The Circle, April 14, 1983.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 28 No. 17 - April 14, 1983
content
.
-
._·
.
Volume ~8, Number 17
Housing
renovati-On
. ,
. .
,
•
.
'
.
.
•
,
.
'
•
'
.
_
-
to · begin in 3 wee
.
ks
,-
by Lynn Gregorski
have
.
a stucco
·
exterior similar t~
:[
··
.
the townhouses arid
·
an
·
_:
entrance
.
Construction to convert the Old
lined by two
.
small
grey si6ri
'
e
Gymnasium
into
freshmen walls,
.
said Cox .
.
The blacktop
housing wiil begin in two to three around the current building will
weeks, according to· Gerard Cox,
·
be
.
removed and shrubbery will j)e
dean of student affairs.
planted, he said. The resident
The renovation will begin by
rooms are 11 '7" x 16' with nine
.
,
taking
·
.
d0wn the exterior walls
foot ceilings. Each room will have
and roofs of each shed located on a walk-in closet that will provide
the sides of the building so the maximum storage space
·
and
steel
·
framework of the new
shelving and may reduce the need
building can
·
be put up, said Cox.
for dressers, C
_
ox said.
.
The sketch by architect Paul
.·
Cox said that he doesn't know
kanin, illustrates the completed
'.'
where . the preschool
·
.
will
·
be
.
freshmen dormitory
.
The peak in
located next year; it is currently in
.
the roof of the dormitory is the the rear shed of the old gym. He
roof of the old gymnasium.
said that there will have to be
·
an
Construction is wrapped around · assessment of the value of
·
the
and through the old building, said
.
preschool to decide whether
.
it will
Cox.
·
..
continue. . The preschool
·
.
was
Cox said that
a
company has established in 1976
·
with the idea
Matist Collei,,, Poughkeepsie, N
:
Y.
·
April 14, 1983
.
'
~
-
~
-
-
.
"1rk
,
·.
_
. '
'
~~
',
.
,
.
__
-
-
-
-
-
--
I\
,
._
..
.-
:
:_~--
.
-~
-<-
.
:
-·
~
-
"
-
~
-
,,t1,i
(J/~
•
.
.
.
.
-
.
111,11~--
·
■11...-------------•u-1
______
1f1Aqs:;a!lllt!!ll!II--
./"'
•
·
--!l!•m-lll!ll!lm~
~
J
The-"new"
.
Old
Gym, scheduled to begin reconstruction in two to three weeks.
not been hired to do the con-
of making it easier for mothers to ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.;... _ _ _ _
.;... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.;.._...J
·
.
struct
i
on but the cost is estimated continue their
·
·
education
.-
by
in trailers that were ordered to be
.
handling the move is going to
The current thinking is to keep
t;
{
.
at$1rilillionto$1.5million.
.
having a place to leave
·
their
brought in, said Cox
.
He said a
causesomestrainontheworkers
.
the ma
i
ntenance shops central to
{,:
_.
·
.
·i
.
·
·
"A plan for financing
.
hasn
'
t child
r
en while in class, said Cox.
.
.
·
more
-
permanent situation will be
One source in the maintenance
the campus, said Cox. He said
•·
·
;
~·
'..
been
worked
out
)'et;"
said
Cox,
Maintenance
will
be
moving
··
arranged for maintenance
by
the
department said that the workers
that there is
a
proposal to put
a
?':J
),;-.
,
·
"but we know
.we
can do it." Cox down to the cold storage wing of beginning of July.
----
are upset because of the lack of
new maintenance building on the
!
]
I
.\:'.~
·
·
·
sai~
:
bY
·
i~cr~asing
.
the popula!ion the Grot_1nds building.located near
.
".I
don't like
t~e
idea of getting
availability_ o! bathrooms in the
south end o~
7
~mpu_s. He said a
,
.!
\ 1
•
•
.
.
·
••
:
qn
.
.-__
campu
·
s the school
Y(ill
be
.
the ten ms courts, said Cox.
.
.
· kicked out
·
(maintenance), but I
grounds bmldmg
.
. future poss1b1hty 1s the con-
f
!
~.
·
;-:.
:·•,t,·
;,
_
_'
s
~
ving
.-
approximately
·
$275,000
·
.
·.
:•w_e want the old gym emptie
_
d
·
li~e the idea o
_
f the new dor-
·
.
·
.
.
struction
~f
a
two story storage
_.1
)
:'~
:''
·
:.:<,:
:.
_
:;
-
B.~
t
;_
Yt;a_r
J
~
_
q_aj:
~ht;
.<!~~~ea
.
~
<:_·
i
~:.t
!t~
,-
:\
?~!
~
~9
:
tW:~: ~~e
,
k~
~o
-
~!?~S!!-
~
~!i~~
-,::
~ut_ory," said .J
?~~
Sh~ug~11essy,
•
·. ."This is
.
supposedly only for
.
and
:
main~enance buildi(!g with
.
} ._:
....
. ::.:.;:,0 ,
°:'
.:
::W
l]l!.11'.11?!=r
:
:··
·
_
of
,.
o(f•caipp~s
:'.-
·
a~a_r:
F
:_
·1
c~n
.
0
-
~!art!
!.';'
~e
/
-s~
_
1_~
•·
:c
°"1Jl.'i
?.
~
'
!h
_
e,
-;.•~-;
as.~1s
_
t~nt
,-
~~~1c
_i
u
.. ~
l
_
a,pt
.,
d1r
.
ector.,=•
th~.
:"
-~m©~!
:;'.
:
_l!!!~}!1~~.::_s3.~~1_:
_
e
.
:
.
h~at~d
,
o
_
fftces on th<: s_econd floor
-
_.),
>!'
.
.. ·,
.
nients leased;
.
;.
.·
.
.-
·.
.
·
gi_:ound
-
e:qmpment that was m
·
ttie
.,
He
_ .
s~1
.
d~ha
_
nql
~
i:1~
:•
the
:.
everyday
,.,.
c~rr!l!entea
,
·
.
\Ye ~re ;ust·waJU~g
·
:·
.
and
',.
cold
·
.
storage· ·~on-the
' :
firsr
~
•
- , .
............. -
· ·
_
:
_
,.
:
·
;:
.
The twi::i'.-story dormifor.y
.
wm
·
:
·
cold st~rage
,
wing
.
ii."
..
being
.
stored
:;"
-.
maintenaQ~e
• .·,.
operation
_
s
.
while ·
·.
to see \\lh~
.
t happens;'
.'
>.
,
-,;
··
::i-
·:,::
npor.
.
: •
.,
,
·
·
l
JI
.
' .
·:
· ..
·.;-
.·:,_:·
·
:
-
·
:
,~·
.
,
.
·
..
..
:·
.
:-
~
-
··-
·
·
.
:·,.
-
.
. _
'.
____ ..
.
_.·._·_
,
__
·
·
·
·
··
·
·
·
,
.
:~.··
'
·
'.·
.--··
·
·
•;.,;
:
<··
.
·'
.-
_
•~-·--·
·
·
··-,:·:-
··
.
·--·
_
.
.
,
..
:-·
-
~
,:
· -
,,
·
1,,
,
,'
• .
·
·•
·.:
•
,
'·
.
,
•
•
··
·
.-
.. -.. :·,:.
-
·,
:.-,·--
·
.
.
·.·-
-
} )
Giitdnit
tO
hellti
Cs.L
itl
,83-, 84
Jfj
.
Newly elected
CSL o
.
ff
~
cers (left to riglll):
.
Margaret Freund
;
•
(SAC president); Roger Newbury (NTSO president);
.
Jim
.
·
•
Barnes (CUB president); Ke
l
t
_
h Galanti (CSL president);
Mark
Zangari
_
(ln
.
ierhouse
.
Counc!Lpi:esident); )Jaryl
•
·
Imperati ·
(Commuter Union president); Keith Griffin (CSL vice
-
presi~
dent).
·
·
(photo
·
by Jeff Ki~ly) ·
.
Crecca
~
s
182
votes .
.
to be as effective as they say they
wiB
.
be
.
due to their inexperience in
student
.
governm
_
ent." .
The race
for
Student Academic
.
Carfylng ahiiost half of the 499
Committee
:
president was the
votes, junio
r
Keith
.
Gala
·
nti won
closest, with Margaret Freund
·
th( Council
·
of Stud~iH
.
Leaders. . winning a run-off against Don
·
Concerning
·
his
future
in-
presidential election held March · Eustace on April
3.
'
volvement in the CSL, ·current
30-31.
.
•
:
·
·
.. ·
.
Regarding the 25
.
percent voter
C
_
ommuter Union
president
.
Running ori the Interactive
turnout for the CSL
·
elections,
Gregg Luna said,
"I
will
continue
.
.
C:hange
·
·
ticket, Galanti got 237
current
president
. ·
Joan
to
be involved in the Commuter
;
votes,
·
followed
by
·
.
Rick
"Schatzie"
·
Gasparovic said the
Union; however, my options in
..
O'Donnell .with 142 votes
·
and
_
sinall turnout was not as good
,
as
•
the CSL are very limited. I would
·
;
Greg Luna with 120 votes .
.
>
-
·
it should ha
v
e
··
be
<:
n and that she
·
like to be involved init, but I'm
.·
Jim
·
earnes skimmed past Jane
hoped it would have been better
.
.
discouraged by
·
the elections
.
.
Scarchilli in
'.
th
_
e race for College
When asked
.
her opinion of the
.
results and I question the abilitY
Union Board president 26:S-225,
•. ,
election
·
,esults
;
:
Gasparovic
·
said,
·
:
·
of
·
the
-
n
·
ew
.
council
·
because the
while Mark Zangari
•
.was
;
elected
:
"Interactive Change ran a very
entire gro
.
up is inexperiencd."
.
to I~ter~House Council president
good
publicity
campaign;
Galanti was
.
unavailable for
wi_th 239 votes, beating Andrew · however,
I
question their ability
.
comment.
Day care center 9ertified; futureindOubt
by Lou
Ann Seelig
and
Mark Zangari
·
·
each other, said Dr. John Pod-
v.vas received on April 5
.
after the
~
theschoolis'indoubt .
.
·
zius, director of the pre
~
s
~
hooi.
:}k
'.
final .re-documentcition began
.
in
...
C
.
Aclministratori
/
are currently
Podzius said
-
he fourid out that September of
1982.
.
.
.
.
·
-
,.
re~evaluating
·
the pre-school to
the
.
pre
0
school would have to
.
In
order for the college to get a
decide if it should
.
continue, Said
~
move. when
,
he
.
called
· ·
.Dean building
-
:
permit
·.
for
the Dean of Student Affairs Gerard
··
Molloy's
·
office to tell him they
renovation of the old
gym;
the
Cox.
On the same day the
.
.Marist
College
·
Pre-school
Center
received • its
.
-long-sought
·
New
York State license, it also was
notified
.
that it would .lose its
home.
Notification of the licensing
and notification that it must
·
vacate
.
came within
:
minutes of
had just received the license
.
"It
building must be vacant. Podzius
There are 33 children enrolled
was a matter of minutes between said the pre-school will
be
in. the pre-school. Children from
the time we got the license and temporarily relocated on campus
Rehabilitations Programs, Inc., a
when
·
I
called," he said
.
for the remainder of the semester
service for various
·
handicapped,
,
The licensing proposal has been as soon as the building permit is
take an active part at the pre-
sought since ·1977; and the license issued, but the future
:
location of school. There are currently 11
handicapped children enrolled.
Senior officers,
:·
_
(!asparovic
·
at
•
impasse
by Christine Dempsey
waiting for the officers to r~sign
·
since she charged the four senior
Only one senior class officer officers, Ted Perrone, president;
has responded to a three-week-old
..
Jennifer Grego, vice president;
request that the officers resign,
Donna Mazzola, secretary; and
according to . Joan "Schatzie"
.
Tricia
O'Donohue,
treasurer,
Gasparovic,
Marist
.
student with failure to carry out senior
government president.
class responsibilities.
Jennifer Grego, senior
·
class
Whether or
not
impeachment is
vice president, has expressed that
possible seems
10
be in question.
·
she is
"willing
·
to
resign,
"
Perrone said that impeachment
Gasparovic said.
i~ not
.
possible unless the officers
Gasoarovic said that she is still
have done something criminally
wrong.
However,
Betty
·
Yeaglin,
Director of College Activities,
said that class officers can be
impeached if they are not doing
their job.
·
Yeaglin said that this new
additiol) 19 the impeachment rules
was added as an amendment to
·
the class officers' constitution in
October
.
CSL was una
_
ble to provide
.
a
copy of the constitution.
"It
is
a
service to the han-
dicapped,"
·
said
.
Beurket.
"It
gives them a chance
10
interact
with people who
·
are not han-
dicapped."
The pre~school was established
in 1974, when
·
a group of un-
dergraduate students began , to
offer child care services under the
direction of Dr. Midge Schratz,
professor of psychology, ac-
cording to Podzius.
According to Podzius, the
students who
·
work in the pre-
s
chool have been working on the
licensing p
r
oposal for a long time.
"The anticipation throughout the
process of evaluation was worth
it," he said
.
.
Podzius said· that the program
strives for the highest quality.
"The license indicated that .we
meet state regulations
·
and serves
as an index of quality,'' he said.
"On a campus in which
·
an of
.
us are involved with social service
concerns, the center provides
humanizing character for the
campus," said Podzius. "As the
pre-school develops we can
become
.
specialized in various
fields of study,
•
and become in-
volved with stress management
and other
·
important research
topics of today."
Podzius said he
.
estimates that
the relocation of the school will
last about two weeks from the
time the building permit is issued
until the end o
·
r the semester.
The pre-school is currently
opened from 8 a
.
m. to
5 p.m. and
operates on a semester basis.
"We look forward to a center
that is growing
-
and hope to get a
·
permaneni location on campus,"
said Podzius.
':'./Y
·
1
).
-~
";
'.\.
-
~
'
-
~
-
¾
·
...
.
--•P~ge 2 · THE CIRCLE· April 14,
·
·
1983
Faculty
and
·
their hangups
by Luane Remsburger
Talking owls, students being
shot for apathy, dogs competing
with the litrary genius of Leo
Tolstoy -
·
a scene from some far
out world, your ask?
No, just a few examples of
faculty doors found hanging
around Marist.
Whether in
the
form
of
newspaper
clippings,
posters,
buttons or stickers, faculty door-
art will do anything but bore you.
But what's in
a
door? Ac-
cording to Jennifer Langner;
faculty
secretary
for
.
the
Humanities
.
Division, her door
arid office are a reflection of
herse!L Upon reaching her office,
one is greeted by a poster of an
owl
saying,
"Never mind
whooooo, just tell me when."
"We're always
under an
avalanche of work here," she said
when asked about its meaning.
"The work load is so incredible
that it doesn't matter wlio wants
what, just tell me when!"
Work isn't the only thing
Langner's office is loaded with. A
45 foot plastic rainbow colored
·
dragon covers her ceiling and
towers over jars filled
•
with
seashells, a giant plant in the
corner, and walls covered with
everything from a Miss
·
Piggy
poster to a black octopus.
"I asked my boss if it was all
·
.
right if I brought a 45 foot dragon
into work," she said. "He said it
was okay as long as it didn't eat
too much and it stayed in my
office
.
"
Amid all this is a
·
sign which
reads, "This place would die
without me."
When looking at the ifoor
·
of
faculty member David Mccraw,
it appears a group of students
might be doing some dying
themselves. The feature attraction
here is a newspaper clipping from
the Kingston Freeman showing
students about to be shot for their
apathy. Some might consider this
door-gore, but McCraw says it
actually sums up the frustration
of many professors -
and
students.
"I have gotten more comments
on that than anything else in my
whole life," he said, referring to
the picture, "which says a lot
about my life! I do
not
have a
trivial door."
·
Maurice Bibeau, assistant
·
professor
of Spanish and the
other foreign language instructors
have an open and shut case when
it comes to being leaders in door
art. Bibeau has a sticker that says •
"Sonrie---es contagiaso" (smile
-
it's contagious) One can find
anything from
the Russian
alphabet outside Dr
.
Casimir
Norkeliunas' office to the
Spanish version of "I like iny
job ... what.I hate is the work!" on
Irma Casey's door.
Casey, however, didn't stop
.
with her door. Her entire
·
office is
like a slice of Spanish life. One
section has been conv
_
erted into a
mini grocery store. The "store"
features everyday products, each·
packaged and labeled in Spanish.
Casey said that actually seeing the
products like this helps her
students to a better understanding
of Spanish.
·
"I believe the more senses that
you use, the better the learning,"
she said. "All the senses are
involved .with
learning -
touching, feeling, tasting."
It's a good thing doors aren't
always open or all this art might
go unnoticed.
Blondes may
supposedly have more fun, and
we may be what we eat, but the
next time you really want to find
out more about a faculty person's
core, simply look at his door.
Attention
JUNIORS
Tickets for the Moonlite
· Cruise on
·
April 29th, will go
on sale Friday, April 15 in
Donnelly Hall.
The cost is $11.00 which in~
eludes Dinner, Refreshments
and D.J.
·
Only a limited
amount can
·
attend so buyyour
ticket soon! !
Ouof,-+yJo,x/wich
·
::
Meals
al-mosi
Reasonable
Prices:
a>
SALADS
~
SoP, DRINKS
!CS.
~AM
Open
Nightly
7:30
p.m.
-1 :00
a.m.
NOW OPEN 2-4:30
SAT & SUN.
.
.
'
:.
CAPUTO'S
-
PIZZERIA
Tel. 473-2500
·
Across from Marist
-
College
.
·-
.
-
~
1--~~--
.
-
-
~----~~-~--~--~--~~----~----~~---.
I
·
·
·
Coupon
· .
·
I
I
1 F
.
.
I
;.
.
~E TOPPING!
·
:
·
•
-
.
On Large Pizza
-_
·
;
•
With This Coupon
I
One Coupon Per Visit
·
· ·
.
·
·
.
.
·
·
.
·
.
Expires May 15
1-----------~----
·
----;..---------~----------
.---~--------~--------------~-----------
I
.
·.
.
.
.
·:
-
EXTRA
:-
L~RGE
CHEESE PIE
:
·,
$5.50
.
Reg. $6.00
I
I
1 Coupon Per Visit
·
·
·
.
_
·
Expires May 15, 1983 ;
·--------~-----------~----------~-------
-----------------------------------------
I
~ ~
00
I
I
I
:
FREE PITCHER OF BUD,
:.
;·
MILLER
or PEPSI
:
I
•
With Purchase of Large Pizza
I
I
On Premises Only
I
I
1 Coupon Per Visit
.
Expires May 15, 1983
I
L-------------------------------------~-•
NEW STORE HOURS:
Mon. thru Thurs.
11
a.m. to
9
p.m.
Sun. 4
p.m. to
11
p.m.
NO DELIVERY SERVICE
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A p r i l
14, 1983 · THE CIRCLE· Page
3--•
Marist'S movie man s3.ys it
by Eileen Hayes
.
"What's Gene
showing·
tonight?:' was the most popular
topic of conversation during the
month_ of March.
From his studio-like room in
Champagnat; sophomore Gene
.
Robbins played his tapes on his
video recorder for all interested
viewers.
According to Robbins,
he
hooked up the video to the whole
ca1T1pus as a publicity stunt to
prove to students and ad-
ministrators that · Marist could
have a student-run television
station.
Robbins attached a channel
splitter -
a device used to create
an additional channel -
to Bruce
·
Cable TV's equipment on the roof
of Chainpagnat hoping it would
·
eventually be found, he said
.
Marist security discovered it,
notified
Bruce
Cable
and
unhooked it on March 31.
The innovative efforts
·.
of
Robbins were not appreciated by
the owners of the equipment.
Ralph Teller of Bruce Cable
TV,
said the cable system was van-
dalized by the· person who in-
stalled the channel splitter:
.
He
said a service man had to reallign
the equipment after
-
the channel
splitter was removed. The school
will have to pay for the damages
and repairs.
_
Teller mentioned the legality of
Robbin's actions. "It's against
the FCC and copyright laws to
show copyrighted tapes over this
type of system,'' he said
.
In reference to a student-run
television station, Teller said he
and Scott
.
Badman of the Beirne
Media Center have been working
Geae Robbins
on it for months.
J3adman could not be reached
for comment.
Director of Housing, Robert
Heywood said,
"Gene's in-
tentions were good. He was in-
novative, but he will have to work
within the framework of the
institution, and
·
go through the
proper channels."
Heywood said he liked the idea
of the campus television. "It is a
great idea, but there will have to
be controls
-
and organized in-
vo
I
vem en t
from
the
ad-
ministration," he said.
It
is the legal aspects of
showing
copyrighted
material
that
concerns the administration
.
"It
is still going through the
courts
.
Most colleges are careful .
about how involved they get,
because
·
it
is
a
high-risk
situation," Heywood said
.
The
movies
started
the
beginning of this semester, when
Robbins
hooked
-
up Cham-
pagnat's east wing of the fourth
floor.
As more Champagnat
residents heard about the movies,
they wanted to be wired
to
receive
the channel.
.
Robbins then went
ahead with his plan and connected
was
all
for show
the campus to his video tape
recorder.
Robbins also showed a "live on
the spot" out of his room using·
his television camera. He said he
felt this also proved his point that
,
a student could run and operate a
campus television station.
Next year's presidents of the
College Union Board and Council
of Student Leaders, Jim Barnes
and Keith Galanti respectively,
said they support the idea of the
television station. They would be
responsible for setting up
·
the
bylaws,
charter and
some
(photo by
Jeff
Kiely)
financial support.
Barnes said he wants to develop
the video department in CUB and
name Robbins chairperson.
The proposals mentioned by
Barnes, Galanti, and Robbins for
television
broadcasts
were:
campus news, athletic events,
television
production
class
assignments and the movies.
·
Robbins said he was very
careful about what he put on the
air. He wanted to get his point
across without insulting anyone.
"I'm happy things turned out the
way they did," he said.
That smell : MariSt :stinks,_ but not for long
by
Lisa Arthur
doing
now
is
.
enclosing ali present cooking of the sludge for
problem areas - that is areas that' conditioning to
·
the
use
of
·
It's
springtime
at
Marist.
cause the stink. We're sealing chemicals. The second phase
There's a keg at
.
"
the river. A
.
everything of(,
.
We're also requires new equipment which
frisbee game is
in
progress
·
in
·
rebuilding our fume incinerator will cost close to $200,000. Phase
front of Champagnat. Everyone's
and covering the two sludge-
II would take
.
six to eight months
celebrating the arrival of warmer
holding tanks which are out
-
to
.
complete, according to En-
weather. The sun is shining, the
__
doors."
virotech officials.
-
trees
_
are green and the air smells
Smith said that the cost of
·
Phase Ill, which is considered
like rotten eggs.
-
Phase I will be approxiinatley an absolute last resort, would
.
The noses of Marist students
$20,000 for the materials needed. involve moving the plant to a new
may soon be getting a break from
The
City
of Poughkeepsie is location or covering the plant
the all
·
too familiar odor which
supplying the money
_
and En-
with an air tight dome. En-
surrounds the campus, especially
virotech is doing the labor at no virotech said this is more an
·
in warm weather. The odor which
additional cost to the city.
.
· ''academic exercise" and that it
originates from the waterwaste
_
Envirotech will rely on the "could not be afforded by this
facility located behind the Mc-
people living iri the surrounding community without extreme
Cann
.
Center may be gone by May
areas to judge if Phase I is sue-
financial b3:rdship
.
"
.
1,
according to
·
Envirotech
cessful. If the reduction in odors
,
The Poughkeepsie waterwaste
.
Operating Services,
.
the company
does not satisfy the neighborhood
.
facility has been in operation
that operates the facility.
and other interested parties, such since August 1977. It was built as
Envirotech is currently in the
as Marist
.
College and Saint a result of the Clean Water Act of
middle of the first phase of a
Francis Hospital, Envirotech will 1972 with money from the federal
program designed to reduce the make a recommendation to the and state government.
The
odors caused by the processing of city to begin Phase II of t
,
he
_
purpose of the plant is to remove
sludge at the plant.
program.
pollutants in wastewater before it
·
"Phase I will be completed by
.
Phase
II
would
-
involve is emptied into the river, ac-
May 1," said Doug Smith, plant changing the entire sludge cording to Envirotech.
manager. "Basically, what we're processing -system
form
the
Smith said that at the time the
3 men sentenced in
·
Berger
-
-
murder case
by
Jim Leonard
A Suffolk County
.
Court jury in
Long Island has found three New
York City men guilty of second-
degree· murder in the March 20,
1982, shooting of Marist student
Richard Berger, 19, during a
holdup at a Hauppauge gasoline
station.
,
Berger was killed during the
1982 spring break while he was
visiting his friend who worked as
a night attendant at
·
a Long Island
gas station. Berger, a sophomore,
was a Marist College honor
student who majored in computer
science.
A.
shocking accusation by the
defense lawyers for
.
the three
assailants received attention in
this year's April
5
edition of The
Star, a grocery store tabloid. The
defense claimed Berger died from
the withdrawal of the life-support
systems rather than from the
bullet.' Juror Thomas Fitzgerald
of Shirley was quoted in
Newsday, saying, "We got rid of
that one (the defense's claim)
right away."
Berger was shot in the head
with a bullet from a .22-caliber
revolver while
·
attempting to
thwart a holdup at the service
station.
After
the
shooting,
Berger was taken to Smithtown
General Hospital where he was
unable to breathe without a
_
respirator. Six days later, after
doctors agreed he was "brain
dead," his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Berger, decided to remove
the life-support systems and
donate their son's kjdneys to two
young men.
The three defendants
William Lai, 18, of Manhattan;
Fabricio Barbaran, 20,
of
Queens; and Philip Wang, 23,
also of Queens face
·
maximum
sentences of 25 years to life on the
murder charges. Lai was also
convicted of first-degree man~
slaughter. Police said
it
was Lai
who shot and killed Berger.
·
Lai testified he was drunk and
under the influence of cocaine
and barbituates at the time of the
holdup
.
Lai and his friends were
returning from a party at the
State University at Stony Brook
.
Berger's father, the Republican
Suffolk County deputy elections
'
commissioner, was quoted in
Newsday, saying, "Well, the
three of them are going away for
25 years. After 25 years, they will
come back to their families again
-
that's more than I've got. I've
lost my son."
Berger, who lived in Benoit
House, was a member of the
Marist diving team and a brother
in
the Sigma Phi Epsilon
fraternity.
plant was b
_
uilt odor prn'Qlems W€,r
not
foreseeable.
·
_
.
Smith
-
said the
.
plant
serves
approximately 40,000 residents
from both the town and city of
Poughkeepsie. · He
said
he is
hopeful that the odor problem
will
be sufficiently reduced
through Phase I.
"We know it just stinks
period," he said. "And we realize
what a problem it is. I've been in
th
_
is business for 14 years so I
.
don't even sme\\
it
anymore but
l
-
-
know ,how bad it stinks. The
things we're doing now should
really reduce the odors and if it's
not enough we'll do Phase
II.
The
problem
will
be solved even-
tually
.
"
If
all goes as planned, by next
spring the Marist community can
expect
to
be enjoying
the
fragrances of the season instead
of the aroma of baking sludge,
Six students arrested
after Rockwell brawl
by
Mark Stuart
.
Two late night brawls at
Rockwell's Bar before Easter
recess led to the arrest of eight
people,
including six
Marist
students.
