difficult,.
however. It is the arduous decision of what
issue needs attention and how the writer
should approach that issue that sometimes
makes the writing of an editorial an un°
pleasant experience. When a reporterw~ites
a news story, he relates factual and,·un-
biased information. Bot when an editor
reveals his opinions and those of this
editorial staff, he knows he is taking a stand
that some will oppose. He also knows that
the readers' identification with The Circle is
at risk the moment his pen touches the
paper.
The writer's decision on how he actually
feels about a situation is another difficulty
with editorial writing. As a former reporter, a
Circle editor is accustomed to seeing both
sides of a situation -
his head is clear of
personal bias. Yet now he finds himself
was failing. At the meeting,. the professor
confirmed that she was failing and would
receive an F at midterms. He added,
however, that she didn't
have
to receive that
F.
He suggested that In exchange for sexual
favors she would receive ari
A.
·
··
Are the above examples the basis for the·
Marist grading system? If so, an awful_lotof ·
people·:are beir;ig deceived.
Jhf3_
c~llege
catalogue stresses that "grading 1s an
objective measure of a student's mastery of
· a selected body of knowledge contained in
a specific course." The mastery of
knowledge involves memory, understanding
• and expression. Most likely, that expression
does not denote sexuality.
·
If in· 'fact such "degrading" grading
systems are in use at
Mari
st,. as the
evidence·suggests, something had better be
done about it. Having the Judeo Christian
heritage that It does; Marist would not want
its reputation -ruined by these types of
procedures.
·
Perhaps a review of the grading policy
and its interpretations by professors is in
need -
before final exams.
behind the editor's aes1<·eacn week, trying
to churn out an opinionated statement on
some aspect of
Marist
Colleg_e.
Sincere thanks ·
· Dear Editor:
· Your front · page story and
picture by Lisa Arthur and Jeff
Kiely
were a terrific journalistic.
feat.
1
have had articles written
about· me · ,from ·Tacoma,
Washington to Augusta, Maine,
Orlando,
Florida
and
Albuquerque, New Mexico. None ·
were better than The Circle story.
Donald Badgley
·· 1984
Presidential Candidate
•' .-·'!I.~_~·
~
- .. -
. ';.
·-
.• '... ""•t
,. '~-
.:
Flea
market
To.The Editor:
The Friends of Marist are
pleased to · announce plans for
their third annual Flea Market to
be held Saturday, February
11,
1984,
from
IO
a.m. to
4
p;m. in
the James J. Mccann Center. The
snow date is Sunday, February
12.
As in the past, the groups
.will
be · accepting proposals · from
Marist. groups, departments and
organizations
to
receive
the
proceeds of the Flea Market. The
deadline for receipt of proposals
· is Wednes4ay, November
23
at
5 .
p.m.
Proposal
forms
and
eligibility guidelines are available
from the Public Information'
Office in Adrian Hall.
Karen McKiernan
Chairman
Friends of Marist
Flea Market
,., Donation?
Dear Editor:·
.
.
· · This letter is concerning World
Hunger Week. Why is •it_· that
when a student gives up.his or her
dinner during· World Hunger
Week that Seiler's only donates
one. dollar? •· Why don't they
Once he decides what avenue to take, the·
donate the entire cost of the meal
. 'think" that if we can sacrifice one
meal,"Seiler's can at-least sacrifice
the full price of that meal. I also
feel that
it
is great that Seiler's
wants to sponsor this · type of
event . and I really· don't mind
giving up a meal, but
1-
strongly .
feel that Seiler's should donate
the full price, instead of trying to
writer has to worry . about the misin-
at the fu,ll price?. 'YhY should
terpretation that his editorial is a vehicle for
Seiler's make a profit_ from our
persoi:ial q_or:i:)P..l_aj;nts. Often, a_n editor,
.<l':r:t,9, :,.
Aonation to,a;~c;>rth-.v,qile cause? I
· make a profit.
·
· ·
3 years of wondering
his associate editors feel compelled to take,., ·
.. ., ,. _.·.,
a position that·_ opposes that of certain
·
b 11 h · k
groups, such as the administration or even
Foot a t an
S
the majority of the student body. This
doesn't mean that an editorial never says
_
To the Marist Football team,
anything positive about Marist -
we've
noted both good and bad points about
Marist in the past. Afterall, we like Marist. If
we didn't, we wouldn't be here. The Circle
editors can only hope that by expressing
their opinions, positive or negative, they are .
contributing to Marist by encouraging
people to think twice, which is one step
closer to making Marist even better.
It's unfortunate that no one
will ever know just how good our
'football team was because we
didn't win on Saturdays. I'm sure ·
with
hard work and dedication in
the off-season our win-loss record
will improve, but for now were
going to have to live with being a
3-6 ·football team.
I would like to take this .op-
portunity to say it has been· my
privilege to be your captain and
teammate these past four years. I.
wish you the best of luck in -the
future, and hope you gain _the
respect you deserve.-
.
·
Sincerely, #53
continued on page 11
Editor
Christine Dempsey
Senior Reporters
Eileen Hayes
Business Manager
Jeannie Ostrowski
The
Jane Scarchilli
Associate Editors
Cindy Bennedum
Advertising Manager
Sean Kenny
Mark Stuart
Cartoonist
Christopher Serafini
Circle
Cathy Houlihan
Circulation Manager_
Cathy McGarity
Sports Editor
John Bakke
Ca!endar Editors
Peggy Hasson
Faculty Advisor
David McGraw
Photography Editor
Jeff Kiely
.m.qQ




Educating
~Rita
New shows,
old comedy
From
country
to classic
by
Tom Fisher
·. Dr. Fra.nk· • Bryant (Michael .
Caine) is a washed . up college
professor at a college that doesn't
have the: heart or patience to
bother firing him. Early on we see
him reach for the novel "Lost·
Weekend" from his shelf, only so·
as to uncover a bottle ·of gin
behind it. As the film progresses,
. we soon · realize that he has a
bottle of· some kind. of booze
behind just about every book in
his office. His tutorials are a joke,
and his students and superiors
· don't
take
him
seriously
anymore. That is, until Rita
arrives.
_by
Richard Copp
Anyone who is a fan of the
hilariously raunchy string of Mel
Brooks films will undoubtedly-be
familiar with the zany Madeline
Kahn. Her comedy credits range
from the crazed bride of a
monster in "Young Fr~nken-
stein" to a rip roaring dance hall
queen in "Blazing Saddles."
Rita (Julie Walters) signs up for
private tutoring with. Dr. Bryant.
But R·i1a is not your typical
student. She dresses in a style that
· is not at all preppy, and walks
·with a step that would make
Hitler · look average by com•
parison.
Her thick
Cockney
accent makes you listen · extra
hard to her words.
Dr.· Bryant doesn't know what
to make of his new pupil, and the
educating · that follows is per-
formed by both teacher and
student. For as much as Rita
learns
about · the works of
Checkov, Blake and Shakespeare,
Frank learns about life beyond
The question is why would
someone as talented as Kahn
retreat to such a restraining
medium as 'television? Perhaps
acting jobs . are far and few·
between, but the fact remains that
Kahn is the title character in the
new ABC-TV Tuesday night
sitcom "Oh, Madeline."
Following the slowly waning
"Three's Company" on the prime
time schedule, "Oh, Madeline"
With her strange high pitchea resembles its lead insofar that it's
voice, wacky expressions, and a sex farce, but in actuality its
amazing sense of timing, Kahn . more of an updated version of
rates right up there with that those unforgettable "I Love
select band of comic geniuses Lucy" episodes of the 1950's.
associated
with
Brooks'
Kahn plays a
housewife
outrageous movies. Stars like married for ten years to Charlie
Gene Wilder, Harvey Korman, Wayne (James Sloyan),
a
· and the late Marty Feldman are romance novelist who writes
but a few she has worked with on under the name Crystal Love and
the big screen.
is chased by his man hungry
Off-campus attractions
rarely heard. Bach/Mahler Or-
chestral Suites.
The Hudson Valley Courtry
Subscriptions for the three
Dance Co-op is delighted to concert series are
$12.50,
single
announce its midwinter series of tickets are $5. Call (914) 454-1222
country dances to be held Nov. 19 for reservations. Saturday, Nov.
at St. James Episcopal Church in
19, 8 p.m., Skinner Hall, Vassar
Hyde Park,
N.Y.
Dances include College; and Sunday, Nov. 20, 3
· a beginners workshop, which p.m., Bard College Chapel.
starts promptly at 8 p.m. to which
The Ulster Choral Society of
everyone is wel~ome.
Refreshments are available and Kingston is helping Ulster County
there is an admission. fee for . celebrate its 300th Anniversary
adults. The St. James Church is with a Tercentennial Concert of
American choral music.
located on Route 9 in Hyde Park,
· ·

· ·
·
0.
·
opposite the · exit from
the
The gala concert will be
Vanderbilt Mansion.
presented at the historic Old
Additional information and Dutch
Church
in
uptown
directions may be obtained by Kingston on Friday,· Nov. -18, 8
calling (914) 485-5676 or (914) p.m. The Choral Society will
473-7050.
repeat the program on Sunday
"Hudson Valley Philhar-
monic" The HVP Chamber
Orchestra Concert with Leon
Botstein Conducting Works by
Schumann -
Cello Concerto
with
." Luis Garcia-Renart; Strauss -
Oboe Concerto
with Joel Timm;
Cowell -
Sinfionetta;
and the
afternoon, Nov. 20, 4 p.m. at the
United Methodist Church in New
Paltz.
Free slot film series
For Nov. 17, Donnelly 245, 11
a.m. "What Right has a Child?"
Contrasting sequences are used to
emphasize and illustrate the need
the bottle and develops a loving
friendship
with
his
kooky
student.
·The dialogue is quite witty with
great lines for both Caine and
Walters. Caine seems to really
enjoy playing the drunkard role.
The most hilarious scenes come as
we watch him literally stumble
through a class lecture, or trying
to dance at disco while heavily
blitzed. The role is also sad.
dening, because we see that the
drinking really controls him and
we don't know if he will ever
overcome it.
Walter' role as Rita is the first
of her career, and the per-
formance she gives cannot be
editor Annie (Francine Tacker).
At home, Madeline indulges in
various activities. to keep trendy
such as aerobics, pottery and
eating tofu. Always around to
help out is Madeline's faithful
friend Doris (Jesse Welles) who is
divorced from
the lecherous
travel agent Robert (Louis
Giambalvo), who happens to be
Charlie's best friend.
The stories all follow the
typical sitcom formulas. In one
show, Madeline must sneak into
Robert's house to retrieve Doris'
diary which contains a complete
listing of her sexual fantasies
from celebrities to football teams.
A number of funny mishaps
follow, but nothing we haven't
seen before.
Without the talent of Kahn this
series would be a totally lost
for and the value of the U.N.
Declaration of The Rights of· the
Child, adopted by the General
Assembly on Nov. 20, 1959.
Children's drawings and pain•
tings accompany the spontaneous
.commentary of the children
themselves.
Interspersed
with
these, Alistar Cooke reads the
preamble where each of the ten
"Rights" is shown as footage of
starving and neglected chilelren.
"When A Man Hungers".
Presents documents of the 1966-
67 drought in Bihar, India. The
resourcefulness of the people
aided by UNICEF and govern-
mantal agencies combat famine,
disease and secure vital water.
"Diary of a Harlem Family" A
series . of photographs of one
hariem
family
by
noted
photographer, Gordon Parks,
explores the reasons for violence
in the ghetto. Parks and members
of the family tell a story of
inadequate education, · restricted
Thursday, Nov. 17
· Meeting:
Friday, Nov.
18
Meeting: Student
:
Sunday, Nov. 20
Mass: Chapel ·'
Monday, Nov. 21
Tuesday; Nov. 22
. Swimming: vs.
described as anything less then
fantastic.
Her
character
gradually, however drastically,
changes and we change with her.
Frank turns out to indeed be a
good teacher, and Rita discovers
a lot about herself. The real
shame of it all is that Ms. Walters
will probably long be forgotten by
the time the Academy Awards
roll around next spring.
Overall, "Educating Rita" is
engaging, touching, funny and
real. In the midst of the pre-
Christmas schlock of lackluster
movies (all the good stuff gets
held back until the holidays) this
movie is a much-welcomed
change of pace.
cause. The supporting players arc
only amusing when they have a
genuinely funny line to dish out,
and the situations will definitely
be rehashed if the show lasts more
than one s·eason.
Kahn is the comic hero who
truly saves this cross over between
"Soap" and "Three's Com-
pany." She is a remarkable ac-
tress and there is little reason to
doubt her ability to make people
laugh.
"Oh, Madeline" is nothing
new. It's not the first of its kind
and it certainly won't be the last.
Madeline indeed gives the face lift
this run of the mill sitcom needs,
but it may not be enough.
1f
you're a Madeline Kahn fan, try it
because chances are you'll like it.
If
you're not, don't waste your
time.
job opportumues,
miserable
housing, and a lack of food and
adequate heating.
At the
Bardavon
"Mass Appeal"
is
being
presented on Sunday, Nov. 20, at
7:30 p.m. It is the story .of an
. idealistic young deacon and a
complacent, established priest as
they clash in this Broadway hit
written by a former Poughkeepsie
resident. This is sure to be a
winner and one you'll hate to
miss. Single tickets are $18, $15,
and$12.
Twyla Tharp Dance Company
is performing on Nov. 19, at 8
p.m.
Twyla
Tharp's
choreography is
playful,
sophisticated, innova~ive and
sometimes magical, and her
company performs it flawlessly.
This company's popularity and
acclaim grow every year. "Ex-
traordinary balance and control,
the ideal wedding of sound and
continued on page 11
Wednesday, Nov. 23
Safety Program:
Psychology Club
DI0S-Sp.m.
Life Teams
Candlelight
12Noon
Saturday, Nov. 19
Hudson Valley
Philharmonic:
Works by Schuman
Skinner Hall,
Vassar College
8p.m.
11
a.m.
·
·
. ,'
. Meeting: MCCT A
Board Meeling · ·
SUNY /New Paltz
7p.m.
Theater
12:45 p.m.
Meeting:
Council of
Student Leaders
. Candlelight
Sp.m.
Rehersal: "Lead
Me Home"
Fireside 6:30 p.m.
Play
admission
SJ
students,
$2.faculty
&
staff
Theaters p.m.
Fashion Show:
admission
S4
Fine Arts Center
Sp.m.
Meetin1: Marist
College Television
Club CC248
9:20p.m.
Pub Film Nile:
"Cannonball Run"
IOp.m.
Training Session:
Lectors
Chapel 2 p.m.
"Take A Prof to
Lunch": ·
Pub 2:30 p.m.
Re1rea1 Departure:
Leave from Byrne
Residence 4:30 p·.m.
Play
SI students .
S2 faculty
&
staff
Theater8 p.m.
Fashion Show:
admission
S4
Fine Arts Center
8p.m.
Mixer:
Classof'SS
Dining Room
9p.m.
At the Bardavon:
"Twyla Tharp Dance
Company" S
p.m.
Play
admission
SJ
students,
$2 faculty
&
staff
Theater
8
p.m.
Fashion Show:
admission
S4
Fine Arts Center
8p.m.
. Dinner: Housing
Staff, Pub
5
p.m.
Dinner: Gregory '
House, 4 p.m.
Meetings: Reynard
Staff, CC248A, and
Leo House Council,
CC269 -
9
p.m.
Lecture:
Mark
Mikolas
Fireside
9-11
p.m.
Poetry Reading:
D249
7:30-10:30
p.m.
Dating Game:
Communication
Arts, 9:30 p.m.
\
I
I











































































































































