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The Circle, February 17, 1983.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 28 No. 13 - February 17, 1983

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.
•:·
,1,•;_.1
:
·
Seco1lQ-.fife1JIJ.:tWo
-.
weeks
,::
c011cerllS(Belloit
byChrl
5
llneDem~~y
.•
,~
:,·

.
-~i;hiAi~
<
fir~
is as
<
yet un- :s~nday's
fire
fmmediately,
track of-wlio'.s
-
c~ming, ;~ and
Members of the Fairview Fire
The prevention of.
-
fir~s
-
:.
is
_
dctcrri)i11ed;
·
.
as:J~
jhe
.
cause of.
;
however, and sounded
'
the alarm,
. ·
out;'' said Brain
·
skoog, another
-
·
Department; who Jamison said
·
becoming a major concern
'
f~r. ~~iiqit~s

fire fa•o weeks before.
·:
·
.
Barry Jamison pointed out.
>
Benoit resident/
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
had just finished responding to an ·
Benoit House residents
·
·
as
·
ttie
>

:
.A
possible cause for the Jan. 30
i
.
:
.
A
.
test
·
of. the Benoit alarms by ·
·
..
Three
.
Benoit residents
-
pointed
alarm at 1:55 a.m: in toilwhouse
second Benoit fire i11 tw
_
o
weeks
...
fife
_
:
cotildcbe a
·
tit
;
dgarette:
:
tliat
.
the
,
Nichol
;
Oxygen
.
··
Co:
·•
·
was
··
·
out
·
that

-
they
·
·
rioticed
..-
two dif-
B-6,
·
displayed disgust
·
_
by in-
was extinguished early S1inday :. was: seen
:
being'disp_osed of in a. scheduled. for:·Tuesdaymorning, · ferent non-residents sleeping on
terrogating a resident who had
morning.
·
-
</
·
:
:
;
/
.

>.·.-
·
·:
·
garbage
·
p·aiL in
:
th~ boy's
·
area
'.
according
:
:
to
.
Joseph
,
· Waters,
the c
.
o~chin their lounge early in
just returned from Skinner-'sand
The Fairview Fire Department from
:
'
:
whjch
-:
flames late
.
r shot · Director' of Security.
·
. . .
.
'
. .
-
.
.
the morning on their way to crew
was not present during the fire,
responded to an alarm that· went forth,·.Jamison said
_
.
:.-
.
·
·.
::
·
.
.

..
.
__
J
.
afi)ison. s~id t~athe thinks
-
the
.
practice
.
on· two
.
separate oc-
according to residents.
, .
off at 2:46 a.m. according
.
to
·:
After. seeing someqne throwing
residents are "fed up" \vith the
.
casions. These compl~ints were
"Certainly we have to
-
take
Residence
Director .
.
;
Barry the cigarette in the pail at ap-
fires, "just as much as I am, the
not reported to security nor
some measures. I don't know
if
a ·
Jamison.
.
:<
·
·
'
.
;.
.
proximately 2:30 a.m. on Jan.
administration, the
.
fire depart-
Jamison, however.

.
.
security desk is the answer, but
Sunday's Benoit fire
.
which
·
30, Jamison said he tried to find:
·
ment, and security, and all ~he ..
The lock on Benoit's front
maybe ids," Jamison said.
· ·
was found i!1
a
garbag·e p~il irt the the. butt, ;to no
_a~ail,._and _then
: tltose pe
_
ople."
.
·
.
_
d?o~, w~ich residents sa\d is
Jamison said the cost of hiring
boy's bathroom, was discovered
.
dumped water on the
pail.
·
.
.
·
.
_
..
:.
While Jamison said he does not
..
d1ff1cult to lock and unlock, 1s not
·
a person to work a security desk
and extinguished
.
by
=
resident
..
At at>out 3:40· that
:
mornil)g, · sec securitY as a problem some
enough protection, St. John said,
for only 33 persons is a possible
Marcos Castro, Jamison said.
.
· BenoiL
'
resident · Roger
_
Ronialio

Benoit residents disa
·
gree . .'
.
beca~se"peoplc come in a
_
nd out
problem.
"I smelled the smoke
·
looked
said h~
·
saw five~to-six-foot flames
·
·
·
·
:
·
with residents."
·
·
A house meeting is scheduled
around and-
·
said,
'9h
'no~· not coming ~rom the pail. .
·
.

·
"My opinion is that none of the
Likewi~e,
resident
Karen
_
for · tonight to discuss the
again!" said Maria Nixon, one of

.
A maJor concern with th~ first residents are involved in setting _l!3hns_on 1s not happy with_ the
.
problem.
the 10 to 12 residents home during
fire was that the fire alarm did not the fires,'' said Ed st• John, a
s1tuat1on, although she does not
But
·
for now,·a notice that was
the fire.
·
.. ·
..
·
·
.
·

.
sound until
0
about seven or eight resident, who said he also believes· Uke the idea of keeping the door
posted on the blackboard of
·
A security worker was posted in
minutes
.
after the
·
fire was put there is a need for a security desk
locked all the time. "People
Benoit's lounge reveals
the
Benoit
·
for the remainder of . out,•~
·
according, to
·
Benoit· at Benoit's
_
front door to conti:ol
should feel free to come
'
in and
resident's first attempt to keep
Sunday morning, according to
.
.
resident'Brai11 Skoog;
·
·

·
·
.
.
the people coming
in
a nd out of
·
out;" she said.
·
their
·
home safe: "Please make
Jamison.
The sensor
irt
the boy's room
<
the building._
·
·
·
The Benoit residents are notthe
sure all outside doors are locked
The
.
exact cause of Sunday
.
picked up the smoke
·
from this
·
'
.
'There's no way of keeping
.
only ones upset about the .fires.
-
no more fires!"
·
·

_
i,t:
:r
ea!m
·
:
:
df
ter
_
:·;
the
.
·
storm
.
by
Lisa Arthur
r
.
.
~"\:i..
·
·
Mar/st
College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Febru~ry
1.,1,
1983·
-
The
F~~ritary sn~; adds
a
~p~dal
beauty
to th;
campus despite i~
.
paralyzing
effec! oii
the atea. _(photo
by
Jeff Kiely)
·
Draft
.
resisters
to.
lose aid
..
.
'
.
·
.~
-
.
There has been rising coilflic1
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
. .
.
.
between the . federal
·
government
,
·
.Males who did
riot
register for•
_
and iristifotions involved ()Ve~ t
_
he
~,
the draftandare
:
seeking firiaricia\ newla-.y.
:
:
: ·
:,
<
·/
>
;
·,' .
'
:
.
,:
:
.
-
''aid
!~
t
-
9
;,,
aitc:rid: college
'
'.-
~m
:
pc:
..
-

.
}'he
'
m!lJOr ORJ~Ct!C>!_l
.
tq
,
the
,
la~
:-
..
·
ll~!!gsm~M~
~
lj~~~;/4~i~f
~
i~~
~
+~;1-
z::
~
;z+
,,,
1
·
:
_
tci
comply
-
with
,
the
-
ne'N.
la~
/'
",:_
last fal!;SJ:i:eldon E. Slemback, 11s
according to
.
the Financial Aid
-:
general. counsel, (C?ld the New
:
office:
<-.
/

·
·
_
·
.
·
_
_
.
·
..
·
Y
_
ork Tun,es;
'.'_We
~1d not opp?se
,
t:
Congressman
..
__
Gerald
,.
-
.
_
R.
·
dt!!-A
_
reg1st~at10n, ~ut w_e thmk
/
Solomon
.
of Glens Falls, N
.
Y.
t
_
hat
_
ho~ku~g
re~1s1ra11on _ to
. '
iniffaied
·
the
.
Solomori Amend-
'
~tl.ld,ent
aid
IS
an l~l!PP_r?pn~te
.
ment lasLfall in association. with
,.
way t°-,,get the umvers1t1es in
_
-
·.
the Military Selective Service Act.
volved.
•·
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
With this, bill in effect, an _males
-
_
:,_
The Ne':"
,
_York_ State Fm~n~1al
.
JS
years
bid
or older must have
_
·
Aid
_
Adm1mst
_
ra11on Assoc~al!on
.
·
registered for the draftjil order to
con_s1der~_1he
.
pas_s8:ge of t.h1s law
be
..
eligible
.
.
for
.
.
a
.
Guaranteed _
_
to
~~ . unadm1mste~able,
.
u~;
Student Loan, Pell Grant, work-
-
_
cons1t1tut1onal ~nd immoral.
study, and
-
other
_
financial aid
:.
r~e
.
~onn,ect1on. betwee_n
programs.
·
~
.
.
.
.
fmanc1al_ a1d,,and the_ draft 1s
·
The law was passed Sept. 8,
u~approl?nate. J\CCordmg to the
1982
and will come into effect
financial
·
aid
group,
-July'
J;
1983.
·
According
·
10
"Withhol~ing aid _from. males not
regulations;
..
a letter from the
.
charged with a cnme ts
·
contrary
Selective
-
Service System must
_
be · to· the due _pro_cess
,-,
clauses of the
attached to any application form
u.s._c;onstttullon
.
.
co11firming that thdndividual has
. Mmam Rusen~erg,
.
.
nat1_o?al
actua_lly
registered. College
director of the Nat1onal Coaht1on
financial
aid
o_fficers
are
of. ln~epen_dent
_
Coll~ge ;, and
responsible
·
for seeing that this
Umv~rs1ty Stu~ents said:
The_
detail is carried out
.
·
reqmrem~nt _is
unnecessary,
.
If
an individualloses the let
_
t~r
.
u _n
c?
n_s t
It
u t Ion a 1 .
.
·
.
and
he can sign a statement with the
d1scnmmi1tory. W~ plan to d_o
understanding that he will obtain. whatever we can to repeal
_
this
it
within 120 days.
Continued on page 6
·
Much of the equipment being
.
battlefield.
busted twice for possession of
used
by
the military is
-
of a highly
. '
·
"Your average Dick,
.
Tom and
marijuana
_
or c;lriving with an
·
..
· ·
·
·
·
·
technical
·.
nature
·
and
.
it takes
Har
_
ry can't come in now,'' said
open container in your car, you
The
:
Unite
__
d States
·
Armed
b
d
· 1
·
·
·
·
intelligentpeople to o
_
perate, he
.
Petty
.
_
.-
Off
_
ice
_
r
·-
·
2n
_
d.·c
_
l
_
a
_
s_s. Bo
nee a spec1a waiver to

get m.
retention
.
rate, that is
·
more and
more of our people are re- ·
enlisting afer four years of service
simply because of the unem-
ployment situation."
Forces have· come
a
long way
'f
d
·
since the
-
days of the "I wc1nt
·
said.
;
c.
.
·
.

