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The Circle, September 22, 1983.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 29 No. 2 - September 22, 1983

content

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by Mark
Stl~ai't
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According
·
to Ed Koch;
:Jr;,
a
-
·
:
:Outs
1
ide
-
,~e
.:
Marist ~~mrriuriity;
:
. picked
,
up.
:
The keys

.
were
:
then
.
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.
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..
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'
:
,
_ .
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resident of
·
<;:.;;f; in

addiiion
·
fo the
>
police said.
>
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_
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returned l<>
:
Burkc and picked up
B
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i.
Residents
-
of townh<>uses
<::
7
1
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~tere? eq~ipment and the:bkycle, ·,
_. i
The apparent point of entry
'
at · bfsome of
_
._
lh
_
c residents.
,
·
-
· ·
u
·
rg a
·.
.
rs
··
and
·
°!3,5 a"'.o~c last Thursday runmng Jackets worth $80
:
were
'
both townhouses was an unlocked
:
.
i
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.
.
·
.
morm!_lg
·_
10
.
.
·
d1scov~r
.
they. ha~
.
·
·
tak~n, but no!
:-
discoliered miss
_
ing
·
front door.
·
. .
·
.•·
·
:
.
_
· .
.
J~miso!1 s~i~
_
that the keys w~re
t

k
.
been burg!anzed durmg the.nigh!.
.
unul lat
_
e Friday and were
·
not .
·
.
According
10 . Koch, . th.~
·
ava1\~bl_e
..,
,
~rn}.ri,~P
:
the burglary
S rl . e
:
_
'.
Accord1~g
to
,
,
Poughkeepsie
:
en
_
ter~don
_
t~ep61_icereport.·
·
.
.
residentsJn C-1 used to leaving
·-
:~ar1d th~t
~
!h~
_t
£p
.
l!~g~
_
fOU_ld not
_
be
.
.

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Town Pohce, goods valued &t
,
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·-·
,
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,
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:·.·,
·

·
:
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thedoor.
:
unlocked .
.
:
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,
:
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-

,
~e~d
,;
:
respons1ble
r
notmg
,:
1ha1
2
.
tow
-
nhouses ·
.
t~:~:~e.ta~en.b
·
•.,
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.
d
.
. ·
- · ·
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oer::e~ll
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~~~~\~%?:iJ()Te!~:~ - ~
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~f~~~~feubfjl~~~ti1i~L7:J)~~-li;::~te1~ ~~aTi~b~a~:dn~:~
-
·.
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-
f
11
e ,'st wTas
.
hr? en owdn as Thurs~ay and the
_
police were
_
the robbery/' he said .
.
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.-
: ·
,
.
",_-
:
.
~
picked them up.
'"
·
Volume 29, Number 2
Lights
on Linda.
Junior Linda
.
Zemba has
-
the
-
:
eye
...
.
for
0
the camera as

she
'
.
dis~usses
·
her
:
winning sketches
.
.
.
o o_ws. a
.
ec m_c
_
t~pe
-
.
_eek,
_
c
_
a
_
lied
_
ma
_
t_ 9:34
.
a.m.
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:
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Accord•,n
·
g- to Pa
·
u
·
1 Burke
_
o
_
f
·
·
·

.
.
·
·
$ 150
$
2
· ·
~•we
try t
_
o stress to lock
·
1he
.
' a stereo receiver,
75, an
_-.
. _
There
·
were no suspects as of .
M .
t
·
s
.
. .
.
h k
AKAi
.
tape deck $150· and a
d
.
. .
·
.
. ans
ecµnty, t
~ eys were townhouses,"
·
.
Jamison said,
S
·
h •
·
L
T
·
··
b'·
-
1
.
•$
200
··
Tues ay and 11 ts presumed that
given to Barry Jam
_
1son
_
North
"and th
·
,s ,
·
s the ha
.
rd way
_
to
·
c wmn e our 1cyc e
.
'
·
·
,h
J
·1
·
· ·
f
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
'
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..
. ·.
,
_
.
e cu pn
s
are persons
.
rom
End res1de!]ce director, but never .: learn.'.'
THE CIRCLE
Marist College, Poughkeepsie,
_
N:
Y.
,r .
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.
September
22,
1983
.
and
·
dr11wings on P
:
M:
Magazine,
.
,,.
.
.
:
-
.
tel~visit>~
:
s
_ ·
ims".f~r to
·
·
-
.
P~oJ)le
_;-,
..
c .
.
_,Mag~z.•~e
,.-_
,
SJw:,•lYSS.
vot
_
ed
'
OUh
;
;~~2~
:~if
;0
i;1;f:11~~;:i¥;r
~
;;;
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~m~,1
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.
C
.
P:M.
>
Magazine
::
visite'~
Miss
.,
Zemba
:
on ~ept .
.
16 andfihned her
.
. •1itvarious
'
l~catfons on the _M,arist
/
.
College campus.-
·
·
·
· :)
o/.i/
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.
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·
• •
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.

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.
(photo by Gina _Francis1covich)

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6et
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P.
f~f
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tf~}jfit
()f
aefi1yed
·
's'3·
.
Reynard
by
Don•~
Pipe, '
·.
. •
·•
..
·.


.
.
,.
th,~
,d:to, ch~:,,
'••=
,t;u,id,;J
~
;di; .. ;~ not ~oing it," g,ad u at ion,
·
.
a cCo ,ding
·
to
·
We
had tO wo,k
.
on
a
Yea,book
-

:
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.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
·
.
didn't
gel."
.
. . : "'
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.
>
'
said
.
O'Donnell ..
"It
got passed O'DonneU, and aidn't have time
that should have been out in
The 1982-83 edifio~
<
of
;
th
,
e
:
: :-_."
According to
a
.
.
source o
·
rt the
:
_.-
on.''
.
·.
.

·
o,
,
·
to finish tlie task; '
_
August. We're the '84 staff."
Marist yearbook
.
,
~
Reynard;
~
_
ilL
_
:
R.eyriard staff,- th~re
'.
weie
'
_
irfa11y
.
'
) /
·
.
._
.
.
.
· .
• /
Burke faterreturned during the
.
O'Donnell said that this year's
be
·
available for distrib
_
u
_
tfon
.
ib
_
:
··
deadlii:u:s missed iii the spriri.iphat
:;t.)
''She knew about layout, but
·
suinme( and the yearbook was
··
Reynard will be better.
_
-
-
late October,
two
morit
_
hs
.
later
.
contributed
,
,
to
·
the delayed
'..
she bit off a little more than she completed.
,
.
··
-
_
·
· _
_
· .

·
·
·
·
·
-
.

.
than
.
the
.
original
_
distribution
)
disti:ib"titilJn.
:
·

:
...

.
·
;
,
_:
S
·
.
,.,
:
_
could
.
chew,''
·
said
_
Nicolette
.
O'Donnell said that the Student
.
·
.
:
'
c
'This year," he said, "we were
date,
·
according
to
·
Rick
.
.
,
.
T}:ie
:
firs".{
·
' edil~r,
Rich
.:
,
Filanino, this year's director of Activities Office has gotten phorie
aHocated
.
a
Jot
more money, we
O;Donnell, editor-inachief of the
__
.
:
Dougherty
/
re~igned_
'.
ear
_
Iy
.;
in the
·

sales and advertising.
.
.
.
.
cans·about the yearbook.

· ·
·
·
have the best people from las~
l983~84~eynard commfrtee.
.
.
.
.
year
.
bicause
.
he
.
did riot have the
·
.
·
. -
0
Th~

iesponsibiHty was then
.
.
Don Eustace,
.
photographer for
year,. and good new people.
It
·
·
.