Police were called to the
Delafield A venue establishment
on March 26, 1983 at 3:07 a.m. to
respond to a large group in the
sue
.
et,
according to
police
reports
.
Off-duty
Police
Officer
Holmes of the Poughkeepsie City
Police Department was at-
tempting to subdue a subject who
started a fight in the bar, that had
moved out into the street.
A crowd of about "30 people
were milling around" when Lt.
Wilkinson and Sergeant Resch
arrived at the scene. The police
asked the crowd to disperse and
all but six people left the area.
The six subjects refused
10
leave the area and the street
because of what they stated "was
the constitutional right to stand in
the street," according
10
official
police reports of the incident.
· Police arrested Ray Castaro,
Daniel Morissey, Peter Moloney,
Ero! Gureli, Michael Buckley,
and Christopher Dyal on charges
of blocking traffic. All of the
subjects are from fifth floor Leo
Hall.
At a court appearance on April
4, all were adjourned from
_
charges with contemplation of
dismissal until October 6, 1983,
according to City Court records.
Castaro, however, was also
made to pay restitution and
apologize along with the six
month good behavior period.
Police were again called to the
bar on March 30, 1983 to respond
to a complaint from owner Ed
McDermott which led to the
arrest of John Laurenzi of 91
Lake St.
,
Congers, N.Y ., Thomas
Meara of 27 Beast Lane, Congers,
N
.
Y
.
, and Timothy Mulhere of
Brewery Road, New City,
N.Y.
Police
arrived
to
find
"numerous fights in progress"
and the glass broken out of the
door and damage done to the
pool table.
Marist student John O'Leary,
who was the bartender at the
time, approached police in the
street and told them he had been
struck in the face.
Laurenzi, Meara, and Mulhere
·
were all adjourned of charges in
contemplation of dismissal for
the next six months.
Police records indicate that
according to a statement given by
Laurenzi, he returned to the bar
with some of his friends. One of
the bouncers shoved one of the
guys with him and a girl in-
tervened. The girl was pushed to
the ground and the brawl broke
out
.
I
I
l
l
I
.
.
I
- - - -Page 4 · THE CIRCLE·
April
14,
1983 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~ - - - ~ - - - - ~ - - - -
.
Readers
Write
.-
:
..
All letters must be typed triple space with a 60 space margin, and submitted .to the
· Circle office no later than 1 p.m. Monday. Short letters are preferred. We reserve thll
'- · right to edit all letters. Letters must be signed, but names may be withheld upon
request. Letters will be published depending_ ~pon availability of space.
_
Disjointed article
To the Editor: .
sheer abili~y to caucus · we
YOU KNOW
r
1-\EARC>
TPA1'
iHky
rre-sc~oole,s
C.TUA'-'-)'
U'5£'D Tc
HAVE.
~Z?z!s455~
otJ
It was a pleasant sight in the
managed to ;make our presence-
illustrious "Circle" to see a
felt. We had two sessions within
-demonstration of support of our
the U.N. itself; the first in the
recent trip to and participation in
General Assembly and we sat
the National Model United
where Laos would sit if in session.
Nations (NMUN), even if the
This alone was a great experience ·
article was
disjointed and
to sit where much of todays world
misleading. Not to mention the
debate takes place; Our second
size and amount of space you
session was held · in various
devoted · to it! .The Marist
conference rooms in the U.N.
delegation as well as all other
. The entire delegation would
participants met at the Grand
like to express our graditute for
Hyatt in New York (city), not
the financial support we received
Washington. This may be a small
from President
Murray and
point but when you spend a half Kathy Shea, chairman of the
houri .with . an .interviewer you
Financial Board, as well as Dean
expect some contiriimity. I am
Cox and Betty Yeaglin. We would
sure you are doing the very best
not have been able to attain such a
you can with the. limited per~
rich educational experience
picuity of your staff.
without their support and
The conference was held from
guidance. The NMUN is an
March 29th to April 3\·d; the
exciting alternative to· traditiqnal ·
Marist delegates, Rich Demeter,
education, it offers a combination
Eric Grindle, Angela Spatia, Stan
of the "hands on" experience and
Merritt, Ken ·.Carlisle, Gina
interpersonal communication and
O'Connel, Marcos Castro, Spiros
interaction. In · the custom· of
Titos, Frank Lorica, Barbra
Marist College we may have
· Demeter, Amie Rhodes and Jim
started a tradition or two of our.
Galvin did a superb job and I ;. own for future Marist delegations
Who cares?·
must commend them all. . As to follow.
.
representatives of Laos we did not
Sincerely,
have much p_ower but through
John Fusco
Throughout the year The Circle has been
pushing for the administration
fo
give the
students more
input · into decisions
regarding. student life at Marist. It's sad to
say that we were wrong. The majority of
students don't care; they don't even care
enough to vote for student leaders.
Only one quarter of the undergraduat~
students at Marist voted in the recent CSL
elections. Isn't that sad? I hope all the
students who .didn't like decisions about
cohabitation, dry day in the pub, or don't
like' the food service v_oted',.
\t
you cou\dn't
find the
60
seconds it takes to vote for
student leaders how, come you can find so
much time to complain?
·
The interactive change party swept the
elections. They had . a good amount of
support from the students who did vote.
Now lets hope they can get the students
who don't care enough to vote to show
some concern for what happens at Marist.
All the people involved in the recent elec-
tions showed that they are concerned .by
taking.the time to run for office. While these
students were putting in the time to·run for
office three quarters of the student_ body
weren't even concerned enough to vote_.
·
diplomacy, compromise and the
Ex Head Delegate
Internships
What does this tell the administration? It
To the Editor:
background . rather than any
tells them to go ahead and do what they
A few remarks concerning the
specific professional training."
want. The students don't care anyway. No
importance of Marist· College's
While a focus .on "professional
matter how you look at it; there's something
internship program:
training" would betray the ideals
wrong with the students of Mari st College if
The first and most salient value
of a "liberal arts education,"
I
do
they can't take a minute to choose a student
of.
the internships that this college
not believe that the two -
leader.
. _;
sponsors is that they are in-
professional experienc_e and the
Interactive change has their work-cut o.~t / . dispensable in helping . an mi-
liberal arts -
should be divorced
for them,. How c1:1.n they ask_for
,
change· if;=",.-/dergraduate choose and launch a:· from-each other. For ·example,
you, the·. studen.ts ;don't
even•:;
care wt:,ato::,< career.
For example,
I
-am ·
my previous three years·atMarist
happens? Before-we attempt to'change·thec};,:_· presently completing a· 15-credit
(eight ofiriffirst ten courses'were
administration, perhaps we should attempe•::, intership at WfSB-TV in Hart- . from''. CORE) cultivated and
to change the students.
-
·,
.
. '
ford,_ Connecticut; Although a
refined my reading, writing and
Why is it that the.same·student leaders do
good part of my work over the
speaking . abilities
·three
all the work and most other students don't
past thirteen weeks has been with· essential ingredients of a sue-
even care? If you couldn't find the time to·
the station's investigative reporter
cessful liberal arts education.
vote at the recent elections, perhaps you
-
I've handled the research -
I
At WFSB-TV, however, I have
_ don't even deserve to be going to college.
have gained additional experience -had the opportunity to con-
We wish the interactive change_ a very
working at the assignment desk.
sistently test those skiHs. The
sincere "good luck." God knows· that they'll
I've accompanied reporters - on
manner in which a typical story is
need it with the students that Marist has to
story'. assignments and worked
put· together serves as
an ·
offer!
with the station's producers and
illustration of this. Researching a
assignment editors . .In short, the
story
for
WFSB-TV's
~
in~
day-by-day,
40-hour-a-week · vestigative reporter initially in-
emersion into the TV news
valves an efiormous amount· of
The envelope, please
business has given me an un-
reading . that ranges from Con-'
dersta:nding ··or the field that I
necticut's
legal
statu.tes · and
couldn't possibly have gotten
opaque, long-winded government
from a classroom or a textbook.
documents to barely literate story
On Sunday night, the Council of Student
Leaders held their annual awards dinner.
. Certificates were · presented to club
· presidents and class presidents, as well as
C.U.B. and C.S.L. members, in recognition
of their efforts over the past year.
·
The people present at the ceremony
support the theory that a minority of the
students do the majority of the work of
planning
activities at Marist. · Several
students received two or more awards as
members of various clubs and committees, ·
and in recognition of their academic
achievements. These are the students who
have really contributed to Marist College -
not the ones who complain but don't act.
And, regardless of how well they did their
jobs, at least these students volunteered
their time and effort.
The Circle would like to congratulate the
Co-Editors
The
Associate Editors
Circle
Sports Editor
Adv!!rtislng Manager
Business Manager
Social Work Club, which received the Club
of the Year award; MCCTA, which received
the Service Organization of the Year award;
and the Class of '86, the Class of the Year.
We
also congratulate the presidents of
those organizations. -
Jerri· Tobin, Arlene
Hutnan, and Andy Crecca :-- for their
achievements.
·
·
As the year draws to a close and we all
look back on the years· activities, we also
look ahead to next year. The Interactive
Change members which won last week's
elections face the challenge of representing
the student body next year. They have
promised greater cornmunicatjon between .
students and ad,ministrators during the next
. year, and It is their responsibility to achieve
that goal. It is the responsibility of the
student body which voted them into office
to keep them to that promise.
What's more, internships allow
undergraduates to make .. im-
portant connections that may lead
to jobs after they are graduated
from college.
A
personal ex-
perience exemplifies · this. An
editor at
WFSB-TV
assisted me in
arranging an interview with the
vice president -of a TV station
where he had formally worked.
That interview provided me with
a solid toehold in a field that is
ferociously competitive.
A
second benefit of the in-
ternship program is that it
symmetrizes ·a liberal . ·arts
education. Webster's New World
Dictionary describes a liberal arts
education as
"providing the
student with a broad cultural
Rick O'Donnell
Reporters
Lisa Arthur, Marla Azzolina,
Advertising Staff
Patti Walsh
Cindy Bennedum, Karen Boll,
Tim Dearie, Alison Demarest,
Chris Dempsey, Lori Dyer,
Karen Lindsay
0onna Fidaleo,
Mike
Graney,
· Classified
Lynn Gregorski, EIieen Hayes,
Lou Ann Seelig
Kristine Lawas, Jim Leonard,
Donna Cody Seelbach
Karyn Magdalen, Paul Murnane
Cartoonist
Karen Nlzolek, Susan Pyle,
· suggestions from members of the
viewing audience. · _After the
reading is finished, I then write up
the pertinent material in an ac-
curate and lucid pr_ose form. Oral
communication prowess is im~
portant as well since. I must be
able to discuss at length with the
investigative reporter what I have
done.. .
.
.
._
In addition, the efficacy of a
story,
and
ultimately
the
reputation of the reporter and the
station, may hinge · on how .
competently I haye done my job.
A mere letter grade evaluation for
- a similar classroom assignment
can't compare with that.
Finally (and while · not. in-
tending to decry
.
_
the classical
continued on page
6
Tara Scanlon
Lisa Crandall·
Dianne Gallagher
Kevin Shulz
Ted Waters
Frank Raggo, Laura Reichert,
Photography Staff
Gina Franclscovich, Jeff Kiely,
Bill Travers
Roger Romano, Jane Scarchllll,
Mark Stuart, Gwen Swinton,
Kyle Miller, Jeanne LeGloahec
Jim Barnes
Boppin Bob Weinman, Mark Zangari
Joe Dldzlulls
Faculty
Advisor
David Mccraw
Adrienne Ryan
Gene Llannis
\
------------------------------------April 14, 1983· THE CIRCLE·
Pages--
The
....
realized
when
was deal ~ith guzzling mugs of beer
registering for courses for the fall · without spilling on your three
semester of next year that Marist. piece suit.
only offers three years of wor- .
Science, Technology and Extra-
thwhile courses. So I started to
marital Affairs: A course for the
think of some of the courses that
scientist of the eighties. Some· of
they could offer to provide a full
the topics covered will be; the
four-year education.-
· theory of relativity, photosyn-
Foolish Fox:
Bathroom Stall Etiquette I: In·· thesis, genetic engineering and
this course we will explore the· quickie divorces. This course is
basic methods of toilet use, toilet
recommended for all students
paper management, and wiping
interested in gynecology.
techniques. Reading material will
Workshop in
Pornography:
be optional, but each student will
This will be a workshop class in
be
expected to
give a fifteen
the wonderful world of hard-core
minute presentation on coping
porno. The primary focus will be
with ,cold toilet seats. Each
on written material, but film will
student is expected to purchase
also be explored.
Required
A.
course
of course
their own supplies.
.
reading includes; Penthouse, Oui,
Beer
Drinking
with
Buns and Boobs and The Norton
Management Applications: This
Ant ho Io g y
of
Taste I es s
course deals with
the con-
Literature. All students will be
sumption of large amounts of expected to pose for a layout
alcohol while managing a small . before the end of the term. This
accounting firm. Amid-term and _. course is · recommended
for.
final will be administered in order 'Fashion
Design
Majors and;
to rate the students course ·per-
convicted rapists.
formance. The course will also.
General Class Skipping I: The
Reel impressions
Teenage gangs roam the city
streets at night, mugging and
robbing people, selling drugs,
stealing cars, and, as one would ·
expect to happen eventuaJly,
killing people.
Bad boys
The gangs in Bad Boys come in
three basic types: Caucasian,
Negro, and Hispanic. We see that
they all have·pretty lousy lives at
. home, but that is to be expected.
The parents are too naive to know
what their kids do at night.
Friday: On Campus
"Snow White and
the Seven Dwa_rfs"
9 a.m.
&
12 noon
Theatre
Airforce Recruitment
10 a.m. - CC269-
Commuter Union
Meeting
2p.m.-D249
R.A.
Workshop
2:1S p.r11. - CC248
Golf for Cystic
,
Fibrosis, 2:30 p;m.
College Hall, Pok.
$4.SO for
9 holes
contact Leslie, 6-114 ·
Men's Tennis vs.
Bard,
3:30 p.m.
Psi Chi Induction
Ceremony, 6 p.m.
Fireside
· "Snow White and.
the Seven Dwarfs"
7:30 p.m. Theatre
. Mastermind
Tournament
9 p.m. Fireside
Mr. Marist Night
9 p.m. Dining Room
The Chance:
Guitarist
Steve Morse
(of The Dregs) and
Morst, Code, 56
The Bardavon:
Vassar Repertory
Dance Theatre at
the Bardavon Opera
House, 8 p.m.
Gen. Adm.,
$S
Groups of 10,
$4
Student and Senior
Citizens,
$3
Saturday: On Campus:
"Snow White and
the Seven Dwarfs"
1&7&9p.m.
Theatre
Rehearsal for
Experimental
Theatre, 2 p.m.
Fireside
Lacrosse vs.
New Haven, 1 p.m. ·
Mass, 6:15 p.m.
Chapel
Mixer sponsored by
IHC and Commuter
Union,
9 p.m.
Dining room
The Chance:
ZEBRA
At Vassar:
Vassar
College
Student
Entertainnient
Committee presents
"The English
Beat"
in concert with
special guest
"R.E.M."
at Kenyon Hall
Vassar Campus
Tickets: 510
Sunday: On Campus
Mass, 11 a.m.
Chapel
"Snow White and
the Seven Dwarfs"
1
p.m. Theatre
Barbeque for North
En~ Residents,
2
p.m.
The Chance:
T.B.A.
The
Bardavon:
Hud59n Valley
Philharmonic
Audience·
Choice Concert
Beethoven, Berlioz,
Mozart- 8 p.m.
Call HVP for Info.
454-1222
Sean Penn (Fast Times at
Ridgemont High) is the head
honcho of the Caucasian gang.
He talks a buddy into heisting the
money from a drug deal that is to
be made between the Negroes and
the Hispanics. What follows is a
very exciting · (and bloody)
confrontation as all three gangs
clash in a plethora of bullets and
confusion. The little brother of
the leader of the Hispanic gang is
killed in the onslaught, which
prompts
him
to
threaten
Monday: The Chance
Video
ELO and Genesis
Free admission
requiremellls
for
this course
include missing every class and
doing no studying what so ever.
There will be no teacher for this
independent sttidy course, but we·
will give you three credits and
take your four hundred dollars.
General Class Skipping Lab:
This course is to be taken con-
. currently with General Class
Skipping.
There
are
no
requirements and. irresponsibility
is stressed.
Hard Drugs for the Liberal
Arts Major: This course will deal
with the problem of drugs on the
college campus. As a semester
long project each student will be
required to submit a proposal
to
have more drugs distributed on
campus.
As
the
semester
progresses students will be en-
couraged to experiment with
various forms of hallucinogetic
drugs. The final will consist of
snorting a tuition's worth of
cocaine.
Required
materials
include: A mirror, razor blade,
vengeance towards the leader of
the Caucasians (Penn).
They both end up in the same
correctional center, and, without
giving away
too
much of the
story, you know there will be a
final confrontation between the
two.
The movie offers some above-
standard performances by Penn
(in a different role from that in
Fast
Times), Esai Morales (in the
role of the Hispanic leader) and
bong and two Doors albums.
Managerial
and
Sexual
Behavior: In this course the
wonders of sexuality in
the
business world will be explored.
Topics such as, How
to
become
sexually agrcssivc with
your
superiors and Making it with the
vice president of finance will be
explored. Beer . Drinking with
Management Applications is a
prerequisite.
Mass Confusion: This course is
an introductory exercise on the
impossibility of finding a job as a
Confusion Ans Major. Press
Freedom and Radio Broadcasting
will also be covered.
Intermediate French Kissing
I:
Explore the wonders of swapping
spit in a classroom athmosphere.
This course should be taken con-
currently with
the · Physical
Education Course
in
Tonsil
Hockey.
Now I just have to figure out
which courses are Liberal Arts
courses and which aren't.
by Reni Santoni (as one of the
more predominant correctional
officers). Trivia fans
may
remeber Santoni as Clint East-
wood's partner in Dirty Harry.
Although the movie is very
fast-paced at times, there arc a
number of segments along the
way that could have been deleted.
It seems like we take a lot longer
to reach the final climax then we
need to. Even so, there are worse
things you could waste two hours
on.
Tuesday: On Campus
Literary Society
Lecture: "Italian
Literature"
8
p.m.
Wednesday:
Thursday: On Campus
Coffeehouse
featuring
The Chance:
Southside Johnny &
the Asbury Jukes,
8:30p.m.,SU_
The Bardavon:
Bardavon
Film Society
presents "The Shop
Around the Corner"
8p.m.
Gen. Ad.
$2.S0
Members SI
On Campus
Spanish Night
7p.m.
Criminal Justice
Career Day
The Chance:
T.B.A.
Linda Black,
9
p.m.
CUB Golf
Tournament
The Chance:
Kate&Anna
McGarrigle
in a very rare club
appearance,
$7.SQ
i
\
·
1
I
I
- - •
·
Page
6 • THE
CIRCLE•
April 14, 1983
·
Jim Raimo
·
to leave
by
Kris Lawas
The reign of Jim Raimo as the
residen( director of both Leo and
Sheahan l-Iall will come to an end
this June after many years of
service to the Marist community
.
Raimo's decision to resign as
resident director came about after
his parents, Jim and Kitty Raimo,
purchased ·"Mr. Sausage," a
small family restaurant in Hyde
Park, this past October. Raimo,
in an agreement with his parents,
·
will
be joining the new business to
·
work full time at the end of this
academic year
.
Raimo graduated from Marist
College in 1981 with a Bachelor of
Arts Degree in Political Science.
During his college years he
became active in the residence
staff. In 1979-80, he was the
resident coordinator of Benoit
House and in 1980-81 he became
the assistant resident director of
the freshmen dorms. After his
graduation, Raimo applied for
the freshmen resident director
position and won the spot.
"I became interested in the
position mainly because of what
the position could give me," said
Raimo. "I knew many of the
resident directors back then and
they really liked their jobs. As an
assistant resident director, I really
.
enjoyed
it.
.
It
was really
something to see a group of
people working together. It gave
me a sense of accomplishment.
That's a major reason why I
decided to
try
the position.,,
.
OPEN 24 HOURS
.
.
.
,,
'
.
.
'
,•
.
PALACE
·
01NER
&
RESTAURANT
·
Breakfast - Lunch - i>in,ier
Fresh Seafood - Steaks - Chops
Cocktails - Baki~g on Premises
_
(NEXT TO All SPORT)
Show your collsgs JD and gB.t a FREE
Glass of Beer with your meal!
7%
DISCOUNT
194 WASHINGTON STREET
·
POUGHKEEPSIE,_ NEW'
·.
YORK
.· '
:
R~!~~c~l
lHUTllf
ACRES Of FREE PAR!<ING
Friday
~
Thursday
One Week Only
THE VERDICT
With Paul
Newman
.
Call Theatre for Times
Starts Friday
April 22
The following internships
·
-·
are still
-
available for the
.
Summar:
Dutchess
Bank
-Controllers
·
~
Trust
Dept.
·
-credit Dept.
·
Northern Dutchess Hospital
_
·
-Biology
-
.
-Chemistry
-
··
t.B.M.
Fox Street
·
-Salas
·
Shwartz
&
Company
.
-Retailing
Do you
have
a s
·
ummer job?
.
Would you like to get College
·
credit
tor
it?
As the freshman
resident
director, Raimo
.
said that he feels
he accomplished -many positive
things at Marist .
,
J3
.
[[B.Aftb
>·
·
j
·
/!
ii~
.
~i
i\~t~,1~us
if'
,~
D230for more lnf9r-
.
''1'.fee\ that I became a positive
role
.
model for students," said
·
Raimo; «They could reline to
me
because
I
wasn't too old. When
they
-·
realized that I was a recent
graduate,
.
•·
they saw me dif- . - - - - - - - - - - - -
1111111
- - - - - - - - - - - - •
.,. . . .
_
_
~ - - - - •
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
~~~:::~~s::e::::ee;e::u::a:a~:
.C
-
·
-
L·
Ass
·
·
M:arist COffee Shop
proved to the school that events
could be run by students.
th;;y;:;:.:sg,o~:tWa~:C~~r!!,~
·
-
_
.
o
·
F
.
F
·
IC
•·_
ER
·
·
.
1- BELONG
·
TO
..
·
even allowed .
.
There wasn.'t any
.
T
.
HE
·
_
MA
·
R
· ·
1
·
s
··
T
·
·_.
·
.
/
confidence in
.
the snidents.
·
.
·
.
•
·
However, I always encouraged
EL
.
ECTIONS
~t:o~~~~t~~~~~i~:~t~c~p!!~~
.
·
.
_·.
_
··.·
.
_
-
.
.
.
_
·
..
·
.
..
.
.
.
MUNCH BUNCH
students involved in functions
,
·
1
.
·
.
.
feel
that
.
I
accomplished
something," said Raimo
.
"I've
been able to get more student
involvment
-
in
the
House
Councils, field days, and I was
Commuters & Residents:
-·:
.
also able
to
prove to students that
they could have fun at an event
·
that didn't involve alcohol, such
as
·
the past freshmen variety
show." However, Raimo
·
also
said that at times things weren~t
too smooth.
·
,
.
.
"I don't" feel that they have a
very good training program for
the residence staff," said Raimo.
"I
·
wasn't trained very well and I
made mistakes. I had to learn
certain skills. I had to learn to be
flexible. At times my lack
·
ofskills
got in the way. This year, I have a
better relationship with my
staff."
Raimo said that he feels Maris~
has greatly improved ov~r the
years.
"Marist now attracts students
who really want and are interested
.
in learning ~ot. only a career but
themselves. The school
.
has
greatly improved for the students
in a social aspect by allowing
more student events.''
Whether or not Raimo's
resignation will be permanent on
his part is uncertain.
"Someday I'd like to come
back, depending on how things
work out," said Raimo. "My
~ays here have been very
rewarding. I'll never forget the
people I've worked with and the
good times we've had. They've
been
the best."
Candidates
Forum-
Monday
April
·_
18
'
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
·
•
.
.
·
•
·
9
.
:3
_
0
:
p.m.
,:
:
·,
,
-
:--
· Room
··
cc:
~
;
249
.
VOTE:
·
Tuesday April 19
and
Wednesday
April
20
11 :00-1 :30 in Donnelly
4:00-6:·oo
in
Campus Center
.
'
·Save 10%
·
Check out ~oupon
booklet. Good in
Coffee Shop,
Deli
~~
Dining Hall
Coffee Shop
-
Special
.
·
Hot Dog and Soda $1.00
Purchase of booklets
may be made
in
Food-Service Office
r
'
i
.
.•.
..
..
.
,
..
.
....
~
.
.
..
'
.
.
.
.
April
14, 1983 ·
THE CIRCLE·
Page
7 - - •
New
Officers
·
outline plans for
'83-'84
year
·.
:
SACseeks
recognition
by Bonnie Hede
.
.
.
_
The newly-elected president of
the
:
Student Academic Com~
mittee, . Margaret Freund, said
this
week
·
that
·
the biggest
challenge she will face in her
1983-84 term of office will be
making the S.A.C. known to
Marist students.
Freund, a junior, who was an
·
s.A.C. member this academic
·
year
.
and also on the Financial
Board as a representative of the
S.A.C. does not allow the
committee to represent the
student body adequately. "The
.
S.A.C. was formed as a· liaison
.
between students and faculty, to
keep the lines of communication
. open," he said. "We can't do that
·
if the students don't know we
exist."
Besides
taking · legitimate
·.
complaints and problems con-
cerning professors and students to
the department chairpersons, the
.
committee
·
also helps students
. contact hard to reach adjunct
'
professors and set up meetings
with them, according to Freund.
·
·
The S.A.C
.
has helped to initiate
new courses of study, such as the
Irish Studies program, and is
·
Leader$hip
·
forum-set
currently working on getting the
administration to keep the lower
level of
.
the library 1Jpen longer at
night, she said.
· Dawn Joy Oliver, the
·
current
S.A.C. president, agrees with
Freund that students need to be
informed ·or
.
the committee's
existence. •:The S.A,C
.
is an
academic organization, nor a
social one,
,
this is written
.
in the
S.A.C. constitution. Because of
this we don't sponsor mixers and
other activities and don'i get the
publicity we need," she said.
Oliver said that the new
president should widely publicize
the· committee to make it known.
"We
·
can be of great use to the
students once they know to come
to us with their problems," she
said. "Last semester we took
three students' grievances
·
about
professors
to
the
proper
department chairpersons and
have heard that things are much
improved in those situations. The
administration has been very
cooperative."
Freund won the race for
president of S
.
A.C. after a tie
vote and a subsequent run-off
election. Don
•
Eustace, Freund's
opponent, will be the S.A.C. vice-
president this year. "We had
informally
_
agreed before the
election that the runner-up would
be the vice-president," Freund
A panel discussion, "Student
Involvement
.·
ih. Government,"
will be
·
presented by Eleanor '
_
,
Roosevelt's Val-Kill, Inc.
(ERVK)
.
-';
in the Campus Center Theatre on
.-.-_,.:
,:
Tuesday at 4 p.m.
··
·
'
·
~
-
·
~
~
\
.
.
,.
,.;
The p;~gram
~ill
focus on the
experiences
··
and
.
interaction of
.
three students of the 1930' s and
five stuqents of the l 980's.
The featured participants are
James
·
Frederick Green, Viola
llma and Jack Richard Mc-
.