:
,
.
.'_
.:
.
-_-
·
·
-
<:
•...
Stone; a !lavy
_
recr:uidng officer:
Even 1 you o get m your op-
.
·
·
f
u
1
s
.
.
..
-
.
.
_'-.'We're
_
·
_
·
talking -
-:
comp
_
uter
__
-_
.
.
'
_
!A
_
_ nybo_ d
.
Y
_~
w
.
i~h
-
hal{:a b
_
rain can
·
portunities will be limited- like
Y.ou'
.
;
·
. ·
pos
.
ters o
.

nc e
_
·
..
..
a
_
m
.
·
h N
Id ' b
bl
prograinmiitg
arid
:.
·
sateUite

digaholein
:
thegroundandrun
·
mt e avyyouwou nt ea e
pointing his finger ai-every youn_g
communications here," Fairley
around the woods and shoot a
to go overseas."
·
man who happened to glance his said. "A job that used to take
.
.
gun: We're interested in building
Stone estimated that
600Jo
to
way.
·.
·
·
eight men
.
to do, now only needs

up leadership now -
we
.
want the
800Jo
.
of the military today
·
is
Today's army has
.
become one man pushing a button on a
cream of the crop."
·
comprised of intelligent to non-
much more selective about whom computer-a computer he is
Stone said that in the last six
troubled · people. He said the
they choose to let join their ranks,
educaied to op!!rate. You're no
months the armed forces have
figure in time,
will be
_
1000/o,
according to Sgt .. James
·
H.
where without at least a high
toughened their entrance stan-
citing the economy as one reason .
Fairley, an army recruiting of-
school diploma."
..
dards
..
Individuals who have a
for this.
-
fleer.
·
·
·
·
,
The
_
peace-time army's main
-
police record will find it hard to
·
"We've been very busy here,"
"We do not take anythng;•i
.
lie
.
concern is
.
to fortify its
·
ranks "".ith
enlist .
.
.
'
.,
he said. 'Ppeople are constan_tly
·
-

· ··
leader
·
s-pe· op
.
le
.
who
·
can
.
·
·
tak
_
e
·
_:
He said: "Used to be that you
coming in; There are no jobs out
said
:
"We are looking for qua 1ty
d
I
b ·
·
·
·
,,
charge in' a time
_
of war. Those could get in if you only had a
there an peop e are egmnmg to
People and we push educauon. .
h
·1·
I
·
Who enl1'st now are being trained
couple of misdemeano
__
rs
·
on your
see t e m1 1tary as an a ternauve
.
Fairley explained that
.
we are m
l'f
1 Al
h
h"
·
h
the era of the "modern army".
to be responsible for lives on the
record. Now, say if you've heen-
1 esty e.
so we ave a very 1g
Nationwide enlistment is at an
all-time high, according to Sgt.
Jerry Hill, a marine recruiting
officer. He agreed that the
_
economic situation in the country
is bringing more people in to take
a look at what the military is
offering.
"We're acually turning people
away," he said. "We only want
people who are willing to
.better
themselves -
·
squared away
individuals, no drugs,
.
no ~ecord,
no alcohol. We don't take dirt-
bags."

























































































- - •
Page
2 •
THE CIRCLE· February 17, 1983
~-------------=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=================-=-=-=-===-=-=-=-=-.:;
Nolan experiences PR work
by Eileen Hayes
Attending a press conference··
with Nick Nolte may sound
.ex-
citing, - but Augustine Nolan,
assistant · professor ·. of com-
munications, liad a job to do.
This was one of the assignments
that Nolan had during his eight-
month sabbatical last year.
Nolan worked
in
the areas of
public
relations
and
organizational
communications
within five corporations from
May to January. These are two of
the subjects he teaches at Marist.
After performing many 9f the
skills he teaches his students,
Nolan said,
"It
was a fun thing to
do because I got a lot of practical
insights."
Nolan said he took the sab-
batical because he has been a full-
time professor for 14 years. "I
felt a need to move into the
professional
world
to
see
organizational
communications
and public relations," he said.
At Paramount Pictures, Nolan
spent three days working with the
senior publicist
James A.
Johnson, a member of the ad-
visory board at Marist. He viewed
the film ."48 Hrs.," then attended
the follow-up dinner reception in
Radio City. The next day, Nolan
worked with Johson who was
While working with Bozell and
handling 'the press· conference Jacobs, Nolan attended a three-
with · Nick Nolte. Nolan arid day seminar on the impact of a
Johnson met the press .at a ,New secretary's job since automation.
York hotel for the interviews.
This was held
at
an. Americana
Nolan began his sabbactical at .Hotel in New Jersey, where 100
IBM in Poughkeepsie. He worked managers · gathered for the
there from May through July. He Secretaries International Survey ..
was involved with all aspects of Nolan worked with· the audio- .
internal and . external com-
visual ·· presentation for the
munications, which included seminar.
.
technkal writing, IBM news, and
The focus of the three days was
audio-visual projects for cor-
for the managers to learn how
poration personnel.
.
technology, such as computers,
. Nolan continued his sabbatical has affected a secretary and the
with England Strohl/De Nigris iri job performance.
New York City. He· wrote. press
Working again . with · public
releases anq identi_fied pot_ential relations, Nolan was with the
Hill
interested groups and agencies for and Knowlton corporation. There
them to work with. These are two · he met with the photographers for
areas taught in a-public relations National
Geographic's
China
· class.
Also
with
England· Exhibit. Hill and Knowlton is·
Strohl/De Nigris, he worked on providing the publicity for the
the Hagaan Dazs account. His book that is a photographic
task with that account was display of China.
·
·
viewing the films and tapes from
television and film, and doing the
Hill and Knowlton was the last
monthly report.
company that Nolan· worked
After
working
in · the within. He is continuing his
professional world for a few.
sabbatical with one ongoing
months, Nolan said, "I can more
project to· be released in early
readily
demonstrate
the spring. ·
relationship of the theories we
"This was a unique sabbatical.
study in both public relations and_ It gave depth and practical insight
organizational
communications · to help make my teaching more
with the actual world."
• effective," Nolan said.
?2o/o
emp(oyed, survey shows
by Jane M. Scarchilli
busy during the semester," Wells
A survey administered earlier
said.
this year indicated that 92.4% of
Alumni" can also come to Wells
the 1981 Marist graduates that · for help in seeking a job. Job
responded and were in the job
announcements are sent
to
them if
market were employed, according · th_ey request
it.
· Wells urged seniors to register
with the Career Placement Office
in order to get useful information
in their job
·
opening unless we
know what you're looking for,"
Wells said.
·
to Ray Wells, director of career
"Alumni can benefit from our
placement and planning.
files on job. openings," Wells
"If
the individual attends all
said. ''We like .them to keep in
three of the workships, they will
Of the 387 graduates from ,toti~hsothatwe;canhelpthemin\ h;av~~all
,ti.),:
b~sics for·job h~n-,
1981, 227. responde~ to. a survey ···,any.way." .. - ;,· ''. -.
·
--~ -.--
.

.·--::·.-
·
::"':
·
,, tmg/' he said::
-
,·•··
-
'.•·· . •··
SENIOBS
--
~
ON-CAMPUS
-
INTERVIEWS
Spri11g, . '983
Tuesday, March 1 ...... CVS Pharmacy Mgmt. Trainees
Wednesday, March 2 .. Reuben H. Donnelley Sales Reps
Thursday, March. Grumman Data Systems· Programmers
· Tues.day, March 8 ... Bank of New York Mgmt. Trainees
Tuesday, March 22 ....... First National.Supermarkets
·
.
Mgmt Trainees
Thu·rsday, M~rch 31 .. Grand Union Co. Mgmt. Trainees
CANDIDATES MUST SUBMIT RESUMES FOR PRE-SCREENING
CVS Pharmacy, Reuben Donnelley and
Grumman
Data Systems
Are Dua February 18th
Further information available in the Office of Career Developm_ent
· :.· CC180
sent
out by the Office of Career ,; . _ . , .
·
·
Development. .
. .
.,
. _ _ _ _
..,..;....;.. _ _ _ _ _
...,. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
1111111
~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
~~t~i:~:,~;E.;i!i1:~~~
CAPUTO'S
M.ARIST
COLLEGE
70/o are in graduate school,
40/o
;;e"J~ft]i
0
: : ~
nd
::•~:::i~:
NIGHT DELIVERY SERVICE
employment.
· ·
The reason for the high per-
centage of graduates working and
the low percentage in graduate .
school is, according to Wells,
because · Marist prepares its
students for the working world.
"Marist students are pragmatic
and here so they can get a good
job when they graduate," he said.
According to Wells, most of the
1981 graduates are working close
to . their home , town. "Since
Marist has
a
large majority of
students from New York City and
Long Island, most of them return
there upori graduation," he said.
Among the many services that
Career Development provides for
students are workshops _ on
resumes, · job hunting and . in-
terviewing. "The ·. goal in . job
hunting is to get the interview,"
Wells said. ·''Then the interview
either makes or breaks you."
Resumes are an important part
of job seeking, according to
Wells.
"If
there's something you
can do better with _your resume,
that's important to know," Wells
said.
Students tend to not realize that
job hunting is a skill, Wells said.
"In an interview, it's important
to know what to emphasize and
what not to emphasize in terms of
background
and
academics,"
Wells said.
·
Mock interviews are given by
· Wells in order to prepare students
for their real ones. By the end of
the year, Wells estimated that he
has met with 60 or 70 percent of
the seniors.
According to Wells, a minority
NEW SPECIAL SIZE PIZZA
16' '. Regular /Large
_
For Marist College Campus Only!
5
4.·SO·
·-
.
.
'
'
--
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,
-·--
-
,
~
. .
.
-
'
.
.
"
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.
.
Tel. 473-2500 -
We »·eliver
to
MARIST ONL¥!-·
·(No Long Waiting 25.Min.)
~-----------------~
I
·_ .
. -.
1
With the.Purchase of , ;
; . A.1:1y
·Large ~i~za Pie;
_
;
I
One (1) Free Pitcher of
1
· ;
·
Bud;·
Miller
or·
Pepsi-Cola.· ;
I
·
·o · -- . ·
I
t-------
R----~-,-

.
.
I
ONE· FREE
TOPPING·
:-
1
on
I
I
I
I
Regular Large 16''
I
I
I
I
_
or
I
I
Large 18" Pizza Pies
1
I
.
$1.00 VALUE
I
I
.
1 COUPON PER VISIT
I
L--~--------------~
f;:~Je
~~
t!~:~ni~;;/~::dau!~e~
DELIVERY HOURS:
Sun. thru Thurs. --
8
p.m. to 12 Midnight
"Most students will do their job

S
d
hunting the summer after they
Friday
&
atur ay -. - 8 p.m. to 2 a.m.
graduate because they are too ._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ .





















