The Circle, March 3, 1983.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 28 No. 15 - March 3, 1983
content
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Volume 28; Number
-
15
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. Marist
College,
f:'Oughl<eepsle,
N~ Y.
March 3,
1983
,,
Pub: Nomorea1cOhOlo11Tuesdays; ThurSdays
nights, will be inoved down
.
stairs
which· this policy was im~
tivities Betty Yeaglin, who had
to the Pub for entertainment on
plemented
·
and
,
think
.
the Ad-
input in
.
_
the decision-making
A prop
·
o
_
sal that the Pub
Tuesday nights, according
.
.
to
.
ministration should haveincluded
process, according to Cox, was
become non-alcoholic two days
·
Cummins.
.
·
·
· -
-
more of
·
the
'.
campus
·
ori
:
the
supposed
.
.
_
to
.
·
insert
·
an an-
per week has been accepted and
"I think n~m-alcoholic
·
days
:
in
decision .
.
Perhaps re-evaluation
nouncement in this week's' edition
will become effective tonight,
thepubisagoodidea.Itgives
·
the
of their
_
procedure should be
of the
.
Weekly Happenings, but
according
-
to
-
John Cummins;
entire campus a place to
.
socialize
.
considered
.
"
.
.
the
-
announcement. did not
·
ap-
manager cif the Pub
.
·
_ ·
-
, __
-
during the
·
week,!' said Cummins.
,
J: R. Fleming, president of the
pear. Yeaglin refused tci commerit
,
Tuesdays and Thursdays have
Members of the Council of Non-Traditional
.
Student onthesubject.
,
-
been
,
selected to be the non-
_
Student Leaders said
-
they were
Organization
;
agreed
;
"It
seems
.
alcoholic days in the
·
Pub, ac-
upset that they had no input in the
to _
me
·
that the administration
·
Other members of the student
cording to Cummins.
·
decision°making process.
·
·
would have had the courtesy to at
b
O
d
Y
·
a Is
O
ex Pressed
The
.
idea was · proposed by
"It
is encouraging ·to see
-
that - least consult the
.,
Council
of
dissatisfaction with
the ad-
Gerard A. Cox, dean
'
of student
the administration is providing
Student Leaders. It :would appear
ministration's decision. Some of
affairs, earlier this semester
.
in
alternative social
events
fot
,
to me thatthe Administration has
those who can drink contend that
order to provide a place for those
students
,
under
:
19," said- senior
_
no regard for our
·
positions as
:
they are being penalized because.
Marist students who are now too
class president
·
Ted Pe~rotte.
campus leaders, or
_
as adults
they will have to go off campus
young to
-
drink legally to
"However; there are i:nany other
·
capable
·
c,f making
·
a:
valuable
-
on the non-alcoholic Pub days.
socialize.
The
,
proposal,
,
ac-
possible places for such events
;
I
contribuffon
·
_
to
:
school policy,"
The Pub is the only place on
cording to Cox, was accepted
·
fed
·
that stu~erit governments
Fleming said.
-
·
_
·
campus that serves alcohol.
Feb
.
21 by the administration.
should have had some input in the
-
·
_
When asked why the Council of
Resident Assistant
Dawn
!'The purpose of making the
_
,
matter, pr at least been notified.
.
Student Leaders was not officially
-
·
Sturtevant said
;
" I agree that
pub
_
non-alcoholic was not only
·
This policy
·
change
is
a surprise to
.-
notified
:
on the approval of the
·
there should be
ii
place provided
·
·
for those under 19, but
_
to have a
me!"
.
·
policy, Cox said,-
"I
planned to
for people to congregate without
place where all students w<>uld be
,_
,
.
Commuter Union
·
Presiderit
in{orm them at the
'
Jan.
21 CS.L.. ,alcohol, but,it should
;
be
someplace,,
abk to socialize' without
-
a bar Greg Luna said,
·
"1.
am not op-
meeting; however, the agenda was
other than the Pub.
I
think that
atmosphere," said Cox.
.
_.
posed to _non
-
alcoholic events on
·
rather lengthy, and I never got the
there will be
_
very little business
The Coffee House, usually held
campus,
:·
or in the Pub for that
opportunity
.
"
_
·
·
down there on Tuesdays and
in Fi_t~side Lounge on Thursday
matter.
I do object to the way
·
in
. Coordinator of
.
College
·
Ac-
.
.
Thursdays."
_
.
by
Mark V. Zangari
,
.
Studenis who are ~nder the age
of 19 and not able to drink legally
appeared to hav!! mixed feelings
about the Pub change. Freshman
·
Edward Flynn said it might be a
good
--
-
idea because
·
under-age
-
students
-
are turned away at
alcoholic events, and this would
unable them to mingle and sperid
sometime in an area where they
-
are usually not allowed.
-
Andrew Crecca, -president
of
the freshmen class, said,
"I
am
glad
.
to see an effort being made
to accommodate freshman;
however,'! don't thinkdry days in
the Pub is a long~term answer.
-
·
There should be a permanent
place where people can socialize
·
all week long."
-,
.
When asked
·
whether the ad-
ministration planned on using the
Pub permanently as
a
site for
non-alcoholic events, Cox said;
"It is not the final answer. It is
just until we set up a permanent
area,
.
which involves cqnstruction
and money,"
:LaMorte
:
cuts
·
back
,
·q
:-,
.
'.;~.
'p'enqlty in
br(IW[cafie
t
-· f
iilrltitr
1:t
0
t@i
~ilj~ii~i
t
~t:-?
t!
"
:?'.';
~
_
his
''
resideiit
·
:
·
_
assistarit
c:
positjon
/ _
_
,.
Friday the two
,-
~et and Clare
?i
,
:
-
~
Instead
/
LaMorte
'
said
,
Clare wHl
'.
told La~~forte- th~t}ie tho!Jght
·
he
_
_
.
be suspended from hisjob for one
-
·
coul~
·
stil!
.
f~ncuon as an
_
R.A.
·
-
}
-
·
week
;
;;,:
·
_
.
,:-
-
,-~,_:_
·
_
·
-.
·
·
despite his mvo!veme
_
nt
m
.
the
,-,
·
Clare's
·
suspension
will
·
be
fight,
,
~aMo~tes1id.
.
}L
1
_·
March
5 thr(?ugh
_
March_
11
in-
.
purmg Fnday s meeting, Clare
{
i
elusive
in response to the Feb. 15
said that he told LaM~rte that
,
j!
fight at Skinner's which involved
there were no othe~ Jobs on
1\,,
ClareJirid severar:other people,
campus that fulfill his need to
\;,
said LaMorte.
_C
-/
:
.
help people. "You don't get to
-.
·,
,
~After the March break, .Clare
interact with people on a per~onal
:
:,is·
j
will return fo
:
his normal duties
as
.
level in any
.
other
_
student JOb,"
'\
l
.,
,
the 4th floor Leo
R
.
A.,
LaMorte
Clare said Mo~day.
.
_
}
.
.
:
.
.
,:I
.
said
:
· -
·
__
_
LaM~rte said h_e agreed
to
~o
·
:
F
-
ans
·
d
0
1s
·
play
··
-
~nthuslasin
·
wil
.
h
_ ·.
t
..
he
..
•
_
tradi
_
tio
_
n
_
ai
toilet
__
.
pap
.
er
_
,
·
LaSt
:
week
·
Clare decided to
-
-
_
a!onglwf it~'Itfhe behef Clarel has
m
-
.
_
-_
:
,
·
_'.
_-
,
.
-
__
-
.
__
;:
1
•
appeal LaMoi-te's decision
-
to
;
h1mse .
more peop e ~ere
.
~
throw after
.
Mai-Isl scored
hs
first basket against FDU. (photo
>
reljeve him
,
of his R.A. job:
·.
_
able t
_
~ express, or _even ma~1fest
t
•
,
-
byJotiitBa~ke)
.
-
-
-
-
-
-
_ Before
'
the
·
officiaLappeal
_
was
!hat kmd_ofa11 aw_tude,:we d be
:t?:
·
·
· _
broµght
befPrc
_·
a
·
--_
j
_
udical ~o~~d,
-
tn
fant
_
~suc sh~pe,
_
he sa~d.
cliSs times
sChedlll~d
·
t
orJall
•
.
~
•
'
·
_
by
Lou
Ann
Seeiig
registrar, said
-
she :is currently
week undenhe new ~chedule will
.
working on a calelldar that will
be one hour and 20 minutes long.
.
.
_
In order t~ us~ Marist;s limited
_
begin classes Sept. 6, the Tuesday
·
The first class of each day
will
run
•
.
:
"
classroom space more efficiently,
·
after Labor Day
:
The calendar is
.
from 8
to
9;20 a.m. Classes
-
that
-
-
ttmesiot
:
·
scheduling
,
will be
subject
'
to approval by
-
tbe
meet three times a
'
week
will
meet
•
'
_
-
changed next semester, according
academic vice president
'
s office
'.
·
for
55
minutes each time; and
-
to
.-.
Academic'_ Vice
'
President
_
The elongated teaching day
will __
there will
'
still be
,.-
10
.
:
'
ininutes
Andrew Molloy.
_
__ . _
_
give students who have jobs more
between classes, Smyiesaid.
,
Under the new schedule, he
flexibili_ty · in
-
their schedules,
The addition
·
or five minutes io
said; there shcmld
"
b~ no e~P!Y
·
.
ac~ording _to .
A?~x
Smy
0
1~! :
·
each class period is "arbitrary in
classrooms at
-
any given ume
,
ass1stan
..
t
_
r_eg1strar
'..
If
:
~
ome ne
that we
-
.
are
·
a
·
bove the m
_
,
_
.
nimu
_
m
.
,''
.
,
-
''This allows
·
classro6ms tQ be
.
·
h
k
I
the day he
_
as to ~or e~r Y
10
,,
·
e s'a·id
said Molloy." The extra minutes
scheduled for complete usage,"
has the
.
later timeslot,
h_
.
,
per class insure that the college
-
he said.
.
-
.
-
and t
_
hose who start their Jobs
will meet the siate requirements:
Class
·
periods
will be five
later m the day can
_
take classes
-
-
minutes longer than they are now,
during the earlier timeslots.
In
.
addition to the
5
p.m.
and an extra timeslot wiH
be
.
According to a New York Stat~
timeslot, other new timeslots
added that runs_ during th'e dinner
law,
•
every three-credit course
include: one that runs Tuesdays
hour.
·
·
must meet for a minimum of from· 8 to 9:20 a.m. and Thur-
.
Currently there is a break
2,250 minutes,
.
said Molloy.
sdays from 9;30 to 10:50 a.m.;
_
between the end of day classes at
·
Marist's current schedule meets
two that run three times a week on
4:50, and the beginning of night
that requirement, but in cases
Mondays, -Wednesdays
.
and
classes at 6:30. The new schudule
where there are holidays and
·
Fridays; and one that runs from 8
includes a
5 to 6:20 p.m. class.
vacations, there is a chance that
.
to 9:20 a.m. on Wednesdays and
Also planned for next semest~r -some courses may fall below the
Fridays. There is also a scheduled
is a change in the academic
_
_
minimum, he said.
·
free-slot
on
Thursdays from 11
calendar. Dr. Elizabeth Ross~
~11
classes that meet twice a
a.m. to 12:20 p.m
.
'
,
;
'
Clare
.
and LaMorte met and
LaMorte said he re-evaluated
reached
·
a new
.
decision that was
continued on page 2
Weds.
.
Fri.
Mon.
Tues.
Thurs.
\
.
,
8:00/
9:20
··
·
1
,
,.
4
1
l
1
-
·
'
.
'
'
9:30/
·
.
-
.
·
..
10:50
·
..
3
5
-
3
4
5
·
· '
'
11:00/
·
-
,._
'
-
11:10"
6
7
6
Free
·
7
(8 &
9)
11:30/
1:50
'
8
9
8
9
;, (8A)
..
11:30/
1:15
8A
8A
8A
(10
& 11)
1:00/
3
:
10
10
11
10
11
(10A)
a
2:00/
2:55
-
lOA
JOA
JOA
3:30/
4:50
-12
13
'
12
13
..
5:00/
6:20
14
15
14
1S
Evenings
6:30/9:10
:
New schedule for
'
83-'84.
,
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•Page2
•·THE CIRCLE· Maich
3, 1983•---------'--------------
1111111~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Clate
.
continued
from
page 1
.
the part of his decision that af~
fected .Clare "in light of what
Willy had said."
· ·
LaMorte said he has always
encouraged people to approach
him
·
if they disagreed with a
decision he has made
:
.
· "The.function of·disdpline ifit
is
.
to be of any real v;i,lu~ is what
.
that
:
person learns
,
.
not
· :
what
·
a
person suffers,'
.
'
he saicl
.
.
·
"Has
something been learned by this?
Are we better for it?" he said. It
is
_
necessary
.
that people . learn
from situations such as this one
"otherwise I could not see myself
being
.
part
.
of
a
·
d
i
sciplinary
·
process," La\\'tm:te said.
· •·
·
-
. :
··
According
.
to
·
·
LaMorte;
·
there
has been much hostiiity toward
.
him and his original decision
.
regarding Clare. He said the
.
situation
.·
regarding
his
disciplinary decision proved to be
a very difficult thing for the
R.A
·
.•s to deal with.
·
·
A fight occurred Tuesday, Feb.
15 outside · Skinner's, and in-
volved
>
three
.
R.A.'s,
.
.
five
freshmen
>-
:
and
·
•
·
·
one
·
residence
director.
·
-
Cl.ire
.·
had been
·
ter-
-
minated in a decision made the
followingMo~day by L
_
aMorte ..
·
D.C. tripplqnned
·
by
Frank Raggo
The Marist college Public Opi-
nion Institute, headed by Dr. Lee
Miringoff, is sponsoririg a
·
five-
day trip to the nation's capitol
from Tuesday, April 5, to Sun-
day, April
10.
.
This trip, according to Dr.
Miringoff, will provide students
who are interested in participating
in a unique learning experience to
gain knowledge of our govern-
ment and how it works on
a
na-
tionaJ.level.. . .
·
.
.
.
.
·
.·.
· ._
.
. • .
.
:
· .
;the
/
trip' :includes
.
many .-
tours
thi-oug~du't ii:le
capitoi
~s
welJ'a~
seminars in
•
which
·
·
students
·
can
.
.
:
..
.
.
at
>
scnoa
..
.
.
.
WITH
.
:
.
.
AR
'
MY ROTC
.
.
Ar111y
ROTC Scholarships
n
·
ow
.
·offered at
.
.
MARIST
Call:
·
Captain Wingate
(212) 295-3533
(COLLECT)
.
Army ROTC scholarshps pay for college tuition, textbooks,
. laboratory fees and other purely educational expenses.
,
Scholarship cadets also get a tax-free subsistence·
allowance of $100 per month for up to 10 months a year,
for each 'year of the scholarship. (The value of the scholar-
ship depends on the tuition and other educational costs of
· the university.)
·
In
_
addition, your textbooks and supplies (notebooks, paper,
pens,
·.
etc.) are also paid.
'
t
.··
participate. Scheduled sif° far
'
to . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
·
•
·
. .
.
•
·
·
,
- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
spea~ with the Maris( group are
American Broadcasting com-
pany's correspondent
.
for Time
magazine, Douglas Brew.
The group will also visit the
museums in Washington, D
.
C
.
,
namely the Smithsonian Institute,
and
·
sit in on hearings of the
Senate ahd the House of
Representatives.
·
·
The
·
cost of the trip will be
$150 .
.
This includes travel fare,
.
.
'
(the bus
will leave M.arist on Tues-
day afternoon and r
'
etum Sunday
evening), hotel accommoaations
and some food, mostly dinners.
Those who are interested
.
sho
.
uld contact Dr. Miringoff in
his
'
of(ice, Donnelly
.
Hall room
205, or call the extension number
438.
.
.
.
Dance-a-thon set
Marist students will dance
.
for
twelve
straight
hours
to
everything from "fifties rock" to
riew wave music when the Circle
K Club sponsors its second an-
.
nual
·
Muscular
Dystrophy
Association Dance-A-Thon
·
on
April 9.
.
. ·
·
The Circle K Club; a nation-
wide community service organiza-
tion, will be holding the Dance-A-
Thon in the Stone Lounge in Leo
Hall
.
It will last from 1 p.m. to 1
a.rit. that Saturday
.
According to
Donna Cashin,
who
along with
Kelly Slater is co-chairperson of
.
the event, the club is now looking
for students to participate in the
Dance-A-Thon.
"Last year there were twelve
couples who took part and they
.
raised $1,000," said Cashin.
"This year we're hoping to sign
up at least fifty people and raise
at least $2,000."
One of the rules of the Dance-
A-Thon is thal those participating
must collect at least $30 ahead of
time. Their sponsors will be re-
·
quired to pay them a certain
amount for each hour that they
dance.
Internouse
CoU
·
-
ncil
:
·
Ne:Ws·
··
_
ThJs article Is to Inform students of the activities planned by the
I.H.C. and the Individual Dorm Councils for the rest of the year
as
wall
as
summarize BRIEFLY what has already bean done this year.
.
LEO DORM COUNCIL (Social Committee) IYllchele Irwin president,
.
Kata Huggard v.p. Events In Leo Include the Rollerskating Party,
which will be offered again soon. House l's volleyball tourney with
the first floor rising to the occasion, and House Ill's Murder Inc.
.
ending with a pizza pirty arid Lori Tratnor and Larry Sulllvan
·
as
the last survivors. Also lri the
·
works Is a mural contest for the
basement. Social committee work Includes Into non-alcoholic
ac-
.
tlvHles and facllltlas.
.
·
-
. ~
-
... .
SHEAHAN DORM
COUNCIL (Food C~m,mfttaa) Andy Crecca presl- .
dent. Ping-pong and racquetball tournaments are underway
as
Is a
·
plan to paint and redecorate the lounge. Food Committee work has
·
Included Dell hours on Sat. and Sim., suggestions about Improv-
ing the Pub an_d looking Into a possible i'ion-alcohollc plilca for pao-
.
·
pie to socialize that would be comparable to the Pub.
-
NORTH END COUNCIL (Resident Life Commlttaa) Mark Zangari
praildent, Liz Murphy v.p. The North End Is currently conducting
a survey of resident students concerns to batter adapt rules and
policies. The N.E. council ls also attempting to address soma con-
cerns of the Townhouses such as a Bulletin Board In the
Townhouse parking Lot.
·
CHAMPAGNAT
DORM
COUNCIL(Malntenance Committee) John
Zanre president, B
.
onnle Hade v.p. Conducted a survey of
students' feeling towards the registrar's office. They are also ar-
ranging for meetings between the maintenance staff a
_
nd the
I.H.C. Dorm Wars are stlll In progress and participation and en-
thusiasm Is stlll high.
INTER-HOUSE COUNCIL In the future: Our Resident Field Day will
be During Spring Fever Day, APRIL
9.
Teams from each house will
compete CAMPUS-WIDE and a team wlll be crowned Marlst Col-
lege Spring Fever Field Day Champs. Also• we'll be looking Into
setting up two televisions with events for the week programmed
·
on them in places where students can read them
.
Anyone with any
other suggestions Just contact a member of the council. Thank
you.
James Galvin, President I.H.C.
CAMPUS
.
ELECTIONS
1
.
983-84
.
TERM
·
Any full-time Marist student may run for any
one
.
of the
·
following positions:
·
·
..
.
Student Govern111ent (C
.
SL) President
-
·
Student Academic Committee
·
President
,
College u
·
n1on· B
.
oard President
·
_:
Commuter Union President
·
Inter-House
.
Council President
_·
_ Class of
'84, '85, '86
..
- President
-Secretary
·
· -Vice-President - Treasurer
·
•
If
you -will
_
be a full-time· student next year
.
and are interested in running for one of the
·
above offices, you must submit a DECLARA-
TION OF CANDIDACY by 5:00 P.M. FRIDAY
·
MARCH
·
11
to the Elections Commissioner
c/o the CSL Office
(CC268).
Forms may be
picked up in the CSL Office.
·
*NOTE: A general information meeting for
all candidates
wm
·
be held on Monday
March 7th at
5:15
p.m. in CC249.
--~------11111!1~--------------------------March
3, 1983-THECIRCLE-Page
3--•
.The long fight·
··.tcJ·clean··a
river
'
'
'
'
.
.
by
Paul
Murnane
Tri ch Io roe t. ha n e,
Dichlorobenzene,
Ploy
Chlorinated Biphenyl, (PCB) and
Benzene all have something· in
common other than the fact that
they. · are ·· hazardous
toxic
chemicals .
. According to several en-
vironmental groups, they can all
be found in The Hudson River,
where many communities, in-
cluding Poughkeepsie, draw their
public water supplies ..
"Poughkeepsie residents are
. facing a long term health hazard
from
low levels
of. toxic
chemicals," said Walter Hang, a
staff scientist with The New York
Public Interest Research group
(NYPIRG).'
"The problems go
far beyond
what has been disclosed to the
public," said Hang. "Authorites
haven't looked for problems, so
· they haven't found them."
Hang worked on the safe water
campaign . which
discovered
PCB's in the Poughkeepsie water
system in 1976.
A
spokesman · for
the
Poughkeepsie city engineer's of- .
fice said that the city "tests for
everything" and that routine PCB
· testing was stopped in 1980 when
the PCB level recorded a "zero
level."
According to the .spokesman, if
PCB's are detec:ted at a plant
upstream from Poughkeepsie, it
alerts all other water plants in the
area.
Hang called the system,
.. "highly inadequate," and was
critical of Poughkeepsie officials.
"They have their heads in the
sand," said Hang. "They are
.
concerned with 19th . century
. health concerni.. If no one dies
. -:::· from
'
Cholera·
or Typhoid, they
· consider their job done .. ~and peo-
ple shouldn't accept that.''
.
Hang is not alone in his assess-
. ment of the water and the Hudson
. River.
"I don't drink it if I can help
it," said Carol Sondheimer, the
Environmental Director· of Scenic
· Hudson, a Poughkeepsie-based
non-profit "watchdog" agency.-
"If.I were a mother with kids I
would be very nervous," she said.
•'Chemicals don't go away by
putting a little chlorine .in the
water."
Hudson
River
Sloop-
Clea'.rwater,
Inc.,
·
is
another
Poughkeepsie based enviromental
group.
Sarah Johnston, Clearwater's
environmental· director, said she
feels that people don't· really
know what is being dumped into
the river.
· In reference to the Clean Water
Act of 1972, Johnston said that
uif you don't· have state troopers,
you can't enforce the 55-mile an
hour speed limit;u
The decision on future funding
to the Clean Water Act will be
made by congress on March 1.
PCB is the most documented
pollutant in the river, according
to Johnston. There are about 40
"hot spots," mostly north of
Poughkeepsie, of major· PCB
contamination.
"General Electric was a major
polluter of the river for years,"
said Hang of NYPIRG. PCB, a
toxic industrial waste product,
has been linked to cancer. Two
G.E. electrical parts plants, one in
Hudson Falls, and the other in
Fort Edward, have been labeled
Hudson
River water ls being contaminated by many toxic chemicals, according to en-
vironmental groups. (photo by Jeff Kiely).
as the key PCB polluters, accor-
Albany, and hundreds of com-
remove PCB contaminated river
millions of dollars worth of
ding to Johnston. G.E. lost a
panies who dump into the river
sediment to a closed landfill. The
research," said the Clearwa~er
lawsuit several years ago, and
without proper· processing. In the
Environmental Protection Agen-
newsletter. -"This effort appears
money from a fine placed on G.E.
Poughkeepsie area, Wes tern
cy approved the dredging plan
to be wasted unless the EPA
was used to finance the study that Publishing, IBM, and Trap Rock
last December, and put the pro-
reverses its decision." (to use
discovered· PCB's in Poughkeep-
quarry have been named in
a
list. ject on a "Superfund" list.
Clean water act funds)
sie water in 1976.
of river polluters, published by
In a recent newsletter, Clear- . . PCB is. just one of the
A spokesman for General Elec-
Clearwater.
.
water charged that funding for
chemicals polluting the Hudson.
tric could not be reacl1.ed for com-
... Some attempts to clean.upJoxic,, ..
•th.~
dredgit)-g:,. should'. come.
from -~
Scenic Hu9-son.spokesperson Son-
• ment.· ., ., :•-·
"
chemical pollution in the.J¼udson ·. tqe,;Clean· Water Act, and noL .. dheimer.-..says_thaLif. each. pollu-
9ther _ pollution sources ._ are
are underway, according to. 91ear-
from
a
Superfund, \Vhich has 400
tant is dealt with, the river can be
. · sewage treatment plants, many in · water and Scenic Hudson. · · · · ·other projects waiting for funds.
restored.
.
need for expensive upgrading; .
Orie
method of removing PCB
"A plan to dredge PCB con-
"The river is cleaner than it was
foundries near Cold Spring,
N.Y,
pollution has been .to dredge the
taminated sediments ... has been
10
years ago," she said, "and it
a conrall . Di~sel facility near
PCB contaminated area, and -· the subject of years of study and
can be cleaner."
A
silent crippler stalks the Hudson Valley
-
-
.
.
by
Jane M. Scarchilli
.
As Mary walks away from her
car parked in a handicapped
parking spot, people tend to stare.
She is not in a wheelchair and
does not have a· cane. Mary has to
park close to the building beause
she must watch'her feet touch the
ground; she cannot feel them:
Mary
Francis,
21,
of
Poughkeepsie,
has
Multiple
Sclerosis, a ne11rological . disease
that
affects
approximately
500,000 Americans. The Mid:
Hudson area has the great.est in-
cidence of the illness, according
to the National Multiple Sclerosis
Society.
·
According to the MS society,
approximately two-thirds of those
who have MS experience their
first symptoms between ~he ages
of 20 and 40. MS is more
prevalent in· the temperate zones
of the United States where the air
is cooler.
There is no cure for MS and no
way of knowing who will get the
disease. . The causes of it are
primarily unknown. MS is not a · in Francis' life due to her illness.
hereditary disease, but you have a . "It's hard to plan . anything
higher chance of getting it if so-
because
I
don't know what will
meone in your family has the
happen next. MS can affect me
disease.
a·nyplace where I have nerves. It's
Frances was diagnosed with the
scary," she said ..
disease after many tests which
With the help of a physical
eventually pointed to MS. "I was
therapist, Francis learned to walk
sent home the first time from the
again. "I look at my feet, or I
hospital with what they diagnosed
listen to them to know that I am
as. a swelling of the brain. Two . walking," she said. "I also learn-
days later I passed out and Jost
ed to pay attention to a vibration
the feeling of my legs,"· Francis
in the back of my ear while I'm
said.
walking. It's one of those things
There have been many changes
you don't notice when you just
normally walk," she said.
Suspect arraigned.in Caputo's/ire
Scientists have three theories on
how someone might develop MS.
A slow-a·cting virus, an immune
reaction whereby the body attacks
its own tissues by mistake,· or a
combination of both could all be
A Highland man charged with
allegedly setting fire to Joe's
Italian Pizzeria in Hyde Park two
weeks ago was arraigned last
week in connection with a second
fire ·which damaged Caputo's
Restaurant in Poughkeepsie.
John G. Stoming, 23; was ar-
raigned on the latest charge of ar-
son in Town of Poughkeepsie
court and remanded without bail
to Dutchess County Jail, where he
was already being hcld pending
arraignment in co_nnection with
the fire at Joe's.
The fire at Caputo's caused ex-
tensive smoke and. water damage
to the building, and destroyed the
restaurant's food inventory: Ac-
cording to Nick Caputo, owner of
Caputo's Restaurant, the entire
kitchen area had to be scrubbed
down and all the food supplies
disposed of.
According to Caputo, both
fires occurred within 48 hours of
each other and similar.methods of
combustion were used .. "There
was a container of gas or
something thrown through the
front window," he said, "Like a
molotov cocktail." Caputo added
that his restaurant used to be
located in the building the Joe's
Pizzeria now occupies.
· The fire at Caputo's was
discovered by Marist Security per-
sonnel during a routine patrol on
the northern end of campus.
This is the last
_
i.ssue of The Circle
u·ntil March 31
causes.
When the disease hits, the fatty
sheath that protects the nerve
fibers is destroyed and replaced
by hardened tissue. This gives in-
terference to the impulses which
are trying to get to the nerve
fil5ers.
Another local victim of MS,
Jim Holland,
38,
of Poughkeep-
sie,
has been
bound to a
wheelchair for four years.
"I
used
to be very athletic before
I
was
diagnosed · with MS
12
years
ago," Holland said.
"l kept on falling down a lot
while l was running. Tlhe doctors
didn't know what was wrong with
me. They finally decided it was
MS after a year of tests,"
Holla;1d said.
A seven-year member of the
MS society, May Geremino, the
MS Society executive director of
the Mid-Hudson Valley Chapter,
said that the local chapters of the
MS society work on a personal
level.
'.'Through' a network of agen-
cies, we try to alleviate any.of the
problems of the MS patient,"
Geremino said. "We set up sup-
port programs for. the MS patient
and seek out whether they are
eligible for disability insurance
and other types of financial aid."
• The main purpose of the MS
society, according to Geremino, is
to find a cure for MS. "It is im-
portant to know that the MS
society is the only society which
helps the MS person," she said.
For reasons of confidentiality,
Diane Perreira, director of
Special Services, would not give
out the exact number of Marist
students with the disease. "There
are a few people here with the
disease and
to
give the exact
number might give away their
identity," Perreira said.
Although there is no cure for
MS, there are treatments which
help MS victims live with their
disability.
Physical
therapy
relieves muscle tension during at-
tacks of the disease. Medication,
such as hormones or muscle relax-
ers, help reduce the severity of an
MS attack.
There has been a lot of research
done to find a cure for MS. Re-
cent experiments have focused on
a vaccine
to
immunize against
MS, but results are not completed
as of yet.
.....
..
--•Page
4- THE CIRCLE· March
3, 1983-----------~----~-------llllli-----------
R
eade
rS:.,Wtite ...
Ail
letters must be typed triple space wUh ·a
60
space margin, and submitted
t~ ihe - .
Circle office no later than 1 p,m. Monday. Short letters are pr11ferred. We reserve the
right to edit an letters. Letters must be signed, but names may be withheld upo~ · _
request. Letters will be publlshed_dependlng up_on availability of space. -
·
Primates
Dear Editor,
,
Once again I find that a letter
of mine - has in some way
stimulated the synapse ... okay,
let's give him the benefit of the
doubt... synapses of one Richard
Dougherty,
R.A.
·
anything whatsoever to do with
Mr. Dougherty. Yet he chose to
respond in both instances. Why?
After careful consideration of
the neurological mechanisms
involved, -I am of the opinion that
Mr. Dougherty's ·reaction· is
fundamentally the same as that of
lower primates when ·one rattles
their cages at the zoo. No good
reason for_ it, just nothing better
to do. I am sure environmental
factors also pertain -
Mr.
Dougherty is, after all, from New
Hampshire.