O'Do
.
ri
'
riell
_
said. th~t , the
:
time.
>
.
J
:
'.,':
>.
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:':·
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·
;,
/
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c
.
.
_
passed on to Carol.Burke, who the 1983-84
·
Reynard,
_
said
·
"The
·
looks to be a much better year-
committee went' thro~gti at lea
_
st
l;'he ·second editor,
~
Ghris
L
..
was
,
a
·
· senior
·
preparing
·:
.for students were upset. I was upset. · book."
·
Maristconsidersdotm
.
name
.
:
.
.
.
by
Paul Becke
_
rle
Marian Hall is being considered as a name for
the new freshman dormitory, according to
Gerard A. Cox, dean of student affairs.
·
"Marian Hall would be a very good name
.
because
it
is a symbol o'r the history o'f Marist
College,ttsaid Cox.
·
When
-
Marist was first founded in 1946 the
college was known as Marian College. Most of
the actual construction was done by the brothers,
who at that time made up the faculty and ad-
ministration. The first building which was built
by the brothers was the gym.
"Now with the new dorm being built right
where the old gym was; and even using the actual
brick walls 9f the old gym," said Cox,
"it
is very
symbolic of the college's growth, living on our
past to strive forward," he said. ·
·
--
Cox said that the final decision will not come
until November when it is brought to the board
of
trustees, butCox said that he is hopeful that the
dorm will be named
Marian
Hall.
·
"It's very important to pay attention to the
college's history," said Cox, "The Old Gym
·
was
·
an important part of the college; we
_
should have
something to recapitulate the Old Gym,"
Keeping that in mind Cox said that a plaque
with the dorm's name will be put on a column of
bricks which was part of the old gym. It is located
.
in the
.
front staircase _which leads to the second
floor. This is where the dedicating ceremony will
take-place.
.
.
.
..
Students seemed to be taking the possible new
name in stride.· Most of the upperclassmen
thought it an acceptable, if not typical name for
the dorm. Some even had their own ideas such as
Stucko Stone, as
·
opposed to Grey Stone, Wench
Hall, and even Woody Hall. Though as one
senior, who wished to
·
remain annoymous, said,
"You can call it
:
whatevet you like, but to me it
will still be t~e
91d GYI!'·''
·
:

:
Ins
i
de
.:·
The
-
.
Crrcle
.
.

.
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CSL hands _out club funds
Marist student remembered
M:urray authors new boor.
·
Footb~ll team wins opener
-page3
-pagt:3
-page9
_:_ page 12
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- - - -
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Page 2:
·
THECIRCLE-.
·
Se tember 22,-1983
.
·
-

-
.
-
.
.
.
~
,
Survey
; predicts
ji1b
rise
A strong upward trend in the
post-reces
s
ion rehiring process is
i
ndicated for the second con
~
s
e
cutive quarter, according to the
findings of the quarterly Em-
ployment Outlook Survey con-
ducted by Manpower, Inc., the
.
world's largest temporary service
firm
.
·
·
Accordin

g to the quarterly
·
poll
·
of more than 11,400 employers
.
in
354 U
.
S.
·
Cities,
·
26%
.
plan' to
increa
s
e their
·
workforce in
t
h
e
4th
'
quarter whil
e
only 9%
·
expect
cutbacks
~
The hiring intentions
for· the
quarter
·
·
(October,
November,
.
December)
are
substantially stronger than those
.
r
eported last year at this time
when only 18% planned to add
staff while ·· 14%
.
anticipated
.
cutbacks.
.
·
·
The current predictions closely
match the third quarter 1983
forecasts in which 27% of the
firms polled said they planned to
hire more staff while 8% planned
s
t
aff reductions
.
Manpower President Mite
.
hell
S
.
Fromstein said, "The hiring
outlook for the last
·
quarter
parallels the survey findings in a
like period of the 1?76 Upturn
following the 1974-75
.
recession.
While the hiring strength in 1976
was slightly better than the
present 26%, the same percentage
,
of firms sur
v
eyed than were
expected staff reductions
.
The
figures are close enough to in-
dicate that rehiring activity has
begun and job-hunting should,
therefore
,
become much easier in
the quarters ahead."
.
.
Currently, 620Jo· of- the
·
·
fi
t
ms
·
surveyed plan no c~ange in staff
..
.
.
levels and 3
o/o
,
aretimsure
of
-
their
-
hiring plans. One
·
year ago, 65%
planned no changes and 3 % were
··
uncertain of their plans
.
Hiring strength is slightly lower
than the national. average in
.
the
..
Northeast, Midwest and West and
.
slightly higher in the South .
.
.
"The hiring indications by
industrial category produced few
surprises;"
said Fromstein
.
"Construction hiring will be
down in the fourth quarter due
primarily to seasonal weather
factors
:
and wholesale and
.
.
retail
.
trade hiring will be
·
s
·
harply
,
up due
·
to a seasonal
·

impact of the
·
holiday
·
buying period. Durable
goods manufacturers will increase
hiring activity while hiring in the
services, non-durable goods
-
and
finance areas will be seasonally
down from last quarter but still
well ahead of last year's com-
parable period.''
Fromstein
.'.
nofe·d .that al
f
of
the
.
survey
.
results confirmed the
'!Recovery Period" which
.
began
in early spring.
He
said that the
·
main recovery indicator is a
progressive shrinking of planned
staff cutbacks and layoffs
·
and
pointed out that
_
the current level
of 9% expecting to reduce
·
their
workforce is not much highe
r
than the
'
typical figure in a period
.
of prolonged prosperity .
.
"If
the recovery continues at its
present pace, a full scale hiring
buildup could come after the first
calender quarter of next year. The
first quarter traditionally
.
reflects
a reduction in

hiring activity
.
following
the
.
active holiday
·
period and that phenomenon is
expected to occur again this
year," explained Fromstein
.
"If the recovery continues at its
·
present pace, a full scale hiring
buildup could come after the fir~t
calendar quarter of next ye!1f• The
·
first quarter traditiqi;1aJly
.
reflects
a reduction in
·
hiring activity
following
the active holiday
period and that phenomenon is
expected to occur again this
.
year," explained Fromstein
.
GRE
.
.
~r¢paration Course
Designed
.
to
·
prepare
·
students
·
for the
December 10th
.
administration

of
·
the
Graduate
·
Re~ord Examinations (aptitude).
· _
_
>;
WHEN:
·
Thursdays, 6-9 p.m.
·
.
Octoper 13-December 8
WHERE:
Poughkeepsie YMCA
Call 473.;.5J68 for addition.al information
·
and
·
registration materials.
·
_
-
,_
lnstit
.
tite
.
for Academic
:
Achievement
.
·•
·
Michael Foley
/
Director
The
.
Hudson Valley
:
's Test
.
P,:eparation Specialists.
Rt. 9, Hyde Park
·
9) 4~229,-0460
Sun.-Thurs. 11-10
Fri. and Sat. 11-11
Old Mexico
Featuring.~-~~e~cali Foo~ at Its Best
Lunch Specials Everyd~y
Combination Mexican Dinners
·
Plus Burgers
·
& Steaks .
Fast Take Out Service
HAPPY HOUR! Everyday 4-6:~0
. ··
2· for l·Margatitas
·
- Fre·e· Chips
,
:
& Sauce.
:
Plus
3
Tacos
for$3~00 diirini~appy-Hout~
Drinks
·
-
--
Food -
Music
·-
1
.
1 :00
a.m .
.
-
,
4:00
a.m.
Sandwiches
11 :00
a.m
_
. -
8:30
p.m.
· -
Rte. 9 Poughkeepsie
914-473-4725
473.7757
Appointment not Necessary
"1;P
_&
MJat••
J,air. Moppt
PRECISION CUTS
PERMANENT WAVES
NATURALIZINGS
8
8.00
Men's Cut and Blow Dry
8
10.00
.
wornen's
·
Cut ana
·
s1ow
·
ory
.
·
6 Mt Carrnel Pl.
, . .
.. Po~gh~-~~P
:_
$.t~,
_N
1
-;)5
_
.
'

-
Qpen
Jues.-Sat
·
.
--,.
-
· '
:
~·:·]/
~{3Q
...
_
"
5
·:
6 CRANNELST.; POUGHKEEPSIE
473-7998
·
~
-··
Tonight -
Phenomenal Jazz with Steps Ahead
23rd
·
Robert ''Ro~kabilly''
·
Gordon
24th
·
Johnny Winter
·
· 25th
Nicksilver (Quicksilver Messenger
26th
17th
28th
29th
30th
1
2
4
5
·
6
7
8
9
11
14
22
23
Service)
Monday Night Football
.
John "Dr. Dirty" Valby
The Joe Perry Project
·
Marshall Crenshaw
Melanie
Coming In October:
Tower of Power
Warren Zevon
Aztec Camet:a
Bongo's
.
Michael Stanley Band
.
Yellowman
Alvin Lee
Father Guido Sarducci
.
R.E
.
M.
John Mayall with Canned Heat
Hot Tuna
Nils Lorgrin
We accept Visa, Mastercard
&
America Express
.
You can charge tickets for
any show by phone. For information & dinner reservations call 473
-
7996.
Your organ
i
zation can rent the chance for a party or special occasion. Call
for details.
You can obtain a calendar, just send a self-addressed stamped envelope to the
Chance.
.
..
·
.
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September 22, 19B3 · THE CIRCLE· Page 3
·
Media
.
clllbS
given
majority of money
1983-1,84 Allocations Fall Term
Club/Organization
Approved Allocation
Gaelic Society ...............
.
......
$
120.00
lnterhouse Council ..................
$
285.00
Accounting Society ............. : ....
$
285.00 Literary Society/Mosaic ..............
$
195:oo
b S
_
Auto Club. • :