~
r
.
r.
-
r
r
r -
Honoring
the
best
by Bill
Coleman
Videos
.
have become such a
major factor in today's music
industry ihat most people can't
wait to "see" what they're
listening to. Inevitabl)· that brings
us to the latest in awards: The
Video Music Awards. Here is a
partial listing of the nominees and
categories.
Do you agree?
.
BEST OVERALL VIDEO CLIP:
"Beat
It" -
Michael Jackson
"Billie Jean" -
Michael
Jackson
"Pressure" - Billy Joel
"I'm Still Standing" - Elton
John
"Co~e Dancing"
-
The Kinks
"She Works Hard For The
Money" - Donna Summer
BEST PERFORMANCE BY A
GROUP:
"Peek-A~Boo"
-
Devo
·
"It's A Mistake" - Men at
Work
"I'm So Excited" - Pointer
Sisters
"Sexy
&
17" - Stray Cats
"Gimme All Your Loving" -
ZZTop
"It's Raining Men" - Weather
Girls
BEST PERFORMANCE BY. A
FEMALE:
"Solitaire" - Laura Branigan
"Love Is A Stranger" - Annie
Lennox (Eurythmics)
"Stand Back" - Stevie Nicks
.
"Goodbye" - Linda Ronstadt
"Total Eclipse of The Heart" -
Bonnie Tyler
BEST PERFORMANCE BY A
MALE:
·
"China Girl"
-
David Bowie
"Beat It" - Michael Jackson
"Billie Jean" -
Michael
Jackson
·
I
i
I
MARIST:
,
:
COLLEGE
.
.
.
.
-
·
.
.
.
.
COUNCIL ON
·
.
•..
.
.
.
.
THEATRE
_
ARTS
·
presents
·
.
The
Threepenny Opera
Nov.-17,
18, 19
at
8
p.m~;::c:
.
,};
;<
Nov. 20
·
at
2
p.
·
m.
Tickets: $1 students
$2 f acuity/ staff
BOX OFFICE HOURS:
·
10 a.m.-2 pm .
.
5 p.m.-7 p.m.
(tel.)
471-3240
.
ext. 133
.
-
Open 24 ~ours
-
473~1576
PALACE
-
·
Diner
-
&
-
Restallrallt
.
--
.
.
.,
"
·
.
·
Breakfast · Lunch · Dinner
Fresh Seafood
~
Steaks - Chops
Cocktails - Baking on Premise·~
Show your college
ID and
get
a
F
-
REE Glass
of
Beer
with your meal!
·
7% QISCOUNT
.
194 WASHINGTON STREET
·
POUGH KEEP
.
SIE, N ew
-
YQRK
(Next to All Sport. A short walk
.
from Marlst).
.
''Tell Her About
It"
.
-
Billy
Joel
·
·
·
··
"I
Love L.A." -
Randy
Newman
dnno
·
urYCing

• •
"Every Breath You Take" -
Sting
.
OTHER CATEGORIES IN-
CLUDE:
.
BEST OVERALL LONG-
'
FORM VIDEO
BEST USE OF VIDEO TO
ENHANCE ARTIST'S IMAGE
BEST
·
USE OF VIDEO TO
ENHANCE SONG
MOST INNOVATIVE VIDEO
BEST CHOROEGRAPHY
..
.
BEST ARTDIRECTION
BEST LIGHTING
BEST EDITING
BEST SPECIAL EFFECTS
BEST
·
USE OF COMPUTER
GRAPHICS/ANIMATION
MOST EFFECTIVE {)SE OF
SYMBOLISM
MOST SOCIALLY CON-
SCIOUS
Another award show which
recognized musical achievcemenc
this year was The First Annual
Music Awards held at N.Y.C.'s
·
Roxy.
The winners of the
following categories were chosen
as a result of a
4000
person poll
_
taken by The New Music Report:
GROUP OF THE YEAR -
U-2
.
ALBUM OF THE YEAR -
!'Speaking In Tongues," Talking
Heads
FEMALE ARTIST -
Joan
Armatrading
SONG -
"New Year's Day" U-
2
MALE . ARTIST
Costello
Elvis
DEBUT ALBUM -
"Mur-
mur," REM
REGGAE ALBUM -
"Con-
frontation," Bob Marley
JAZZ ALBUM -
"Travel," Pat
Metheny
SOUL ALBUM -
"Midnight
Love," Marvin Gaye
MOST
PROMISING
NEW
ARTIST -
REM
_,.,
LIVE ACT -
Talking Heads
.
.
VIDEO -
"Beat It" Michael
Jackson
,.
.
.
,
.~
..
..,.,,
.
.
,
.
,,

-
--.,
-·--
-•.-~-
.
...
-·----
-
--
-
·
-·--
-
-
-

.
.
.
.
.
r,0
L--te,'y
Otrtp
boutique
n
-
ow
Novem~.~
-
r.
S.p~~!~~
:
10%
.
OFF
:
ALL':-::
:
,,
!:
Men's
and
Women's
Clothing·
25 collegeview ave., arlington 473-0694
open mon. thru sat. 9 :30-6; thurs. until 8:30 p.m .
Scruples
·
for

·
Men
Sc~uples
for
.
Women






















































































· I,•. ·•


,,/•
·
I
..

/
.
,
, •
.
.
_
.
.
.
,
.
.
·,

....__DORM WARS_
·
_ _ _
....,.
RETURN
~~E
CHAMPIONS
Championship _
J
.
Playoffs
Sunday, Nov.
.
· 20th
8
p.m.
in
Mccann
-
Come
cheer
on your
Teams!
-
And May
the-Force
Be on your
Side!
TONIGHT - HUEY LEWIS AND THE NEWS
November
18th Zebra
19th Taco
10th X
21st Monday Night Football
22nd Cyndi Lauper
23rd Blotto .
24th The
Band
·
-
25th D.C. Star
26th Gang of Foµr
27t~ Clint Eastwood Video Festival
28th Monday Night Football
29th A Marist Party!
30th Superstars of Male Burlesque
December
·
1st Danny Spanos
2nd Rick Derringer
3rd Orleans
10th Ginger Baker
11th Nils Lofgren and Brother (Acoustic)
16th Outlaws
·
·
For concert information and chances to win free tickets to
shows at The Chance, listen to WMCR every day. WMCR
where the Red Fox Rocks!
We accept Visa, Mastercard & American Express. You can
charge tickets for any show by phone. For information & din-
ner reservations call 473-7996.
·
Your organization can rent The Chanceforaparty of special
occasion. Call for details.
)'.'_o!J. c~~
-
Qbt~J_I!_ a ca~t:11
_
c,far ,just send a self-addressed stamped
·
envelope to The Chance.
·
·
..
·
·
PERTINENT THANKSGIVING
.
-
.
RECESS
.
RESIDENT HALL
IN
-
FORMATIO
.
N
.
-
.
The
-
Residence Halls will
close 'at
-
1
.
1
:00 p.m. on
_
Wed., November
~3, 1983.
.
.
.
The last meal
-
witl
·
be lunch
on Wednesday.
- The residence hal Is wi 11 re-open
at 1.0:00 a.m. on Sunday,
Novemper 27,
1983.
The first meal served wi 11 be
dinner on Sunday.
Failure
·
on the part of residents
to meet with the expectations
of this closing will result in a
fine, low priority housing for
spr~ng, or both.
So please, take a friend home
and have a safe and happy
Turkey Day.
NO
·
ONE WILL BE PERMITTED
-
TO STAY
IN RESIDENCE HALLS OVER THIS RECESS.

·

..
,
.
,
The road
-
to Germany
by Patti Walsh and
Lou Ann Seelig
After having ridden tho Orient
Express
for
·
10
hours,
we
stumbled off the train, tired after
the all-night voyage. Before we
could get our maps out, people
were tapping us on the backpacks,
asking if we were lost or needed
help.
We
didn't speak
the
language; but they smiled
anyway. We knew we weren't in
Paris.
We don't have mid
-
term break
or Thanksgiving vacation, but All
Saints Day is just as big a holidaY.
in Europe. So, for our first
vacation,
we chose to visit
Munich.
We found a place to stay for the
night, dropped off our baggage
and headed for the Hofbrauhaus,
the oversized beer hall, complete
with oversized steins, pretzels,
tuba players and barmaids. The
menu also included a selection of
American tourists, ranging from
a guy from Maine studying in
Germany to a Southerner who
had just completed his doctorate
in theology
.
But we all had one
thing in common -
we could
down liters of beer.
We spent the next few days
trying to see everything that
Munich had to offer, which in-
cluded all of the post-World War
II reconstruction, the magnificent
churches, the concentration camp
at Dachau
,
the olympic stadium
and the obligatory art museums.
It was hard to believe that, in
spite of the devastation of the
city,
the
spirit of the people
enabled them not only
to
rebuild
it, but to progress
.
We were
uplifted
by
the
newness,
modernization
and sense
of
worldly cooperation of the
olympic stadium, and jolted by
the bleakness of Dachau.
It
was a
strange feeling to realize we were
walking on the same ground as
prisioners
had crossed when
marching to their deaths. You
don't see a place like that without
reflecting a bit, but life - and our
exploration -
went on
.
Part of our exploration entailed
finding a different place to stay
each night. It would have been
easy if we had hostel cards
to
allow us to stay more
.
than one
night in one place, but "Let's Go
Europe," our bible for the trip,
didn't tell us that, so we had to
hostel-hop
.
We decided to ease the tran-
sition back to Paris by
s
topping in
a French city, Strasbourg, located
in the province of Alsace, which
has been claimed off and on over
the years of France and Germany.
The Brothers Grimm must have
grown up there
-
the narrow
streets, tiriy bridges and the
looming cathedral were right out
of a fairy tale. We spent most of
our time there taking pictures and
we covered nearly every inch of
the city on foot. We had plenty of
time, since our train didn't leave
until 2 a.m.
It
took
.
the Orient
Express only four hours to bring
us "home" to Paris.
Through hazy eyes, we saw
dawn/rush hour in the city,
boarded the metro without even
looking at the map, and stumbled
back to the foyer just in time for
breakfast. After having lived on
chocolate bars for the past 24
hours, cafe au lait and bread was
a welcome meal. Recounting our
travel stories to familiar faces
settled us right back into the
routine. Does this mean we're
adjusting?
Lou Ann Seelig and Patti
Walsh are in the Marist Abroad
Program.
'
L
I

:
.
..-'


















































































































'
I
I
I
t
·
I
I
1
·
,.
t
-
r
r
r
t
.
.
.
r
~
-
r
,
~-
►·
f
,
--------------
-
-
--
--
-
.
.
.
~
-
,--
·
·
!>
..
Y
Ke,
·
in
Schulz
.
While most 1
·
8-year-olds were
J
\
heading off to college or look
.
ing
for work, Nick Caputo was
starting his own business.
He had worked in the pizza
business since he was 14, and is
how, ten years later, the owner
,
boss and employee of Caputo's
Pizzeria, a
popular Marist
hangout, on North Road across
from rhe Marisr campus.
Wearing jeans, a
baseball
·
jersey and an apron, he
/
appears
to be just an employee of the
establishment. "I'm more of a
worker," he said with a laugh.
"I'm no boss, that's for sure!"
But
he
is
the boss and
everything that
happens at
Caputo's concerns Nick Caputo.
With some help from his
family,
Caputo started his
business on Route 9G in Hyde
Park
after
graduating
from
Poughkeepsie High School.. The
business moved to its current
locarion late in 1981.
Being so near to a college
campus, Caputo tried to attract
student customers while retaining
the clicntele
.
of the
.
original
Caputo's in Hyde ~ark.
"It
was like mixing grease with
water," he said. "The locals feel
betrayed when they come in here
and see college kids. They think
I'm making a fortune on them
(students) and that I don't need
their (the
locals)
business
anymore."
· by
Donna
Piper
Everyone remembes what they
were doing when it happened .
Ask anyone
.
-
·
Lee M. Miringoff, assistant
professor of political science, was
in
seventh
grade when
his
principal
approached
him
solemnly, and iiJformed
him
of
the news. He thought that it
wasn't serious.
Dr.
Louis C.
Zµccarello,
associaie professor of political

.
. science, was supervising a study
hall of 250 students when
·
a radio
"'1!
announced
-
it over a PA system.
·
·
He thought
·
that it was someone
"fooling around."
Vincent L. Toscano, Ph.D.,
assistant vice president and dean
.. , _ of academic programs and ser-
vices, was picking up a few things
for an
__
anticipated trip when the
local postmaster told him.
"He had a big smile on his
face," Toscano said, "I thought
he was joking."
·
My mother was taking a nap
when she woke up from the
_
blaring of the news over the T. V.
set. She thought that she was
having a nightmare.
Twenty years ago, the words of
the 1:30 p.m. newscast of Nov.
22; 1963, were simple, but per-
plexing.
President John F
.
Kennedy was pronounced dead at
Parkland Memorial Hospital.
society. ''The- initial
.
first person
.
to go has such a stunning effect,"'
·
he said. He
.
used the analogy or'
the first man to land on the moon.
.
"People stopped in their tracks,"
_
he said. "Now, we could ask
someone and they·wouldn't know
if a man was aloft or not. It's
become commonplace."
.
Toscano said that the violence
that occurred in the 10 years.after
Kennedy's assassination,_ such as
·
the continuation of the civil rights
movement, the rising escalation
of Americans in Vietnam, and the
assassinations of Robert Kennedy
and Martin Luther King, Jr.,
further emphasized his death
_
.
People tend to wonder what it
would have been like if Kennedy
had
not been assassinated,
-
Toscano said. "The reality of
Kennedy is the · legend and the
.
heart of the legend is the sense of
what might have happened if
.
he
had lived," he said.
·
According to Nolan,
-
"The
image
_
or myth of what the
·
promise might have been seems to
live on and be more importaiit
than the substance of what he
.
actually did," he said.
Zuccarello said that
·
because
Kennedy's time was so short,
·
"a
.
valid evaluation could never be
- formed."
Meanwhile,
Lee
Harvey
Oswald remains a controversial
figure. Even though in the '60s,
In his attempt to "mix grease
with water," Caputo at first had a
wall separating the counter from
the dining area. Offers of free
pizza toppings and dinner specials
Nick Caputo is shown making a compumenrary pizza for
a
Circle
-
.Today, people still find the
according to Nolan, most of the
·
assassination
·
difficult to
-
fully
public believed that Oswald acted
.
accept. Kennedy
·
was
·
young,
alone, many accusations have
vibrant, charming -
a symbol of been made to the contrary.
promise. His smile and air of
-
·
·
confidence are still remembered.•
·
Zuccarellos
.
aid that spec~latio~
His time in the White House was is due, in part, to the fact that the
difficult' and cluttrered with crisis.
.
public wants a better explanation
photographer.
for the locals had a
·
limited
currently considering some kind
response. ·
of contest between the
.
houses of
"We could tell by their ex-
each dorm; in which the house
pressions 'and attitudes chat they ~
'
that buys the most pizzas can wiri
were rejecting us,''
·
he said
:
'' I
·
a pizza party:
_
·
didn't know it could happen
.
"
In the past couple of 'years
Caputo said that he currently
Caputo
'.
s has gone through some
gets about 90 percent
.
of its
modifications which
·
were in-
business from Marist. Hurt by the
.
tended_to satisfy the custorners
.
closing of Western Publishing
"At first we struggled to make
and the.opening of the Culiriary's
it
.
a restaurant," Caputo said.
pizza-deli,
.
business is nearly C'But I · seemed that everything
nonexistent when Marist is on
went the opposite; when he has
vacation.
.
.