_
My question to Mr. Dougherty,
after re-reading his last attempt at
a rebuttal is, "How do you know
so much about pregnant women, ·
Rich? And why. th'is' . preoc-
cupation with women who handle
It's a sad story
I have written two letters to the
editor prior to this. The first
expressed my alarm over the
warped topography of cafeteria
trays; the· seconded contained a
brief
but
nontheless
apt
Shakespearian summary of a so-
called
"column" which has
regrettably, become a regular
feature in
The Circle
(when it's-
style,. or lack thereof, would be
much more admirably· suited to
the insides of grimy matchbook
covers from third rate motel
rooms in states having a low_er
. than average rate of literacy.) In
neither case did my letter have
poles?
·
· _
· ·
Sincerely,
Michael Bowman
Residence Director ·
The Student Affairs Office made another
decision for the students of Mari~t College
this past Y1eek. This time the decision was
dealing with dry days in the pub. What will it
be next time?
·
Perhaps we could yell and scream about
yet another decision that will affect us all
that we had no say in. Perhaps we could
take cheap shots at the Student Affairs
Office for making decisions that the
students are more than capable of making
th_emselves. Perhaps we should rebel
against "the administration." Perhaps we
should do nothing, because no one really
listens to the students anyway.
·
It really is sad. None of us would be here
if we didn't respect what Marist stands for,
but that doesn't mean that the students
· ,:never want change! We want to make Marist
better, we really do. The problem is that no
· one seems to trust us enough to let us try
and make Marist better, make It the -best.
We're· capable, ;'rri6re capable than: the
Student Affairs Office will· ever give us .
credit· for. We can make irnportant _
decisions, we can put on · a fine social
program without filling-out stacks of social
registration forms, we can_ make Marist a
better and more efficient place to live. Will
anybody let us?
We know that the Office of Student Af-
fairs has been making good \decisions for a
long time. They. may have m'ade some bad
ones too, but whether the decision is good
- or bad, the students aren't involved enough.
have more say in our' lives at Marist. We're
not radicals, we just want to get some
respect. Unti( the students are consulted on
some of these decisions, we'll never get the
respect.
.
·
·
So everybody cries about the decisions
that are made for us. Isn't it about tiine that
we did something about it! Marist's Judeo-
Christian heritage _ is important to the
Student Affairs Office, maybe it's important
to the students. Has anyone ever.bothered
to ask us? Does anybody care? Does
anybody care if we care?
The school's heritage is Important, but
individuals are more important and students
are individuals. We want to· grow. We want
to learn. Maybe if we were let in on more
decisions there wouldn't be so damn much
apathy!
·
_
Internships
Dear Juniors,
The Admissions Office · is.
pleased to announce that ap-
plications for the Fall
1983
In-
ternship _ in Educational - Ad-
ministration (Admissions In-
- ternship) are now being accepted.
Specific duties include planning
and maintaining a travel itinerary
and expense account, seven weeks
of travel representing Marist
College at high schools _ and
College Information Programs,
maintaining - a work log, and
submitting reports of v-isitations .
and programs. -
-
-
. Interested juniors should
submit letters of application and a
resume· to my office no later than
Friday, March 25,
1983.
Sincerely,
James E. Daly
Dean of Admissions
Mccann complaint
This week The Circle received a note from
To the Editor:
1·
won'Lmention· how much .the
_. _
-, !~1e!i~~e;;e
A!~~~~
t~!fi~~c!ohs~~,
0
!:rife~~dp
It is_ now 3 :35 _
p.m'._ the basket-
_
player's pay for tuition); I expect
·_
·
_
\reg' ard
__
\n_
··g:~--.-~
.
_tudetit_·s. :~
1
_no
__ mlri,a_ t
__ e_d
__
·_1,_. __
i_-_n
__ -.·_-
-_W_h_
o_
·_,_s, _
.ball
ga!11e
~egi11-s. ~t 8
=0<?
P:ni/8:nd
:'r:}g;P.~iA~lt~f\Y~~i~11
~
~~!~~t~qq~
.
-
•···the we1ght·Toom•1s·closmg·a1?4;00-:"".~1P.'t:~ours_,_a,a);;lf.l7.<,lioo~~f'Tli1s- ·
· · Who and'The
Natlohal:Reglster.
is published
p.m: Why? Because of the basket-
1s nd1culous! .
· - -
·
in next week's Circle.'.' We are the editors of
ball game.
·
-
The Circle and we don't need to tie told what
1 -
realize that the basketball
_ is important. We included
Lt
because it was ,_ team is the school's pride and joy,
newsworthy material. It was our decision as . and we do not want to upset.
student editors of the student newspaper. · . ·them. However, for 8,000 a year (
Let's take a careful look at how · the
Student Affairs Office· treats the students.
·oo they treat us like free-thinking adults? If
. they don't, why not? Is it 01,1r fault, .or their
fault? Is it anyone's fault? All things must
· change; even Marist College. Give us the
respect to change, to grow up.
To the editor:
Big Brother'?
Sincerely,
Chris Radigan
·
Kathy McIntyre
Maybe we'll make some bad decisioi:is, but -
we'll learn, and that's what we're here for. -
Mari st College can be the best for. all of
us. The heritage won't make ·it that way
alone; the students are going to have to help
I · understand that the fight
between
·three
resident assistants,
and five Marist freshmen, which
resulted in the firing of one of the
R.A.
's and the suspension of one
of the freshmen, occurred off-
campus. My question is, •."Why
are the students of Marist College
being treated as if they were in
high school? I can accept the fact
that the administration is con-
cerned about_ the welfare of its
students and I can also accept the
fact the Fr.· LaMorte is trying to
protect the Judeo-Christian
reputation of this institution, but
wheri does "concern" stop and
outside of Skinner's and had
nothing to do with the activities
of the college.
If
the college's
authority extends outside of
Marist, then _
where are we 'safe
from the watchful eye of the
· It's time that the students are allowed to
make mistakes, allowed to learn, allowed to
out too.
·
What does
it
mean?·
When the administration cracked down
on cohabitation, the rationale behind the
decision was Marist's "Judea-Christian
heritage."
When an R.A. was relieved of his duties
over a fist fight, again the punishment was
justified under the Judea-Christian heritage.
students; but that was years ago before
Marist had to become non-sectarian school
in order to survive.
It's now
·1983:
time for an update.
''Big Brother" begin?··
·
This - incident •· is - clea~iy not-
under the jurisdiction of the
college.
The fight . oc<:urred
_
Marist hierarchy? When
J
go
home over spring break; will
I
have to show my .mother my meal
ticket number before I eat? Will I
have to.have my posters approved
before I
put _ . them in my
bedroom?
I believe that Fr. LaMorte went
too far in his dealings with the
students involved. What· a Marist
student does on his own time
should not affect his or her
employment with the college. I
. hope the administration_ is wiser
when the appeal goes through;
Sincerely,
KevinT. Perez
Time and time again major decisions are
backed by the same explanation, and each
time students have the same question.
What is this elusive concept that has
become the moral basis for decision making
at this college?
It would be in·'its best interest for the
administration tdclarify the meaning of this -
often-used term.' To the students, this
Judea-Christian heritage is a Cliche. Every
time it is used,· students lose sight of the
context and
concentrate on
the·
meaninglessness -of a term. Rather than •
raising any emotional· support from the ·
students, this term generally turns them off. : -
A trip
to
re.member
Judea-Christian :_ an adjective that
obviously has great significance to Marist's
administration that has lost much, if not all,
of its meaning to the student. Atone time .
the term probably meant something
fo
the
Co-Editors
The
Associate Editors
Circle
_
Sports Editor
Advertising Manager
Business Manager
Dear Editor:
-The administration seems _ to want a
unification among the various facets of the
Marist community. Perhaps clarifying a
small point like this could be a starting
point.
It is
2 PM
and you board the
elevator from the ninth floor of
Champagnat hoping to be a little
early for- your 2
PM
class. You
Rick O'Donnell
Reporters
Lisa Arthur, Maria Azzolina,
Advertising Staff
Patti Walsh
Cindy Bennedum, Karen Boil,
Tim Dearie, Alison Demarest,
Karen Lindsay
Chris Dempsey, Lori Oyer,
Classified
Lou Ann Seelig
Donna Fidaleo,.Mike Graney,
Donna Cody Seelbact.
Lynn Gregorski, Eileen Hayes,
Cartoonist
Kristine Lawas, Jim Leonard,
Karyn Magdalen, Paul Murnane
Photography Staff.
Karen Nlzolek, Susan Pyle,
Bill Travers
· Frank Raggo, Laura Reichert,
Roger Romano, Jane Scarchilll,
Jim Barnes
· Mark Stuart, Gwen Swinton, ·
Boppln Bob Weinman, Mark Zangari
Faculty
Advisor
Adrienne Ryan
·
J!?e Dldzlulia
Gene Llannis
push the button for the first floor
and you can hear the whirl of the
wheels as the elevator
~
quickly
descends. The lighted panel over
continued on page 6
Tara Scanlon
Lisa Crandall •
Dianne Gallagher
Kevin Shulz
Ted Waters
- Gina Franciscovich, Jeff Kiely,
Kyle Miller, Jeanne LeGloahec
Oayid Mccraw
Got them
.
.
.
Monticello
blues
by Rick O'Donnell
Does anybody from Marist live
in Monticello, N.Y.1 hope not!
The only positive thing that I have
to say about Monticello is th~t it
makes Poughkeepsie look like
Disney World.
·
I never expected to
·
spend an en-
chanted evening in this Shangri-la
of the Catskill mountains, but
It ain't necessarily so
Women's
.
rights
By Adrian Donnelly
and Lou Ann Seelig
Several months ago Marist and
all the colleges in America were
reviewed by a feminist magazine
and rated on a scale of one to five
according to the leadership role o
women in each college. Marist
scored nearly a big zero, but was
granted one star for the efforts of
Reel impressions
No, but
.
_
I saw
the first
.·
one
thanks to a burnt-out carburetor,
.
a plugged catalytic converter, a
dead battery, a failing muffler
and a mechanic that needs an in-
stniction manual to picJc his nose,
I
was a prisoner of Monticello.
. I'm no expert when it comes to
automobiles, but even I know that
there's something wrong with a
car that has to shift into passing
gear to pass a hitch-hiker.
I
figured that
I
would
·
turn off ihe
highway, have a mechanic take a
.
look at the problem, grab a bite to
eat and continue on with my
journey. Little did
I
know,
I
was
about to enter the Twilight Zone.
(DO
DO
DO
00 ... 00
DO DO
DO ... )
The mechanic at Jack Ortesky's
Amoco station reminded me of
Jimmy, the mechanic on the
television series, "Taxi", except
he wasn't quite as intelligenf. He
took out his wrench and began
banging on everything under the
hood. Just what
I
needed, a
mechanic that wants to be a
Miss Gasparovic, student body
president, and . all the other
.
women who hold student leader-
ship positions on campus.
Vassar, of course was rated a
four-or five-star rating. After all,
even their chaplain is a womari.
We've decided that Marist
should never again receive such a
low rating
by a
feminist
magazine; so we've nominated
the following women to take
leadership roles at this college:
next time Marist will surely rate
five stars.
For president of Marist Col-
lege: Jane Fonda ... Was there a
question about the ROTC? Pro-
bably not, with her around, and
for balance in Greystone, con-
sider Bella Abzug for academic
vice president.
drummer in a marching band!
After he banged around under the
hood for awhile, he ended up
charging me $16 for fixing my
-
car, (he fixed it so well that it
would have to stay in the garage
all night!) After swifty the
mechanic got through with the
car, I backed up 50 feet and the
car died.
(It
had to be pushed into
·
the service station.)
My two cohorts (Who
J
will call
Dick and Jane to protect their
identities) were less than excited
about spending a night in-the Cat-'
.
skills, but we made the best out of
·
it. We were goirig to check into
the C11pri Motel, but swifty the
mechanic told us it was not a very
-
good choice, and believe me, if he
said it wasn't a very good choice,
it must have been BAD. He
_
recom~ended the Patio motel. A
lovely little love nest with a view
of a parking lot, and hourly rates.
Before he let us check in, he asked
if we wanted a shot of penicillin.·
·
In the student affairs
.
office,
we'll keep the tradition "in theater
and nominate Vanessa Redgrave
for dean of student affairs. She
should be a nice complement to
the women in Greystone. And just
to keep things on an even keel
·
we'll nominate Mother Theresa
for chaplain and assistant dean of
student affairs.
For admissions we need so-
meone who can really sell things.
Jane Russell seems
-
to do that
well,- let's put her in as dean of ad-
missions. She'd really comfor-
tably support the college .
.
The chairperson of the
.
facqlty
will have to be tough since the
_
faculty is predominantly male.
We've found just the woman:
Miss Piggy. She's tough and she
really
·
knows how to handle
1:he room was quaint.
It
was
decorated in Modern American
Sleeze and there was only one
bed. I guessed this wasn't the type
of motel that offered a family
plan. At least the television work-
ed. We needed the television to
drown out the bed springs from
next door!
We woke up in the morning anct .
I called the garage where my car
was at to get an estimate. The first
estimate was $60, then they called
back and pushed it up to
$85, then
it was $120, I ended up paying
$177.42. That's not bad consider-
ing that it cost me $16 to have the
other mechanic ruin my car._
We spent the day walking down
Broadway. We stopped in all the
hot spots, including the arcade,
two drug stores, a Woolworth's, a
kosher deli and a dirty book
store.
(It
was called a "news-
tand. ") When we got in there we
·
were face to face with the latest
herself in front .:>fa crowd.
As athletic director of Mc-
cann, we've decided to nominate
someone we believe will be in-
novative;
someone who
will
schedu~e Mccann for optimum
usage throughout the year. We
thought Dorothy Hamill would
be just right. Maybe she could
redesign the building for use as an
ice rink after basketball season.
For the new director of Marist
Abroad Program,
Jackie
0
.
should be good: she's a world
traveler and very hard to pin
down.
Chairperson of the
psychology department
is
ob-
vious: Dr. Ruth Westheimer of
WYNY
fame.
And
since
everything else is changing,
Seiler's will need a new manager.
How about Annette Funicello?
issue of Buns and Boobs.
We
left,
pronto.
At 2:30 the car was finished
and we were finally able to con-
tinue on with our trip. At this
time Jack tried to charge me a
four-percent service charge for
using a Master Card. I knew this
was illegal to do and told him so.
He replied, "Well then let's call it
square, and we'll forget about the
service charge."
After I left Jack's Amoco, I
drove for about fifteen minutes. I
was just about to leave Monticello
when I noticed flashing lights in
my rear~view mirror. After
I
ex-
plained to the police officer about
what had happened to my car-
buretor, he replied,
"It
sure looks
like they fixed it."
·
The rest of the trip went fine.
Does anybody want to buy a '76
Buick Regal? How about a night
in the Patio Motel and a penicillin
shot?
She seems to really know her
peanutbutter.
As health services co_C>~c;linator-
Cathy Rigby is a
shoe-in,
but it's
a little embarrassing to mention
why. Finally, to keep Marist safe
at all times, the new director of
security just has to be Patty
Hearst.
Nice Try
...
... to Fairleigh Dickenson. It
was fairly ridiculous to try to beat
Marist at home.
... to It Ain't Necessarily so for
last week's column.
...
to J.C. Gorman for letting
it
all hang out during Pub Night
. .. to Rick O'D. for immortaliz-
ing a Seiler's menu.
... to Benoit for avoiding a ma-
jor fire this week.
deserves recognition.
fort, Staying Alive, the Saturday
were being considered for
~
-
Odyssey Two are among the few
A sequel in my book is a Night Fever sequel that will star
Smokey and the Bandit III, while
that I would think could b good.
money-making process only, and John Travolta.
Jackie Gleason has considered
2010 will be directed by 2001
sh.ows
-
~. complete lack
_
of im-
Jaws 3 is not only a reality, but
repeating his role
.
as Sheriff director Stanley Kubrick.
:_agipatiori.
0
.or
~
.
originality
_
:·
Qii
.
_
the
.
iqvill
be filmed
in
that ne_we
,
si,
!!X~- .
l,\~~9.rd --~:
.
l u
5t
ice'.
.
Speaking
of_
_
.
Th
"
h
U { .
·
part of the individuaJs
·
involved. I cuse-.for
•
sequels
·
-,.
·
3a~.;Jn
t
the
-'.
·,
car.
:
chases,. hold
'0!lto
y011r seat
,.
.
.
-
·
.
~ollg
:
a o
,
lbis, you
.~n~w
must adniit that I
.
have lowered tradition of Friday the 13th; Part
.
for
.
Another Ball, the Cannonball
tber~,JuSt h~d to
b;
another Ai~-
myself to go out and see a sequel 3, Jaws 3-D will be followed by
Run sequel.
port . movie. Airport
2000.
1
s
I
·
·
Amityville 3-D, and, God help us,
boastmg the use of new, genume
on severa occasions, only
to
be Halloween IV i·n·
3
sD.
In the horror genre, Anthony
.
computer_ technolog_y aboard y_ et
disgusted with myself afterwards.
p k"
·
·11
•
p
h
II
h
II
r,
d
fl
h
A
h
Not all sequels are bad, Rocky
Trail of the Pink Panther prov-
er ms is st1 crazy m syc
O
•
anot .. er
.
1 - a!~
•~ t.
·
s
Wit
III, Star Trek II: The
,
wrath of ed that even if you die, you're not
On the lighter side of the spec-
any ~irport
movie, _the~e are
safe from sequels. Giant II will
trum,
George Hamilton will
two thmgs that are mev1tably
Khan, and The Empire
·
Strikes f t
d
1
D
return in Love at Second Bite.
guaranteed: the plane and George
Back were a few exceptions, but
ea ure unuse
ames
can ·Th
h
l
b
·
lk f
c
· ·
f t g
.
H
A .
1
H
ere as a so een ta o
reep-
Kennedy as Patrom. Airport 2000
by Tom Fisher
most
are
simply
awful.
oo a e.
owever, mma
ouse
h
II
.11
1
.
h b
Remember when the obviously II has
.
been shelved due to actor
s
ow ·
·
wi come comp etc
Wit
oth.
_
.
Up until a couple of years ago,
plastic shark attacked a helicopter John Belushi's death. Chalk up
Then there
·
is the category
Of course, an E.T. sequel is in-
.
we had come to only expect con ti-
.
in Jaws 2? You get the picture.
·
one for our side.
where one simply asks, "Why?"
evitable, so why fight it? Besides,
nuing chapters of the "Planet of
·
Of the titles I just mentioned,
Superman
III will
feature
Among these are sequels to
it'll give me something to talk
the Apes" series, James Bond and all will
or might
become Richard
Pryor along with
movies that were terrible in the
·
about if I do a sequel to this arti-
the Pink Panther. These days, any predecessors to continuations.
·
Christopher Reeve. Dolly Parton
first place, so be wary of Conan
cle.
and all motion pictures that are Revenge of
-
the Jedi will hit is being eyed for the- lead in
the Barbarian II, Porky's II: The
I know you think I made up
brought to the silver screen are theaters this summer, while Star Superglrl,
although I can't
Next Day, The Wild Geese II,
some of these titles just to make
subject
to
that
now-famous Trek III: In Search of Spock is in realistically see her as being able
Battle Beyond
the
Stars II, Sword
the article longer, but my infor-
Hollywood
cloning
process the
.
works. Rocky IV is still just a
·
_
to fly. Also, keep an eye peeled . and the Sorcerer II, The Blue
mation comes from a reliable
known as "sequels." On occa-
drawing card for Sylvester for Superman IV.
Lagoon II, and Swamp Thing II.
source. I'm not kidding. Would
·1 .
sion, I will dedicate this cohimn Stallone, and may .depend on the
The Dukes of Hazzard boys
The Black Stallion Returns,
make up something like Swamp
-
to an
-
-
issue or individual that success of his next directorial ef-
John Schneider and
.
Tom Wopat,
Kramer Vs. Kramer II, and 2010:
Thing II?
Friday: On Campus
Saturday: On Campus
Meeting:
Admissions Open
HEOP,CC270
House
2p.m.
Campus Cenler
lp.m.
Workshop:
Developing
Mass
Leadership skills
Chapel, 6:15 p.m.
CC249, 2:15 p.m.
Film:
"Bus Stop"
8p.m.
.
"Sharkey's
Thearre
Machine"
CC249, 7:30 p.m.
Pub Night
9p.m.
"Bus Stop"
8p.m.
Women's
Theatre
Baskelball
Semi-Finals of
St. Patrick's
Mel. Conference,
Day Mixer
TBA
sponsored by
the Senior Class
9p:m.
New Dining Room
Transfer Residents
and Communters
Dinner, Pub,
6p.m.
Rehearsal
"Snow White"
Fireside
7p.m.
Film:
"Sharkey's
Machine"
7&9:30pm
Theatre
Rehearsal'
"The Dunkard"
8:30p.m.
New Dining Room
.
"Bus Stop''.
2p.m.
Theatre
Monday:
On Campus
MID-TERMS
The Chance
Marist College
_
Crew
Party/ Auction
Tuesday: On Campus
MID-TERMS
Wednesday
On Campus
MID-TERMS
Pub Night
Highlights
Thursday: On
.
Campus
MID-TERMS
Spanish Club
presents La Tuna
7p.m.
The Marist College Council on the Thca1rical Arts presents
William Inge's "Bus Stop," directed by Jan Denison or the
Communicy Experimental Repercory Theatre in Poughkeepsie.
Performance dates arc March 3, 4. S, and 6. All
shows
begin at
8 p.m
.
with a matinee at 2 p
.
m. on the 6th. Tickers are $3.00
for general admission and SI .00 for
students.
"Bus Stop" takes place on a snowy night in a midweslern
diner.
It
is a play about a cowboy who falls in love wich a
saloon singer
and abduc1s her and wha1 evencuall
y
happens
between chem.
.
..
..,.,,
...,._.,..·
..
,
·····•
....... ·····•
........
,_,~-.~
·
··
...............
_.,..
. .
.,._
..
,
.. .
.
.
- - •
Page 6 · THE CIRCLE; March
3,
1983 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
,
..
-
'·.
·
~
.
-
,.-'•·.""..
/
.
.-
..
•:
.
,
· ..
Heat pi'oblems·blamedoil building•. strUCtUte
·wiitdows to keep out drafts .. He
also· · suggested
that students
refrain from opening the large
by Lynn Gregorski
The lack of heat in Cham-
pagnat is a dual problem caused
by the structure of the building
and an . inadequate heating
system, according to college of-
ficials.
During the cold winter months
· there is an ongoing problem of
heat circulation in Cha_mpagnat,
particularly on the upper dor-
mitory floors.
The unequal distribution of
heat has always· been a problem
because the·system is zoned on an
east-west basis rather than a
north-south basis, said Gerard
Cox, dean of student affairs. Cox
· said that because the wind comes
from the north in the winter, the
· north side of both wings get the
brunt of the attack, and if the
heating ·system was on a north-
south basis, the north side of the
building would be getting better
heat circulation.
Assistant Physical Plant Direc-
Students get recognition
.
Marist College students will be
Elmira;·
Kate
Hedges,
named in two prestigious national
Sagaponack; Allison McCarthy,
publications which
recognize
Carmel; Janet McNamara, .Pearl
outstanding young leaders, ac-
River;
Patrick
O'Oonnell,
cording to Gerard A. Cox, dean
Poughkeepsie; Susan Pecoraro,
of student affairs.
Highland; William Perrotte,
· -,
Hyde Park; David Skrodanes,
tor John Shaughnessy said that he
admits to the fact that the struc-
ture is riot sound enough for the
particular type of area we live in.
"I think that it's due to the con-
struction, and the big windowed
areas,"· said Shaughnessy. He
said the mechanical plant is pum-
ping a sufficient amount. of hot
water up to those areas, but fur-
ther. up the.· building
the
temperature of the water is drop-
ping and the wind chill factor is
greater.
·
"The heat plant that we have is
adequate for a building that size,
if the building was built proper-
ly," said Shaughnessy.
Andrew Pavelko,
physical
plant · director, said · that the
boilers in the· building are work-
ing full capacity. He said the bot-
tom line is that the building is not
. really built to take extreme cold,
there. As. too . much glass and
aluminum iri the construction.
"The college is searching for an
answer,'' said Cox. He said one
solution would· be to insulate the
inside of the exterior walls on the
north side of the building. He said
that Champagnat is the building
. on campus that consumes the
most fuel and that might be due to
the fact that
it
was built in 1965
when heating fuel was very inex-
pensive.
"It
is not that we have been cut-
. ting. back on heat;!' said Cox,
''but that the. building is growing
older." He said that since the
building is 18 years old that might
be a signal that more serious pro-
blem . in the heating system has
.developed. Cox said that he
suspects there _may be a blockage
in -the heating system that is not
allowing the heat to rise.
Shaughnessy said that the only.
temporary solution at his disposal
is to assist the students by sealing
plastic with duck tape over their
• windows and to avoid putting .
things in front of the heaters in
the rooms. Cox said ._ that most
students assume the control knobs
on the heat registers don't _work
and that many are left•in the off
position, which
will
prevent heat
from getting into· the ·room.
Director of Housing· . Robert
Heywood said he thinks that there
is· no way around· the problem, ·
•'The students . are being incon-
y1enced by it and it should
be
remedied as soon as possible,"
said Heywood. In . cooperation
with maintenance there will be a
· review of the present situation to
determine what needs to be- done
to solve the heat problem and how
much it would cost, he said ... -
.
"There is no question that it.is
cold up there, .· said Heywood,
"too cold."
· Tl'ie-ncw,._
editions of Wh~'s
,
Greenlawn; Stephen Smith, White
Who
Among··· S
t
udents
m .
Plains; Theresa Tobin, Belle
American
Universities
and
Colleges
and
the National
~arbor; Maureen Tynan, Seaford
Register
of
Outstanding College.. and Susan Vassallo, Ft. Salonga.
Junior class sponsors graduate School
day
•
h
Students. from New Jersey are:
Graduates will recogmze t ese
Christopher Barnes, tittle Silver,·
byKiarynMagdalen
schedule; by working·it helps to
students for their academic
f
Joan Gasparovic, North Bergert;
pay some o the costs."
achievements,
service
to the
Dawn-Joy Oliver, Saddle Brook;
~he Junior class win be spon- .
There a.re other ways of going·
community
and
leadership . Thomas Shannon; Union.
_sormg a graduate School Day on through graduate school if a stu~
potential.
Students from Connecticut are:
Tuesday, Marc~ 29, between 11 . dent wanted to go part-time or
· Students from New York are:
Carolyn Shaw, Ridgefield; Dawn-
a.m. and~ p.m.
m
Do_nnelly Hall.
full-time.
"One · way,,, said
Peter. P. Acquafredda, Staten
Marie Sturtevant, West Haven;
. ~ccordmg to ':hns ~?lluso, ·Anderson, "is to. become a
Island; June Aquilla, · Glover-
Laurie
Ann
wash burn,
Jumor · class president,
Many graduate assistant which is . a
sville, Robert Aufiero, Bayside;
Higganum.
students don't really know too work-study
program."
Other
Stephen Broer, Westbury; Bonnie
Also: Kevin Hancock, Walnut
much about graduate schools.
ways Anderson mentioned were
Blanchard, Watervliet; Anthony
Creek,
California;.
Arlene
This is. a way to -inform the. New York State TAP and also
Cardone,
Monroe; · William
Hutnan, Springfield, Virginia;
Slud~mt~, there is schooling after. Guaranteed Student Loans.
.
.
.
Applying for· graduate schools
· should be done early in the spring
of a student's senior year. "A.stu-
dent should apply early to make
sure they've taken all the ap-
propriate graduate school tests,"
said Anderson. "These would in-
clude the LSAT's (Law School
Admissions .. test),
GRE's
(Graduate Record exam)'imd the
GMAT's (Graduate Management •
Admissions test)." ·
Clare,
·
Clifton Park; Bernadette
William LaPrade,
Amherst,
ManSl.
.
.
"A lot of schools are cutting
Cosner, Lake Ronkonkoma; Paul
Massachusetts,
and Theresa
T~e Jumor class officers are back on their aid ,for graduate
Choosing a graduate school can
Damin, St. _ Johnsville; Joseph
Sullivan, Scituate, Massachusetts.
hopmg to get graduate schools schools, but we're doing -the op- -
be difficult because the areas of
Finnerty,
Manhasset; Denise
These students will receive
from .throu~hout the New ~ork · posite. We're looking for addi-
study. are much more focused
Fitzpatrick, Hyde Park; George
recognition awards at the Marist
a_rea, mcludmg ~ew
)'.°
ork Umver-
tional funding," said Anderson.
than in under graduate studies.
.
d
s1ty, Hofstra Umvers1ty and Col-
. ·
·
··
Flemmg, Cold Spring; James
College Council of Stu ent
b' . U .
.
"W
1
.
''Graduate school is ·a two year
Galvin, Central Valley; Maryanne
Leaders annual dinner scheduled
um _ia; . mvemty.__
· e a so are,
·
_,-Marist currently .
.
?as : _330 ... investment of time and money;''
Griffin, Hyde: Park; Lois flayes,
to take place in the .college's_. , hopmg · t9. show .·_ Sl\ldents t~at,. graduate students studymg e1th
_
~r .... said Anderson ."so a · student
~- . M idclleto'.Nn;
David . -:_ }:i~u pt,
campus center in April.
·
.
. . .
.
, . there ar~ :w.ays
to
Jund . grad\lllf ~; Pa~~i1· cn·1·s·.ta_r· da.m1·1o~Pn. _i's· ~~ap_ tsiy~c111i~o·1·bo···ug
__ Y~!~~osjr': '. :.)wJ:1anQU.t.l~t-•0Ls~tnu~odwy·;_w=~hxeancteiyn· ',t;,ewr1·_hnagt.1pl_
.
_·_e_·
Y .
,
. -:;,';,;,,school,LsJU!i,Mollus,o_.,u
,
1
,1
wu
.. . .
WilliainAnderson: 'director oC: computer.s<:ience. :'Plans.for.new
Anderson said he'd like to see
graduate admissions for Marist,
graduate pro~ranis are in
~~e
pr?2- · more M,arist ·• students . go
:
to
said very few Marist students go , cess of ~,emg offered, . said
graduate school.
"If
students
continued
from
page
4 •
to graduate _- school. right after Anderson,
these would. mclude
have questions they should talk to
~ra:duation; . _"Many students, go
an
M.S.
·
in accounting,., master~s
faculty members
or
to .me, I'd-be
-: _· •-',Wes;·_'..'./ybff
~
affswe~··:-:,;b.,u
..
1
. . .· .
.Q_\it and get a job .and then come
'
in social work (i\'ISW) and·Psy. D
happy to. answer any questions
take the stairs/' ·
.
:
• ·
I'll· back.
io
school ,Ori a" 'part-time: ··inpsycholojty;"--
·s
·
:~
·
-· ·
.
they may have."
·
.