• • • • • .......
.
........ $ 212.50 Marist College Council
Y
.
teven A. Berger
•·
said Yeaglin.
Black Student Union .................
$
345.00
.
on Theatre Arts .................... $3,400.00
Th
St d
G
.
Board Chairperson Stephen P.
Circle••• .. • ...................... $5,783.00 Musician's Organization ......
..
......
$
130.00
e
u ent
overnment
Funk
·
, of East Hartford, Conn.,
Circle K
·
$
75 00 P 1·1· IS ·
Cl b
$
Fl
·nanc· I B
d
1
k
· · · · · · • • • • • •. • • •..........
.
o 1 1ca c1ence
u . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
335.00
ia
oar
aS t
·
wee
sa1·d that the board rec· e1·vcd a
Class of 1984
$ 740 00 P
h I
Cl b
$
allocat d
·
I $22 000
· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·
·
syc
O
ogy
u · · · · · · · • · · · • • · • • • • • •
799.00
to
27
e cl 6'prox~mate
Y •
!
budget from each club that
Class of 1985 • • • ................... $ 225.00 Marist College Singers ............... $ 590.00
associatedu \ha~ _orgamzauons
desired money. "They submit
Class of 1986 • .............
.
.......
$
541.00 Reynard ..................
.
....
.
.. $2,250.00
·
The Circ~!
·
~nsdt. th
I
budgets at the end ofthe semester
Computer Society

......
.
......
.
....
$
110.00 Ski Club ......
.
....
.
..
.
......
.
.... $
90.00
·
receive
e argest
for the
·
next semes
·
ter,"
-
he sai·d.
Communication Arts Society ..........
$
495.00 Social W k
·
$ 345 00
allocation of $5,783. The second-
or · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·