Michael for the l 930's and Robert
Eisman, Bard College, AQnette
Martin,
Dutchess Community
College, Barbara Demeter, _Marist
College,
and Franklin Fink,
Vassar College for the 1980's.
•
·
.....;;
;..;;,;
=.-
,'.I
I,
-
-
r
· said, "I'm really happy about this
because Don is enthusiastic and
dedicated."
Freund
s
aid that she sees her
goals for the S.A.C. tie into the
goals of the 'Students for Jn-
teractive Change,
•
the ticket she
ran on, which created a stir by
winning all but one office in this
election. "The Interactive Change
group
realizes
that
com
-
munications between students and
administration need to be im-
proved, on both sides, and is
willing to do something about it,"
she said.
"Students complain that the
administration does not inform
them," Freund said, "but _the
students don't always go out
_
of
iheir way to ask questions or
communicate with' the
·
aa:.
ministration. The s:KC:
.'
can
:
ait'd
will
improve this situation.,,
.
·
Barnes eyes
_
new projects
by Mike Hayden
Newly elected College Union
Board President Jim Barnes has
big plans for next semester.
According to Barnes, next
semester's plans include com-
puterization of
.
all · C.U.B.
financial
records,
programs
involving a Marist television
network, formation of
a
public
opinion organization and the
possibility of holding a major
concert
.
.
"One major goal for next
semester will be to computerize
the organization," said Barnes.
·
"the computer society
is
already
proposing Jo help
.
all the clubs
organize and get
their in-
formation down on computers."
The C.U.B.
is
a student
organization that is res
.
ponsible
for sponsoring and expanding
social and educational programs
·
for students at Marist College.
The organization consists of four
elected officers and seven ap-
.
·
pointed chairmen.
_
·
''.I am .very eager to get as many
people
·
involved
·
as·
f
can," said
Barnes, in regard to appointing
C.U
.
B
.
chairmen
.
·
There
have
been
many
suggestions for new programs
next semester including
.
ex-
perimentation with a Marist
television network. "We cannot
promise results without support,
so if students are interested they
should consider applying," said
Barnes.
The television network could
conceivably be hooked up with
the existing cable connections in
dorm
·
rooms allow in~ student
films
10
be shown as well as
c
ampu
s
advcrciscincnt
s
.
"A concert committee will also
be appointed in the hope of
getting a major concert
s
pon-
s
ored,"
s
aid Barne
s
. "A nmccrr
at Marist has alwav!> been a
consideration
but· due
1,,
technicalities a concert has vet
10
be approved," said Barnes. ·
Another
program · belll!!
considered for the CSL next vear
is a public opinion organizat.ion.
"I feel it would be a good idea
to
have th
e
CSL print a forum which
would help the administration
and students communicate more
effectively.
The organization
would be permanently set up to
handle questionnaires and ideas
brought about by student
s
."
Barnes said.
The remaining
.
three elected
positions to C.U.B. have not been
determined at this point. Ber-
nadette Cosner,
the current
C.U.8. president, said that these
positions would be internally
filled by herself, Barnes and Betty
Yeaglin, coordinator of college
activities. "The C.U.B
.
is
i
n the
process of requmng future
ca1'didates of elected positions to
have at least one year of ex-
perience in the C.U.B. This i
s
because of the enormous amount
of work to do, you need some
kind of experience," said Cosner.
·
Act
.
student
:
;
-~iris
.
awar(t
,
i ,
;:l•;:c1JJ!
;if~
Marist student Joan "Schat-
zie" Gasparovic is
·
one of 30
- college seniors from
·
New York,
New Jersey, Connecticut and
Pennsylvania to be
.
awarded a full
scholarship to attend an ad-
vertising seminar in New York
.
City this week;
.
.
.
. ;
The scholarship is sponsored by
The Direct Mail/Marketing
Educational Foundatjon a
.
nd
Direct Marketing Day in New
York Selection Committee. It is
taking place at The Summit Hotel
and consists of a seminar focusing
.
.
on different aspects of direct mail
marketing. Thes
·
e aspects include
creativity in direct mail and
response advertising, testing and
measuring results and space and
broadcast advertising.
A · faculty
of about
12
marketing experts will conduct
the seminars in their specialty
fields.
.
.
Gasparovic said _she was asked
by her advertising teacher, Gene
Rebcook,
·.
to apply
for
the
scholarship.
Her advertising
background, which
includes
classes
in
advertising and
marketing, and school activities
such as holding the office of
studenc body president helped her
to win the scholarship, she said.
·
Ready
to cruise
Campus skaters get ready for fun in the sun on Friday, but
rain put
a
damper on the event,
which
.
was sponsored by
the
CUB
.
·
·
(photo
by Gina Franciscovich)
PrQject 2nd
.·
Chance does just that
by
Kris
Lawas
·
•·
.
.
ih;;t{}~
~:J
ear;old
·
Sheena
Hawkins is
·
a
divorced
homemaker with four children
and wants to
.
be more self-
supportive.
.
.
Forty
·
seven-year-old Mary
Healy wants to make a complete
career changeover
.
Dorothy Bellochio is 35 years
old and wants to do something
for herself.
What these women all have in
common is that they are
.
college
students enrolled al Marist in a
course entitled Project Second
Chance.
Julianne
·
Maher, dean of adult
education, said, "Project Second
Chance is a course designed for
women entering the 'job market
for the first time, planning to
enter college, undecided about
careers, or unsure of how to
combine a family, school and a
career."
Project Second Chance was
first introduced to Marist in 1981
~nd achieved acceptanci
a
s1
wei
L
·
as approval from both the new
students and the
;
administration.
According
to
Maher, a program
like this was needed at the college.
"Many
women
are
·
ap-
prehensive and are unsure of
themselves when faced with the
task of going to college for the
first time or returning
10
school,"
said Maher.
"It's a big step for a
woman to take. After being in a
kitchen rather than a classroom
for a number of years, they don't
know what to expect."
"What this course does is help
prepare these older women for
college
,
" said Cathleen Alban,
adult
·
education
academic
counselor and instructor of the
course. "The program teaches
these women how
10
write a
resume, how to go about looking
for a job and what
10
expect in the
career world," she said.
"This course has helped me
tremendously,'' said Bellochio.
"I'm a cashier in a Grand Union
and I wanted to do more with my
lid
}
i
.
ha\;; one son and I don't
want
to be the type
·
or woman
who
,
doesn't know what to do
with her
'
life once her children are
on their own
.
"
The women said that they had
noticed many changes in college
since they first started.
"When I was in college
,
it was
extremely strict," said Barbara
Ambrose, a 46-year-old school
teacher. "Socially, we had a lot of
limitations. We had curfew
s
that
would be laughed at today
.
I
think that the way Marist and
colleges like this school are run
give students more freedom to
grow
.
as individuals," she said.
"I never went
to college
before," said Bellochio
.
"1 had
always anticipated it as being
snobbish kids studying 24 hours a
day
.
Now, I get an entirely dif-
ferent picture
.
It's more relaxed
and easy-going
.
"
Although Marist will not help
place these women in jobs, the
course has helped prepare them
10
be able to go out into the job
market with more confidence and
skills.
"These women have a great
chance of succeeding in the career
world
,
" according
·
to Marge
Palmer, coordinator of job
location
and
development.
"Although some people tend to
think that their ages will cause a
disadvantage, it is actually an
asset. Employers will look at
these women as having more
·
experience with life and will in
many instances hire them over
much younger people. Age really
isn't a deciding factor," she said.
Although the course ha
s
already concluded for this year,
Adult Education will be spon-
soring Project Second Chance
again ne
x
t year.
"This course has reall
y
given
me more confidence. Even my
husband notices me as being more
out-going," said Bellochio. "So
.
what if they have to eat hot dogs
when I
'
m at school. I'm doing
this [or me."
I
~
l
I
I~
I
l
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
r
--•Page
B• THE CIRCLE-April
14,
1983 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
Around, the world in a single semester
by Laura Reichert
The institute is a national
Most of the 60 courses offered
Kissel, who spent some of his
"Sometimes pictures would fall
off the walls."
The campus travels from
country to country, giving its
students the chance to take what
they learn out of the classroom
and experience it in Japan, India,
Egypt, and. eight other countries
visited during the semester.
nonprofit
organization
which
are similar to those offered during
trips exploring Mount Everest in
makes the program available to
an average semester · at
the
Nepal and touring the pyramid~
colleges
and
universities
University of ·Pittsburgh and
in Egypt said that he felt he
throughout the United States,
many, such as International
learned much more about the
said Judy Dennehy; associate
Economics, Cultural Geography,
different countries by actually
director of admissions for the
and Elementary Chinese relate to
being there.
program.
the ports at which the ships dock.
Some of the broad field ac- ·
The ship includes classrooms,
laboratories, lounges, a library,
book store, cafeteria, swimming
pool, basketball and volleyball
courts, hospital, and hair salon.
The student cabins are available
as singles, doubles, triples and
·quadruples with or without
portholes. The ship can hold up to
500 students · and classes usually
range from
five
to twenty
students each.
For the fall semester the ship
The field programs, which are
tivities include a three .day bus
leaves the U.S. from Seattle,
conducted on land are classified
tour or-Seoul in South Korea, a
Wash., on Sept. 14 and returns at
into three groups:
Standard
visit to the Taj Mahal in India, a
Port Everglades, Fla., on Dec. 23.
Practica,
Course-Related
tour of Istanbul in Turkey, a.trip
During the voyage the ship will
Practica, and Optional Pay Trips.
to Corinth in Greece and an
stop at the cities of Kobe, Japan;
Standard Practica are events that
orientation · of Casablanca in
Pusan, Korea; Keelung, Taiwan;
relate broadly to the "nature of . Morocco.
The campus is aboard the
cruise ship, S.S. Universe and the
program is Semester at Sea, an
academic program sponsored by
the University of Pittsburgh in
. cooperation with the Institute for
Shipboard
Education.
This
program
is
now
taking
registration for the fall of 1983
semester.
Hong Kong; Jakarta, Indonesia;
the voyage." These include state
The ship spends from three to
Bombay, India; Colombo, Sri
department briefings by U.S. ·• eight days in each port and three
Lanka;
Alexandria,
Egypt;
Ambassadors,
programs. in-
in-port experiences are required
Haifa, Israel; Piraeus, Greece and
volving local universities, · and
for each student per semester.
-
Cadiz, Spain.
folk music and dance programs..
.Students -must carry_ at· Jeast
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Course-related' field activities
four courses a semester and, said
The professors are selected
from colleges and universities
around the U.S. and from some
foreign countries said Dennehy.
For every 30 professors that
apply, only one is chosen.
More letters
are those most closely rela~ed
19 ..
Kissel, the. studying is "con-
each student's academic•p~9gram ; 'derised." •Most. of the work is
and optional pay-trips are those · done between ports so that ·the
Student organizations on board
-include drama club, student
newspaper, student council and
choir. There are also activities
such as dances and talent shows.
continued from page 4
approach to collegiate studies), I
am convinced that interning is a
refreshing, workable alternative
to a strictly book-and-lecture
education. Because it introduces
students to possible career choices
and places them in a professional
ambiance, the internship program
at Marist enriches and underpins
the college's liberal arts tradition.
Brian Hanley
Ignorance
To the Editor:
after my enlistment expired, the
I received a letter in the mail -
chance to pursue a college
not two weeks ago as
did
all education at no cost to me· or my
freshmen listed on· the "dean's family, thanks to the G.I. Bill .
. list" -
eight years ago from the
Now, of course, the Bill is no
U.S. Marine Corps informing me longer in available for those
of the opportunity to experience wishing to enlist in the armed
what very few other "future high forces, but if. that "dean's list"
school graduates" might never freshman who wrote in two weeks
have the chance to do. That was ago would do some investigating
regarding the chance to enhance he would have found that since
my physical ability as well as my the mid-70's the military's
furture educational advancement enlisted personnel is composed of
by joining this elite group of over 90 percent of men and
young men who are respected not .women who have high school
only in this country but by other educations.
fighting forces around the world.
And if this smart student is too
With no set plans to . attend smart to be caught in the military
college following my graduation, then he isn't bright. enough to
and the reasoning of why blow knowthat a college graduate can
thousand_s
I
of · dollars of my attain-a commission·',fo'be,come··:·
parents money for an education an officer. And if he might look a :
that I wasn't ready to begin, I little harder he would see that an
eagerly enlisted in the Corps. officer in the military just might
After spending three summer make more money in the service
months at Parris Island, South than a college graduate who takes
Carolina, watching 98 young men -a job on the "outside." Also,
start and having only 68 com-
becoming an officer allows you
plete, I was proud of myself for the chance to do work in your
not only surviving but for being field of study rather than ac-
one of seven people chosen by the cepting a job that may only give
drill instructors to be promoted you the chance to use.little of your
meritoriously for my
per-
studied
skills.
·formance.
Just one more point .for this
I did not torture myself nor was "dean's list" whiz kid. He wishes
I tortured by my superiors during the college would .• screen . the .
. my stay at this "summer resort." people that they giye his grades
I learned a lot about myself and out to. A college is not a person
more about others in respect of and therefore can not be classified
who· I could trust and those who I as a they· but rather as an
ii
should not.
. because.it •is an object. Not bad
But the biggest reward was for a former ignorent g·rum, huh!
what I had to look forward to
Matthew P. Mclnerny
Rabid newshounds
_ Dear Editor,
theory I advanced in my last
Well, we tried .to keep it a correspondence with you was
· secret,
but . your_:- crack in-· another smoke screen· to throw.
vestigative ·reporters finally Walter off the scent. I realize it
penetrated our cover story. I am, was only a matter of time before
· of course, referring to the daring he, or someone
·
with an,·equally
expose, "The Bowman-Douherty ridicul~us
·
pseudonym, blows that
Connection," which appeared in one equally sky high. So here it is,
your April l issue. I guess we the awful, unvarnished truth.
should have known better than to And it ain't pretty ...
think we could conceal anything
Richie is the victim of a deep-
from - the likes -0f "Walter seated inferiority complex. You
Mapey" and his pack of rabid see, during the operation to
newshounds.
separate us soon after birth
But ·. there is more to the · (readers will recall we were joined
Bowman-Douherty c.onnection (I at the groin) the Chief of Surgery
mean beyond the misspelling of made the incision a lot closer to
Richie's last name): the shocking Richie than to me:
answer to the question, "Why is
Rich obsessed with replying to my
· letters?" The simple cage-rattling
Sincerely
Michael Bowman
Residence Director
Women
To the Editor:
I am in full agreement with the
writers of the Circle column 'It
ain't necessarily so' and their
expression of disappointment in
the March 3rd issue.
It is a shame
that Marist has not merited
recognition as an institution
which places women in leadership
positions.
It also seems that tactics is a
point of discord between myself
and the columnists. Instead of
naming names as they have so.
adroitly done, we ought to be
exploring areas in the Marist
community where women can be
introduced in primary roles. If
not, we are going to be pushed
aside, unnoticed, with no one to
blame but ourselves.
Diane Loiacono
activities which aren't required in
students can spend more time
~he academic_ program. These
sight-seeing. Classes meet every
include educauonal tours through
day but Sunday while at sea.
places that are normally difficult
The voyage lasts 100 9ays, half
to . tra;el throu~h such_ as t~e
of w.hich are spent travelling.-·
People s Repubhc of Chma, said
Kissel recalled a few times when
Dennehy.
. .
. .
the trip got a little rough. "I'd be
Students must send their
transcripts to be evaluated by the
Uni\l_ersity of Pittsburgh in order
to apply for admission and have
to have finished at feast one
semester of college.
Studen~s are · also ~ree to
sitting in th~ classroom and
arra~ge mdepend:nt tnps, ~c-
looking out the porthole. One
cording to Ted Kissel, a Manst
minute I'd see the sky and the
student who was involved in the next minute I'd see a wall of water
program and is promoting it here.
from
a
wave,"
he
said.
The cost for the semester is
$8,280 said Dennehy and the
program selects students fr.om 35
schools per semester.
THE VPI
RESUME-WRITING
AND-
<> . .
\£.OVER LETTER
,
, "·': c·:C
'?i?,;'tf\Vo
RKSH OP
At the VPI Resume-Writing and Cover-Letter Workshop
each student receives the following:
·
1 -
½
Hour
Lttctura
on Resume-Writing,
Covar Letters, and
Job-Interviewing
Techniques, etc.
10-Min.
Break.
20-Minute Question
&
Answer'
Period/' ··
'•
:
- • .
30-Mlnute Works.hop
on Job-Description
Writing.
1. A Blue Folder
containing
. 2-.
A 52-Page Resume-Analysis and
Cover~Letter Book. :
3.- ~ix Skill Analysis· Sheets.
1
· 4. A CHECS LIST Employment
Chronology Analysis Form.
2
5. Eight Resume-Format Blanks -
4 each- of 2.
3
6. An ~mployer-lnterview_ Report
Form.•
·
7. 18 inches.of Correction Tape.
8. Note Paper, pencil.
9. Workshop Review Sheet.
5
·10. Press-On Type Bonus.
8
1
To facilitate the prioritization of job function within job descriptions.
2
To help organize employment and other time-periods for resume~job-history
description.
3
To aid the resume-writer in balancing [VISUALLY] his/her resume.
4
An actual Employer-Interview Form with a check list of attributes to analyse
in an employment interview.
5
A Workshop Overview of its most important points, for quick review.
11
Referral-Related Bonus (Everyone gets one, regardless) of Press-On Type for head-
lining the student's resume job titles, companies, objectives, etc.
-
-·
--
-
------------------------------------------April 14, 1983 · THE CIRCLE -Page 9
.Area /;Jar owners are getting the big picture
by Luane Remsburger
nightly fee charged by bands.
screen is connected to a bottom clubs, such as the Briarpatch,
.
.
·
-.
-
·''.A
·
club can get a video system
console. Inside the console are have the added expense of a
On this particular Saturday
for as low
·
as $2,500," he said.
three
picture
tubes
.
with "V .J" _ a video jockey who,
night, the seats are all
.
taken at the
"Most bands charge from $300 to
projection lenses. These lenses according to· Ballantine, charges
:
Briarpatch Lounge in Carmel,
$400 per night. That means an
send
out three different images on
from $50 to $100 per night. The
·N.Y . .
,
Guys wearing leather owner pays the same for
~
an
the screen. The images, which are real test, therefore, is whether the
.
jackets and
-
Levis and
-
girls in
unlim
.
ited number
·
of video
red, green, and blue, then overlap video system
pays
off J'or the
anything from skins to mini-skirts presentations
·
as he would for
to form the picture.
club.
According
to
Rosalie
turn toward
.
the front of the room only about eight appearan~es by a
What actually ends up on the Weeden
·
,· publicity director for
as Chrissie Hynde and the barid."
Besides the initial cost, some The Chance,
in
Poughkeepsie,
·
Pretenders perform their latest - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - bar-video has passed this im-
_
hit. Before long, Fleetwood Mac
'People come into. bars and
portant test with flyin~colors.
appears, followed by Tom Petty,
Toto and Diana Ross.
·
t
·
th•
th t
"It's going over very well," she
With this lineup,
there's
Wan
·
SOme Ing
a
goes
said; refering to The Chance's
something to please almost
beyond' the1·r own
.
T.V.
·
These
elaborate video set-up, "and it's
everyone, especially the club's
continuing to build up."
owner, Joe Cmar. Why is he so
sy
·
stems let them sit and drink
Just one
.
example of this,
happy?
Weeden said, was the recent
He didn't have to pay these
,
groups a cent to appear.
with their friends while wat-
~h~st~o~~~-o:~\~~t~c;r
~f~!i
No, he's not a magician. Cmar
ching
a
game_
.
or
.
fig.ht/
episode drew about 300 viewers to
the home of the largest video
is just one of many b a r - o w n e r s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
turning to an alternate form of
Cmar, who used to hire live
,
s
'
creen depends on the video tape
entertainment: video.
bands
,
on several nights, agreed.
being used. Whether a rock video
"We've
·had
our video system for or a regular movie, the cassettes
According to Chuck Ballantine,
about two months and it has gone are run in a video recorder similar
of Ballantine Communications
·
over very good
,
We're
using
it to home models. Ballantine said.
and Staging, video systems are seven nights a week now," he
"This type of system ranges
being used by more and more said. "The initial cost is a lot, but from $2,000 to $4,000 and can be
nightclubs
in
replacement of and you're paying far Jess in the long
,
installed
in
about an hour," he
alongside live entertainment.
run."
said. He added that this week he
Ballantine; who owns a video
The initial cost Cmar refered to had talked with two clubowners·
production studio and sells .and
depends on the type of system the who are interested in installing
installs
professional
_
video club decides to install. The most such systems.
equipment, said these systems are
popular system,
·
according
,to
The
more
conser·vative
appealing because they involve an
Ballantine, is called a
·
self-
clubowner might still wonder if
initial cost only, compared to the
contained system in which a large the cost of video is worthwhile.
Marist
·
to request
_
ri-ver lab funding
by
Cindy Bennedum
...
_
money may help fund an in depth
,
study of PCBs in the river .
The Hudson River will
_become
a classroom ifMa:rist
-
receives
a
$1
·
'
A
.
riverfront lab, which is
·
.
million research grant
.
this year.
-
located
'
in Marisf's' co
·
rnell
The grant, available for the
_
boath6use,
Will
be the base for the
first
_
time this year, is
sponsored
river
·
research. Samples
·
taken
by the Hudson River Foundation.
,
from the river
.
will be brought
Funds for the grant were collected
back to the lab arid arialyzed.
two years ago from
-
power
co111panies along the river. Twelve
companies contributed $1 million
each. The interest on this money
·
is
now available for river
research.
·
The request for the grant will
be written by Dr. Wang Hwa Wti,
director of environmental science,
and Dr. William Perrotte Jr.,
assistant professor of biology.
According to Dr. Wu, the
.
Dr. Perrotte said,
"Because
this lab is on the water front,
it
puts us in an excellent position to
·
get some of this money.''
screen in the country, she said.
"The video-bash went over
better than we could have ever
expected," she said. "
·
We just
threw it on the calendar at the last
minute and
it
ended up we
couldn't seat everybody."
As the
MASH
bash
_.,,
example
illustrates, rock video is only one
use for big screen video systems in
nightclubs.
According
to
Ballantine, their versatility is
another reason for their bar
-
room
popularity.·
"One of the biggest for the
systems
is
sporting events."
Ballantine said.
"People
come
into bars and want
something
that
goes beyond their own T. V. These
systems let them
sit
and drink ·
with their friends while watching
a game or fight on a life-size
screen.
This is real popular.··
Video and live entertainment.
however, are not usually ex-
clusive, he said. Larger clubs find
video
systems
useful in com-
bination with live acts.
"Sometimes a large club with
one or more rooms will focus
video cameras on the band." he
said. "They then run the video of
.
the band on a
screen
in another
part of the club. That way.
everyone gets to sec the band
without having a mob around the
stage."
"Discos use video in a similar
way," he said. "Often, they will
point the
cameras
on the dancers
so they can watch themselves in
action on the screen."
Such "action" is characteristic
of video entertainment
in
whatever form. Whether a prize
fight or a rock video, Ballantine
said the
systems
provide a new
dimension in viewing and will
continue to play a growingly
important role in nightclub en-
tertainment.
Regtsir~tion
·
moved
up
River research can also be done
directly from the lab; it contains a
·
pump which draws river water
directly into the river through the
use of
·
the pump. A fishtank
which can be divided into three
separate tanks, can be
·
used for
river
·
water
.
experimentation.
There is also a lecture area
·
within
the laboratory.
·
·
Alcohol
awareness
-
Margaret Freund tests her coordination in the pub during
Alcohol Awareness Week.
'
Registration/ orientation week for
this fall's freshman class will be
held three weeks earlier than
previously scheduled,
.
according
to Richard.
-
LaMorte,
·
assistant
dean of student affairs.
·
The
week's activities will be held May
31
throughJtine4.
LaMorte said that the change in
.
dates makes the registration
_
process . more meaningful · for
_ freshman and t_heir parents. "The
faculty are more accessible," said
LaMorte.
-
He added
·
that the
.
presence of mentors on campus
during registration will enable
more planning for next year's
freshman class to take place,
One disadvantage of the earlier
registration,
according
to
LaMorte, is the fact that it would
come on top of the work for
graduation in
the
·
registrar's
office. "It's the week after
commencement," said Registrar
Elizabeth Ross. "The week before
we're here during the wee hours
of the morning."
·
-
Of the estimated 625 freshmen
in the class of 1987, 400 are ex-
pected to register during the first
week of June, according to James
Daly, dea!l of admissions.
The lab, built with Title
III
funds, was'. designed
.
by Dr
.
Lawrence Menapace, in
·
con-
junction with other faculty
members.
,-
.
-
Dr. Perroue said that because
Marist has already done research
along the waterfront, there is a
good chance of receiving the
.
grant;
·
. ~--
, ,
·
·
;,_
, ;
.":'.
The lab has been used to
analyze samples taken from a
river embayment behind
·
the
Franklin D. Roosevelt estate.
·
In
addition, Matist has previously
received two National Science
Foundation
grants,
worth·
$18,000
each, allowing the college
to teach river ecology to fifty
local high school teachers.
·
To aid in limnology, the study
of fresh water, Marist owns an
I
8~foot, 85-horsepower-motorb-
oat, capable of carrying eight
researchers at a time. This allows
for greater mobility and speed in
the research.
The Jab
h,
being used this
semester by only one clc1ss, Dr.
Wu's environmental chemistry
lab, which meets in the boathouse
laboratory each week. However,
.
Dr. Perrone says, "The potential
of the lab is incredible.
It
leaves
us open for wide dimensions· of
research."
I
(photo by Jeff Kiely)
College cautious about River Day
by Jane
M~
~~!lr~hilli
Despite rumors that the ad-
ministration
_
at Marist will try to
prevent River Day, Gerard A.
Cox, dean of student affairs, says
the administration does not have
the power to prohibit' the event,
"Marist does not own the land
at
toe
particular spot where River
Day is held," Cox said. "We are
in an agreement with the city to
monitor that property."
The college is not opposed to
the concept, Cox said, as long as
those who organize it accept the
responsibility.
River Day is an annual event
held one to two weeks before
spring semester finals. Members
of the senior class
·secretly
organize a last fling which is held
at the parking lot north of 1he
boathouse. The seniors stand on a
hill adjacent
10
the lot while
underclassmen stand in
the
parking lot. The day Ri\:er Day is
co be held on is known only to the
seniors until v·ery early that
morning.
-
:_
''.There have been River Days
in the
.
past when everyone has had
a good time," Cox said. "But,
last year's River Day was a
nightmare."
Injuries and sickness plagued
many students last year when the
rain-filled afternoon was over.
Some students were sick from too
much alcohol, and a few were
abusive co the staff at St. Francis
Hospital, Cox said.
A concern of Cox's is the
consumption of alcohol by those
freshman who are still under the
· 1egal drinking age of 19. The
organizers could be held liable if
an under age student was caught
drinking, Cox said.
Cox sees River Day as being a
test of how much the students
care for one another. He said: "l f
students decide to take part in the
River Day tradition, they should
keep in mind the tradition of the
institution. Caring about the
welfare of their fellow
.
students is
a
concern
of the
Marist
brothers."
Cox said that River Day can go
either way. "The students can be
responsible and have spiri1, or it
can be a disaster," he said.
"Some students that were in-
volved last year urged future
students to never run another
River Day."