·•.·:.··
.
and as the door opens· you walk .
·out only to realize that you're on
the ground floor ..
You quickly
.
turn around and
run back into the elevator as the
door begins to close, thinking fo
· yourself that you must have made
a mistake. Once again ·you push
the button for the first floor: You
A
student who would
rather live on the
first floor.
Core survey
feel a slight jerk as the elevator Dear Editor:
ciimbs upward. As the· door opens
Recently some two hundred re-
you peek out to find that you're quests were sent to current junio1
on the second floor, and nobody'.s and- senior students asking them_
there. You glance up to find to complete a ques~ionaire design-
. number one lit up on the panel.
>
ed to _assess the quality of their ex-
Doo doo doo-doo, . the.· theme perience of the Core. curriculum. ·
from "The Twilight Zone" We frequently hear the apathy of .
echo.es in your head. ·You're all the Marist student decried, so it
alone, stuck in, what they call came as no small suprise when
"The Psycho-vator." You press responses to the requesfbegan to
one again but the elevator climbs trun up almost immediately. At
upward. You sigh, remembering· this writing, the level of reply.has
that you wanted to get to class been significant. · -
<
early. A jerk -
the door operis,
To ·those of you- readers who
you're in limbo -
struck between have already
·
responded, this is a
the third and fourth floor. · ·message of sincere gratitude for
"Thank
God
I'm
not your help. It is quite impossible to
.. claustrophobic!" you think 'to · assess fully the merits ·or academic
yourself. You anxiously push the programs without feedback from
button again as your heart begins· students. In responding promptly
to race and your body breaks out and graciously you demonstrated
· in a cold sweat.
your serious interest in your own
"Will I ever get out alive?" you education and in the ability of
. ask yourself. The elevator jerks Marist to serve the educational·
again,
as
the door slowly slides needs of the students who will
open -
damn another dead end, come after you.
Hey Lynn --How about taking a_
taxi through the drive
0
thru. again,
it was fun. Or maybe we should
buy
a
bicycle! Love, Paula
.
flED6
More_.:...... Buk up! Still crazy after
:->an these years? You're a good
friend -- kamikazi
The nasty girl.gang -
best bun~h
of nuts I know!
-=-
leader of.the
pack.
·
Champ 3rd floor -'- Still lively,
. yeah! That's wonderful! -
l'.m
.c·
To .DE. the follower: A "real
- one
BMOC doesn't have to go around
J.P. (alias Do·nald Duck) .
-=-
hanks
for
putting a smile on my
face;toveya, P.T.
. :
Pula -
You're
a
wench! But a
saying h_e's a BMOC. · - · the
. Irishman'
·
· ·
Hey. Yondie, you're a concept! · good nut- kamikazi
G.S.B.
Karen .:_ calm down! You nut -
Bob "Lynch ~- Thanks so much
for
all
·your. help. We: greatly
appreciate i1. -
MCCT A
· . ·· .
Greg H. - Keep March 26th open
-
a secrel admirer .
Jimmy Jazz -
You are an ob-
solute waste of lcgalness. Happy
binhday anyway!·..
Love,
Tomm Gun and the last gang in
·1own.
LOST -
. Pen/watch. If found
please remrn
10
G-108. Thanks.
. well, maybe nol. - ·kamikazi
John Vincent Hintze, Rober!
Royal. Hintze, and Thomas
George Murphy -
WATCH
OUT! Love, the three musketeers
-· Homewreckers -_ All's fair in
LOVE and WAR -
us
To Slinky~ You are just what
1
always wanted -
something in a
corduroy. Give me
a
smile cu1ey!
-Guess who?
To the CUB and BY -
ll'sMiller
time in the Bahamas! - ·
The
Miller
Man
Tony -- All kidding _aside, I hope
you have the best birth(iay ever.
-
Love, Cindy
Tony -
Hope you have a great
20th birthday! Thanks for always
being tJiere -
Love, Lori
Teresa (alias the Greasy Turk) -
What's a fetid pin-head? Love,
Spider Legs ·
To Sigma Phi Epsilon's New
York Zeta Chapter at Maris1
College -
Happy Fourth An-
niversary!
somewhere between the fifth and
To those of you readers who
eighth floor you guess. Nine is lit have not yet responded, this is an
. up on the panel above you. You urgent message seeking your help
Readers, Look , for news abour
Do you wanr 10 move lo the CIA,
h b
·
d h
d
· · Pl
k
h
· WMCR in the next issue of The
G1"na? (Or maybe Dutch Gar
Hey Grace, Good . tuck in Bus
Stop. We know y·ou'll be great!
.Ferr Shurr! Totally! -
Killy,
Cecelia, Badeana, M;L.
·
push t e
utton agam an
t e an cooperauon.
ease ta e t e
·
-
To my favori1e·li1tle felon: Here's
door slowly closes and you claw time to share a description of
Circle. ··
dens?) Love, Gabe
16 "wha1ever"!Love, B.L
the walls. This time it opens on your experience with us. If you do
. the ninth floor. You rush off not, we really have no where else
D. Michelle -
Either the s10ck
Dear Karyn -
Happy 21st! Love,
Michele,. Happy "1wo y~ars"
breathing heavily, with a look of to go!
car races or the Beaver Cleaver' Jim and Michele
anniversary! Here's 10 the future!
horror on your face, as others get
show, it doesn't mauer. Good
Carla -
MM, MM good -
that's
Forever yours, Jim.
oninhopeofgoingsomewhere.
Luck!
wha1 Campbell'ssoupis
Dear Gidget -
Happy 21s1
"Psycho-vator's
here,"
Your truly
binhday! No Black Russians this .
11
"I , b
h
J.
Richard LaPietra
Chris.- before you judge the caf.
Dave....:. you really can't dance -
year, please, Luck and love _
someone ye s.
ts etter t an
DirectorofCoreSttidies
sides, take a good look a1 who's
a friend.
Coney Island," you hear another
silting next to you (you've been
- - - - ' - - - - - - - - - -
13arb
.
.
person C?mme_nt.
As your
tho nit he lately!) -
your friends . Sue -
You're once crazy chick,
Dear Elisa- Happy binhday
IO
a .
roommate
IS
gettmg on she asks,.
_
.
0
al Gregory
·
you wench! But a good friend. -
terrific co-worker and friend!
"Aren'tyou-going-toclass?.?,,;_,,,.,_v,v ..
•.·>. ·.•.-·.·: .• •.,,:
,.,~~n•~-
0
~~~--~~-l)~g-~} .. ,.:.,,.:. . -
. . . . .. •.• ... •.• ,,, .. , , , .,
!(_a_~!k,a,z!, .• , , • , , , "
, . _ , • , ,.,
J-p,vh
B11rb~~a.
~t~d
"~D-'"--'--
\
A NATIONAL
·
FRATERNITY
DON'.T 'PASS IT UP!
Mari st. College's only national fraternity, Sigma
Phi. Epsilon,
is
having an open gathering on Sun-
day, March 6 at 6 p.m. in the_ lounge of Benoit
House for any men interested in our organiza-
tion. We hope to see you there.
-The Brothers of
Sigma Phi Epsilon
March
3,
1983- THE CIRCLE, Page 7 - -
A heljJing hand for crime victims
. by
Donna Fi~aleo
· It looks like an ordinary house,
but what goes on inside is
anything but ordinary.
On the second ·floor of this
house on the grounds of St. Fran-
cis. Hospital are offices that
belong to Dutchess County Crime
Victims Assistance Program.
A person who has been the vic-
tim of a sexual assault, family
abuse, robbery or any other
criminal act can seek help here
with no charge and complete con-
fidentiality.
Crime Victims Assistance Pro-
gram, "We do, of course, deal
with women who have . been
raped, and provide a number of
services for them, but we're not
restricted to dealing with rape vic-
tims."
The program is the only one of
its kind in the Dutchess County
area, said Graven.
Rape,· committing a sexual act
against a person's will, brought
about by a threat of the use of
force, seems to be the programs
most significent problem.
Many of the rape victims are
referrals to the program through
In 1982 the program received
the police or St. Francis Hospital,
450 referrals of general assault,
said Craven. "We're on call all
approximately 15 percent of them
I
the time. We can be with the per-
for rape.
son through the hospital exam, go
and provide therapy sessions."
Craven said that the ttmount of
therapy depends on the needs of
the individual;
however,
the
minimal therapy lasts 6-8 weeks.
There is an individual meeting
with a social worker, which is
confidential, and a
group
meeting. "The first type of group
is a non-committing self, the per-
son can come when he needs to.
The second is the time-limited
group. This type runs for an exact
time period on an exact day, the
victim
has
a
commitment,"
Craven said.
According to Jean Craven,
to the police station with them,
director of Dutchess County
help make legal arrangements,
·~====================================:: .--------------------.
REZUTER PROGRAM
According to 'the Crime Victims
Assistance Program, CV AP, rape
is one of the most seriously under
reported crimes. The number of
reported crimes, said Craven, has
increased 41 percent in the last
five years.
Craven said that the program
was started in 1976 an in 1978 it ·
contracted with St. Francis
Hospital. The program is funded
by Dutchess County, the New
York State Crime Victims Com-
pensation Board, and the New
York State Department of
Health.
·EASTER BREAK INFO:
·
The dor.ms will close on Thursday · March 31 ·, 1983 . at
11:00 p.m. for the long weekend. Thay will re.;open on
Monday Aprll 4, 1983 at 10:00 a.m. . -
ONLY THOSE WITH PERMISSION WILL BE ALLOWED TO
REMAIN. THIS PERMISSION MUST BE OBTAINED
FROM THE HOUSING OFFICE NO LATER THAN MARCH
.
25, 1983.
Only those with employment, academic, or athletic
obHgations, or those living an unreasonable distance will
.. ·.: •·.~~l'~·:ifi~~I!,~·1!,~
~~!;~:~,
ss
•~r-t:~ \,\:,
/T":'.;'. ·:~· ·,\:-: ,{ ., ·
Thanf you' for.your coop·eratlon
iri
thls,matte'r:
ENJOY THE WEEKENDI
.~~
I~
-...-.}.'~.:=••
- ~
r·
. An excellent haircuttery.
Now featuring CELLOPHANES, the new_ non-
peroxide haircolor/conditioning system with
unlimited color choices and excellent' sheen.
1-lAIRCUTTf;RS
$2.00
Off
With Marist 1.0.
Serving
Marist College
Since 1975
3 Liberty St., Main Mall,1>oughkeepsie
454-9239,
By
Appointment Only
ATTENTION: All residents, commuters, and off:-campus
residents.
The Commuter Union is in the process of establishing REZUTER; a
grouping of students who are interested in integrating residents and
commuters of Marist College. Rezuter will give each participant an
opportunity to share each others outlook of campus life, extra cur-
ricular activities both on and off campus. Students can also com-
pare their varying points of view on the ''college experience.''
Rezuter can be on-going it's up to you!
..
Please return this survey to either Greg Luna, P.O. Box C-840,
your Resident Advisor, or in the Commuter Lounge, 0-249.
_For additional information contact Greg Luna ext. 206, CSL office
CC-268.
REZUTER SURVEY
1.
What is your major? _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
2. What is your
sex? Male. _ _
Female, _ _
_
3:
What year are you in? _ _ _
_
.. :.<l. ;_"r;.,
,
:::- : .• _,_ ·;_: :-:-.·,:: -;.;- ;·~:.
4 ..
Majof' interesff'·(hobbies, etc.i:) _ _ _ _ _
_
5.
What kind of activities would you like to do during a gather_? __
6.
Day, evening or weekend gathering? _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
7.
Would you be interested in a trip to an away athletic event? __
8.
Would you be interested in a trip to a local event? _ _ _ _
_
9.
Additional suggestions:·------------
RESIDENTS: N A M ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - -
P .O. BOX NO. _ _ _
_
COMMUTERS: NAM _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
ADDRESS,-'----,--------
PHONE NO.
THE HAIR SHACK
. (Super New York Cuts)
located at
49 ACADEMY STREET
(Next to Brandy's Two)
Ample Customer Parking
His
and Her
BODY
PERM
Reg. $35.00
Special ·
$18.50
Shampoo, Cut
and Blow
Dry .
From
$5.00
Open Daily 10-6 -
No Appt. Necessary
FOR APPOINTMENT, CALL
486-9883
New York State Department of
Health has provided the program
with a $11,856 Rape Federal
Block Grant for 1983. Craven
said, "This grant has allowed us
to hire another full-time social
worker, who will provide direct
services and specialize in the area
legal advocacy.'' Craven added
that the grant will allow the pro-
gram to expand the services that
are available to rape victims and
to reach victims who aren't aware
of the programs.
The. program consists of three
full-time social workers and one
part-time social worker, all of
whom have
of
are currently work-
ing towards their masters.
According
to CV AP, the pro-
gram can help victims determine
if they are eligible to receive
emergency funds, · arrange for
community services that may be
needed, determine if the victim is
eligible for reinbursement by the
State Medical Expenses resulting
from the crime, provide emo-
tional support and counseling,
and explain legal procedures.
Craven said that the success of
the program is growing because
victims are. getting more comfor-
table with the idea of getting help.
"For many years it was taboo to
discuss rape, now people ·are get-
ting more comfortable with the
subject and they are reaching out
for help," Craven said.
For every
rape which
is
reported, between five and ten ac-
tually occur according to CV AP.
"Women don't want to go
through · the court processes,"
said Craven. "They're afraid that
they will look bad. The media has
a tendency to sensationalize the
drama."
Women are protected by a New
York State law that forbids past
background to be introduced,
unless the case is of an unusual
nature, said Craven .
Social rape, said Craven, is the
hardest type of rape to prove.
"This occurs when two people
know each other in a social situa-
tion. It's most frequent with peo-
ple in their young twenties, who
frequent bars," Craven said.
In a social rape case the rapist
can defend himself by saying that
it was a mistaken identity or that
it was of mutual consent. "I'm
not saying that it can't be done,
but legally it's the toughest kind
of rape to prove," Craven said.
The Crime Victims Assistance
Program, which has recently
started an
adult incest group,
adapts to the needs of its people.
Craven said: "It's important for
the people to know that we don't
report information to the police
and that they're not pressured in-
to coming to us. When people feel
that they are ready to seek help,
._ __ -____________________ __. a-----------------------•
.we're here."
j
l
j
j
I
'I
..
~;
\"\:
{
i
(
·
•
·
.
•
,
.
,.,
.
•••-·•· w
·
•
•
·
• .,
..
·•·•~--
-·•
•-
-:
,,,. ,..,, .. ._
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•
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...... ,....,...
•·-
·
•
-
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•
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--•P~ge
8 ·
THE
CIRCLE• March
3,
1983
Housing eyes
fan
pla.ririirig
by
Kris Lawas
Marist students who will be
seeking college housing next fall
may find it a little less confusing
if housing officials have their
way.
\
'The problem with last year
was that everyone was sur-
prised," said Director of Housing
Robert Heywood. "If you aren't
sure where you're going to be
living it can cause
.
a lot of
anxiety
.
"
.
·
Many students said that they
were "outraged" last year when
they received word from the
Housing Office informing them
that they
.
had either been denied
housing altogether or had been··
placed in off-campus apartments.
One of last year's housing
problems
.
was the acceptance of
the largest freshman class
.
in
history for the 1982-83 academic
year
.
_ -
An exact number of freshmen
and transfers expected next fall
will
not be available until the
middle of March, according to
the Admissions Office. Without
an estimate Heywood said that he
was unable to predict if there
would be any serious problems
wit
_
h housing this year
.
To avoid any confusion this
year, housing will try to keep
students informed on any changes
or problems. "We don
'
t want to
see worried students,'' said
Heywood
.
"We'll try
.
our best to
keep everyone informed."
Because ofa limited amount'of
space on campus last year, less
·
space
·
was available to upper-
classmen. Marist policy dictates
that freshmen have to be housed
on campus. The only possible way
to provide housing was for the
Housing Office to lease a number
of off-campus apartments such as
the Canterbury apartments in
Poughkeepsie. Although the
townhouses helped improve
·
a
small portion of the
·
problem,
only 210 students could be housed
there
.
Many students had to be
housed off-campus and a lot of
residents said that they didn't like
the idea.
"I sincerely believe that Marist
over-booked its freshmen dorms
iast year," said sophomore Karen
Nizolek,
causing housing
problems not only in Leo and
Sheahan but for the rest of the
campus. I was placed in the Park
Place apartments before I
_
received word of an
.-
opening in
Champagnat
;
'
I was never quite
sure where I would be living. It
gave me a lot of headaches."
Co-op office
-
seeks
applications
.
.
According to
Mike
Bowman,
Champagnat
·
Hall
resident
director, "From the point of
taking in freshmen
·
students to
live on campus, I feel that they
did accept inore than we had
room
·
for' in
·
the traditional
freshmen area. · This created
problems for freshmen living in
an upper-classmen dorm like
Champagnat."
·
"There was a lot of confusion
in Leo Hall last year," said
·
sophomore Frank Raggo. "A lot
of guys didn't know what was
going on.
It
sceined as if people
were being sc
_
attered
.
all over
Poughkeepsie. We didn't know
why this was happening."
"There are approximately
1,200 housing spaces open to
students on campus," said
Heywood.
"If
enough spaces
aren't available,
.
w
e place students
.
off-campus in one of the apart-
ments. These
_
apartments con-
stitute residential housing because
we do
·
provide many services for
these students, such as tran-
sportation.
'
We could send
.
students on their own but we like
to providethem with achoice."
Room reservation cards
will
· not be issued until the middle of
spring.
,
.
When this occurs,
Heywood said that he would try
his best to see that students are
made aware of any problems.
·
"Marist is
.
growing and im-
proving, attracting
·
more students
and that's good," replied
Heywood. "With the Title III
Grant, all sorts of money was
by Karyn Magdalen
Ansbro, "because if an internship
allocllted to expand curriculum.
comes up we would be able to go
.
We
·
attract even
·
more good
Applications are now being
through our files to get someone
students. But with that we're
accepted
.
at the Cooperative
right
oil
the spot."
experiencing growing pains which
Education
office
for
the
If anyone is interested in an
is ultimately felt in housing and in
numerous internships offered to
·
i
nternship they should stop by the
.
the classrooms, and we try to
Marist students for the summer
-
Co-op office for
·•
more
.
in-
.
·
adjust to
·
the trend .
.
_
This
.
year,
a~d raU$triesters.
i
·
.
• .
.
c
·
'.
''
formation. The ciffice is located'
,
we'll try
'
to, ci'IOid such confusion
_
_
·
.
,
Accordi'ng
'fo
Ka
t
h{'A'.nsbi-6,
in
·
oonneli
)"'
rooni
.
230
•·
·
or
'
the
'
by trying't'o
'
Jcee
·
p, students
·
foa
•
MARIST
·
·
·
.
.
'
.
.
COLLEGE
·
The following Internships are
·
available for Sum~
mer
&
Fall:
·
·
TECH WRITING & P.R.
I.B.M. Kingston
LB.M. Poughkeepsie
1.8.M.
Owego
N.Y-.s.
Assembly
BUSINESS, Marke,ing, Advertising
&
Sales
·
..
DCD
Technologies
·
Mike Bolger, Inc. Advertising
·
Northwestern Sales
Heubline,
Inc.
of Hartford
,
There are MANY more available!
See
us
-
-
in
0230
for more information .
.
•
There
·
will -be a seminar for anyone Interested
in
beco~ing
_
an Intern on
__
Thursday,
..
March 3, at
.
11
:20 (free
_
slot) in
D21f.
'
.
.
,
.
·_-
_,
,
·
•
-
!
;_::
~
.,
_·· .
...
,
.
,
.
~
,.
_
·;~-:
·:
~:
:
~~
-
~
:·
•
·:
'
-.·
~1
i~;
~:f;t~f
ti
~
~~f7J
f
iit
\7':
f
f
f
t1;f}~
i;
t
~~j{~
•
•
.
, ..
•
,,
;
_
,:
s
~udent worker in the Co
~
op
phone number is extens
i
on 210.
formed as
ff
wha~'s going
off."
office,
"
There
•
are so many in- . .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
•----llil!li-------------------••--.
•
t
ernships available to
.
the students
and not
-
,
enough
.
people to fill
them
.
"
·
..
···
·
·
,,
The Co-op office
·
will
be
sponsoring an orientation for all
prospective interns for either the
summer or the fall today during
the free-slot in room D-211
.
The internships are not just for
communicaiion arts and business
majors. ''.We do have a lot of
internships for communication
and business majors
,
but we do
also have internships for social
work, fashion design and political
science majors," said Ansbro.
Production work for WNBC-
TV
and WCBS-TV,
public
relations work for the American
Cancer Society and news writing
for
WOR-AM
radio in New York
City, are just a few internships
offered for communications
majors.
Other locations for internships
include the
·
New York State
Senate, Dutchess Court Executive
Office,
Astor
Head
Start
Program and The New York State
.Assembly
.
·
·
•
Qualifications for an internship
are a 2.5 for most majors, except
for business majors, who need a
3.0.
"IBM,
which offers quite a
few internships, requires a 3.0 for
all majors,"'"
·
said Ansbro. A
student should also have a 3
.
0 for
all ,majors," said Ansbro.
A
student should
·
also have 60
credits or more to apply.
Although most of the in-
ternships are non-paying, there
are a few internships that do.
"We have internships at IBM that
pay students an average of $335 a
week," said Ansbro. "Most of
the other internships don't pay,
··
but it's the experience and
·
the
connections that really count
,
the
money is an extra bonus,"
·
An,
sbro~dded
.
The deadline for applications is
Mar.ch I, 1983, for the summer,
and April I for the fall. "It's
important that anyone interested
fills out an applic~tion,"
_
said
.
•
• •t.,-•.t
.•
•
.:
-."'
.
~
.
-
•
.:.
.
.
F
·
riends
.
of
--
-
Marist
.
•·
·
·
.
FLEA
.
MARKET
Marist MCCanrl
SAT. M;ARC
-
I-L
:
_
12
:·
_
_
10 a.m. to 4
·
p.m.
150 vendors,
.
FREE
admission
Refreshments available
call
471-3240,
ext.
278
_______________________
..
-~'
.
.
.
'
'•
•
, ~•
'
I
·
.,•
•~
1:
•
•:
.
•
,
,.
•
.
··
THEOFFICE OF
ADMISSIONS
.
is
-~urren
:
tly ac~e
-
ptigg
!
.
:
,
applications
for'
..
the
.
-
-
~dmlssio
_
ns-
Co-O
_
p
Jn
.
.
.
Ed
.
ucatioilal
•
Administration~
lryterested juniors
_
should
submit letters of appli~auon
and
-
a resume to:
-
JAMES DALY
.
..
·
Dean of Admissions,
No
·
-
1a,
_
er than F
_
riday
March 25,
1883
-------~---------------------------•March
3,
1983- THE CIRCLE-
Page
9
The
.
bizarre daysofthe Lemuel Smith trial
.
Editor's note: Reporter Cindy
.
hoop. It wasn't Dustin Hoffman whatever he's looking at.
Bennedum recently sat in on a ses-
in "Tootsie" that had lured me
When· Smith walked into the
distinct change from the husky-
voiced Kunstler, pacirig and jingl-
ing his keys during testimony.
·
Only minutes later laughter
erupted once more as one of the
prosecution's witnesses was about
to swear to tell the truth. Even the
judge laughed when the witness
was told he was raising his left
hand and had the wrong hand on
the Bible.
sion of the Lemuel Smith murder
here;
It
was Lemuel Smith.
Dutchess County Supreme Cour-
. .-
triat Here are her impressions:
Smith, 4 I, a prisoner at the troom smiling, I knew I was
·
·
Green Haven Correctional Facili-
mistaken. I couldn't take my eyes
Asl stood in line waiting for
.
ty, is accused of the May
15, 1981
'
off his face, wondering why this
the doors
.
to open, my pulse
·
murder of rookie prison. guard man, who faces the death penalty
quickened and I couldn't seem to
Donna Payant. Her cause of if convicted, thought this whole
The sixteen-member jury seem-
ed quite relaxed in their black,
stand still.
_
death;
.
strangulation and sexual ordeal was amusing.
"How could all these
·
people
mutilation. Payant's body was
As my eyes scaled the length of
·
cushioned swivel chairs. One
female juror refreshed her lipstick
while waiting for the performance
·
to begin.
.
There was a moment of confu-
sion over the labeling of one of
the papers needed as evidence -
whether to label
it
A4 or AAAA.
The judge smiled and responded
sarcastically
to
Kuntsler,
"Whatever you feel comfortable
with.''
waiting with me remain so
.
found
·
May
16
at the Amenia Smith, I took notice of his
.
calm?" I asked
·
myself. A lady
Landfill, her body wrapped in
.
clothes. The too-short sleeves of
Once the trian begun, it was
halted only twelve minutes later,
when the defense and prosecution
met in the judge's chambers for a
legal discussion. For over half an
hour the remainder of the cour-
troom had to amuse themselves.
next to me stood reading a novel.
plastic ga_rbage bags.
his light blue sport jacket caught
·
One elderly woman called to a
I kept trying to
_
picture in my my eye.
passing friend, "I'm here again!"
mind what Smith would look like.
Defense Attorney William
The au~ience, comp
_
osed of
-
peo-
What does a person look like who Kuntsler appeared in a three-piece
pie rangmg from the1r teens to the
is already serving four life suit. Somehow, this didn't match
-
elderly,
·
even discussed Florida sentences from two previous the disheveled remainder of what
·
suntans.
.
.
murder convictions? My answer made up Kuntsler. With bifocal
When order was restored,
I
glanced over and caught Kuntsler
drinking out of a Dallas Cowboys
mug. My next survey of the room
cited Smith
.
actually laughing. I
was beginning to become preoc-
Stanton and Kuntsler were not
comfortable with the lunch break
schedule for that day, which is
usually from noon until
2
p.m.
I wasn't waiting to see the was
.
someone who grunts instead
.
glasses mounted on top of his un-
Marist Red Foxes shoot some of speaks and whose eyes pierce trimmed grey bush of hair, Kunt-
·
An argument erupted as the
judge tried to settle on a time that
would please everyone .
.
Series to focus on women
byS.C. Pyle
· Women in History
will
be the
front line topic in a series of panel
discussions and lectures March 7-
10, 6:30 p.m.-8 p.m. each even-
ing, in Marist's Fireside Lounge.
Designa
'
ted
as
Women's
History Week, the series
·wm
·
recognize the likes of Eleanor
Roosevelt for the influence and
contributions they have made in
ROOSEVELT THEATRE
Rte. 9, Hyde Park, N.Y.
TEL. CA9-2000
the past, are making now and will
be making in the future.
Areas that will be focused on
during the course of the week in-
clude Historical Women in the
Hudson
Valley;
Eleanor
Roosevelt; Women in Govern-
ment,- Law, and Business; and
Women in the Arts. Each even-
ing's topic will include a lecture or
overview and audience dialogue.
.,
Now Playing Friday Feb. 18
through Thursday March 16
*********************************
Reverend John Garvey
Glenmary Home Missioners Room
2
7
Box
46404
Cincinnati. Ohio
45246
sler shook hands with his client,
as if to wish each other luck in yet
another round of this ongoing
battle. This chaotic image was
reinforced as he shuffled through,
and could not find, papers needed
during the testimony.
Prosecutor William Stanton,
·
on the other hand, had everything
under control.
With glasses
resting securely on his nose, he
calmly stood next to the jury dur-
ing questioning.
His voice
reflected the calm atmosphere
surrounding him, which was a
,
cu pied in
.
finding humor in the
situation. It was there.
My eyes turned to the three in_-
timidating wardens sitting behind
Smith. I almost chuckled out loud
as one passed a stick of gum to
another, then popped
·
a but-
terscotch disc into his own mouth.
The entire courtroom burst into
laughter when Kuntsler asked
Judge Albert Rosenblatt a ques-
tion. The judge responded,
"Should I go on the witness
stand?"
When testimony resumed, In-
vestigator John Fox, the present
witness on the stand, said that he
had received as evidence articles
of clothing, including "a pair of
panties."
What may be the biggest
murder trial to hit Dutchess
County just may be the funniest
.
With such an electrifying cast,
as well as the smile of Lemuel
Smith, this just might be a televi-
sion soap opera.
Lake topresent writing of Plath
by Lori Dyer
"She's a fascinating person,"
That's me; that's me exactly! Is
said Lake.
"She's
considered to
that going to happen to me? How
She leaned forward in her chair be a truly great poet. It's her per-
can I stop it?'."
and her
.
voice dropped: "Dying is sonal life too that's fascinating.
Lake said that she herself iden-
an art like
-
everything else. I do it Out of the trauma of her personal
tified somewhat with Plath,
exceptionally well;
I
do it so it life came this really hard-hitting whom Lake called "the ultimate
feels like hell."
poetry."
perfectionist." Lake said,
"If
she
·
Diane Lake, instructor for Ad-
Lake said she feels that Plath
got an A- in a class, she went into
vanced Oral Interpretation at had a lot to say to college
depression."
·
In
comparing
Marist, was quoting a line written students. Plath wrote a letter to
herself, Lake said: "That's me.
by Sylvia Plath, famous poet arid her mother concerning
a
boy who
I'm a perfectionist. I can relate to
'
'--
lluthot.C!,t:;
.
TheBeU_J_;u-
-
.;.•
.
;
.
.
.
....
_ had
·
.
tried,-
._
to
.
commit
.
suicide
_
.
,that.
Ldidn'.t have the same kind
·
:
Lake
-
will be g1vmg an
.
oral because he was depressed about
of pressures, but
I put them on
reading featuring
·
the journals, grades. In the letter she said,
myself
:
"
·
letters and published works of
"When
you die, they're not going
In regard to oral readings,
Plath, March 30 at 7:30 p.m. in to carve your marks on your Lake said, "When you say to so-
the Fireside Lounge. She said she tombstone!"
meone, 'I'm going to give a
chose
·
to do readings by Plath
In the past, when Lake taught poetry reading,' well, you know
because they deal with subjects sections on Sylvia Plath in her
how many people get excited
that college students can relate to.
classes, she found that female
about that." Lake says she feels
Plath was successful early in students in particular have iden-
that Plath may be an exception to
her
life. She was a guest editor of tified with Plath's feelings and
this stereotyping. "It's just in-
"Mademoiselle" and had many emotional trauma. Lake said,
"I
credible, her poetry. It's just wild
poems published while she was had one girl call me up at
11
:30 at
and crazy. She uses images that
still in college. She also commit-
night and say, 'You know what
really grab you and make you see
ted suicide at the age of
~0.
you said about Sylvia Plath?
what she feels."
Talk scheduled on media in poli_tics
, A roundtable discussion on the
role
of
the media in state politics
will be presented by the Marist
College Public Opinion Institute
Wednesday in the college campus
theater beginning at 7:30 p.m.
Highlighting the program for
the night will be a group of pro-
minent leaders from the media.