largest amount of $
3
,
400
was
"The board looks at that and
Commuter Union • • . • .
.
...••...•.
.
..
$
518.00 Spanish Club ..............
..
...... $
80.00
allocated to The Marist College approves or rejects the allocation.
Criminal Justice· • • • • • • • • • ......
.
.
.
. $ 163.00 Student Academic Committee ..........
$
474. 75
Council on Theatre Arts.
WMCR
Then it. (approved allocation)
Fashion ~lub ...•..................
$
165.00 WMCR ........................... $2,940.75
radio was third with
s
2
,
940
_
75
_
goes to the Council of Student
.
._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_;_ _ _ _ _
~_...J
Among
the
tr1ple-figure
;~~:[~~
who give the final ap-
allocations, the Psychology Club
The CSL and Financial Board
and the class of 1984 received
work together to decide the
$799 and $740 respectively.
amount of money each club
The 5-member Financial Board
should receive
.
"It's based on
gave approximately $21,700 of
-
.
need," said CSL President Keith
the total $22,000 available to
Galanti.
"WMCR
js naturally
.
process involves evaluating each
club. "We look at the club's past
record and look at what the
president's done," he said.
"If
he
(the president)
·
scheduled
11
events last year and only carried
out two of them, why should we
fund him if he's asking for
another 11 events?"
"We look at whether they filed
organizational reports, who the
club presidents are and what are
their objectives. (We look at) the
number
.
of events actually carried
(compared) to one's planned,"
said Galanti.
There are approximately 35
clubs active on campus, although
only 27 asked for money.
A portion of the money given
to clubs comes
right
from
students' pockets. The student
activity fee of $40, paid by each
student in the tuition bill, is split
into thirds. One-third of the $40
goes to the Financial Board and
the Student Government.
campus clubs.
going to get more than anoth~r
·
The allocations are given on a
club, because they have expensive
term-to-term basis, according to
equipment. When you have clubs
Betty Yeaglin, advisor to the
which
._
are
purely
service
Financial Board. The money that
organizations, like the
·
Social
is not used is saved. "We un-
Work
.
.
Club, they may need
Campus
clubs
are
also
obligated to hold fundraisers .
.
They are not supposed to rely
solely on the board
'
s allocations,
according to Funk, who said
nearly 100% of all clubs hold
fundraisers. However, "some do
a lot more than others."
The number of students that
turn out for club events is im-
derallocated this term, so we'll
(less)," he said.
·
pick it up in the second term,"
Funk said the decision-making
.
portant, said Galanti. Each club
is supposed to file, among other
reports, evaluation forms of its
event.
The other two
-
thirds are
divided between funding for the
.
Mccann Recreational Center and
the Commuter Union Board.
r-
...
Marist professor calls
airliner
attack
inhuman
by Jeffrey DeSantis
killing of 61 Americans without
consistent policy to deal with the
provocation."
He should have
Soviet Union from one ad-
On Sept. I, a Soviet SU-15 shot in the strongest terms, indicated
ministration to another. Because
down a South Korean airliner that to Russia that America would not
of a lack of a policy each ad-
had flown into Soviet airspace.
tolerate such inhuman actions, he
ministration "acts to the Soviet
Dr. Ca
s
imir Norkeliunas, sa
·
d
u ·
·
1 .
.
mon
erratically
and
in
·
assistant professor of Russian and
The United States should rally . decisively.•'
·
-
-
~er_man, -~atd thJ _S~~i
-
~t~ shot
_
tht; her
.
.
all~es . to
.
.
institute: _
h31-rsh
Norkeliunas concluded that if a
.
.
,
a~rlm~r be~ause lt . Vl?lated ~1!,e
..
economic sanctions_. lt is . mef-
.
,
consisent
..
.
dit1\omatic
.
and in-
)egat!nle~
-
~~~v
_
?f:t'!~I~
a1~s!?~~e.
>
/
fectual
.
:
foc the U m_ted
.
Stat~s
·
tq
:
ternational policy·
·
had
:
.
·
been.
:
:
,
·
H1stoncally, Russia has been prevent Aerofiot
flights
because
·
established
from
the
riine
of'the
·
.
constantly invaded by
.
Toreigners
'
·
·
:
very f<;wfliglits are
:
mai:fcf outside
'.
.
-· Truman administration to deal
and has had to defend itself from
the Soviet Union. he noted.
·
·
..
•-
with Communism and Soviet
outside invaders.
Norkeliunas
The United States should
leaders, "we - would not have
gave Napolean and Hitler as
·
sanction the export of technology.
~llowed Communism_ to advance
examples.
.
•~one of the most vulnerable
·
m the world as far as
It
has today.
.
for .. this
.
re~son Norkeli1!~as
retaliatory measures,
that if
"Th_ere is
_
not
a
defif!ite policy in
said,
R~ss1~
!s
rath:r sen
_
s1uve consistently imposed would be
deah~g with
the
Soy1ets, whether
ab~ut ma1~tammg the mtegnty of most harmful to Russia, namely
_
they mvade Afgha_m~tan or shoot
!heir fro~tI~~s, whether on land or refuse to export wheat and all
down
~
Korean a1rlmer, or they
m the skies.

foodstuff to a population that is
march mto Hungary, or Poland,
. Accor~irig . to Norkeliu~as,
constantly, year after year, on the
or Czech~slovakia."
given theu national psychological
brink of starvation" Norkeliunas
Norkehunas was
born in
attitude to those who violate their said
;
.
·
'
-
·.,
·
'
.
Lithuania, now one of the 15
b
_
orders,
"It
was a fairly c~n-
The United States has to get the
·
republics of the_Soviet Uni_on. He
ststent act to repulse the m-
support of her allies to not send
came to the Umted States m 1949
vaders.
·.
However,
it was
wheat and foodstuff. "The Jong
at the age of 12. Norkeliunas
inhuman," he said.
range effect of such a boycott
received his Ph.D. in Slavic
Marist Professor Casimir Norkeliunas commented recently
The
most
effective
act would surely bring hunger riots in
languages, literature and history
President Reagan could have the Soviet Union just as it did in
from New York University
.
He
made, Norkeliunas rioted, "was the February riot in 1917."
got
'
his
M.A
.
in Russian Area
to call Congress
·
into session
Norkeliunas noted that the
S tu dies
from
Ford ham
on the downing of the KAL jet
.
(Photo by Jeff Kiely)
·
immediately upon hearing of the United States does not have a
University
.
·
·
Mass remembers
.
Marist
-
student
by
Veronica O'Shea
A memorial mass was held Sunday in the
chapel for
-
Marist student, David Mulcahey, who
was killed in an automobile accident July 7, near
Middletown;N.Y
.
Mulcahey, 20, of Barryville,
N. Y.,
was driving
home from a softball game with friends when the
accident occurred at 11: 15 p.m. on Route 97 in
Lumberland.
Mulcahey apparently took his eyes off the road
and lost control of the car, while changing a
cassette in the tape deck, a state trooper said.
Mulcahey died of multiple internal injuries.
His best friend, Philip Robinson, 21, was also
killed in the accident. State police said Mulcahey
and Robinson were thrown from the car when it
flipped over six times. Both wer pronounced dead
at the scene.
This semester was -to have been the start of
Mulcahey's senior year at Marist. As a Marist
student, Mulcahey was known as a quiet but well-
liked person.
His roommate from sophomore year, Donald
Eustace, said, "David was a quiet guy, but he
always had a great sense of humor. We often
went out together on weekends, although he liked
to spend most of his weekends at home. He was
·
very close to his family and friends at home," he
said.
.
·
Rob Powers, who lived with Mulcahey on the .
third floor of Leo H~ll said, "Although I did not
know David that well, he was a nice guy and
seemed to keep to himself."
Although he spent his freshman and
sophomore years as a resident, Mulcahey
~o~muted from his home in Bai-ryville during his
Jumor year.
Father Richard LaMorte, Asst. Dean of
Student Affairs, who has been in touch with the
family said, "David came from a small, rural
close-knit community, where everyone knew
everyone. He was quiet yet very involved
.
''
"David was very involved in his church and
functioned in a number of capacities within it "
said LaMorte. "Those people that spent the m~st
time with him, knew David a~ a quiet but active
person," he said.
"Often when you think of a person described
as nice and quiet, you think of a stick of fur-
niture," said LaMorte. "David was not like this,
.
you could see there wa~ another side to him," he
said, "The side that was out playing softball that
night."
...
Maris!
·
television stations
may soon become reality
by Claudia Bruno
The Marist College community
may soon have two television
stations broadcasting on campus.
Channels 6 and 8 are close
·
·
circuit stations capable of
broadcasting progams to any
televison on campus. Both
channels
·
have
unresolved
problems, but as they stand now,
Channel
6
will
broadcast
primarily educational material
from the Beirne Media Center
and Channel 8 will be operated by
the Marist College Television
Club, which is in the process of
being approved by the Council of
Student Leaders.
Although
Channel
6
is
operating now, said Scott Bad-
man, a technician from the Media
Center, the students won't see
much on it, because the channel
only comes on when there is a
program to play.
Approximately $2,000 was
spent for equipment to hook
Channel 6 into Bruce T.V.'s
antenna system, said Badman.
The channel
.
has been under
consideration for years and, three
years ago, a bid was put out to see
how much it would cost, said
Badman.
Channel 6 is more of a service
to the faculty
than to the
students, said