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,P.· .!.•, •,
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_'• • .,~
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--·.
_
February
17, 1983 •
THE CIRCLE - Page
3 - - •
Richmond Center:
·
_Helping the· handicapped
by
Karen Boll
greenhouse with an adjacent deck
When the weather is bad, the Coming out to the Richmond
group will shovel snow and gather . Center and participating in a .few
wood and a few group members outdoor activities is
a
way for
may use cross-country skis to ski · them to adjust to new behavior,
around the buildings. These and Altamura said.
"
.
.
. . .
a~d small .building.· Although
In a word, our population 1s . Richmond Center will not open
retarded but each one here has a · until the warm weather for over a
· special story," explains Owen · year, the Rehabilitatio~ Program
Murphy.
has been coming out to the center.
Murphy is one of tw.~ st_aff
"We teach them to be good
other outdoor activities help to
Some of their activities in the
promote their physical awareness win.ter include hiking, gathering
through a routine, Murphy said.
wood
for the wood stove,
· members
from
Rehabihtation
hikers and wood gatherers," said
Program _ Incorporate~, · 181
Murphy. Accomplishing physical
Church St., Poughkeepsie, who,
tasks may help. them feel better
_.for four days a week, _takes_ a
about themselves he said.
Another group of adults from
shoveling snow' sledding and
·
tobogganing.
Rehabilitation Program In-
The staff
will
prepare a lunch
group of ten out of thirty-five
'
.
mentally retarded· adults . out to
. The group goes on t~o-mde
corporated aiso comes to the
for them, and the group will all sit
Center, though they come only
down family style and eat. This is
once a week for a few hours. This
to teach them dinner manners.
Marist College's Richmond
hikes ~hen the weather 1s good
Market Gardening Center.
and brmgs back wood to stack
ai:id burn on cold days. According
!O
Murphy, they started in one
corner of the property and cleared
the wood there.
is a group of autistic adults run by
In the summer they may cook
Lynn Altamura. The group is
h ·
The Center was established in
the spring of 1979 in Pleasant
Valley, N.Y., seven miles from
Marist. 1'.he Cehter is privately
funded and is located on 74 acres
of woodlot, open. meadows and
wetlands.
The Center's original purpose
is market gardening, which
utilizes small plots of land (about
1/10 acre) to provide food for a
family of four and also to sup-
plement their regular income.
The center also ' includes a
p011d, three beehives,. · a solar
Iceberg sighted
.along the Hudson
One man.within a gold pyramid
can produce the sound of an en-
tire band. The man is Michael
Iceberg, and the gold pyramid is
the Iceberg Machine.
Iceberg gave a concert last week
in
the
Marist
theater,
demonstrating the phenomenal
sounds that his machine can
make.
Iceberg said tnat the machine
inside the pyramid is made up of
synthesizers and related in-
struments hooked together so he
can play all of'. them.at once, ~ot •
.. ,.only.does he play.the instruments'
inside the pyramid but, according
to· Iceberg, there are instruments
behind the pyramid that he plays
·
by remote control.
Iceberg said that ·tie has been
trying to get the sound ,of a
multitrack · recording from- the
machine. The machine is capable
of making a variety of different
sounds, from a flute or guitar to
the wind or a woman's voice, he
added.
.
When asked what he thought
was interesting about his music
Iceberg said,
"It
is unusual that
just one person can make that
much noise." He said that he has
been collecting the best in-
struments one piece at a time and·
it would be impossible for so-
meone to have it all at once and be
able to play· it. Iceberg has been
. building his machine and has been
performing with it for the last 13
years, he said;
·
Iceberg,- 42, has been playing
the. piano since he was four years
old and said that he studied
· smaller and self contained, ·ac.-
t eir meals outside and play
outdoor games like tennis.
.
cording to Altamura, consisting.,.,.
"In the summer we have more
of six autistic adults and three · freedom because in the winter
staffmembers.
they don't tell us if they are
When the group hikes, the
members use ski poles · . year
around· to gain body awareness.
"It
keeps their hands busy, then
they'll be able to use them for
other things," said Murphy.
According to Murphy, we gain
· balance as children, but these
adults spent their childhood
indoors. Thus something simple
can take twenty minutes for them
todo.
According to Altamura, their
group is small but · the charac-
teristics of autistic adults makes
things difficult; "The group is
nonverbal except for Nina," said
Altamura. "The autistic like to
rearrange things, have stealing
behavior or eat foreign objects."
One of the difficulti~ w·orking
· with autistic _adults is that they do
not adjust well to new behavior.
cold," said Altamura.
·
Though some of their activities
are similar to Murphy's group,
the groups participate in the
activities separately because one .
large group would be too difficult
to handle, accor.ding to staffers.
According to Murphy, they
take pleasure in simple motor
actions, as turning the pages in a
book.
Michael Iceberg performin.g at Marist last week. (photo
by
Jeff
KeilyJ
classic piano as a piano and com-
technological edge.
position major at Julliard School -
Iceberg has appeared on the
of Music. He said that he owned
Johnny Carson Show, "Com-
iwo retail music stores, a large
puters Are People Too," and said
home in the suburbs, a Porsche he has ·played in Radio City Music
and an airplane, until he decided
Hall. According to Iceberg, he
that wasn't what he wanted from
has been playing at Disney World
life. In 1969 he quit the retail
for the last six years,and every
· business and went to Aspen,. Col-
penny he has earned has been put
orado, "to be a hippie-freak, a . into , the development of his
ski bum," said Iceberg. He said machine.
he just wanted to play in bars at
"I've escaped," he says. Over
night.
the last year Iceberg said that he
Iceberg said that for the first has played at ~bout 100 colleges
time he might be producing music and universities. He added that he
for a new feature film,· "Kidco", prefers-playing at private colleges
which is being produced by the like Marist. He said he likes the
people who made. "Little Dari-
fact that he can ·play spontaneous-
ings." He said that they are ly and not be forced io do the
presently debating between hiring same thing every night.
Iceberg or Burt Bachrach, but
When asked how he is inspired,
· Iceberg feels that he has a Iceberg responded that he enjoys
listening to english and classic
rock and roll, particularly; Yes,
Genesis, Pink Floyd, Moody
Blues, Keith Emerson and Rick
·wakeman.
"I really like esoteric music, "
he explains.
· Iceberg said his second album
will soon be released which con-
sists of a synthesizer concerto on
one side and five popular songs
on the other side, the melodies
which come from the concerto.
Iceberg says that he has recent-
ly purchased a log cabin in the
small town of Snowmass, Col-
orado; where he lives with his
wife Nancy and dog Betty when
· they aren't travelling. He jokes,
"We are now the Icebergs of
Snowmass."
Clowning around, off campus
by
Lynn
Gregorski
· Some Marist students are
clowning around -
and hope to
do some good by it.
The new club .Campus Clowns
is made up of students who want
to use their talents to bring some
laughter- into the lives of people in
the Hudson Valley.
The club was organized by stu-
. dent· Jim O'Doherty with help
from Sister Eileen Halloran,
Assistant Director of Campus
· Ministry, and Freshman Mentor
Peter Amato.
O'Doherty says the club is com-
prised or· students who are in-·
terested in dressing up as clowns
to bring -entertainment to the
emotionally disturbed and those
in nursing homes and children's
homes. O'Doherty said there is a
need for this type of volunteer
service in the Hudson Valley.
Clowning takes up a great deal
of time and energy O'Doherty
said. He explained that the dif-
ficulty of performing as clowns is
not .just being a bunch of kids
with make-up on their faces, but
· reaching a real element of profes-
sionalism.
·
Club member Jean Fahey said
she thinks that it is rewarding be.-
ing able to communicate with so-.
meone who wants and needs the
attention the clowns can give.
. "I love it," said Fahey, "There
is rio better gift because this orie is
from the heart." She explained
that the character of the clown
comes from part of the person's
personality. Fahey says that you
don't have to have experience as a
clown to join the club because
clowning comes from inside you.
She said that the experienced
members of the clul, will be advis-
ing those with no experience.
"People who think they have
the least ability," said Fahey,
"are usually the
warmest
clowns."
.
If
you are interested in joining
the Campus Clowns you can con-
tact Sister Eileen Halloran at
ext.#275 or in the Byrne
Residence.
Bruce Cable controversy cleared up.
Any cable hook-ups that fit the
Bruce Cable system on campus
are acceptable as long as they are
not bare wii;es that would damage
the system,· Mike Bowman,
residence director
~
of Cham-
pagnat, said Monday.
Bowman said that he hung
signs last
week
on bulletin boards
in the hallways that "said that
students had to buy their cable
hook-ups from BruceT.V."
Many students took the sign to
mean that if they did not buy their
hook-ups from Bruce T.V., they
would
be
fined.
Bowman said, however, that
the only fines that would be
charged for certain are those
charged to people who damage
the hook-up plates or the cable
system by using bare wires instead
of the appropriate hook-ups.
He said that cases in which he
catches students using bare wires
he will treat the case individually.
He said that he does not wish to
make a blanket policy for fines at
this time.
"Neil
spent thirty-five years in
Wassaic schools where he learned
to rip up paper and clutch
it,"
said Murphy. ·
These actions· give them
pleasure and you · become their
adversary when you stop their
pleasure, explained Murphy.
They then revert back to crying or
other behaviors. They get an
attitude that is hard to break. In
an outdoor program they're too
busy to fight change, Murphy
said.
· "What works with children
works with them, firmness and
knowing where their coming
from," said Murphy.
- Adding to the task, Murphy
said, is the ratio of two leaders to
10 group · members. He said a
volunteer program would help.
Altamura -adds that there are
not many volunteers because of
the
economy.
"Primarily,
students from Dutchess Com-
munity College volunteer but not
in my class because it's too hard
to train them," said Altamura.
"What volunteers need is just
common sen_se and kindness.
Media center
gets $450,000
by Cindy Bennedum
Through a government grant
and the Beirne/Spellman Media
Center, and "interactive learning
" program is developing at Marist
College.
The Media Center has been
granted approximately
$450,000,
which it will receive throughout
the next five years, from Title
lll
funds.
This money is being invested in
interactive learning programs,
· designed in con3unction with
faculty members and . their
courses.
The
system,
to
be installed in
the Media Center, consists of a
combination of a mini-computer,
a television set, a floppy-disc
computer program and a video
tape.
"The computer, the television
set and the student work together
to learn material listed in the pro-
gram," said Scott Badman, pro-
duction technician at the Media
Center. He added that the work
would also be aided by the video
tape.
Badman said, "The nice thing
about it is that it kind of fits itself
to the student, instead of being
passively watched.
It's an
ndividual-type learning tool.''
According .to Badman, the
areas in the course that the
students are strong in, the system
will
go through fairly quickly.
If
the · student has difficulty in an
• area, the system will go back and
repeat it or will expand on the in-
strucion in those areas.
Badman said that the system
consists
of
"brand-new
technology," featuring · some
equipment which is not yet on the
market.
The development of the interac- -
tive learning program
will
be
spread over the five-year period
that the grant covers. Badman
said that each year the grant has
to be justified.
"The money is very tightly con-
trolled and allocated by the Title
III grant. We have to justify what
we did each year before we get the
next year's allotment."
"The first thing we're doing
this year is just getting a
preliminary system; making_ sure
ir'works," said Badman. He add-
ed that next year a person to
develop the programs
will
be
hired and work will be done with
faculty to find the course areas in
. which the program will be most
advantageous.
.
"It's not like going out and
buying a text book. In essence,
we're writing the text book," said
Badman.























































































































