·
waitresses, people diclri't
.
want
He said, .about the. suminer them; when we didri't have them,
break, that "17 weeks is like
people wanted to know where
seventeen
·
years."
·
they were."
.
In ari attempt
_
to attract more
Another fixture not seen as
road
:
business, Caputo is con-
.
often in the generally plain, but
s
i
dering a new road sign.
spotless interior of the restaurant,
-
·
In
order
-
·
10
maintain his
.
is Grandpa Caputo, the white-
.
business with Marist,
_
Caputo
·
haired, cigar-smoking,
.
.
Italian
keeps
tabs
on
the
latest man who used to sit behind the
developments at the college and counter almost
_
every
night.
offers free toppings. Caputo is
~!though he annoyed many of the
(photo
by
Margo
Kucick) _
· older · customers, according to
Caputo,
.
the students
.
enjoy
talking and joking with him.
.
, .
"He told me once that he's the
·
main attraction
·
here," Caputo
said with a grin. ·
_
Last February; fire broke out in
.
the pizzeria causing sev
'
ere smoke
damage to the building. A suspect
-was arrested and charged with
arson a few days
·
later. He was
caught attempting to set fire to
another pizza place,
.
which · oc-
cupies the original Caputo's_
building, according to Caputo ..
Caputo
·
used to work 80-90
hours per week, but has learned
the importance of not pushing
hi.mself past his limit.
·
"It
don't pay to get too ner-
vous," he said_.
"If
You got your
health you got everything; if you
don't got your health you ain't
got nothing."
TV course teaches
~
about Vietnam
i
by Holly A. Sraeel
provides
.
two different
per-
·
spectives, and allows the students
The
·
Viet~am War may
·
have
·
to draw
.
a conclusion," Olson
ended a decade ago; but William
said
.
·
·
Olson, associate professor of.
According to Olson,
'
Americans
history and political science at
did not understand the
:
Vietnam
.
Marist,
.
is keeping the issue alive
·
·experience, or the cost to
·
the
through a course offered this year United States, both huinait and
in conjunction with a current economic. "The Vietnam War
Public Broadcasting Service pits
generation
against
·
television series, which is aesigned
generation," Olson said.
to allow people
to
incerpret the
In order for students to be able
Vietnam War experiences.
·
to analyze the series, Olson
"It
seems to me that the
provides
them
with
some
Vietnam
experience
-
fun-
necessary concepts of history
damentally altered American
through his lectures. According to
society,
as well
as
foreign
Olson, these concepts are tools,
policy," Olson said.
such
as
perception
and
The course, offered to both
traditional
undergraduate
students and Adult Education
students, is· being taught through
_
three seminars lasting two hours
each, in addition to the PBS series
on Vietnam currently being aired
on television. The students are
expected to view each episode of
the 13-part series which began on
Oct. 4 and ends on Dec. 13.
"The series attempts to really
provide a balanced appraisal.
It
socialization,
which
enable
students to interpret American
involvement in Vietnam.
Asked about the success of
teaching a · course
·
through
-
a
.. combination of lectures and a
television series, Olson said that it
is a new method for students to
get accustomed to,
.
especially
since people are used to television
as a means of entertainment.
"One of_ the problems with
television courses is that people
watchT. V. for entert~inment, not
.!
'
'
I
·,
'
'
. .
_/
'
.
'
'
.
.
,
.
.
.
,

,

,

\
:
..
..
,
.,,
'I:
..
,•>
,

,
•;
~
,_
...
.
_,
,.
._,
..,::-_
..
~
'.
-
..
,
.

H
.....

.~•_....,
.
, . , .
,.,..
-
- - ~
.•
,

to learn, and as a consequencb,
you don't remember much for the
.
exam," Olson said.
_ Olson suggested that students
would d() better
'
by listening
.
to
tapes
·
rather than by
·
watching
T. V. because they would con~
centrate more on the tapes as a
learning experience.
"It
is a
general problem as
·
college enters
'tele-courses,' " Olson said.
When asked
if
he felt the
.
students were keeping up with the
PBS series, viewed weekly by the
students on their own, Olson said,
."I think that they're watching it.
How they're watching it is what's
important to me. I don't
'
think
they are intending to watch the
series for entertainment, but
they're so used to television that
way."
·
Because some of the episodes
contain scenses of violence, the
problem of viewing for en-
tertainment rather than for the
learning experience may increase
at different times throughout the
length of the course, but studenis
are becoming aware of the
problem.
Kennedy
,
was
the first
.
than "some guy going up to the
"television
president;"
As Texas
-,
Schoolbook Depository
,.
'Toscano said, Kennedy used the
·
,
a_nd
;
killing the President.
,
,
-The
-
..
television effectively and the press act doesn't inatch
:
ti-ii:tri:iagitituctf
'
.,
:
·
loved him.'
.
' He
·_
was the first
.
of what happened," he said.
.
:
,
president to come into your livirig
_-
-
·
The tragedy happened 2Q
·
years
room and loo.k into your
·
eyes;''.
·-=
ago, arid perceptio~s continue to
.
he said.
· ·
:
.
·
·
.
_
.
,
,
·_
be blurred. But one fact remains
·
'
·
Maybe;
;
Augustine Nolan,
;
-
.
J
.
ohn F •
.
Kennedy's death left a
-
assistant professor
:
of
'
com~
.
:
.
nationnumb. There was no
.
time
-
munications,
said,
·
Kennedy's to prepare,
·
·
or · perhaps, to
popularity as
a
president was, in recover. As one of his aides
'
had
.
· part;
a:
result of the fact that his said; ''We knew it wouldn't last
assassination was the · first such
.
forever, but we didn't think it
act of vioience experienced by our
.
would erid so scion."
.
'
•'
'
.
.

' · •
,
',
.
.
Woillen's peac
·
e
·
group
to
.
give
talk
·
Oll
.
arms
·
Irene Eckert, German peace
·
activist on
·
a fall nationwide
tour sponsored by the U.S. section
.
.
cif the Women's In-
ternationai League for Peace
i
and
-
Freedom,
will speak· about
the growing European opposition to
U.S.
deployment of the
Cruise
_
and Pershing missiles at 8 p.m
.
on Thursday, Dec. I at
the
.
Friends
·

.
Meeting House,
·
241
Hooker Avenue,
Poughkeepsie.
·
.
. .
.
.
-
.
Her talk, which is sponsored by the Mid-Hudson branch of
_
WILPF, is free and open to the public.
,
Lisa Rudikoff,
.
coordinator of the
-
local WILPF branch
said that Eckert;
'
a high school teacher from West Berlin ha;
taken a twoayear leav_e of absence from teaching to trave{ and
speak about
.
arms race issues .
...
.
.
·
Most recently she was a chief org;mizer of WILPF's "Stop
the Arms Race" rally which was
_
held in Brussels on In-
ternational Women's Day, March
_
8, 1983, and drew over
10,000 persons from around the world. The rally ended a two-
.
.
year campaign
to
secure the signatures of a million men and
-
women opposed to the arms race and present them to NA TO
(North Atlantic Treaty Organization) headquarters in
Brussels.
_
·
·
_
Ms.
_
Eckert has
_
worked extensively in the field of peace
_
ed_uc~11on. From _1980 to 1982, she served on a joint com-
-
m1ss1on representmg the West Berlin teachers' union and the
peace educatio):l department of the German Protestant
Church. This group has organized
·
lectures and seminars
relating to the
_
field of peace education and has produced a
variety of teaching materials.
·
. -
Lisa Rudikoff said that Ms; Eckert has reported that the
peace movement everywhere is
·
gaining momentum, but is
_
perhaps nowhere as strong, as unified and as well informed
about the issues as in West Germany and West Berlin.
·
"This, of course, is no coincidence but due to the fact that
Germany is more densely packed with nuclear weapons than
any other country in the world
.
" The local WILPF coor-
dinator also pointed out that the Pershing II missiles are to be
deployed only in Germany.
For more information call 452-8878 or 255-0113.
;
·
i