Badman.
For
example, said Badman, taped
lectures could
.
be played over
Channel 6 when a faculty member
is away.
Copyright problems restrict
.
Channel 6 to showing tapes of
lectures, according to Frank
Ribaudo, director of media and
instructional technologi~s
.
The
problems should be cleared up by
next semester, said Ribaudo.
Badman said, in the future,
Channel 6 plans
to
use tapes from
the Media Center collection and
tapes that are recorded under the
fair-use guidelines or the faculty
can bring in their own tapes.
Continued on page 10

>
.•

























































































--Page
4 · THE CIRCLE·
September 22,
1983•--------------------------~-------
·:
~
J)lf\fJ:.T~
·
~
\-bJs\NEI:.
.
·
~ ~ . ~ · ~ I
''AfA:.sE'
~
IT'
APl!R
()It.
lU,9&E.QlU--,r~
ff4U!
The name game
\t's bad enougt\ \he new
·
dorm
wasn't
to Uck the champagne bubbles off the side
corhpleted
.on time,'
'
and
that it.
Is
being
ofthe bulldlng
when
it's
finally
dedicatei:fr
called
·
the "New Residence Hall" While top
.
.

1.
Hudson
·
Hotel,
within
~iew
of the scenic
administrators scratch their heads tfying to
'
:
.
Hudson, arid
·
smack
·
in the middle of

name it, but
·
now it's possible that the dorm
.
campus.

··
·
·
.
,
is being named after Marist's original name,
·
,
2.
Maintenance Motel
.
or Shaughnessy's
Marian College.
·•>
·''
,
Shack,
after its former inhabitants.
·
·
·
Come now. Back in
1960,
Marian College
.
3.
"Den,"
In honor of top college official
became Marist
.
College
·
for a reason. Let's
.
President Dennis Murray
_
.
·
.
be original and
·
stop bouncing back and
·
4. Jamison Hall,
after
.
the dedicated
forth
·
between similar
·
names.
·
Why not let
dictator of the North End.
the students suggest some names for the,
5.
Hlggin's Hall,
after "the man Marlst
dorm in which sorne of them live? After all,
-
loves to love."
·
the students know what their priorities are
6.
Charlie's Place,
in honor of our hard•
at Marlst more than anyone else does.
working dishroom worker. We know ho\"
But to avojd names such as "Bud Dorm,''
difficult it would be to remember to put
and '.'Alco~Hall;" The Circle decided to let
"sllva-ware on the wack" without him.
the students play "Name That Dorm" and
pick one of the possibilities below. New
Send entries to "Name That Do;m," Circle
suggestions are welcome. The
·
winn~r gets
Post Office Box
000.
.
Some friends
.
Our first few weeks at Marist have been
filled with · welcome back mixers, parties
and nights out with friends. But that's not
all.
.
.
Amid all the celebrations, there have been
instances of burglaries and "late night

visitors." Two townhouses have been
·robbed of stereo equipment, as well as
other possessions. Another house had the
misfortune of having five strangers· walk in,
uninvited, during the night.
It seems to be an impossible task to try
and comprehend why anyone would commit
either of these offenses. Perhaps I've led
too
.
sheltered a life, living in a community
where everyone knows, and
.
are
.
usually
friends with, everyone else. I guess I've
come to expect that type of atmosphere at
Marist. Up until recently I've gotten what
I've expected. During my two years here, I
can't remember hearing about something
The
.
Editor
·
Associate Editors


:
.
.
.
·
..
,
.
.
~.
.
Circle
:
Sports Editor
like this happening.
And
it
shouldn't
have
happened .
.
But
perhaps
·
a large portion of Marist's
.
population are just as trustworthy of others
as I am. Too trustworthy, obviously.
Wouldn't it be nice to think that we could
leave our doors open at all times?
.
And to
think that people have enough respect for
the privacy and possessions of others?
So much for dreams. The evidence shows
that some people are only concerned with
themselves, at the expense of others.
Until this changes, It looks like we'll have
to keep locking our real friends out, along
with those "friends" who sneak in during
the night.
This whole issue is an unpleasant cycle,
with what appears to have no resolve. One
hand washes the other, but one seems to
always be dirty.
·
Cindy Bennedum
Christine Dempsey
Photography_Editor
Cindy Bennedum
Senior Reporters
Mark Stuart
John Bakke
Cartoonist
Readers Write
'
·
All letters ~ust be typed triple space with a 60 space margin, and submitted to the
Circle office no later ttian 1 p.m. Monday. Short letters are preferred. We reserve
.
the
right to edit all letters
.
Letters must
be
signed, but names may be withheld upon
request
.
Letters wilt be published depending upon avatlablllty of ~pace
.
.
.
TAP
To the Editor:
This is a notice to all TAP
recipients
arid

Regents
·
Scholarship holders. The
1983
TAP/REGENTS SCHOLAR·
SHIP Bulletin is available in th
_
e
Registrar's Office. This Bulletin is
meant to give you general in•
formation
·
concerning
the
requirements governing
·
the
Regents Scholarship arid
TAP.
Please read
it
carefully and let me
know if you have any questi~ns.
My hours are Monday ttiroligh
Friday,
8:30
to
12:30,
in the
·
Registrar's
·
Office. ·
.
Yours truly,
.
Rosemary Molloy
TAP Certifying Officer -
Wrong year
. Dear Editors:
student Brothers had gone to
The September
15 issue of THE
Mexico and Canada, but we have
CIRCLE has a slight error in the
traditionally dated the founding
article by Lou Arin Seelig.
·
.
of MAP from Michael Perry.
·
.
MAP was started actually in
.
.
.
Perry was ordaii:ied a priest
.
1963,
not
1968.
Michael Perry,
.
after graduation, and he

·
is
Junior French major from
currently chaplain as Pratt In-
Douglaston, Long Island, spent
stitute of Design.
63-64
iri Paris as the first at
Marist College lay student to go
abroad. Before him
,
a
few
Fraternally,
Bro. Joseph L.R. Belanger; fms
Audition problems
Dear Editor,
,
.
.
herself from laughin•g when one
I am a freshman who (as
m
of her friends was auditioning for
high school) is very interested in
a part. It
.
was
quite obvious
·
that
the Theatre Arts activities here at
he had been drinking and she
. Marist. Last week, I attended the
found humor in the fact that he
auditions for the one-act-play:
couldn't
pronounce
.
• words
The . Weatherman,
.
to be per-
.
correctly. In this instance, his lack
·
formed on October 8 and 9; I was
of control and her lack of tact,
.
appalled at what I witnessed at
made
the
-
people
·
he
·
was
those auditions.
-
.
auditioning with look like fools .
.
The director, who is an
·
up-
··
·
At
·
·
one
.
point;
'
the dir~ctor
·
perclassman ,
.
and
.
first-time
1
,
·
· ·
·
· ·
·'-
::,
director, hel.ct·two auditions that!
-
~a ked out of
the
:
room-f<;>r what I
·,
assumed as
·
a
short
'tfreak
':'
I also
:
and
·
some
.
.
other individuals
·
'
thought
.,
were
.
very
.
un-
werit out of the room to get a
.
professionally done
.
.
.
. ·.
.
.
drink and found the director tap•
The first
,
night,
.
things started
.
fnaf ~!?aii:~ o~e
.
_
of the custodians
out OK. Unfortunately, they did
.
To top
it
all off, the results of
not st;1y that way,
·
At
·
· certain
.
times
'
during
.
the evening, the
thea,uditions,
.
which \Ve
,
:were told
director. found it
.
necessary to
would
.
be posted
.
first thing the
laugh or joke out loud with the
.
·
next morning, were not
.
made
MCCTA president while people
public
-
untjl
the following
.
were
.
auditioning
.
Some of her
evening.
.
friends (who noisely came in late)
.
Because
·
of the nature
.
of
.
this
_ were
·
allowed to see the script for
letter and the fact that I am only a
a long period
.
of time
·
before
·
..
Freshman with .three more years
.
auditioning while the rest of us
·
to attend Marist College; I chose
·
were barely
.
allowed to know what
·
to remain anonymous
:
I am sure
the play was about before trying-
·
that ;-if I reyealed
my
name
it
.
out.
·
would· effect

my chances
- ·
of
Besides the
·
constant in-
.
participating in any productions
terruptions
.
throughout
the
·
.
in the future.
·
·
· ·
evening, at one point the MCCTA
Needless
:
to
.
say, I
.
was very
president announced that the
disappointed
.
in he upperclass
director had to go to another
Drama participants
and
the
meeting
.
and for everyone
·
to
MCCT A .
.
.
With this opinion I
return at
10: 15 if possible. The
·
know
I am not alone. If this is any -
director
·
did return at ap-
indication of how ihe rest of the
proximately
10:40,
twenty five
scho
_
ol's pro(!uctions are going to
minutes late.
be held then I definitely think
The next evening wasn't much
something should be done about
different. The direc
.
tor found it
it.
increasingly difficult to contain
Correction
Upset Marist student
Last week's story on Linda Zemba was in error about the
dat~ of her appearance on
_
PM
Magazine. The segment about
her 1s to be aired the week of Oct.
10,
according to the Marist
Public Relations office.
··
·
Jeff Kiely_
Business Manager
Jeannie Ostrowski
Eileen Hayes
Advertising Manager
Sean K9nny
Jane Scarchilli
Circulation Manager
Kathy McGarlty
Christopher Serafini
Faculty Advisor
David Mccraw






























I
I
-------------•--1!11111------------------september
22, 1983 ·
THE CIRCLE•
Pages--•
Reel


1m press1 ons
Rodney film
for fans only
These
LP's
are sure
to please
EASY MONEY
Poor Rodney Dangerfield. No
matter what he does, he gets no
respect. In
Easy Money, his
mother-in-law considers him to be
nothing better than a bum, while
Rodney holds somewhat similar
sentiments for her. Then word
comes that the mother-in-law has