- - Page 4 -
THE
.
CIRCLE -
February
17,
1983
\jJ
Ell
A
,
,
LEA
:s
r .
!''II
~AVE
-
f
f)JA~
·
ciA
r
A
iD ,
·
.
.
.
It's cold
-
inside·
It's 7:30 a.m. and you drag yourself out of
plied with an electric heater if they cari
bed. As you look outside at the weather, you
change the fire hazard.regulations. It will be
notice about a quarter of an inch of ice on
spring before that ever h
·
appens
.
They send
the inside of your window. "God, it's cold in
maintenance up to tape rlastic over the
here," you say to no one in particular. Your
windows. You don't even know that they did
roommate wakes and says, "Whaaat?" You
-
it until you come back from dinner and find
notice that her breath Is making steamy
them In your room.
patterns In the air.
·
-
After
_
a couple of days, yourroom begins
You don't dare take a shower for fear of
to get a stale smell. "Thank God neither of
having icicles form In your hair while you
us smoke," you say.
·
rush to get dressed. As you get ready for
It's still cold •In your room and the cold in
·
class you feel the coldness permeating the
your body that you thought you had gotten
windows and think, "Boy, It'll be.nice to be
rid of last
week,
comes back. You decide·to
in a warm classroom. Maybe I can get some
take a nice hot shower but you've
got to wait
sleep."
. ·
until the hot water comes back. That should
-
You take the elevator from the ninth floor
be sometime after 11 p.m. Or maybe you
down to the first. You don't even have to go
should get up extra early, before everyone
. ·
outside. You're lucky; your class is In
else, so you can have at least a ,warm
Champagnat. As you talk
.
into class, you see
shower.
your classmates huddled in their coats with
so, you sit in your room and
.
shiver. or _
mittens on while r.:ups of tea arid coffee
maybe you go and visit your friend on the
·
·Readers
Write
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
~
.
'
·
.
.
All ;ette;s ~usl be typ;d ;rlpl~ sp~~e with~
60
space inargln, arid subml!led lo :~e
Circle office no later than 1 p.m. Monday. Short letter& are preferreo. We r~s~;e e
right to edit all letters. Letters must
be
signed, but names may be with e upon
· ·
request
.
Letters wlll
be
published deper:,dlng upon avallablll~y or space.
·
Essays wanted
.
Dear ·
.
faculty,
·
administration,
·
staff and students,
The Circle
is accepting essays
for the columm, "Forum." The
essays may
·
deal with any topic
·
that would be of interest to people
·
of the Marist community. World
issues, the joining of liberal arts
·
and technology, and politics are a
few of the many topics that may
be covered in this column. The
essays should be approximately
500 words~
-.::
.
:
.
.
.
-~
.•,:.
·.
..
This c
·
olumri prqvides diverse
attitudes and new· topics.
-
The
topics are yours for the choo~ing.
·

This column is a great way to br-
.
ing attention to an idea that is of
:
interest to the Marist community.
, ·
Please send your essays to Meg
Adamski, Box
C-709 ... ··
.
Meg Adamski
Forum Editor
.
.
.
Pregnant pole-vaulters
Dear Editor,
Once
.
again M~. Bowman has
.
expressed a concern
·
by writing a
letter to the editor and once again
I feel compelled to reply.
After having read the column
-
addressed by Mr. Bowman I can-
not argue with the fact that it is,
'.' ... a tale told by
·
an idiot ... signi-
fying nothing." Quoting William
Shakespeare
is
impressive,
especially for a theatre major. For
this I commend him; While on the
subject of quotes and the like, my
own tendencies towards practical
thinking make me feel it ap-
propriate at this time to remind
Mr. Bowman of one of Murphy's
laws which states, "Never argue
with an idiot, people might not ,
know the difference."
·
·
I feel the college owes him
.
thanks for proving this. It was a
valiant' attempt to clear your
name but it went over like a preg-
.
nant ~oman doing a pole-vault. I
am awaiting your response.
_
:
Sincerely,
Richard Dougherty
R.A.
No
-
to ROTC
make steamy patterns in the frosty air. You
_
fourth floor with the perpetual stuffy nose.
are reminded of something.
someone tells you about an experiment he
You sit down thinking, "At least I'm used
·
did up on the ninth floor, as a joke. He put
Dear Editor:
and "How to Treat
·and·.
OR
to it.'' Meanwhile, your friend from
.the
f
t
• th h
11
t
If th
Id
In
·
today's
administration's
Dispose of
A
Radioactive or
fourth floor is sitting next to you thinking,

.
cups
O
wa er rn
e a
O
see
ey wou
habit of constantly increasing the
.
Chemically Contaminated Body"
"They must have turned the heat off down
freeze. You th ink he may have a good idea.
military
·
budget and steadily
take the place. Doesn't that make
here by mistake:" She Is warm. She had to
Since you don't have a refrigerator you can
decreasing
-
the
-
social
service

you downright sick? Wouldn~t a
keep her windows open all night long
bulld a shelf by your wiodow a
nd
keep your
.
budget, I don't see how we can ac:-
class in C.P .R. or Childbirth be
because the heat was pouring out of the
drinks cold. You don't even need Ice cubes.
cept an R
.
O. T.C. program here a!
more productive. The ROTC
-
radiator. Her skin is beginning to get dry and
·
It's still cold and they try to comfort you
Marist. Ronald Reagan is chopp-
.
courses in blowing up people or
she has a perpetual stuffy nose from being
by saying that these problems have existed
ing·services like educational loans
disposing of them are sick and
in such different atmosphe(es within the
for years. You are not comforted. You do a
and federal jobs to support h
_
is
wasteful. How can this be allowed
same building.
.
.
.
.
.-
..
few jumping j~cks to keept~e blood fl9Wlng,
i:
war
..
machiri~
.
.
w~ich includes
by
·the
same college that forced

;,
·
·
.
A ft
.
er ·. c_lass
·
you
..