A
gate has been put up at the
entrance of the tunnel down to the
river with the city's approval, Cox
said. "The gate was needed to
.
reduce cars coming into that area
because of the work being done
by the McCann Foundation,"
Cox said. The McCann Foun-
dation is currrently working on
Marist's landscape for the entire
waterfront area.
Another concern of the ad-
ministration is the location of
River Day. The closeness of the
tracks and the river worries the
administration, Cox said.
.
The administration tries to
guess when River Day will be, but
administrators are never really
sure, Cox said. "We try to
narrow it down, but tradition has
1he decision being made at
midnight the day before."
....
◄
,..------
I
I
(
f:
_r.,'
--•Page 10 • THE
CIRCLE•
April 14, 1983
Happening. this week
. WMC,R to raise funds for Heart Association
by
Mark Stuart
For the third consecutive year
WMCR will take heart for 91.9
· houn.
_
In
its
efforts to raise a targeted
$1,500 for the Heart Association,
WMCR will take four of its disc
jockeys_and lock them into the
station for 91.9 hours, according
to chairmen Bob Davies and Dan
Hartman.
The marathon -will run today
through Sunday.
The four dj's will be Paul
Palmer,
Lew Goidel,
Paul
Beckerle and Jay Stone.
This year's goal is
$500
more
than· last year's collections of
$1,000.
Hartman said that a higher
number of students this year
should yield a higher number of Marathon.
donations. "It's good to be
Co-chairman Hartman, a
optimistic. This year we have · sophomore,
said
there were
more students and expect more personal reasons for being in-
donations," Hartman said.
volved in the marathon. "My
Donations can be made at father died_ of a heart attack and
it
cannisters at the Marist College· - (heart disease) was something I
Book Store, the coffee shop in never really thought-about.until it-
Donnelly, the Palace Diner and happened," he said.
Caputo's Pizzeria.
•
Hartman said
·
he would be
satisfied if he could let other
students be aware of heart
disease.
"Most people don't
realize until its too late," he said.
Programming, for the marathon
will
feature "heart facts," which
are a series of facts about care for
cardiac health, according to
Davies. The marathon will be
highlighted by- a telephone in- :
terview with New York State
Health Commissioner - David
Axelrod.
Pledges can be made by con~
tacting WMCR volunteers, Bob
Davies at ext. 117 or Dan Hart-
man at ext. 116.
"You have to set a higher goal
every year," said Davies, "and
this year we have a lot of help
from volunteers."
"The reason for ihe success last
year was that so many people
helped," said Jack Grafing,
chairman for the 1982 Heart
Golf tourney will aid Cystic Fibrosis group
by
Lori Dyer
The Cystic Fibrosis. Foun-
dation, (CFF) has been searching
since 1955 to find a cure for cystic
fibrosis.
It
relies on the generosity
and ingenuity of individuals to
continue this search: individuals
like Leslie Heinrich.
Heinrich; a junior from Dover
Plains, has organized a golf
tournament to
benefit CFF.
Heinrich said:
"I
decided to
donate the money to CFF because
of the article I read in the Circle
about Dick Quinn's daughter.
I
saw that and I wanted to help."
The tournament will be held
Friday
at
College
Hill,
Poughkeepsie, but Heinrich said
that
they were
less
than
cooperative. She said they were
willing to give_ her a date but
wouldn't give her any discount.
golf. $1.50 of that will go to CFF. ·
"I
can't understand why they
wouldn't give me a cut-rate,"
Heinrich said, then added sar:-
castically, "Unless they think I'm
doing it for my own profit."-
"Seriously though,
I
don't
Heinrich originally planned the . think they believed me when
I
event
to comply with an said that I was doing it for cystic
assignment given by Professor fibrosis. The city runs the golf
Augustine Nolan in her Public course and obviously the city has
Relations class.
Each class no compassion," Heinrich said. ·
member is required to plan and
Heinrich said she feels this
execute an . event on or off assignment has helped her.to see
campus. Within . that - broad what a non-profit organization
category, Heinrich decided to ·deals -with. "If everyone-.would
dedicate her time to helping CFF.
just give a little bit ofmortey or a
The price to play in the tour-
little bit of time, they could'get so
nament is $4.50 for nine holes of _
much more done,,,- she said.
Manhatiaf!,-professor to lectureonpeace, .. ,·
SENIOR'S
ON-CAM-PUS INTERVIEWS
Friday~
-
April 29th
1) United States Air Force.
2)
Profesco Corporation,
· subsidary of John Hancock.
Marketing financial planning ser-
vice to _
physicians and other pro-
fessional practices.
,
,
Further Information and sign-ups In CC180,
_
· Office
of Career. Qevelopment. -
by Donna Fidaleo
and a Ph.D: in Religion_ and
sor1ium . on· Peace Research,
-
:::::::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!
Social Ethics from New York
Education and Development and
A lecture entitled· "Creating
Alternatives to the Arms Race"
and the film "The Perspective of
Peace Studies," will be given by
Dr. Joseph Fahey, director of the
Peace Studies
Institute at
Manhattan College, on Thursday
April 21 at 11 :30 a.m . .in Donnelly
Hall 243.
Fahey, who received a B.A. and
M.A. from Maryknoll Seminary
Robin,
Congratulations on your dazzling
debut at West Point! You really
fell (literaity) for those Cadets.
Love, Mishkuba
Perry-Good-Night,
I
missed you very much. Hope
you had a good time in the
Bahamas. Come back and- show
me that tan!
Love, B.B.
Pat and
Mike,
- Mike, 3 for 3 next weekend. Pat,
read your feet. ·
User,
University, is the · author of the
American . Arbitration
"Reinhold Niebuhr on Human Association.
He.·· is·· associate
Nature and World Peaces" and
professor of Religious Stuclies at
"Peace, War and the Christian Manhattan College and adjunct
Conscience." - He has also · associate professor of Religion
published over. 40
magazine and Social· Ethics at Fordham
articles:
·
University.
The ·- lecuire,
·- Fahey is a member of the sponsored by the Faculty Lecture -
Catholic Theological Sqciety of Series, is the last of a three-part·
America, The American Society series. It will be given in mom
of_ Christian Ethics, _ the Con-
D243.
IFIED6
Thanks Jodie, Rose, Laurie, Sue
and Tree,
We'll do it again.some night.
Love Ya, John
Hey Joyce,
Here's another classified for you!
Happy,E_aster!
Love,Meg_
Senior F.D.,
_ - • 'I-li Bob,
Blue feathers in the bed? .It's What's your bag?
getting light out again!!
Us
·
Burnt Steak
NEEDED:
For Junior Ring
Ceremony; Pictures of Juniors·
for a video tape. Please drop off
pictures and/or negatives to Tom
Fisher, Gregory 106, Jane in TH-
B7, Eileen in TH-C7 or Don
Eustace in C::-922. Ask Junior
Class for 50Q: if you want it.
K.S.
Leo 2 River Partiers,
Let's try Father Abraham again.
And this time let's finish it.
·
Love y'all lots,
Gail&Sue
Joyce,
I owed. you one -
now we're
even. Keep smiling to make others
do the same.
Happy Birthday and please let me
go out without you once in a
while.
To the whole flock,
· J.v:· I Love You!
S.L.,
Love,
the C.S. in I 08
- - - - - - - - - -
K.L. the honorary member
c.s.
Florida WAS great. Too bad
nobody can tell that we were
there. Thanks for everything -
your parents too.
The kid from C.S.
Loretta Jean,
"I Love You." Thanks for the
best of times.
Love, John Vincent
Dear Ferrari,
How's life in the fast lane? Maybe
I can help you with your
homework sometime. Seriously,
thanks for everything.
Love, Slinky
Hi Joyce!
Someone finally sent you a·
classified! Happy now?
Love, Steve
Thanks for coming up early! I
love you!!
K.A.
Skoog,
Mr. Koh wants his mailbox back!
Donna
Did T.O.C. find out what makes
you tick? Here's to early morning
nights!
Luv, Kelly
TWO GOOD DEALS -THAT
CAN'T BE BEAT!,
~
at
-
- McDonalds of Hyde Park
SUNDAYS SPECIALS! ---
ggc
All the Hotcakes You can Eat!
_-PLUS .
r--~~---~-----~------~
I
Mat1Sf
BUY ONE BIG
MAC® -
. - ,-
I
I·
.
GET ONE FREE!
:
:
. · OFFER GOOD ONLY AT:
_
I
1
-
·
McDonald's Restaurant
_
_
-
-
·
-
I
I
PA·
-
RTE. 9,HYDE PARK, N.Y;
-
~ -
I
I
MC
ld'S
.
•
·
Mc
natters
I
I
couroN •
~
-
April 14 - April -20
co~roN
■
'®_
I
---------------------~
_
. An excellent haircuttery.
Now featuring CELLOPHANES, the new- non-
peroxide haircolor/conditioning system with
unlimited color choices and excellent sheen.
$2.00 Off
With Marist I.D.
Tli~ CUTT~l?-,,
Serving
Marist College
Since 1975
3 Liberty St., Main Mall, Poughkeepsie
454-9239
By Appointme-nt Only
,I
. ij
. I
-------------------------------------April 14,
1983
·THE.CIRCLE· Page
1 1 - - •
Ruililers- firiish
-
2nd at· mee
by Tim Dearie
The Marist College outdoor
track team placed second out of
five teams in a meet held at Kings
College Saturd~y. ,
Although the team was only
entered in six events on the
program, it managed to place at
least one ·runner in the· top three
. finishers in each.
·
"I was pleased with the way the
races went," · said coach Jim
Klein. "The , way we've been
training is starting to pay off."
Captain Ken Bohan, a.junior,
took third in the 1,500 meter run
with a time of
4:
13, just a second
behind the winner from Hunter
College.
Bohan also
placed
second in the 800 mders close
behind the same runner. from
Hunter. Marist freshman Chris
Morrison finished right behind
Bohan to take third.
Other Marist runners to finish
in the top three were: freshman
Pete· Pazik in the 5,000 meters,
taking second with a time of
16: 11;
senior Ron
Dimmie,
running 23.2 in the
200
meters,
good for second place; and
freshman Don Godwin, finishing
first in the quarter with a time of
55.4. The team's mile relay of
Bohan, Morrison and freshmen
Mike McClintock and Pete Riley
gave
Marist's
lone
relay
representatives a third place finish
with a time of3:47.3. ·
Rob Shanahan receiving puck.
(photo by Jeanne
LeGloahec)
Circle banquet May· 8
Details next w~ek
The team is hungry for more
races.
"l
should have won both
races but ran tactically stupid,.~
said Bohan
"I
should have gone
· out harder.".
Hockey· happenings
THE.HAIR ·SHACK
(Super New York Cuts)
located at
Another runner not . satisfied
with his performance is Pazik.
"I
felt really stiff from the first lap
on and I lost contact," he said.
"I'm disappointed because I ran
15 seconds faster a· week ago
under lousy conditions."
Klein said"that on the whole the
team is showing improvement and
that he looks forward
to
the next
meet, which will be April 23 at
Hartwick College.
by Jeanne LeGloahec
Hockey Coach Jim Peelor is
optimistic about next year.
Peelor said "There are three of
four real good
freshmen
coming up next year. The team
will
have better personnel."
Peelor isn't worried about the
departing seniors. "All the
freshmen lines ·will move up,"
he said. "Every year the
competition gets tougher but
the team gets better also. This
year the team played alot of
teams in Division
II
while we
are in Division
II I."
All in all the coach was
impressed with
the teams
season.
"I
can't compliment
the guys enough, they played
better than last year," he said.
49 ACADEMY STREET
(Next to Brandy's Two)
Ample Customer Parking
Maris! crew finishes
2nd- on
Merrimac
His and Her
BODY PERM
. Reg. $35.00 .
Special
$18.50
Shampoo, Cut
and Blow
Dry
From
$5.00
by Terry Abad
team despite a shortage of team
members participating in races.
The team lost five seniors last
year to grad_uation. "We're short
on numbers this season," said
Davis. "People who could be
rowing aren't rowing."
Open Daily 10-6 ......, No Appt. Necessary
FOR APPOINTMENT, CALL
The Marist College crew team
finished second to the University
of Rhode Island in a meet hosted
by
Lowell College on the
Merrimack River Saturday. The
team travels to Ithaca College on
Saturday.
Second year coach Larry Davis
anticipates a good season
for
the
Davis is looking forward to the
President's Cup Regatta, to be
held April 23 at Marist. It is the
team's only home meet of the
486-9883
-'-/ VIDEO
DAv'll>
BOWi£
..
~~
TUt....lOAY
5
COMED.V
N·ITE.
fU1'!la1-.I&:
9"Ll. 1Y"A~"f'fA;'!t
1
ft/4M.._ {Ok'w
Ll=>A.1.-t·
-"H'\oi:to>
.-io
MA-.1ST
p: ..
~-:..t..~C:;.C.
•~le
MA~IS1'
(OLLEbt
A•P.
BAND
rtNALS
!
'A.Nl'
Mv<:,_t'\
,.,.,,,u•t-
f.
!')
1
f-
P'
1·A,,..11At'.
» \
I
Coming ...
(,us
~ E ·~
Sol"lie("("O
(Mf
~
~ -
~
(tLl)fMfffl>IA~~M"IUI
~
Don't Miss the Fabulous
May 6 The David Bromberg Reunion
(original band members)
May I 3 Spyro Gyra
-
.
May
14
Wayland Flowers
&
Madame
Pat Metheny Group
Kris Kristofferson
Comedy Nite -
April 26
featuring Richard Jeny
Rob Bartlett
Ron Darren
(as seen on Johnny Garson
&
David Lettermen)
Don't Miss the Chance
for Lunch
Continential Buffet Lunch
Wed.
&
Fri. 11 :30 - 2:30
All you care to eat $3.95
season, and is one of the larger
races held on the east coast during
the collegiate season. "There is a
good field of teams competing
this year," said Davis of the
twelve teams rowing at the
regatta.
Dayis pointed out the men's
race with the LaSalle team at last
year's President's Cup. LaSalle
defeated Marist by one point,
placing Marist second overall. He
hopes the team does as well at this
year's event.
Because the President's Cup
Regatta is traditionally held on
parents' weekend, Davis expects
a
good spectator turnout pending
nice weather. "It will be a great
event to watch," said Davis.
The regatta will begin at 8 a.m .
and end sometime after noon,
depending on water conditions.
President Murray will be on hand
to present awards to the winning
teams . .
Bikers start ride
for foundation
by
John
Bakke
Last Sunday, in a steady rain,
the eight members of the "USA
Team Tour 1983" began their
I 0,000-mile, round-trip, cross-
country bicycle ride from All-
Sport in Poughkeepsie.
The group is making the trip to
promote fitness and to benefit the
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. The
CF Foundationn raises money for
research into Cystic Fibrosis, a
genetic disease which attacks
children and is usually fatal.
The cyclists began the eight-
month journey after a breakfast
at All-Sport which benefitted the
CF Foundation. Between the
breakfast and pledges · for the
tour, over $10,000 was raised for
the foundation according to Dick
Quinn, local CF spokesman and
assistant
athletic
director
at
Marist.
County Executive Lucille
Pattison read a letter from
Governor Mario Cuomo to the
bikers at the breakfast and a copy
of a proclamation honoring the
cyclists from the State Legislature
was read and presented.
The eight riders are mostly
local and include former Marist
student Tammy Hajjar, 1982
NCAA
women's racquetball
champion.
..
I ;
I:
i
~
''-'
..
________ _
--Page
12 ·
THE CIRCLE •-April 14~
1983-------.------------------------------
~aye,.hof~r.·r~$igns.as
.
X-.
·
coun,try coaC.h··
·
. by Tim
Dearie ,
the .budget has increased. He said, that
-coach for . tiis· won-lost reco~d. ''This
.
20 letters from kids asking me to contact .
Athletic Director- Ron· Petro was very
was a concedement ·on their part that
·them and tell them about- our program
Bob Mayerhofer announced earlier
· this week that. he is resigning as· head
coach of the Marist Colleg cross country
team.-.··
helpful in getting. the team its trip to
_they weren't really supporting us," h~
· ., and. I haven't got anything to tell .
Notre-Dame. The move to Division I
said: "They should want to· hold me·
them," he said. ''I would love for any
brings with it automatic commitments·
responsible for my record. I think thai's
one of them to come and run with these
in order to be successful," Mayerhofer
part of taking the job in the first place.
. guys but is ii fair to the· athlete?"
· Mayerhofer, who has coached for the
last three years, cited· two key reasons
for his resignation. "Without a full-
time coaching -staff," he said, "and
without recruiting on a Division I level,
we're dealing with an impossible
situation," he said.
. said . . "Those commitments include
To think that we're having a program
awarding scholarship support to the
but we're ~ot expected to win is just
Mayerhofer said he has one regret.
According to Mayerhofer, the cross
country program hasn't suffered
financially over the last three years a!}d
students and hiring a full-time staff.
contradictory."
These commitments became more and
-
more evident to me this year, our second
year in Division
L"
. Mayerhofer said. that when he'd voice
these concerns to the athletic ad-.
ministration, he got the feeling that he
wasn't going to be held responsible as a
Petro has suppoited
the track
program in the past and had said he
would work to improve it.
• · After this season was· over and with
all this on his mind, Mayerhofer started
"The only regret I have is that I was led
to believe by the people who make
decisions
about
sports at Marist
College,
that
tlte
program could
maintain its 'high tradition at · the
Division I level and in my opinion, after
three· years of coaching; is that it's
. looking at recruiting again. "I had 15 or
impossible."
·
·
LactcJss.e
team
faces
tou_ghest Week,.:yet~-c
by Jim Leonard
Maritime · squad.
"Marist
definitely. was mentally prepared
_ The ·Marist • College. lacrosse for the game," said RikHn, "but
team, which lost to New York our team was so pumped up we·
Maritime 16-6 last Saturday, took were tripping over _our own feet.
· a 1-2 record into its toughest week Maritime came to play and Marist
of the season as it faced St. didn't," he said.
John's University Monday and
According to Riklin, the team's . ·
will face New Haven College on inconsistent play · can be.. at-
Saturday.
·
·
tributed in part to its friexperience
In addition, the team made up a in college level play. Ten out of
rained out game · against . City the 19 members have never played
· College of New Yo.rk yesterday.
college lacrosse before -this
The lacrosse team is having an season.
·
"The rr·eshmen are not
up~and-down season after losing used to pressure situations yet,
its first game to Kean, looking but they will be getting plenty of
very impressive in
beating experience in the upcoming
Fairleigh Dickenson University games," said Riklin.
last Thursday but appearing tight _ Both coaches said they agreed
and tentative in its loss to that the only bright spot of the
Maritime
on· Saturday. Maritime game was the·excellent
"Sometimes Marist is like two goal tending by freshman Paul
entirely different teams," said Leterra, who had 28 saves. "If it
Assistant Coach Pete Jackson.
wasn't for Paul, Maritime's score
"Against FDU
we
were would
have ·been
doubled,"-
relaxed, played our- gaJlle and Riklin said.
blew them out," said Jackson.
Probably the most interesting
"But against Maritime our. zone incident of. the game involed
defense didn't work, we didn't Leterra. About. halfway through
challenge the loose balls and we
the game the referee~ called . a •
weren't relaxed."
time-out and requested that .the
First-year Head Coach Jeff Marist coaches attach a chin
·Riklin said he admitted. Marist protector to Leterra's helmet.
was simply outplayed by a strong Leterrn was already weai'irig a pad
The lacrosse team goes on the attack against Maritime dur-
in_g Marist's 16-6 loss Saturday. (photo by.Gina Franciscovich )
around his neck to protect his goals and one assist and Larry
throat.:.
McNeill, with one goal and two
"According
to
the · In-
assists.
ternational Lacrosse League,
goalies must wear chin protectors
to protect the throat area starting
next year," said Jackson, "but
some · refs enforce a new rule a
year earlier to make all teams
aware of an upcoming,, rule
change.-''·,·· .. ,,-- , ·,
· ;u:. -
Jackson addeci,
•i1
think the
refs were worried Paul might get
hurt because
he
never backs,away
·
.
from any shot on goal.'! .·.
. -
· : Leading scorers for Marist we.re
juniors Dave_ Naar;, with · three ..
Marist must now face two of its
.toughest opponents of the year,
St. John's and New Haven.
"Considering St. John's and New
Haven are Division I teams that
offer scholarships plus the fact St;
John's· · beat Maritime 20-2
already, I.'d say we certainly have
a ·,tough_ week ahead cif us,» said
Riklin. ''We should be more
relaxed this week, since we have
nothing to lose and everything to
gain."
·
Women's hoop team
.
awaits reci-uitllewS
!>Y
Mike Graney
Basketball is over this year as
far as the court is concerned, but
as far as
·
head coaches are con-
cerned it's the second half with a
couple minutes left.
Tomorrow . is . the. National
Letter of .Intent day for high
school
_
athletes. This is the day
that these athletes inform colleges
whicq school they intend to attend
next year.
.
Women's. Head Coach Sue
Deer has actively recruited two
girls for· next year's team'. This
year's .squad . is losing several
'players to graduation and needs
these two recruits to fill the holes
left· by senior starters Laurie
Hrebenak, Diana Jones, and·
.
Lolita Silva. ·
· Lynne Jackson; a 5'8" guard
from Otego,
N.Y.,
is this year's
top recruit. "Lynne is extremely
quick and is the kind of top.flight
player that will definitely improve .
our ballclub," said Deer.
Fairleigh Dickinson· is the only
.other school thatLynm(is· con-
sidering at this,point. "We have a
good shot at her and besides being
a good player, she's a great kid,"
Deer said: -
· · · ·
.
The importance of height_anhe .
Division I . level · · is. extreme;
Because of the loss of front court
starters. 'Deer is also pursuing
someone to fill those empty spots.
- Donna Tribble, a 5'11" power
forward, is another girl that Deer
·hopes will ·. be wearing red and
white
next
year. ·. · Donna· is
currently in her senior year at
Westchester County Community
College.•·
.·· · · . ·.·
· .
''G'irls like Donna are a
necessity at the Division
·l
level,'.'
'
Deer said. "We're always looking ·
for 5'11 "power forwards." . ·
SojJh · runn_ er
.
.
to leave -team
.
,
<if
ter. season
by Tim Dearie
The Marist College cr~ss
country team suffered another
setback when its top runner,
sophomore John Lovejoy, an-
. nounced that he will not return to
Marist for the '83-'84 school year.
Lovejoy, a 3.3 student from
Wantagh,
N.Y.,
said that his
financial situation was the main
reason for leaving. He also in-
dicated his disappointment with
the future prospects of Marist
cross country as a reason for his
leaving.
Lovejoy's achievements at
Marist include producing the
third fastest time ever by a Marist
harrier on the five-mile course at
Van Cortland Park in New York.
He was also a first-team all-state
selection by virtue of his sixth-
place finish in the state cham-
pionships this year.
·. Before making his decision . to
· leave Marist, Lovejoy went to
Financial Aid to inquire about a
possible increase in his aid. "l
went to them twice and explained
my situation," said Lovejoy.
· /'Their response was to take out
another loan, which I definitely
· do not want
to
do."
According to Lovejoy, the
recent news of Bob Mayerhofer's
· resignation as head cross country
coach was a major reason for his
decision. "Now, even if they did
offer me money it's doubtful I'd
come.
·
back," said Lovejoy,
"because the cross country
program doesn't , appear to· be
- going · anywhere. Losing Coach
Maverhofer was a big blow.''
.
.. Lovejoy indicated that his only
alternative is to go to a state
schooL He . wili . be . attending
SUNY at Syracuse University in
. the. fall;
Athletes suffer
Mayerhofer does not see this · '.~~t~l~;s"k eac1/ii~e •they .. put ~n
· happening. So what we have is no
their · running, ·shoes. .This·
Does anybody in the
_
ad-
more than
a
top Diyision II team
de.finitely hurts the
.
athlete
ministration . really care what . racing in• Division I against . mentally ... , _.
happens to any sport beside runners-· that are Division I
L_ast
semester the Foxes
basketball?. It· certainly doesn't caliber. So Marist runs_.Division I . traveled · to . Notre Dame ·and
look that way.
but does not get recruited and
finished 10th out of 18 teams.
A..
perfect example is the slow coached like Division
I.
· This sounds impre'Ssive, but just -
demise of the cross country team
.
.
how well could Marist have done
which was dealt another blow this
··· Mayerhofer has ,indicated that
if they had 2 or 3 scholarship
week as Coach· Bob Mayerhofer his won-lost record wasn't a
runners on the squad? From the
announced his resignation. He matter to · the athletic ad-
point of view of Marist College
has no confidence that Marist .ministration.
Well, . that's the_ finish was great. To the
College has -any desire to restore · ashame.
.
runners it is only mediocre.
what was once the winningest and
·The slogan, "It's ·not 'whether
Athletes strive to win ... and it was
most.prestigious sport on cam-
you win or lose, it's how you play
virtually impossible at Notre
pus.
·
· · the game" is cute but how many
Dame and in most other meets
· And why should he? What has
athletes believe that? Winning is
because Marist cross country is
happened since · the · move to what makes the long hours of not a true Division I team. ·
Division I is ·simple. The team is
training worthwhile. All the sweat
That's why Mayerhofer hoped
expected to run against other and hard work is tolerable with
a
the Division I proposal made
teams that are stocked with · win. It's the athletes that suffer
several months ago would pass so
players on scholarship. Marist
from not caring.
·
· · Marist would be forced to give
offers no scholarships.
There are three teams that seem
schoiarships. to the team in
Mayerhofer feels that to be
to fall into this category: cross
Division I or be forced to drop the
competitive
in
Division I you need
country, tennis and football.
squad to Division II where it
a scholarship program and in
The cross country team has
would be one of the top teams.
. addition a
full-time staff.
done well in its races, but are
The proposal was _yetoed.
-The football team, although
not D.ivision II, has suffered thi:ee
consecutive 2-7 seasons has been
·hurt by· the move ·. because of
increasing attention in basketball:
It doesn't look like there. is any
real desire at Marist to field a
winning football team· or even a
respectable one.
.
One of the coaches has in-
dicated in the past that full time
coaches would be needed to have
a winning team •.
Back
in -November many
seniors were playing their final
home game at Marist. Naturally a
pre-game ceremony was in order
to honor the players, some of
whom had endured four years.
- But the public address system
never worked that day and the
players did not receive any
recognition, like seniors from the
basketball team got in March.
Mike
Malet . is dedicated to
having a winning team and takes
every loss
harder than
the
previous._ ·He cares,· but . more
.
.
caring is needed elsewhere.
. Then we have tennis, another
Division · I team caught in the
shadow the basketball
rise.
Again, -like in cross country, the
· players suffer -
this time from
embarrassment.
·
The six tennis courts are in .
terrible (at best) shape. . Three '
courts have been condemned and
are awaiting repairs. Division I
Marist plays there. Tennis player
Bill Flood told it best last year:
It's like playing in a pit," he
said. "It's very embarrassing for
us and the school when teams
come to play us. The visiting team
knows that we're Division I and
are shocked when they see our
courts. Every team · laughs and
asks if these courts are the
practice courts.· I've been asked
many times why I would come to
a school with courts like these."
· Players
embarrassed
and
players up against too high odds.
ls this how a Division 1 program
should be?
·
28.17.1
28.17.2
28.17.3
28.17.4
28.17.5
28.17.6
28.17.7
28.17.8
28.17.9
28.17.10
28.17.11
28.17.12
-
._·
.