died. This sets Rodney up on easy
street. Then word comes that her
will is going to be read. This sets
Rodney up with easy money. Or
so he thinks.
· "BODIES
&
SOULS"-
MANHA TIAN TRANSFER
The latest release from The
Manhattan Transfer, is a definite
winner. This Ip contains some of
the group's best work to date.
Since their last studio outing,
"Mecca For Moderns," the group
has adopted a new producer,
Richard Rudolph, replacing Jay
Graydon.
The sides of the album are
separated foto 1 ("BODIES")
and 2 ("SOULS"). "Bodies" is
the more contemporary of the
two.
It includes the· latest single,
"Spice of
Life,"
an
R&B
flavored
cut featuring a harmonica solo by
Stevie Wonder. Other candidates
for release are, the ballad-like,
"Mystery," and the uptempo
rhythm of "This Independence."
"Souls" brings the Transfer back
home with their extraordinaire
vocal arrangements intertwined
with sharp instrumental hooks.
"Code of Ethics" opens the
side and is truly a classic by their
standards
modern jazz
complete
with
a
string
Unfortunately
for
Rodney,
there are some complications. In
order to gain his inheritance, he
must give up everything he likes:
smoking,
drinking,
gambling,
and other women, for an entire
year. To ask this of Rodney is.like
asking anyone else
to
sit through
four showings of
Superman III.
Yes, it's torture.
This prolonged dose of "cold
turkey" starts to make Rodney a
little crazy.
He's a
child
photographer by profession and
arrangement and Vangelis-like
atmosphere. "Down South Camp
Meetin' " and "Why Not" are in
the traditional swing/jazz fusion
incorporating many delightful
vocal riffs.
It's one of the best, (if not the
best) vocal group around;
Manhattan Transfer, (James
Siegel,
Cheryl Bentyne, Tim
Hauser, Alan Paul) always
manage to maintain their unique
style while still broadening their
selection
of
tunes.
Most
refreshing.
"CLOSE TO THE BONE"-
TOM TOM CLUB
Q: What do you get when you
take some great studio musicians,
a few .ideas for songs fusing funk
and rock, in association with Tina
Weymonth and Chris Frantz (of
Talking Heads)?
A: The Tom Tom Club and
their latest album, "Close To The
Bone."
Since their '81 breakthrough,
the Tom Tom Club have
developed into much more than a
'flash in the pan' -
they are, in
Monday
in one scene he is having trouble
with a little boy who won't hold
stjll or keep quiet. While the
parents try in vain to get the bqy
settled, Rodney loses his cool and' "
calls the boy a name that would .
suggest
his
illegitimacy.
For
Christmas,
Rodney gets an
exercise bicycle that he proceeds
to drive right into the Christmas
tree.
As a whole,
Easy
Money
belongs in the "strict)y - for -
Rodney - Dangerfield - fans"
fact, a group displaying unique
style and rhythms. Sometimes
referred to as· a Talking Heads
spinoff, they have a bit more
depth this time around. The
sleeper turned classic, "Genius of
Love," left many wondering if
they could pull it off again. Yes,
they can and they did.
"Close To The Bone" comes
very 'close' to being faultless.
Each cut is given equal treatment,
resulting in an album complete
with
an
abundance
of
bass/ drum/ synthesizer tracks.
Unlike the first self-titled Ip, there
are no "filler" tunes here -
Favorites include:
"Measure
Up," "Pleasure of Love," "This
Is a Foxy World," and "At-
sababy!"
Tina, Chris, and friends have
successfully leaped from under
the 'Heads' shadow to offer us a
recording that's danceable and
. fup, yet still artistic in its own
way. Join the club.
"BEST BEA TS"
Joe Jackson-"Mike's Murder"
Wham U.K.-"Fantastic"
Heart-''Passionworks''
Tuesday
category. As a movie, it's a
mishmosh, but if you like Rodney
(I do) you'll probably get a charge
out of this. There are enough one-
liners here to keep you chuckling
for most of the two hours.
I don't eve·n remember what his
character name was. In a movie
like this, it doesn't matter. If you
sec
Easy Money,
you go because
you· want
to sec Rodney
Dangerfield, and that's it. If you
go for any other reason, it's just
to kill time.
Comatecns-"Picturcs On A
String"
The Cure-"Thc Walk"
Hawaiian Pups-"Split Second
Reaction''
Robert Plant-"Principles of
Moments"
Neil
Young_-"Everybody's
Rockin'"
Rick James-"Cold Blooded"
Lillo Thomas-"Let Me Be
Yours"
S.0.S. Band-"On The Rise"
Madonna-•' Madonna"
Rufus
&
Chaka Khan-"Stompin
At The Savoy"
Pat Metheny Group-"Travels"
llare Silk-"New Weave"
Hiroshima- "Third Generation''
Herb Alpert-"Blow Your Own
Hero"
Beside/Fab
5
Freddie-"Change
The Beat"
Talking
Heads-"Slippery
People/Making Flippy Floppy"
The Creatures-"Right Now"
(import)
Culture
Club-"Karma
Chameleon" (import)
Duran Duran-"Girls On Film"
(import)
Thursday
Meeting: Student
Affairs Directors
10 a.m. CC269
Friday
Mini-Concert:
Chapel 12 noon
Saturday
Trip: Vanderbilt
· and Roosevelt
Homes 2 p.ni.
Champagnat
Parking Lot
Sunday
. Mass: Chapel
lla.m.
Meeting: MCCT A
BoardS p.m.
Faculty Recital
7:30p.m.
Wednesday
Women's Tennis
vs. Siena
Meeting: Criminai
Justice Club
11
a.m: CC248
Meeting: Social
Work Association
11
a.m. Fireside
Film Series:
"Getting Busted,"
"Until lGet Caught,
and "The Social
Drinker and the
Anti-Social Driver"
11 a.m.D24S
Mass: Chapel
12 noon
Mime Performance:
"Trent Arterberry"
9:30 p.m. Theatre
Meeting: Fashion
Club 9:30 p.m.
CC248
Meeting: Marist
College T. V. Club
9:30 p.m. CC248A
Cambridge "Jam"·
Sessions: 12:1S p.m.
3rd Floor Fontaine
Meeting: Commuter
Union3p.m.
Commuter Lounge
Women's Tennis
vs. Bard
4p.m.
Film: "Escape
from New York"
7:30p.m.
Theatre
Mixer: "Dress
to Impress"
9
p.m. Dining
Room sponsored
by Fashion Club
Mass: Chapel
6:1S p.m.
PubNite:
"Heavy Sweater"
9p.m.
Brunch: Campus
Ministry 11:4S
a.m. Pub
Meeting: MOSIAC
Club6p.m.
Fireside
Dinner: Resident
Staff6p.m.
Pub
Film: "Escape
from New York"
7 p.m.
·and
9:30
p.m. Theatre
Roller Skating
lOp.m • . .
4p.m.
.Film:
''Nosferatu"
9:30 p.m.
Highlights
The National Shakespeare Company opens their 21st
Annual Tour on Sept. 22, 23, and 24 in McKenna
Theatre, SUNY at New Paltz. Their performances
include "Hamlet," "Twelfth Night" and "Much Ado
About Nothing." All performances begin at 8 p.m.
Pianist Harry Jensen and soprano Barbara Rocher
join in an evening of French and German song, in-
cluding those by Wolf and Debussy. The performance
begins at 8 p.m. in McKenna Theatre,
SUNY
at New
Paltz.
Phenomenal Jazz with Steps Ahead is appearing
tonight at Th~ .. Chance. Tomorrow night features
Robert "Rockabilly" Gordon. Johnny Winter will be
appearing at The Chance on Friday; Sept. 23.
Also playing at The Chance within the next week is
Nicksilver, John "Dr. Dirty" Valby, The Joe Perry
Project, and Monday Night Football on a giant video
screen.
\.,
..
}..
; i







































































































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6
~
TliE CIRCLE
·
·
September
22; 1983
-••,•·.~
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hasjt1St
been
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sh6t full of
3
holes .. ·
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ISTHIS·ANY TIME TO THINK
ABOUTARMY ROIC?
It's the perfect time.
You 're
;i
freshman, right? And you want
to make college a real learning experience?
- Well.ROTC can add a valuable
dimension to your college education. A
dimension ofleadership and manage-
ment training. And that'll make your
degree worth more.
.
ROTC offers scholarship and
financial opportunities, too.
Plus, the opportunity to graduate
with a commission and
begin your future as an
officer.
For more informa-.
tion, contact
ARMYROTC.
BEALLYOU CAM BE.
For more informa- .,-
. -tion contact Cap·tai~
t
Wingate, 212-297-3533
(collect).
Freshman
ROTC classes·
are available on
Monday after-
noons.
by
Council of
Student Leaders
The Council of Student Leaders
is a cabinet of elected students
which represents the needs and
concerns of all students, clubs
and
organizations active
on
campus.
The CSL of
1983-1984
is
composed of the president of the
student body, Keith Galanti; vice
president of the student body,
Keith Griffin; president of the
commuter union, Darryl lm-
perati; president of inter-house
council, Mark Zangari; president
of student academic committee,
Margaret Freund; president of
non-traditional
student
organization, Roger Newberry;
president of the college union
board, James Barnes.
This eyar, the student govern-
ment was off to an early start,
sponsoring Activities Day at the
McCann Center on Labor Day.
All the clubs on campus were
present, seeking to inform the
incoming freshmen class as to
what was
available for
in-
volvement during their academic
sojourn at Marist.
Activities day saw a successful
80-85
percent of the freshman
class attend.
Besides sponsoring an event
such as Activities Day, the
CSL
is
repsonsible for Homecoming Day
onOct.
l, 1983.
On this day, each class, club
and organization will enter a float
in the Homecoming Day football
game.
Moreover, the CSL is interested
in having the students aware of
the important issues that affect
the
Marist
community.
As
a
result, the CSL meetings,
he\d in the Candlelight dining
..
------■
•• •• •• •• •• •.·"••.···.·.,:
·
':'":··::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::_•
;~~:!1v::~~a!;~;i~=~t:~~:~~h
to listen to the issues being
discussed among the council
members.
CAPUTO's
·
·PIZZA
473-2500
Hot
·
&
Cold

s
·
ubs
.

-
Salads •Calzones
'
'
'
.
.
-
.
-• ltal-ian ·
·