go back

.
t<>.
your rooin •

.
,
:
.
11n~
.
;
.Y
.
O!:J
,:
:
~~u~
;,,for
/,SPf.l
ng •
. ,
;,
~H
,
~~
-~
,
,,
!,
.
:
th_!:3 :, t:;>~etetnen.tl
,
~~~*
;3:~.
BQT<:;u1.~.1:!~ar
,
,
.,
:-
students
.
to
;
a Dean• s. Copvocation
The.re. is a ._m_lmeographed sheet .under the
groundnoq
.
.
·
didn't · s·ee: ~is:
:
sh
·
aaow.
-
-
,:hat _..
arms;
,
g
·
erm
: ·
wa:ifare;
·,
the-··MX
1
:
-bat
'"
ori'
....
peacef"Noboitf-
·
siio
'
uitt'
door
exp/arn,ng the options you have to
means we re going to have an early sprmg,
.
missile etc .. How many of you
·
force an 18-year-old
.
or
.
older
contend with the cold. You might be sup-
right?
.
·
were refused college loans or just
adult to do anything; That was
··
Still your
.
tllrn
Mr. Blackwell has his ten best and ten
.
worst lists; now it's our turn. In our own
pseudo-sci_entific
.
way, we would
lil~e
to
__
know your opinion of t~e classes you've
taken here at Marist. Please complete the
.
following, clip it out and
·
return
it
to the
Circle, Box
c~a57,
by Monday
21,4.
·
·
·
·
missed on
·
e because of the Presi-
absolutely hypocritical of the ad~
.
dent's reduction
.
iri loan pro-
,
ministration. How can the saine
_
grams? How many freshmen had
people who galla!ttly preach
·
edJor
friends lea".e high school early to
.
pea.ce that day let the ROTC
.
on
meet the May '82 deadline for
the campus? How can
·
the same
continuation of social security aid
·
administration who wants to en~
.
for college?
•· .
.
. _
.
.
·
force cohabitation because this is
·
Although

ROTC helps those
.
·
.
a
·
Catholic
.
.
School' let
·
someihjng
who enroll i~ it, is it fair that only
-
.
('which
i
guess would be "twice as
.
participants in the program reap . immoral") like ROTC on cam-
. , - - - ~ _ .
_ _ _
...,_;... _ _
..;. ____ ~ _
... _ _ _ _ _ _
;,.. _ _ _
~ - , goveri:l.mentarbe.nefits while the.
pus.
_
.
:
'
I
-
·
·
·
restofus struggle along?_
-
.
·
It's
.
~
about
·
time we
do
I
.
-
-
-
.
.
·:
The Best and Worst
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
~
,
••
Also, what place do ROTC
something to show our resistance
,
'
classes have
._
in

:
a
_
(so-called)
·
toward
·
the government's policy
•·
·
of Mari
st
.
••
-
.
"Cath~lic' Liberal Arts" college.
of increasing
-
militarism arid
·
How can
·
we let such
.
insane
-
·
social cuts,
-:
_
Sincer~ly
·
I
-
I
classes like
'
.
' Advanced Infantry"
Vincent Kane
I
Your year:_
Semester taken: -
·
I
·
..
·
I
;
I
Best Class: - - - - - - - - - -
Worst Class:
•,
Good job
Professor:_______________
Professor:----'---...:-----'------'--
I
.
··
·

·
I
To the Editor:
their own war.
.
.
I
Comments/reasons for choice: _ _ _ _ _
Comments/reasons
·
for choice: - - - - -
I
-
How many times have
'
you
These men fought that war for
I
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
·1.
.
heard the terrri community here at
·
hours on end with no sign of
I
Marist? All
_
too often some relent. While the mechanic
_
kept
I
members; some very important
.
.
machinery running smootl!ly our
,-
.
'
I - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
'---------------'----
·
. I
.
members
,
of that community are
·
_
gr~undspeople shoveled, sanded,
I __________________
---------------~--'- I .
not given the credit they deserve. pl~wed, ~
nd
s~lted
.
. The ef-
1
on the sixth of February many
.
(c1ency
w1~h: which this crew
.
of
I -------------'------
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
1
ie~~~l~onw~~~gr:~r?.~~~ Jr1nd~ :~~r~~s~~ei;;°!e~r:~'~~a~a~f!t
I
Semester taken:
;
of War," while at the yery same commumty very proud
.
and
I
·
time on
·
our very own campus thankful.
.
.
,
-
,
.
·
·
·
·
-
··
I
there were groundspeople fighting
James Patrick O Doherty
~------~--------~-~-------~-----~
Co-Editors
Rick O'Donnell
Reporters
Lisa Arthur, Maria Azzollna,
Advertising Staff
Tara Scanlon
Lisa Crandall
Patti Walsh
Cindy Bennedum, Karen
Boll,
Dianne Gallagher
Gene Llannis
Tim Dearle, Alison Demarest,
The
-
Chris Dempsey, Lori Dyer,
Classified
Kevin Shulz
Donna Fidaleo,
Mike Graney,
Associate Editors
Karen Lindsay
Lynri Gregorski, Eileen Hayes,
Cartoonist
Ted Waters
.
Lou Ann Seelig
Kristine Lawas, Jim Leonard,
Circle
Donna Cody Seelbach
Karyn Magdalen, Paul Murnane
Photography Staff
Gina Franciscovich, Jeff Kiely,
Sports Editor
Bill Travers
Karen Nizolek, Susan Pyle,
Kyle Miller, Jeanne LeGloahec
Frank Raggo, Laura Reichert,
Advertising Manager
Jim Barnes
Roger Romano, Jane Scarchllli,
/
Mark Stuart, Gwen Swinton,
Business Manager
Adrienne Ryan
Bopp in Bob Weinman, Mark Zangari
Faculty
Advisor
David Mccraw
Joe Dldziulla
)
I


































- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - February 17, 1983 · THE CIRCLE· Page 5 - - •
The
by
Rick
O'Donnell
,,. ·
Do you ever wonder who was
the mastermind that named things
at Marist?
·
It
bothers me. Why must names
be so deceiving? Maybe they
figure if we don't know what-the
building, room or department is
we won't bother with it.
after people on campus, I learn
that there is actually a building
named the Martin Boathouse!
Who tlie hell is Martin, and why
did Marist name a boathouse
after him? To tell you the truth I'd
be a little ticked off if someone
named a boathouse after me. I bet
he would have preferred Martin's
Greystone building or Martin's
Campus center.
Foolish Fox:
. I think the· most confusing
names are given to the buildings
and rooms on campus.- I for one
can never remember a gate in the
front -of Marist, as a matter of
fact I've never even seen a fence,
so why do we need a Gatehouse?
What goes on in the gatehouse
anyway? Does anybody know?
Rooms are another problem at
Marist. Has anyone ever seen a
fire in the fireside lounge_?
If
I saw
a fire there I \YOUld probably be
so shocked that I'd pull the
alarm. Right next door to the
The·name
,game
Then there are the· buildings
that are named after people that
have somehow helped Marist Col-
lege become what it is today. I
learned who Champagnat, Done
nelly, Fontaine and Leo were in
my freshman year. In my
Sophmore year
I
learned who
Sheahan, . Gregory, Benoit arid
Adrian were. I already know who
St. Peter was (That's the other lit-
tle building that resembles the
gate house, I don't know· what
goes on in there either.) Just when
I thought I had mastered the
. fireside lounge is the browsing
library. The room has a television
and chairs in it. There aren't any
books to be seen in it, so what's
there to browse through? Maybe
it was named after someone nam-
ed Browsing? Even so they should
call it the Browsing Television
Lounge. Thep again- Marist has
always had problems with what
they term a "Library."
If
my
comments about the Browsing
Library sound familiar, it's pro-
bably because they appeared in
last weeks "It Ain't Necessarily
So."
I
figured that they warrant ·
repeating because when deceiving
names . are the topic -at hand,
· buildings that have been named
by Adrianne Donnelly
· and Ann Ryan
Does your crowd exhibit these
symptoms?
ing a good time. He's reserved
(for every desperate, drunken
wall-flower). This person has a
sense (as in "vague idea") of
humor and is i:_eady to _
talk to
anyone._ .. for hours ... and hours.
Our nominee: Don Eustace,
founder of the Marist Auto Club.
..
.
There's one
The fearless leader: He's witty,
charming, tactful, and good-
looking. · Yes,
he's
got
personality-plus (plus a big .
mouth). He charms the support
stockings off administrators, the
·horns off of rhinos, and the sup-
porters off our athletes. Charisma
simply oozes from his pores. Our
nominee for the perfect example'
Ted Perrotte,- Senior class presi-
dent.
The over-achiever: This person
does or .at least -tries everything.
He. has
a
major (of sorts) and is
bored if he has two minutes to
himself. He attends classes in his
spare time, yet somehow manages
a decent average. He does not
understand the word and/or con-
cept of "No," and is always com-

1n
every
crowd
The
Entity
Friday: On Campus
Meeting·
Commuter Union
2p.m. D249
Resident Assistant
Workshop, 2:15 p.m.
Fireside
Mixer
sponsored by the
Classof'84
9p.m. in the
dining room
>
Film:
"Gumball Rally" ·
7:30p.m.
The Chance
. The Ramones
$9.00
The Bardavon
"The Magic Flute"
see below for details.
-
- The Foilower: .the devoted fool:
He's always there when you least
expec_t him; like when you're hav-
by
Tom Fisher
There's a new movie around
that may or may not be playing at
your local.Bijou.- It's called "The
Entity." Thi~ is the'kind of movie
that comes around -for a week or
so, and then disappears; never to
be heard of again.
Right after the opening titles,
we
see Carla Moran (Barbara
Hershey) sitting alone in her
bedrgom. Before you cari swallow
your. first mouthful of popcorn,
Carla is being punched around
her room, and finally raped, by
soine unforeseen force .. The En-
tity's attacks are frequent and ans
noying, and soon become harder
. plaining that there aren't enough
hours in a day. Our nominee: Gai
~
.
.
1 '


· to swallow than your three day~
old popcorn. .
Carla seeks the aid of a
psychiatrist in a futile attempt to
solve her problem. He tells her
_ that the attacks are in her mind,
and not the result of some ghost
with a hormone problem. Never
mind the bruises and cuts that are .
all over her body.
After Carla is attacked a few
more times, she ditches the Doc's
advice (finally) and employs the
help of some parapsychologists.
With the introduction of these
latter-day ghost hunters, "The
Entity" progresses from bad to
worse, as it soon resembles a
Saturday: On Campus
Sunday: On Campus
Monday: On Campus
Mass
"Mass
6:lSp.m.
·12p.m.
The Chance
in the chapel
- in the chapel
Rock Video
free admission
W_omen's Basketball
Rehearsal
· vs. Monmouth
"Bus Stop" -
The Bardavon
7p.m.
4p.m. in the
Gallery Talk:
Theatre
James Klosty will
Independent Student
speak about his
Coalition Statewide
House Dinner: ·
photo exhibition -
Conference,
T.B.A.
House II
in the Bardavon
In Campus Center
Champatnat
Gallery, 8 p.m.
in the Pu
The Chance
s
p.in.
David Lindley and
EIRayoX
Film
$6.50 in adv.
"Gumball Rally"
$7. at the door
7&9:30 p.m.
The Bardavon
The Bardavon
"The Magic Flute" .
Mid-Hudson
see below for details.
~
_India Association
presents a film
at 1:30 p.m.
$4.50 or $3.50
for members
perhaps "It Ain't Necessarily So"
should have been named
"It
Ain't
Necessarily Funny!" Besides I
had this column written first
anyways!
· · There's one office that confuses
every student · that walks around
Donnelly building .. Who knows
what the Physical Plant office
does. Are they in charge of the
Botany' department?
Andy
Pavelko is the head of the
Physical Plant office. Is he some
kind of Richard Simmons for
plants? Acually the Physical
Plant Office is in charge of cam-
pus Maintainence. Everybody
seems to blame a lot on· them
anyway, and they do a pretty
good job, so I don't blame them
for nqt wanting anyone to know
where they are located.
. Of course no red blooded
Marist College student would let
me forget the pub. Or perhaps I
should say the Foolish Fox Pub.
Is that supposed to imply that
everybody who goes down to the
pub is foolish? Why don't we call
the basketball team foolish foxes?
We could just change the school
mascot from a red fox to a foolish
fox. How come we're only foolish
when we're drinking?
Sometimes there's even trouble .
Poe (fashion design major,
R.A.,
ROTC cadet, - cheerleader and
BSU club president.)
The joker: He's the one always
. trying to make you laugh ...
sometimes he even succeeds. To
get his jokes across, he recites
them as loudly and as frequently
as possible. He also looks funnier
than most of his jokes sound as he
carries a laugh track with him at
all times. Our nominee: Pat Pat-
terson, freshman class member.
Nice Try....
,
... to Mike Bowman for his rebut-
tal to this column: Spoken like a
true theater major - not an
original line in the whole thing.
.. . to Betty
Y
eaglin for stopping
the mixer
right on time. -
road-company
''Poltergeist:••
Even the
titles
are synonomous.
The parapsychologists
set
up a
very expensive and extravagant
trap to catch the Entity. It is only
afterwards that they realize it
couldn't possibly have worked.
The major problem with
The
Entity is that it raises lots of ques-
·tions and provides very - few
answers. The film spends way too
. much time on the psychiatrist's
increasing concern for Carla and
her problem, and not enough on
the problem itself. The irony in all
of this is that the film ends
without resolving their relation-
ship to each other or to us.
All we
ever see of the Entity is a blur of
with naming people on campus.
What in the world is a dean? If
Dean Cox was supposed to be
named Dean then his parents
wouldn't, have named him
Gerard. How about calling him
the John of Student Affairs, or
the Hank of Student Affairs.
Why does Dean get all the credit.
What makes it such a great name?
I don't think any United ,States
presidents were named Dean. As
a matter of fact, the only Dean I
know of is Dean Martin. I'm sure
Dean Cox doesn't want to be
named after Dean Martin!
Another title that the college
has had trouble with is
R.A.
What is an
R.A.? At
first it stood
for Resident Advisor. Then it was
changed to Resident Assistant.
What does an R.A. do anyway,
does he advise or assist? A lot of
students would probably say the
A
stands for something else, but
that's not very nice.
Far be it from me to play un-
fair. The Circle is far from being
perfect, afterall _no matter how
you look at it, the Circle is a rec-
tangle. I can't imagine how tough
it would be to layout a round
newspaper. Perhaps we should
call ourselves the rectangle, or
even better-The Foolish Rec-
tangle!
. .. to the winning
dealers at the
Gambel-fling. Tell us it wasn't
fixed.
... to the activities office for fill-
ing up the entire "fun" quota for
Spring '83 in one weekend. Now
you won't have to knock
yourselves out for the rest of the
semester .
... to the "Jug Band" for the
soothing dinner music during the
Mardi Gras dinner.
... to the residence staff for get-
ting official badges. Is that where
our damage fine money goes?
... to our favorite Thumbsucking
Pussykin - Rick O'Donnell. Did
you have a Happy Valentine's
Day?
'light,
and
the rest
of
the effects
are on a · par
with
the old
Frankenstein movies.
After about two hours of all
this nonsense, the producers must
have run out of time or money or
both, so they give us some ex-
planatory written passages at the
end instead of a solid resolution.
Since this is supposed to be based
on a true story, I presume that
this is why they felt they could
skimp on the ending and get away
with it.
Watching "The Entity" was
like eating an ice cream cone
without the ice cream. And the
cone was stale.
Tuesday: On Campus
Wednesday:
Thursday: On
Campus
Blood Drive
On Campus
Coffeehouse:
Social Work Film:
Kim and Reggie
Women's Basketball
"Getting Straight"
Harris,
9 p.m.
vs. Rider, 6 p.m.
9:30p.m.
Men's Basketball
Metropolitan
Concert: Musicians
Swimming and
Organization,
vs. Vermont
Diving
9:30pm
8p.m. ·
Championships
The Chance
Hockey vs.
The Chance
AU-Male Revue
Pace,9p.m.
T.B.A.
The Bardavon
Housing Workshop
The Bardavon
Bardavon Film
Stone Lounge
Merce Cunningham
Society presents
9:30p.m.
Dance Company,
The Naked Night
see below for details
directed by
The Chance
Ingmar Bergman
Female Mud
8 p.m., $2.50 or
Wrestlin~ The
SI for members.
Chicago nockers,
ss.oo
,,,,,_.
~,_
.
_,.













































































































'
.
- - •
Page
6 ·
THE CIRCLE·
February 17, 1983 - - - - - • -- - - - - -....
- - - - - - - - ~ -....
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
.
::~~~~s
i:
1
~r
Land Th8tJob!
·
by Lou Ann Seelig
:
Her office walls are covered
with miscellany -
·
a cartoon of
Boston,
a
couple of prints -
and
a large bulletin board devoted to
her special interest, wildlife.
For the p·ast two years Janice-
Casey, assistant

profess
.
or of
English, has been donating
money to the Center for En~
_
virorimental Education, a private-
ly funded organization based in
Washington, D.C.
"It's just something I'm in-
terested in," she said.
"I
send
them money from time to time
and they send me information."
She said the CEE lobbies to
stop commercial whaling, baby
seal slaughter and sea turtle hun-
ting.
Sirice she has been receh'ing
publications from the CEE, the
organization has "succeeded in
providing for phasing out com-
mercial whaling by 1986,''. she
said.
The CEE influenced the Inter-
national Whaling Commission to
make this decision, she said, but
the decision is not binding, and
·
"the
·
few whaling nations left are
threatening not to abide by it."
She added, however, that it
represents "some degree of step
forward."
Commercial whaling does not
take place in American waters.
The only whaling nations left, she
said, are Japan, the U.S.S
.
R.,
Norway and Peru.
Baby seals,
however,
are
hunted in Alaska. "That's us,"
she said.
·
The U.S. government hires
local Alaskans who "apparently
don't have much to do," she
said,
to club baby seals for a period of
five to six weeks every year. The
hides
_
are sold to European fur