2
new ::courses
-··
·focus, Ort .. Women
·
·
by Caroline Kretz
.
'
Marist courses for the spring
semester will' include two new of-
ferings focusing on issues and
topics affecting women.
Phiiosophy of Woman and
Gender, Race and Language, are
two upper-level courses that will
be
made available to Marist
students' for the first time next
semester. Both courses take a
look
at
those
aspects
of
philosophy ·and communications
which
consider · the
ever-
increasing role that gender plays
in the study of these disciplines.
Nadine· Foley, assistant pro~·
fessor of philosophy, will teach
the Philosophy of Woman course,
and Nawal Lutfiyyal, assistant
professor of communication arts,
will teach the Gender, Race and
Language course.
Lutfiyya, who is a new~ii'ddition
to
the Marist
faculty
this
semester, said that the study of
gender and race in relation · to
communication and language use
is a relatively new area of study.
Only in the last thn:e years or so
have social scientists begun to
recognize the way in which sex
and race play a part.in our "daily,
face-to-face interpersonal .com- "
munication," she said.
· The
Gender" Race
and
Language course, according to ,.
Lutfiyya, will lake a look at those
characteristics and patterns of
communication which are typical
of women and . various races in
American society, and the effects
these have in terms of com-
munication.
The PI1ilosophy of Woman
course, .. according to Foley, will
explore the "sources of prevailing
myths about women." The class
will examine these myths through
the
writings
of
major
philosophers who have written on
the subject of women and will
place these in perspective with the
thought of some contemporary
feminist philosophies,.
Foley
said.
·
Foley, who has authored and
edited numerous works on the·
subject of women and the church,
sees the Philosophy of Woman
class as an opportunity to help
contemporary college students in
their
own
self-awareness.
"Women have to be in touch with
themselves
and
begin
to
understand their own sources of
oppression," she said.
..
..
Bob Norman
(photo
by
Jeff
Kiely)
Financial
aid notes
The
Gender,
Race
and
Language course will be primarily
·discussion oriented,
Lutfiyya
said. Discussion topics will in-
clude "What aspects of Com-.
munication denegrate blacks and
Marist will roast Bob Norman
by
Paul Beckerle
,
women?", "ls- Black English a
For 23 years he has helped hun-
deficient language?", "In what
dreds of Marist students achieve
ways do women use the English . their career goals, and on Nov.
Financial aid available through
·
language differently from men?",
I
9, Bob Norman's friends from
college and governmental sources "Why· do we define white/male the radio, television and academic
can be supplemented with pro-
communication as the standard
commmunities will roast the man
grams offered by private.corpora-
-
as the most valued form of whom they say "Put Marist on
tions and , organizations .. These· communication?·"
·
. the map."
'
· · · · · · . _/:
financial resources <are awarded
- "Bob· Norman is Marist Col-·
on the basis of academic merit as
Lutfiyya said she hoped to con-
well as need. Students are en-
duct the class in a seminar-like
lege," said Ernie Enrico, bureau
couraged to· inquire about format to facilitate a large degree
chief of the Times Herald, Troy,
assistance program_ s offered by of student feed-back. The discus-
N.Y.,
a
nd co-chairman of the
event. "He molded me to where I
their parents' present employers sion topics and· readings will be
am ·today:.,
and labor unions.
enlightening to many
and
For more information, contact especially interesting for those
your parents' personnel -or who are basically.unfamiliar with
employee benefits office; Also for ' the topic of gender, race and
information pertaining to aid pro-
language.
.
. .
grams offered by labor unions,
Foley hopes to heighten student
please write
for: ·
·
awareness and interest , in the
Tlie Guide to Union Sponsored Philosophy of Woman course.
Scholarships_
·
Foley said she hopes to find out
if
· A.F.L-C.LO.
there's a- market for this type of
Dept. of Education
course at .Marist. If there is, she
815 16th Street.
N.W.. .
said,
it
could point the way to
Room 407
other courses of this kind in the
Washington, D.C. 20006
future.
·-
.
·Enrico, a. Marist alumnus, said
that the purpose of the roast is to
thank Norman for all that he has
done. "For more than 23 years
Bob has. been developing a com-
munication arts · program
at
Marist. A roast is just a small way
of saying thanks," said Enrico.
Norman, who is. an associate
professor of communication arts
and internship director, came to
Marist in 1960. Since then, he has
\vorked on building the com-
munications program to where it
is today.
. "I'm very flattered about the
idea of being roasted," said Nor-
man. "To have people think
enough about you, especially
Norman has worked with in the
past, from his beginnings in radio
to his present position as intern-
ship director at Marist.
Some of the roasters scheduled
will be Jake Maness, director of
cooperative education; Dennis
'I'm sure there will be a lot of ribbing,
but that's all· right, because I've got
stories also.'
former students, really makes you
f~el good."
Norman said that organizers
are keeping many of the details
about the roast from him but he
expects that a lot of embarrassing
moments wiU be brought up.
"I'm sure there will be a lot of
good-natured,
tough ribbing
stories which will be told," said
Norman, "but that's all right
bec·ause I've got stories also."
The roasters for this event in-
clude some of the people whom
-Bob Norman
Murray, president of Marist;
Bryan Maloney, alumni director
at Marist;
Jack
McWeeney,
WHVW
Radio; and Ron Petro,
athletic director at MarisL The
master of ceremonies will be Tony
Bell of Heritage Energy Company
of Kingston.
The roast will start at 8:30 p.m.
in the college dining room. All
those interested in attending may
obtain tickets by calling Leslie
Heinrich in the co-op office, ex-
tension 210.
IBM,·
MaristjOin~for novel training program
by Daisy Maxey
-
· enjo/the opportunity to be ·on a
taught in room 249 of the Cam-
college campus away from the
pus Center from 8 a.m.
to
5 p.m.
· Something unusual is taking
work environment. IBM's objec-
Andy Crecca, student secretary
place in rooin 249 of the Campus
tive iri the program is to get peo-
for college activities, has express-
Center.
· pie away from the interruptions
ed concern about IBM's use of
The fa.miliar classroom chits
of the workplace," she said.
·
room 249 because of the current
· chat is absent. The 17 students, all
Voogt said · the
·
program also
space shortage in the Campus
_ dressed in_ business attire, enter
benefits Marist by-providing the
Center. According to Crecca, that
the room quietly. On t_he fronfof. instructors with experience, infor- · room could be used for additional
each desk is a name card and in
macion and the opportunity to in-
student space.
. •the. back
of_ the
room
teract with people from other
.
_ refreshments are served.
· fields. .
"It
enhances
their
Voogt said, though, that 249 1s
knowledge and keeps it current
not used by IBM in the evening
The ·students,
all
IBM
and relevant," Voogt said. ·
and that, during the day, space,
employees, are taking part in a
Voogt said the program began . must
be
provided
if the
unique training program that
when Don McCoy, who was then
workshops are to be taught. "The
Marist has created in cooperation
education manager at IBM in
decision was made by the ad-
with IBM. The progra_m, which
East Fishkill, approached Marist
ministration that we were going to
began in November 1981, allows
with some specific ideas for
run the program, so we have to
IBM employees to attend on-
workshops. Voogt explaine~ that
provide space for .them," she
campus workshops during their
IBM and Marist worked closely to
said.
work hours. The workshops are· "put together a program that
Marist College President Den-
taught by Marist instructors and
IBM wanted and Marist faculty
nis
J. Murray said he feels it is im-
stress skills they hope will be
and administration could sup-
portant for colleges to service the
valuable in the job world.
port."
· adult and professional learner.
Anita Voogt is director of com-
"Marist has always been actively
munity service programs at
The result was a program which
involved in meeting community
Marist and coordinator of the
consists of three workshops _
needs," he said. "Part of com-
program. She explained that the
Professional Skills Development,
munity needs is
professional
program provides IBM with pro-
Personal Skills Development and
training for business firms and
fessional insfructors to teach their
Statistical Analysis Systems. The
the professional sector."
employees and an alternative to . workshops. w_hich range in length
Murray also said that the
in-house training. :.'.!~_;.;;e_S_t,..u_d_e,_n.;.;ts;.....;f~ro;:;,m;.;.:.,:,:t h~r..:::e.:.e ..:;d;,;;a~y;.s.;.t,;;;o.,;o;;.:n:,;,;e;..;.;w.;e,;;.ek;;;,:.a;;;.r~e~-' ...
vorkshops. provide an i merest ing
opportunity for the instructors.
"It
keeps them alive and vital in
the fields they are teaching in and
provides extra income for them,
which is something all colleges
like to do," he said.
According to Voogt, about
15
instructors are involved
in
teaching
the workshops and
others help to prepare the cur-
riculum and make new proposals.
Voogt said instructors are chosen
to teach a segment of a workshop
if they express an interest and
have the necessary qualifications.
Each segment is taught in addi-
tion to regular teaching duties and
instructors are "in no way taken
away
from
their classroom
duties," said Voogt.
Assistant Professor of Com-
munications Augustine Nolan,
who teaches a segment called
Completed Staff Work, said that
teaching in the program has been
beneficial to him.
"It
has caused
me to develop my technical and
presentation skills and to do more
research in the area," Nolan said.
The students are "generally in-
terested and cooperative," said
Nolan. "I find it interesting.
It
is
a different variety of student that
you are dealing with. It is a higher
level with greater maturity.'•
Adjunct Instructor Diane P\att,
who teaches segments on interper-
sonal communications and goal
setting, said she enjoys teaching
the workshops but regrets that,
because of the short time period,
she does not get to see the applica-
tion of the material she teaches.
"The disadvantage is that a
workshop is easy-in, easy-out.
You have the students for eight
hours and don't ever see them
again.
I
have a vested interest.
I
have to walk away from that.
I
find that difficult," she said.
Voogt said she is excited about
the program and expects
it
to con-
tinue and expand. "I see it conti-
nuing. We are already negotiating
a contract for next year," she
said. "We are paying a lot more
attention to this area. IBM is giv-
ing us a good foundation to work
with."
According to Voogt, the college
is already starting to work with
banks and has a team training
program at· Vassar
Brothers
Hospital. 'I am sure it is going to
grow," she said. "It definitely is a
trend."
·.··
,







































































































t-·
·

.
•~
' '
;
,,:
1
;,

•'
.
0
;.,'
'
:;~
}
.,
s+·
'
,
.
,
.
:
;i

.
.
Page 10 ·THE
.
CIRCLE·
November 17, 1983~----~_;
...
_____________
~
...
- - .
...
------■
.
--------•
Co~op
.seeks
new funding after
.
loss of grant
by John Albinson
.
'"
new internships for the handicap-
well Marist would do without
allocates what
it
feels ·to be the
had
361
interns last year and
received no federal funding this
year, another private area college,
which Maness chose to remain
nameless, had about 25 interns
last year, and was allocated
federal funding.
ped.
.
·
federal funding.
proper amount of funding toward
.
The
Cooperative Education
program at Marist, one of the
most successful programs of its
nature in the area, has lost nearly
all of its federal funding this year
due to federal budget cuts within
the Department of Education.
With no federal funding, the
·
the program. Maness said there is
.
program must look to other
Maness
said
tha(
the no field staff
10
come to the cam-
sources
for funding. Maness I.Vas
Cooperative Education
.
program
pus and personally inspect the
to attend a cabinet meeting at
is a "paper program," whereby
program,- but merely a panel
of
Marist this week to ask for ample
the director- and his assistants
readers, three states away, judg-
money for the Co-op program.
write
·
a report detailing the pro-
.
ing the writing ability of one or
.
Maness said that federal budget
gram and send
_
it to Washington
two men.
cutting may not be the only
.
'
where
it is placed before a panel
According to Maness, with the
The program intends to present
a brand-new proposal, due next
month, to
.
the board of
·
readers
next year. Maness said he has no
doubts that the Cooperative
The program, previously fund-
ed
by
.
a federal grant which
allocated upwards of $150,000
over a three-year period, received
only $3,100 for the '83-'84 year,
,, hich director Jake Maness
_said
Hent towards the development of
reason for the progr;im losing its
of "readers." Their job is tc> in-
system being the way it is, the en-
·
grant this year. The fact that
terpret the report, judge and
tire program lii.erally rests on one
Marist had 361 interns last year;
grade it. Maness said that the
man's shoulders,
·
which could
117
in the Fall,
177
in the Spring,
division within the Department of lead some of the readers in the
and
67
in the Summer, may have
Education
dealing
with
panel to draw false conclusions.
prompted Washington to see how
Cooperative Ed',lcation then
Maness said that although Marist
·
Education program at Marist will
get its grant for the '84
-
'85 school
year.
_E_n_t-,e-p-,e-n_e_u-,s-h_i_t
-sn_a_g_Pre~school
·
moves
into_ -llew
·
home
by
Mary
Hussey
by Heinz Warmhold
Two Marist College students who say they were looking for a
way to make extra money may
·
face disciplinary a~tion for selling
T-shirts on campus ..
Sophomores Peter Asselin and Tom Begg decided, during the
course of last summer, that they would try selling T-shirts "to
save our parents' money by being able to pay for our own books,
part of our tuitions, and a spring break trip."
The shirts, which have a picture of a fox and the logo,
"There's a little bit of fox in all of us" were made from a screen
designed by Peter's brother
.
David Asselin.
·
The problem with the students' plan arises from the rules
regarding solicitation on campus. According to the Marist
handbook. "No solicitatio·n of any nature will be permitted on
campus unless
·
prior permission has been obtained from the
appropriate office. Requests should be made in writing and the
approving office
.
will indicate in writing the specific location
where solicitation should take place."
In what Asselin and Begg termed "a misunderstanding
through a third party," they thought they had proper permission
to sell the shirts, as long as they did not advertise in the form of
posters or leaflets. Asselin and Begg now face possible
disciplinary action for selling the shirts during freshman family
day.
Neither student felt that what started out as a positive project
might end up getting them in trouble
.
"We felt that since we are both business majors we were only
.
putting into practice what we have been taught here at Marist
.
College," said Begg. Marist professor Dr. Gregory Kilgariff
called the idea, "a good experiential technique," but added that
you always have to check the laws governing a business action.
Other opportunities for Asselin and Begg to earn money,
·
they
say; are
reduced
by the fact that neither student qualifies
for
i'he
·
Ever wonder ~vho's camping in
· the Sheahan
·
parkirig lot? Maybe
you caught a glimpse last week of
the line of miniature Marist peo-
ple headed with chairs in hand to
take up their new residence.
The
.
Marist Pr!;:-School has
finally arrived at its new home -
the trailer in the Sheahan parking
lot.
It
was learned
-
last spring that
the p"reschool would
-
have to move
out of the old gym because of
construction of the new residence
·
hall.
According to Edward P.
Waters, vice president for ad-
ministration and finance, there
was no other space available for
the pre-school, and
it
was the
least costly. ~'The trailer is good
because it provides flexibility, no
building can be taken up and
down," he said:
Problems arose however in tlie
delivery and setup of the trailer
and a temporary space was
necessary to keep the program go-
ing. According to Joy Belirket,
educational teacher,
she ap-
proached Betty Yeaglin, director
.
of college activities who approved
'
use of the Browsing Library
.
unfortunate
.
but is pleased that the
children are settled in their new
home.
·
According to Podzius, he em-
phasized
·
to parents that the pro-
.
gram would continue in a tem-
porary area. "The space was ti_ght
because it is an area used by dif-
ferent groups, but the parents an-
.
ticipated some problems," he
said.
'
·
Podzius said that the new loca-
tion is more attractive to parents
because it is
'
more accessible.
"Parents do not have to walk
across campus to drop their
children off now," he said. Pod-
zius added that the area offers a
good environment_ for
.
the
children because of the play area
outside and the increased space
inside.
Beurket agreed saying that the
new area is good for the children
and is quite versatile. "We are ex-
tn,mely happy and the kids have
been very cooperative," she said.
Beurket said that parents stood
by her because Marist was able to
keep the program going. She said:
"I knew I'd love the building.
I
just waQted to get in_, It's like
waiting for Christmas.~
.
According to Beurket, eriroll
~
ment is up this year

with 38
.
children and the flexible schedules
can meet the needs of various peo-
. pie. Beurket said that the pro-
gram has
.
.
three less children
enrolled this year, but the reasons
had nothing to do with the inove.
John Cardis, a student teacher .
at the pre-school,
·
said that using
the Browsing Library was a hard-
ship for other students but he
received few complaints.
Lolita Silva, a graduate
-
student
·
working with the pre-school, said
that the Campus Center was just
an inconvenience:
"It
was okay
for the time, but the trailer in Mc-
Cann is a great place
·
10
have the
pre-school," she said.
·
NOV24,1983
work-study program.
·
.
·
"Currently the business and financial aid offices are seeking to
eliminate people from campus jobs, who are on non-work study
.
·
Beurket
.
said'
thai
.
communic-
tio_n problems
_
all along were
_
a
major
reason
for the delays. Ac-
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
cording to Beurket; several dates
programs," said Asselin.
.
were given before the actual move
Asselin and Begg have since worked out a plan with Dick
Quinn, assistant athletic direc;tor, to sell the shirts at the Mccann
Center during basketball games, with 25
,
¢ per shirt going to
benefit the Marist swim team, which Asselin said, "is working
'
under a tight budget." This plan must be submitted to the college
activities office for approval. Quinn said, "The reason we're
doing it is because they give something back to the swim team."
on Wednesday, Nov.
7.
·
.
Another problem, according
to
Beurket, was the fencing around
the trailer. Beurket said that trou-
ble with
outside

contractors
delayed installment.
.
Dr. John Podzius, director of
the program, sees the qelays as
.
.
R i v e r - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
continued from page 3
Association,
·
Exxon's tanker
operations in che area increased
dramatically after July.
John Cronin, riverkeeper for
the association, estimates that
Exxon Corp. removed. a billion
gallons of water from
the
Hudson.
·
·
"Industries and
.
municipalities
in the Hudson Valley have spent a
fortune trying to clean up the
Hudson, and we didn't do it to
turn it into the Aruban water-
works," said Robert H. Boyle,
president of the Hudson River
CSL-----
Continued from page 1
Galanti, because he played a key
role in resolving the money
situation.
"He (Galanti) truly functioned
throughout in working with the
students involved in the party to
bring things to a positive end,"
said LaMorte. "He really worked
on behalf of the student body."
LaMorte said the controversy
had given him the opportunity to
grow and work with Galanti.
"We're not dealing with a penal
colony here,"
·
said LaMorte.
"The. most difficult part of the
past few
·
months was for Keith
·
·
·
·and
·
I to ge1 beyond names and
titles and really appreciate what
· we're here for," he said.
,
"The way to change things is
not to go against what's there,"
Fisherman's Association.
"They are taking a resource from
Exxon Corp. said it charges
New York and selling it. They are
·
Aruba for the transportation of so crass as to tell us it has no
t!Je water, not the water itself.
economic value."
Chenco Yarzaray, head of the
·
.
water and energy department,
The committee will
·
hold a
said Exxori Corp. charges three
public hearing on Nov. 28 to
times the cost of producing the
discuss the issue. Hinchey is
same amount
.
of water in its
·
asking • Exx1;>n
Corp.,
the
plants. Exxon Corp. charg
'
es
$7
a
fisherman's association and
metric ton, which
'
amounts to
several state agencies to provide
approximately $10,500-a day.
representatives who can testify at
Assemblyman Maurice Hin-
the hearing.
chey, chairman of the Assembly
The hearing will be he1d at the
of the Environmental Con-·
·
Ulster County Office Bi.lilding)n
servation Commit~ee;
said:
Kingston and
·will
begin at
IO
a.m.
Men ..
:
-
TheseS~tures
Meantal.ot
toOurCbuntry.
,
Yours
will
too.
l(
vou"rc \\ithin a month
of
'""' <ipn,,:mh hinhJ.1,.
it\
tiTTl<'
\·ou
rc..~tt..·n ..
-J
wirh
St:k.,
·
ti\'l"
~i1.•l•
.
:1t
:tn\"
L'.S.
P."'
()fth·.
~
It's Quick. It's
Ea.w.
And it's th"
Law
.
{:~)
.
.
·
_
..
,.
,
..
-~
,
....
"
\ ' ,
.
~
"'•·
··
~
, ..
,
.
.
·~••
H
,