This includes David Hepp, co-
anchor person and reporter from
the Public Broadcasting Service's
OPEN 24 HOURS
"Inside
Albany,"
Marcia
Kramer, reporter
·
of the Daily
News and also the Bureau Chief
of
Albany,
Frank
_
Lynn,
metropolitan editor of the New
York
Times,
Barbara Ross,
reporter of the New York Post,
Judy Watson, bureau chief of
United Press International and
Paul Brown, reporter from the
Watertown Daily Times and also
a graduate of Marist.
473-1576
PALACE
DINER
& RESTAURANT
Breakfast - Lunch - Dinner
Fresh Seafood - Steaks - Chops
Cocktails - Baking on Premises
(NEXT TO ALL SP,QRT)
Show your college ID and get a FREE
Glass of Beer with your meal!
7%
DISCOUNT
Name
- - - - - - - - - -
-
- - , - - . . , - . - - - - - - - - - - : - - A g e _ _ _
_
Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
·
City _ _ _
;_
_ _ _ _ State
.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Zip _
_
_
194 WASHINGTON STREET
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
.J
.
.
,
'
:
,
:
•
:
·
I
,.
!
•
'?:
.:
~
l
.r
,
,
;
-
_
,;,1
,
•
.,
-
.
..
..
·-
.
.:..,,
.
/
--•Page 1() · THE
CIRCLE· March
3, 1983---------------------------------------
.
·
Duo.
Set
for
200~niife
C
rtil1
by Maria Azzolina
.
·
,,
-.
-
.
.
Marist
.
seniors David
·
.
Haupt
and Mark Wickham will run from
Boston, Mass., to Poughkeepsie,
N. Y.; beginning March 16 to raise
money to establish a scholarship
fund for disabled
Marist
students.
The 200-mile run will begiri
'
at
the
.
Prudential Center in Boston,
and five days later the runners
will arrive at Marist.
·
According to Diane Perreira,
·
director of special services, mer-
chants along the route have
donated
·
accommodations, meals
the road," Hauptsaid;
·
and running equipment.
.
.
.
. _
..
··
··
.
"We do expect them to finish,
.
.
Both
.
seniors said that 'they are but' if one runner cannot makdt
.
running in th
_
e
·
hopes
.
that the run
·
the other
.
will
.
continue on.'' said
.
will become an annual fund raiser Perreira.
·
·
·
·
·
·
for
_
the disabled.
-
.
_.
·
Perreira
• '
Said that it Would
·
be
:
"I want to run for those who
.
.
best if
•
people
.
pledged a
.
flat
:
cannot," said
•
Haupt. Wickham amount of money than
.
a by~the~
added, "When
I finish I'll feel
mile pledge. She also said that if
•
.
that
I have contributed something people
:
did pledge by the mile and
•
worthwhile to the college."
the runners did not complete the
·
.
Both runners also said that they
run, money would be collected for
are positive that they wilJ com." the number of mi
_
les cam
_
pleted.
plete the 200-mile run.
··
"The only way we will stop is if
"I would be ecstatic if we rais-
somebody comes and yanks us off ed close to
$3;000, ''
she said.
- - -
.
·
More letters-
-
----------
contlnued from page 6
Support parade
To the Editors:
Recently the St. Patrick's Day
Parade has gotton a great deal of
.
.
bad publicity
.
The appointment
an event is not
.
determined on the
number of participants but rather
on the enjoyment one receives
from taking part.
Sincerely,
Fred Gainer
Mentor
-
·
·
message reached s~ many people
who decided to support our ef-
forts.
John Henry Griffiths
·
.
Vice President
·
New York Zeta Chapter
Immature idea
of Michael Flannery as Grand
Mixer II
Marshall has upset many people.
Dear Editor,
·
Though Flannery had been charg-
Dear Editor:
Last week's Circle expressed
ed with gun running, he was
·
"What was in here?" she ask-
·
concern
·
over the
·
lack of
aquitted of all allegations.
.
ed. I fou nd myself too embarrass-
respondents
·
to their recent
For decades New Yorkers and ed at the time to answer, looked coupon, "The Best and Worst of
people all
·
over America have away,
a
nd continued my work Marist." Did anyone bother to
turned out on March 17th, in cleaning up. Yes it was a mixer
find out if the non-respondents, a
snow, sleet, rain and sunshine to sponsored by the Commuter majority, were actually saying
celebrate the Irish. The St.
Union;
·
unfortunately it was not something
·.
by not
·
replying? Of
Patrick's Day Parade is becoming successful.
course the
·
old scapegoat known
the medium through which Irish-
Aside from the fact that two as apathy was blamed, but
Americans
can
assert their
·
feel-
events
were scheduled on Satur-
perhaps
·
others,
like myself;
ings regarding the present situa-
day February 26 , we did adver-
believed
·
the coupon was im-
tise. I was flattered to find that
tion in English-occupied Ireland.
mature and unnecessary. After
The image that so many people people fou nd our poSters attrac-
all, what would the results show?
..
have of the Irish as "fun-loving, tive enough to decorate their walls Would
it
be an objective aria)ysis
happy~go-lucky, leprechauns" is
wilh . Regretfully the same people of the present curriculum, or
·
who went out of their
.
way to take
being shattered. The reality that
.
. ,
would the "easy" teachers lead
civil rights are being denied to our poSters
_
didn t bother to c
_
ome the "best" column? Would a pro-
Catholics in the area of Ireland and chec~ out the band.-
· .
·.
fessor who happens to be a· little
still occupied by the English has
Chazy is perhaps the best band demariding lead the "worst" col-
not been accepted
.
by
a h1.rge
,
that has played at M~rist. Those umn'? Would
_
'.'gut"
class~s be
MARI ST
:
coLLEGE
COUNCIL
.
on
·
THEATER ARTS
·
-
_
presents-
·
William
:·_
·--
Inge's
·.
·
-
directed
by
Jan Denison
Thursday March
3 • 8
p.m.
·
Friday
_
March 4
.
•
-
.
8
p.m .
. ·.
.
Saturday March'
·
5 • 8
·
p.
m
·
.
~
Sunday
·
•
~arch°
6
...
•
.
2
p.m.
Matinee
<:
..
:
, •
.
·
TICKETS
·
.
gar{adm .
..
0
stUdtlg
.
.
.
percentage of the popu\atiol\
_
.
.
,
·
.
i
)
who attended the mixer would first or last
_
? And most-important-
•:
·:
·
·
·
·
W
_
e-Ami:ricans;
.who
are:so
'
con~
·
'
~
agree; thos,e
,.
who
·,
pas~ed
.
by and
. :
:
ly ,
•
••
did
'•
'.
anyone
..
ever
.
.
think
:~
they
.
.
,.
~:;::1~
t~t~n~~~
~~ju;~t=doi;,
;
~6;;~1d!~~~~: =~t;~e~n;in~~!. :~!~t
:
;
h
_
~r~
_
-
~~~~~n~
/n
_
/~;
~
)
~
;;
::::;;;:::::::::::.-_..._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
•
Poland and many other countries, to hSten to the quahty ent~~tau;ia
..
·
We aJlha've the
.
opportunity to
:
c
-
should remember the blood, ment.
.
.
·
.
·
.
. ·
_
.
.
.
•
·
.
evalua,te
·
.
.
our:
·
courses
·
and pro-
,
sweat and tears shed by Irish men
w_
e tnpped ?ver t
_
his h':1rdle,-
fessors
.
'
at
:
the
.
·
end of
-.
each
.
.
;
.
aiid women in
'
the
.
founding, ~ut
lt
has not cnpplcd us
.
I w
_
ould
.
semester;
:
(They are also evaluated
defense and development of the hke to than~ all the J)eople who
.
by
.
their departm~nts.)
If
anyone
·
United States of Ainerica. It is attentle~ (resident and
.
commuter)
has a particular gripe about acer-
abotit time we remembered the
.
for the1r ~upport. As
.
the Colll-
tain professor,
:
the door
·
to :the
/
·
Irish for much more than "the muter _Umon sponsors events, I
·
resP.ective department chairman is
'
wearin' of the green."
.
.
reco¥mze the same people who
'
always open
.
.
·
If a student
.
is
:
.
·
If
through the St. Patrick's Day continue _to
.
~ome out to the~;
.
dissatisfied
:
with
a.
certain course,
·
• ·
Parade we, the students; faculty your dedicau~n and support
IS
.
:
or
:
wishes to see a new course that
·
anci administration of Marist Col-
.
greatly
_
appreci
_
ated and has no~
·
•·
is not
:
presently offered;
.
he c~n
lege can inake a statement in sup-
gone unrecogm~ed.
.
. ,
, -
'
also St:C the department chairman
;_ .
.
port of Irish desires for freedom,
I have seen too much growth in
.
If enough students
:
feel the same
:
:
civil rights and
.
national unity, t~e pa~t semester for ~n organiza-
way;
.
something will
,
be
•'
done
>
'
then let it be so.
:
.
-
.
!
10n With great potenual to watch After
.
ail,
.
poor professors
::
arid
C
.
In addition, the spring break
.
It _fiZ?~e
_
OUL
·
The Com'!1ut~r courses, like poor
.
products, don't
:
:
:
announcement iri last week's Cir-
Umon 1s by no means throwing m
last.very long.
·
.
.
.
.
·
·
•:·
'.
·
cle (Feb. 24, page 9) displayed the the towel!
·
.•
·
·
Mary BethColi.lcci;
·
stereotypical
Irishman in knickers
.
''Commuters drive
.
to
-
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
· ·
and
.
buckle shoes, sporting a mug
·.
achie:ve.''
_:
.
·
~dvis
_
ing
·
of beer. Cartoons
.
·
such as this
Thank you again everyone for
.· ·
··
serv
.
e only to
·
reinforce the unfair their support.
To the Editor:
:
.,:. ·
.:
..
.
connection between the Irish and
·
.
Very tnily yours,
:
·
Recenily1 was informed that!
!_
alcohoL
Greg Luna Commuter Union
_may
riot be able
fo
fake an intern-
.::
·
I am
.
certain that Italian-
President
ship because I don't have enough
:
Americans_, Black-Americans or
.
·
Blood drive
liberal arts credits. The sad thing
other ethmc group would not ap-
•
·
is nobody advised me any dif~
<:
predate such derogatory, damag-
.
'.
Dear Editor,
.
ferently
.
to avoid this n1istake
;
,'
:
·
:
ing stereotypes,
_
either!
·
·
On behalf of all the brothers at
·
As a second semester junior my
.
.
·
Sincerely,
.
Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity, I
·
options are limited now
as
to how
Mary Anne Conway
.
would like to thank everyone who I can take an internship, collect
.
.
Mixer I
.
supported our most recent blood
·
the 24 or
_
soHberal arts credits
1
·
·
drive
.
The blood drive
·
is now a need and graduate on time
:
•
.
biannual tradition cosponsored . I reaily feel the advisor system
To the Editor:
by Sig Eps and the Hudson Valley 1s
.
to. blame here. I
.
tried to
On February 26TH, the Com-
Blood Services. This semester's organize my schedule so l would
.
muter Union sponsored a Mixer drive, held on Tuesday, February be able to take
an
internship and I
featuring "Chazy."
.
22 in fireside Lounge, was an was told I was on the right track,
Although the event was not well amazing event. One hundred and yet now I'm being told different-
attended, those who did attend
·
fifty-six pints of blood in six ly.
.
.
had an enjoyable evening. As to hours made this one of the most
I think that tile advisor system
·
why the attendance was low is a
successful
drives in Marist Col- should J?e re-evaluated and some
good question. It was publicized! lege's history.
It was fantastic to improvements
shJuld
be made.
Perhaps
students
felt this Mixer see scores of people sign our
·They
should be th!!re to guide us
was
only
for Commuters
.
.
Not so.
·
pledge sheets, and
to
have a blood
_
an~ to make us
a·
.
vare of our re-
All events the C.U. sponsor, like donation line that never slowed quirements
,
so tha·
.
people don't
any other club/organization, are down all afternoon
.
The turn out find themselves
ir.
che same boat
open/organization, are open to was so great that the blood drive as me.
all
members of the Maris! Com-
was extended an hour
in
order
10
I hope that by writi:tg this lct1er
munity.
accommodate the overwhelming I will at least make people aware
Many thanks are in order
·
for
··
amount of donors. The button that there are ,ertain re-
all organizers of this event, par-
that all of Sigma Phi Epsilon's quirements fqr graduation and
ticularily Greg Luna. All who brothers wore during the blood 1ha1 they should find out what
worked,
I'm sure, enjoyed drive period read, "Blood is Life - they are before it's toe !ate
.
their.selves as well. The success or
·
Pass It On" We're glad our
Karyn Magdalen
Model
~
Cheri
·
Hair
By .. Alfie
ALFIE WEIL Hair Salon
.
_
...-
.
354
main
mall,
2nd floor
452-6712
·
..
·
_
_
· .·
•
.
_
.
-
·
.
,
.
March
3,
1983 • THE (?IRCLE • Page 11 - - •
Swzmmersfinish thfrd in Metro Championships
bY. Mike Graney
:
.
The Metropolitan Swimming
Conference
·
Division
B
·
Cham-
pionshps were held at the Mc-
Cann swimming pool this past
weekend.
_·
.
The
eleven-team,
·
three-day
event was dominated by New
York Maritime.
·
Maritime scored
·
a total of 365 points easily beating
·
its closest competition Adelphi
(288) and Marist (240).
An overall team effor_t pushed
. Maritime to victory, withstanding
an outstanding individual per-
formance by
_
Adelphi's Robert
Sommese.
participated in two relays that
Sommese, a
·
Junior, was a
produced first place finishes for
winner in three different events.
Maritime
.
Sommese
·
started off his brilliant
Delp captured the meet's first
meet with
a
2:00.40 in the 200-
event, the 500-yard freestyle, in
yar
·
d
_
intermediate raye.
He 4:45.13. He then took the
JOO·
became a double winner after yard freestyle with an impressive
recording a
I
:46.14 in the 200
·
time of 49:48. Delp was also one
freestyle. Event number 14 made of four swimmers to participate in
him the meet's only triple winner Maritime's
.
400
.
and 800-yard
with a win in the 200-yard relay wins .
.
backstroke in 1 :59.47.
.
Winning coach Roy Larson of
Maritime could also boast of an Maritime was very pleased with
outstanding performance by one
·
his team's performance, but he
of their swimmers, and he is only wasn't pleased with the style in
a freshman. Tim Delp was a which they were rewarded for
double winner individually, and their efforts. "The meet was run
very efficiently, but there is a lot
to be said about the awards
ceremony," said Larson. Larson
continued, "There should be
victory blocks in the awards
presentation so the winners can be
isolated, and therefore receiving
the credit they deserve
."
Marist finished higher than
.
they ever have before with their
third-place finish. The Red Foxes'
success is attributed to freshman
diver Dave Luber.
Luber, from Buffalo, captured
both the
.
I-meter and 3-meter
diving events. His 456
.
10 points
broke a meet record. Also aiding
Still a chance· to get valuable info at the Jollowing workshop
_
s:
1.- Self-assessment/resume writing
March 7.
·
2. Job Hunting Strategies
March lQ, 23, 28
3. Interviewing
March 9, 21, 30
LAND THAT-JOB·!
Seniors! Are you prepared for the job search?
.
. Workshops held in.the OFFICE OF CAREER DEVELOPMENT
C
_
ampus Cen
_
ter 180
/
•,
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Se~lNG
BREAK
'
INFO:
-
.
;
NOTl'CE
·.
TO
-
RESIDENTS
Please be advised that the Residence Halls will be closed and no meals will be served
·
trom
·
Friday March 11th;
_
1983 at 11 :OO p.m.-through Sunday March 20, 1983 at 10:00
.
~
.
-The last meal on Friday March 11th will be lunch and
fhe
first meal on Sunday March 20
-.
will be dinner.
·
~
~
.
·
·
NO
ONE WILL BE PERMIJTED TO REM.AIN IN THE RESIDENCE HALLS
-
DURING THIS
PERIOD.
.
Plea~e see
-
that all windows are closed, lights are out, plugs are unplugged and doors
are locked before you leave.
Should you have questions regarding this policy you should report to the Housing Office
no later than Friday, March 4, 1983.
Your cooperation in this matter will be greatly appreciated.
Enjoy
_
the Breakt
P.S. You will receive notice shortly regarding the
_
4 day long weekend in April. Please do
Marist to their third-place finish
was
freshman
Pete
Asselin.
Besides placing fourth in the JOO-
and
200-yard
freestyles.
.
the
.Waterbury, Conn. native posted
an impressive second place finish
in the 50-yard freestyle with a
22.70 time.
Two different relay teams also
helped
Marist
keep second place
in question until the end. The 400
medley relay team, consisting of
Adam Their, Jim Morgan, Pete
Asselin and Paul Raini came in
third with a 3:55.29. The 800-yard
free relay team also produced a
third-place finish. Dave Garcia
replacing Raini was the only
difference in this team's 7:45.13
showing.
1983 Metropolitan
Conference Div.
B.
Championships
-
Final Standings -
Points
I.
Maritime
.
(N.Y.)
2.Adelphi
3. Marist
4. City CoUege
(N. Y.)
5.
Queens
6. Ramapo
·
7. Manhattan
·
-
8.
New York Univ.
9.
Iona
10
.
Long Island Univ.
I I.
Vassar
Track team
runs poorly
365
288
240
212
205
145
141
116
113
79
23
at invitational
by
Tim
Dearie
The Marist College track team
travelled to Troy,
N.Y.
Saturday
· ·
to
-
compete
-~
in
·-
the
-
R,P.
l:
--
l
n
-
vitational not knowing what
.
to
expect.
The team is months behind
other programs in the state and
was competing in only
its
second
meet of the season compared
10
the six or seven of most of the
l l
other schools at the meet.
With only
11
runners com-
peting, the team scored only
(WO
points taking fifth
.
place in the
3200 meter relay. The relay
consisted of junior captain Ken
Bohan, freshmen Mike Murphy,
Pete
Colaizzo
and
Chris
Morrison.
"Eighty percent of this is in
your head," Jim Klein, head
track coach, said to his runners.
"We just haven't raced enough to
be that tough mentally yet."
Everyone's legs felt a little
sluggish according to Klein. "We
haven't done any real speed work
yet," he added.
"We have
10
be more patient
with ourselves
,
" Bohan said.
When asked what has to be
done to close the gap between the
other schools and themselves
Bohan said,
"I
know we have
to
work ourselves a lot harder
during
the week.
Coach's
workouts arc geared for us to
progress slowly and I think we're
just expecting too much too
soon."
Klein said he feels that a tough
workout during the week con-
tributed to some slow times. "The
guys were all still sore from last
Wednesday's hill workout," he
said. "That means there's still a
lot of lactic acid in the muscle and
that had a lot
10
do with per-
formances."
The team has two indoor meets
remaining, the Union College
Invitational on March 12 and the
State Championships on March
19.
"I don't like getting bear at a
meet like R.P.l.," said Bohan.
"I'm really
.
looking forward
10
running against those guys again
at the State meet and this spring,"
·not confuse the two.
._ ____________________________________________
...I
headded.
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--•Page
12 ·
THE CIRCLE· March
3,
1983 ~ - - . •
-
- - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
Red
Foxes
roll over
FD,U
at· hom.e,.
76-7i. .
.·
.. ·.. .
.,t: ··.
. ' .. '
. .
The half ended ~ith FDU on top Smith had ,·th~. ball and was·. ,·After _the game Co~Ch,.'·Petro ..
rebounds for the Foxes. Forward
41 39
.
looki~g for a.n open man .. Seeing sai_d "th_e &,a,me w, as. one of our·-
Larry Hampton led· all scorer_s
-
• .
w
Jenly of up
Steve Smith scored· his .2000th .. with 22 points while fellow Knight
.The. second half · began with · that rio one was open he drove to
·
better_ wms. . . _ e ve P .
i
: • .
·
by
Joe
Didziulis
career .. point •arid-. Marist. Red Marcus Gaither scored 21 for Marist'spossesion of the ball and
the basket from the right side and
performances; and '!le ve ·. !m- ·
Foxes · raised their ECAC Metro. · p· D
u
·
after only 11 seconds had elapsed, · dunked • the · ball · to go over the
proved the team concept, Jhere
5
a
· confe_rem:e recor_d t_o 6-6 _in _a .76-
· The first h. alf was dominat.ed by Chris Metcalf had tied the game 2000 point mark.
-
·. definite sen~e of acc~mphshrnent; ·
F 1 h D k
T
-The game was · _held_ up_ for • We're.on t_he up_cswmg at the.~nd
72 wm over air e1g
1c mso.n . :Fairleigh •Dickinson
at times . at
4L
Seconds _ later,_
om
d f
f
d ng
Knights _ last. Saturday
!n
the_· leading by_ 1
o
..
Ma;ist _ made a , Meekins put Marist ahead w_itti a several minutes as the crowd
of the season mStea, •
0
a .
1
.
McCann Center. The wm .was comback towards the end or-the 15 .foot jump shot. After an. cheered
-
the feat and Smith was
like last year. Thats ~ery im-
Marist's third in a row and the . half with
a
series· of scoring by
exchange of the lead, Steve Smith
congratulated by his teammates,
port~nt ~ecause we're gomg to be
fourth in its last five games.
··Tom· Meekins, Bruce Johnson,
scored his -l 999th point · to put
coaches, family, .and others. -
playing
10
the !ourname~t. pretty
Smith led Marist in scoring and John Donovan who com-
Marist in the lead 47-46.
. FDU ran a string of baskets up soon; so now 1s a good ume to
with 21
points while Tom bined to score , 10 points . 19
··
With a 50-48 lead and just · and had temporarily taken the peak," he said.·
. ·
.
·
-.
Meekins added 17. Bruce Johnson Fairleigh Dickinson's 2 in the under 14 minutes to go~ Marist
lead. Marist tied the score. at 62
· About Steve Smith, Petro s~id,
and Ted Taylor· both had 7 final four minutes of the half.
had possesion of the . ball. Sieve all -on · a Ted · Taylor basket and ·. ''Steve. Smith ·.· did a· great .
10~·
'
.
!,()-()()!
<tstev.·e; Smjth drives
d~wit •
the · ·
lane .(above) and slain dunks his
· 2,000th
0
\ ·
career: . point , (befow) ·
. Saturday ~Jllght in
·O
the"iMcCann
' Center;
Smith
becomes
the .
first
..
'
.
'
Marist · ;, piayer , to reach ; . the .
· prestigious·>\ mark.
•
.
.-smith's-
uniform
...:.::·nuinbei-:12 - ·wm be
retired. at 'the end: of the,, s~ason
and dJsplayed .. :in the McCann
Center. He also received the MVP
, award
:for·
the'' season and the
J)unkin' Donuts>Dlink . Award.
(top· photo by John Bakke; IQwer
, p1toto
.by
Jeff Kiely) :
,- __ ,.·;;
<
->-~--~
:.r
-'· -·
.
,-."'.:
·-:.:::J~:
Smt . is zrs
ox o
if
tli,(f ·
-
-
,
..
...
; by Joh"1_llakke
.
' .
:
building· up
si~~~
the previous , especially note':Vorthy b~~ause he
·
·. . . . .. · · - . , . ._.
:
.
Wednesday when Smith finished
doesn't
.
shoot
as
much as rriany
-· Last ~aturday _night, )he night · 11 points.shy of 2,000.: Smith said · college players aridb.ecaus~ he did'
·Marist · 1,eat Fairleigh
·
Dickirson;. the way ; he .· broke 2,000 ·.was··•_ it during Mar-ist's 'transition to
was not'.f.'Steve Smith NighC' at coincidehtaL
.. _· _
Division
L
·'
.
, ,,
, ... - .
the McCaru~ ~enter; .
..
,:
"It
seemed to ·me like he. just
.
. Sitting -·in his · office before
-- Officially, that is.
gave me. the baseline,:
:
1hinkif!g · Saturday's gaine,Petro discussed
- · It
inightjust as well have been, that somebody _else would stop me:
•
what· Smith nas meanuo Marist;
because Smith was the main · downJow,'!
he
said, referring
to
"He~provided
us with.
a cqn:
·
·
attraction
·
all night, even before the· FDU. defense ..
cm
the play,
sisieri°toffensive threat ever since
· the first strains· of, ''The Star-
"But nobody helped him out,_and he's ,been here/' he said. "He's ,
. Spangled : Banneru .· filled · the
it
just so happen_ed that it was a . very difficult .. to stop., He
gymnasium.·
..
.
.
.
.
.
play like that.''
·>
•
_ . . . . .
challenges people-to stop him an_d
. · First, ._ Coach·. Ron Petro an~
Smith said he was reliev·ed_ to · because
·
• of "_his strength .. and
noimced
·
that.Smith's jersey -
· get the 2,00Qth point·. "That was, .
.
shooting ability,he is very tough_.,.
number 12 - was being retired at· just another ·._ a~decl , pressure
· In addition_ to. being the only
the end of this ~eason,drawing an because everybody was saying; 'I .. player in Maristhistory to· score
.. ovation· from ·1he nearly 2,700 in hope you get it tonight in front of·
-
~ 2,000 .points, Smith holds the
attendance. :
·
· the home crowd,' he said, "I feh :• season scoring average record .:....
. Then Smith.was presenteo with, .
.
the pressure as far as scoring it;- i_t , 21 points per· game last year -
the fans' "Most Valuable Player" · was a lot -different~ than
·
the · and needs 53 ·points to take over
aw·ard by the Miller Corporaton l,OOOth point." '-'When I got it, I ·the_ season point-scoring record.
for having received the · most was kind of ·relieved that it was That record is currently at 577
MVP votes from the home fans.
over with, and . then when we points, set by Mike Hart in 1972-
At halftime, Smith received the won .. .it was a good night."
73.
·
"Dunkin Donuts Dunk Award"
Smith's parents were at the
Four years. ago, when Smith
for having the mos~ dunks _during
.
game, and afterwards Smith's was still in high school few people
the seas~n. At the ume Smith ~ad father, Edward, spoke about his thought that he was a potential
20, ~ut
It
was n~m~er 21 which reaction to the 2,000 points.
All-American. "He was kind of a
prov~ded the highlight of the
"You expect it, but when it passive player, not a very strong
evenmg.
happens your reaction is more player," said Petro. "He'd not
With 13:29 remaining to play, overwhelming-than you thought it been allowed to shoot outside, so
Smith drove inside along the right would be," he said. "I think it's he was restricted in many ways.
baseline and scored career points . been a great year here for him -
We took him out of a situation
2,000 and 2,001 on a slam-dunk it's been a great four years for where.we were probably lucky
to
which - brought the standing-
him."
get him and he was_ probably
room-only crowd to its feet and
Petro said that 2,000 points is a .lucky to come here.
It ·
merged
halted play for several minutes.
milestone for a college player, an very well.''. -.
It was a dramatic way to end
"earmark of success." He said
"As soon as we got him, his
the anticipation_ that had been
that Smith's attaining it is open court ability and his ability
then took the lead with a Bruce After he scored his 2000th pomt 11
Johnson free-throw.
·
:
was like getting over the hump;
-· ·
·
Once again_ Fairleigh ·Dicklnson and the tea~ jus( ~ame togethe~." ·
took the lead for
<!-
time, but the
. Steve Smith . said_ that ~co~m,. .
Red Foxes were not to be stopped. . his 2000th car~er POl';'Jt at
~!s
fm~ ' ..
·With 3:12 'remaining and. the home game was mce.
I-. was ·
score 66-63 Bruce Johnson and
under a lot of press_ure. but)h.e ,
_Steve Smith combined 10 put-the cr~n~d .. was.really behmd me, he
.
. Red Foxes in the lead with a pair · sa1?· _
.
. After I scored. the 2000th.
of baskets.
·
pomt my body seemed_.to r~lax . ·
and . my shots were falhng.
Larry Hampton
.
put the· Tonight is one of the biggest;
·
Knights· ahead 68-67 · with 2:03 · nights of· my life -as far as .
left, but Marist took .the lead , baske;tball goes." . · .. ·
.
again with 1:49 remaining· on a .. In previous · action _. Marist
pair of;. free-throws by Keith trounced . the · University · of -
Denis.
.
Vermont . Catamounts • 88-56 .
. :.
·
Fred Collins put the Knights "'Smith led all scorers with· 23·
·ahead one final time with 1 :35 l~ft points and Meekins added
J
4. · Gil ..
but 12 seconds later $te,ve Smith Padilla and Donovan each had :10
put Marist ahead for'.good 71:10 .
.
- rebound~ For Vermont John
- St_eve·smith scored one, rriorl! Simko was the leading scorer and.
point on the fro1't !!lld·of __ a.,,onet · rebounder with
J3
points and 12
·
·
and-one and with 35 sec::.smds_ left . rebounds.
·
Denis,. iff the-. words of -Steve
·
. Smith; ".pu( ~bl!•jcing
·
on the•:- Boxscore:
cake," with
'
a
slam-dunk.· John
Fairleigh Dickinson (72)
Donovan added· .two ·free-throws - Collins 1-0-2, Foster _ 2-0-4,
and with'l4 seconds left in the Gaither 7-7<21, Houston 1-2-4,
game Fairleigh Di_ckinson ,scored Payne 9-lsl9, Hampton }0-2"22.
its finalpoirits with a pair of free-
Marist
(76)
· '·,,
·
· throws by Mike Houston. •
·
·
Meekins 8-1 ~I 7, Denis- 3-3-9,
Secon~s ·Iater-:the.Marist Red · Johnson .. 3-3-9, Smith· 9-3s21,
Foxes~ended their 1982-83 home Taylor 3~2-8;. Donovan 0-4-4,
campaign· with a-7~~ 72:vicfory.
Metcalf 4-0-8.
,.,
0:
to score from
outside was
dem~nstrated very quickly,''
Petro said. "He has certainly
improved · his game since his
freshman year. He's playing
against some excellent teams and
doing well."
·
Smith always ,vanted _ to play
four years of college ball. "I
wasn't thinking that l would go as
. far as I did," said Smith. "It's
something that I never thought
I'd be able to accomplish, but
everytliing's worked out well for
me at Marist, so I can't com- ·
plain."
·
However, there is one person
who knows Smith well and said he
always felt Smith could · ac-
complish what he has. He said:
"I've always thought that he's·
been competitive and would do
well here. I thought he had a
talent for it," He· laughed. "Of
course, I'm his father, so I'm a
liule biased."
28.15.1
28.15.2
28.15.3
28.15.4
28.15.5
28.15.6
28.15.7
28.15.8
28.15.9
28.15.10
28.15.11
28.15.12
, )
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:
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,,
Volume 28; Number
-
15
,
'
,
.
•
.
-
•
.
-.
'
,
'
. Marist
College,
f:'Oughl<eepsle,
N~ Y.
March 3,
1983
,,
Pub: Nomorea1cOhOlo11Tuesdays; ThurSdays
nights, will be inoved down
.
stairs
which· this policy was im~
tivities Betty Yeaglin, who had
to the Pub for entertainment on
plemented
·
and
,
think
.
the Ad-
input in
.