Volume ~8, Number 17
Housing
renovati-On
. ,
. .
,
•
.
'
.
.
•
,
.
'
•
'
.
_
-
to · begin in 3 wee
.
ks
,-
by Lynn Gregorski
have
.
a stucco
·
exterior similar t~
:[
··
.
the townhouses arid
·
an
·
_:
entrance
.
Construction to convert the Old
lined by two
.
small
grey si6ri
'
e
Gymnasium
into
freshmen walls,
.
said Cox .
.
The blacktop
housing wiil begin in two to three around the current building will
weeks, according to· Gerard Cox,
·
be
.
removed and shrubbery will j)e
dean of student affairs.
planted, he said. The resident
The renovation will begin by
rooms are 11 '7" x 16' with nine
.
,
taking
·
.
d0wn the exterior walls
foot ceilings. Each room will have
and roofs of each shed located on a walk-in closet that will provide
the sides of the building so the maximum storage space
·
and
steel
·
framework of the new
shelving and may reduce the need
building can
·
be put up, said Cox.
for dressers, C
_
ox said.
.
The sketch by architect Paul
.·
Cox said that he doesn't know
kanin, illustrates the completed
'.'
where . the preschool
·
.
will
·
be
.
freshmen dormitory
.
The peak in
located next year; it is currently in
.
the roof of the dormitory is the the rear shed of the old gym. He
roof of the old gymnasium.
said that there will have to be
·
an
Construction is wrapped around · assessment of the value of
·
the
and through the old building, said
.
preschool to decide whether
.
it will
Cox.
·
..
continue. . The preschool
·
.
was
Cox said that
a
company has established in 1976
·
with the idea
Matist Collei,,, Poughkeepsie, N
:
Y.
·
April 14, 1983
.
'
~
-
~
-
-
.
"1rk
,
·.
_
. '
'
~~
',
.
,
.
__
-
-
-
-
-
--
I\
,
._
..
.-
:
:_~--
.
-~
-<-
.
:
-·
~
-
"
-
~
-
,,t1,i
(J/~
•
.
.
.
.
-
.
111,11~--
·
■11...-------------•u-1
______
1f1Aqs:;a!lllt!!ll!II--
./"'
•
·
--!l!•m-lll!ll!lm~
~
J
The-"new"
.
Old
Gym, scheduled to begin reconstruction in two to three weeks.
not been hired to do the con-
of making it easier for mothers to ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.;... _ _ _ _
.;... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.;.._...J
·
.
struct
i
on but the cost is estimated continue their
·
·
education
.-
by
in trailers that were ordered to be
.
handling the move is going to
The current thinking is to keep
t;
{
.
at$1rilillionto$1.5million.
.
having a place to leave
·
their
brought in, said Cox
.
He said a
causesomestrainontheworkers
.
the ma
i
ntenance shops central to
{,:
_.
·
.
·i
.
·
·
"A plan for financing
.
hasn
'
t child
r
en while in class, said Cox.
.
.
·
more
-
permanent situation will be
One source in the maintenance
the campus, said Cox. He said
•·
·
;
~·
'..
been
worked
out
)'et;"
said
Cox,
Maintenance
will
be
moving
··
arranged for maintenance
by
the
department said that the workers
that there is
a
proposal to put
a
?':J
),;-.
,
·
"but we know
.we
can do it." Cox down to the cold storage wing of beginning of July.
----
are upset because of the lack of
new maintenance building on the
!
]
I
.\:'.~
·
·
·
sai~
:
bY
·
i~cr~asing
.
the popula!ion the Grot_1nds building.located near
.
".I
don't like
t~e
idea of getting
availability_ o! bathrooms in the
south end o~
7
~mpu_s. He said a
,
.!
\ 1
•
•
.
.
·
••
:
qn
.
.-__
campu
·
s the school
Y(ill
be
.
the ten ms courts, said Cox.
.
.
· kicked out
·
(maintenance), but I
grounds bmldmg
.
. future poss1b1hty 1s the con-
f
!
~.
·
;-:.
:·•,t,·
;,
_
_'
s
~
ving
.-
approximately
·
$275,000
·
.
·.
:•w_e want the old gym emptie
_
d
·
li~e the idea o
_
f the new dor-
·
.
·
.
.
struction
~f
a
two story storage
_.1
)
:'~
:''
·
:.:<,:
:.
_
:;
-
B.~
t
;_
Yt;a_r
J
~
_
q_aj:
~ht;
.<!~~~ea
.
~
<:_·
i
~:.t
!t~
,-
:\
?~!
~
~9
:
tW:~: ~~e
,
k~
~o
-
~!?~S!!-
~
~!i~~
-,::
~ut_ory," said .J
?~~
Sh~ug~11essy,
•
·. ."This is
.
supposedly only for
.
and
:
main~enance buildi(!g with
.
} ._:
....
. ::.:.;:,0 ,
°:'
.:
::W
l]l!.11'.11?!=r
:
:··
·
_
of
,.
o(f•caipp~s
:'.-
·
a~a_r:
F
:_
·1
c~n
.
0
-
~!art!
!.';'
~e
/
-s~
_
1_~
•·
:c
°"1Jl.'i
?.
~
'
!h
_
e,
-;.•~-;
as.~1s
_
t~nt
,-
~~~1c
_i
u
.. ~
l
_
a,pt
.,
d1r
.
ector.,=•
th~.
:"
-~m©~!
:;'.
:
_l!!!~}!1~~.::_s3.~~1_:
_
e
.
:
.
h~at~d
,
o
_
fftces on th<: s_econd floor
-
_.),
>!'
.
.. ·,
.
nients leased;
.
;.
.·
.
.-
·.
.
·
gi_:ound
-
e:qmpment that was m
·
ttie
.,
He
_ .
s~1
.
d~ha
_
nql
~
i:1~
:•
the
:.
everyday
,.,.
c~rr!l!entea
,
·
.
\Ye ~re ;ust·waJU~g
·
:·
.
and
',.
cold
·
.
storage· ·~on-the
' :
firsr
~
•
- , .
............. -
· ·
_
:
_
,.
:
·
;:
.
The twi::i'.-story dormifor.y
.
wm
·
:
·
cold st~rage
,
wing
.
ii."
..
being
.
stored
:;"
-.
maintenaQ~e
• .·,.
operation
_
s
.
while ·
·.
to see \\lh~
.
t happens;'
.'
>.
,
-,;
··
::i-
·:,::
npor.
.
: •
.,
,
·
·
l
JI
.
' .
·:
· ..
·.;-
.·:,_:·
·
:
-
·
:
,~·
.
,
.
·
..
..
:·
.
:-
~
-
··-
·
·
.
:·,.
-
.
. _
'.
____ ..
.
_.·._·_
,
__
·
·
·
·
··
·
·
·
,
.
:~.··
'
·
'.·
.--··
·
·
•;.,;
:
<··
.
·'
.-
_
•~-·--·
·
·
··-,:·:-
··
.
·--·
_
.
.
,
..
:-·
-
~
,:
· -
,,
·
1,,
,
,'
• .
·
·•
·.:
•
,
'·
.
,
•
•
··
·
.-
.. -.. :·,:.
-
·,
:.-,·--
·
.
.
·.·-
-
} )
Giitdnit
tO
hellti
Cs.L
itl
,83-, 84
Jfj
.
Newly elected
CSL o
.
ff
~
cers (left to riglll):
.
Margaret Freund
;
•
(SAC president); Roger Newbury (NTSO president);
.
Jim
.
·
•
Barnes (CUB president); Ke
l
t
_
h Galanti (CSL president);
Mark
Zangari
_
(ln
.
ierhouse
.
Counc!Lpi:esident); )Jaryl
•
·
Imperati ·
(Commuter Union president); Keith Griffin (CSL vice
-
presi~
dent).
·
·
(photo
·
by Jeff Ki~ly) ·
.
Crecca
~
s
182
votes .
.
to be as effective as they say they
wiB
.
be
.
due to their inexperience in
student
.
governm
_
ent." .
The race
for
Student Academic
.
Carfylng ahiiost half of the 499
Committee
:
president was the
votes, junio
r
Keith
.
Gala
·
nti won
closest, with Margaret Freund
·
th( Council
·
of Stud~iH
.
Leaders. . winning a run-off against Don
·
Concerning
·
his
future
in-
presidential election held March · Eustace on April
3.
'
volvement in the CSL, ·current
30-31.
.
•
:
·
·
.. ·
.
Regarding the 25
.
percent voter
C
_
ommuter Union
president
.
Running ori the Interactive
turnout for the CSL
·
elections,
Gregg Luna said,
"I
will
continue
.
.
C:hange
·
·
ticket, Galanti got 237
current
president
. ·
Joan
to
be involved in the Commuter
;
votes,
·
followed
by
·
.
Rick
"Schatzie"
·
Gasparovic said the
Union; however, my options in
..
O'Donnell .with 142 votes
·
and
_
sinall turnout was not as good
,
as
•
the CSL are very limited. I would
·
;
Greg Luna with 120 votes .
.
>
-
·
it should ha
v
e
··
be
<:
n and that she
·
like to be involved init, but I'm
.·
Jim
·
earnes skimmed past Jane
hoped it would have been better
.
.
discouraged by
·
the elections
.
.
Scarchilli in
'.
th
_
e race for College
When asked
.
her opinion of the
.
results and I question the abilitY
Union Board president 26:S-225,
•. ,
election
·
,esults
;
:
Gasparovic
·
said,
·
:
·
of
·
the
-
n
·
ew
.
council
·
because the
while Mark Zangari
•
.was
;
elected
:
"Interactive Change ran a very
entire gro
.
up is inexperiencd."
.
to I~ter~House Council president
good
publicity
campaign;
Galanti was
.
unavailable for
wi_th 239 votes, beating Andrew · however,
I
question their ability
.
comment.
Day care center 9ertified; futureindOubt
by Lou
Ann Seelig
and
Mark Zangari
·
·
each other, said Dr. John Pod-
v.vas received on April 5
.
after the
~
theschoolis'indoubt .
.
·
zius, director of the pre
~
s
~
hooi.
:}k
'.
final .re-documentcition began
.
in
...
C
.
Aclministratori
/
are currently
Podzius said
-
he fourid out that September of
1982.
.
.
.
.
·
-
,.
re~evaluating
·
the pre-school to
the
.
pre
0
school would have to
.
In
order for the college to get a
decide if it should
.
continue, Said
~
move. when
,
he
.
called
· ·
.Dean building
-
:
permit
·.
for
the Dean of Student Affairs Gerard
··
Molloy's
·
office to tell him they
renovation of the old
gym;
the
Cox.
On the same day the
.
.Marist
College
·
Pre-school
Center
received • its
.
-long-sought
·
New
York State license, it also was
notified
.
that it would .lose its
home.
Notification of the licensing
and notification that it must
·
vacate
.
came within
:
minutes of
had just received the license
.
"It
building must be vacant. Podzius
There are 33 children enrolled
was a matter of minutes between said the pre-school will
be
in. the pre-school. Children from
the time we got the license and temporarily relocated on campus
Rehabilitations Programs, Inc., a
when
·
I
called," he said
.
for the remainder of the semester
service for various
·
handicapped,
,
The licensing proposal has been as soon as the building permit is
take an active part at the pre-
sought since ·1977; and the license issued, but the future
:
location of school. There are currently 11
handicapped children enrolled.
Senior officers,
:·
_
(!asparovic
·
at
•
impasse
by Christine Dempsey
waiting for the officers to r~sign
·
since she charged the four senior
Only one senior class officer officers, Ted Perrone, president;
has responded to a three-week-old
..
Jennifer Grego, vice president;
request that the officers resign,
Donna Mazzola, secretary; and
according to . Joan "Schatzie"
.
Tricia
O'Donohue,
treasurer,
Gasparovic,
Marist
.
student with failure to carry out senior
government president.
class responsibilities.
Jennifer Grego, senior
·
class
Whether or
not
impeachment is
vice president, has expressed that
possible seems
10
be in question.
·
she is
"willing
·
to
resign,
"
Perrone said that impeachment
Gasparovic said.
i~ not
.
possible unless the officers
Gasoarovic said that she is still
have done something criminally
wrong.
However,
Betty
·
Yeaglin,
Director of College Activities,
said that class officers can be
impeached if they are not doing
their job.
·
Yeaglin said that this new
additiol) 19 the impeachment rules
was added as an amendment to
·
the class officers' constitution in
October
.
CSL was una
_
ble to provide
.
a
copy of the constitution.
"It
is
a
service to the han-
dicapped,"
·
said
.
Beurket.
"It
gives them a chance
10
interact
with people who
·
are not han-
dicapped."
The pre~school was established
in 1974, when
·
a group of un-
dergraduate students began , to
offer child care services under the
direction of Dr. Midge Schratz,
professor of psychology, ac-
cording to Podzius.
According to Podzius, the
students who
·
work in the pre-
s
chool have been working on the
licensing p
r
oposal for a long time.
"The anticipation throughout the
process of evaluation was worth
it," he said
.
.
Podzius said· that the program
strives for the highest quality.
"The license indicated that .we
meet state regulations
·
and serves
as an index of quality,'' he said.
"On a campus in which
·
an of
.
us are involved with social service
concerns, the center provides
humanizing character for the
campus," said Podzius. "As the
pre-school develops we can
become
.
specialized in various
fields of study,
•
and become in-
volved with stress management
and other
·
important research
topics of today."
Podzius said he
.
estimates that
the relocation of the school will
last about two weeks from the
time the building permit is issued
until the end o
·
r the semester.
The pre-school is currently
opened from 8 a
.
m. to
5 p.m. and
operates on a semester basis.
"We look forward to a center
that is growing
-
and hope to get a
·
permaneni location on campus,"
said Podzius.
':'./Y
·
1
).
-~
";
'.\.
-
~
'
-
~
-
¾
·
...
.
--•P~ge 2 · THE CIRCLE· April 14,
·
·
1983
Faculty
and
·
their hangups
by Luane Remsburger
Talking owls, students being
shot for apathy, dogs competing
with the litrary genius of Leo
Tolstoy -
·
a scene from some far
out world, your ask?
No, just a few examples of
faculty doors found hanging
around Marist.
Whether in
the
form
of
newspaper
clippings,
posters,
buttons or stickers, faculty door-
art will do anything but bore you.
But what's in
a
door? Ac-
cording to Jennifer Langner;
faculty
secretary
for
.
the
Humanities
.
Division, her door
arid office are a reflection of
herse!L Upon reaching her office,
one is greeted by a poster of an
owl
saying,
"Never mind
whooooo, just tell me when."
"We're always
under an
avalanche of work here," she said
when asked about its meaning.
"The work load is so incredible
that it doesn't matter wlio wants
what, just tell me when!"
Work isn't the only thing
Langner's office is loaded with. A
45 foot plastic rainbow colored
·
dragon covers her ceiling and
towers over jars filled
•
with
seashells, a giant plant in the
corner, and walls covered with
everything from a Miss
·
Piggy
poster to a black octopus.
"I asked my boss if it was all
·
.
right if I brought a 45 foot dragon
into work," she said. "He said it
was okay as long as it didn't eat
too much and it stayed in my
office
.
"
Amid all this is a
·
sign which
reads, "This place would die
without me."
When looking at the ifoor
·
of
faculty member David Mccraw,
it appears a group of students
might be doing some dying
themselves. The feature attraction
here is a newspaper clipping from
the Kingston Freeman showing
students about to be shot for their
apathy. Some might consider this
door-gore, but McCraw says it
actually sums up the frustration
of many professors -
and
students.
"I have gotten more comments
on that than anything else in my
whole life," he said, referring to
the picture, "which says a lot
about my life! I do
not
have a
trivial door."
·
Maurice Bibeau, assistant
·
professor
of Spanish and the
other foreign language instructors
have an open and shut case when
it comes to being leaders in door
art. Bibeau has a sticker that says •
"Sonrie---es contagiaso" (smile
-
it's contagious) One can find
anything from
the Russian
alphabet outside Dr
.
Casimir
Norkeliunas' office to the
Spanish version of "I like iny
job ... what.I hate is the work!" on
Irma Casey's door.
Casey, however, didn't stop
.
with her door. Her entire
·
office is
like a slice of Spanish life. One
section has been conv
_
erted into a
mini grocery store. The "store"
features everyday products, each·
packaged and labeled in Spanish.
Casey said that actually seeing the
products like this helps her
students to a better understanding
of Spanish.
·
"I believe the more senses that
you use, the better the learning,"
she said. "All the senses are
involved .with
learning -
touching, feeling, tasting."
It's a good thing doors aren't
always open or all this art might
go unnoticed.
Blondes may
supposedly have more fun, and
we may be what we eat, but the
next time you really want to find
out more about a faculty person's
core, simply look at his door.
Attention
JUNIORS
Tickets for the Moonlite
· Cruise on
·
April 29th, will go
on sale Friday, April 15 in
Donnelly Hall.
The cost is $11.00 which in~
eludes Dinner, Refreshments
and D.J.
·
Only a limited
amount can
·
attend so buyyour
ticket soon! !
Ouof,-+yJo,x/wich
·
::
Meals
al-mosi
Reasonable
Prices:
a>
SALADS
~
SoP, DRINKS
!CS.
~AM
Open
Nightly
7:30
p.m.
-1 :00
a.m.
NOW OPEN 2-4:30
SAT & SUN.
.
.
'
:.
CAPUTO'S
-
PIZZERIA
Tel. 473-2500
·
Across from Marist
-
College
.
·-
.
-
~
1--~~--
.
-
-
~----~~-~--~--~--~~----~----~~---.
I
·
·
·
Coupon
· .
·
I
I
1 F
.
.
I
;.
.
~E TOPPING!
·
:
·
•
-
.
On Large Pizza
-_
·
;
•
With This Coupon
I
One Coupon Per Visit
·
· ·
.
·
·
.
.
·
·
.
·
.
Expires May 15
1-----------~----
·
----;..---------~----------
.---~--------~--------------~-----------
I
.
·.
.
.
.
·:
-
EXTRA
:-
L~RGE
CHEESE PIE
:
·,
$5.50
.
Reg. $6.00
I
I
1 Coupon Per Visit
·
·
·
.
_
·
Expires May 15, 1983 ;
·--------~-----------~----------~-------
-----------------------------------------
I
~ ~
00
I
I
I
:
FREE PITCHER OF BUD,
:.
;·
MILLER
or PEPSI
:
I
•
With Purchase of Large Pizza
I
I
On Premises Only
I
I
1 Coupon Per Visit
.
Expires May 15, 1983
I
L-------------------------------------~-•
NEW STORE HOURS:
Mon. thru Thurs.
11
a.m. to
9
p.m.
Sun. 4
p.m. to
11
p.m.
NO DELIVERY SERVICE
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A p r i l
14, 1983 · THE CIRCLE· Page
3--•
Marist'S movie man s3.ys it
by Eileen Hayes
.
"What's Gene
showing·
tonight?:' was the most popular
topic of conversation during the
month_ of March.
From his studio-like room in
Champagnat; sophomore Gene
.
Robbins played his tapes on his
video recorder for all interested
viewers.
According to Robbins,
he
hooked up the video to the whole
ca1T1pus as a publicity stunt to
prove to students and ad-
ministrators that · Marist could
have a student-run television
station.
Robbins attached a channel
splitter -
a device used to create
an additional channel -
to Bruce
·
Cable TV's equipment on the roof
of Chainpagnat hoping it would
·
eventually be found, he said
.
Marist security discovered it,
notified
Bruce
Cable
and
unhooked it on March 31.
The innovative efforts
·.
of
Robbins were not appreciated by
the owners of the equipment.
Ralph Teller of Bruce Cable
TV,
said the cable system was van-
dalized by the· person who in-
stalled the channel splitter:
.
He
said a service man had to reallign
the equipment after
-
the channel
splitter was removed. The school
will have to pay for the damages
and repairs.
_
Teller mentioned the legality of
Robbin's actions. "It's against
the FCC and copyright laws to
show copyrighted tapes over this
type of system,'' he said
.
In reference to a student-run
television station, Teller said he
and Scott
.
Badman of the Beirne
Media Center have been working
Geae Robbins
on it for months.
J3adman could not be reached
for comment.
Director of Housing, Robert
Heywood said,
"Gene's in-
tentions were good. He was in-
novative, but he will have to work
within the framework of the
institution, and
·
go through the
proper channels."
Heywood said he liked the idea
of the campus television. "It is a
great idea, but there will have to
be controls
-
and organized in-
vo
I
vem en t
from
the
ad-
ministration," he said.
It
is the legal aspects of
showing
copyrighted
material
that
concerns the administration
.
"It
is still going through the
courts
.
Most colleges are careful .
about how involved they get,
because
·
it
is
a
high-risk
situation," Heywood said
.
The
movies
started
the
beginning of this semester, when
Robbins
hooked
-
up Cham-
pagnat's east wing of the fourth
floor.
As more Champagnat
residents heard about the movies,
they wanted to be wired
to
receive
the channel.
.
Robbins then went
ahead with his plan and connected
was
all
for show
the campus to his video tape
recorder.
Robbins also showed a "live on
the spot" out of his room using·
his television camera. He said he
felt this also proved his point that
,
a student could run and operate a
campus television station.
Next year's presidents of the
College Union Board and Council
of Student Leaders, Jim Barnes
and Keith Galanti respectively,
said they support the idea of the
television station. They would be
responsible for setting up
·
the
bylaws,
charter and
some
(photo by
Jeff
Kiely)
financial support.
Barnes said he wants to develop
the video department in CUB and
name Robbins chairperson.
The proposals mentioned by
Barnes, Galanti, and Robbins for
television
broadcasts
were:
campus news, athletic events,
television
production
class
assignments and the movies.
·
Robbins said he was very
careful about what he put on the
air. He wanted to get his point
across without insulting anyone.
"I'm happy things turned out the
way they did," he said.
That smell : MariSt :stinks,_ but not for long
by
Lisa Arthur
doing
now
is
.
enclosing ali present cooking of the sludge for
problem areas - that is areas that' conditioning to
·
the
use
of
·
It's
springtime
at
Marist.
cause the stink. We're sealing chemicals. The second phase
There's a keg at
.
"
the river. A
.
everything of(,
.
We're also requires new equipment which
frisbee game is
in
progress
·
in
·
rebuilding our fume incinerator will cost close to $200,000. Phase
front of Champagnat. Everyone's
and covering the two sludge-
II would take
.
six to eight months
celebrating the arrival of warmer
holding tanks which are out
-
to
.
complete, according to En-
weather. The sun is shining, the
__
doors."
virotech officials.
-
trees
_
are green and the air smells
Smith said that the cost of
·
Phase Ill, which is considered
like rotten eggs.
-
Phase I will be approxiinatley an absolute last resort, would
.
The noses of Marist students
$20,000 for the materials needed. involve moving the plant to a new
may soon be getting a break from
The
City
of Poughkeepsie is location or covering the plant
the all
·
too familiar odor which
supplying the money
_
and En-
with an air tight dome. En-
surrounds the campus, especially
virotech is doing the labor at no virotech said this is more an
·
in warm weather. The odor which
additional cost to the city.
.
· ''academic exercise" and that it
originates from the waterwaste
_
Envirotech will rely on the "could not be afforded by this
facility located behind the Mc-
people living iri the surrounding community without extreme
Cann
.
Center may be gone by May
areas to judge if Phase I is sue-
financial b3:rdship
.
"
.
1,
according to
·
Envirotech
cessful. If the reduction in odors
,
The Poughkeepsie waterwaste
.
Operating Services,
.
the company
does not satisfy the neighborhood
.
facility has been in operation
that operates the facility.
and other interested parties, such since August 1977. It was built as
Envirotech is currently in the
as Marist
.
College and Saint a result of the Clean Water Act of
middle of the first phase of a
Francis Hospital, Envirotech will 1972 with money from the federal
program designed to reduce the make a recommendation to the and state government.
The
odors caused by the processing of city to begin Phase II of t
,
he
_
purpose of the plant is to remove
sludge at the plant.
program.
pollutants in wastewater before it
·
"Phase I will be completed by
.
Phase
II
would
-
involve is emptied into the river, ac-
May 1," said Doug Smith, plant changing the entire sludge cording to Envirotech.
manager. "Basically, what we're processing -system
form
the
Smith said that at the time the
3 men sentenced in
·
Berger
-
-
murder case
by
Jim Leonard
A Suffolk County
.
Court jury in
Long Island has found three New
York City men guilty of second-
degree· murder in the March 20,
1982, shooting of Marist student
Richard Berger, 19, during a
holdup at a Hauppauge gasoline
station.
,
Berger was killed during the
1982 spring break while he was
visiting his friend who worked as
a night attendant at
·
a Long Island
gas station. Berger, a sophomore,
was a Marist College honor
student who majored in computer
science.
A.
shocking accusation by the
defense lawyers for
.
the three
assailants received attention in
this year's April
5
edition of The
Star, a grocery store tabloid. The
defense claimed Berger died from
the withdrawal of the life-support
systems rather than from the
bullet.' Juror Thomas Fitzgerald
of Shirley was quoted in
Newsday, saying, "We got rid of
that one (the defense's claim)
right away."
Berger was shot in the head
with a bullet from a .22-caliber
revolver while
·
attempting to
thwart a holdup at the service
station.
After
the
shooting,
Berger was taken to Smithtown
General Hospital where he was
unable to breathe without a
_
respirator. Six days later, after
doctors agreed he was "brain
dead," his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Berger, decided to remove
the life-support systems and
donate their son's kjdneys to two
young men.
The three defendants
William Lai, 18, of Manhattan;
Fabricio Barbaran, 20,
of
Queens; and Philip Wang, 23,
also of Queens face
·
maximum
sentences of 25 years to life on the
murder charges. Lai was also
convicted of first-degree man~
slaughter. Police said
it
was Lai
who shot and killed Berger.
·
Lai testified he was drunk and
under the influence of cocaine
and barbituates at the time of the
holdup
.
Lai and his friends were
returning from a party at the
State University at Stony Brook
.
Berger's father, the Republican
Suffolk County deputy elections
'
commissioner, was quoted in
Newsday, saying, "Well, the
three of them are going away for
25 years. After 25 years, they will
come back to their families again
-
that's more than I've got. I've
lost my son."
Berger, who lived in Benoit
House, was a member of the
Marist diving team and a brother
in
the Sigma Phi Epsilon
fraternity.
plant was b
_
uilt odor prn'Qlems W€,r
not
foreseeable.
·
_
.
Smith
-
said the
.
plant
serves
approximately 40,000 residents
from both the town and city of
Poughkeepsie. · He
said
he is
hopeful that the odor problem
will
be sufficiently reduced
through Phase I.
"We know it just stinks
period," he said. "And we realize
what a problem it is. I've been in
th
_
is business for 14 years so I
.
don't even sme\\
it
anymore but
l
-
-
know ,how bad it stinks. The
things we're doing now should
really reduce the odors and if it's
not enough we'll do Phase
II.
The
problem
will
be solved even-
tually
.
"
If
all goes as planned, by next
spring the Marist community can
expect
to
be enjoying
the
fragrances of the season instead
of the aroma of baking sludge,
Six students arrested
after Rockwell brawl
by
Mark Stuart
.
Two late night brawls at
Rockwell's Bar before Easter
recess led to the arrest of eight
people,
including six
Marist
students.