traders,
she
said.

' 'The whole
process
is
very
·
routinized," she said. One team
herds the seals, the next tearn
clubs them, the next takes the
hides and the next carts the hides
away.
She said, "The seals are herded
.
away from the water - much far-
ther than they would normally
be." The "stunners," she said,
then go into the herd and club the
babies.
· The men hired to do this are
unemployed most of the year. The
U.S. government provides them
with earned income during the
seal season. ''I think the govern-
ment might
.
find something else
.
for thern to do," Casey said.
"It's
.
not a question of putting
animals ahead of human beings;
it's a matter of putting conve-
nience
·
ahead of animals," she
said.
·
.
She quoted
New
England
author Henry Beston: "they are
not brethren; they are not underl-
ings;
they are other na-
-
tions ..
,fellow
prisoners of the
splendor and travail of the earth.
That expresses
·
my feelings exact-
ly," she said. She
·
added quietly,
"they're not our servants -
or
our conveniences."
Draft
Continued from page 1
provision."
An assistant to Solomon, Gary
Holmes, said the argument
concerning constitutionality is
unfounded because "no one has a
constitutional right to financial
aid." Said Holmes, "it is up to
the Government to set whatever
regulations it wants in setting up
such programs."
Several colleges have initiated
plans to provide students with any
aid lost as a result of this law if
·
their failure to register is based on
reasons of
·
conscience.
Yale
University maintains that it
will
continue to meet 'financial need of
students regardless of the recent
legislation.
·
A Day of Straight-Talk About Job-Hunting and
Careers with Marist College alumni
THURSDAY; FEBRUARY 17 -
CAMPUS CENTER
.
2 Identical Sessions:
10:00
am - NOON
::-1:00
pm
-3:00
pm
HEAR A KEYNOTE ADDRESS CONCERNING THE
CURRENT JOB MARKET AT
10:00
AM or
1:00
PM
(as
your schedule permits) IN THE.THEATRE. ..
William Kuttner '68
Vice-President
·
CitiBank ·
I

Ned Kane
'74
Asst. Vice-President
.
Bankers Trust
Co.
THEN TALK DIRECTLY WITH MARIST ALUMS EM-
PLOYED IN A VARIETY OF CAREER FIELD:
Accounting
Personnel
·
Sales/Marketing
Banking
Advertising
Transportation
. PLEASE ATTEND
Finance
Insurance
Education
-
-
·
,
.
-
JO/NTL Y SPONSORED by
·
-
.
.
.
_
New York Metropolitan Chapter:Marist College Alumni
Association
. .
...
_-
. . _.
and
.
·
.
,
.
'.
.
·'
·
· ·
-
The Olfic'! of CareerDevelopment
·
IN CONCERT!
FRIDAY, FEB.
25,
7:30
&
10:00
p.m~
OLD MAIN AUD.
I
SUNY NEW PALTZ
STUDENTS
Only $4.
with 1.0.
HITS
''Carolina
Day"
''I Will Be
In
Love
With You''
''Over The
Rainbow''
·
RESERVE
NOW!
257-2192
.
Ouafi·+yJariciwich
'/ibefnT,~
Meals
-
a-f
mos-!
_
Reoscnob/e
Prices
a.
SALADS

SOPr DRINKS
ICE- C.RellM
Open
Nightly
7:30 p.m.-l:00 a.m.
NOW OPEN 2-4:30
SAT
&
SUN.
-
See us
-fo,r
your' ·
.
-floor r.arii~ -
~
-
Spe-cicd
Plalf&S
A-vai(a.ble
.
.
~
;
.we
Need
30
People
Could'
You
Be
One?
Wo
_
uld you like to
:
help
.
introduce
.
.
_new
parents
.
and students
-
.
to Maristr
-
.
·-
Be part of the
:
Orientation
·Team!
for one day to five days this June.
Name
Room No.
(or address)
P.O.
Box No.
Please circle:
Fr.
So. _
·
Jr.
Sr.
·
-(Return
to: Father LaMorte by 15th February)



































FOOLISH FOX
PUB
21st thru 25th
PUB LUNCH SPECIAL
Bacon Cheese Burger
Fries
Soda
$2.00
Open
Daily 10:00-2:30
Monday
thru Friday
/
February
17, 1983 ·
THE CIRCLE· Page
7 - -
Captain sets skiing pace
by Mark Stuart
training.
. Even though the team practices
Every winter when the sno~ . were tough, Moorehouse would
'and temperature come down,
practice and condition on her
Nancy Moorehouse goes up.
own.
Up to the slepes, that is.
To keep in shape during the
. Moorehouse is the co-captain summer, Moorehouse would
of the Marist ski team and is bicycle to Kingston (a little over
Marist's most successful skier this 20 miles round-trip) where she
season. She has won six first-
would work out with weights and
place titles and two second-place play either racquetball or tennis.
titles afte·r competing in 10 events
"Bicycling is
really good
in five meets.
because it
strengthens the
But skiing is
something quadriceps
and
hamstring
Moorehouse has been doing for muscles," she said. "I'd also do
quite a long time.
leg-squats for power, and if I
· "I've been skiing now for 19 could, I'd fit a game of tennis or
years," she said, "I've been ski-
racquetball in."
in9since I could walk."
\
Moorehouse' s
success,
A.
native of Woodstock, NY, however, hasn't been without a
Moorehouse is not far from areas certain degree of personal
such as Hunter Mountain, Win-
sacrifice. She missed all of the
dham Ski· Area, . or Cortina Fall 1982 semester to recover
Valley.
from a severe back injury suf-
"I've been skiing so long now, fered during the summer.
I should be a lot better," she said.
Moorehouse said: it was a com-
. "I like to compete at the areas bination of things that caused her
(around Woodstock). Its not injury. "I would lift weights
because I'm used to the slopes, without a power belt, or just lift
but because I get to see a lot of my something wrong,'' she said.
friends ski also," she said.
While lifting a heavy box, she
Moorehouse skiied for Onteora injured her back and that left her
High School and went on to in extreme pain.
North Country Community Col-
'All I dig was lay down on the
lege and lived at Lake Placid for floor. It hurt so bad ·1 had to be
three years.
taken away on a backboard,'' she
"We skiied at Whiteface and said.
really had some tough coaches,".
Moorehouse then remained on
she said. "After we would ski the backboard for six weeks and
down the course, there were five spent five days in the· hospital
instructors who would make us with a severe muscle tear and a
walk back up the mountain by small fracture of the vertabrae.
foot. Those guys should have had
"It's a awful feeling not being
whips."
able to do anything. I really was
In the off-season, the team worried when my right arm felt
would practice by
running. funny," she said.
through the gates and weight
In
any
case,
Nancy
Nancy Moorehouse
Moorehouse is well and perform-
ing well also. ·
Moorehouse has a certain way
of psyching up before a race and
cooling down afterwards.
"Before a race
1
like to think
about how I'm going to approach
the course and concentrate,'' she
said. "Then after I'm done I'll
take a run down some moguls just
for my own satisfaction."
As captain she likes to share
some of her. enthusiasm by, "yell-
ing and cheering about how
Marist is gonna win or just going
wild!," she said.
With that kind of winning
spirit, Moorehouse looks forward
to the NCAA regionals and the
Eastern States Association Races,
which are races outside of col-
legiate activities on a national
level.
"Last year I was two seconds
away from going out to Idaho for
the Regional Championship
because of a small mistake,''
Moorehouse said. "I hope to get
that chance again."
Journalist urges blacks to be concerned
by
G"'.~11
SlVi_llt~~
-- ·
Noble said. .
.
. - · · · The film, "The Loss of Our'
to't'C't'Un.nc.,:-s.,.:
1'.c.c.<::,,;:_d..\."""~
'-Co
~c,b'-.c...,
Gil
Noble, award winning Warrior,,.. concentrates on the
!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·
ABC-TV commentator and jour- latter part of X's life.
It
is these-
nalist, spoke arid presented a film cond of a continuing number of
on the life of Malcolm X to open films Noble is doing on Malcolm
the recent Students' Black X.
commercials and advrtisements
today stress solely "looking out·
· for
self"
as
the all-important
role.
· Noble noted that music,
throughout black history, has
been known for its inspirational
messages, but today it has been
replaced by what Noble calls
"garbage." The lyrics, he said,
prompts strange and immoral
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In his speech, Noble urged
by the Students' Afro-American black students to take a serious
Society, at Vassar College.
look at what is happening to them
Noble, who is a reporter on the and to take into special con~idera-
Eyewitness News show, and host tion the work of black forerun-
and producer of the popular talk ners. "We are where we are
show, "Like
It
Is," focused on because somebody else opened up
Malcolm X's life because, he said, the door for us," Noble said.
"he had had
a
great impact on my
He
warned
against . the
life; ·and he has had a great impact onslaught of a "counter culture"
on the kind of work that I do.''
that diverts the attention of black
Before showing the film, Noble people away from the struggle for
told a crowd of more than
150
equality. Movies,
television,
students that it was his desire that music, drugs and video gamei are
they should profit from the all things that flood the environ-
movie. "We're beginning to see ment with negative messages,
students becoming more concern- because they offer no political or
ed, not only about black history, moral clarity, he said.
but of the present conditions of
He said movies and television
black people and the present con- suggest a different type of value
dition of this society in general," _system than that of the black
acts.
·
He also warned against the use
of drugs and the preoccupation
with video games. "Turn away
from the many of these poisons
that are being deliberately in-
jected into your system,'' he said.
Noble is currently working on a
third film about the life of
Malcolm X, which will be aired in
a few weeks. He also has done
documentaries on the lives of
other famous black Americans,
such as Frederick Douglass and
Jack Johnson, which will be aired
during Black History Week.
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:pQUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
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Now Playing Friday Feb. 18
through Thursday March 16
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9,
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*********************************
There
is
one cadet
about to expose the system ...
THE TRUTH:
IT
WAS ALL A LIE.
1·11F. 1.anns;
G~ DISCIPI.IIIF.
Dear Kevin,
What I feel for you should be
CLASSIFIED Top Secret!
???
Captain,
Pinched neck syndrome runs
rampant in House 1.
K
Kiselik,
Get a real Life!
The many peple who know you
(Not
to
be confused with a friend)
Chris,
Suicide is not the answer for
knowing Jon.
._ PARAMOUNT PICTURE
:A- ·
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this Ad and
'"""" . ....._,
1
··~--:-:;:,-:::::;i,,~}
To the girls on the wall of Leo 608
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******* **************************
Buu Fuu, Buu Fuu ........... .
....
...;
....
....,
.......
ii,,iiii,,..,.. ..... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ , .
858-Rif, New Jersey- up, down,
let's .try the _middle. Good luck
with the_cukes!
Fresh Little Kid
(Who loves ya)
HeyMikeB.
Is it true your so called staff
"development" is really a
"learning experience" or is it just
another reason for wearing Old
Spice - You Salty Dog!
· Your Better Business Bureau
Tony, Don't worry about girls-
women are so much better, but
BUU FUUis best! Guess who?
Johnny
Hope you're not sore bout the
valentines massage, message-
Love your Buu Fuu Buddies.
Bernie
Who made you breakfast last
Saturday morning? Curiously
Eileen, Jane, Linda
Tony
Are you taking care of Bobby?
Eileen.
Ted,
Thank you, it's beautiful!
Lou Ann
Only bunnies would eat Barinanas
and peanut butter! (Sick Bunnies)
Volunteers EMT's needed for
Marist emergency Medical Service
Contact Kevin Ryan at Health
Services.
Tony
Whats the story with the second
floor?
Buu Fuu, Buu Fuu
...
.,,
·
,





































































































'
\
---
_Page
8,
!HE CIRCLE•
Februa;y17, 1983
,
,,,
.
·
Rili1EoxifSShOCki~ill"et
i

f11
McCClnn,
69-59
,
·
-
·
-
.,
.
--
.
-
-
.
-
-
T
-
h
-
·
e
se
·
con· d ha
·
lf wa
_
s pret
_
ty
·
well
.
300 career as~ists and-201 points
.
by
Joe
i:>idzl
__
ulls
.
chipped in 13: Ivan Felder, Der-
-
h
-
-
·
-

--
.
O'H
dom1·na
·
ted by Marist who
_
at
_
all
fort e season.
·
-
-- ·
·-
·
<
-
and
·
w~
were
-
playing
·
good
defense," the
.
coach said . ."
_
Bruce
was great. He was in
,
c~nsta~t
control and they couldn't ·trap
him."
.
When asked if something
had
,
happened to the tea;'ll that
_
inade them overcome their early
second half
-
.
slump Pet
_
r
_
o· said,
"Maybe we're more
.
team
oriented.
It jus
·
t sure helps."
.
_ ,.-
:
.:
.
:
-
_ _
__
.
_
_
·
rick Lamar,
-
and
.
Tom
ara
.
-
.
d . .
d
·
.
At the 4:54
.
point
.
an
This Sat~~day theMarist Red
-
e~ch ,mus~e~ed
11 point~ Ride
_
r.
,
timeskeptRidercontaine msi __ e.
unsportsmanlike
·
-
conduct _Jou,l
Foxes
--
basketball team travels to
.
·
Riders Ke
_
vm Thomas led under Steve Smith started the scoring
-
d
· t Riders
·
2
b
d
·
for
-
the Red Fo
·
xes
·
on a
-
fie
_
ld
_
g
·
oal
_
.
was · assesse
agams
·
·
Loy
·
ola to ra
·
c· e
·
the Grey
·
hounds
_
in the
-
boards with his 1 re o
_
un s
w
G
·
tt for shoving Keith
11
d
d
,
20
Sec
-
onds a
·
fte
-
·
r
·
·
_
the half started
__
.
-
ayne
an
·
-
-
·
an ECAC
.-
_
:
__
M
-
e
·
tro
.
contest
.
The
-
w
_
hile·Ted
-
.
Taylor pu e
-
own
--
·
-
R.d
oach
John
Thi·s set
-
the
·
pace
__
.
for
_
t
_
he Red
.
Denis:
i
er
c
-
·
Greyhoun
-
ds a
·
re i
_
n
_
the c_ e
_
_
Uar of n
_
ine for M_ arist•
·
-
_
-
_
.
-
-
.
·
-
c
·
·
t
had a r
·
ew words with
h lf
d
Foxe
·
s
··
si·nce Ri"der could come on-
-
arpen er
·
-
.
-
.
-
-
the Metro
.
so·u· th di·v1·s1·on,
·
h
_
aving

The first_
a
was
_
a
_
mp a_n
-
r
d
also issued a
h
h
ly Wi.th,·n· two, midway
_
through the re eree an was
_
recently won only their first gam~ t!,lck affair throug out; d witd the
·
half.
.
• _
.
-
. .
technical foul. Tom Meekins
.c~n-
of the season·~

·
· ·
·

~
·
_
. .
several changes
0 ~
the ~ea
_
an
verted
·
all three foul shots giv1ng
Last Thursday, the Red Foxes with_ the sc~re
·
staymg
_fairly
~ven.
The main factor for Marist's
Marist· a comfortable
55-46
lead.
_
BOX SCORE:
upset the Rider Broncs in
a
non-
But m the fm~l few mmut~s it ap-
second half success was guard
After this, Rider posed. few pro-
Rider(S9)
-
_
conference game, 69-59. Marist's peared that Rider had a shght ad-
Bruce Johnson. "'They couldn't
blems and by the time the
.
final
Lee 2-2-6, 0-Hara 4-3-1\,
_
Burke
1-0-2,
-
record
·
is now 7-12 overall and re-
vantage and as
_
late as the three
-
s
··
top Bru
_
ce," were the words
·
or
-
buzzer
.
sounded, Marist ha
_
d won
-

Lamar
5.1:11,
Felder 4-3-1\;Brown
2-0-4,
mal·ns
·
3-5
-
_
·
,•n
'
the
.
con
_
fererice.
minute mark
_
Rid_ er had a five
__
69-59.
Ganu2-0-4,
Thomas4-0-B,
Lonetto
I-0•
2
·
Marisf coach Ron Petro. In the
-
Rider's · record dfops to
.
14-7 point lead.

_ '
.
·
·
-
·
.
_-
:
'.
_
secorid half, the 5-11 sophomore
In his post-game com~en!s
Marlst (69)
.
..
.
-
overall.
·
_
_-
._
-
_• -
But seven key-free th~O\VS by
-
-
scored
16
points, had six re-
Coach Petro called the mght s
Meekins
4-5-13,
Denis s-0-10, Johnson
4•
- -
Steve Smith led all scorers with Bruce Johnsqn
·
,
-
Steve Smit~, ~nd
-
-
bounds
-
and dished off eight
.
victory "a gopd win." "We were
10
-
18, Smith 8-4-20, Taylor 1-0-2,
.
20 points While
-
Bruce Johnson John Donovan gave Manst the
assists. This gives Johnso
_
n
_
over
-
up by the end o! the second half - Donovano-1-1, Metcatf2·1-5.
added 18._ arid
.
·
Tom
'
~eekings lead at the half 30-28.
-
·,_
Hockey
:
:
team
-
skat~s
.
to
fie;
-
defense
·
fails
by Jeanne LeGloahec and
Frank Raggo
·-
Scoring goals h~s not been a
problem this year for the
Ma~ist
College hockey team;
-
preventing
them has.
'
-
In order to retain their hopes
for a spot in the playoffs, Marist
will have to show a much tougher
defense for its remaining games.
_
Depending upon the outcome of-
last night's game
_
against third-
place Kings Point
,
theRe
_
d Foxes
could find themselves slipping out
of playoff contention.
-
·
·
_
They do play the last-place
..
team
.
in
_
the
·
conference, Pace
'
University,
.
nexf Wednesday at
·
-y,
home, following
.
a
game on the
~
-
~
;'}
?ft
;
f.;
?;
~
H'
fft
~~l1{
1
~~~~kf?~i{~~?:!!~
1
;
,;
·
for.the second-place Red Foxes
in
last
·
Wednesday's Metropolit_an
Collegiate Hockey - Conference
game
against
_
-
-
fourth~p,lace
Columbia University.
With
the
_
Foxes leading7-3 with 18:34 left
in the
.
game, they completely
Soccer
-
·
team
·
comes
.
inaoors
,
by
John Bakke
Febr.uary is genera1ly not the
time of year for
·
outdoor sports,
·
and so those Marist students who
enjoy watching a good ga111e must
do so indoor~.
You know -
the usual things:
watching a basketball game at the
McCann center, going into town
to the civic center to watch some
hockey, dropping by McCann
again for the soccer game. Soccer
game?
·
For
those
who weren't aware of
it Marist does have
.
an indoor
s~ccer team. In fact, they've had
·-
one for nearly ten years, accor-
'
ding to
·
.
Howa
·
rd
"Doc"
:
Goldman, who coaches both the
currently activedndoor as wen :3s
_.
the outdoor team, which JJ.~!1}'.~,1ts_
'
•.,
'
scason
·
1n
·
tne
·
ra11;:-
·
·,
·
.
--~--
---·
·
·
·
Goldman,
:
helps to keep
.the
players