_
the decision-making
A prop
·
o
_
sal that the Pub
Tuesday nights, according
.
.
to
.
ministration should haveincluded
process, according to Cox, was
become non-alcoholic two days
·
Cummins.
.
·
·
· -
-
more of
·
the
'.
campus
·
ori
:
the
supposed
.
.
_
to
.
·
insert
·
an an-
per week has been accepted and
"I think n~m-alcoholic
·
days
:
in
decision .
.
Perhaps re-evaluation
nouncement in this week's' edition
will become effective tonight,
thepubisagoodidea.Itgives
·
the
of their
_
procedure should be
of the
.
Weekly Happenings, but
according
-
to
-
John Cummins;
entire campus a place to
.
socialize
.
considered
.
"
.
.
the
-
announcement. did not
·
ap-
manager cif the Pub
.
·
_ ·
-
, __
-
during the
·
week,!' said Cummins.
,
J: R. Fleming, president of the
pear. Yeaglin refused tci commerit
,
Tuesdays and Thursdays have
Members of the Council of Non-Traditional
.
Student onthesubject.
,
-
been
,
selected to be the non-
_
Student Leaders said
-
they were
Organization
;
agreed
;
"It
seems
.
alcoholic days in the
·
Pub, ac-
upset that they had no input in the
to _
me
·
that the administration
·
Other members of the student
cording to Cummins.
·
decision°making process.
·
·
would have had the courtesy to at
b
O
d
Y
·
a Is
O
ex Pressed
The
.
idea was · proposed by
"It
is encouraging ·to see
-
that - least consult the
.,
Council
of
dissatisfaction with
the ad-
Gerard A. Cox, dean
'
of student
the administration is providing
Student Leaders. It :would appear
ministration's decision. Some of
affairs, earlier this semester
.
in
alternative social
events
fot
,
to me thatthe Administration has
those who can drink contend that
order to provide a place for those
students
,
under
:
19," said- senior
_
no regard for our
·
positions as
:
they are being penalized because.
Marist students who are now too
class president
·
Ted Pe~rotte.
campus leaders, or
_
as adults
they will have to go off campus
young to
-
drink legally to
"However; there are i:nany other
·
capable
·
c,f making
·
a:
valuable
-
on the non-alcoholic Pub days.
socialize.
The
,
proposal,
,
ac-
possible places for such events
;
I
contribuffon
·
_
to
:
school policy,"
The Pub is the only place on
cording to Cox, was accepted
·
fed
·
that stu~erit governments
Fleming said.
-
·
_
·
campus that serves alcohol.
Feb
.
21 by the administration.
should have had some input in the
-
·
_
When asked why the Council of
Resident Assistant
Dawn
!'The purpose of making the
_
,
matter, pr at least been notified.
.
Student Leaders was not officially
-
·
Sturtevant said
;
" I agree that
pub
_
non-alcoholic was not only
·
This policy
·
change
is
a surprise to
.-
notified
:
on the approval of the
·
there should be
ii
place provided
·
·
for those under 19, but
_
to have a
me!"
.
·
policy, Cox said,-
"I
planned to
for people to congregate without
place where all students w<>uld be
,_
,
.
Commuter Union
·
Presiderit
in{orm them at the
'
Jan.
21 CS.L.. ,alcohol, but,it should
;
be
someplace,,
abk to socialize' without
-
a bar Greg Luna said,
·
"1.
am not op-
meeting; however, the agenda was
other than the Pub.
I
think that
atmosphere," said Cox.
.
_.
posed to _non
-
alcoholic events on
·
rather lengthy, and I never got the
there will be
_
very little business
The Coffee House, usually held
campus,
:·
or in the Pub for that
opportunity
.
"
_
·
·
down there on Tuesdays and
in Fi_t~side Lounge on Thursday
matter.
I do object to the way
·
in
. Coordinator of
.
College
·
Ac-
.
.
Thursdays."
_
.
by
Mark V. Zangari
,
.
Studenis who are ~nder the age
of 19 and not able to drink legally
appeared to hav!! mixed feelings
about the Pub change. Freshman
·
Edward Flynn said it might be a
good
--
-
idea because
·
under-age
-
students
-
are turned away at
alcoholic events, and this would
unable them to mingle and sperid
sometime in an area where they
-
are usually not allowed.
-
Andrew Crecca, -president
of
the freshmen class, said,
"I
am
glad
.
to see an effort being made
to accommodate freshman;
however,'! don't thinkdry days in
the Pub is a long~term answer.
-
·
There should be a permanent
place where people can socialize
·
all week long."
-,
.
When asked
·
whether the ad-
ministration planned on using the
Pub permanently as
a
site for
non-alcoholic events, Cox said;
"It is not the final answer. It is
just until we set up a permanent
area,
.
which involves cqnstruction
and money,"
:LaMorte
:
cuts
·
back
,
·q
:-,
.
'.;~.
'p'enqlty in
br(IW[cafie
t
-· f
iilrltitr
1:t
0
t@i
~ilj~ii~i
t
~t:-?
t!
"
:?'.';
~
_
his
''
resideiit
·
:
·
_
assistarit
c:
positjon
/ _
_
,.
Friday the two
,-
~et and Clare
?i
,
:
-
~
Instead
/
LaMorte
'
said
,
Clare wHl
'.
told La~~forte- th~t}ie tho!Jght
·
he
_
_
.
be suspended from hisjob for one
-
·
coul~
·
stil!
.
f~ncuon as an
_
R.A.
·
-
}
-
·
week
;
;;,:
·
_
.
,:-
-
,-~,_:_
·
_
·
-.
·
·
despite his mvo!veme
_
nt
m
.
the
,-,
·
Clare's
·
suspension
will
·
be
fight,
,
~aMo~tes1id.
.
}L
1
_·
March
5 thr(?ugh
_
March_
11
in-
.
purmg Fnday s meeting, Clare
{
i
elusive
in response to the Feb. 15
said that he told LaM~rte that
,
j!
fight at Skinner's which involved
there were no othe~ Jobs on
1\,,
ClareJirid severar:other people,
campus that fulfill his need to
\;,
said LaMorte.
_C
-/
:
.
help people. "You don't get to
-.
·,
,
~After the March break, .Clare
interact with people on a per~onal
:
:,is·
j
will return fo
:
his normal duties
as
.
level in any
.
other
_
student JOb,"
'\
l
.,
,
the 4th floor Leo
R
.
A.,
LaMorte
Clare said Mo~day.
.
_
}
.
.
:
.
.
,:I
.
said
:
· -
·
__
_
LaM~rte said h_e agreed
to
~o
·
:
F
-
ans
·
d
0
1s
·
play
··
-
~nthuslasin
·
wil
.
h
_ ·.
t
..
he
..
•
_
tradi
_
tio
_
n
_
ai
toilet
__
.
pap
.
er
_
,
·
LaSt
:
week
·
Clare decided to
-
-
_
a!onglwf it~'Itfhe behef Clarel has
m
-
.
_
-_
:
,
·
_'.
_-
,
.
-
__
-
.
__
;:
1
•
appeal LaMoi-te's decision
-
to
;
h1mse .
more peop e ~ere
.
~
throw after
.
Mai-Isl scored
hs
first basket against FDU. (photo
>
reljeve him
,
of his R.A. job:
·.
_
able t
_
~ express, or _even ma~1fest
t
•
,
-
byJotiitBa~ke)
.
-
-
-
-
-
-
_ Before
'
the
·
officiaLappeal
_
was
!hat kmd_ofa11 aw_tude,:we d be
:t?:
·
·
· _
broµght
befPrc
_·
a
·
--_
j
_
udical ~o~~d,
-
tn
fant
_
~suc sh~pe,
_
he sa~d.
cliSs times
sChedlll~d
·
t
orJall
•
.
~
•
'
·
_
by
Lou
Ann
Seeiig
registrar, said
-
she :is currently
week undenhe new ~chedule will
.
working on a calelldar that will
be one hour and 20 minutes long.
.
.
_
In order t~ us~ Marist;s limited
_
begin classes Sept. 6, the Tuesday
·
The first class of each day
will
run
•
.
:
"
classroom space more efficiently,
·
after Labor Day
:
The calendar is
.
from 8
to
9;20 a.m. Classes
-
that
-
-
ttmesiot
:
·
scheduling
,
will be
subject
'
to approval by
-
tbe
meet three times a
'
week
will
meet
•
'
_
-
changed next semester, according
academic vice president
'
s office
'.
·
for
55
minutes each time; and
-
to
.-.
Academic'_ Vice
'
President
_
The elongated teaching day
will __
there will
'
still be
,.-
10
.
:
'
ininutes
Andrew Molloy.
_
__ . _
_
give students who have jobs more
between classes, Smyiesaid.
,
Under the new schedule, he
flexibili_ty · in
-
their schedules,
The addition
·
or five minutes io
said; there shcmld
"
b~ no e~P!Y
·
.
ac~ording _to .
A?~x
Smy
0
1~! :
·
each class period is "arbitrary in
classrooms at
-
any given ume
,
ass1stan
..
t
_
r_eg1strar
'..
If
:
~
ome ne
that we
-
.
are
·
a
·
bove the m
_
,
_
.
nimu
_
m
.
,''
.
,
-
''This allows
·
classro6ms tQ be
.
·
h
k
I
the day he
_
as to ~or e~r Y
10
,,
·
e s'a·id
said Molloy." The extra minutes
scheduled for complete usage,"
has the
.
later timeslot,
h_
.
,
per class insure that the college
-
he said.
.
-
.
-
and t
_
hose who start their Jobs
will meet the siate requirements:
Class
·
periods
will be five
later m the day can
_
take classes
-
-
minutes longer than they are now,
during the earlier timeslots.
In
.
addition to the
5
p.m.
and an extra timeslot wiH
be
.
According to a New York Stat~
timeslot, other new timeslots
added that runs_ during th'e dinner
law,
•
every three-credit course
include: one that runs Tuesdays
hour.
·
·
must meet for a minimum of from· 8 to 9:20 a.m. and Thur-
.
Currently there is a break
2,250 minutes,
.
said Molloy.
sdays from 9;30 to 10:50 a.m.;
_
between the end of day classes at
·
Marist's current schedule meets
two that run three times a week on
4:50, and the beginning of night
that requirement, but in cases
Mondays, -Wednesdays
.
and
classes at 6:30. The new schudule
where there are holidays and
·
Fridays; and one that runs from 8
includes a
5 to 6:20 p.m. class.
vacations, there is a chance that
.
to 9:20 a.m. on Wednesdays and
Also planned for next semest~r -some courses may fall below the
Fridays. There is also a scheduled
is a change in the academic
_
_
minimum, he said.
·
free-slot
on
Thursdays from 11
calendar. Dr. Elizabeth Ross~
~11
classes that meet twice a
a.m. to 12:20 p.m
.
'
,
;
'
Clare
.
and LaMorte met and
LaMorte said he re-evaluated
reached
·
a new
.
decision that was
continued on page 2
Weds.
.
Fri.
Mon.
Tues.
Thurs.
\
.
,
8:00/
9:20
··
·
1
,
,.
4
1
l
1
-
·
'
.
'
'
9:30/
·
.
-
.
·
..
10:50
·
..
3
5
-
3
4
5
·
· '
'
11:00/
·
-
,._
'
-
11:10"
6
7
6
Free
·
7
(8 &
9)
11:30/
1:50
'
8
9
8
9
;, (8A)
..
11:30/
1:15
8A
8A
8A
(10
& 11)
1:00/
3
:
10
10
11
10
11
(10A)
a
2:00/
2:55
-
lOA
JOA
JOA
3:30/
4:50
-12
13
'
12
13
..
5:00/
6:20
14
15
14
1S
Evenings
6:30/9:10
:
New schedule for
'
83-'84.
,
,·-'·
-:.::.
~-:
_
.;..,;,.. __
~
,
:,__
.;
,
~~~..:,.. ... ,;.
,
~
,
..
_
........
:
,
...
..
.
...
.
,~ .. ,,-
--
·
-
-
"
"'
'-·
·
•:,-
-~'<-=
•-~----~--).,..,~:
--
....
,
,
: ·
· ~
· · · · · · -
·
-
- -
~
.
. . .
.
~
.
~
•
¥
__
. .
.
_
c., . . . . .
, .
- -
- -
, : •
.
...
·
, :
·
_
_
. ,
•
•
_.,.
.,..,r-
~
'.
..
'
"
.'
1,
~
- · •
·
- -
·
•Page2
•·THE CIRCLE· Maich
3, 1983•---------'--------------
1111111~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Clate
.
continued
from
page 1
.
the part of his decision that af~
fected .Clare "in light of what
Willy had said."
· ·
LaMorte said he has always
encouraged people to approach
him
·
if they disagreed with a
decision he has made
:
.
· "The.function of·disdpline ifit
is
.
to be of any real v;i,lu~ is what
.
that
:
person learns
,
.
not
· :
what
·
a
person suffers,'
.
'
he saicl
.
.
·
"Has
something been learned by this?
Are we better for it?" he said. It
is
_
necessary
.
that people . learn
from situations such as this one
"otherwise I could not see myself
being
.
part
.
of
a
·
d
i
sciplinary
·
process," La\\'tm:te said.
· •·
·
-
. :
··
According
.
to
·
·
LaMorte;
·
there
has been much hostiiity toward
.
him and his original decision
.
regarding Clare. He said the
.
situation
.·
regarding
his
disciplinary decision proved to be
a very difficult thing for the
R.A
·
.•s to deal with.
·
·
A fight occurred Tuesday, Feb.
15 outside · Skinner's, and in-
volved
>
three
.
R.A.'s,
.
.
five
freshmen
>-
:
and
·
•
·
·
one
·
residence
director.
·
-
Cl.ire
.·
had been
·
ter-
-
minated in a decision made the
followingMo~day by L
_
aMorte ..
·
D.C. tripplqnned
·
by
Frank Raggo
The Marist college Public Opi-
nion Institute, headed by Dr. Lee
Miringoff, is sponsoririg a
·
five-
day trip to the nation's capitol
from Tuesday, April 5, to Sun-
day, April
10.
.
This trip, according to Dr.
Miringoff, will provide students
who are interested in participating
in a unique learning experience to
gain knowledge of our govern-
ment and how it works on
a
na-
tionaJ.level.. . .
·
.
.
.
.
·
.·.
· ._
.
. • .
.
:
· .
;the
/
trip' :includes
.
many .-
tours
thi-oug~du't ii:le
capitoi
~s
welJ'a~
seminars in
•
which
·
·
students
·
can
.
.
:
..
.
.
at
>
scnoa
..
.
.
.
WITH
.
:
.
.
AR
'
MY ROTC
.
.
Ar111y
ROTC Scholarships
n
·
ow
.
·offered at
.
.
MARIST
Call:
·
Captain Wingate
(212) 295-3533
(COLLECT)
.
Army ROTC scholarshps pay for college tuition, textbooks,
. laboratory fees and other purely educational expenses.
,
Scholarship cadets also get a tax-free subsistence·
allowance of $100 per month for up to 10 months a year,
for each 'year of the scholarship. (The value of the scholar-
ship depends on the tuition and other educational costs of
· the university.)
·
In
_
addition, your textbooks and supplies (notebooks, paper,
pens,
·.
etc.) are also paid.
'
t
.··
participate. Scheduled sif° far
'
to . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
·
•
·
. .
.
•
·
·
,
- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
spea~ with the Maris( group are
American Broadcasting com-
pany's correspondent
.
for Time
magazine, Douglas Brew.
The group will also visit the
museums in Washington, D
.
C
.
,
namely the Smithsonian Institute,
and
·
sit in on hearings of the
Senate ahd the House of
Representatives.
·
·
The
·
cost of the trip will be
$150 .
.
This includes travel fare,
.
.
'
(the bus
will leave M.arist on Tues-
day afternoon and r
'
etum Sunday
evening), hotel accommoaations
and some food, mostly dinners.
Those who are interested
.
sho
.
uld contact Dr. Miringoff in
his
'
of(ice, Donnelly
.
Hall room
205, or call the extension number
438.
.
.
.
Dance-a-thon set
Marist students will dance
.
for
twelve
straight
hours
to
everything from "fifties rock" to
riew wave music when the Circle
K Club sponsors its second an-
.
nual
·
Muscular
Dystrophy
Association Dance-A-Thon
·
on
April 9.
.
. ·
·
The Circle K Club; a nation-
wide community service organiza-
tion, will be holding the Dance-A-
Thon in the Stone Lounge in Leo
Hall
.
It will last from 1 p.m. to 1
a.rit. that Saturday
.
According to
Donna Cashin,
who
along with
Kelly Slater is co-chairperson of
.
the event, the club is now looking
for students to participate in the
Dance-A-Thon.
"Last year there were twelve
couples who took part and they
.
raised $1,000," said Cashin.
"This year we're hoping to sign
up at least fifty people and raise
at least $2,000."
One of the rules of the Dance-
A-Thon is thal those participating
must collect at least $30 ahead of
time. Their sponsors will be re-
·
quired to pay them a certain
amount for each hour that they
dance.
Internouse
CoU
·
-
ncil
:
·
Ne:Ws·
··
_
ThJs article Is to Inform students of the activities planned by the
I.H.C. and the Individual Dorm Councils for the rest of the year
as
wall
as
summarize BRIEFLY what has already bean done this year.
.
LEO DORM COUNCIL (Social Committee) IYllchele Irwin president,
.
Kata Huggard v.p. Events In Leo Include the Rollerskating Party,
which will be offered again soon. House l's volleyball tourney with
the first floor rising to the occasion, and House Ill's Murder Inc.
.
ending with a pizza pirty arid Lori Tratnor and Larry Sulllvan
·
as
the last survivors. Also lri the
·
works Is a mural contest for the
basement. Social committee work Includes Into non-alcoholic
ac-
.
tlvHles and facllltlas.
.
·
-
. ~
-
... .
SHEAHAN DORM
COUNCIL (Food C~m,mfttaa) Andy Crecca presl- .
dent. Ping-pong and racquetball tournaments are underway
as
Is a
·
plan to paint and redecorate the lounge. Food Committee work has
·
Included Dell hours on Sat. and Sim., suggestions about Improv-
ing the Pub an_d looking Into a possible i'ion-alcohollc plilca for pao-
.
·
pie to socialize that would be comparable to the Pub.
-
NORTH END COUNCIL (Resident Life Commlttaa) Mark Zangari
praildent, Liz Murphy v.p. The North End Is currently conducting
a survey of resident students concerns to batter adapt rules and
policies. The N.E. council ls also attempting to address soma con-
cerns of the Townhouses such as a Bulletin Board In the
Townhouse parking Lot.
·
CHAMPAGNAT
DORM
COUNCIL(Malntenance Committee) John
Zanre president, B
.
onnle Hade v.p. Conducted a survey of
students' feeling towards the registrar's office. They are also ar-
ranging for meetings between the maintenance staff a
_
nd the
I.H.C. Dorm Wars are stlll In progress and participation and en-
thusiasm Is stlll high.
INTER-HOUSE COUNCIL In the future: Our Resident Field Day will
be During Spring Fever Day, APRIL
9.
Teams from each house will
compete CAMPUS-WIDE and a team wlll be crowned Marlst Col-
lege Spring Fever Field Day Champs. Also• we'll be looking Into
setting up two televisions with events for the week programmed
·
on them in places where students can read them
.
Anyone with any
other suggestions Just contact a member of the council. Thank
you.
James Galvin, President I.H.C.
CAMPUS
.
ELECTIONS
1
.
983-84
.
TERM
·
Any full-time Marist student may run for any
one
.
of the
·
following positions:
·
·
..
.
Student Govern111ent (C
.
SL) President
-
·
Student Academic Committee
·
President
,
College u
·
n1on· B
.
oard President
·
_:
Commuter Union President
·
Inter-House
.
Council President
_·
_ Class of
'84, '85, '86
..
- President
-Secretary
·
· -Vice-President - Treasurer
·
•
If
you -will
_
be a full-time· student next year
.
and are interested in running for one of the
·
above offices, you must submit a DECLARA-
TION OF CANDIDACY by 5:00 P.M. FRIDAY
·
MARCH
·
11
to the Elections Commissioner
c/o the CSL Office
(CC268).
Forms may be
picked up in the CSL Office.
·
*NOTE: A general information meeting for
all candidates
wm
·
be held on Monday
March 7th at
5:15
p.m. in CC249.
--~------11111!1~--------------------------March
3, 1983-THECIRCLE-Page
3--•
.The long fight·
··.tcJ·clean··a
river
'
'
'
'
.
.
by
Paul
Murnane
Tri ch Io roe t. ha n e,
Dichlorobenzene,
Ploy
Chlorinated Biphenyl, (PCB) and
Benzene all have something· in
common other than the fact that
they. · are ·· hazardous
toxic
chemicals .
. According to several en-
vironmental groups, they can all
be found in The Hudson River,
where many communities, in-
cluding Poughkeepsie, draw their
public water supplies ..
"Poughkeepsie residents are
. facing a long term health hazard
from
low levels
of. toxic
chemicals," said Walter Hang, a
staff scientist with The New York
Public Interest Research group
(NYPIRG).'
"The problems go
far beyond
what has been disclosed to the
public," said Hang. "Authorites
haven't looked for problems, so
· they haven't found them."
Hang worked on the safe water
campaign . which
discovered
PCB's in the Poughkeepsie water
system in 1976.
A
spokesman · for
the
Poughkeepsie city engineer's of- .
fice said that the city "tests for
everything" and that routine PCB
· testing was stopped in 1980 when
the PCB level recorded a "zero
level."
According to the .spokesman, if
PCB's are detec:ted at a plant
upstream from Poughkeepsie, it
alerts all other water plants in the
area.
Hang called the system,
.. "highly inadequate," and was
critical of Poughkeepsie officials.
"They have their heads in the
sand," said Hang. "They are
.
concerned with 19th . century
. health concerni.. If no one dies
. -:::· from
'
Cholera·
or Typhoid, they
· consider their job done .. ~and peo-
ple shouldn't accept that.''
.
Hang is not alone in his assess-
. ment of the water and the Hudson
. River.
"I don't drink it if I can help
it," said Carol Sondheimer, the
Environmental Director· of Scenic
· Hudson, a Poughkeepsie-based
non-profit "watchdog" agency.-
"If.I were a mother with kids I
would be very nervous," she said.
•'Chemicals don't go away by
putting a little chlorine .in the
water."
Hudson
River
Sloop-
Clea'.rwater,
Inc.,
·
is
another
Poughkeepsie based enviromental
group.
Sarah Johnston, Clearwater's
environmental· director, said she
feels that people don't· really
know what is being dumped into
the river.
· In reference to the Clean Water
Act of 1972, Johnston said that
uif you don't· have state troopers,
you can't enforce the 55-mile an
hour speed limit;u
The decision on future funding
to the Clean Water Act will be
made by congress on March 1.
PCB is the most documented
pollutant in the river, according
to Johnston. There are about 40
"hot spots," mostly north of
Poughkeepsie, of major· PCB
contamination.
"General Electric was a major
polluter of the river for years,"
said Hang of NYPIRG. PCB, a
toxic industrial waste product,
has been linked to cancer. Two
G.E. electrical parts plants, one in
Hudson Falls, and the other in
Fort Edward, have been labeled
Hudson
River water ls being contaminated by many toxic chemicals, according to en-
vironmental groups. (photo by Jeff Kiely).
as the key PCB polluters, accor-
Albany, and hundreds of com-
remove PCB contaminated river
millions of dollars worth of
ding to Johnston. G.E. lost a
panies who dump into the river
sediment to a closed landfill. The
research," said the Clearwa~er
lawsuit several years ago, and
without proper· processing. In the
Environmental Protection Agen-
newsletter. -"This effort appears
money from a fine placed on G.E.
Poughkeepsie area, Wes tern
cy approved the dredging plan
to be wasted unless the EPA
was used to finance the study that Publishing, IBM, and Trap Rock
last December, and put the pro-
reverses its decision." (to use
discovered· PCB's in Poughkeep-
quarry have been named in
a
list. ject on a "Superfund" list.
Clean water act funds)
sie water in 1976.
of river polluters, published by
In a recent newsletter, Clear- . . PCB is. just one of the
A spokesman for General Elec-
Clearwater.
.
water charged that funding for
chemicals polluting the Hudson.
tric could not be reacl1.ed for com-
... Some attempts to clean.upJoxic,, ..
•th.~
dredgit)-g:,. should'. come.
from -~
Scenic Hu9-son.spokesperson Son-
• ment.· ., ., :•-·
"
chemical pollution in the.J¼udson ·. tqe,;Clean· Water Act, and noL .. dheimer.-..says_thaLif. each. pollu-
9ther _ pollution sources ._ are
are underway, according to. 91ear-
from
a
Superfund, \Vhich has 400
tant is dealt with, the river can be
. · sewage treatment plants, many in · water and Scenic Hudson. · · · · ·other projects waiting for funds.
restored.
.
need for expensive upgrading; .
Orie
method of removing PCB
"A plan to dredge PCB con-
"The river is cleaner than it was
foundries near Cold Spring,
N.Y,
pollution has been .to dredge the
taminated sediments ... has been
10
years ago," she said, "and it
a conrall . Di~sel facility near
PCB contaminated area, and -· the subject of years of study and
can be cleaner."
A
silent crippler stalks the Hudson Valley
-
-
.
.
by
Jane M. Scarchilli
.
As Mary walks away from her
car parked in a handicapped
parking spot, people tend to stare.
She is not in a wheelchair and
does not have a· cane. Mary has to
park close to the building beause
she must watch'her feet touch the
ground; she cannot feel them:
Mary
Francis,
21,
of
Poughkeepsie,
has
Multiple
Sclerosis, a ne11rological . disease
that
affects
approximately
500,000 Americans. The Mid:
Hudson area has the great.est in-
cidence of the illness, according
to the National Multiple Sclerosis
Society.
·
According to the MS society,
approximately two-thirds of those
who have MS experience their
first symptoms between ~he ages
of 20 and 40. MS is more
prevalent in· the temperate zones
of the United States where the air
is cooler.
There is no cure for MS and no
way of knowing who will get the
disease. . The causes of it are
primarily unknown. MS is not a · in Francis' life due to her illness.
hereditary disease, but you have a . "It's hard to plan . anything
higher chance of getting it if so-
because
I
don't know what will
meone in your family has the
happen next. MS can affect me
disease.
a·nyplace where I have nerves. It's
Frances was diagnosed with the
scary," she said ..
disease after many tests which
With the help of a physical
eventually pointed to MS. "I was
therapist, Francis learned to walk
sent home the first time from the
again. "I look at my feet, or I
hospital with what they diagnosed
listen to them to know that I am
as. a swelling of the brain. Two . walking," she said. "I also learn-
days later I passed out and Jost
ed to pay attention to a vibration
the feeling of my legs,"· Francis
in the back of my ear while I'm
said.
walking. It's one of those things
There have been many changes
you don't notice when you just
normally walk," she said.
Suspect arraigned.in Caputo's/ire
Scientists have three theories on
how someone might develop MS.
A slow-a·cting virus, an immune
reaction whereby the body attacks
its own tissues by mistake,· or a
combination of both could all be
A Highland man charged with
allegedly setting fire to Joe's
Italian Pizzeria in Hyde Park two
weeks ago was arraigned last
week in connection with a second
fire ·which damaged Caputo's
Restaurant in Poughkeepsie.
John G. Stoming, 23; was ar-
raigned on the latest charge of ar-
son in Town of Poughkeepsie
court and remanded without bail
to Dutchess County Jail, where he
was already being hcld pending
arraignment in co_nnection with
the fire at Joe's.
The fire at Caputo's caused ex-
tensive smoke and. water damage
to the building, and destroyed the
restaurant's food inventory: Ac-
cording to Nick Caputo, owner of
Caputo's Restaurant, the entire
kitchen area had to be scrubbed
down and all the food supplies
disposed of.
According to Caputo, both
fires occurred within 48 hours of
each other and similar.methods of
combustion were used .. "There
was a container of gas or
something thrown through the
front window," he said, "Like a
molotov cocktail." Caputo added
that his restaurant used to be
located in the building the Joe's
Pizzeria now occupies.
· The fire at Caputo's was
discovered by Marist Security per-
sonnel during a routine patrol on
the northern end of campus.
This is the last
_
i.ssue of The Circle
u·ntil March 31
causes.
When the disease hits, the fatty
sheath that protects the nerve
fibers is destroyed and replaced
by hardened tissue. This gives in-
terference to the impulses which
are trying to get to the nerve
fil5ers.
Another local victim of MS,
Jim Holland,
38,
of Poughkeep-
sie,
has been
bound to a
wheelchair for four years.
"I
used
to be very athletic before
I
was
diagnosed · with MS
12
years
ago," Holland said.
"l kept on falling down a lot
while l was running. Tlhe doctors
didn't know what was wrong with
me. They finally decided it was
MS after a year of tests,"
Holla;1d said.
A seven-year member of the
MS society, May Geremino, the
MS Society executive director of
the Mid-Hudson Valley Chapter,
said that the local chapters of the
MS society work on a personal
level.
'.'Through' a network of agen-
cies, we try to alleviate any.of the
problems of the MS patient,"
Geremino said. "We set up sup-
port programs for. the MS patient
and seek out whether they are
eligible for disability insurance
and other types of financial aid."
• The main purpose of the MS
society, according to Geremino, is
to find a cure for MS. "It is im-
portant to know that the MS
society is the only society which
helps the MS person," she said.
For reasons of confidentiality,
Diane Perreira, director of
Special Services, would not give
out the exact number of Marist
students with the disease. "There
are a few people here with the
disease and
to
give the exact
number might give away their
identity," Perreira said.
Although there is no cure for
MS, there are treatments which
help MS victims live with their
disability.
Physical
therapy
relieves muscle tension during at-
tacks of the disease. Medication,
such as hormones or muscle relax-
ers, help reduce the severity of an
MS attack.
There has been a lot of research
done to find a cure for MS. Re-
cent experiments have focused on
a vaccine
to
immunize against
MS, but results are not completed
as of yet.
.....
..
--•Page
4- THE CIRCLE· March
3, 1983-----------~----~-------llllli-----------
R
eade
rS:.,Wtite ...
Ail
letters must be typed triple space wUh ·a
60
space margin, and submitted
t~ ihe - .
Circle office no later than 1 p,m. Monday. Short letters are pr11ferred. We reserve the
right to edit an letters. Letters must be signed, but names may be withheld upo~ · _
request. Letters will be publlshed_dependlng up_on availability of space. -
·
Primates
Dear Editor,
,
Once again I find that a letter
of mine - has in some way
stimulated the synapse ... okay,
let's give him the benefit of the
doubt... synapses of one Richard
Dougherty,
R.A.
·
anything whatsoever to do with
Mr. Dougherty. Yet he chose to
respond in both instances. Why?