Police were called to the
Delafield A venue establishment
on March 26, 1983 at 3:07 a.m. to
respond to a large group in the
sue
.
et,
according to
police
reports
.
Off-duty
Police
Officer
Holmes of the Poughkeepsie City
Police Department was at-
tempting to subdue a subject who
started a fight in the bar, that had
moved out into the street.
A crowd of about "30 people
were milling around" when Lt.
Wilkinson and Sergeant Resch
arrived at the scene. The police
asked the crowd to disperse and
all but six people left the area.
The six subjects refused
10
leave the area and the street
because of what they stated "was
the constitutional right to stand in
the street," according
10
official
police reports of the incident.
· Police arrested Ray Castaro,
Daniel Morissey, Peter Moloney,
Ero! Gureli, Michael Buckley,
and Christopher Dyal on charges
of blocking traffic. All of the
subjects are from fifth floor Leo
Hall.
At a court appearance on April
4, all were adjourned from
_
charges with contemplation of
dismissal until October 6, 1983,
according to City Court records.
Castaro, however, was also
made to pay restitution and
apologize along with the six
month good behavior period.
Police were again called to the
bar on March 30, 1983 to respond
to a complaint from owner Ed
McDermott which led to the
arrest of John Laurenzi of 91
Lake St.
,
Congers, N.Y ., Thomas
Meara of 27 Beast Lane, Congers,
N
.
Y
.
, and Timothy Mulhere of
Brewery Road, New City,
N.Y.
Police
arrived
to
find
"numerous fights in progress"
and the glass broken out of the
door and damage done to the
pool table.
Marist student John O'Leary,
who was the bartender at the
time, approached police in the
street and told them he had been
struck in the face.
Laurenzi, Meara, and Mulhere
·
were all adjourned of charges in
contemplation of dismissal for
the next six months.
Police records indicate that
according to a statement given by
Laurenzi, he returned to the bar
with some of his friends. One of
the bouncers shoved one of the
guys with him and a girl in-
tervened. The girl was pushed to
the ground and the brawl broke
out
.
I
I
l
l
I
.
.
I
- - - -Page 4 · THE CIRCLE·
April
14,
1983 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~ - - - ~ - - - - ~ - - - -
.
Readers
Write
.-
:
..
All letters must be typed triple space with a 60 space margin, and submitted .to the
· Circle office no later than 1 p.m. Monday. Short letters are preferred. We reserve thll
'- · right to edit all letters. Letters must be signed, but names may be withheld upon
request. Letters will be published depending_ ~pon availability of space.
_
Disjointed article
To the Editor: .
sheer abili~y to caucus · we
YOU KNOW
r
1-\EARC>
TPA1'
iHky
rre-sc~oole,s
C.TUA'-'-)'
U'5£'D Tc
HAVE.
~Z?z!s455~
otJ
It was a pleasant sight in the
managed to ;make our presence-
illustrious "Circle" to see a
felt. We had two sessions within
-demonstration of support of our
the U.N. itself; the first in the
recent trip to and participation in
General Assembly and we sat
the National Model United
where Laos would sit if in session.
Nations (NMUN), even if the
This alone was a great experience ·
article was
disjointed and
to sit where much of todays world
misleading. Not to mention the
debate takes place; Our second
size and amount of space you
session was held · in various
devoted · to it! .The Marist
conference rooms in the U.N.
delegation as well as all other
. The entire delegation would
participants met at the Grand
like to express our graditute for
Hyatt in New York (city), not
the financial support we received
Washington. This may be a small
from President
Murray and
point but when you spend a half Kathy Shea, chairman of the
houri .with . an .interviewer you
Financial Board, as well as Dean
expect some contiriimity. I am
Cox and Betty Yeaglin. We would
sure you are doing the very best
not have been able to attain such a
you can with the. limited per~
rich educational experience
picuity of your staff.
without their support and
The conference was held from
guidance. The NMUN is an
March 29th to April 3\·d; the
exciting alternative to· traditiqnal ·
Marist delegates, Rich Demeter,
education, it offers a combination
Eric Grindle, Angela Spatia, Stan
of the "hands on" experience and
Merritt, Ken ·.Carlisle, Gina
interpersonal communication and
O'Connel, Marcos Castro, Spiros
interaction. In · the custom· of
Titos, Frank Lorica, Barbra
Marist College we may have
· Demeter, Amie Rhodes and Jim
started a tradition or two of our.
Galvin did a superb job and I ;. own for future Marist delegations
Who cares?·
must commend them all. . As to follow.
.
representatives of Laos we did not
Sincerely,
have much p_ower but through
John Fusco
Throughout the year The Circle has been
pushing for the administration
fo
give the
students more
input · into decisions
regarding. student life at Marist. It's sad to
say that we were wrong. The majority of
students don't care; they don't even care
enough to vote for student leaders.
Only one quarter of the undergraduat~
students at Marist voted in the recent CSL
elections. Isn't that sad? I hope all the
students who .didn't like decisions about
cohabitation, dry day in the pub, or don't
like' the food service v_oted',.
\t
you cou\dn't
find the
60
seconds it takes to vote for
student leaders how, come you can find so
much time to complain?
·
The interactive change party swept the
elections. They had . a good amount of
support from the students who did vote.
Now lets hope they can get the students
who don't care enough to vote to show
some concern for what happens at Marist.
All the people involved in the recent elec-
tions showed that they are concerned .by
taking.the time to run for office. While these
students were putting in the time to·run for
office three quarters of the student_ body
weren't even concerned enough to vote_.
·
diplomacy, compromise and the
Ex Head Delegate
Internships
What does this tell the administration? It
To the Editor:
background . rather than any
tells them to go ahead and do what they
A few remarks concerning the
specific professional training."
want. The students don't care anyway. No
importance of Marist· College's
While a focus .on "professional
matter how you look at it; there's something
internship program:
training" would betray the ideals
wrong with the students of Mari st College if
The first and most salient value
of a "liberal arts education,"
I
do
they can't take a minute to choose a student
of.
the internships that this college
not believe that the two -
leader.
. _;
sponsors is that they are in-
professional experienc_e and the
Interactive change has their work-cut o.~t / . dispensable in helping . an mi-
liberal arts -
should be divorced
for them,. How c1:1.n they ask_for
,
change· if;=",.-/dergraduate choose and launch a:· from-each other. For ·example,
you, the·. studen.ts ;don't
even•:;
care wt:,ato::,< career.
For example,
I
-am ·
my previous three years·atMarist
happens? Before-we attempt to'change·thec};,:_· presently completing a· 15-credit
(eight ofiriffirst ten courses'were
administration, perhaps we should attempe•::, intership at WfSB-TV in Hart- . from''. CORE) cultivated and
to change the students.
-
·,
.
. '
ford,_ Connecticut; Although a
refined my reading, writing and
Why is it that the.same·student leaders do
good part of my work over the
speaking . abilities
·three
all the work and most other students don't
past thirteen weeks has been with· essential ingredients of a sue-
even care? If you couldn't find the time to·
the station's investigative reporter
cessful liberal arts education.
vote at the recent elections, perhaps you
-
I've handled the research -
I
At WFSB-TV, however, I have
_ don't even deserve to be going to college.
have gained additional experience -had the opportunity to con-
We wish the interactive change_ a very
working at the assignment desk.
sistently test those skiHs. The
sincere "good luck." God knows· that they'll
I've accompanied reporters - on
manner in which a typical story is
need it with the students that Marist has to
story'. assignments and worked
put· together serves as
an ·
offer!
with the station's producers and
illustration of this. Researching a
assignment editors . .In short, the
story
for
WFSB-TV's
~
in~
day-by-day,
40-hour-a-week · vestigative reporter initially in-
emersion into the TV news
valves an efiormous amount· of
The envelope, please
business has given me an un-
reading . that ranges from Con-'
dersta:nding ··or the field that I
necticut's
legal
statu.tes · and
couldn't possibly have gotten
opaque, long-winded government
from a classroom or a textbook.
documents to barely literate story
On Sunday night, the Council of Student
Leaders held their annual awards dinner.
. Certificates were · presented to club
· presidents and class presidents, as well as
C.U.B. and C.S.L. members, in recognition
of their efforts over the past year.
·
The people present at the ceremony
support the theory that a minority of the
students do the majority of the work of
planning
activities at Marist. · Several
students received two or more awards as
members of various clubs and committees, ·
and in recognition of their academic
achievements. These are the students who
have really contributed to Marist College -
not the ones who complain but don't act.
And, regardless of how well they did their
jobs, at least these students volunteered
their time and effort.
The Circle would like to congratulate the
Co-Editors
The
Associate Editors
Circle
Sports Editor
Adv!!rtislng Manager
Business Manager
Social Work Club, which received the Club
of the Year award; MCCTA, which received
the Service Organization of the Year award;
and the Class of '86, the Class of the Year.
We
also congratulate the presidents of
those organizations. -
Jerri· Tobin, Arlene
Hutnan, and Andy Crecca :-- for their
achievements.
·
·
As the year draws to a close and we all
look back on the years· activities, we also
look ahead to next year. The Interactive
Change members which won last week's
elections face the challenge of representing
the student body next year. They have
promised greater cornmunicatjon between .
students and ad,ministrators during the next
. year, and It is their responsibility to achieve
that goal. It is the responsibility of the
student body which voted them into office
to keep them to that promise.
What's more, internships allow
undergraduates to make .. im-
portant connections that may lead
to jobs after they are graduated
from college.
A
personal ex-
perience exemplifies · this. An
editor at
WFSB-TV
assisted me in
arranging an interview with the
vice president -of a TV station
where he had formally worked.
That interview provided me with
a solid toehold in a field that is
ferociously competitive.
A
second benefit of the in-
ternship program is that it
symmetrizes ·a liberal . ·arts
education. Webster's New World
Dictionary describes a liberal arts
education as
"providing the
student with a broad cultural
Rick O'Donnell
Reporters
Lisa Arthur, Marla Azzolina,
Advertising Staff
Patti Walsh
Cindy Bennedum, Karen Boll,
Tim Dearie, Alison Demarest,
Chris Dempsey, Lori Dyer,
Karen Lindsay
0onna Fidaleo,
Mike
Graney,
· Classified
Lynn Gregorski, EIieen Hayes,
Lou Ann Seelig
Kristine Lawas, Jim Leonard,
Donna Cody Seelbach
Karyn Magdalen, Paul Murnane
Cartoonist
Karen Nlzolek, Susan Pyle,
· suggestions from members of the
viewing audience. · _After the
reading is finished, I then write up
the pertinent material in an ac-
curate and lucid pr_ose form. Oral
communication prowess is im~
portant as well since. I must be
able to discuss at length with the
investigative reporter what I have
done.. .
.
.
._
In addition, the efficacy of a
story,
and
ultimately
the
reputation of the reporter and the
station, may hinge · on how .
competently I haye done my job.
A mere letter grade evaluation for
- a similar classroom assignment
can't compare with that.
Finally (and while · not. in-
tending to decry
.
_
the classical
continued on page
6
Tara Scanlon
Lisa Crandall·
Dianne Gallagher
Kevin Shulz
Ted Waters
Frank Raggo, Laura Reichert,
Photography Staff
Gina Franclscovich, Jeff Kiely,
Bill Travers
Roger Romano, Jane Scarchllll,
Mark Stuart, Gwen Swinton,
Kyle Miller, Jeanne LeGloahec
Jim Barnes
Boppin Bob Weinman, Mark Zangari
Joe Dldzlulls
Faculty
Advisor
David Mccraw
Adrienne Ryan
Gene Llannis
\
------------------------------------April 14, 1983· THE CIRCLE·
Pages--
The
....
realized
when
was deal ~ith guzzling mugs of beer
registering for courses for the fall · without spilling on your three
semester of next year that Marist. piece suit.
only offers three years of wor- .
Science, Technology and Extra-
thwhile courses. So I started to
marital Affairs: A course for the
think of some of the courses that
scientist of the eighties. Some· of
they could offer to provide a full
the topics covered will be; the
four-year education.-
· theory of relativity, photosyn-
Foolish Fox:
Bathroom Stall Etiquette I: In·· thesis, genetic engineering and
this course we will explore the· quickie divorces. This course is
basic methods of toilet use, toilet
recommended for all students
paper management, and wiping
interested in gynecology.
techniques. Reading material will
Workshop in
Pornography:
be optional, but each student will
This will be a workshop class in
be
expected to
give a fifteen
the wonderful world of hard-core
minute presentation on coping
porno. The primary focus will be
with ,cold toilet seats. Each
on written material, but film will
student is expected to purchase
also be explored.
Required
A.
course
of course
their own supplies.
.
reading includes; Penthouse, Oui,
Beer
Drinking
with
Buns and Boobs and The Norton
Management Applications: This
Ant ho Io g y
of
Taste I es s
course deals with
the con-
Literature. All students will be
sumption of large amounts of expected to pose for a layout
alcohol while managing a small . before the end of the term. This
accounting firm. Amid-term and _. course is · recommended
for.
final will be administered in order 'Fashion
Design
Majors and;
to rate the students course ·per-
convicted rapists.
formance. The course will also.
General Class Skipping I: The
Reel impressions
Teenage gangs roam the city
streets at night, mugging and
robbing people, selling drugs,
stealing cars, and, as one would ·
expect to happen eventuaJly,
killing people.
Bad boys
The gangs in Bad Boys come in
three basic types: Caucasian,
Negro, and Hispanic. We see that
they all have·pretty lousy lives at
. home, but that is to be expected.
The parents are too naive to know
what their kids do at night.
Friday: On Campus
"Snow White and
the Seven Dwa_rfs"
9 a.m.
&
12 noon
Theatre
Airforce Recruitment
10 a.m. - CC269-
Commuter Union
Meeting
2p.m.-D249
R.A.
Workshop
2:1S p.r11. - CC248
Golf for Cystic
,
Fibrosis, 2:30 p;m.
College Hall, Pok.
$4.SO for
9 holes
contact Leslie, 6-114 ·
Men's Tennis vs.
Bard,
3:30 p.m.
Psi Chi Induction
Ceremony, 6 p.m.
Fireside
· "Snow White and.
the Seven Dwarfs"
7:30 p.m. Theatre
. Mastermind
Tournament
9 p.m. Fireside
Mr. Marist Night
9 p.m. Dining Room
The Chance:
Guitarist
Steve Morse
(of The Dregs) and
Morst, Code, 56
The Bardavon:
Vassar Repertory
Dance Theatre at
the Bardavon Opera
House, 8 p.m.
Gen. Adm.,
$S
Groups of 10,
$4
Student and Senior
Citizens,
$3
Saturday: On Campus:
"Snow White and
the Seven Dwarfs"
1&7&9p.m.
Theatre
Rehearsal for
Experimental
Theatre, 2 p.m.
Fireside
Lacrosse vs.
New Haven, 1 p.m. ·
Mass, 6:15 p.m.
Chapel
Mixer sponsored by
IHC and Commuter
Union,
9 p.m.
Dining room
The Chance:
ZEBRA
At Vassar:
Vassar
College
Student
Entertainnient
Committee presents
"The English
Beat"
in concert with
special guest
"R.E.M."
at Kenyon Hall
Vassar Campus
Tickets: 510
Sunday: On Campus
Mass, 11 a.m.
Chapel
"Snow White and
the Seven Dwarfs"
1
p.m. Theatre
Barbeque for North
En~ Residents,
2
p.m.
The Chance:
T.B.A.
The
Bardavon:
Hud59n Valley
Philharmonic
Audience·
Choice Concert
Beethoven, Berlioz,
Mozart- 8 p.m.
Call HVP for Info.
454-1222
Sean Penn (Fast Times at
Ridgemont High) is the head
honcho of the Caucasian gang.
He talks a buddy into heisting the
money from a drug deal that is to
be made between the Negroes and
the Hispanics. What follows is a
very exciting · (and bloody)
confrontation as all three gangs
clash in a plethora of bullets and
confusion. The little brother of
the leader of the Hispanic gang is
killed in the onslaught, which
prompts
him
to
threaten
Monday: The Chance
Video
ELO and Genesis
Free admission
requiremellls
for
this course
include missing every class and
doing no studying what so ever.
There will be no teacher for this
independent sttidy course, but we·
will give you three credits and
take your four hundred dollars.
General Class Skipping Lab:
This course is to be taken con-
. currently with General Class
Skipping.
There
are
no
requirements and. irresponsibility
is stressed.
Hard Drugs for the Liberal
Arts Major: This course will deal
with the problem of drugs on the
college campus. As a semester
long project each student will be
required to submit a proposal
to
have more drugs distributed on
campus.
As
the
semester
progresses students will be en-
couraged to experiment with
various forms of hallucinogetic
drugs. The final will consist of
snorting a tuition's worth of
cocaine.
Required
materials
include: A mirror, razor blade,
vengeance towards the leader of
the Caucasians (Penn).
They both end up in the same
correctional center, and, without
giving away
too
much of the
story, you know there will be a
final confrontation between the
two.
The movie offers some above-
standard performances by Penn
(in a different role from that in
Fast
Times), Esai Morales (in the
role of the Hispanic leader) and
bong and two Doors albums.
Managerial
and
Sexual
Behavior: In this course the
wonders of sexuality in
the
business world will be explored.
Topics such as, How
to
become
sexually agrcssivc with
your
superiors and Making it with the
vice president of finance will be
explored. Beer . Drinking with
Management Applications is a
prerequisite.
Mass Confusion: This course is
an introductory exercise on the
impossibility of finding a job as a
Confusion Ans Major. Press
Freedom and Radio Broadcasting
will also be covered.
Intermediate French Kissing
I:
Explore the wonders of swapping
spit in a classroom athmosphere.
This course should be taken con-
currently with
the · Physical
Education Course
in
Tonsil
Hockey.
Now I just have to figure out
which courses are Liberal Arts
courses and which aren't.
by Reni Santoni (as one of the
more predominant correctional
officers). Trivia fans
may
remeber Santoni as Clint East-
wood's partner in Dirty Harry.
Although the movie is very
fast-paced at times, there arc a
number of segments along the
way that could have been deleted.
It seems like we take a lot longer
to reach the final climax then we
need to. Even so, there are worse
things you could waste two hours
on.
Tuesday: On Campus
Literary Society
Lecture: "Italian
Literature"
8
p.m.
Wednesday:
Thursday: On Campus
Coffeehouse
featuring
The Chance:
Southside Johnny &
the Asbury Jukes,
8:30p.m.,SU_
The Bardavon:
Bardavon
Film Society
presents "The Shop
Around the Corner"
8p.m.
Gen. Ad.
$2.S0
Members SI
On Campus
Spanish Night
7p.m.
Criminal Justice
Career Day
The Chance:
T.B.A.
Linda Black,
9
p.m.
CUB Golf
Tournament
The Chance:
Kate&Anna
McGarrigle
in a very rare club
appearance,
$7.SQ
i
\
·
1
I
I
- - •
·
Page
6 • THE
CIRCLE•
April 14, 1983
·
Jim Raimo
·
to leave
by
Kris Lawas
The reign of Jim Raimo as the
residen( director of both Leo and
Sheahan l-Iall will come to an end
this June after many years of
service to the Marist community
.
Raimo's decision to resign as
resident director came about after
his parents, Jim and Kitty Raimo,
purchased ·"Mr. Sausage," a
small family restaurant in Hyde
Park, this past October. Raimo,
in an agreement with his parents,
·
will
be joining the new business to
·
work full time at the end of this
academic year
.
Raimo graduated from Marist
College in 1981 with a Bachelor of
Arts Degree in Political Science.
During his college years he
became active in the residence
staff. In 1979-80, he was the
resident coordinator of Benoit
House and in 1980-81 he became
the assistant resident director of
the freshmen dorms. After his
graduation, Raimo applied for
the freshmen resident director
position and won the spot.
"I became interested in the
position mainly because of what
the position could give me," said
Raimo. "I knew many of the
resident directors back then and
they really liked their jobs. As an
assistant resident director, I really
.
enjoyed
it.
.
It
was really
something to see a group of
people working together. It gave
me a sense of accomplishment.
That's a major reason why I
decided to
try
the position.,,
.
OPEN 24 HOURS
.
.
.
,,
'
.
.
'
,•
.
PALACE
·
01NER
&
RESTAURANT
·
Breakfast - Lunch - i>in,ier
Fresh Seafood - Steaks - Chops
Cocktails - Baki~g on Premises
_
(NEXT TO All SPORT)
Show your collsgs JD and gB.t a FREE
Glass of Beer with your meal!
7%
DISCOUNT
194 WASHINGTON STREET
·
POUGHKEEPSIE,_ NEW'
·.
YORK
.· '
:
R~!~~c~l
lHUTllf
ACRES Of FREE PAR!<ING
Friday
~
Thursday
One Week Only
THE VERDICT
With Paul
Newman
.
Call Theatre for Times
Starts Friday
April 22
The following internships
·
-·
are still
-
available for the
.
Summar:
Dutchess
Bank
-Controllers
·
~
Trust
Dept.
·
-credit Dept.
·
Northern Dutchess Hospital
_
·
-Biology
-
.
-Chemistry
-
··
t.B.M.
Fox Street
·
-Salas
·
Shwartz
&
Company
.
-Retailing
Do you
have
a s
·
ummer job?
.
Would you like to get College
·
credit
tor
it?
As the freshman
resident
director, Raimo
.
said that he feels
he accomplished -many positive
things at Marist .
,
J3
.
[[B.Aftb
>·
·
j
·
/!
ii~
.
~i
i\~t~,1~us
if'
,~
D230for more lnf9r-
.
''1'.fee\ that I became a positive
role
.
model for students," said
·
Raimo; «They could reline to
me
because
I
wasn't too old. When
they
-·
realized that I was a recent
graduate,
.
•·
they saw me dif- . - - - - - - - - - - - -
1111111
- - - - - - - - - - - - •
.,. . . .
_
_
~ - - - - •
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
~~~:::~~s::e::::ee;e::u::a:a~:
.C
-
·
-
L·
Ass
·
·
M:arist COffee Shop
proved to the school that events
could be run by students.
th;;y;:;:.:sg,o~:tWa~:C~~r!!,~
·
-
_
.
o
·
F
.
F
·
IC
•·_
ER
·
·
.
1- BELONG
·
TO
..
·
even allowed .
.
There wasn.'t any
.
T
.
HE
·
_
MA
·
R
· ·
1
·
s
··
T
·
·_.
·
.
/
confidence in
.
the snidents.
·
.
·
.
•
·
However, I always encouraged
EL
.
ECTIONS
~t:o~~~~t~~~~~i~:~t~c~p!!~~
.
·
.
_·.
_
··.·
.
_
-
.
.
.
_
·
..
·
.
..
.
.
.
MUNCH BUNCH
students involved in functions
,
·
1
.
·
.
.
feel
that
.
I
accomplished
something," said Raimo
.
"I've
been able to get more student
involvment
-
in
the
House
Councils, field days, and I was
Commuters & Residents:
-·:
.
also able
to
prove to students that
they could have fun at an event
·
that didn't involve alcohol, such
as
·
the past freshmen variety
show." However, Raimo
·
also
said that at times things weren~t
too smooth.
·
,
.
.
"I don't" feel that they have a
very good training program for
the residence staff," said Raimo.
"I
·
wasn't trained very well and I
made mistakes. I had to learn
certain skills. I had to learn to be
flexible. At times my lack
·
ofskills
got in the way. This year, I have a
better relationship with my
staff."
Raimo said that he feels Maris~
has greatly improved ov~r the
years.
"Marist now attracts students
who really want and are interested
.
in learning ~ot. only a career but
themselves. The school
.
has
greatly improved for the students
in a social aspect by allowing
more student events.''
Whether or not Raimo's
resignation will be permanent on
his part is uncertain.
"Someday I'd like to come
back, depending on how things
work out," said Raimo. "My
~ays here have been very
rewarding. I'll never forget the
people I've worked with and the
good times we've had. They've
been
the best."
Candidates
Forum-
Monday
April
·_
18
'
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
·
•
.
.
·
•
·
9
.
:3
_
0
:
p.m.
,:
:
·,
,
-
:--
· Room
··
cc:
~
;
249
.
VOTE:
·
Tuesday April 19
and
Wednesday
April
20
11 :00-1 :30 in Donnelly
4:00-6:·oo
in
Campus Center
.
'
·Save 10%
·
Check out ~oupon
booklet. Good in
Coffee Shop,
Deli
~~
Dining Hall
Coffee Shop
-
Special
.
·
Hot Dog and Soda $1.00
Purchase of booklets
may be made
in
Food-Service Office
r
'
i
.
.•.
..
..
.
,
..
.
....
~
.
.
..
'
.
.
.
.
April
14, 1983 ·
THE CIRCLE·
Page
7 - - •
New
Officers
·
outline plans for
'83-'84
year
·.
:
SACseeks
recognition
by Bonnie Hede
.
.
.
_
The newly-elected president of
the
:
Student Academic Com~
mittee, . Margaret Freund, said
this
week
·
that
·
the biggest
challenge she will face in her
1983-84 term of office will be
making the S.A.C. known to
Marist students.
Freund, a junior, who was an
·
s.A.C. member this academic
·
year
.
and also on the Financial
Board as a representative of the
S.A.C. does not allow the
committee to represent the
student body adequately. "The
.
S.A.C. was formed as a· liaison
.
between students and faculty, to
keep the lines of communication
. open," he said. "We can't do that
·
if the students don't know we
exist."
Besides
taking · legitimate
·.
complaints and problems con-
cerning professors and students to
the department chairpersons, the
.
committee
·
also helps students
. contact hard to reach adjunct
'
professors and set up meetings
with them, according to Freund.
·
·
The S.A.C
.
has helped to initiate
new courses of study, such as the
Irish Studies program, and is
·
Leader$hip
·
forum-set
currently working on getting the
administration to keep the lower
level of
.
the library 1Jpen longer at
night, she said.
· Dawn Joy Oliver, the
·
current
S.A.C. president, agrees with
Freund that students need to be
informed ·or
.
the committee's
existence. •:The S.A,C
.
is an
academic organization, nor a
social one,
,
this is written
.
in the
S.A.C. constitution. Because of
this we don't sponsor mixers and
other activities and don'i get the
publicity we need," she said.
Oliver said that the new
president should widely publicize
the· committee to make it known.
"We
·
can be of great use to the
students once they know to come
to us with their problems," she
said. "Last semester we took
three students' grievances
·
about
professors
to
the
proper
department chairpersons and
have heard that things are much
improved in those situations. The
administration has been very
cooperative."
Freund won the race for
president of S
.
A.C. after a tie
vote and a subsequent run-off
election. Don
•
Eustace, Freund's
opponent, will be the S.A.C. vice-
president this year. "We had
informally
_
agreed before the
election that the runner-up would
be the vice-president," Freund
A panel discussion, "Student
Involvement
.·
ih. Government,"
will be
·
presented by Eleanor '
_
,
Roosevelt's Val-Kill, Inc.
(ERVK)
.
-';
in the Campus Center Theatre on
.-.-_,.:
,:
Tuesday at 4 p.m.
··
·
'
·
~
-
·
~
~
\
.
.
,.
,.;
The p;~gram
~ill
focus on the
experiences
··
and
.
interaction of
.
three students of the 1930' s and
five stuqents of the l 980's.
The featured participants are
James
·
Frederick Green, Viola
llma and Jack Richard Mc-
.
Michael for the l 930's and Robert
Eisman, Bard College, AQnette
Martin,
Dutchess Community
College, Barbara Demeter, _Marist
College,
and Franklin Fink,
Vassar College for the 1980's.