working together as a
team . ."It keeps them involved
with soccer and it keeps them
together
as a group," he said.
"With.a lot of teams you have a
faH season and then the guys dis-
band
·
and you don't see them
again until the next fall. That's
not the way with this group.
They're together· right until the
end of March."
Indoor soccer is a much quicker
.
game than the more traditional
·
outdoor version, according to
Goldman. "It's a very exciting
game, it's very fast-paced," said
Goldman,
"There
are no stop-
pages -
you don't stop the game
for anything
.
In terms of being
close to the action and being in-
-
volved, the indoor game is more
-
exciting
.
to watch."
:. :
According to Goldman, this in•
door sport differs from the in-
door soccer you might have seen
on television. "It's not the same
indoor gaine that you see with the
pros," he said. "We don't use the
walls' it's not hockey without
The team do;;n't play a
.
season
of
-
individual
·
matchups, as the,
outdoor team does, but rather a
series of seven .indoor tour-
naments. Two
·
of those tour-
naments
.
will- be
·
at Marist; th~
first is Sunday, Feb.
20,
and the
second is on Sunday, March 27.
.
skates. We play soccer, indoors."
forgot about the defensive aspect
_
-
-_
·R
_
_
ob
,
Trib~ll
_
'ii~es
_
a ~h
_
ot d
_
urlng a recent
_
-
cla
_
sh
_
. (p
_
ho
__
fo_
-
b
_
y
__
-
.
_
-
-
--
.