After careful consideration of
the neurological mechanisms
involved, -I am of the opinion that
Mr. Dougherty's ·reaction· is
fundamentally the same as that of
lower primates when ·one rattles
their cages at the zoo. No good
reason for_ it, just nothing better
to do. I am sure environmental
factors also pertain -
Mr.
Dougherty is, after all, from New
Hampshire.
_
My question to Mr. Dougherty,
after re-reading his last attempt at
a rebuttal is, "How do you know
so much about pregnant women, ·
Rich? And why. th'is' . preoc-
cupation with women who handle
It's a sad story
I have written two letters to the
editor prior to this. The first
expressed my alarm over the
warped topography of cafeteria
trays; the· seconded contained a
brief
but
nontheless
apt
Shakespearian summary of a so-
called
"column" which has
regrettably, become a regular
feature in
The Circle
(when it's-
style,. or lack thereof, would be
much more admirably· suited to
the insides of grimy matchbook
covers from third rate motel
rooms in states having a low_er
. than average rate of literacy.) In
neither case did my letter have
poles?
·
· _
· ·
Sincerely,
Michael Bowman
Residence Director ·
The Student Affairs Office made another
decision for the students of Mari~t College
this past Y1eek. This time the decision was
dealing with dry days in the pub. What will it
be next time?
·
Perhaps we could yell and scream about
yet another decision that will affect us all
that we had no say in. Perhaps we could
take cheap shots at the Student Affairs
Office for making decisions that the
students are more than capable of making
th_emselves. Perhaps we should rebel
against "the administration." Perhaps we
should do nothing, because no one really
listens to the students anyway.
·
It really is sad. None of us would be here
if we didn't respect what Marist stands for,
but that doesn't mean that the students
· ,:never want change! We want to make Marist
better, we really do. The problem is that no
· one seems to trust us enough to let us try
and make Marist better, make It the -best.
We're· capable, ;'rri6re capable than: the
Student Affairs Office will· ever give us .
credit· for. We can make irnportant _
decisions, we can put on · a fine social
program without filling-out stacks of social
registration forms, we can_ make Marist a
better and more efficient place to live. Will
anybody let us?
We know that the Office of Student Af-
fairs has been making good \decisions for a
long time. They. may have m'ade some bad
ones too, but whether the decision is good
- or bad, the students aren't involved enough.
have more say in our' lives at Marist. We're
not radicals, we just want to get some
respect. Unti( the students are consulted on
some of these decisions, we'll never get the
respect.
.
·
·
So everybody cries about the decisions
that are made for us. Isn't it about tiine that
we did something about it! Marist's Judeo-
Christian heritage _ is important to the
Student Affairs Office, maybe it's important
to the students. Has anyone ever.bothered
to ask us? Does anybody care? Does
anybody care if we care?
The school's heritage is Important, but
individuals are more important and students
are individuals. We want to· grow. We want
to learn. Maybe if we were let in on more
decisions there wouldn't be so damn much
apathy!
·
_
Internships
Dear Juniors,
The Admissions Office · is.
pleased to announce that ap-
plications for the Fall
1983
In-
ternship _ in Educational - Ad-
ministration (Admissions In-
- ternship) are now being accepted.
Specific duties include planning
and maintaining a travel itinerary
and expense account, seven weeks
of travel representing Marist
College at high schools _ and
College Information Programs,
maintaining - a work log, and
submitting reports of v-isitations .
and programs. -
-
-
. Interested juniors should
submit letters of application and a
resume· to my office no later than
Friday, March 25,
1983.
Sincerely,
James E. Daly
Dean of Admissions
Mccann complaint
This week The Circle received a note from
To the Editor:
1·
won'Lmention· how much .the
_. _
-, !~1e!i~~e;;e
A!~~~~
t~!fi~~c!ohs~~,
0
!:rife~~dp
It is_ now 3 :35 _
p.m'._ the basket-
_
player's pay for tuition); I expect
·_
·
_
\reg' ard
__
\n_
··g:~--.-~
.
_tudetit_·s. :~
1
_no
__ mlri,a_ t
__ e_d
__
·_1,_. __
i_-_n
__ -.·_-
-_W_h_
o_
·_,_s, _
.ball
ga!11e
~egi11-s. ~t 8
=0<?
P:ni/8:nd
:'r:}g;P.~iA~lt~f\Y~~i~11
~
~~!~~t~qq~
.
-
•···the we1ght·Toom•1s·closmg·a1?4;00-:"".~1P.'t:~ours_,_a,a);;lf.l7.<,lioo~~f'Tli1s- ·
· · Who and'The
Natlohal:Reglster.
is published
p.m: Why? Because of the basket-
1s nd1culous! .
· - -
·
in next week's Circle.'.' We are the editors of
ball game.
·
-
The Circle and we don't need to tie told what
1 -
realize that the basketball
_ is important. We included
Lt
because it was ,_ team is the school's pride and joy,
newsworthy material. It was our decision as . and we do not want to upset.
student editors of the student newspaper. · . ·them. However, for 8,000 a year (
Let's take a careful look at how · the
Student Affairs Office· treats the students.
·oo they treat us like free-thinking adults? If
. they don't, why not? Is it 01,1r fault, .or their
fault? Is it anyone's fault? All things must
· change; even Marist College. Give us the
respect to change, to grow up.
To the editor:
Big Brother'?
Sincerely,
Chris Radigan
·
Kathy McIntyre
Maybe we'll make some bad decisioi:is, but -
we'll learn, and that's what we're here for. -
Mari st College can be the best for. all of
us. The heritage won't make ·it that way
alone; the students are going to have to help
I · understand that the fight
between
·three
resident assistants,
and five Marist freshmen, which
resulted in the firing of one of the
R.A.
's and the suspension of one
of the freshmen, occurred off-
campus. My question is, •."Why
are the students of Marist College
being treated as if they were in
high school? I can accept the fact
that the administration is con-
cerned about_ the welfare of its
students and I can also accept the
fact the Fr.· LaMorte is trying to
protect the Judeo-Christian
reputation of this institution, but
wheri does "concern" stop and
outside of Skinner's and had
nothing to do with the activities
of the college.
If
the college's
authority extends outside of
Marist, then _
where are we 'safe
from the watchful eye of the
· It's time that the students are allowed to
make mistakes, allowed to learn, allowed to
out too.
·
What does
it
mean?·
When the administration cracked down
on cohabitation, the rationale behind the
decision was Marist's "Judea-Christian
heritage."
When an R.A. was relieved of his duties
over a fist fight, again the punishment was
justified under the Judea-Christian heritage.
students; but that was years ago before
Marist had to become non-sectarian school
in order to survive.
It's now
·1983:
time for an update.
''Big Brother" begin?··
·
This - incident •· is - clea~iy not-
under the jurisdiction of the
college.
The fight . oc<:urred
_
Marist hierarchy? When
J
go
home over spring break; will
I
have to show my .mother my meal
ticket number before I eat? Will I
have to.have my posters approved
before I
put _ . them in my
bedroom?
I believe that Fr. LaMorte went
too far in his dealings with the
students involved. What· a Marist
student does on his own time
should not affect his or her
employment with the college. I
. hope the administration_ is wiser
when the appeal goes through;
Sincerely,
KevinT. Perez
Time and time again major decisions are
backed by the same explanation, and each
time students have the same question.
What is this elusive concept that has
become the moral basis for decision making
at this college?
It would be in·'its best interest for the
administration tdclarify the meaning of this -
often-used term.' To the students, this
Judea-Christian heritage is a Cliche. Every
time it is used,· students lose sight of the
context and
concentrate on
the·
meaninglessness -of a term. Rather than •
raising any emotional· support from the ·
students, this term generally turns them off. : -
A trip
to
re.member
Judea-Christian :_ an adjective that
obviously has great significance to Marist's
administration that has lost much, if not all,
of its meaning to the student. Atone time .
the term probably meant something
fo
the
Co-Editors
The
Associate Editors
Circle
_
Sports Editor
Advertising Manager
Business Manager
Dear Editor:
-The administration seems _ to want a
unification among the various facets of the
Marist community. Perhaps clarifying a
small point like this could be a starting
point.
It is
2 PM
and you board the
elevator from the ninth floor of
Champagnat hoping to be a little
early for- your 2
PM
class. You
Rick O'Donnell
Reporters
Lisa Arthur, Maria Azzolina,
Advertising Staff
Patti Walsh
Cindy Bennedum, Karen Boil,
Tim Dearie, Alison Demarest,
Karen Lindsay
Chris Dempsey, Lori Oyer,
Classified
Lou Ann Seelig
Donna Fidaleo,.Mike Graney,
Donna Cody Seelbact.
Lynn Gregorski, Eileen Hayes,
Cartoonist
Kristine Lawas, Jim Leonard,
Karyn Magdalen, Paul Murnane
Photography Staff.
Karen Nlzolek, Susan Pyle,
Bill Travers
· Frank Raggo, Laura Reichert,
Roger Romano, Jane Scarchilll,
Jim Barnes
· Mark Stuart, Gwen Swinton, ·
Boppln Bob Weinman, Mark Zangari
Faculty
Advisor
Adrienne Ryan
·
J!?e Dldzlulia
Gene Llannis
push the button for the first floor
and you can hear the whirl of the
wheels as the elevator
~
quickly
descends. The lighted panel over
continued on page 6
Tara Scanlon
Lisa Crandall •
Dianne Gallagher
Kevin Shulz
Ted Waters
- Gina Franciscovich, Jeff Kiely,
Kyle Miller, Jeanne LeGloahec
Oayid Mccraw
Got them
.
.
.
Monticello
blues
by Rick O'Donnell
Does anybody from Marist live
in Monticello, N.Y.1 hope not!
The only positive thing that I have
to say about Monticello is th~t it
makes Poughkeepsie look like
Disney World.
·
I never expected to
·
spend an en-
chanted evening in this Shangri-la
of the Catskill mountains, but
It ain't necessarily so
Women's
.
rights
By Adrian Donnelly
and Lou Ann Seelig
Several months ago Marist and
all the colleges in America were
reviewed by a feminist magazine
and rated on a scale of one to five
according to the leadership role o
women in each college. Marist
scored nearly a big zero, but was
granted one star for the efforts of
Reel impressions
No, but
.
_
I saw
the first
.·
one
thanks to a burnt-out carburetor,
.
a plugged catalytic converter, a
dead battery, a failing muffler
and a mechanic that needs an in-
stniction manual to picJc his nose,
I
was a prisoner of Monticello.
. I'm no expert when it comes to
automobiles, but even I know that
there's something wrong with a
car that has to shift into passing
gear to pass a hitch-hiker.
I
figured that
I
would
·
turn off ihe
highway, have a mechanic take a
.
look at the problem, grab a bite to
eat and continue on with my
journey. Little did
I
know,
I
was
about to enter the Twilight Zone.
(DO
DO
DO
00 ... 00
DO DO
DO ... )
The mechanic at Jack Ortesky's
Amoco station reminded me of
Jimmy, the mechanic on the
television series, "Taxi", except
he wasn't quite as intelligenf. He
took out his wrench and began
banging on everything under the
hood. Just what
I
needed, a
mechanic that wants to be a
Miss Gasparovic, student body
president, and . all the other
.
women who hold student leader-
ship positions on campus.
Vassar, of course was rated a
four-or five-star rating. After all,
even their chaplain is a womari.
We've decided that Marist
should never again receive such a
low rating
by a
feminist
magazine; so we've nominated
the following women to take
leadership roles at this college:
next time Marist will surely rate
five stars.
For president of Marist Col-
lege: Jane Fonda ... Was there a
question about the ROTC? Pro-
bably not, with her around, and
for balance in Greystone, con-
sider Bella Abzug for academic
vice president.
drummer in a marching band!
After he banged around under the
hood for awhile, he ended up
charging me $16 for fixing my
-
car, (he fixed it so well that it
would have to stay in the garage
all night!) After swifty the
mechanic got through with the
car, I backed up 50 feet and the
car died.
(It
had to be pushed into
·
the service station.)
My two cohorts (Who
J
will call
Dick and Jane to protect their
identities) were less than excited
about spending a night in-the Cat-'
.
skills, but we made the best out of
·
it. We were goirig to check into
the C11pri Motel, but swifty the
mechanic told us it was not a very
-
good choice, and believe me, if he
said it wasn't a very good choice,
it must have been BAD. He
_
recom~ended the Patio motel. A
lovely little love nest with a view
of a parking lot, and hourly rates.
Before he let us check in, he asked
if we wanted a shot of penicillin.·
·
In the student affairs
.
office,
we'll keep the tradition "in theater
and nominate Vanessa Redgrave
for dean of student affairs. She
should be a nice complement to
the women in Greystone. And just
to keep things on an even keel
·
we'll nominate Mother Theresa
for chaplain and assistant dean of
student affairs.
For admissions we need so-
meone who can really sell things.
Jane Russell seems
-
to do that
well,- let's put her in as dean of ad-
missions. She'd really comfor-
tably support the college .
.
The chairperson of the
.
facqlty
will have to be tough since the
_
faculty is predominantly male.
We've found just the woman:
Miss Piggy. She's tough and she
really
·
knows how to handle
1:he room was quaint.
It
was
decorated in Modern American
Sleeze and there was only one
bed. I guessed this wasn't the type
of motel that offered a family
plan. At least the television work-
ed. We needed the television to
drown out the bed springs from
next door!
We woke up in the morning anct .
I called the garage where my car
was at to get an estimate. The first
estimate was $60, then they called
back and pushed it up to
$85, then
it was $120, I ended up paying
$177.42. That's not bad consider-
ing that it cost me $16 to have the
other mechanic ruin my car._
We spent the day walking down
Broadway. We stopped in all the
hot spots, including the arcade,
two drug stores, a Woolworth's, a
kosher deli and a dirty book
store.
(It
was called a "news-
tand. ") When we got in there we
·
were face to face with the latest
herself in front .:>fa crowd.
As athletic director of Mc-
cann, we've decided to nominate
someone we believe will be in-
novative;
someone who
will
schedu~e Mccann for optimum
usage throughout the year. We
thought Dorothy Hamill would
be just right. Maybe she could
redesign the building for use as an
ice rink after basketball season.
For the new director of Marist
Abroad Program,
Jackie
0
.
should be good: she's a world
traveler and very hard to pin
down.
Chairperson of the
psychology department
is
ob-
vious: Dr. Ruth Westheimer of
WYNY
fame.
And
since
everything else is changing,
Seiler's will need a new manager.
How about Annette Funicello?
issue of Buns and Boobs.
We
left,
pronto.
At 2:30 the car was finished
and we were finally able to con-
tinue on with our trip. At this
time Jack tried to charge me a
four-percent service charge for
using a Master Card. I knew this
was illegal to do and told him so.
He replied, "Well then let's call it
square, and we'll forget about the
service charge."
After I left Jack's Amoco, I
drove for about fifteen minutes. I
was just about to leave Monticello
when I noticed flashing lights in
my rear~view mirror. After
I
ex-
plained to the police officer about
what had happened to my car-
buretor, he replied,
"It
sure looks
like they fixed it."
·
The rest of the trip went fine.
Does anybody want to buy a '76
Buick Regal? How about a night
in the Patio Motel and a penicillin
shot?
She seems to really know her
peanutbutter.
As health services co_C>~c;linator-
Cathy Rigby is a
shoe-in,
but it's
a little embarrassing to mention
why. Finally, to keep Marist safe
at all times, the new director of
security just has to be Patty
Hearst.
Nice Try
...
... to Fairleigh Dickenson. It
was fairly ridiculous to try to beat
Marist at home.
... to It Ain't Necessarily so for
last week's column.
...
to J.C. Gorman for letting
it
all hang out during Pub Night
. .. to Rick O'D. for immortaliz-
ing a Seiler's menu.
... to Benoit for avoiding a ma-
jor fire this week.
deserves recognition.
fort, Staying Alive, the Saturday
were being considered for
~
-
Odyssey Two are among the few
A sequel in my book is a Night Fever sequel that will star
Smokey and the Bandit III, while
that I would think could b good.
money-making process only, and John Travolta.
Jackie Gleason has considered
2010 will be directed by 2001
sh.ows
-
~. complete lack
_
of im-
Jaws 3 is not only a reality, but
repeating his role
.
as Sheriff director Stanley Kubrick.
:_agipatiori.
0
.or
~
.
originality
_
:·
Qii
.
_
the
.
iqvill
be filmed
in
that ne_we
,
si,
!!X~- .
l,\~~9.rd --~:
.
l u
5t
ice'.
.
Speaking
of_
_
.
Th
"
h
U { .
·
part of the individuaJs
·
involved. I cuse-.for
•
sequels
·
-,.
·
3a~.;Jn
t
the
-'.
·,
car.
:
chases,. hold
'0!lto
y011r seat
,.
.
.
-
·
.
~ollg
:
a o
,
lbis, you
.~n~w
must adniit that I
.
have lowered tradition of Friday the 13th; Part
.
for
.
Another Ball, the Cannonball
tber~,JuSt h~d to
b;
another Ai~-
myself to go out and see a sequel 3, Jaws 3-D will be followed by
Run sequel.
port . movie. Airport
2000.
1
s
I
·
·
Amityville 3-D, and, God help us,
boastmg the use of new, genume
on severa occasions, only
to
be Halloween IV i·n·
3
sD.
In the horror genre, Anthony
.
computer_ technolog_y aboard y_ et
disgusted with myself afterwards.
p k"
·
·11
•
p
h
II
h
II
r,
d
fl
h
A
h
Not all sequels are bad, Rocky
Trail of the Pink Panther prov-
er ms is st1 crazy m syc
O
•
anot .. er
.
1 - a!~
•~ t.
·
s
Wit
III, Star Trek II: The
,
wrath of ed that even if you die, you're not
On the lighter side of the spec-
any ~irport
movie, _the~e are
safe from sequels. Giant II will
trum,
George Hamilton will
two thmgs that are mev1tably
Khan, and The Empire
·
Strikes f t
d
1
D
return in Love at Second Bite.
guaranteed: the plane and George
Back were a few exceptions, but
ea ure unuse
ames
can ·Th
h
l
b
·
lk f
c
· ·
f t g
.
H
A .
1
H
ere as a so een ta o
reep-
Kennedy as Patrom. Airport 2000
by Tom Fisher
most
are
simply
awful.
oo a e.
owever, mma
ouse
h
II
.11
1
.
h b
Remember when the obviously II has
.
been shelved due to actor
s
ow ·
·
wi come comp etc
Wit
oth.
_
.
Up until a couple of years ago,
plastic shark attacked a helicopter John Belushi's death. Chalk up
Then there
·
is the category
Of course, an E.T. sequel is in-
.
we had come to only expect con ti-
.
in Jaws 2? You get the picture.
·
one for our side.
where one simply asks, "Why?"
evitable, so why fight it? Besides,
nuing chapters of the "Planet of
·
Of the titles I just mentioned,
Superman
III will
feature
Among these are sequels to
it'll give me something to talk
the Apes" series, James Bond and all will
or might
become Richard
Pryor along with
movies that were terrible in the
·
about if I do a sequel to this arti-
the Pink Panther. These days, any predecessors to continuations.
·
Christopher Reeve. Dolly Parton
first place, so be wary of Conan
cle.
and all motion pictures that are Revenge of
-
the Jedi will hit is being eyed for the- lead in
the Barbarian II, Porky's II: The
I know you think I made up
brought to the silver screen are theaters this summer, while Star Superglrl,
although I can't
Next Day, The Wild Geese II,
some of these titles just to make
subject
to
that
now-famous Trek III: In Search of Spock is in realistically see her as being able
Battle Beyond
the
Stars II, Sword
the article longer, but my infor-
Hollywood
cloning
process the
.
works. Rocky IV is still just a
·
_
to fly. Also, keep an eye peeled . and the Sorcerer II, The Blue
mation comes from a reliable
known as "sequels." On occa-
drawing card for Sylvester for Superman IV.
Lagoon II, and Swamp Thing II.
source. I'm not kidding. Would
·1 .
sion, I will dedicate this cohimn Stallone, and may .depend on the
The Dukes of Hazzard boys
The Black Stallion Returns,
make up something like Swamp
-
to an
-
-
issue or individual that success of his next directorial ef-
John Schneider and
.
Tom Wopat,
Kramer Vs. Kramer II, and 2010:
Thing II?
Friday: On Campus
Saturday: On Campus
Meeting:
Admissions Open
HEOP,CC270
House
2p.m.
Campus Cenler
lp.m.
Workshop:
Developing
Mass
Leadership skills
Chapel, 6:15 p.m.
CC249, 2:15 p.m.
Film:
"Bus Stop"
8p.m.
.
"Sharkey's
Thearre
Machine"
CC249, 7:30 p.m.
Pub Night
9p.m.
"Bus Stop"
8p.m.
Women's
Theatre
Baskelball
Semi-Finals of
St. Patrick's
Mel. Conference,
Day Mixer
TBA
sponsored by
the Senior Class
9p:m.
New Dining Room
Transfer Residents
and Communters
Dinner, Pub,
6p.m.
Rehearsal
"Snow White"
Fireside
7p.m.
Film:
"Sharkey's
Machine"
7&9:30pm
Theatre
Rehearsal'
"The Dunkard"
8:30p.m.
New Dining Room
.
"Bus Stop''.
2p.m.
Theatre
Monday:
On Campus
MID-TERMS
The Chance
Marist College
_
Crew
Party/ Auction
Tuesday: On Campus
MID-TERMS
Wednesday
On Campus
MID-TERMS
Pub Night
Highlights
Thursday: On
.
Campus
MID-TERMS
Spanish Club
presents La Tuna
7p.m.
The Marist College Council on the Thca1rical Arts presents
William Inge's "Bus Stop," directed by Jan Denison or the
Communicy Experimental Repercory Theatre in Poughkeepsie.
Performance dates arc March 3, 4. S, and 6. All
shows
begin at
8 p.m
.
with a matinee at 2 p
.
m. on the 6th. Tickers are $3.00
for general admission and SI .00 for
students.
"Bus Stop" takes place on a snowy night in a midweslern
diner.
It
is a play about a cowboy who falls in love wich a
saloon singer
and abduc1s her and wha1 evencuall
y
happens
between chem.
.
..
..,.,,
...,._.,..·
..
,
·····•
....... ·····•
........
,_,~-.~
·
··
...............
_.,..
. .
.,._
..
,
.. .
.
.
- - •
Page 6 · THE CIRCLE; March
3,
1983 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
,
..
-
'·.
·
~
.
-
,.-'•·.""..
/
.
.-
..
•:
.
,
· ..
Heat pi'oblems·blamedoil building•. strUCtUte
·wiitdows to keep out drafts .. He
also· · suggested
that students
refrain from opening the large
by Lynn Gregorski
The lack of heat in Cham-
pagnat is a dual problem caused
by the structure of the building
and an . inadequate heating
system, according to college of-
ficials.
During the cold winter months
· there is an ongoing problem of
heat circulation in Cha_mpagnat,
particularly on the upper dor-
mitory floors.
The unequal distribution of
heat has always· been a problem
because the·system is zoned on an
east-west basis rather than a
north-south basis, said Gerard
Cox, dean of student affairs. Cox
· said that because the wind comes
from the north in the winter, the
· north side of both wings get the
brunt of the attack, and if the
heating ·system was on a north-
south basis, the north side of the
building would be getting better
heat circulation.
Assistant Physical Plant Direc-
Students get recognition
.
Marist College students will be
Elmira;·
Kate
Hedges,
named in two prestigious national
Sagaponack; Allison McCarthy,
publications which
recognize
Carmel; Janet McNamara, .Pearl
outstanding young leaders, ac-
River;
Patrick
O'Oonnell,
cording to Gerard A. Cox, dean
Poughkeepsie; Susan Pecoraro,
of student affairs.
Highland; William Perrotte,
· -,
Hyde Park; David Skrodanes,
tor John Shaughnessy said that he
admits to the fact that the struc-
ture is riot sound enough for the
particular type of area we live in.
"I think that it's due to the con-
struction, and the big windowed
areas,"· said Shaughnessy. He
said the mechanical plant is pum-
ping a sufficient amount. of hot
water up to those areas, but fur-
ther. up the.· building
the
temperature of the water is drop-
ping and the wind chill factor is
greater.
·
"The heat plant that we have is
adequate for a building that size,
if the building was built proper-
ly," said Shaughnessy.
Andrew Pavelko,
physical
plant · director, said · that the
boilers in the· building are work-
ing full capacity. He said the bot-
tom line is that the building is not
. really built to take extreme cold,
there. As. too . much glass and
aluminum iri the construction.
"The college is searching for an
answer,'' said Cox. He said one
solution would· be to insulate the
inside of the exterior walls on the
north side of the building. He said
that Champagnat is the building
. on campus that consumes the
most fuel and that might be due to
the fact that
it
was built in 1965
when heating fuel was very inex-
pensive.
"It
is not that we have been cut-
. ting. back on heat;!' said Cox,
''but that the. building is growing
older." He said that since the
building is 18 years old that might
be a signal that more serious pro-
blem . in the heating system has
.developed. Cox said that he
suspects there _may be a blockage
in -the heating system that is not
allowing the heat to rise.
Shaughnessy said that the only.
temporary solution at his disposal
is to assist the students by sealing
plastic with duck tape over their
• windows and to avoid putting .
things in front of the heaters in
the rooms. Cox said ._ that most
students assume the control knobs
on the heat registers don't _work
and that many are left•in the off
position, which
will
prevent heat
from getting into· the ·room.
Director of Housing· . Robert
Heywood said he thinks that there
is· no way around· the problem, ·
•'The students . are being incon-
y1enced by it and it should
be
remedied as soon as possible,"
said Heywood. In . cooperation
with maintenance there will be a
· review of the present situation to
determine what needs to be- done
to solve the heat problem and how
much it would cost, he said ... -
.
"There is no question that it.is
cold up there, .· said Heywood,
"too cold."
· Tl'ie-ncw,._
editions of Wh~'s
,
Greenlawn; Stephen Smith, White
Who
Among··· S
t
udents
m .
Plains; Theresa Tobin, Belle
American
Universities
and
Colleges
and
the National
~arbor; Maureen Tynan, Seaford
Register
of
Outstanding College.. and Susan Vassallo, Ft. Salonga.
Junior class sponsors graduate School
day
•
h
Students. from New Jersey are:
Graduates will recogmze t ese
Christopher Barnes, tittle Silver,·
byKiarynMagdalen
schedule; by working·it helps to
students for their academic
f
Joan Gasparovic, North Bergert;
pay some o the costs."
achievements,
service
to the
Dawn-Joy Oliver, Saddle Brook;
~he Junior class win be spon- .
There a.re other ways of going·
community
and
leadership . Thomas Shannon; Union.
_sormg a graduate School Day on through graduate school if a stu~
potential.
Students from Connecticut are:
Tuesday, Marc~ 29, between 11 . dent wanted to go part-time or
· Students from New York are:
Carolyn Shaw, Ridgefield; Dawn-
a.m. and~ p.m.
m
Do_nnelly Hall.
full-time.
"One · way,,, said
Peter. P. Acquafredda, Staten
Marie Sturtevant, West Haven;
. ~ccordmg to ':hns ~?lluso, ·Anderson, "is to. become a
Island; June Aquilla, · Glover-
Laurie
Ann
wash burn,
Jumor · class president,
Many graduate assistant which is . a
sville, Robert Aufiero, Bayside;
Higganum.
students don't really know too work-study
program."
Other
Stephen Broer, Westbury; Bonnie
Also: Kevin Hancock, Walnut
much about graduate schools.
ways Anderson mentioned were
Blanchard, Watervliet; Anthony
Creek,
California;.
Arlene
This is. a way to -inform the. New York State TAP and also
Cardone,
Monroe; · William
Hutnan, Springfield, Virginia;
Slud~mt~, there is schooling after. Guaranteed Student Loans.
.
.
.
Applying for· graduate schools
· should be done early in the spring
of a student's senior year. "A.stu-
dent should apply early to make
sure they've taken all the ap-
propriate graduate school tests,"
said Anderson. "These would in-
clude the LSAT's (Law School
Admissions .. test),
GRE's
(Graduate Record exam)'imd the
GMAT's (Graduate Management •
Admissions test)." ·
Clare,
·
Clifton Park; Bernadette
William LaPrade,
Amherst,
ManSl.
.
.
"A lot of schools are cutting
Cosner, Lake Ronkonkoma; Paul
Massachusetts,
and Theresa
T~e Jumor class officers are back on their aid ,for graduate
Choosing a graduate school can
Damin, St. _ Johnsville; Joseph
Sullivan, Scituate, Massachusetts.
hopmg to get graduate schools schools, but we're doing -the op- -
be difficult because the areas of
Finnerty,
Manhasset; Denise
These students will receive
from .throu~hout the New ~ork · posite. We're looking for addi-
study. are much more focused
Fitzpatrick, Hyde Park; George
recognition awards at the Marist
a_rea, mcludmg ~ew
)'.°
ork Umver-
tional funding," said Anderson.
than in under graduate studies.
.
d
s1ty, Hofstra Umvers1ty and Col-
. ·
·
··
Flemmg, Cold Spring; James
College Council of Stu ent
b' . U .
.
"W
1
.
''Graduate school is ·a two year
Galvin, Central Valley; Maryanne
Leaders annual dinner scheduled
um _ia; . mvemty.__
· e a so are,
·
_,-Marist currently .
.
?as : _330 ... investment of time and money;''
Griffin, Hyde: Park; Lois flayes,
to take place in the .college's_. , hopmg · t9. show .·_ Sl\ldents t~at,. graduate students studymg e1th
_
~r .... said Anderson ."so a · student
~- . M idclleto'.Nn;
David . -:_ }:i~u pt,
campus center in April.
·
.
. . .
.
, . there ar~ :w.ays
to
Jund . grad\lllf ~; Pa~~i1· cn·1·s·.ta_r· da.m1·1o~Pn. _i's· ~~ap_ tsiy~c111i~o·1·bo···ug
__ Y~!~~osjr': '. :.)wJ:1anQU.t.l~t-•0Ls~tnu~odwy·;_w=~hxeancteiyn· ',t;,ewr1·_hnagt.1pl_
.
_·_e_·
Y .
,
. -:;,';,;,,school,LsJU!i,Mollus,o_.,u
,
1
,1
wu
.. . .
WilliainAnderson: 'director oC: computer.s<:ience. :'Plans.for.new
Anderson said he'd like to see
graduate admissions for Marist,
graduate pro~ranis are in
~~e
pr?2- · more M,arist ·• students . go
:
to
said very few Marist students go , cess of ~,emg offered, . said
graduate school.
"If
students
continued
from
page
4 •
to graduate _- school. right after Anderson,
these would. mclude
have questions they should talk to
~ra:duation; . _"Many students, go
an
M.S.
·
in accounting,., master~s
faculty members
or
to .me, I'd-be
-: _· •-',Wes;·_'..'./ybff
~
affswe~··:-:,;b.,u
..
1
. . .· .