•
·
.....;;
;..;;,;
=.-
,'.I
I,
-
-
r
· said, "I'm really happy about this
because Don is enthusiastic and
dedicated."
Freund
s
aid that she sees her
goals for the S.A.C. tie into the
goals of the 'Students for Jn-
teractive Change,
•
the ticket she
ran on, which created a stir by
winning all but one office in this
election. "The Interactive Change
group
realizes
that
com
-
munications between students and
administration need to be im-
proved, on both sides, and is
willing to do something about it,"
she said.
"Students complain that the
administration does not inform
them," Freund said, "but _the
students don't always go out
_
of
iheir way to ask questions or
communicate with' the
·
aa:.
ministration. The s:KC:
.'
can
:
ait'd
will
improve this situation.,,
.
·
Barnes eyes
_
new projects
by Mike Hayden
Newly elected College Union
Board President Jim Barnes has
big plans for next semester.
According to Barnes, next
semester's plans include com-
puterization of
.
all · C.U.B.
financial
records,
programs
involving a Marist television
network, formation of
a
public
opinion organization and the
possibility of holding a major
concert
.
.
"One major goal for next
semester will be to computerize
the organization," said Barnes.
·
"the computer society
is
already
proposing Jo help
.
all the clubs
organize and get
their in-
formation down on computers."
The C.U.B.
is
a student
organization that is res
.
ponsible
for sponsoring and expanding
social and educational programs
·
for students at Marist College.
The organization consists of four
elected officers and seven ap-
.
·
pointed chairmen.
_
·
''.I am .very eager to get as many
people
·
involved
·
as·
f
can," said
Barnes, in regard to appointing
C.U
.
B
.
chairmen
.
·
There
have
been
many
suggestions for new programs
next semester including
.
ex-
perimentation with a Marist
television network. "We cannot
promise results without support,
so if students are interested they
should consider applying," said
Barnes.
The television network could
conceivably be hooked up with
the existing cable connections in
dorm
·
rooms allow in~ student
films
10
be shown as well as
c
ampu
s
advcrciscincnt
s
.
"A concert committee will also
be appointed in the hope of
getting a major concert
s
pon-
s
ored,"
s
aid Barne
s
. "A nmccrr
at Marist has alwav!> been a
consideration
but· due
1,,
technicalities a concert has vet
10
be approved," said Barnes. ·
Another
program · belll!!
considered for the CSL next vear
is a public opinion organizat.ion.
"I feel it would be a good idea
to
have th
e
CSL print a forum which
would help the administration
and students communicate more
effectively.
The organization
would be permanently set up to
handle questionnaires and ideas
brought about by student
s
."
Barnes said.
The remaining
.
three elected
positions to C.U.B. have not been
determined at this point. Ber-
nadette Cosner,
the current
C.U.8. president, said that these
positions would be internally
filled by herself, Barnes and Betty
Yeaglin, coordinator of college
activities. "The C.U.B
.
is
i
n the
process of requmng future
ca1'didates of elected positions to
have at least one year of ex-
perience in the C.U.B. This i
s
because of the enormous amount
of work to do, you need some
kind of experience," said Cosner.
·
Act
.
student
:
;
-~iris
.
awar(t
,
i ,
;:l•;:c1JJ!
;if~
Marist student Joan "Schat-
zie" Gasparovic is
·
one of 30
- college seniors from
·
New York,
New Jersey, Connecticut and
Pennsylvania to be
.
awarded a full
scholarship to attend an ad-
vertising seminar in New York
.
City this week;
.
.
.
. ;
The scholarship is sponsored by
The Direct Mail/Marketing
Educational Foundatjon a
.
nd
Direct Marketing Day in New
York Selection Committee. It is
taking place at The Summit Hotel
and consists of a seminar focusing
.
.
on different aspects of direct mail
marketing. Thes
·
e aspects include
creativity in direct mail and
response advertising, testing and
measuring results and space and
broadcast advertising.
A · faculty
of about
12
marketing experts will conduct
the seminars in their specialty
fields.
.
.
Gasparovic said _she was asked
by her advertising teacher, Gene
Rebcook,
·.
to apply
for
the
scholarship.
Her advertising
background, which
includes
classes
in
advertising and
marketing, and school activities
such as holding the office of
studenc body president helped her
to win the scholarship, she said.
·
Ready
to cruise
Campus skaters get ready for fun in the sun on Friday, but
rain put
a
damper on the event,
which
.
was sponsored by
the
CUB
.
·
·
(photo
by Gina Franciscovich)
PrQject 2nd
.·
Chance does just that
by
Kris
Lawas
·
•·
.
.
ih;;t{}~
~:J
ear;old
·
Sheena
Hawkins is
·
a
divorced
homemaker with four children
and wants to
.
be more self-
supportive.
.
.
Forty
·
seven-year-old Mary
Healy wants to make a complete
career changeover
.
Dorothy Bellochio is 35 years
old and wants to do something
for herself.
What these women all have in
common is that they are
.
college
students enrolled al Marist in a
course entitled Project Second
Chance.
Julianne
·
Maher, dean of adult
education, said, "Project Second
Chance is a course designed for
women entering the 'job market
for the first time, planning to
enter college, undecided about
careers, or unsure of how to
combine a family, school and a
career."
Project Second Chance was
first introduced to Marist in 1981
~nd achieved acceptanci
a
s1
wei
L
·
as approval from both the new
students and the
;
administration.
According
to
Maher, a program
like this was needed at the college.
"Many
women
are
·
ap-
prehensive and are unsure of
themselves when faced with the
task of going to college for the
first time or returning
10
school,"
said Maher.
"It's a big step for a
woman to take. After being in a
kitchen rather than a classroom
for a number of years, they don't
know what to expect."
"What this course does is help
prepare these older women for
college
,
" said Cathleen Alban,
adult
·
education
academic
counselor and instructor of the
course. "The program teaches
these women how
10
write a
resume, how to go about looking
for a job and what
10
expect in the
career world," she said.
"This course has helped me
tremendously,'' said Bellochio.
"I'm a cashier in a Grand Union
and I wanted to do more with my
lid
}
i
.
ha\;; one son and I don't
want
to be the type
·
or woman
who
,
doesn't know what to do
with her
'
life once her children are
on their own
.
"
The women said that they had
noticed many changes in college
since they first started.
"When I was in college
,
it was
extremely strict," said Barbara
Ambrose, a 46-year-old school
teacher. "Socially, we had a lot of
limitations. We had curfew
s
that
would be laughed at today
.
I
think that the way Marist and
colleges like this school are run
give students more freedom to
grow
.
as individuals," she said.
"I never went
to college
before," said Bellochio
.
"1 had
always anticipated it as being
snobbish kids studying 24 hours a
day
.
Now, I get an entirely dif-
ferent picture
.
It's more relaxed
and easy-going
.
"
Although Marist will not help
place these women in jobs, the
course has helped prepare them
10
be able to go out into the job
market with more confidence and
skills.
"These women have a great
chance of succeeding in the career
world
,
" according
·
to Marge
Palmer, coordinator of job
location
and
development.
"Although some people tend to
think that their ages will cause a
disadvantage, it is actually an
asset. Employers will look at
these women as having more
·
experience with life and will in
many instances hire them over
much younger people. Age really
isn't a deciding factor," she said.
Although the course ha
s
already concluded for this year,
Adult Education will be spon-
soring Project Second Chance
again ne
x
t year.
"This course has reall
y
given
me more confidence. Even my
husband notices me as being more
out-going," said Bellochio. "So
.
what if they have to eat hot dogs
when I
'
m at school. I'm doing
this [or me."
I
~
l
I
I~
I
l
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
r
--•Page
B• THE CIRCLE-April
14,
1983 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
Around, the world in a single semester
by Laura Reichert
The institute is a national
Most of the 60 courses offered
Kissel, who spent some of his
"Sometimes pictures would fall
off the walls."
The campus travels from
country to country, giving its
students the chance to take what
they learn out of the classroom
and experience it in Japan, India,
Egypt, and. eight other countries
visited during the semester.
nonprofit
organization
which
are similar to those offered during
trips exploring Mount Everest in
makes the program available to
an average semester · at
the
Nepal and touring the pyramid~
colleges
and
universities
University of ·Pittsburgh and
in Egypt said that he felt he
throughout the United States,
many, such as International
learned much more about the
said Judy Dennehy; associate
Economics, Cultural Geography,
different countries by actually
director of admissions for the
and Elementary Chinese relate to
being there.
program.
the ports at which the ships dock.
Some of the broad field ac- ·
The ship includes classrooms,
laboratories, lounges, a library,
book store, cafeteria, swimming
pool, basketball and volleyball
courts, hospital, and hair salon.
The student cabins are available
as singles, doubles, triples and
·quadruples with or without
portholes. The ship can hold up to
500 students · and classes usually
range from
five
to twenty
students each.
For the fall semester the ship
The field programs, which are
tivities include a three .day bus
leaves the U.S. from Seattle,
conducted on land are classified
tour or-Seoul in South Korea, a
Wash., on Sept. 14 and returns at
into three groups:
Standard
visit to the Taj Mahal in India, a
Port Everglades, Fla., on Dec. 23.
Practica,
Course-Related
tour of Istanbul in Turkey, a.trip
During the voyage the ship will
Practica, and Optional Pay Trips.
to Corinth in Greece and an
stop at the cities of Kobe, Japan;
Standard Practica are events that
orientation · of Casablanca in
Pusan, Korea; Keelung, Taiwan;
relate broadly to the "nature of . Morocco.
The campus is aboard the
cruise ship, S.S. Universe and the
program is Semester at Sea, an
academic program sponsored by
the University of Pittsburgh in
. cooperation with the Institute for
Shipboard
Education.
This
program
is
now
taking
registration for the fall of 1983
semester.
Hong Kong; Jakarta, Indonesia;
the voyage." These include state
The ship spends from three to
Bombay, India; Colombo, Sri
department briefings by U.S. ·• eight days in each port and three
Lanka;
Alexandria,
Egypt;
Ambassadors,
programs. in-
in-port experiences are required
Haifa, Israel; Piraeus, Greece and
volving local universities, · and
for each student per semester.
-
Cadiz, Spain.
folk music and dance programs..
.Students -must carry_ at· Jeast
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Course-related' field activities
four courses a semester and, said
The professors are selected
from colleges and universities
around the U.S. and from some
foreign countries said Dennehy.
For every 30 professors that
apply, only one is chosen.
More letters
are those most closely rela~ed
19 ..
Kissel, the. studying is "con-
each student's academic•p~9gram ; 'derised." •Most. of the work is
and optional pay-trips are those · done between ports so that ·the
Student organizations on board
-include drama club, student
newspaper, student council and
choir. There are also activities
such as dances and talent shows.
continued from page 4
approach to collegiate studies), I
am convinced that interning is a
refreshing, workable alternative
to a strictly book-and-lecture
education. Because it introduces
students to possible career choices
and places them in a professional
ambiance, the internship program
at Marist enriches and underpins
the college's liberal arts tradition.
Brian Hanley
Ignorance
To the Editor:
after my enlistment expired, the
I received a letter in the mail -
chance to pursue a college
not two weeks ago as
did
all education at no cost to me· or my
freshmen listed on· the "dean's family, thanks to the G.I. Bill .
. list" -
eight years ago from the
Now, of course, the Bill is no
U.S. Marine Corps informing me longer in available for those
of the opportunity to experience wishing to enlist in the armed
what very few other "future high forces, but if. that "dean's list"
school graduates" might never freshman who wrote in two weeks
have the chance to do. That was ago would do some investigating
regarding the chance to enhance he would have found that since
my physical ability as well as my the mid-70's the military's
furture educational advancement enlisted personnel is composed of
by joining this elite group of over 90 percent of men and
young men who are respected not .women who have high school
only in this country but by other educations.
fighting forces around the world.
And if this smart student is too
With no set plans to . attend smart to be caught in the military
college following my graduation, then he isn't bright. enough to
and the reasoning of why blow knowthat a college graduate can
thousand_s
I
of · dollars of my attain-a commission·',fo'be,come··:·
parents money for an education an officer. And if he might look a :
that I wasn't ready to begin, I little harder he would see that an
eagerly enlisted in the Corps. officer in the military just might
After spending three summer make more money in the service
months at Parris Island, South than a college graduate who takes
Carolina, watching 98 young men -a job on the "outside." Also,
start and having only 68 com-
becoming an officer allows you
plete, I was proud of myself for the chance to do work in your
not only surviving but for being field of study rather than ac-
one of seven people chosen by the cepting a job that may only give
drill instructors to be promoted you the chance to use.little of your
meritoriously for my
per-
studied
skills.
·formance.
Just one more point .for this
I did not torture myself nor was "dean's list" whiz kid. He wishes
I tortured by my superiors during the college would .• screen . the .
. my stay at this "summer resort." people that they giye his grades
I learned a lot about myself and out to. A college is not a person
more about others in respect of and therefore can not be classified
who· I could trust and those who I as a they· but rather as an
ii
should not.
. because.it •is an object. Not bad
But the biggest reward was for a former ignorent g·rum, huh!
what I had to look forward to
Matthew P. Mclnerny
Rabid newshounds
_ Dear Editor,
theory I advanced in my last
Well, we tried .to keep it a correspondence with you was
· secret,
but . your_:- crack in-· another smoke screen· to throw.
vestigative ·reporters finally Walter off the scent. I realize it
penetrated our cover story. I am, was only a matter of time before
· of course, referring to the daring he, or someone
·
with an,·equally
expose, "The Bowman-Douherty ridicul~us
·
pseudonym, blows that
Connection," which appeared in one equally sky high. So here it is,
your April l issue. I guess we the awful, unvarnished truth.
should have known better than to And it ain't pretty ...
think we could conceal anything
Richie is the victim of a deep-
from - the likes -0f "Walter seated inferiority complex. You
Mapey" and his pack of rabid see, during the operation to
newshounds.
separate us soon after birth
But ·. there is more to the · (readers will recall we were joined
Bowman-Douherty c.onnection (I at the groin) the Chief of Surgery
mean beyond the misspelling of made the incision a lot closer to
Richie's last name): the shocking Richie than to me:
answer to the question, "Why is
Rich obsessed with replying to my
· letters?" The simple cage-rattling
Sincerely
Michael Bowman
Residence Director
Women
To the Editor:
I am in full agreement with the
writers of the Circle column 'It
ain't necessarily so' and their
expression of disappointment in
the March 3rd issue.
It is a shame
that Marist has not merited
recognition as an institution
which places women in leadership
positions.
It also seems that tactics is a
point of discord between myself
and the columnists. Instead of
naming names as they have so.
adroitly done, we ought to be
exploring areas in the Marist
community where women can be
introduced in primary roles. If
not, we are going to be pushed
aside, unnoticed, with no one to
blame but ourselves.
Diane Loiacono
activities which aren't required in
students can spend more time
~he academic_ program. These
sight-seeing. Classes meet every
include educauonal tours through
day but Sunday while at sea.
places that are normally difficult
The voyage lasts 100 9ays, half
to . tra;el throu~h such_ as t~e
of w.hich are spent travelling.-·
People s Repubhc of Chma, said
Kissel recalled a few times when
Dennehy.
. .
. .
the trip got a little rough. "I'd be
Students must send their
transcripts to be evaluated by the
Uni\l_ersity of Pittsburgh in order
to apply for admission and have
to have finished at feast one
semester of college.
Studen~s are · also ~ree to
sitting in th~ classroom and
arra~ge mdepend:nt tnps, ~c-
looking out the porthole. One
cording to Ted Kissel, a Manst
minute I'd see the sky and the
student who was involved in the next minute I'd see a wall of water
program and is promoting it here.
from
a
wave,"
he
said.
The cost for the semester is
$8,280 said Dennehy and the
program selects students fr.om 35
schools per semester.
THE VPI
RESUME-WRITING
AND-
<> . .
\£.OVER LETTER
,
, "·': c·:C
'?i?,;'tf\Vo
RKSH OP
At the VPI Resume-Writing and Cover-Letter Workshop
each student receives the following:
·
1 -
½
Hour
Lttctura
on Resume-Writing,
Covar Letters, and
Job-Interviewing
Techniques, etc.
10-Min.
Break.
20-Minute Question
&
Answer'
Period/' ··
'•
:
- • .
30-Mlnute Works.hop
on Job-Description
Writing.
1. A Blue Folder
containing
. 2-.
A 52-Page Resume-Analysis and
Cover~Letter Book. :
3.- ~ix Skill Analysis· Sheets.
1
· 4. A CHECS LIST Employment
Chronology Analysis Form.
2
5. Eight Resume-Format Blanks -
4 each- of 2.
3
6. An ~mployer-lnterview_ Report
Form.•
·
7. 18 inches.of Correction Tape.
8. Note Paper, pencil.
9. Workshop Review Sheet.
5
·10. Press-On Type Bonus.
8
1
To facilitate the prioritization of job function within job descriptions.
2
To help organize employment and other time-periods for resume~job-history
description.
3
To aid the resume-writer in balancing [VISUALLY] his/her resume.
4
An actual Employer-Interview Form with a check list of attributes to analyse
in an employment interview.
5
A Workshop Overview of its most important points, for quick review.
11
Referral-Related Bonus (Everyone gets one, regardless) of Press-On Type for head-
lining the student's resume job titles, companies, objectives, etc.
-
-·
--
-
------------------------------------------April 14, 1983 · THE CIRCLE -Page 9
.Area /;Jar owners are getting the big picture
by Luane Remsburger
nightly fee charged by bands.
screen is connected to a bottom clubs, such as the Briarpatch,
.
.
·
-.
-
·''.A
·
club can get a video system
console. Inside the console are have the added expense of a
On this particular Saturday
for as low
·
as $2,500," he said.
three
picture
tubes
.
with "V .J" _ a video jockey who,
night, the seats are all
.
taken at the
"Most bands charge from $300 to
projection lenses. These lenses according to· Ballantine, charges
:
Briarpatch Lounge in Carmel,
$400 per night. That means an
send
out three different images on
from $50 to $100 per night. The
·N.Y . .
,
Guys wearing leather owner pays the same for
~
an
the screen. The images, which are real test, therefore, is whether the
.
jackets and
-
Levis and
-
girls in
unlim
.
ited number
·
of video
red, green, and blue, then overlap video system
pays
off J'or the
anything from skins to mini-skirts presentations
·
as he would for
to form the picture.
club.
According
to
Rosalie
turn toward
.
the front of the room only about eight appearan~es by a
What actually ends up on the Weeden
·
,· publicity director for
as Chrissie Hynde and the barid."
Besides the initial cost, some The Chance,
in
Poughkeepsie,
·
Pretenders perform their latest - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - bar-video has passed this im-
_
hit. Before long, Fleetwood Mac
'People come into. bars and
portant test with flyin~colors.
appears, followed by Tom Petty,
Toto and Diana Ross.
·
t
·
th•
th t
"It's going over very well," she
With this lineup,
there's
Wan
·
SOme Ing
a
goes
said; refering to The Chance's
something to please almost
beyond' the1·r own
.
T.V.
·
These
elaborate video set-up, "and it's
everyone, especially the club's
continuing to build up."
owner, Joe Cmar. Why is he so
sy
·
stems let them sit and drink
Just one
.
example of this,
happy?
Weeden said, was the recent
He didn't have to pay these
,
groups a cent to appear.
with their friends while wat-
~h~st~o~~~-o:~\~~t~c;r
~f~!i
No, he's not a magician. Cmar
ching
a
game_
.
or
.
fig.ht/
episode drew about 300 viewers to
the home of the largest video
is just one of many b a r - o w n e r s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
turning to an alternate form of
Cmar, who used to hire live
,
s
'
creen depends on the video tape
entertainment: video.
bands
,
on several nights, agreed.
being used. Whether a rock video
"We've
·had
our video system for or a regular movie, the cassettes
According to Chuck Ballantine,
about two months and it has gone are run in a video recorder similar
of Ballantine Communications
·
over very good
,
We're
using
it to home models. Ballantine said.
and Staging, video systems are seven nights a week now," he
"This type of system ranges
being used by more and more said. "The initial cost is a lot, but from $2,000 to $4,000 and can be
nightclubs
in
replacement of and you're paying far Jess in the long
,
installed
in
about an hour," he
alongside live entertainment.
run."
said. He added that this week he
Ballantine; who owns a video
The initial cost Cmar refered to had talked with two clubowners·
production studio and sells .and
depends on the type of system the who are interested in installing
installs
professional
_
video club decides to install. The most such systems.
equipment, said these systems are
popular system,
·
according
,to
The
more
conser·vative
appealing because they involve an
Ballantine, is called a
·
self-
clubowner might still wonder if
initial cost only, compared to the
contained system in which a large the cost of video is worthwhile.
Marist
·
to request
_
ri-ver lab funding
by
Cindy Bennedum
...
_
money may help fund an in depth
,
study of PCBs in the river .
The Hudson River will
_become
a classroom ifMa:rist
-
receives
a
$1
·
'
A
.
riverfront lab, which is
·
.
million research grant
.
this year.
-
located
'
in Marisf's' co
·
rnell
The grant, available for the
_
boath6use,
Will
be the base for the
first
_
time this year, is
sponsored
river
·
research. Samples
·
taken
by the Hudson River Foundation.
,
from the river
.
will be brought
Funds for the grant were collected
back to the lab arid arialyzed.
two years ago from
-
power
co111panies along the river. Twelve
companies contributed $1 million
each. The interest on this money
·
is
now available for river
research.
·
The request for the grant will
be written by Dr. Wang Hwa Wti,
director of environmental science,
and Dr. William Perrotte Jr.,
assistant professor of biology.
According to Dr. Wu, the
.
Dr. Perrotte said,
"Because
this lab is on the water front,
it
puts us in an excellent position to
·
get some of this money.''
screen in the country, she said.
"The video-bash went over
better than we could have ever
expected," she said. "
·
We just
threw it on the calendar at the last
minute and
it
ended up we
couldn't seat everybody."
As the
MASH
bash
_.,,
example
illustrates, rock video is only one
use for big screen video systems in
nightclubs.
According
to
Ballantine, their versatility is
another reason for their bar
-
room
popularity.·
"One of the biggest for the
systems
is
sporting events."
Ballantine said.
"People
come
into bars and want
something
that
goes beyond their own T. V. These
systems let them
sit
and drink ·
with their friends while watching
a game or fight on a life-size
screen.
This is real popular.··
Video and live entertainment.
however, are not usually ex-
clusive, he said. Larger clubs find
video
systems
useful in com-
bination with live acts.
"Sometimes a large club with
one or more rooms will focus
video cameras on the band." he
said. "They then run the video of
.
the band on a
screen
in another
part of the club. That way.
everyone gets to sec the band
without having a mob around the
stage."
"Discos use video in a similar
way," he said. "Often, they will
point the
cameras
on the dancers
so they can watch themselves in
action on the screen."
Such "action" is characteristic
of video entertainment
in
whatever form. Whether a prize
fight or a rock video, Ballantine
said the
systems
provide a new
dimension in viewing and will
continue to play a growingly
important role in nightclub en-
tertainment.
Regtsir~tion
·
moved
up
River research can also be done
directly from the lab; it contains a
·
pump which draws river water
directly into the river through the
use of
·
the pump. A fishtank
which can be divided into three
separate tanks, can be
·
used for
river
·
water
.
experimentation.
There is also a lecture area
·
within
the laboratory.
·
·
Alcohol
awareness
-
Margaret Freund tests her coordination in the pub during
Alcohol Awareness Week.
'
Registration/ orientation week for
this fall's freshman class will be
held three weeks earlier than
previously scheduled,
.
according
to Richard.
-
LaMorte,
·
assistant
dean of student affairs.
·
The
week's activities will be held May
31
throughJtine4.
LaMorte said that the change in
.
dates makes the registration
_
process . more meaningful · for
_ freshman and t_heir parents. "The
faculty are more accessible," said
LaMorte.
-
He added
·
that the
.
presence of mentors on campus
during registration will enable
more planning for next year's
freshman class to take place,
One disadvantage of the earlier
registration,
according
to
LaMorte, is the fact that it would
come on top of the work for
graduation in
the
·
registrar's
office. "It's the week after
commencement," said Registrar
Elizabeth Ross. "The week before
we're here during the wee hours
of the morning."
·
-
Of the estimated 625 freshmen
in the class of 1987, 400 are ex-
pected to register during the first
week of June, according to James
Daly, dea!l of admissions.
The lab, built with Title
III
funds, was'. designed
.
by Dr
.
Lawrence Menapace, in
·
con-
junction with other faculty
members.
,-
.
-
Dr. Perroue said that because
Marist has already done research
along the waterfront, there is a
good chance of receiving the
.
grant;
·
. ~--
, ,
·
·
;,_
, ;
.":'.
The lab has been used to
analyze samples taken from a
river embayment behind
·
the
Franklin D. Roosevelt estate.
·
In
addition, Matist has previously
received two National Science
Foundation
grants,
worth·
$18,000
each, allowing the college
to teach river ecology to fifty
local high school teachers.
·
To aid in limnology, the study
of fresh water, Marist owns an
I
8~foot, 85-horsepower-motorb-
oat, capable of carrying eight
researchers at a time. This allows
for greater mobility and speed in
the research.
The Jab
h,
being used this
semester by only one clc1ss, Dr.
Wu's environmental chemistry
lab, which meets in the boathouse
laboratory each week. However,
.
Dr. Perrone says, "The potential
of the lab is incredible.
It
leaves
us open for wide dimensions· of
research."
I
(photo by Jeff Kiely)
College cautious about River Day
by Jane
M~
~~!lr~hilli
Despite rumors that the ad-
ministration
_
at Marist will try to
prevent River Day, Gerard A.
Cox, dean of student affairs, says
the administration does not have
the power to prohibit' the event,
"Marist does not own the land
at
toe
particular spot where River
Day is held," Cox said. "We are
in an agreement with the city to
monitor that property."
The college is not opposed to
the concept, Cox said, as long as
those who organize it accept the
responsibility.
River Day is an annual event
held one to two weeks before
spring semester finals. Members
of the senior class
·secretly
organize a last fling which is held
at the parking lot north of 1he
boathouse. The seniors stand on a
hill adjacent
10
the lot while
underclassmen stand in
the
parking lot. The day Ri\:er Day is
co be held on is known only to the
seniors until v·ery early that
morning.
-
:_
''.There have been River Days
in the
.
past when everyone has had
a good time," Cox said. "But,
last year's River Day was a
nightmare."
Injuries and sickness plagued
many students last year when the
rain-filled afternoon was over.
Some students were sick from too
much alcohol, and a few were
abusive co the staff at St. Francis
Hospital, Cox said.
A concern of Cox's is the
consumption of alcohol by those
freshman who are still under the
· 1egal drinking age of 19. The
organizers could be held liable if
an under age student was caught
drinking, Cox said.
Cox sees River Day as being a
test of how much the students
care for one another. He said: "l f
students decide to take part in the
River Day tradition, they should
keep in mind the tradition of the
institution. Caring about the
welfare of their fellow
.
students is
a
concern
of the
Marist
brothers."
Cox said that River Day can go
either way. "The students can be
responsible and have spiri1, or it
can be a disaster," he said.
"Some students that were in-
volved last year urged future
students to never run another
River Day."