Dinners
Eat
/-n
-
Take Out
Delivery 5:00 to Closing
LARGE PIE
$5.00
-
·
Extra Items
$1.00
$5~00 Min. Delivery Or.der
·,.
Most importantly, the CSL
hopes that students with any ideas
or concerns will contact a council
member to discuss them, thereby
strengthening the · lines of com-
munication
throughout
the
college community.
·: The . student government is
lqca;ted· in Campus.,Center 268,
where the office-: hours are
maintained by the council
members every day.
Interns meet
next Thursday
There will be a meeting of all
interns and students interested in
the
internship/cooperative
education program at
10:30
a.m.
Thursday, Sept. 29, in Donnelly
245.
.
This orientation meeting will-be
the · first of three meetings to be
held this semester. The report
meeting will be held Oct.
20,
and
the final report meeting
will
be
held on Dec.
8. All
meetings are
at
11 :30
a.m. in Donnelly 245.
At this first orientation
meeting, intern requirements and
responsibilities, as well as facility
responsibilities and new grading
procedures, will be discussed.
Fashion club
One of the · new clubs on
campus this year is the Fashion
Club. The next meeting of the
Fashion Club will be today in
Campus Center room 248 at
9:30
p.m.
The club provides the op-
portunity for students to explore
the many facets of fashion and to
gather together with the mutual
interest of becoming more aware
of themselves by expressing that
self through style, colors and
design.


















































































































_
Page
8 · TH°i:c,ticLE ·
Septembei22,
1983
.
Marist
-
·
·
worker led search
-
effort
by Kerry Judge
boy's disappearance he took it
effect on the neighborhood.
_
; and
upon himself to organize a search
_
"I'm scare to let my
·
kids
Lisa Arthur
,
'.':.;
·
·," '

party.
·
.
'
·
-
outside," Fink said. "I have three
· ·
·
·
'
-
·
; ·
' ·
·
"
;;:
· "I went up and down White children and I won't let them go
Findi~g
'
a
neighbor
·
who's
·
· Gates with
a
bullhorn trying to out unless they travel in pairs
.
"
willing to lend a helping hand
recruit people to help me
,
" he
·
Fink
·
-
said, "I think the laws of
th
e
se days isn't always easy. Some
said. "Many people ignored me,
·
N
.
Y.
state must be changed. The
people don't want to g
e
t involved.
·
but then gave their assistance. We police diC,n't do anything to help
Others are just too bus
y.
Bob
covered every bit of land from the out, they just treated Gary like a
Fink isn't one of
_
those types of
White Gate Apartments to the runaway." He added, ''.Tli
e
age
neighbors.
_
·
nex~ towi:i over :-
-
Fishkill."
d_eclared for runaways should be
Fink, an employee of the
Fmk didn't fmd the boy
.
sixteen ye~rs old because then
Marist College Bookstore, spent
"If given another day,
I
would kids can
·
be responsible for
several days this summer heading
have found Gary. I was so close themselves." If
N.Y.
doesn't
a
search party which was trying to
to finding him myself," he said
.
change its laws then it should be
track down a missing 12-year-old
"The boy's body was foundd one made mandatory for kids to be
boy
.
half mile away from the area
I
fingerprinted, so that they have
was searching
.
He was found near some identification and can at
the home of Mr. Arvid Ohlson."
any
.
time be readily identified,"
Gary Renta, the blue-eyed,
redheaded
youngster
was
reported missing on the night of
Aug. 1. He had last been seen at
the White Gates Apartment
·
Complex in Wappingers Falls,
where he lived with his mother.
When Fink heard about the
Ohlson, 62, was arrested for Fink said.
the murder. He has been
·
indicted
To prevent future cases like this
with second degree murder along from happening, Fink said, "I am
with other charges, according to working on setting up a neigh-
Fink.
borhood watch program, so the
Fink and wife Barbara said the feeling of safety can be restored in
Renta case has had a profound the community."
Number of tutors
·
on
_
rise
by Claudia Bruno
According to Carpenter, all
Sundays,
6-7
p.m.
new tutors, writing as well as
A
non-credit mathematics
More tutors were needed this
content, are required to attend
course, a foundation for
·
the
year at the Learning Center due to two workshops conducted by
three-credit algebra course,
last year's success, according to Toscano. She (Toscano) deals
·
started
- .
last Thursday
;
said
Barbara Carpenter, coordinator with motivation, communication
Carpenter.
.
of linguistic studies.
skills, and practical aspects such
Registration for the non-credit
Although the tuturing staff is
as filling out worksheets, said
mathematics course and for a
completed for this semester
,
Carpenter.
·
·
non-credit reading course which
Carpenter said,
.
·
she is always
·
"
"Tutor
trammg
.
is
peer
starts on
·
September 27, is in the
looking for prospective tutors.
counseling," said Toscano. "It's Learning Center.
·
"One vital thing is that they
(tutor training)
'
".i
Jor
;:
R,A.
's,
.
"If
a
·
student can't take the
(the tutors) are free during the students working
,
on
•··
campus,
reading course,
_
there's in-
time which I have a special section
.
.
.
students who
work
with
dependent study and counseling
of college writing," said Car-
students," said Toscano.
and tutoring by me,"
·
said
penter, who
·
prefers English or
According to Carpenter, tutors
Carpenter. "I don't hire reading
Communication Arts majors with
·
start at $3.85 per hour with an
tutors," Carpenter stated
.
·
averages of 3.0 for writing
increase after one semester, and
Review sessions currently being
-
ass
i
stants.
private tutors get paid $5 per hour
.
offered are for Principles of
Writing assistants
.
are r~quired
_.
by the students.
.
.
Accounting
I
and Introduction to
to
.
prepare
•.
one
_
_
hour
_
_
the
-
day"
.
Besides
_
.
the
.
special college
.
Statistics with Keith
.
Galanti,
before the class
an
c
l'
to
meet
on
writing section, the Learning
Introduction
_
to Computer
_
s
..
-_
_
_.
.
Fridays to
.
discuss
da.ss
activides
,

Center offers a proof
~
reading
·
A
;
p.
L
:;
and
_.
,
Cakulus
with
·
·
<:,)
_
"::
.
;
;""
_
·_(
,;
_
_
i-
_
.'
_
~
-
-
~
_
d
___
..
c~t
_
:\'.ienti:\
;-j
;
;
~
y
j:{'
:
t
:~1
:
,
"i
;i/
,-~_
:
_
-_
,:,;;;_
.
se~sipn
,..;
-
-_
fo.r
-.
,'.
st\ld_ents
_
with
_
out
_
:
·_
Man
_
a
_
genien
_
t
·
F
:c
A
_PP
_
lication
-
_
s
_ ~
;-_
,_-
~ith
.
,
,
.
,.
"-
:~
::~~
~
•f;:qr.
'im
in
ecifafe
;
employfiieni
r
<":
cnarg
e
·
··•
or
·•
appointm
·
e
·
nr
~·qn
?
i
fs
a~King;~\G
alc
uius~:3:-:;'wllli-'
:
_
use
·
sophomores, juniors,
·_
·
and
.
Tuesdays, 7-8
··
p.m., and on
·
:
Mpnica Beck't61d:
:
,
.
:
·,
_
,

:
.
.
~
.:
,
_.
:.
senio
r
s, but I welcome freshmen

·
·
whom I can train to
.
be writing

assistants in the coming years,"
-
-
·
said Carpenter.
J
Tutors for
the academic
:
:
.
:
content area have to have had the
course and made an "A" or "B"
in it, in addition to having the
recommendation of the in
-
o

structor, said Carpenter. Car
-
.
penter said content tutors must
.
meet
.
p
_
erjodically with
,
,
their in
-
sirudois
and
' ·
a
r
e
..
observed
,
_
trained,
and evaluated by
n
Marianne Toscano, coordinator
of academic review.
-
Although
she uses
upper
-
.
classnien, Toscano said
:
"I
allow
freshmen
·
to sit in. Second
-
s
'
semester freshmen can work for
_
_
Happy Birthday, Susan,
Hi Joyce,
Don't say
.
I nevt:r
anything
.
Love, A3
Love, Steve
For a good time call ext. 6-104.
Win a free
.
date with Ziggy!
B.M.O.C., New Residence, Last
of the Red Hot Lovers.
-
See
Dapper Dan, 1st floor Sheahan
for details after eight.
Drug City - Refried Bean - Thisis
funny!!
I DON'T CARE!
RDQ - I love you,
_
you big
"goofball.
"
Jim
&
Eileen - you're both-great
friends.
: ·
·' •
.
·
·
Love,AMP
Jeanne F. - Get that "pulsating"
tongue ready!
Maggie,
Aim for the goalpost!
e
f
_
3
·
Collegeview Avenue
Poughkeepsie
OPEN MON.-SAT.
Open late Thursday Nights
471-4444
471~4067
...
·-------------------~
I
.
I
1
$10°
0
Haircut :
I
·
Monday
·
- Friday
I
1
for the
:
:
Month of October
I
: Present this coupon with your Marist ID.
·
I
~-------~-----------~
Butterfields
South Avenue,
-
Poughkeepsie
471-8607
WELCOME
·BACK!
-
Mon.
Have your party
.
_
at
our place!
Tues. -
$4.oo
·
Lowenbrau
-
BEER BLOW OUT!
Wed. -
3 N.Y.C. Comedians
·
Thurs. -
·Dance Crazy
$1.00
Admission
$1.00
Bar Drinks
Fri. "." Ladies Night!!
_
Ladies
_
Drink
~
FREE 8-11
_
Sat . ..;
__
dancerock -
soc
·
Drinks
8 - 11
-
-
_
Open 24
Hpurs
"
473-1576
PALACE
-
-
.
Diner
-
-
& Restaurant
Breakfast -
-
-
Lunch
-
~ Dinner
Fresh Seafood - Steaks - Chops
-
Cocktails•
B_aklng
on Premises
Sh~w your college ID and get
a
FREE Glass of Beer
with
your meal!
-
7%
DISCOUNT
·
194 WASHINGTON STREET
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
(Next to All Sport. A short walk from Marfst)
I






























--■--~
.
.
.
111
.
~
.
~
,
- -..
.
- - - - - - -
-
- - - - - - -
-
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.;_ _ _ _ _
Septemb~ir 22, 1983 · THE CIRCLE·
Page
9 -
Muffcly'S
·
·
·

bOOk
Pinpoints corporate research
·
by Christopher Serafini
Marist
·
College
President
·
Dennis J. Murray says that he
believes the forging of a
·
part-
nership between academic in-
stitutions and
. ·
industrial cor-
porations may be one of !he more
significant
.
scientific develop-
ments of this decade.
·
·
In fact:Murray has co-written
a 341~page volume on how
universities and corporations
.
could cooperate in the research of