-
I
,
.
.
,·•
·
··
·
.
\\
..
,
,,.,.--
.
,
.
.
I~
'
~
·
•.:.
PROCEDURE FOR
-
-
ROOM
.
CHANG-E
.
.
REQUESTS
--
·
SPRING
.
1984
.
.
.
.
,
.
Anyone req9esHng a room change for
the Spring
1984
sem~ster must
.
file a
.
.
Room Change Request Form
·
. with
his/her Residence Hall Director before
5:00 p.m.
-Friday,
December
9, 1983-.
r
lndividu
.
als w~o have reques
·
ted
·
a
room change must completely- vacate
their
.
room before le~ving for the in-
-
tercession break.
Notification of Room Change Request
'
.
'
.
.
Approvals or Disapprovals will be
made over the intercession.
Key exchanges for individuals whose·
room changes requests are approved
will
·
take place with Residence Hall
Directors on Sunday, January 22,
1984.
IU-t.;
u_,,_
1...,
1JJ\., . , ; , ~ • • '"-'•••
,

...,••.••
·
.
u,,,
..
usa:...a
1
--
a
·
Morte.
·
J I I
·1,;.;·
•~J,;,,;'';;'J~".;;·.
·
.;;u.~"~'".;.''.;.•.;
·
J~U.;.•~·;,;,".;·~"~'·~'1
'
_;~:;--J~~·~;..;~~,:;,;,;,;.;;;~-----H••--------======~--------..J







































































To
.
our advertisers:
.
The
final
.
two issu
.
e·s
of this semester's
CIRCLE
will-be
December 8
December 15
.
ADVERTISING DEADLINE:
Mondays at Noon
.
.
.
CONTACT:
Sean Kenny, ext. 6-121
G


I
,
I
YOU
TO THINK!
IF YOU ARE~._ ...
Be

a part
of the ...
Residence
Staff!
- willing
·
to train for
-
- male or female
- with a 2.5 cum
- interested
.
in the
quality of our dorm
life
Current Sophomores or Juniors ....
may apply for Spring '84 (Feb.-May)
Current Freshman; Sophomores or Juniors ....
may apply for Fall '84 thru Spring '85.
we
hope that you join us in our con~ern
about Marist
_College
..
For.information and registration
·
contact:
The Director of Housing
or
Any
Residence Dlre_ctor
November 17,
1983 ·
THE CIRCLE· Page 1 1 - -
·
R oTc
·
makes·
·
gains
in
·
cadet enrollffients
by Phyllis C. Gauler
The Reserved Officers Training
Corps has increased in size since it
was
instated at Marist
last
semester, · according to Major
. Barbara Wingate, an instructor
for the ROTC program here.
·
Last semester, when the pro-
gram first started at Marist, it in-
cluded 12
students,
according
to
Wingate. "Normally a program
·
will start with
12,"
Wingate said.
This
semester
..
there arc 40
students enrolled in the ROTC
program.
However, not all of
.
the cadets
are Marist students. Several of the
cadets
·
are
·
students; at Mount
Saint
Mary;s
College
.
in
Newburgh, SUNY College al New
Paltz, Dutchess Community Col-
lege in Poughkeepsie
·
and Pace
University in White Plains, N. Y.
Of the 40 cadets, 18 are con-
tracted, which means that they
are juniors or seniors and receive
payment. "We're pleased with
.
this number," said Wingate.
The salary is a living allowance
of $1,000 a year or about $100 a
month.
With the increasing number of
students in the progri,un, the need
for more instructors is inevitable,
according to Wingate. The pro-
gram
·
has only
-
five instructors
now .
Last fall, when the addition of
the program was being debated,
many were concerned that the
anything tactical," he said.
Castro also said that just as the
football team must train, so must
thecadets. ·
There are no requirements for
joining the ROTC, aside from the
fact that the students must be a
'Most students don't see us ...
we're not doing anything tac-
tical.'
cadets would practice military
maneuvers on campus. At that
time, Colonel Herbert Siegel
assured that such maneuvers
would not take place on cam us.
According to many students;
they have seen the cadets training
on campus. However, this is only
physical training, according
to
cadet and Marist student Marcos
Castro.
The physical training takes
place by the McCann Athletic
Center and the cadets are rarely
seen by the other students, accor-
ding to Castro.
"Most students don't see us.
We don't do too much," said
Castro.
"We're not
.
doing
citizen of the United States
.
Freshm·an
and
sophomore
years are the basic program,
which give the student time to
decide if he or she wants to join.
·
ln the junior and senior years,
the cadet is contracted and paid.
At this point,
.
the cadet must
maintain a grade point average of
2.0.
Upon receipt of a bachelor's
degree, the cadet is given the rank
of a second lieutenant.
The cadets studying at Marist
are doing wel1, according to
Wingate. "The cadets respond
well, show affinity as a group,
have high morale and have mold-
ed into a high motive group,"
said Wingate
.
"They have gained
in maturity and ability," she said
.
·
L e t t e r s - - - - - - - - - - - - -
continued from page 4
Comm arts
Dear Editor,
I would like to make some per-
sonal observations about Marist's
Comm Arts. Before
I
start
I
would like to point out that
I'm
not perfect, and I know most
other people a·ren't either.
J
First,
I
would like to look into
why radio is so neglected as a ma-
jor that
prepares
.
you
for the
future. How can any student who
graduates into the field of radio
leave Marist without knowing
how to splice or edit any type of
audio tape?
Until last year, the radio
pro-
duction room was without a splic-
·
ing block. You take classes in
Journalism and spend two ,veeks
on the history and the set-up of a
newspaper.
In
radio
broad-
casting,
.
you take the
·
whole
semester to learn about radio and
then if you're lucky enough to get
into Advanced Radio you might
learn how to read some copy
...
Are you kidding me? Why does
The Circle get twenty or so
students each semester to write
for The Circle? Because they have
to in their Advanced Journalism
class; it's "their homework. Why
doesn't
WMCR
get the radio
classes to do stuff for them?
Why, if we are spending millions
of dollars on this imaginary
,
<;::()mm Arts
.
center, aren't we
.
put-
.
ting a
.
radio
;
,
station on the air.
..
.
you knO\V, i-eal radio! Why not!
If somebody came up to me as
general manager of WMCR, and
asked if he or she should go here
for Communications
I
would say
~o, and right now I'm almost
sorry
I
came to Marist. It is kind
of dumb to spend thousands of
dollars to get an internship
.
in
radio news across the city when
you could be learning the same
stuff here. Too bad· they don't
have NCAA Division
l
Radio
because we would be bigger than
WPDH and WAPP put together.
Robert R. LaForty
G.M
.
WMCR 91.9 F.M.
Post' office
Dear Editor:
People depend on the post of-
fice and it's very annoying
when
you expect a letter or package and
you end-up waiting iwo days for
it. This could have happened to
you the past four weekends
,
with
one exception during midterm
vacation. The post office has
decided to change its hours every
Saturday and even once decided
not to open. It is bad enough they
arc only opened till twelve noon
on Saturdays but now you're
lucky if they are opened till
eleven-thirty. People who have
their mail held and people who
get notices saying they have a
package are put out by this lack
of commitment by the post office.
All I'm asking the workers at the
post office to do is keep the hours
they have posted or give notice
prior
to
the day they will close
early. Hopefully this problem can
be ta:ken care of promptly so no
one else will have to wait two days
for their mail.
Yours truly,
Arlene Rung
Convocation
Dear Editor:
What exactly was Dean's Con-
vocation Day? According to
Assistant Vice President, Vincent
Toscano, "This Fall Convocation
provides our Marist Community
with a rare opportunity
to
come
together and consider an issue of
global significance." To many of
the students
attending
this
assembly at McCann, it was
"mandatory" "attendance will
be taken," "councs against hous-
ing points next year if you're not
there," and some even heard of a
buffet. How can "the excellent
program
...
be a
very
valuable
and
meaningful learning experience"
if the students are manipulated in-
to attending?
Yes, Huinan

Rights is a very
important topic. However, we
think our human
.
and student
rights were violated when we were
deceived in this way. According
to the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, Article 20, Sec-
tion 2, "No one may be compell-
ed to belong to
an
association."
Yet, we were forced to be
members of this group meeting.
We, by chance
,
heard sometliing
in our hall which a student was
saying.
"Don't ever
believe
another thing the R.A. tells you.
For all we know it could be a lie."
This may have been said jokingly,
since our R.A. was around. But
the message behind it is clear. We
were deceived. As members of the
Freshmen class, we feel that our
first experience
as
part of the
Marist Community was a disap-
pointment. The deception
,
in-
flicted on us is a poor example of
the trust we should see in our
community leaders.
In the future, we think students
should be given a choice. Then,
only those
·students
who are ge-
nuinely interested in the topic will
be able to listen and learn without
any distractions from annoyed or
disinterested students.
Sincerely,
Christine A
.
Klein
Eileen
M. Kelly
Class of '87
Week-------------------
.
continued from page 5
movement." Come witness a
fantasy! Single tickets are $16,
$14, and $12.
·
Student productions
Nov. 17 and 18 at 8 p.m. the
.
fashion design majors will have
the opportunity to exhibit their
creativity in the 1983 fashion
show, "Fall Innovations." New
fall styles that have been created
and sewn by the students will be
displayed. Students will also be
the models of their
.
original
designs. The show will be held in
the Fashion Galleria in Donnelly
Hall and admission will be
$4 for
everyone.
Another Maris! production,
"Three Penny Opera" will be
presented Nov. 17, 18, and 19 at 8
p.m., and Sunday Nov. 20 a1 2
p.m. in...!~!1a_i;!s,~
0
_l!1,eat:,r. ;The
cast includes: Chuck Gasser,
freshman, who will play the lead,
Mackie; Nancy Keschinger, a
junior, will play the part of Polly,
Mackie's wife; Peter Scuelly, a
sophomore, as Mr. Peachum; and
Philine van Lidth de Jeude, a
senior,
as
Mrs.
Peachum.
Alannah Molloy, president of the
MCCTA, is the producer of the
show.
Calh~· Houlihan
.,
JIPJ1)~rgg);Lr-,asson


































































I
I
.>
\'
' '
·
I
.
I
.
·
I
1
,
.
I.,
,
:
~
.'
,
ii
'
I'
h
,
-,
.
.
Page
12 ·
T~E C~RCLE · November
17, 1983
.
.
.
.
Faculty:to .
·
.
reconSidet
plan fot act
·
·major
by Adrienne Ryan
After being rejected by the
faculty Academic Affairs Com-
mittee last year, the proposal for
a bachelor of science degree in
·
advertising at Marist is being
revised and should be re-
submitted by the end
·
of this
semester, according to Eugene
Rebcook, associate professor of
communication arts.
Citing "philosophical dif-
ferences" as the cause for the re-
jection of the proposal, Joseph
·
Bettencourt, chairman of the
three-member
AAC,
said they are
now waiting for the re-submission
of the proposal.
·
''We gave it back with sugges-
tions
.
for change and are now
.
waiting for them to re-submit,"
·
Bettencourt said.
·. ·
The major
·
problem concerning
the AAC is that the original pro-
.
"If everything runs smoothly,
posal stressed too much hands-on
and
·
a new proposal is submitted
experience and moved away from
by the end
o'f
the semester, the
a
theoretical,
liberal
arts• major can begin by the
.
fall of
background, according to An-
'84," Molloy said.
"It
takes six to
drew Molloy, academic vice-
eight months for the State Educa-
president.
tion Department to authorize a
"There is a reluctancy to in-
new major, so things must move
crease the number of hands-on
on schedule," he said.
majors with less liberal arts
background," Molloy said.
The AAC did approve a minor
in advertising at
·
the end of last
year, which has already gone into
effect
,
according to Richard
Platt, chairman of the Division of
Arts and Letters. All classes taken
for the minor can be transferred
to the major when it is approved,
Platt said.
Molloy,
.
Platt, and Rebcook
said they are confident that an
advertising major~ill be approv-
ed by next year.
.
Molloy
outlined
the steps
necessary for the approval of a
major. First, a proposal by the
division is drawn up and sent to
·
the AAC for review.
If
approved,
·the proposal . goes before the
faculty, first in an informal
meeting and theri a session where
. it is voted upon. If the outcome
is
favorable
the proposal then
moves to the board of trustees
and is finally sent to the State
Education
Department
for
authorization .
.
·
'
Nurse: Let dedth be dignified
by
Denise DeVitis
Now that chemotherapy has
done nothing but remove all of
his hair, radiation has scarred his
tissue
·
and there are machines and
tubes connected to his cancer-
ridden body
to
keep him alive, he
painfully cries out that he wants
to see the Atlantic Ocean one
more time.
According
to Joy
.
Ufema,
leader in the terminal care move-
ment for ten years, the best thing
that one can do for someone who
is dying is to simply have the
courage to ask them what they
want.
·
It's
okay to be afraid of death;
however, we should not let our
fears
_
paralyze us if we can help
someone have a dignified death;
said Ufema.
·
.
Speaking to an audience of
faculty, students,
.
doctors and
.
nurses Nov.
9
in the theatre, Joy
Uferna addressed the subject of
death and dying.
Ufema is the initiator of the
position of Staff Nurse Specialist
in death
.
and dying at Harrisburg
Hospital in Lancaster County,
Pennsylvania,
·
and has· been
featured
in
articles for the
Washington
Post,
People
Magazine and McCalls Magazine
and
has appeared on
''60
Minutes" and "P .M. Magazine."
Her career with the Hospice
Program began when she did
work in the ·neurology section of
the Harrisburg Hospital and was
able to identify with the patients
who were dying. Ufema said she
realized that she did not want to
die in an institution, isolated and
in pain, and that 'the patients must
feel
.
the same way.
Ufema said she beganHstening
and sharing with the· seriously
ill,
'
discovering that their
·
lives are
should-haves and would-haves,
but the bottom line is they have to
die, we all have io die'.
According to Ufema, if one
leads a full, happy life then one
will have a good death. However,
there are those people who choose
to curl up and die, and that is
their choice, said Ufema.
It matters more how we die
rather than that we die, said
Ufema. This follows her idea that
one has a good death if one leads
a congruent life.
·
To be effective in relating to the
terminally ill, said Ufema, you
must be sensitive and intuitive .
.
Ufema, a registered nurse and
gynecologist, has taught death
and dying courses at several col
-
leges and has been a guest lecturer
and
·
consultant to over 1,000
churches, hospitals, schools and
.
st~te and professjonal organiza-
tio~s
>
,
·
.
·
·
;
,
.
·
, .
··
The. television film, "A Matter
·
of Life
.
&
Death,"
·
recounts
.
Ufema's life story_
·
and
-
she has
just completed her first book,
"Brief Companion."
THE FRIENDS OF
MARIST are once
again accepting pro-
posals to receive
funds from the 3rd
Annual FRIENDS
OF MARIST FLEA
MARKET, to be held
February
11, 1984,
from
10
a.m.
to 4 p.m.
(Snowdate
2/12/84)
Proposal forms must be turned in-
to the Office of Public Informa-
tion by no later than
S
p.m., Nov.
231983_
Your group should not be funded
by gifts from other sources, or re-
quest something · already covered
by your operating budge!.
The amount of money awarded
wHI be deteremined by the Friends·
of Marist after the Flea Market.
Feb. 11 or 12, 1984.
·
-
Proposal forms and complete eligibility
·
·
guidelines are available at the Office of Public
Information, Adrian Hall,
.
ext. 278.
___
....,..
___
_
______
_
-----------------
WANTED:
Applications are
now being accepted for Marist's
most exclusive Townhouse, B~5.
.
Applicants need not
·
be on
disciplinary probation but should
.
expect to be after awhile: Prior
.
.
·.
knowledge of Black humor and
Grain Punch a must. A 250 word
essay on ''Why I want to live in B-
5" is needed.
Apply in person and hu
·
rry.
If
you apply today you will recieve a
free quartz watch.
·
..
·
·
.
Proof of age required.
Freshmen need not apply.
.
Interviews by appointment on-
.
·
•_
ly:Ext.6-112
To my heart,