A
gate has been put up at the
entrance of the tunnel down to the
river with the city's approval, Cox
said. "The gate was needed to
.
reduce cars coming into that area
because of the work being done
by the McCann Foundation,"
Cox said. The McCann Foun-
dation is currrently working on
Marist's landscape for the entire
waterfront area.
Another concern of the ad-
ministration is the location of
River Day. The closeness of the
tracks and the river worries the
administration, Cox said.
.
The administration tries to
guess when River Day will be, but
administrators are never really
sure, Cox said. "We try to
narrow it down, but tradition has
1he decision being made at
midnight the day before."
....
◄
,..------
I
I
(
f:
_r.,'
--•Page 10 • THE
CIRCLE•
April 14, 1983
Happening. this week
. WMC,R to raise funds for Heart Association
by
Mark Stuart
For the third consecutive year
WMCR will take heart for 91.9
· houn.
_
In
its
efforts to raise a targeted
$1,500 for the Heart Association,
WMCR will take four of its disc
jockeys_and lock them into the
station for 91.9 hours, according
to chairmen Bob Davies and Dan
Hartman.
The marathon -will run today
through Sunday.
The four dj's will be Paul
Palmer,
Lew Goidel,
Paul
Beckerle and Jay Stone.
This year's goal is
$500
more
than· last year's collections of
$1,000.
Hartman said that a higher
number of students this year
should yield a higher number of Marathon.
donations. "It's good to be
Co-chairman Hartman, a
optimistic. This year we have · sophomore,
said
there were
more students and expect more personal reasons for being in-
donations," Hartman said.
volved in the marathon. "My
Donations can be made at father died_ of a heart attack and
it
cannisters at the Marist College· - (heart disease) was something I
Book Store, the coffee shop in never really thought-about.until it-
Donnelly, the Palace Diner and happened," he said.
Caputo's Pizzeria.
•
Hartman said
·
he would be
satisfied if he could let other
students be aware of heart
disease.
"Most people don't
realize until its too late," he said.
Programming, for the marathon
will
feature "heart facts," which
are a series of facts about care for
cardiac health, according to
Davies. The marathon will be
highlighted by- a telephone in- :
terview with New York State
Health Commissioner - David
Axelrod.
Pledges can be made by con~
tacting WMCR volunteers, Bob
Davies at ext. 117 or Dan Hart-
man at ext. 116.
"You have to set a higher goal
every year," said Davies, "and
this year we have a lot of help
from volunteers."
"The reason for ihe success last
year was that so many people
helped," said Jack Grafing,
chairman for the 1982 Heart
Golf tourney will aid Cystic Fibrosis group
by
Lori Dyer
The Cystic Fibrosis. Foun-
dation, (CFF) has been searching
since 1955 to find a cure for cystic
fibrosis.
It
relies on the generosity
and ingenuity of individuals to
continue this search: individuals
like Leslie Heinrich.
Heinrich; a junior from Dover
Plains, has organized a golf
tournament to
benefit CFF.
Heinrich said:
"I
decided to
donate the money to CFF because
of the article I read in the Circle
about Dick Quinn's daughter.
I
saw that and I wanted to help."
The tournament will be held
Friday
at
College
Hill,
Poughkeepsie, but Heinrich said
that
they were
less
than
cooperative. She said they were
willing to give_ her a date but
wouldn't give her any discount.
golf. $1.50 of that will go to CFF. ·
"I
can't understand why they
wouldn't give me a cut-rate,"
Heinrich said, then added sar:-
castically, "Unless they think I'm
doing it for my own profit."-
"Seriously though,
I
don't
Heinrich originally planned the . think they believed me when
I
event
to comply with an said that I was doing it for cystic
assignment given by Professor fibrosis. The city runs the golf
Augustine Nolan in her Public course and obviously the city has
Relations class.
Each class no compassion," Heinrich said. ·
member is required to plan and
Heinrich said she feels this
execute an . event on or off assignment has helped her.to see
campus. Within . that - broad what a non-profit organization
category, Heinrich decided to ·deals -with. "If everyone-.would
dedicate her time to helping CFF.
just give a little bit ofmortey or a
The price to play in the tour-
little bit of time, they could'get so
nament is $4.50 for nine holes of _
much more done,,,- she said.
Manhatiaf!,-professor to lectureonpeace, .. ,·
SENIOR'S
ON-CAM-PUS INTERVIEWS
Friday~
-
April 29th
1) United States Air Force.
2)
Profesco Corporation,
· subsidary of John Hancock.
Marketing financial planning ser-
vice to _
physicians and other pro-
fessional practices.
,
,
Further Information and sign-ups In CC180,
_
· Office
of Career. Qevelopment. -
by Donna Fidaleo
and a Ph.D: in Religion_ and
sor1ium . on· Peace Research,
-
:::::::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!
Social Ethics from New York
Education and Development and
A lecture entitled· "Creating
Alternatives to the Arms Race"
and the film "The Perspective of
Peace Studies," will be given by
Dr. Joseph Fahey, director of the
Peace Studies
Institute at
Manhattan College, on Thursday
April 21 at 11 :30 a.m . .in Donnelly
Hall 243.
Fahey, who received a B.A. and
M.A. from Maryknoll Seminary
Robin,
Congratulations on your dazzling
debut at West Point! You really
fell (literaity) for those Cadets.
Love, Mishkuba
Perry-Good-Night,
I
missed you very much. Hope
you had a good time in the
Bahamas. Come back and- show
me that tan!
Love, B.B.
Pat and
Mike,
- Mike, 3 for 3 next weekend. Pat,
read your feet. ·
User,
University, is the · author of the
American . Arbitration
"Reinhold Niebuhr on Human Association.
He.·· is·· associate
Nature and World Peaces" and
professor of Religious Stuclies at
"Peace, War and the Christian Manhattan College and adjunct
Conscience." - He has also · associate professor of Religion
published over. 40
magazine and Social· Ethics at Fordham
articles:
·
University.
The ·- lecuire,
·- Fahey is a member of the sponsored by the Faculty Lecture -
Catholic Theological Sqciety of Series, is the last of a three-part·
America, The American Society series. It will be given in mom
of_ Christian Ethics, _ the Con-
D243.
IFIED6
Thanks Jodie, Rose, Laurie, Sue
and Tree,
We'll do it again.some night.
Love Ya, John
Hey Joyce,
Here's another classified for you!
Happy,E_aster!
Love,Meg_
Senior F.D.,
_ - • 'I-li Bob,
Blue feathers in the bed? .It's What's your bag?
getting light out again!!
Us
·
Burnt Steak
NEEDED:
For Junior Ring
Ceremony; Pictures of Juniors·
for a video tape. Please drop off
pictures and/or negatives to Tom
Fisher, Gregory 106, Jane in TH-
B7, Eileen in TH-C7 or Don
Eustace in C::-922. Ask Junior
Class for 50Q: if you want it.
K.S.
Leo 2 River Partiers,
Let's try Father Abraham again.
And this time let's finish it.
·
Love y'all lots,
Gail&Sue
Joyce,
I owed. you one -
now we're
even. Keep smiling to make others
do the same.
Happy Birthday and please let me
go out without you once in a
while.
To the whole flock,
· J.v:· I Love You!
S.L.,
Love,
the C.S. in I 08
- - - - - - - - - -
K.L. the honorary member
c.s.
Florida WAS great. Too bad
nobody can tell that we were
there. Thanks for everything -
your parents too.
The kid from C.S.
Loretta Jean,
"I Love You." Thanks for the
best of times.
Love, John Vincent
Dear Ferrari,
How's life in the fast lane? Maybe
I can help you with your
homework sometime. Seriously,
thanks for everything.
Love, Slinky
Hi Joyce!
Someone finally sent you a·
classified! Happy now?
Love, Steve
Thanks for coming up early! I
love you!!
K.A.
Skoog,
Mr. Koh wants his mailbox back!
Donna
Did T.O.C. find out what makes
you tick? Here's to early morning
nights!
Luv, Kelly
TWO GOOD DEALS -THAT
CAN'T BE BEAT!,
~
at
-
- McDonalds of Hyde Park
SUNDAYS SPECIALS! ---
ggc
All the Hotcakes You can Eat!
_-PLUS .
r--~~---~-----~------~
I
Mat1Sf
BUY ONE BIG
MAC® -
. - ,-
I
I·
.
GET ONE FREE!
:
:
. · OFFER GOOD ONLY AT:
_
I
1
-
·
McDonald's Restaurant
_
_
-
-
·
-
I
I
PA·
-
RTE. 9,HYDE PARK, N.Y;
-
~ -
I
I
MC
ld'S
.
•
·
Mc
natters
I
I
couroN •
~
-
April 14 - April -20
co~roN
■
'®_
I
---------------------~
_
. An excellent haircuttery.
Now featuring CELLOPHANES, the new- non-
peroxide haircolor/conditioning system with
unlimited color choices and excellent sheen.
$2.00 Off
With Marist I.D.
Tli~ CUTT~l?-,,
Serving
Marist College
Since 1975
3 Liberty St., Main Mall, Poughkeepsie
454-9239
By Appointme-nt Only
,I
. ij
. I
-------------------------------------April 14,
1983
·THE.CIRCLE· Page
1 1 - - •
Ruililers- firiish
-
2nd at· mee
by Tim Dearie
The Marist College outdoor
track team placed second out of
five teams in a meet held at Kings
College Saturd~y. ,
Although the team was only
entered in six events on the
program, it managed to place at
least one ·runner in the· top three
. finishers in each.
·
"I was pleased with the way the
races went," · said coach Jim
Klein. "The , way we've been
training is starting to pay off."
Captain Ken Bohan, a.junior,
took third in the 1,500 meter run
with a time of
4:
13, just a second
behind the winner from Hunter
College.
Bohan also
placed
second in the 800 mders close
behind the same runner. from
Hunter. Marist freshman Chris
Morrison finished right behind
Bohan to take third.
Other Marist runners to finish
in the top three were: freshman
Pete· Pazik in the 5,000 meters,
taking second with a time of
16: 11;
senior Ron
Dimmie,
running 23.2 in the
200
meters,
good for second place; and
freshman Don Godwin, finishing
first in the quarter with a time of
55.4. The team's mile relay of
Bohan, Morrison and freshmen
Mike McClintock and Pete Riley
gave
Marist's
lone
relay
representatives a third place finish
with a time of3:47.3. ·
Rob Shanahan receiving puck.
(photo by Jeanne
LeGloahec)
Circle banquet May· 8
Details next w~ek
The team is hungry for more
races.
"l
should have won both
races but ran tactically stupid,.~
said Bohan
"I
should have gone
· out harder.".
Hockey· happenings
THE.HAIR ·SHACK
(Super New York Cuts)
located at
Another runner not . satisfied
with his performance is Pazik.
"I
felt really stiff from the first lap
on and I lost contact," he said.
"I'm disappointed because I ran
15 seconds faster a· week ago
under lousy conditions."
Klein said"that on the whole the
team is showing improvement and
that he looks forward
to
the next
meet, which will be April 23 at
Hartwick College.
by Jeanne LeGloahec
Hockey Coach Jim Peelor is
optimistic about next year.
Peelor said "There are three of
four real good
freshmen
coming up next year. The team
will
have better personnel."
Peelor isn't worried about the
departing seniors. "All the
freshmen lines ·will move up,"
he said. "Every year the
competition gets tougher but
the team gets better also. This
year the team played alot of
teams in Division
II
while we
are in Division
II I."
All in all the coach was
impressed with
the teams
season.
"I
can't compliment
the guys enough, they played
better than last year," he said.
49 ACADEMY STREET
(Next to Brandy's Two)
Ample Customer Parking
Maris! crew finishes
2nd- on
Merrimac
His and Her
BODY PERM
. Reg. $35.00 .
Special
$18.50
Shampoo, Cut
and Blow
Dry
From
$5.00
by Terry Abad
team despite a shortage of team
members participating in races.
The team lost five seniors last
year to grad_uation. "We're short
on numbers this season," said
Davis. "People who could be
rowing aren't rowing."
Open Daily 10-6 ......, No Appt. Necessary
FOR APPOINTMENT, CALL
The Marist College crew team
finished second to the University
of Rhode Island in a meet hosted
by
Lowell College on the
Merrimack River Saturday. The
team travels to Ithaca College on
Saturday.
Second year coach Larry Davis
anticipates a good season
for
the
Davis is looking forward to the
President's Cup Regatta, to be
held April 23 at Marist. It is the
team's only home meet of the
486-9883
-'-/ VIDEO
DAv'll>
BOWi£
..
~~
TUt....lOAY
5
COMED.V
N·ITE.
fU1'!la1-.I&:
9"Ll. 1Y"A~"f'fA;'!t
1
ft/4M.._ {Ok'w
Ll=>A.1.-t·
-"H'\oi:to>
.-io
MA-.1ST
p: ..
~-:..t..~C:;.C.
•~le
MA~IS1'
(OLLEbt
A•P.
BAND
rtNALS
!
'A.Nl'
Mv<:,_t'\
,.,.,,,u•t-
f.
!')
1
f-
P'
1·A,,..11At'.
» \
I
Coming ...
(,us
~ E ·~
Sol"lie("("O
(Mf
~
~ -
~
(tLl)fMfffl>IA~~M"IUI
~
Don't Miss the Fabulous
May 6 The David Bromberg Reunion
(original band members)
May I 3 Spyro Gyra
-
.
May
14
Wayland Flowers
&
Madame
Pat Metheny Group
Kris Kristofferson
Comedy Nite -
April 26
featuring Richard Jeny
Rob Bartlett
Ron Darren
(as seen on Johnny Garson
&
David Lettermen)
Don't Miss the Chance
for Lunch
Continential Buffet Lunch
Wed.
&
Fri. 11 :30 - 2:30
All you care to eat $3.95
season, and is one of the larger
races held on the east coast during
the collegiate season. "There is a
good field of teams competing
this year," said Davis of the
twelve teams rowing at the
regatta.
Dayis pointed out the men's
race with the LaSalle team at last
year's President's Cup. LaSalle
defeated Marist by one point,
placing Marist second overall. He
hopes the team does as well at this
year's event.
Because the President's Cup
Regatta is traditionally held on
parents' weekend, Davis expects
a
good spectator turnout pending
nice weather. "It will be a great
event to watch," said Davis.
The regatta will begin at 8 a.m .
and end sometime after noon,
depending on water conditions.
President Murray will be on hand
to present awards to the winning
teams . .
Bikers start ride
for foundation
by
John
Bakke
Last Sunday, in a steady rain,
the eight members of the "USA
Team Tour 1983" began their
I 0,000-mile, round-trip, cross-
country bicycle ride from All-
Sport in Poughkeepsie.
The group is making the trip to
promote fitness and to benefit the
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. The
CF Foundationn raises money for
research into Cystic Fibrosis, a
genetic disease which attacks
children and is usually fatal.
The cyclists began the eight-
month journey after a breakfast
at All-Sport which benefitted the
CF Foundation. Between the
breakfast and pledges · for the
tour, over $10,000 was raised for
the foundation according to Dick
Quinn, local CF spokesman and
assistant
athletic
director
at
Marist.
County Executive Lucille
Pattison read a letter from
Governor Mario Cuomo to the
bikers at the breakfast and a copy
of a proclamation honoring the
cyclists from the State Legislature
was read and presented.
The eight riders are mostly
local and include former Marist
student Tammy Hajjar, 1982
NCAA
women's racquetball
champion.
..
I ;
I:
i
~
''-'
..
________ _
--Page
12 ·
THE CIRCLE •-April 14~
1983-------.------------------------------
~aye,.hof~r.·r~$igns.as
.
X-.
·
coun,try coaC.h··
·
. by Tim
Dearie ,
the .budget has increased. He said, that
-coach for . tiis· won-lost reco~d. ''This
.
20 letters from kids asking me to contact .
Athletic Director- Ron· Petro was very
was a concedement ·on their part that
·them and tell them about- our program
Bob Mayerhofer announced earlier
· this week that. he is resigning as· head
coach of the Marist Colleg cross country
team.-.··
helpful in getting. the team its trip to
_they weren't really supporting us," h~
· ., and. I haven't got anything to tell .
Notre-Dame. The move to Division I
said: "They should want to· hold me·
them," he said. ''I would love for any
brings with it automatic commitments·
responsible for my record. I think thai's
one of them to come and run with these
in order to be successful," Mayerhofer
part of taking the job in the first place.
. guys but is ii fair to the· athlete?"
· Mayerhofer, who has coached for the
last three years, cited· two key reasons
for his resignation. "Without a full-
time coaching -staff," he said, "and
without recruiting on a Division I level,
we're dealing with an impossible
situation," he said.
. said . . "Those commitments include
To think that we're having a program
awarding scholarship support to the
but we're ~ot expected to win is just
Mayerhofer said he has one regret.
According to Mayerhofer, the cross
country program hasn't suffered
financially over the last three years a!}d
students and hiring a full-time staff.
contradictory."
These commitments became more and
-
more evident to me this year, our second
year in Division
L"
. Mayerhofer said. that when he'd voice
these concerns to the athletic ad-.
ministration, he got the feeling that he
wasn't going to be held responsible as a
Petro has suppoited
the track
program in the past and had said he
would work to improve it.
• · After this season was· over and with
all this on his mind, Mayerhofer started
"The only regret I have is that I was led
to believe by the people who make
decisions
about
sports at Marist
College,
that
tlte
program could
maintain its 'high tradition at · the
Division I level and in my opinion, after
three· years of coaching; is that it's
. looking at recruiting again. "I had 15 or
impossible."
·
·
LactcJss.e
team
faces
tou_ghest Week,.:yet~-c
by Jim Leonard
Maritime · squad.
"Marist
definitely. was mentally prepared
_ The ·Marist • College. lacrosse for the game," said RikHn, "but
team, which lost to New York our team was so pumped up we·
Maritime 16-6 last Saturday, took were tripping over _our own feet.
· a 1-2 record into its toughest week Maritime came to play and Marist
of the season as it faced St. didn't," he said.
John's University Monday and
According to Riklin, the team's . ·
will face New Haven College on inconsistent play · can be.. at-
Saturday.
·
·
tributed in part to its friexperience
In addition, the team made up a in college level play. Ten out of
rained out game · against . City the 19 members have never played
· College of New Yo.rk yesterday.
college lacrosse before -this
The lacrosse team is having an season.
·
"The rr·eshmen are not
up~and-down season after losing used to pressure situations yet,
its first game to Kean, looking but they will be getting plenty of
very impressive in
beating experience in the upcoming
Fairleigh Dickenson University games," said Riklin.
last Thursday but appearing tight _ Both coaches said they agreed
and tentative in its loss to that the only bright spot of the
Maritime
on· Saturday. Maritime game was the·excellent
"Sometimes Marist is like two goal tending by freshman Paul
entirely different teams," said Leterra, who had 28 saves. "If it
Assistant Coach Pete Jackson.
wasn't for Paul, Maritime's score
"Against FDU
we
were would
have ·been
doubled,"-
relaxed, played our- gaJlle and Riklin said.
blew them out," said Jackson.
Probably the most interesting
"But against Maritime our. zone incident of. the game involed
defense didn't work, we didn't Leterra. About. halfway through
challenge the loose balls and we
the game the referee~ called . a •
weren't relaxed."
time-out and requested that .the
First-year Head Coach Jeff Marist coaches attach a chin
·Riklin said he admitted. Marist protector to Leterra's helmet.
was simply outplayed by a strong Leterrn was already weai'irig a pad
The lacrosse team goes on the attack against Maritime dur-
in_g Marist's 16-6 loss Saturday. (photo by.Gina Franciscovich )
around his neck to protect his goals and one assist and Larry
throat.:.
McNeill, with one goal and two
"According
to
the · In-
assists.
ternational Lacrosse League,
goalies must wear chin protectors
to protect the throat area starting
next year," said Jackson, "but
some · refs enforce a new rule a
year earlier to make all teams
aware of an upcoming,, rule
change.-''·,·· .. ,,-- , ·,
· ;u:. -
Jackson addeci,
•i1
think the
refs were worried Paul might get
hurt because
he
never backs,away
·
.
from any shot on goal.'! .·.
. -
· : Leading scorers for Marist we.re
juniors Dave_ Naar;, with · three ..
Marist must now face two of its
.toughest opponents of the year,
St. John's and New Haven.
"Considering St. John's and New
Haven are Division I teams that
offer scholarships plus the fact St;
John's· · beat Maritime 20-2
already, I.'d say we certainly have
a ·,tough_ week ahead cif us,» said
Riklin. ''We should be more
relaxed this week, since we have
nothing to lose and everything to
gain."
·
Women's hoop team
.
awaits reci-uitllewS
!>Y
Mike Graney
Basketball is over this year as
far as the court is concerned, but
as far as
·
head coaches are con-
cerned it's the second half with a
couple minutes left.
Tomorrow . is . the. National
Letter of .Intent day for high
school
_
athletes. This is the day
that these athletes inform colleges
whicq school they intend to attend
next year.
.
Women's. Head Coach Sue
Deer has actively recruited two
girls for· next year's team'. This
year's .squad . is losing several
'players to graduation and needs
these two recruits to fill the holes
left· by senior starters Laurie
Hrebenak, Diana Jones, and·
.
Lolita Silva. ·
· Lynne Jackson; a 5'8" guard
from Otego,
N.Y.,
is this year's
top recruit. "Lynne is extremely
quick and is the kind of top.flight
player that will definitely improve .
our ballclub," said Deer.
Fairleigh Dickinson· is the only
.other school thatLynm(is· con-
sidering at this,point. "We have a
good shot at her and besides being
a good player, she's a great kid,"
Deer said: -
· · · ·
.
The importance of height_anhe .
Division I . level · · is. extreme;
Because of the loss of front court
starters. 'Deer is also pursuing
someone to fill those empty spots.
- Donna Tribble, a 5'11" power
forward, is another girl that Deer
·hopes will ·. be wearing red and
white
next
year. ·. · Donna· is
currently in her senior year at
Westchester County Community
College.•·
.·· · · . ·.·
· .
''G'irls like Donna are a
necessity at the Division
·l
level,'.'
'
Deer said. "We're always looking ·
for 5'11 "power forwards." . ·
SojJh · runn_ er
.
.
to leave -team
.
,
<if
ter. season
by Tim Dearie
The Marist College cr~ss
country team suffered another
setback when its top runner,
sophomore John Lovejoy, an-
. nounced that he will not return to
Marist for the '83-'84 school year.
Lovejoy, a 3.3 student from
Wantagh,
N.Y.,
said that his
financial situation was the main
reason for leaving. He also in-
dicated his disappointment with
the future prospects of Marist
cross country as a reason for his
leaving.
Lovejoy's achievements at
Marist include producing the
third fastest time ever by a Marist
harrier on the five-mile course at
Van Cortland Park in New York.
He was also a first-team all-state
selection by virtue of his sixth-
place finish in the state cham-
pionships this year.
·. Before making his decision . to
· leave Marist, Lovejoy went to
Financial Aid to inquire about a
possible increase in his aid. "l
went to them twice and explained
my situation," said Lovejoy.
· /'Their response was to take out
another loan, which I definitely
· do not want
to
do."
According to Lovejoy, the
recent news of Bob Mayerhofer's
· resignation as head cross country
coach was a major reason for his
decision. "Now, even if they did
offer me money it's doubtful I'd
come.
·
back," said Lovejoy,
"because the cross country
program doesn't , appear to· be
- going · anywhere. Losing Coach
Maverhofer was a big blow.''
.
.. Lovejoy indicated that his only
alternative is to go to a state
schooL He . wili . be . attending
SUNY at Syracuse University in
. the. fall;
Athletes suffer
Mayerhofer does not see this · '.~~t~l~;s"k eac1/ii~e •they .. put ~n
· happening. So what we have is no
their · running, ·shoes. .This·
Does anybody in the
_
ad-
more than
a
top Diyision II team
de.finitely hurts the
.
athlete
ministration . really care what . racing in• Division I against . mentally ... , _.
happens to any sport beside runners-· that are Division I
L_ast
semester the Foxes
basketball?. It· certainly doesn't caliber. So Marist runs_.Division I . traveled · to . Notre Dame ·and
look that way.
but does not get recruited and
finished 10th out of 18 teams.
A..
perfect example is the slow coached like Division
I.
· This sounds impre'Ssive, but just -
demise of the cross country team
.
.
how well could Marist have done
which was dealt another blow this
··· Mayerhofer has ,indicated that
if they had 2 or 3 scholarship
week as Coach· Bob Mayerhofer his won-lost record wasn't a
runners on the squad? From the
announced his resignation. He matter to · the athletic ad-
point of view of Marist College
has no confidence that Marist .ministration.
Well, . that's the_ finish was great. To the
College has -any desire to restore · ashame.
.
runners it is only mediocre.
what was once the winningest and
·The slogan, "It's ·not 'whether
Athletes strive to win ... and it was
most.prestigious sport on cam-
you win or lose, it's how you play
virtually impossible at Notre
pus.
·
· · the game" is cute but how many
Dame and in most other meets
· And why should he? What has
athletes believe that? Winning is
because Marist cross country is
happened since · the · move to what makes the long hours of not a true Division I team. ·
Division I is ·simple. The team is
training worthwhile. All the sweat
That's why Mayerhofer hoped
expected to run against other and hard work is tolerable with
a
the Division I proposal made
teams that are stocked with · win. It's the athletes that suffer
several months ago would pass so
players on scholarship. Marist
from not caring.
·
· · Marist would be forced to give
offers no scholarships.
There are three teams that seem
schoiarships. to the team in
Mayerhofer feels that to be
to fall into this category: cross
Division I or be forced to drop the
competitive
in
Division I you need
country, tennis and football.
squad to Division II where it
a scholarship program and in
The cross country team has
would be one of the top teams.
. addition a
full-time staff.
done well in its races, but are
The proposal was _yetoed.
-The football team, although
not D.ivision II, has suffered thi:ee
consecutive 2-7 seasons has been
·hurt by· the move ·. because of
increasing attention in basketball:
It doesn't look like there. is any
real desire at Marist to field a
winning football team· or even a
respectable one.
.
One of the coaches has in-
dicated in the past that full time
coaches would be needed to have
a winning team •.
Back
in -November many
seniors were playing their final
home game at Marist. Naturally a
pre-game ceremony was in order
to honor the players, some of
whom had endured four years.
- But the public address system
never worked that day and the
players did not receive any
recognition, like seniors from the
basketball team got in March.
Mike
Malet . is dedicated to
having a winning team and takes
every loss
harder than
the
previous._ ·He cares,· but . more
.
.
caring is needed elsewhere.
. Then we have tennis, another
Division · I team caught in the
shadow the basketball
rise.
Again, -like in cross country, the
· players suffer -
this time from
embarrassment.
·
The six tennis courts are in .
terrible (at best) shape. . Three '
courts have been condemned and
are awaiting repairs. Division I
Marist plays there. Tennis player
Bill Flood told it best last year:
It's like playing in a pit," he
said. "It's very embarrassing for
us and the school when teams
come to play us. The visiting team
knows that we're Division I and
are shocked when they see our
courts. Every team · laughs and
asks if these courts are the
practice courts.· I've been asked
many times why I would come to
a school with courts like these."
· Players
embarrassed
and
players up against too high odds.
ls this how a Division 1 program
should be?
·
28.17.1
28.17.2
28.17.3
28.17.4
28.17.5
28.17.6
28.17.7
28.17.8
28.17.9
28.17.10
28.17.11
28.17.12