..
-
-
.
and enabled Columbia to
·
score
-
-
_
Each tournament ~onsists
of
a
--
..
-
-
Goldthan said that this year's
--
Jive goals in the last 18 minutes
:
·
'
Jeff
Keily)
·
-
·
-
·
--
-
· ·
·-:
numbei: of short games'. Sunday's
team looks to
·
be in good shape
for the 8-8 tie .
.

--
~
·
-
-
·
·
··
-
-
-
·
-
tournament will be decided by 16 · going into the season
.
"There's a
·
In
-
-.
-
what·
-
_
-
_
w
·
as a
_
t
_
,-ght,
_
-
h
_
ard-
_ -
enabled Rob · Trabulsi with the M~rist.
~
Goaiie Brian Kelly was
-
·
-
l
k ·
1
-
-
·
,,
h
·d

games involving two Marist teams · very
.
c ose- m
..
group,
e sa1 .
fought contest,
.
things looked in
- •
help of
;
defenseman
-
Kevin successful in
·
stopping
40 shots.
--
and six

guest squads, with each
"I like to think that without being
hand
for
Marist after the first 40 Murphy and
·
Steve Pryor m!l,ke
-
Mari
.
st had
:
47 shots
_
on
.
the
game lasting 20 minutes .
.
Garnes
really intense aboutit, we do
it
as
minutes of
-
play. FoHowing t_wo
the
$Of!!
8-5.
_
Columbia didn't Columbia

-
-
-
goalie;
·
Fernado
.
are scheduled to start at 10 a.m.
well as anybody."
-
first
-
__
:

period
:
goa
_
ls_
.
by
_
J·unior
_
giv
_
e up
-
and sco
_
red
t
_
hree
·
ti
_
mes Rodriquez.
-
,
.
.
.
.
a d
·11
b
·
t-
th
- ·
h
-
-
-
n w1
_
e con muous
ro
_
ug
·--_
When
.
a
·
sked about
·
spec1·f1
'
c
·
deferiseman
:_
Bdan Foley
· -
and
.
ending
the
gaaje w
_
fth a tie of8-8.
The Next
·
and Last home game
h f' I
-
5
15
_
.
-
-
- -
-
'
·
u ·
t e ma game at
_
:
-
p
.
m.
-
str
·
engths
___
th
-
,·s
_
ye
·
ar, Goldman
sophorriore·centerRob
-
Caldiero,
·
:
_: ,
In the third period Marist had a

is Feb .
.
23 against Pace mver-
:
Marist scored four goals in. the
·
goal.:..disallowed because a man
·
sity.
-
Come
;
_
and see
·
the Foxes
Goldman said that the team is
said: "With Wayne Cargill and
secorid per1cid 10 open up a 6c3

was in the crease. Cr
_
aig Thier was _ skate tQ victory;
made up of members of the
·
out-
Tito Diaz up front playing of-
-
lead going into the finalsession.
-
_
gi,.,en a two minute penalty for
'
·
·
P
door team who want to keep th
.
cir
·
fense, we're
_
going to score goals.
· -
. A
minute and
·
a half
'.
into the
.
-
being
,
in
_
the
_
crease and a
·
game
15
-
skills sharp during the off-season.
·
Mike Terwilliger, who's played a
w
L T
ihir
cf
Tim Graham shot o
_
ne past
--
·
mis~ond!.u;f for unsportsmanlike
2
3
"We play together outside and
·
lot of indoors, is very good inside.
cblumbias
·
goalie widening the conduct, Marist was ab!e to take
15
then inside for three months,"
·
And with the-skill level of people
William
Paterson
II
I
I
Marlsl
7
5
I
score to 7-3..it looked likeMarist advantage of thre~ of the
.
four
13
said.Goldman.
~•It
makes a
.
dif-
like Mark Adams and Jimmy
was going jto
-
get a win at home
·
_
penalties given to Columbia with
12
_
.
ference next year in terms
of
:
Bride -
and Joe Vasile-Cozzo is
KlngsPolril
6
.
4
l
Columbia
.
5
4
2
only to have Columbia
.
score two powerplay goals. Columbia could
1
~
knowing each other, helping each
another one that works hard -
qtii~k
.
goals;
. _
·
_
_
__ ·
only ~akc; advam~ge ~f four out
8
.
other, and skill leveL"
-
they could be a very exciting
c.w.-Post
4
5
-2
F.D.U
.-C
.
-
4
8
0
Another
·penalty
on Columbia
.
the eight penalues awarded to
J
-
The
indoor
game,
.
_
said
group."
Fordham ·
4 10
0
Pace
.
l
1l
I
_
by
BIii Travers
It's anybody's guess who took
the court last night in the St.
_
Francis
(N.Y.) gym
and
who will
take the
-
court
_
Saturday at
Loyola.
. Is it the Red
·
Foxes that came
from behind and defeated the
University
'
of Baltimore and
shocked
-
heavily-favored Rider
last week?·
-
Or is it the Red Foxes who were
embarassed
·
by Long Island
University in
a
conference match-
tight direction or if the team is
taking
a
step backward -
the
first since Marist's climb into
.
the
.
Division I ranks.
_
·
In its final six games, the Red
Foxes will play five important
conference tilts (not
-
important
for the playoffs, but important in
assessing the program -
more on
playoff picture later) including St.
Francis (N.Y.) in the Mccann
Center
Monday,
a
game
rescheduled from Jan. 15.
Will the Foxes soar or fall?
up?
.
_
·
Playoffs:
The conference playoffs
The next two weeks will be the
·
this year are designed very much
most important games Marist has
like_ the National Hockey League
ever played. These contests will
playoffs. You remember, play an
,
decide whether the Marist basket-
·
80-gamescheduleand let 16 teams
ball program
is
heading in the into the playoffs except for five.
What is_ th~ sense of the regular
Conference winner.
-
-
holding back until later in the
season, you ask?
-
-
Women's BBall: The women
·
are
·
season and waiting for
_
the peak."
Well, I don't have an answer.
b~Wk in action after a week layoff.
-
Also, the team is still outraged
But I do know that the same
-
They play at home Saturday. Last
at the type of sneakers they must
question can be
_
asked about the
week the teain was
·
snowed out
use to run indoors at Mccann.
__
ELAC conference basketball
against.Wagner, and before that The preferred black-soled shoes
tournament. The tournament will
won by forfeit.
are not allowed because of scuff
include all teams, with the
Track: Alihough a new track
marks - that
_
are
.
left behind .
_
preliminary round on March 7
coach who seems dedicated to im-
."Other colleges like Stena can use
·
with
-
#3 playing #6 and #4 playing
prove the program was hired, the
_
any shoe they wish, "said Padala.
#5. The top two teams get byes.
harriers are not totally satisfied:
"We're limited to a type
_
of
The following night, #I
will
-
Because of this season's late start,
sneaker
that's
not
made
play the winner of #4/#5 and #2
-
the team is three weeks behind its
anymore."
will battle the #3/#6 winner. The
opponents.
·
-
,
These words
were spoken
tournament semi-finals will be
'_'We're working hard and try-
·
several weeks ago by former track·
held on March 10 with the
ing to do our best," said Mike
coach and now public address an-
North/South
Division
Cham-
Padala, sophomore member of nouncer
·
Rich
..
Stevens. Stevens
-
pionship on March 12. The
the teain. "At this early stage in
said that Siena College has similar
conference champion will
_
then
the ~~Jqn we don't want to push
surface and that they have their
advance to the• NCAA
·
tour-
ourselves. It's like a
-
training
maintenance crews work harder
nament against the Midwes_t Ch~
season right now and we're
to clean the marks.


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