.Q_\it and get a job .and then come
'
in social work (i\'ISW) and·Psy. D
happy to. answer any questions
take the stairs/' ·
.
:
• ·
I'll· back.
io
school ,Ori a" 'part-time: ··inpsycholojty;"--
·s
·
:~
·
-· ·
.
they may have."
·
.
·•.·:.··
.
and as the door opens· you walk .
·out only to realize that you're on
the ground floor ..
You quickly
.
turn around and
run back into the elevator as the
door begins to close, thinking fo
· yourself that you must have made
a mistake. Once again ·you push
the button for the first floor: You
A
student who would
rather live on the
first floor.
Core survey
feel a slight jerk as the elevator Dear Editor:
ciimbs upward. As the· door opens
Recently some two hundred re-
you peek out to find that you're quests were sent to current junio1
on the second floor, and nobody'.s and- senior students asking them_
there. You glance up to find to complete a ques~ionaire design-
. number one lit up on the panel.
>
ed to _assess the quality of their ex-
Doo doo doo-doo, . the.· theme perience of the Core. curriculum. ·
from "The Twilight Zone" We frequently hear the apathy of .
echo.es in your head. ·You're all the Marist student decried, so it
alone, stuck in, what they call came as no small suprise when
"The Psycho-vator." You press responses to the requesfbegan to
one again but the elevator climbs trun up almost immediately. At
upward. You sigh, remembering· this writing, the level of reply.has
that you wanted to get to class been significant. · -
<
early. A jerk -
the door operis,
To ·those of you- readers who
you're in limbo -
struck between have already
·
responded, this is a
the third and fourth floor. · ·message of sincere gratitude for
"Thank
God
I'm
not your help. It is quite impossible to
.. claustrophobic!" you think 'to · assess fully the merits ·or academic
yourself. You anxiously push the programs without feedback from
button again as your heart begins· students. In responding promptly
to race and your body breaks out and graciously you demonstrated
· in a cold sweat.
your serious interest in your own
"Will I ever get out alive?" you education and in the ability of
. ask yourself. The elevator jerks Marist to serve the educational·
again,
as
the door slowly slides needs of the students who will
open -
damn another dead end, come after you.
Hey Lynn --How about taking a_
taxi through the drive
0
thru. again,
it was fun. Or maybe we should
buy
a
bicycle! Love, Paula
.
flED6
More_.:...... Buk up! Still crazy after
:->an these years? You're a good
friend -- kamikazi
The nasty girl.gang -
best bun~h
of nuts I know!
-=-
leader of.the
pack.
·
Champ 3rd floor -'- Still lively,
. yeah! That's wonderful! -
l'.m
.c·
To .DE. the follower: A "real
- one
BMOC doesn't have to go around
J.P. (alias Do·nald Duck) .
-=-
hanks
for
putting a smile on my
face;toveya, P.T.
. :
Pula -
You're
a
wench! But a
saying h_e's a BMOC. · - · the
. Irishman'
·
· ·
Hey. Yondie, you're a concept! · good nut- kamikazi
G.S.B.
Karen .:_ calm down! You nut -
Bob "Lynch ~- Thanks so much
for
all
·your. help. We: greatly
appreciate i1. -
MCCT A
· . ·· .
Greg H. - Keep March 26th open
-
a secrel admirer .
Jimmy Jazz -
You are an ob-
solute waste of lcgalness. Happy
binhday anyway!·..
Love,
Tomm Gun and the last gang in
·1own.
LOST -
. Pen/watch. If found
please remrn
10
G-108. Thanks.
. well, maybe nol. - ·kamikazi
John Vincent Hintze, Rober!
Royal. Hintze, and Thomas
George Murphy -
WATCH
OUT! Love, the three musketeers
-· Homewreckers -_ All's fair in
LOVE and WAR -
us
To Slinky~ You are just what
1
always wanted -
something in a
corduroy. Give me
a
smile cu1ey!
-Guess who?
To the CUB and BY -
ll'sMiller
time in the Bahamas! - ·
The
Miller
Man
Tony -- All kidding _aside, I hope
you have the best birth(iay ever.
-
Love, Cindy
Tony -
Hope you have a great
20th birthday! Thanks for always
being tJiere -
Love, Lori
Teresa (alias the Greasy Turk) -
What's a fetid pin-head? Love,
Spider Legs ·
To Sigma Phi Epsilon's New
York Zeta Chapter at Maris1
College -
Happy Fourth An-
niversary!
somewhere between the fifth and
To those of you readers who
eighth floor you guess. Nine is lit have not yet responded, this is an
. up on the panel above you. You urgent message seeking your help
Readers, Look , for news abour
Do you wanr 10 move lo the CIA,
h b
·
d h
d
· · Pl
k
h
· WMCR in the next issue of The
G1"na? (Or maybe Dutch Gar
Hey Grace, Good . tuck in Bus
Stop. We know y·ou'll be great!
.Ferr Shurr! Totally! -
Killy,
Cecelia, Badeana, M;L.
·
push t e
utton agam an
t e an cooperauon.
ease ta e t e
·
-
To my favori1e·li1tle felon: Here's
door slowly closes and you claw time to share a description of
Circle. ··
dens?) Love, Gabe
16 "wha1ever"!Love, B.L
the walls. This time it opens on your experience with us. If you do
. the ninth floor. You rush off not, we really have no where else
D. Michelle -
Either the s10ck
Dear Karyn -
Happy 21st! Love,
Michele,. Happy "1wo y~ars"
breathing heavily, with a look of to go!
car races or the Beaver Cleaver' Jim and Michele
anniversary! Here's 10 the future!
horror on your face, as others get
show, it doesn't mauer. Good
Carla -
MM, MM good -
that's
Forever yours, Jim.
oninhopeofgoingsomewhere.
Luck!
wha1 Campbell'ssoupis
Dear Gidget -
Happy 21s1
"Psycho-vator's
here,"
Your truly
binhday! No Black Russians this .
11
"I , b
h
J.
Richard LaPietra
Chris.- before you judge the caf.
Dave....:. you really can't dance -
year, please, Luck and love _
someone ye s.
ts etter t an
DirectorofCoreSttidies
sides, take a good look a1 who's
a friend.
Coney Island," you hear another
silting next to you (you've been
- - - - ' - - - - - - - - - -
13arb
.
.
person C?mme_nt.
As your
tho nit he lately!) -
your friends . Sue -
You're once crazy chick,
Dear Elisa- Happy binhday
IO
a .
roommate
IS
gettmg on she asks,.
_
.
0
al Gregory
·
you wench! But a good friend. -
terrific co-worker and friend!
"Aren'tyou-going-toclass?.?,,;_,,,.,_v,v ..
•.·>. ·.•.-·.·: .• •.,,:
,.,~~n•~-
0
~~~--~~-l)~g-~} .. ,.:.,,.:. . -
. . . . .. •.• ... •.• ,,, .. , , , .,
!(_a_~!k,a,z!, .• , , • , , , "
, . _ , • , ,.,
J-p,vh
B11rb~~a.
~t~d
"~D-'"--'--
\
A NATIONAL
·
FRATERNITY
DON'.T 'PASS IT UP!
Mari st. College's only national fraternity, Sigma
Phi. Epsilon,
is
having an open gathering on Sun-
day, March 6 at 6 p.m. in the_ lounge of Benoit
House for any men interested in our organiza-
tion. We hope to see you there.
-The Brothers of
Sigma Phi Epsilon
March
3,
1983- THE CIRCLE, Page 7 - -
A heljJing hand for crime victims
. by
Donna Fi~aleo
· It looks like an ordinary house,
but what goes on inside is
anything but ordinary.
On the second ·floor of this
house on the grounds of St. Fran-
cis. Hospital are offices that
belong to Dutchess County Crime
Victims Assistance Program.
A person who has been the vic-
tim of a sexual assault, family
abuse, robbery or any other
criminal act can seek help here
with no charge and complete con-
fidentiality.
Crime Victims Assistance Pro-
gram, "We do, of course, deal
with women who have . been
raped, and provide a number of
services for them, but we're not
restricted to dealing with rape vic-
tims."
The program is the only one of
its kind in the Dutchess County
area, said Graven.
Rape,· committing a sexual act
against a person's will, brought
about by a threat of the use of
force, seems to be the programs
most significent problem.
Many of the rape victims are
referrals to the program through
In 1982 the program received
the police or St. Francis Hospital,
450 referrals of general assault,
said Craven. "We're on call all
approximately 15 percent of them
I
the time. We can be with the per-
for rape.
son through the hospital exam, go
and provide therapy sessions."
Craven said that the ttmount of
therapy depends on the needs of
the individual;
however,
the
minimal therapy lasts 6-8 weeks.
There is an individual meeting
with a social worker, which is
confidential, and a
group
meeting. "The first type of group
is a non-committing self, the per-
son can come when he needs to.
The second is the time-limited
group. This type runs for an exact
time period on an exact day, the
victim
has
a
commitment,"
Craven said.
According to Jean Craven,
to the police station with them,
director of Dutchess County
help make legal arrangements,
·~====================================:: .--------------------.
REZUTER PROGRAM
According to 'the Crime Victims
Assistance Program, CV AP, rape
is one of the most seriously under
reported crimes. The number of
reported crimes, said Craven, has
increased 41 percent in the last
five years.
Craven said that the program
was started in 1976 an in 1978 it ·
contracted with St. Francis
Hospital. The program is funded
by Dutchess County, the New
York State Crime Victims Com-
pensation Board, and the New
York State Department of
Health.
·EASTER BREAK INFO:
·
The dor.ms will close on Thursday · March 31 ·, 1983 . at
11:00 p.m. for the long weekend. Thay will re.;open on
Monday Aprll 4, 1983 at 10:00 a.m. . -
ONLY THOSE WITH PERMISSION WILL BE ALLOWED TO
REMAIN. THIS PERMISSION MUST BE OBTAINED
FROM THE HOUSING OFFICE NO LATER THAN MARCH
.
25, 1983.
Only those with employment, academic, or athletic
obHgations, or those living an unreasonable distance will
.. ·.: •·.~~l'~·:ifi~~I!,~·1!,~
~~!;~:~,
ss
•~r-t:~ \,\:,
/T":'.;'. ·:~· ·,\:-: ,{ ., ·
Thanf you' for.your coop·eratlon
iri
thls,matte'r:
ENJOY THE WEEKENDI
.~~
I~
-...-.}.'~.:=••
- ~
r·
. An excellent haircuttery.
Now featuring CELLOPHANES, the new_ non-
peroxide haircolor/conditioning system with
unlimited color choices and excellent' sheen.
1-lAIRCUTTf;RS
$2.00
Off
With Marist 1.0.
Serving
Marist College
Since 1975
3 Liberty St., Main Mall,1>oughkeepsie
454-9239,
By
Appointment Only
ATTENTION: All residents, commuters, and off:-campus
residents.
The Commuter Union is in the process of establishing REZUTER; a
grouping of students who are interested in integrating residents and
commuters of Marist College. Rezuter will give each participant an
opportunity to share each others outlook of campus life, extra cur-
ricular activities both on and off campus. Students can also com-
pare their varying points of view on the ''college experience.''
Rezuter can be on-going it's up to you!
..
Please return this survey to either Greg Luna, P.O. Box C-840,
your Resident Advisor, or in the Commuter Lounge, 0-249.
_For additional information contact Greg Luna ext. 206, CSL office
CC-268.
REZUTER SURVEY
1.
What is your major? _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
2. What is your
sex? Male. _ _
Female, _ _
_
3:
What year are you in? _ _ _
_
.. :.<l. ;_"r;.,
,
:::- : .• _,_ ·;_: :-:-.·,:: -;.;- ;·~:.
4 ..
Majof' interesff'·(hobbies, etc.i:) _ _ _ _ _
_
5.
What kind of activities would you like to do during a gather_? __
6.
Day, evening or weekend gathering? _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
7.
Would you be interested in a trip to an away athletic event? __
8.
Would you be interested in a trip to a local event? _ _ _ _
_
9.
Additional suggestions:·------------
RESIDENTS: N A M ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - -
P .O. BOX NO. _ _ _
_
COMMUTERS: NAM _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
ADDRESS,-'----,--------
PHONE NO.
THE HAIR SHACK
. (Super New York Cuts)
located at
49 ACADEMY STREET
(Next to Brandy's Two)
Ample Customer Parking
His
and Her
BODY
PERM
Reg. $35.00
Special ·
$18.50
Shampoo, Cut
and Blow
Dry .
From
$5.00
Open Daily 10-6 -
No Appt. Necessary
FOR APPOINTMENT, CALL
486-9883
New York State Department of
Health has provided the program
with a $11,856 Rape Federal
Block Grant for 1983. Craven
said, "This grant has allowed us
to hire another full-time social
worker, who will provide direct
services and specialize in the area
legal advocacy.'' Craven added
that the grant will allow the pro-
gram to expand the services that
are available to rape victims and
to reach victims who aren't aware
of the programs.
The. program consists of three
full-time social workers and one
part-time social worker, all of
whom have
of
are currently work-
ing towards their masters.
According
to CV AP, the pro-
gram can help victims determine
if they are eligible to receive
emergency funds, · arrange for
community services that may be
needed, determine if the victim is
eligible for reinbursement by the
State Medical Expenses resulting
from the crime, provide emo-
tional support and counseling,
and explain legal procedures.
Craven said that the success of
the program is growing because
victims are. getting more comfor-
table with the idea of getting help.
"For many years it was taboo to
discuss rape, now people ·are get-
ting more comfortable with the
subject and they are reaching out
for help," Craven said.
For every
rape which
is
reported, between five and ten ac-
tually occur according to CV AP.
"Women don't want to go
through · the court processes,"
said Craven. "They're afraid that
they will look bad. The media has
a tendency to sensationalize the
drama."
Women are protected by a New
York State law that forbids past
background to be introduced,
unless the case is of an unusual
nature, said Craven .
Social rape, said Craven, is the
hardest type of rape to prove.
"This occurs when two people
know each other in a social situa-
tion. It's most frequent with peo-
ple in their young twenties, who
frequent bars," Craven said.
In a social rape case the rapist
can defend himself by saying that
it was a mistaken identity or that
it was of mutual consent. "I'm
not saying that it can't be done,
but legally it's the toughest kind
of rape to prove," Craven said.
The Crime Victims Assistance
Program, which has recently
started an
adult incest group,
adapts to the needs of its people.
Craven said: "It's important for
the people to know that we don't
report information to the police
and that they're not pressured in-
to coming to us. When people feel
that they are ready to seek help,
._ __ -____________________ __. a-----------------------•
.we're here."
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8 ·
THE
CIRCLE• March
3,
1983
Housing eyes
fan
pla.ririirig
by
Kris Lawas
Marist students who will be
seeking college housing next fall
may find it a little less confusing
if housing officials have their
way.
\
'The problem with last year
was that everyone was sur-
prised," said Director of Housing
Robert Heywood. "If you aren't
sure where you're going to be
living it can cause
.
a lot of
anxiety
.
"
.
·
Many students said that they
were "outraged" last year when
they received word from the
Housing Office informing them
that they
.
had either been denied
housing altogether or had been··
placed in off-campus apartments.
One of last year's housing
problems
.
was the acceptance of
the largest freshman class
.
in
history for the 1982-83 academic
year
.
_ -
An exact number of freshmen
and transfers expected next fall
will
not be available until the
middle of March, according to
the Admissions Office. Without
an estimate Heywood said that he
was unable to predict if there
would be any serious problems
wit
_
h housing this year
.
To avoid any confusion this
year, housing will try to keep
students informed on any changes
or problems. "We don
'
t want to
see worried students,'' said
Heywood
.
"We'll try
.
our best to
keep everyone informed."
Because ofa limited amount'of
space on campus last year, less
·
space
·
was available to upper-
classmen. Marist policy dictates
that freshmen have to be housed
on campus. The only possible way
to provide housing was for the
Housing Office to lease a number
of off-campus apartments such as
the Canterbury apartments in
Poughkeepsie. Although the
townhouses helped improve
·
a
small portion of the
·
problem,
only 210 students could be housed
there
.
Many students had to be
housed off-campus and a lot of
residents said that they didn't like
the idea.
"I sincerely believe that Marist
over-booked its freshmen dorms
iast year," said sophomore Karen
Nizolek,
causing housing
problems not only in Leo and
Sheahan but for the rest of the
campus. I was placed in the Park
Place apartments before I
_
received word of an
.-
opening in
Champagnat
;
'
I was never quite
sure where I would be living. It
gave me a lot of headaches."
Co-op office
-
seeks
applications
.
.
According to
Mike
Bowman,
Champagnat
·
Hall
resident
director, "From the point of
taking in freshmen
·
students to
live on campus, I feel that they
did accept inore than we had
room
·
for' in
·
the traditional
freshmen area. · This created
problems for freshmen living in
an upper-classmen dorm like
Champagnat."
·
"There was a lot of confusion
in Leo Hall last year," said
·
sophomore Frank Raggo. "A lot
of guys didn't know what was
going on.
It
sceined as if people
were being sc
_
attered
.
all over
Poughkeepsie. We didn't know
why this was happening."
"There are approximately
1,200 housing spaces open to
students on campus," said
Heywood.
"If
enough spaces
aren't available,
.
w
e place students
.
off-campus in one of the apart-
ments. These
_
apartments con-
stitute residential housing because
we do
·
provide many services for
these students, such as tran-
sportation.
'
We could send
.
students on their own but we like
to providethem with achoice."
Room reservation cards
will
· not be issued until the middle of
spring.
,
.
When this occurs,
Heywood said that he would try
his best to see that students are
made aware of any problems.
·
"Marist is
.
growing and im-
proving, attracting
·
more students
and that's good," replied
Heywood. "With the Title III
Grant, all sorts of money was
by Karyn Magdalen
Ansbro, "because if an internship
allocllted to expand curriculum.
comes up we would be able to go
.
We
·
attract even
·
more good
Applications are now being
through our files to get someone
students. But with that we're
accepted
.
at the Cooperative
right
oil
the spot."
experiencing growing pains which
Education
office
for
the
If anyone is interested in an
is ultimately felt in housing and in
numerous internships offered to
·
i
nternship they should stop by the
.
the classrooms, and we try to
Marist students for the summer
-
Co-op office for
·•
more
.
in-
.
·
adjust to
·
the trend .
.
_
This
.
year,
a~d raU$triesters.
i
·
.
• .
.
c
·
'.
''
formation. The ciffice is located'
,
we'll try
'
to, ci'IOid such confusion
_
_
·
.
,
Accordi'ng
'fo
Ka
t
h{'A'.nsbi-6,
in
·
oonneli
)"'
rooni
.
230
•·
·
or
'
the
'
by trying't'o
'
Jcee
·
p, students
·
foa
•
MARIST
·
·
·
.
.
'
.
.
COLLEGE
·
The following Internships are
·
available for Sum~
mer
&
Fall:
·
·
TECH WRITING & P.R.
I.B.M. Kingston
LB.M. Poughkeepsie
1.8.M.
Owego
N.Y-.s.
Assembly
BUSINESS, Marke,ing, Advertising
&
Sales
·
..
DCD
Technologies
·
Mike Bolger, Inc. Advertising
·
Northwestern Sales
Heubline,
Inc.
of Hartford
,
There are MANY more available!
See
us
-
-
in
0230
for more information .
.
•
There
·
will -be a seminar for anyone Interested
in
beco~ing
_
an Intern on
__
Thursday,
..
March 3, at
.
11
:20 (free
_
slot) in
D21f.
'
.
.
,
.
·_-
_,
,
·
•
-
!
;_::
~
.,
_·· .
...
,
.
,
.
~
,.
_
·;~-:
·:
~:
:
~~
-
~
:·
•
·:
'
-.·
~1
i~;
~:f;t~f
ti
~
~~f7J
f
iit
\7':
f
f
f
t1;f}~
i;
t
~~j{~
•
•
.
, ..
•
,,
;
_
,:
s
~udent worker in the Co
~
op
phone number is extens
i
on 210.
formed as
ff
wha~'s going
off."
office,
"
There
•
are so many in- . .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
•----llil!li-------------------••--.
•
t
ernships available to
.
the students
and not
-
,
enough
.
people to fill
them
.
"
·
..
···
·
·
,,
The Co-op office
·
will
be
sponsoring an orientation for all
prospective interns for either the
summer or the fall today during
the free-slot in room D-211
.
The internships are not just for
communicaiion arts and business
majors. ''.We do have a lot of
internships for communication
and business majors
,
but we do
also have internships for social
work, fashion design and political
science majors," said Ansbro.
Production work for WNBC-
TV
and WCBS-TV,
public
relations work for the American
Cancer Society and news writing
for
WOR-AM
radio in New York
City, are just a few internships
offered for communications
majors.
Other locations for internships
include the
·
New York State
Senate, Dutchess Court Executive
Office,
Astor
Head
Start
Program and The New York State
.Assembly
.
·
·
•
Qualifications for an internship
are a 2.5 for most majors, except
for business majors, who need a
3.0.
"IBM,
which offers quite a
few internships, requires a 3.0 for
all majors,"'"
·
said Ansbro. A
student should also have a 3
.
0 for
all ,majors," said Ansbro.
A
student should
·
also have 60
credits or more to apply.
Although most of the in-
ternships are non-paying, there
are a few internships that do.
"We have internships at IBM that
pay students an average of $335 a
week," said Ansbro. "Most of
the other internships don't pay,
··
but it's the experience and
·
the
connections that really count
,
the
money is an extra bonus,"
·
An,
sbro~dded
.
The deadline for applications is
Mar.ch I, 1983, for the summer,
and April I for the fall. "It's
important that anyone interested
fills out an applic~tion,"
_
said
.
•
• •t.,-•.t
.•
•
.:
-."'
.
~
.
-
•
.:.
.
.
F
·
riends
.
of
--
-
Marist
.
•·
·
·
.
FLEA
.
MARKET
Marist MCCanrl
SAT. M;ARC
-
I-L
:
_
12
:·
_
_
10 a.m. to 4
·
p.m.
150 vendors,
.
FREE
admission
Refreshments available
call
471-3240,
ext.
278
_______________________
..
-~'
.
.
.
'
'•
•
, ~•
'
I
·
.,•
•~
1:
•
•:
.
•
,
,.
•
.
··
THEOFFICE OF
ADMISSIONS
.
is
-~urren
:
tly ac~e
-
ptigg
!
.
:
,
applications
for'
..
the
.
-
-
~dmlssio
_
ns-
Co-O
_
p
Jn
.
.
.
Ed
.
ucatioilal
•
Administration~
lryterested juniors
_
should
submit letters of appli~auon
and
-
a resume to:
-
JAMES DALY
.
..
·
Dean of Admissions,
No
·
-
1a,
_
er than F
_
riday
March 25,
1883
-------~---------------------------•March
3,
1983- THE CIRCLE-
Page
9
The
.
bizarre daysofthe Lemuel Smith trial
.
Editor's note: Reporter Cindy
.
hoop. It wasn't Dustin Hoffman whatever he's looking at.
Bennedum recently sat in on a ses-
in "Tootsie" that had lured me
When· Smith walked into the
distinct change from the husky-
voiced Kunstler, pacirig and jingl-
ing his keys during testimony.
·
Only minutes later laughter
erupted once more as one of the
prosecution's witnesses was about
to swear to tell the truth. Even the
judge laughed when the witness
was told he was raising his left
hand and had the wrong hand on
the Bible.
sion of the Lemuel Smith murder
here;
It
was Lemuel Smith.
Dutchess County Supreme Cour-
. .-
triat Here are her impressions:
Smith, 4 I, a prisoner at the troom smiling, I knew I was
·
·
Green Haven Correctional Facili-
mistaken. I couldn't take my eyes
Asl stood in line waiting for
.
ty, is accused of the May
15, 1981
'
off his face, wondering why this
the doors
.
to open, my pulse
·
murder of rookie prison. guard man, who faces the death penalty
quickened and I couldn't seem to
Donna Payant. Her cause of if convicted, thought this whole
The sixteen-member jury seem-
ed quite relaxed in their black,
stand still.
_
death;
.
strangulation and sexual ordeal was amusing.
"How could all these
·
people
mutilation. Payant's body was
As my eyes scaled the length of
·
cushioned swivel chairs. One
female juror refreshed her lipstick
while waiting for the performance
·
to begin.
.
There was a moment of confu-
sion over the labeling of one of
the papers needed as evidence -
whether to label
it
A4 or AAAA.
The judge smiled and responded
sarcastically
to
Kuntsler,
"Whatever you feel comfortable
with.''
waiting with me remain so
.
found
·
May
16
at the Amenia Smith, I took notice of his
.
calm?" I asked
·
myself. A lady
Landfill, her body wrapped in
.
clothes. The too-short sleeves of
Once the trian begun, it was
halted only twelve minutes later,
when the defense and prosecution
met in the judge's chambers for a
legal discussion. For over half an
hour the remainder of the cour-
troom had to amuse themselves.
next to me stood reading a novel.
plastic ga_rbage bags.
his light blue sport jacket caught
·
One elderly woman called to a
I kept trying to
_
picture in my my eye.
passing friend, "I'm here again!"
mind what Smith would look like.
Defense Attorney William
The au~ience, comp
_
osed of
-
peo-
What does a person look like who Kuntsler appeared in a three-piece
pie rangmg from the1r teens to the
is already serving four life suit. Somehow, this didn't match
-
elderly,
·
even discussed Florida sentences from two previous the disheveled remainder of what
·
suntans.
.
.
murder convictions? My answer made up Kuntsler. With bifocal
When order was restored,
I
glanced over and caught Kuntsler
drinking out of a Dallas Cowboys
mug. My next survey of the room
cited Smith
.
actually laughing. I
was beginning to become preoc-
Stanton and Kuntsler were not
comfortable with the lunch break
schedule for that day, which is
usually from noon until
2
p.m.
I wasn't waiting to see the was
.
someone who grunts instead
.
glasses mounted on top of his un-
Marist Red Foxes shoot some of speaks and whose eyes pierce trimmed grey bush of hair, Kunt-
·
An argument erupted as the
judge tried to settle on a time that
would please everyone .
.
Series to focus on women
byS.C. Pyle
· Women in History
will
be the
front line topic in a series of panel
discussions and lectures March 7-
10, 6:30 p.m.-8 p.m. each even-
ing, in Marist's Fireside Lounge.
Designa
'
ted
as
Women's
History Week, the series
·wm
·
recognize the likes of Eleanor
Roosevelt for the influence and
contributions they have made in
ROOSEVELT THEATRE
Rte. 9, Hyde Park, N.Y.
TEL. CA9-2000
the past, are making now and will
be making in the future.
Areas that will be focused on
during the course of the week in-
clude Historical Women in the
Hudson
Valley;
Eleanor
Roosevelt; Women in Govern-
ment,- Law, and Business; and
Women in the Arts. Each even-
ing's topic will include a lecture or
overview and audience dialogue.
.,
Now Playing Friday Feb. 18
through Thursday March 16
*********************************
Reverend John Garvey
Glenmary Home Missioners Room
2
7
Box
46404
Cincinnati. Ohio
45246
sler shook hands with his client,
as if to wish each other luck in yet
another round of this ongoing
battle. This chaotic image was
reinforced as he shuffled through,
and could not find, papers needed
during the testimony.
Prosecutor William Stanton,
·
on the other hand, had everything
under control.
With glasses
resting securely on his nose, he
calmly stood next to the jury dur-
ing questioning.
His voice
reflected the calm atmosphere
surrounding him, which was a
,
cu pied in
.
finding humor in the
situation. It was there.
My eyes turned to the three in_-
timidating wardens sitting behind
Smith. I almost chuckled out loud
as one passed a stick of gum to
another, then popped
·
a but-
terscotch disc into his own mouth.
The entire courtroom burst into
laughter when Kuntsler asked
Judge Albert Rosenblatt a ques-
tion. The judge responded,
"Should I go on the witness
stand?"
When testimony resumed, In-
vestigator John Fox, the present
witness on the stand, said that he
had received as evidence articles
of clothing, including "a pair of
panties."
What may be the biggest
murder trial to hit Dutchess
County just may be the funniest
.
With such an electrifying cast,
as well as the smile of Lemuel
Smith, this just might be a televi-
sion soap opera.
Lake topresent writing of Plath
by Lori Dyer
"She's a fascinating person,"
That's me; that's me exactly! Is
said Lake.
"She's
considered to
that going to happen to me? How
She leaned forward in her chair be a truly great poet. It's her per-
can I stop it?'."
and her
.
voice dropped: "Dying is sonal life too that's fascinating.
Lake said that she herself iden-
an art like
-
everything else. I do it Out of the trauma of her personal
tified somewhat with Plath,
exceptionally well;
I
do it so it life came this really hard-hitting whom Lake called "the ultimate
feels like hell."
poetry."
perfectionist." Lake said,
"If
she
·
Diane Lake, instructor for Ad-
Lake said she feels that Plath
got an A- in a class, she went into
vanced Oral Interpretation at had a lot to say to college
depression."
·
In
comparing
Marist, was quoting a line written students. Plath wrote a letter to
herself, Lake said: "That's me.
by Sylvia Plath, famous poet arid her mother concerning
a
boy who
I'm a perfectionist. I can relate to
'
'--
lluthot.C!,t:;
.
TheBeU_J_;u-
-
.;.•
.
;
.
.
.
....
_ had
·
.
tried,-
._
to
.
commit
.
suicide
_
.
,that.
Ldidn'.t have the same kind
·
:
Lake
-
will be g1vmg an
.
oral because he was depressed about
of pressures, but
I put them on
reading featuring
·
the journals, grades. In the letter she said,
myself
:
"
·
letters and published works of
"When
you die, they're not going
In regard to oral readings,
Plath, March 30 at 7:30 p.m. in to carve your marks on your Lake said, "When you say to so-
the Fireside Lounge. She said she tombstone!"
meone, 'I'm going to give a
chose
·
to do readings by Plath
In the past, when Lake taught poetry reading,' well, you know
because they deal with subjects sections on Sylvia Plath in her
how many people get excited
that college students can relate to.
classes, she found that female
about that." Lake says she feels
Plath was successful early in students in particular have iden-
that Plath may be an exception to
her
life. She was a guest editor of tified with Plath's feelings and
this stereotyping. "It's just in-
"Mademoiselle" and had many emotional trauma. Lake said,
"I
credible, her poetry. It's just wild
poems published while she was had one girl call me up at
11
:30 at
and crazy. She uses images that
still in college. She also commit-
night and say, 'You know what
really grab you and make you see
ted suicide at the age of
~0.
you said about Sylvia Plath?
what she feels."
Talk scheduled on media in poli_tics
, A roundtable discussion on the
role
of
the media in state politics
will be presented by the Marist
College Public Opinion Institute
Wednesday in the college campus
theater beginning at 7:30 p.m.
Highlighting the program for
the night will be a group of pro-
minent leaders from the media.