.
Lwant to listen to you but' I
.
can'.t!
.
Boo
_
To my mind,
·
I don't want to listen to you but
I
have to!
Boo
.
.
To the cast
&
crew of Three Pen-
.
ny Opera, Break a leg!
.
·
Love, Boom-Boom
.
P;S.
Thanks Adrien
.
'
Maiden.form Lady,
.
We got the "6"
·
Baby, give us
yo
.
ur "9"!
·
The Loom!
·
Jim, I want my sox!

P.S. This is getting to be a very
.
_oldjoke!
Marist Anti-social Club presents a
1930's mixer to benefit Oxfam.
. Music provided by Joe
.
Did-
.
:
·
.
ziulius;
·
BJ's Raiders!
·
·
Noire Dame
or
Bust in the
Murray
Mobile
.
.
,
;
·
;
;
..
,
,;
,
' :
_,
.
,
-
.
.
-
-
-··
--·
-

Lisa;
Remeber the deal we made?
porn star
.
Quoted from a 6th floor girl:
"Take down your pants.
Everyone else in this dorm has
.
"
Eat Granola Maria!!
Don't be upset. Call J]im, but
dpil't call ~im. Write a letter.
591 '
Saw you in Rockwell's. I'm
jealous! Still waiting for you to
write.
·
·
From a friend of
5 Spartan Pl.
I
want ya!
I'll meet ya!
I'll
kill ya!
524
Does anyone recall a girl, in a
9B: Thanks for a great weekend!
drunken state, ask you if you
21B
wanted popcorn while you were in
P
.S.: Who had the Bodacious set
·
the pub
.
·
Friday night? Don't
.
of ta-tas??
.
- - - - - - - - - - - -
worry, the popcorn was safe.
"Cool,"
.
,
What's your favorite "ad-
NO Leo, we can t go to Oswego.
dress?" There are a
·
number of
NO NO NO ND_.1'19!!!
:
·
:;
·
:
;
tcifates t
'
o
>
chocise
;
But remember
·
,
;
Okay, let's g9.
,
"Like a steer on:·
if
'
ybu
gei fo;st
:'.
I'll always to b~'
Rt.
17."
"70 to 80?_" "Pabst"
there for you t~o.
·
·
.
.
P.S.: The Thorn
1s
.
gone. Love,
Love, Horn Eyes
E.T.
P .S. I have "3" favorite colors.
To anyone that's interested:
Welcome to the continuing story
A lot of 6th floor girls have of Bruce and Sheila - As Marist
been mooning lately. Photo's Turns:
available.
Peter's Place -
A
nice quiet and secluded bar
·
The Blue "Love" Mobile
Gibony,
Joe's was great! Remember?
M's Copilot
Hey Vulture,
Nice kilt - Who'd you borrow it
from?
Dear Mom,
My checkbook got lost ... and
somebody's been writing checks
and spending lots
of
money.
Love,
NICE
Bruce,
Saw yciu in the PUB - dying to
meet you. Goodies in store. Reply
via classifieds. P .S. Don't worry
about my boyfriend, he doesn't
hit hard.
Sheila
Just looking "Tough"
I don't want a relationship
.
either.
I'll
just settle for

a "quiet"
dinner at my place. Don't forget
the white wine .
.
Your favorite LAW student
P.S. Please Reply!
Malley,
I think you are so sexy -
wait
until
I
get you alone.
I
have my
·
eye on you.
A secret admirer
Thanks for the rose
beautiful, Who sent it?
it
was
JP
To the late night cost accounting
.
lovers, Watch out for low flying
aircrafts.
a fellow pilot
To Moon Inc. El Presidente de la
gobierna de estuiante in Ochenta
y cuatro y cinco!
-SAC84-85
Margaret
F.,
Let's get together like last even-
ing.
It
·
was super!
Thanks
gorgeous!
An Eternal Admirer
Dear
,
est Michelle,
All my love always ..
Your friend on the Second
Floor.
Dear Michael,
Happy annibirthday, I love ya
Always, Sue
Nora,
Here is the classified I promis-
ed. Wiil you remember my name
next time?
Hint: coffee, tea or me.
Ox& Rubber,
·
You're always
been
there
through all
the
bad jokes,
obscenities ancf oh ... good iimes
too! Love ya muchly!
·
The Crew Woman?
Helium Balloons -
for all occa-
sions! Call Susan 473-0070.
Prez. Marta,
Smitty may have more air
m
her balloons, but you -have more
cushion to sit on.
R.M .
Break a leg! Best wishes to the
cast and crew of "Three Penny
.
Opera."
·
.
From Sadistic Smith
To the Champagnat staff - Have
a Happy Turkey Day.
Best Wishes -, Chris
Jimmy Joe: Don't worry, next
time I won't fall asleep!
Cutie
NooNan~
·
Those
.
excititory im
~
pulses only work
.
on bare skin
huh?
·
.
Maggie
Dear Foi-goten One,
Don't be sad, don't be blue, If I
wasn't so busy, you kn_ow I'd can
you
:
Love, Puritan Annie
Dear Robert,
I wonder where we would be if.
I hadn't been aggressive. I guess it
doesn't matter cause
I
like where
we are now .
Much love,
XXX
EileenOOO
Free passport photos with pur-
chase at Encore, 3 I 6 Main Mall.
We ticket Amtrak and People's
Express. Call 24 hours. 485-5800:
"Win" Travel Po51ers - Help us
.
celebrate first anniversary and get
a Christmas gift at the same time.
Drawing Thurs., Dec. 15th. Send
name,
,
address,
and phone
number to
Encore Travel, 316
Main Mall, Poughkeepsie, N.Y .
Nice try Rick, but
I
·
caught you
this time. Remember -
I
don't
get angry,
I
get even!
The Poet






































Musical-
begins
-
_
tonigfzt
The cast for ThreePenn~Qpera
rehearses in the theater. The
.
curtain
-
rises tonight at 8 p.m.
Additional
performances are
scheduled
for
·
Friday
and

Saturday at
8
p.m. and Sunday at
2p.m.
-
- - -

-
----------------
Nursing program seeks approval from state
by
Veronica O'Shea
will
come out of tuition and other
health care agencies in the area,"
·
Is Marist College prepared for she said.
advancement in the field
·
of
Marist will receive federal fun-
medicine?
Ask
Dr.
Barbara
.
ding for a period of five years to
Hynes, director of the nursing provide for faculty and necessary
program here at Marist, and she'll medical equipment. However, ac-
tell you all systems are "go" on cording to Hynes, it will be a self-
the nursing major as soon as the supporting program after those
New York
.
State Regents gives
five years are over.
final approval.
Hynes said: "The nursing cur-
"We
are waiting for approval
riculum was designed specifically
on the proposal any time now,
for Marist. It will be a four-year
and as soon as we receive the go-
program leading to
a
bachelor of
ahead Marist will have a nursing
science degree with a major in
program," said Hynes.
·
nursing. For the first two years
The program will go into effect
students will build a foundation
in the fall of 1984. "Marist has
·
to work within the classroom.
been allocated a $116,000 Title III Then in their junior and senior
grant for the firs.t year which will years
they
will
take
this
,
,
provide 85 percent of the funding knowledge and apply itto outside
_
_
for the program. Other funding
.
agencies."
.
. .
.
.
·
·
.
ROOM
·
REC
.
ONFIRMATION
'
ADVANCE ROOM DEPOSIT
SPRING 1984
-
.
PERTINENT INFORMATION
·
.
All Resident Students are required to
recon-
firm their College Housing with a $75.00
non-
refundable deposit.
·
The
deposit and a completed
Room Recon-
firmation Card are due
·
in the
Business Of•
·
flee prior to December 1, 1983.
If you will not require College Housing for
the Spring 1984 semester,
fill
<;>ut the Room
Reconfirmation Card and return it to the
Housing Office.
Non Resident students who are interested in
securing
-
College Housing for the Spring
1984 semester must fill out a Room Request
Form in the Housing Office - Room
271
in the
Campus Center.
After December 1, 1983 all
unconfirmed
rooms will be considered vacant.
If you have any questions or concerns,
please contact the Housing Office.
Marist will also offer nursing
students the opportunity to work
with the computer terminals to
assist in their learning.
·
"The transfer from learning to
application is very hard. For the
first time we· will have computer
assisted learning which will enable
us to use the computer for interac-
tion. With the
simulation
of a
situation on a computer, we will
be able to get as close to the situa-
tion as possible and learn to make
decisions and mistakes to real
situations," said Hynes.
According to Hynes
._
there will
be about 20 outside agencies
cooperating in the program in-
eluding Vassar Hospital, St.
Francis
Hospital,
Dutchess
Health Dept. and other neighbor-
ing clinics and health agencies ..
"There has been a deep interest
in favor of the program with
nearly everyone we've spoken to
hoping to be of assistance because
of the growing need for nurses in
the Dutchess County area," she
said.
The expected enrollment for the
1984-85
.
school year should be
about 30
students,
with an in-
crease each year as the program
becomes more widespread.
Hynes is aware of the space
crunch at Marist and says that the
program will not require a lot of
room to start out with. ·
"We will only need one large
room to work in and housing
facilities may be provided for by
outside clinical agencies. With the
completion of the Lowell Thomas
Communication
Arts
Center,
there will be a lot of space free for
us to utilize," she said.
According to Hynes, human
service careers will be in great de-
mand in the future.
"I
believe such careers are very
desireable to students. I can
guarantee 100 percent employ-
ment upon graduation with such a
degree, in nearly any geographic
location you desire," said Hynes.
Knights, Ca,.mpus Ministry plan events
The Knights of Columbus and
the Campus Ministry will be
working together in the next few
weeks in an effort to accomplish a
number of activities.
·
.
. .

·
A
food drive,
a
Christmas Ore
·
phans Day,
'
a Christmas clothes
drive and a Right-to-Life Week
are the various functions that are
in the planning stages_.
·
·
The first project that the two
organizations are collaborating
on
.
is a Thanksgiving food drive.
Headed by sophomore Knight
John Vispoli, the food drive will
run through Friday
.
It
will be
·conducted
in an effort to assist
needy families in the Poughkeep-
sie area. Members of the Knights
will be covering each dorm to col-
lect food for the cause. Money
will also be collected to purchase
turkeys
for
Poughkeepsie
families.
The Christmas Orphans Day is
tentatively set for Dec.
10.
Patrick Patterson, Knight officer,
is assisting in the success of this
day.
Patterson said the orpha·ns will
be spending the day on campus
where a number of activities have
been planned for them.
A free lunch will be donated by
Seiler's Food Services, Campus
Ministry will provide Christmas
Carols and Santa will make an ap-
pearance.
A collection will be held to buy
sports equipment for the or-
phanage. The Knights will pur-
chase a Christmas tree for the
children, according to Grand
Knight Rich Frey.
Sister Eileen Halloran first sug-
gested the idea of uniting the two
religious organizations on campus
in an effort to achieve
·
better
results to benefit everyone.
P h o n e - - - - - - - - - - - - -
continued from page 1
He also explained that there
was a problem with manpower.
Workmen were brought in from
the local area and Albany, "but
there just wasn't enough man-
power to finish the phones before
was also a problem with the
telephone cables. Because they
were too thick to pull through the
ground to Donnelly Hall, he said
that they had
to
be spliced.
( ' . ;
.-.
~~On
·,
Nov.17th,
adopt a friend
who smokes:'
Help a friend get through
the day without a cigarette.
They might just quit
forever. And that's
important. Because good
friends
are
hard to find.
And even tougher to lose.
I
THE GREAT AM~RICAN SMOKEOUT
T
AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY

the students moved in," he said.
Tracy
Sterling,
residence
director of the building, said that
the students have been "very
frustrated" over the situation
because they can't make phone
·
calls from their own building. As
a
result,
she said, they have
formed
a
negative attitude
towards
the administration.
"They like to feel that there are
.
answers,"
·
she said, "but they
haven't been
able
to find any."
Sterling said that this is due to
the students periodically asking
when the phones will be in.
"They're told, 'in a week.' A
week comes and goes, and there's
no phones. They feel they're
being handed a line," she said.
According
to Sterling,
the
phones should be installed by the
end of the month.
Director of Housing Robert A.
._------~~~~~-----------,. L----------~"!"'J"!"'."!"'.
_________
_.
Heywood stressed
that
even
though the New Residence Hall
wir have the capability to have
pi
1vate student
phones,
the
students
.
will not have them
because it is against school policy.
The only exception
is
the
townhouses, Heywood said.
"It
was never our intention to let
students have private phones," he
said .
I
j
i
j



































































































, 'l
,
.
- - •
·
Page
14 ·
THE CiRCLE. November 17, 1983
Club
.
forming to
liOfse
>
~t()Uiicl
,
by Diane Gallagher
Come next fall, Marisi students
may be hearing and seeing
·
an
active new organization,
the
Marist College Equestrian Team.
Freshman
·
Joyce Knox
·
of
Bayshore,
N.Y.,
is in the process
of putting a team together. Before
the Equestrian Team can actually
compete, it must get approval
from the Student
·
Government
and the Student Activities Office.
Any new organization wishing
to
become a college activity must
submit chartering materials to the
Director of Student Activities.
Copies of the by-laws and other
forms
will
be submitted to
Student Government for ap-
proval.
·
From there, Student" Govern-
apiece,
·.-
are
'
assigned to
.
their .
ment will notify
.
.
the Activities
horses the day of the competition·
Office of approval or disapproval
so as to
.
give each
.
rider a fair
of chartering the organization, • ·
·
. chance by preventing
a
rider from_
The prospective team will act in
getting used to onespecific horse.
accordance
with
ihe
In-
.
·
The rider's true ability and
·
tercollegiate
Horse
Show
flexibility of adjusting to
a
un-
Association, headed
.
by Robert
familiar horse,
·
it is said, will be
Cacchione, executive secretary
.
tested in ihis way .
.
·
.
.
·
'
Competitive horse shows have
The prospective team members
.
already begun within
.
the In-
.
have no horses of their own. The tercollegiate
Horse Show
·
horses, as well as facilities such as Association. After the fall season
an indoor riding ring, will be has ended, the team will not
provided by Roseview Stables of compete until the spring season.
Dutchess
,
Hill
Road,
The
team
wi_ll
start
Poughkeepsie. Coaching will be
lessons/practices on Tuesday,
provided by Audrey Struezari,
Nov. 15 at 6
_
p.m. and on
also from Roseview Stables,
Thursdays at
1
p.m. Those who
The members of the team, who · are jnterested can contact Joyce
average five years of experience

Knox in Leo Hal\, room 211.
Football--
-
------
Continued from
.
page
i6
.
the defense on the field aU the
time." .
Marist's only score was 30-yard
pass to Warren Weller from Jim
Cleary early in the fourth quarter.
Both Weller and Cleary were
playing their last games for
Maris!.
Other seniors that played their
final game Saturday were: Bob
Cardinal, an offensive lineman
and one of the team's captains;
John O'Leary, also a captain, and
a defensive back; Briap Sewing, a
defensive lineman and a captain;
Jim Creech, a defensive lineman;
kicker Tom Huber; and receivers
Randy Rosand, Chris Stempsey
..
and Warren Weller.
Marist players cele~rate after
week's game.
·
·
(Photo by John Bakke)
Soccer season '83
·
.
Players:
Goals
Assists
Total
Points
Steve Thompson
8
2
18
JimMcKenna
4
3
ll
·
Peter Nargi
2
2
6
Paul Sutherland
1
4
6
Jim Bride
2
1
5
Raul Verne
2
1
5
Chris Jones
2
1
5
Scott Tonic
2
1
5
Joe Vasile-Cozzo
2
1
5
Mike Terwilliger
1
3
5
.
Andrew Ross
1
l
3
Robert Murray
1
0
2
Fran Payne
0
2
2
Goalies:
Games Goals
Average
Record Shut;outs
Tim McKinney runs
the
ball in the fourth quarter of last Satur-
day's loss to Albany State.
·
·
"l
haven't really started
thinking about football being
over
for
me," said Sewing
_
after
the game .
.
"After
13 years of
playing, it's a little hard
to
·
realize. Maybe in a few day~ ... " ·
The Foxes had played Albany
only· once before, when they lost
BillTholan
15
Against
17
1.2
8-4-2
5
X-Country-
continued from page 15
·
Asked how he trained for the
race, Colaizzo said: "Basically,
it
was crossacountry training up
until two weeks before
·.
the
marathon. Then. I upped my
weekly mileage close to SQ with
.
one Jong run at the end of the
week which was close to 20 miles.
But the bulk of the training
.
was
not keyed on the 111arathon.
"If
I had trained just for the
marathon,
i
probably would have
done just as well. Most of the
marathon is in the head and if
I
trained exclusively
··
for
the
marathon
I would have put
.
pressure on myselfand the result
would be the. same," he said.
Colaizzo was congratulated
after the race by his teammates.
"Peter ran better than he even
probably expected," said Lurie.
·
Colaizzo was modest about the
surprisingly good finish.
"I
think
I ran a smart race, because
I went
out in
I
:
26 and
I
came
·
back in
I
:28. And because
I
didn't go out
too fast,
I didn't hit the 'wall,'
but from 23 on, it was drudgery.
But
I
didn't die and
l'rri
happy I
ran an even, smart race,'' he said.
As for what the future holds,
Colaizzo is a bit reserved. "Right
now, I'm not going to be doing
anything for a couple of months.
I'm going to ta
_
lk to Coach Lurie
and
together,
we'll
work
something out," he said.
· -
· -
Lurie said that Colaizzo
will
be
better trained in the spring. "You
should see him running in the
2:40's or even the high 2:30's, he
said.
·
Colaizzo summed
up his
outlook on his running
·
career.
"While in college, I want to be
running competitively on teams. I
don't see
·
myself
.
being a con-
sistent marathoner while I'm in
college,,,
.
he said. "After college I
may be a marathoner, and if 1 am
I want
10
be competitive."
(Ph~tQ
'
~YA~hn
ilakke)
. 48-0 last year
;
.
·
.,.
.
.
.
John Montanaro
6
11
.:·
·,
,··;
2~6
1-3~
CAPUJO'S
Thanksgiving Day Special
Thursday
..
No'leniber·
11th
.
Friday
·
Nove
_
mber 18
and
Saturday
.
,
NovelTlber
19tt)
1
,
:;•
-
.on·e
FREE
Pitcher
.
·
01 Bud
·

or
e
·
ud
-
.
.
Lite
"
:
withpurchas
"
e
:
01
large
·
f)izza P
,
ie.
Also all Draft
12
oz. cups Of Beer only
soc.
~~
'
'
.
.
-
'
Come
and Enjoy!
Winner of
_
the Pizza Delivery Contest will be announced Friday
November 18th. Winners will have a Pizza
·
Party Sunday,
November 20th at 9:00 p.m.
,
at Caputo's.
/

I
"l"
)
i'
•'
t?~
~~
(
'




































































\
---------•-------------------------Noveml1er 17, 1983 •
THE CIRCL:E
~
Page 1 5 - - •
Thursday
Morning Quarterback
John· Bakke
One~on-orie
•with
myself
.
.

.
My alter ego dropped by the
Circle office the other day.
_
He'd
-
been reading a lot about Marist's
football team, he said, and he
thought I'd
.
be able
·
to answer
some
.
of his questions about
it.
"I
.
read·
·
they've
·
suffered
through
·
another disappointing
season;'' he said.· '.'What's the
story?"
.
"Is
this the Circle you've been
·
reading?" I asked." Iscirt of hoped
my own alter ego would read the
Circle, or at least my column;
.
.
.
"Among other things," he
said.
''They
won three games this
year,
.
didn't they? That's more
than they've
·
done in years. Isn't
that an improvement?"
"Sure it is. If they keep getting
one game better every four years,
they'll have a. winning record by
1989
.
I was hoping to have
graduated by
theri,
but it's
-
·
something to look forward to."
''Now wait a
minute, that's not
fair,» he
·
said, sticking up for the
Foxes.
·
'
·
'They were a little better
.
.
than the.3-6 record -
you said
yourself.
they could have won the
RPI
game."
"They should have won the
:
RPI
game," I conceded.
·
"But
what about homecoming? What
about St. John's, or Coast Guard,
·
or
·
Ramapo, or Albany State?
They scored 14 points in all five
·
games combined, and let up 138.
That's not even three points a
game of offense."
·
.
"OK,
.
OK,
so they're still
getting beaten.!'
"Badly, at times.''
"You're awfully quick
to
criticize, you know. The players
don't go out and try to lose," he
said.
"They do their best to win,
so who are you to stand on the
sidelines ancl complain?"
«Nobody," I said, backing
away. "Are you always thi~
hostile?
.
I don't remember you
being this way."
·
"The subconscious is a nasty
business. And I'm riot through
with you yet. As long as you have
all the answers here, tell me why
the team isn't better."
·
"I never said I had all the
ans,vers. You're misquotin.g me."
'Wve heard that one before.
·
Besides, it's in my notes. Last
week you said you had all the
answers," he insisted.
.
"I was talking about one of my
midterms."
·
"You're avoiding the question.
What about the football team? I
read where some say they should
get full-time coaches."
"II couldn't hurt," I said.
"They could use some All-
America players
100."
"Don't
·
get
sarcastic.
The
question is, can they win with the
program they've got? l saw an
article the other day about a
Division Three school with less
football money than Marist that
always has winning seasons."
"Coincidentally, l read the
same article," l said. "Did you
notice that
·
1he coach had a full-
time position? He said the key
10
winning wasn't cash, but time -
time to study films, draw up
plays,
order pizza and
do
whatever else coaches do at those
late-night strategy sessions."
"So if
·
they gets full-time
coaching
we'll
·
see winning
seasons?"
"I didn't say that. I'm not even
sure Maris!
needs
winning
seasons.
Every team
.
wants a
winning season every year, and
it's mathematically impossible for
all of them to get what they
want
."
"You mean you don't care if
the team wins or not?"
"These are trick questions," I
said. "Sure, given a choice, I'd
rather see Marist win than lose.
But what I'd really like is to go to
every
game
and know the team
isn't going to be embarrassed."
"You ought
to
do a
story
on all
this for the Circle. At the rate you
get things done, it might be ready
for the next issue on Dec. 8 if you
.
start
right away," he said.
"That's a cheap shot.
D011'1
you have other things to do?"
.
"Actually yes. I should be
running along,"
"That's too bad," I li~d.
Marist women's
-
b-b'all
awaits new season·
-
by Heinz Warmhold
lack of experience will have to be
made up by intensity.
After
,
13
years of
-
football,
Brian Sewing reaches the end
With the loss of five seniors
and the appointment of a new
head coach, there will be many
new faces on the Marist College
Women's Basketball team this
year as preparations begin to
open the season against national.
.
powerhouse Syracuse University
on
·
.
Nov. 26 at a Dartmouth
tournament.
Pat Torza, 32, . from Wood-
bury, Conn,, is the new head
coach. She will be looking to
freshmen recruits Jennifer Gray
from Dublin, Ireland, Tobither
Clarkson from New Rochelle and
Sue Blazejewski from Albany,
N.Y.,
to help make up for the loss
of the seniors.
·
Coming off a 14-14 season last
·
year, Torza set a modest goal of
.
:~bettering last season's record."
However, some of the returning
·•
players have more lofty ambitions
for
.
the year.
,
.
"We're capable of winning the
conference," said Ursula Winter,
-
20, from Fort Lee, N.J.
.
The key to a
.
winning year,
according to Torza, is that the
"Her intensity rubs off on us,"
said Joyce lacullo, a
·
senior from
Bellville. N.Y ., about her new
coach. "She has added a com-
pletely new spirit with more
discipline," added Winter.
"Strength under the boards and
a more team orientated spirit are
what will help the team win more
this year," said Una Geoghegan,
a
·
sophomore from
Dublin,
Ireland.
Another thing the team will
need to win will be more point
production. In this department
the team looks to high-scoring
junior, Lynne Griffin to play an
important role.

··
\
The w
·
ome
_
n play a tough
schedule
.
and· will have to beat
conference .rivals such as Siena
and Monmouth Colleges if they
·
are to win the Cosmopolitan
Conference, and go on to post-
season play.
·
To reach this goal the
.
women
would like help. "We'd like to see
more fans at the games," said
-
Geoghegan
.
-Red
Fox skaters
·
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
f
tozen
_
out of
,
,
first two
.
matchllps