This includes David Hepp, co-
anchor person and reporter from
the Public Broadcasting Service's
OPEN 24 HOURS
"Inside
Albany,"
Marcia
Kramer, reporter
·
of the Daily
News and also the Bureau Chief
of
Albany,
Frank
_
Lynn,
metropolitan editor of the New
York
Times,
Barbara Ross,
reporter of the New York Post,
Judy Watson, bureau chief of
United Press International and
Paul Brown, reporter from the
Watertown Daily Times and also
a graduate of Marist.
473-1576
PALACE
DINER
& RESTAURANT
Breakfast - Lunch - Dinner
Fresh Seafood - Steaks - Chops
Cocktails - Baking on Premises
(NEXT TO ALL SP,QRT)
Show your college ID and get a FREE
Glass of Beer with your meal!
7%
DISCOUNT
Name
- - - - - - - - - -
-
- - , - - . . , - . - - - - - - - - - - : - - A g e _ _ _
_
Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
·
City _ _ _
;_
_ _ _ _ State
.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Zip _
_
_
194 WASHINGTON STREET
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
.J
.
.
,
'
:
,
:
•
:
·
I
,.
!
•
'?:
.:
~
l
.r
,
,
;
-
_
,;,1
,
•
.,
-
.
..
..
·-
.
.:..,,
.
/
--•Page 1() · THE
CIRCLE· March
3, 1983---------------------------------------
.
·
Duo.
Set
for
200~niife
C
rtil1
by Maria Azzolina
.
·
,,
-.
-
.
.
Marist
.
seniors David
·
.
Haupt
and Mark Wickham will run from
Boston, Mass., to Poughkeepsie,
N. Y.; beginning March 16 to raise
money to establish a scholarship
fund for disabled
Marist
students.
The 200-mile run will begiri
'
at
the
.
Prudential Center in Boston,
and five days later the runners
will arrive at Marist.
·
According to Diane Perreira,
·
director of special services, mer-
chants along the route have
donated
·
accommodations, meals
the road," Hauptsaid;
·
and running equipment.
.
.
.
. _
..
··
··
.
"We do expect them to finish,
.
.
Both
.
seniors said that 'they are but' if one runner cannot makdt
.
running in th
_
e
·
hopes
.
that the run
·
the other
.
will
.
continue on.'' said
.
will become an annual fund raiser Perreira.
·
·
·
·
·
·
for
_
the disabled.
-
.
_.
·
Perreira
• '
Said that it Would
·
be
:
"I want to run for those who
.
.
best if
•
people
.
pledged a
.
flat
:
cannot," said
•
Haupt. Wickham amount of money than
.
a by~the~
added, "When
I finish I'll feel
mile pledge. She also said that if
•
.
that
I have contributed something people
:
did pledge by the mile and
•
worthwhile to the college."
the runners did not complete the
·
.
Both runners also said that they
run, money would be collected for
are positive that they wilJ com." the number of mi
_
les cam
_
pleted.
plete the 200-mile run.
··
"The only way we will stop is if
"I would be ecstatic if we rais-
somebody comes and yanks us off ed close to
$3;000, ''
she said.
- - -
.
·
More letters-
-
----------
contlnued from page 6
Support parade
To the Editors:
Recently the St. Patrick's Day
Parade has gotton a great deal of
.
.
bad publicity
.
The appointment
an event is not
.
determined on the
number of participants but rather
on the enjoyment one receives
from taking part.
Sincerely,
Fred Gainer
Mentor
-
·
·
message reached s~ many people
who decided to support our ef-
forts.
John Henry Griffiths
·
.
Vice President
·
New York Zeta Chapter
Immature idea
of Michael Flannery as Grand
Mixer II
Marshall has upset many people.
Dear Editor,
·
Though Flannery had been charg-
Dear Editor:
Last week's Circle expressed
ed with gun running, he was
·
"What was in here?" she ask-
·
concern
·
over the
·
lack of
aquitted of all allegations.
.
ed. I fou nd myself too embarrass-
respondents
·
to their recent
For decades New Yorkers and ed at the time to answer, looked coupon, "The Best and Worst of
people all
·
over America have away,
a
nd continued my work Marist." Did anyone bother to
turned out on March 17th, in cleaning up. Yes it was a mixer
find out if the non-respondents, a
snow, sleet, rain and sunshine to sponsored by the Commuter majority, were actually saying
celebrate the Irish. The St.
Union;
·
unfortunately it was not something
·.
by not
·
replying? Of
Patrick's Day Parade is becoming successful.
course the
·
old scapegoat known
the medium through which Irish-
Aside from the fact that two as apathy was blamed, but
Americans
can
assert their
·
feel-
events
were scheduled on Satur-
perhaps
·
others,
like myself;
ings regarding the present situa-
day February 26 , we did adver-
believed
·
the coupon was im-
tise. I was flattered to find that
tion in English-occupied Ireland.
mature and unnecessary. After
The image that so many people people fou nd our poSters attrac-
all, what would the results show?
..
have of the Irish as "fun-loving, tive enough to decorate their walls Would
it
be an objective aria)ysis
happy~go-lucky, leprechauns" is
wilh . Regretfully the same people of the present curriculum, or
·
who went out of their
.
way to take
being shattered. The reality that
.
. ,
would the "easy" teachers lead
civil rights are being denied to our poSters
_
didn t bother to c
_
ome the "best" column? Would a pro-
Catholics in the area of Ireland and chec~ out the band.-
· .
·.
fessor who happens to be a· little
still occupied by the English has
Chazy is perhaps the best band demariding lead the "worst" col-
not been accepted
.
by
a h1.rge
,
that has played at M~rist. Those umn'? Would
_
'.'gut"
class~s be
MARI ST
:
coLLEGE
COUNCIL
.
on
·
THEATER ARTS
·
-
_
presents-
·
William
:·_
·--
Inge's
·.
·
-
directed
by
Jan Denison
Thursday March
3 • 8
p.m.
·
Friday
_
March 4
.
•
-
.
8
p.m .
. ·.
.
Saturday March'
·
5 • 8
·
p.
m
·
.
~
Sunday
·
•
~arch°
6
...
•
.
2
p.m.
Matinee
<:
..
:
, •
.
·
TICKETS
·
.
gar{adm .
..
0
stUdtlg
.
.
.
percentage of the popu\atiol\
_
.
.
,
·
.
i
)
who attended the mixer would first or last
_
? And most-important-
•:
·:
·
·
·
·
W
_
e-Ami:ricans;
.who
are:so
'
con~
·
'
~
agree; thos,e
,.
who
·,
pas~ed
.
by and
. :
:
ly ,
•
••
did
'•
'.
anyone
..
ever
.
.
think
:~
they
.
.
,.
~:;::1~
t~t~n~~~
~~ju;~t=doi;,
;
~6;;~1d!~~~~: =~t;~e~n;in~~!. :~!~t
:
;
h
_
~r~
_
-
~~~~~n~
/n
_
/~;
~
)
~
;;
::::;;;:::::::::::.-_..._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
•
Poland and many other countries, to hSten to the quahty ent~~tau;ia
..
·
We aJlha've the
.
opportunity to
:
c
-
should remember the blood, ment.
.
.
·
.
·
.
. ·
_
.
.
.
•
·
.
evalua,te
·
.
.
our:
·
courses
·
and pro-
,
sweat and tears shed by Irish men
w_
e tnpped ?ver t
_
his h':1rdle,-
fessors
.
'
at
:
the
.
·
end of
-.
each
.
.
;
.
aiid women in
'
the
.
founding, ~ut
lt
has not cnpplcd us
.
I w
_
ould
.
semester;
:
(They are also evaluated
defense and development of the hke to than~ all the J)eople who
.
by
.
their departm~nts.)
If
anyone
·
United States of Ainerica. It is attentle~ (resident and
.
commuter)
has a particular gripe about acer-
abotit time we remembered the
.
for the1r ~upport. As
.
the Colll-
tain professor,
:
the door
·
to :the
/
·
Irish for much more than "the muter _Umon sponsors events, I
·
resP.ective department chairman is
'
wearin' of the green."
.
.
reco¥mze the same people who
'
always open
.
.
·
If a student
.
is
:
.
·
If
through the St. Patrick's Day continue _to
.
~ome out to the~;
.
dissatisfied
:
with
a.
certain course,
·
• ·
Parade we, the students; faculty your dedicau~n and support
IS
.
:
or
:
wishes to see a new course that
·
anci administration of Marist Col-
.
greatly
_
appreci
_
ated and has no~
·
•·
is not
:
presently offered;
.
he c~n
lege can inake a statement in sup-
gone unrecogm~ed.
.
. ,
, -
'
also St:C the department chairman
;_ .
.
port of Irish desires for freedom,
I have seen too much growth in
.
If enough students
:
feel the same
:
:
civil rights and
.
national unity, t~e pa~t semester for ~n organiza-
way;
.
something will
,
be
•'
done
>
'
then let it be so.
:
.
-
.
!
10n With great potenual to watch After
.
ail,
.
poor professors
::
arid
C
.
In addition, the spring break
.
It _fiZ?~e
_
OUL
·
The Com'!1ut~r courses, like poor
.
products, don't
:
:
:
announcement iri last week's Cir-
Umon 1s by no means throwing m
last.very long.
·
.
.
.
.
·
·
•:·
'.
·
cle (Feb. 24, page 9) displayed the the towel!
·
.•
·
·
Mary BethColi.lcci;
·
stereotypical
Irishman in knickers
.
''Commuters drive
.
to
-
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
· ·
and
.
buckle shoes, sporting a mug
·.
achie:ve.''
_:
.
·
~dvis
_
ing
·
of beer. Cartoons
.
·
such as this
Thank you again everyone for
.· ·
··
serv
.
e only to
·
reinforce the unfair their support.
To the Editor:
:
.,:. ·
.:
..
.
connection between the Irish and
·
.
Very tnily yours,
:
·
Recenily1 was informed that!
!_
alcohoL
Greg Luna Commuter Union
_may
riot be able
fo
fake an intern-
.::
·
I am
.
certain that Italian-
President
ship because I don't have enough
:
Americans_, Black-Americans or
.
·
Blood drive
liberal arts credits. The sad thing
other ethmc group would not ap-
•
·
is nobody advised me any dif~
<:
predate such derogatory, damag-
.
'.
Dear Editor,
.
ferently
.
to avoid this n1istake
;
,'
:
·
:
ing stereotypes,
_
either!
·
·
On behalf of all the brothers at
·
As a second semester junior my
.
.
·
Sincerely,
.
Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity, I
·
options are limited now
as
to how
Mary Anne Conway
.
would like to thank everyone who I can take an internship, collect
.
.
Mixer I
.
supported our most recent blood
·
the 24 or
_
soHberal arts credits
1
·
·
drive
.
The blood drive
·
is now a need and graduate on time
:
•
.
biannual tradition cosponsored . I reaily feel the advisor system
To the Editor:
by Sig Eps and the Hudson Valley 1s
.
to. blame here. I
.
tried to
On February 26TH, the Com-
Blood Services. This semester's organize my schedule so l would
.
muter Union sponsored a Mixer drive, held on Tuesday, February be able to take
an
internship and I
featuring "Chazy."
.
22 in fireside Lounge, was an was told I was on the right track,
Although the event was not well amazing event. One hundred and yet now I'm being told different-
attended, those who did attend
·
fifty-six pints of blood in six ly.
.
.
had an enjoyable evening. As to hours made this one of the most
I think that tile advisor system
·
why the attendance was low is a
successful
drives in Marist Col- should J?e re-evaluated and some
good question. It was publicized! lege's history.
It was fantastic to improvements
shJuld
be made.
Perhaps
students
felt this Mixer see scores of people sign our
·They
should be th!!re to guide us
was
only
for Commuters
.
.
Not so.
·
pledge sheets, and
to
have a blood
_
an~ to make us
a·
.
vare of our re-
All events the C.U. sponsor, like donation line that never slowed quirements
,
so tha·
.
people don't
any other club/organization, are down all afternoon
.
The turn out find themselves
ir.
che same boat
open/organization, are open to was so great that the blood drive as me.
all
members of the Maris! Com-
was extended an hour
in
order
10
I hope that by writi:tg this lct1er
munity.
accommodate the overwhelming I will at least make people aware
Many thanks are in order
·
for
··
amount of donors. The button that there are ,ertain re-
all organizers of this event, par-
that all of Sigma Phi Epsilon's quirements fqr graduation and
ticularily Greg Luna. All who brothers wore during the blood 1ha1 they should find out what
worked,
I'm sure, enjoyed drive period read, "Blood is Life - they are before it's toe !ate
.
their.selves as well. The success or
·
Pass It On" We're glad our
Karyn Magdalen
Model
~
Cheri
·
Hair
By .. Alfie
ALFIE WEIL Hair Salon
.
_
...-
.
354
main
mall,
2nd floor
452-6712
·
..
·
_
_
· .·
•
.
_
.
-
·
.
,
.
March
3,
1983 • THE (?IRCLE • Page 11 - - •
Swzmmersfinish thfrd in Metro Championships
bY. Mike Graney
:
.
The Metropolitan Swimming
Conference
·
Division
B
·
Cham-
pionshps were held at the Mc-
Cann swimming pool this past
weekend.
_·
.
The
eleven-team,
·
three-day
event was dominated by New
York Maritime.
·
Maritime scored
·
a total of 365 points easily beating
·
its closest competition Adelphi
(288) and Marist (240).
An overall team effor_t pushed
. Maritime to victory, withstanding
an outstanding individual per-
formance by
_
Adelphi's Robert
Sommese.
participated in two relays that
Sommese, a
·
Junior, was a
produced first place finishes for
winner in three different events.
Maritime
.
Sommese
·
started off his brilliant
Delp captured the meet's first
meet with
a
2:00.40 in the 200-
event, the 500-yard freestyle, in
yar
·
d
_
intermediate raye.
He 4:45.13. He then took the
JOO·
became a double winner after yard freestyle with an impressive
recording a
I
:46.14 in the 200
·
time of 49:48. Delp was also one
freestyle. Event number 14 made of four swimmers to participate in
him the meet's only triple winner Maritime's
.
400
.
and 800-yard
with a win in the 200-yard relay wins .
.
backstroke in 1 :59.47.
.
Winning coach Roy Larson of
Maritime could also boast of an Maritime was very pleased with
outstanding performance by one
·
his team's performance, but he
of their swimmers, and he is only wasn't pleased with the style in
a freshman. Tim Delp was a which they were rewarded for
double winner individually, and their efforts. "The meet was run
very efficiently, but there is a lot
to be said about the awards
ceremony," said Larson. Larson
continued, "There should be
victory blocks in the awards
presentation so the winners can be
isolated, and therefore receiving
the credit they deserve
."
Marist finished higher than
.
they ever have before with their
third-place finish. The Red Foxes'
success is attributed to freshman
diver Dave Luber.
Luber, from Buffalo, captured
both the
.
I-meter and 3-meter
diving events. His 456
.
10 points
broke a meet record. Also aiding
Still a chance· to get valuable info at the Jollowing workshop
_
s:
1.- Self-assessment/resume writing
March 7.
·
2. Job Hunting Strategies
March lQ, 23, 28
3. Interviewing
March 9, 21, 30
LAND THAT-JOB·!
Seniors! Are you prepared for the job search?
.
. Workshops held in.the OFFICE OF CAREER DEVELOPMENT
C
_
ampus Cen
_
ter 180
/
•,
•·
·
····
,_· .....
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
---·
··
,
,
..
:.
"
::.
..
.
·-
~
·~:·t-
-
~-i
~
~
~
_·::.....:
_
_
-·
~-
~
-
-
:
--;,,~~-
.
-
.
•
.
·
.
...-
,
•·
-
·
..
.
·
..
·
·
.
:
_.
'_
:
".
:
~
'
-
·
_
--.-
.
:
.
-.
,
.
•
..
.:.
,
.
:·
.
·
.
.
"
•
.
..
•
-
.
.
Se~lNG
BREAK
'
INFO:
-
.
;
NOTl'CE
·.
TO
-
RESIDENTS
Please be advised that the Residence Halls will be closed and no meals will be served
·
trom
·
Friday March 11th;
_
1983 at 11 :OO p.m.-through Sunday March 20, 1983 at 10:00
.
~
.
-The last meal on Friday March 11th will be lunch and
fhe
first meal on Sunday March 20
-.
will be dinner.
·
~
~
.
·
·
NO
ONE WILL BE PERMIJTED TO REM.AIN IN THE RESIDENCE HALLS
-
DURING THIS
PERIOD.
.
Plea~e see
-
that all windows are closed, lights are out, plugs are unplugged and doors
are locked before you leave.
Should you have questions regarding this policy you should report to the Housing Office
no later than Friday, March 4, 1983.
Your cooperation in this matter will be greatly appreciated.
Enjoy
_
the Breakt
P.S. You will receive notice shortly regarding the
_
4 day long weekend in April. Please do
Marist to their third-place finish
was
freshman
Pete
Asselin.
Besides placing fourth in the JOO-
and
200-yard
freestyles.
.
the
.Waterbury, Conn. native posted
an impressive second place finish
in the 50-yard freestyle with a
22.70 time.
Two different relay teams also
helped
Marist
keep second place
in question until the end. The 400
medley relay team, consisting of
Adam Their, Jim Morgan, Pete
Asselin and Paul Raini came in
third with a 3:55.29. The 800-yard
free relay team also produced a
third-place finish. Dave Garcia
replacing Raini was the only
difference in this team's 7:45.13
showing.
1983 Metropolitan
Conference Div.
B.
Championships
-
Final Standings -
Points
I.
Maritime
.
(N.Y.)
2.Adelphi
3. Marist
4. City CoUege
(N. Y.)
5.
Queens
6. Ramapo
·
7. Manhattan
·
-
8.
New York Univ.
9.
Iona
10
.
Long Island Univ.
I I.
Vassar
Track team
runs poorly
365
288
240
212
205
145
141
116
113
79
23
at invitational
by
Tim
Dearie
The Marist College track team
travelled to Troy,
N.Y.
Saturday
· ·
to
-
compete
-~
in
·-
the
-
R,P.
l:
--
l
n
-
vitational not knowing what
.
to
expect.
The team is months behind
other programs in the state and
was competing in only
its
second
meet of the season compared
10
the six or seven of most of the
l l
other schools at the meet.
With only
11
runners com-
peting, the team scored only
(WO
points taking fifth
.
place in the
3200 meter relay. The relay
consisted of junior captain Ken
Bohan, freshmen Mike Murphy,
Pete
Colaizzo
and
Chris
Morrison.
"Eighty percent of this is in
your head," Jim Klein, head
track coach, said to his runners.
"We just haven't raced enough to
be that tough mentally yet."
Everyone's legs felt a little
sluggish according to Klein. "We
haven't done any real speed work
yet," he added.
"We have
10
be more patient
with ourselves
,
" Bohan said.
When asked what has to be
done to close the gap between the
other schools and themselves
Bohan said,
"I
know we have
to
work ourselves a lot harder
during
the week.
Coach's
workouts arc geared for us to
progress slowly and I think we're
just expecting too much too
soon."
Klein said he feels that a tough
workout during the week con-
tributed to some slow times. "The
guys were all still sore from last
Wednesday's hill workout," he
said. "That means there's still a
lot of lactic acid in the muscle and
that had a lot
10
do with per-
formances."
The team has two indoor meets
remaining, the Union College
Invitational on March 12 and the
State Championships on March
19.
"I don't like getting bear at a
meet like R.P.l.," said Bohan.
"I'm really
.
looking forward
10
running against those guys again
at the State meet and this spring,"
·not confuse the two.
._ ____________________________________________
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--•Page
12 ·
THE CIRCLE· March
3,
1983 ~ - - . •
-
- - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
Red
Foxes
roll over
FD,U
at· hom.e,.
76-7i. .
.·
.. ·.. .
.,t: ··.
. ' .. '
. .
The half ended ~ith FDU on top Smith had ,·th~. ball and was·. ,·After _the game Co~Ch,.'·Petro ..
rebounds for the Foxes. Forward
41 39
.
looki~g for a.n open man .. Seeing sai_d "th_e &,a,me w, as. one of our·-
Larry Hampton led· all scorer_s
-
• .
w
Jenly of up
Steve Smith scored· his .2000th .. with 22 points while fellow Knight
.The. second half · began with · that rio one was open he drove to
·
better_ wms. . . _ e ve P .
i
: • .
·
by
Joe
Didziulis
career .. point •arid-. Marist. Red Marcus Gaither scored 21 for Marist'spossesion of the ball and
the basket from the right side and
performances; and '!le ve ·. !m- ·
Foxes · raised their ECAC Metro. · p· D
u
·
after only 11 seconds had elapsed, · dunked • the · ball · to go over the
proved the team concept, Jhere
5
a
· confe_rem:e recor_d t_o 6-6 _in _a .76-
· The first h. alf was dominat.ed by Chris Metcalf had tied the game 2000 point mark.
-
·. definite sen~e of acc~mphshrnent; ·
F 1 h D k
T
-The game was · _held_ up_ for • We're.on t_he up_cswmg at the.~nd
72 wm over air e1g
1c mso.n . :Fairleigh •Dickinson
at times . at
4L
Seconds _ later,_
om
d f
f
d ng
Knights _ last. Saturday
!n
the_· leading by_ 1
o
..
Ma;ist _ made a , Meekins put Marist ahead w_itti a several minutes as the crowd
of the season mStea, •
0
a .
1
.
McCann Center. The wm .was comback towards the end or-the 15 .foot jump shot. After an. cheered
-
the feat and Smith was
like last year. Thats ~ery im-
Marist's third in a row and the . half with
a
series· of scoring by
exchange of the lead, Steve Smith
congratulated by his teammates,
port~nt ~ecause we're gomg to be
fourth in its last five games.
··Tom· Meekins, Bruce Johnson,
scored his -l 999th point · to put
coaches, family, .and others. -
playing
10
the !ourname~t. pretty
Smith led Marist in scoring and John Donovan who com-
Marist in the lead 47-46.
. FDU ran a string of baskets up soon; so now 1s a good ume to
with 21
points while Tom bined to score , 10 points . 19
··
With a 50-48 lead and just · and had temporarily taken the peak," he said.·
. ·
.
·
-.
Meekins added 17. Bruce Johnson Fairleigh Dickinson's 2 in the under 14 minutes to go~ Marist
lead. Marist tied the score. at 62
· About Steve Smith, Petro s~id,
and Ted Taylor· both had 7 final four minutes of the half.
had possesion of the . ball. Sieve all -on · a Ted · Taylor basket and ·. ''Steve. Smith ·.· did a· great .
10~·
'
.
!,()-()()!
<tstev.·e; Smjth drives
d~wit •
the · ·
lane .(above) and slain dunks his
· 2,000th
0
\ ·
career: . point , (befow) ·
. Saturday ~Jllght in
·O
the"iMcCann
' Center;
Smith
becomes
the .
first
..
'
.
'
Marist · ;, piayer , to reach ; . the .
· prestigious·>\ mark.
•
.
.-smith's-
uniform
...:.::·nuinbei-:12 - ·wm be
retired. at 'the end: of the,, s~ason
and dJsplayed .. :in the McCann
Center. He also received the MVP
, award
:for·
the'' season and the
J)unkin' Donuts>Dlink . Award.
(top· photo by John Bakke; IQwer
, p1toto
.by
Jeff Kiely) :
,- __ ,.·;;
<
->-~--~
:.r
-'· -·
.
,-."'.:
·-:.:::J~:
Smt . is zrs
ox o
if
tli,(f ·
-
-
,
..
...
; by Joh"1_llakke
.
' .
:
building· up
si~~~
the previous , especially note':Vorthy b~~ause he
·
·. . . . .. · · - . , . ._.
:
.
Wednesday when Smith finished
doesn't
.
shoot
as
much as rriany
-· Last ~aturday _night, )he night · 11 points.shy of 2,000.: Smith said · college players aridb.ecaus~ he did'
·Marist · 1,eat Fairleigh
·
Dickirson;. the way ; he .· broke 2,000 ·.was··•_ it during Mar-ist's 'transition to
was not'.f.'Steve Smith NighC' at coincidehtaL
.. _· _
Division
L
·'
.
, ,,
, ... - .
the McCaru~ ~enter; .
..
,:
"It
seemed to ·me like he. just
.
. Sitting -·in his · office before
-- Officially, that is.
gave me. the baseline,:
:
1hinkif!g · Saturday's gaine,Petro discussed
- · It
inightjust as well have been, that somebody _else would stop me:
•
what· Smith nas meanuo Marist;
because Smith was the main · downJow,'!
he
said, referring
to
"He~provided
us with.
a cqn:
·
·
attraction
·
all night, even before the· FDU. defense ..
cm
the play,
sisieri°toffensive threat ever since
· the first strains· of, ''The Star-
"But nobody helped him out,_and he's ,been here/' he said. "He's ,
. Spangled : Banneru .· filled · the
it
just so happen_ed that it was a . very difficult .. to stop., He
gymnasium.·
..
.
.
.
.
.
play like that.''
·>
•
_ . . . . .
challenges people-to stop him an_d
. · First, ._ Coach·. Ron Petro an~
Smith said he was reliev·ed_ to · because
·
• of "_his strength .. and
noimced
·
that.Smith's jersey -
· get the 2,00Qth point·. "That was, .
.
shooting ability,he is very tough_.,.
number 12 - was being retired at· just another ·._ a~decl , pressure
· In addition_ to. being the only
the end of this ~eason,drawing an because everybody was saying; 'I .. player in Maristhistory to· score
.. ovation· from ·1he nearly 2,700 in hope you get it tonight in front of·
-
~ 2,000 .points, Smith holds the
attendance. :
·
· the home crowd,' he said, "I feh :• season scoring average record .:....
. Then Smith.was presenteo with, .
.
the pressure as far as scoring it;- i_t , 21 points per· game last year -
the fans' "Most Valuable Player" · was a lot -different~ than
·
the · and needs 53 ·points to take over
aw·ard by the Miller Corporaton l,OOOth point." '-'When I got it, I ·the_ season point-scoring record.
for having received the · most was kind of ·relieved that it was That record is currently at 577
MVP votes from the home fans.
over with, and . then when we points, set by Mike Hart in 1972-
At halftime, Smith received the won .. .it was a good night."
73.
·
"Dunkin Donuts Dunk Award"
Smith's parents were at the
Four years. ago, when Smith
for having the mos~ dunks _during
.
game, and afterwards Smith's was still in high school few people
the seas~n. At the ume Smith ~ad father, Edward, spoke about his thought that he was a potential
20, ~ut
It
was n~m~er 21 which reaction to the 2,000 points.
All-American. "He was kind of a
prov~ded the highlight of the
"You expect it, but when it passive player, not a very strong
evenmg.
happens your reaction is more player," said Petro. "He'd not
With 13:29 remaining to play, overwhelming-than you thought it been allowed to shoot outside, so
Smith drove inside along the right would be," he said. "I think it's he was restricted in many ways.
baseline and scored career points . been a great year here for him -
We took him out of a situation
2,000 and 2,001 on a slam-dunk it's been a great four years for where.we were probably lucky
to
which - brought the standing-
him."
get him and he was_ probably
room-only crowd to its feet and
Petro said that 2,000 points is a .lucky to come here.
It ·
merged
halted play for several minutes.
milestone for a college player, an very well.''. -.
It was a dramatic way to end
"earmark of success." He said
"As soon as we got him, his
the anticipation_ that had been
that Smith's attaining it is open court ability and his ability
then took the lead with a Bruce After he scored his 2000th pomt 11
Johnson free-throw.
·
:
was like getting over the hump;
-· ·
·
Once again_ Fairleigh ·Dicklnson and the tea~ jus( ~ame togethe~." ·
took the lead for
<!-
time, but the
. Steve Smith . said_ that ~co~m,. .
Red Foxes were not to be stopped. . his 2000th car~er POl';'Jt at
~!s
fm~ ' ..
·With 3:12 'remaining and. the home game was mce.
I-. was ·
score 66-63 Bruce Johnson and
under a lot of press_ure. but)h.e ,
_Steve Smith combined 10 put-the cr~n~d .. was.really behmd me, he
.
. Red Foxes in the lead with a pair · sa1?· _
.
. After I scored. the 2000th.
of baskets.
·
pomt my body seemed_.to r~lax . ·
and . my shots were falhng.
Larry Hampton
.
put the· Tonight is one of the biggest;
·
Knights· ahead 68-67 · with 2:03 · nights of· my life -as far as .
left, but Marist took .the lead , baske;tball goes." . · .. ·
.
again with 1:49 remaining· on a .. In previous · action _. Marist
pair of;. free-throws by Keith trounced . the · University · of -
Denis.
.
Vermont . Catamounts • 88-56 .
. :.
·
Fred Collins put the Knights "'Smith led all scorers with· 23·
·ahead one final time with 1 :35 l~ft points and Meekins added
J
4. · Gil ..
but 12 seconds later $te,ve Smith Padilla and Donovan each had :10
put Marist ahead for'.good 71:10 .
.
- rebound~ For Vermont John
- St_eve·smith scored one, rriorl! Simko was the leading scorer and.
point on the fro1't !!lld·of __ a.,,onet · rebounder with
J3
points and 12
·
·
and-one and with 35 sec::.smds_ left . rebounds.
·
Denis,. iff the-. words of -Steve
·
. Smith; ".pu( ~bl!•jcing
·
on the•:- Boxscore:
cake," with
'
a
slam-dunk.· John
Fairleigh Dickinson (72)
Donovan added· .two ·free-throws - Collins 1-0-2, Foster _ 2-0-4,
and with'l4 seconds left in the Gaither 7-7<21, Houston 1-2-4,
game Fairleigh Di_ckinson ,scored Payne 9-lsl9, Hampton }0-2"22.
its finalpoirits with a pair of free-
Marist
(76)
· '·,,
·
· throws by Mike Houston. •
·
·
Meekins 8-1 ~I 7, Denis- 3-3-9,
Secon~s ·Iater-:the.Marist Red · Johnson .. 3-3-9, Smith· 9-3s21,
Foxes~ended their 1982-83 home Taylor 3~2-8;. Donovan 0-4-4,
campaign· with a-7~~ 72:vicfory.
Metcalf 4-0-8.
,.,
0:
to score from
outside was
dem~nstrated very quickly,''
Petro said. "He has certainly
improved · his game since his
freshman year. He's playing
against some excellent teams and
doing well."
·
Smith always ,vanted _ to play
four years of college ball. "I
wasn't thinking that l would go as
. far as I did," said Smith. "It's
something that I never thought
I'd be able to accomplish, but
everytliing's worked out well for
me at Marist, so I can't com- ·
plain."
·
However, there is one person
who knows Smith well and said he
always felt Smith could · ac-
complish what he has. He said:
"I've always thought that he's·
been competitive and would do
well here. I thought he had a
talent for it," He· laughed. "Of
course, I'm his father, so I'm a
liule biased."
28.15.1
28.15.2
28.15.3
28.15.4
28.15.5
28.15.6
28.15.7
28.15.8
28.15.9
28.15.10
28.15.11
28.15.12