_.
-
.
J
• .
-


..
.
by
Robert LaForty
now we're kind of all working for
ourselves."
·
·
The
-
Marist' College Hockey
Last Wednesday
.-.
t~e
·
F.ox
_
es
club started its season off this
ended the second period with a 4
by Marci'Medoro
The crisp 37
-
degree breeze
blows through the chilly Marist
football fans as they watch the
scoreboard change from 41-0 to
41-7. The end result is Marist 7,
Albany State 48 marking the last
time senior co-captain Brian
Sewing will
-
wear the Marist
Football jersey.
According
·
to Sewing, this
year's team is the most talented
he has played with during his
four years at Marist.
~•we
have
·
all the talent in the
world
·
but for some reason we ·
just don't
.
.
seem to
-
win
-:on
Saturday. We have a young but
good offense and I can't pick
out a weak point in our
·
defense," he said.
During
his
·
four years at
Marist, Sewing said he has seen
a great improvement in the
coaching staff. "All the coaches
know their football, so I can
listen to them and
·
know they
know what
they're
talking
about," he said.
Sewing's father started him
playing football when he was a
young boy. "My father
asked
me if I wanted io play football
and I said
'I
don't care; so it
wasn't like I totally wanted to
play football," he said. He just
got me into it and I can't thank
him enough. I
can
never pay
him back."
His father attends all the
Marist football games, both
home and away. "The way I
thank him for dqing
all
he's
done for me is by playing as
hard as I can
in every game. l do
as well as
·
I can for my team-
.
mates but my motivation is
-
:/~'
:>,,
.... ·-
'
: '
.
-
~
,~~2
~
.
i
...
~
i'.:;~
Brian Sewing
(Photo by Margo Kucich)
. knowing my father's watching on
the sidelines,"
said
Sewing.
He said the Marist team is not
one that' needs much discipline.
"At the start of the season we
had a meeting," he said. "I
asked all the coaches to leave
and told the guys that the
party's over -
it's time to play
football and win."
According to Sewing, football
has always been an important
part of his life. After graduating
and establishing a
career,
Sewing said he hopes to coach a
football team. "I want to stay
involved with football because
for 13 years there was always
next season. Now, there's no
more next season for me.
"I'd like to go out leaving
people feeling that
'Sewing
was
a good player'
.
"
·
me from the stands,'.' he said.
·
He's been playing football all
his life, including four years in
high school at Our Lady of
Lourdes,
Poughkeepsie, and
one
year
at Springfield College,
Springfield,
Mass.,
before
tranferring to Marist
.
"Football is what I do best,"
said Sewing. last season he
gained
·
Easiern
Collegiate
Athlete Conference All-League
Honors in football.
When asked if he gains
·
respec1 from his teammates for
being chosen captain for the
second year in a row, Sewing
said he
earns
their respect by
being a good player on the field.
"As a captain
l
try to be more
like
a coach. I explain by seuing
.
examples
.
I don't try
to
be a
captain, I just try to be myself:"
past week on thin ice losing their
to 2 lead against the U.S
.
Mer-
.
first two games. .
chant Marine Academy only to
.
"We feel frustrated," said
give up three unanswered goals
sophomore Tim Graham, right
which made the score 5-4.
A
wing for the Foxes. "We just
Marist goal scored by Trabulsi
can't put
·
three good periods
was
disallowed
because
togetl:Jer," he said. "It's very
sophomore John Dearden was in
Harriers finish year at_ Bethlehem
by
Joe Didziulis
confusi'ng."
the crease.
On yet another bitterly cold
The Red Foxes managed to let
weekend in November, the Marist
go of a 4-1 lead on Saturday
According to senior forward Al
cross-country team found itself
against
The University
of Petie "When they didn't count
·
coming up very short while at the
Bridgeport, Conn. After two
that
·
goal we got down on our-
same time, two Petes led the way
periods of play the Red Foxes
-
-
selves and we couldn't come
but in completely different places.
were ahead with two goals by
·
back ~•
At the Cross-Country cham-
Graham and two by Jim Mc-
The
final
score
was
.
pionships in Bethlehem, Pa., the
Donald, a senior center from
U.S.M.M.A.'7, Marist 5.
Red . Fox harriers did rather
Troy, N.Y. The third period
Graham put it best. "You want
poorly, but just how poorly may
brought four unanswered. goals
·
to look at someone to blame but
not be known for a while because
by U.B., and a·n empty net goal
you can't pick out one person -
of a snafu in the scoring system.
with ten seconds
10
go ended the
it's a team effort. -
You win as a
According to Marist Coach
game 6-4.
.
team and you lose as a team," he
Steve Lurie, a multiple chute
"We're not working together as said.
'
system was used to determine the
a
·
team yet," said junior co-
The Red Foxes
,viii
be;: playing
finishing order of the runners and
captain Rob Trabulsi. "It's going
away Saturday against Fordham this led to some confusion over
10
take a few games before we can
University and will be back home what place each runner finished.
work together as a team, right
on Nov. 30 against Patterson.
Said Lurie: "Peter Pazik was
handed a card number 187 but he
finished more like 120."
A videotape or the finish will be
replayed
to
determine
the
finishing order and team scores.
Notwithstanding the
team's
place in the championships, Lurie
felt everyone did about as ex-
pected. "I didn't expect anyone to
finish in the top 200. And except
for Pete, they didn't. Pete has
completed step one in a three step
program in which by the time he
is a senior, he should be in the
individual championships. He is a
good Division One runner."
The other Pete 1hat led the way
was Peter Colaizzo, who ran in
hb first marathon and finished an
astounding 78th in a field of
. -3,500.
He covered the 26-mile,
385-yard course at the Jersey
Shore in a much more than
respectable two hours and 54
minutes.
Colaizzo, who ran the first half
of the marathon with teammate
Don God\vin, found the lack of a
definite coach for the Cross-
Country team over the summer
provided him with the motivation
for the marathon. "The original
thing was that we weren't going to
have a coach and of course I was
disappointed," he said. "I needed
a goal and that turned out to be
marathoning. On top of that, I
don't have much leg speed and
l
haven't been successful in shorter
races as the five-mile cross-
country races.."
Continued on pa~e 14
41
(
.
.




























~
...
!:;'.. ·:_\;;,~:\
.
.
,•
·
.
.....
.
.
.,
......
-~-
---~~~-~•
.............
-
..
-
--··--

-
....
-
'-
-~
;
Page
16
~
THE CIRCLE - November
.
17/1913
BQote_:rs finisli with
.a
fury
..
.
.
'
'
.
.-

.
.
..
· for
ih~
Gaels. ·
from~behind -victory
when
.'~We·. weren't· mentally
freshman Bob Murray, with an
_ · The uniforms. will _.be stored<. prepared," said Head Coach br;
assist' from McKenna, netted his
. away until the start of the 1984
Howard Goldman. "We weren't
first of the year'with 10:43 left in
.- fall season as all hopes for play in · concentrating-maybe because we . the ·game. The. play of freshmen
a post-season tournament ended
didn't take them seriously, but
Murray, McKenna and leading
this week for the Maris!College
obviously,
they. took. us _ team scorer Steve ·Thompson
soccer team.
· seriously." · ·
gives Goldman something to look
·· The Eastern College . Athletic
Whatever-Goldman said to his
forward to'next year.
.
Conference tournament .was the
players at halftime worked. Just
,
"It
give me
a:
good feeling,"
only chance for Marist, but the
18 minutes into· the second half,
said Goldman. They move well
two teams that qualified from the
Marist had scored. three unan- •· and play very well together.'' .
Metro .Conference were . St.
swered goals for a one goal lead.
Champagne bottles popped at
Francis and Loyola, Colleges,
Joe Vasile-Cozzo, a senior,
the end of· the game for the
· leaving the Foxes on the sidelines
scored the first goal for the Foxes ·_departures of two senior captains
after an up and down season.
on a penalty kick as the team
_ Paul Sutherland and Vasile-
The team finished the season on
captain netted his second of the
Cozzo as both played their final
a positive note: six wins and
;i·
tie.
-year.
·
·
··
· game at Marist.
, Because of a poor start (1-5-1)
Freshman --Jim McKenna then
"I'd Jove for us to play some of
though, the undefeated surge left•
put the Foxes in front for good by
t_he earlier teams -again," said
Marist at 9~8-2 for the year. They
scoring the next two goals. Off a
Goldman. "I think the results
finished fourth in the Tri-State
crossing · pass from midfielder
would be somewhat . different
Con_ference, and will undoubtedly ·: Peter Nargi, McKenna tied the
now."
be--ranked among the Top 10 , score at two by beating-the Iona
Marist traveled to St. John's
Division One'soccer teams in New ·
·
goalie to the right side ofthe net - University to finish off a rain-
York State when those rankings , with 29:25 left to play.
delayed game from Oct. 23 that
are announced. ••·
.
It ·
was McKenna again 57
Marist trailed 3-0 with 31 minutes
The last h_ome gaine typified
seconds later as he headed the ball
left at its suspension. The two
the · Foxes' season. With 31
off
a
pass from sophomore Mike
hour trip was wasted as the score_
Andy Ross grabs Jim McKenna in jubilation after one of
McKenna's two goals in the Foxes' 4-2 defeat of Iona. _
·
, . _
(Photo by John
Bakke)·
minutes gone in the first half, -Terwilliger to give the Foxes a one remained unchanged and the
Marist trailed Iona College 2-0 as
goal lead.
Foxes dropped their· "last game"
Tom McElderry scored both goals
The Foxes secu_!:ed their come-
of the year.
·
Swimmers eye title after
.
first-meet setback
bl John Bakke
and Heinz Warmhold
yard freestyle ev_ents. The women
division.
also a member of the Eastern
also won the400-yard relay.
.
"We may be one or.· two College Athletic Conference
Meanwhile, Dave Luber ex-
swimmers short of winning the B • · Eastern Seaboard Section, and
Coming off a 'strong season last
tended Marist's streak of dual-
division championships," said will. face some Division One
year, swimming coach Larry Van
meet diving· wins to 32. Luber
Van Wagner. "But we should be diving competition there.
W_agner is looking toward his ·won the five . required -dives
stronger than last year. We have
: Eight m,ore dual meets are on
men's team contending again for
grouping with
a
178.24 score and
more quantity and quality.'.'.
this year.'s schedule, capped by
the Metropolitan Swimming
took .the six optional dives with
: The , team, which
has
no the. metropolitan championships
Conference title .. ,'· .
265. 74 points.
swimmers on scholarships, won
to be held at Marist in February.
The campaign got
off
to a slow
-The men's-loss ,wasn't the best
five;pf nine dual meets last year,.
The team lost three of :last
start as the men losuci Montclair-
start a.season could have,,butit's
bre~king 16 of-18 school records year's swimmers· to. graduation,
State 64-49 in a dual meet last .. _ a long season and the-team still
in the progress.
It
was a season but have recruited heavily for this
Saturday. Pete Asselin. led the
expects a strong year,·'; .. ,
climaxed by
a,
third~place-finish in
year. "I re_cruited 10 (reshmen,"
team with victories in the 50 and
.
"I
believe we
will
finish in the
the 'conference's B divisjon said Van Wagner. "Nine came
100-yard freestyle events. ·
.. top two/' · said Van Wagner,
championships.
· and eight are still with the team.
· That same meet.· - saw·• the
adding that the team's main
Marist is a Division Onl: team, . Another
.
three -join~d as walk~
women's team lose 80-33 despite ·· competition
'will
come from · bur it doesn't · swim againsr ons."
.
· ·· ·
·
.. Mary ··Marino's· winning per-
Maritime CoUege. _ The team ::--
0
Division Orie competition ·in the
With only four of 17 swimmers
formances· in· the 500 and 1000-
com~etes in the conference's B Metro Conference. However, it is . above the sophomqre class level,
it's a young team. Peter Asselin,
a
sophomore, is expected to be one
of the strongest swimmers.
Other swimmers Van Wagner
said he expects to lead the team
are sophomore Paul Raynis and
freshmen
Chris Chludzinski,
· Fabrice. Cuadrado, Kevin Keyes
and- Fred Dever. "The. freshmen
are. the fastest swimmers we've
ever· recruited at Marist," said
Van Wagner. -
Another standout is Joe
Karney, a junior transfer from
the · University of Missouri.
Karney will be ineligible to
:compete this yeai:, but will be
swimming . unofficially at the
meets.
·
Foxes fail in, finale, finisli without fourth
13_28 0 7~48
· 0
0 0
1-: 1
· An old sp~m maxi111 says that misleading.-: "TWo and 'seven or · AlbanYState
it's never over untilit's over; Last not,_•_ Albany State is - a. great •
Marist
Saturday, it was_ over. before football team,"-he said.
halftime.
. ·
.•
Milano completed
--10
of 12
·Alb - Gonzales 1 run(Lincoln
Albany State pounded the Red first-half passes for 180 yards and
kick)
..
Foxes 48:7 befo~e a cro~d,9f 876 _ the three toµchdown passes of 6,
-.. Alb -,- Brien 6 pass'.
at Leomdoff
m
Manst s .· last 27 and 35 yards,.Hewas replaced
Milano (kick failed)
footba~l ga~~ of the 1983 seaso~.
·
in the second half by Rick Jones,
. Alb __, ... Dunham 10
..: Manst f1mshed ~t 3:6 _
wfnle :· who was three o( five for 30 yards· (Dunham passJrom Jones)
Albany, also playmg its fmal' as the Danes switched to a time-
Alb·- Dunham 27 pass from
game of the year, raised it record constiining. _ second-half ground· . l\1ilano (kick failed) _
_
to 3-7.

.
.. _.
. .
_, .
· game. . - , : .
.
Alb --: Melvin 3 run (Giknis
Albany's Great D~nes led with - Ne
.
ither Albany quarterback
kick) .

41 unchalJenged. pomts at __ half-
was · intercepted, _
• but Marist
Alb -
McGrath. 35 _ pass . frcim "
time, t_he product of 1-, 10- and 3a · quarterbacks-threw info.opposite
MiJano (Giknis kick)
,
yard touchdown runs and three • hands three.times .. ,,~
c
:-.•-~:..r,XL -·
·
Mar,...:. Weller :-30 pass from
scoring
pas~es . ~y . Albany
Malet pointed ·-to ~h_ree early
Cleary (Huber kick)
.
.
quarterback M1_ke Milano;. _
. turnovers as.hurting Marist. "The··
Alb -
Monteleone
· ThoughManst and Albany end first two times we held them," he
(Giknis kick) .
their seasons with siniil~r. records,_ said, . "but the. third time they_
·
. A - 876 · ·
the m,1mbers are dece1vmg. The went in." _
Danes have played higher grade
Linebacker Sean Keenan also
opponen_ts than has Marist all talked.about the turnovers. "You
seasonlong -
the teams had no can't turn it overthat many times·
common opponents in 1983.
and win," he said. "We've been
Fox Head Coach, Mike Malet doing that all season, and it keeps _
agreed that Albany s record. was
Continued on page 14
- X-Country ~t-(championships
- Hockey season underway
- Women's basketball
"'. Thursday Morning Quarterback
.
' , . ; . , , ,
.
'
J I • • • • . , - • , I •
, I
Alb.
· First downs
17
~
Rushes-yards 39-134
Passing yards 210 -
Return yards 28
Passes
13-17-0
Punts
2-32
· Fumbles-lost 1-1
Penalties-yards5-50
Mar
12
·36-94.
177
78 :
13-31-3
3-15
2-2
2-14
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Rushing -:- Albany, Dunham
11-39, Jones 3-20, Gonzales 5-18,
Brien 2-15, Melvin 5-15. Marist,
Cleary 14-43, McKinney 6-18,
Oliver 5-17, -Penfield 3-12,
Simpson 2-3.
Passing --Albany, Milano 10-
12-0-180, Jones 3-5~0-30 .
.
Marist,
Cleary 11-23-1-142, Hawkins 1-5-
1-21, Fedigan l-1-0-l4;Loucks 0-
1-0-0, McKinney0-1-1-0.
Peter Moloney dives on the ball, just fumbled by an Albany State
receiver. It was Albany's only turnover in its 48-7 trouncing
of
the
Foxes.
(Photo by John Bakke)


29.8.1
29.8.2
29.8.3
29.8.4
29.8.5
29.8.6
29.8.7
29.8.8
29.8.9
29.8.10
29.8.11
29.8.12
29.8.13
29.8.14
29.8.15
29.8.16