biotechnology .. The result of this
link between these corporate and
Irish
·studies
to experience
class growth
by Kathleen Driscoll
Ensuring a two-year effort
Marist College will be expanding
its courses in Irish Studies.
"We have Hispanic, Black and
Jewish studies, and with 85% of
Marist students being of some
Irish descent I felt there was a
need and a definite interest
.
to
begin an Irish Studies program,"
said Donald Eustace, executive
board
,
member of the Gaelic
Society and initiator of the
program.
Eustace said that the process
for instituting the program went
smoothly,
and that fatuity
.
members were supportive
of
his
endeavors. "President Murray as
well as Andrew Molloy (academic
vice president) are
·
behind the
program and seem enthusiastic
about the courses to be offered,"
Eustace said.
Eustace followed
proposal
procedures given

to him
.
by
Associate
Professor
of
Philosophy Edward P. Donohue.
Eustace
explained
that
.
proposals must be approved by
both
.
the
..
Student Academic
Committee
'
as well as by the
Academics Affair Committee.
·
History and Political Culture
of Ireland was the first Irish
·
Studies course offered. Taught by
Assistant Professor of Criminal
Justice Barbara Lavin, the class
began during the spring
·
'83
·
semester and enrolled 42 students.
academic
·
worlds could be the
creation of new

drngs and
chemicals · that would benefit all
mankind, according to Murray.
"However, the real focus of the
book is
.the
university-industry
relationship," Murray said. "We
chose the field of biotechnology
·
because it
·
is the most difficult: If
we can overcome the problems
encountered in this field, we can
cer,tainly solve any problems that
might be faced in the fields of
telecommunications or computer
sciences. The theories we present
in this book are not generic; they
are applicable to all areas of
research."
Murray
.
said
that
the
relationship between industry and
university has not been developed
to its fullest potential. He said the
problem is serious because "there
,
is more talent in our universfties
than in all the biotechnology
laboratories combined in the
United States."
.
In- his book, Murray reasons
that the · partnership between
universities,
.
which
have
,the,
scholars and laboratories, and
corporations, which have
·
the
money, could bring profits to
both and benefits to mankind.
.
With all this going for it, why is
corporate-sponsored university
research not more popular?
Traditionally,
Murray said,
universities were reluctant to
.sign
corporate research contracts
because they feared that their
academic freedom and integrity
could be challenged by the
marketplace and by restrictive
contracts
with
·
profit-seeking
companies. On the other hand,
corporations were afraid to give
money to university scientists for
open-end research that might not
result in a saleable product.
Murray
suggests
that
universities
could
maintain
control over the use of research
by keeping patents on discoveries.
The licensing arrangement would
allow
corporations
to
use
university research to create new
products and a portion of the
royalties from these product-sales
would go back to the university.
In
addition,
the
licensing
arrangement
would
allow
umvers1t1es to make sure that
their research is being used for a
socially acce
.
ptable purpose by the
corporations .
The licensing arrangement
between universities and cor-
porations would also give the
corporation exclusive rights to the
production and sale of any
product and results from cor-
porate-sponsored
research.
Murray said that the profits from
these sales may ultimately find
their way back to the research
laboratory,
enriching
·
the
professors who
perform
the
valuable research.
According to Murray, his book
was written for the narrow
audience of corporate planners,
lawyers, and university officials.
"I don't expect to see this book
on the New York Times best-
seller list," he said.
Murray said that his book,
titled "A Guide to Corporate
Sponsored University Research in
Biotechnology," is selling well
and has been purchased by many
corporate planners and major
universities internationally. The
book was published by McGraw
Hill Publications and sells for
$187. However, curious Marist
students will be able to pursue the
volume in the college library in
the near future.
Murray co-author is
Yale
graduate Patrick
J.
O'Connor.
The Danbury-based writer is a
consultant in the field of business
and education and is, according
to Murray, "very bright and
talented."
"The students were
-
interested,
and if the students are willing to
get involved in a course then I am
.
willing to prepare a course that is
·
in my
·
·
realm of expertise and
interest," said Professor Lavin.
WMCR General Manger Bob LaForty kicks off another·year of
(Photo by Gin.a Frl!nciscovich)
Professor' Lavin went on to say
.
that too many times the students
have no say in the courses being
offered to them. "What we need
is· more of a two-way street
between the students and the
faculty," said Lavin ..
Professor Lavin's course is a
survey
·
course
tracing
the
·
political, economical, social and
.
cultural aspects of
·
Ireland
through prehistoric to modern
times.
According to Eustace two more
courses will be offered next
.
semester,
one called
Irish
Literature, to be taught by
Assistant· Professor of English
Janice A. Casey. Irish Art
History is the other course, to be
taught
by
Sr.
Ma.riann
McGillicudy,
an adjunct in-
structor of English.
A possibility of a fourth course
dealing with the Irish in America
may be offered in the near future.
Professor Lavin said that the
fourth course was a result of a
student survey, and that its ad-
dition may result in an Irish
Studies
concentration.
"Hopefully by this time, next
year the concentration will have
been put through," Lavin said.
Further information con-
cerning Irish Studies will be
discussed this week at a social
sponsored by the Student Ac-
tivities Committee in the Fireside
Lounge.
·
broadcasting at the campus radio station.
..
Marist
_
community to
.
hear change on MCR
by Marci Medoro
The Marist community will be
hearing
a
change in Marist's radio
station WMCR, 91
.9
F.M. this
year.
.
General Manager Bob LaForty
foresees
a
promising year for the
station. "The C.S.L. (Council of
Student
Leader's) Financial
Board gave us a pretty good
amount of money this year .
.
l'm
happy with this year's budget."
LaForty has invested in new
equipment for
WMCR
including
a
$1,000 compressor/limiter,
which the station never had
before and a $495 microohone.
LaForty also
.
has a large budget
for new albums.
,
"With this new equipment,"
LaForty said, "and the new
albums, I think
WMCR
could
sound as good as
WPDH."
.
Along with the new equipment,
LaForty plans to
·
increase the
WMCR
listening by

having
contest give-aways over the air.
'
These contests will include such
things as album give-aways and
restaurant discount coupons.
Other highlights that
will
be
heard on
WMCR
this year
will
be
campus news, including class
cancellations, spot
interviews
and
footbal! and basketball games.
LaForty also hopes to hook up a
To ensure
·
this line of com-
cable line to the Mccann Ice
munication, LaForty has set up a
Arena so the Marist hockey
Traffic
.
i
Departinent:
>which
games can also be heard over
the ·
WMCR
·
iias
.
never' had before.
air.
Thisdepartm
'
ent wilt-receive mail
Aside from the technical side of
and will be responsible · for in-
WMCR,
LaForty's main ob-
.
forming everyone on the staff of
jective this year is to create and
the going's-on within
·the
radio
retain communication between
station. Ellen Stigberg
will
be the
the management and the staff.
.
head of this department.
"This was a problem last
"I really want the station to
year," said LaForty, "no one
sound good this semester," said
new what was going on. Decisions
LaForty.
"I
really think it will
would be made and not everyone
because we have some very
would be happy with them. That's
talented people involved this
not the way I want it to be this
year."
year,
I
want everyone to know
Over the summer, LaForty
what's going on."
worked with a professional radio
station,
WTNY
79
A.M.,
and
Students
·
praise off-campus life
with a professional television
station,
WWNY
channel 7, both
from Watertown, N.Y.
"I
want to
.
bring some of the
experience I got over the summer
into
WMCR,"
said LaForty.
"I
really think we're going to have
a
great year."
by Debbie Simone
Students who have made the
,
move from dormitories
to
apartments or houses off-campus
agree that the advantages greatly
outweigh the disadvantages.
When. asked to describe off-
campus housing, Nancy Halgren
of Plainview, L.I., said she en-
joyed being on her own without
Marist's rules hanging over her
head.
"I
feel more independent
than
I
did while living in the
dorms," she said:
"Dorm
life was
almost like living at home with
mom and dad watching me."
The feeling is mutual from one
of the girls living at 39 Delano St.,
in Poughkeepsie. Terry Abad of
Paramus, N.J., said that living
under the rules and regulations of
Marist made her feel like a child.
"At Marist you are not given the
full advantage of being an adult,"
she said. "People go to college to
become independent. I haven't
felt that way until this year and
'
that is because
I
.
have my own
house."
Another advantage of off-
campus living is the money saved
from food and housing. Barbara
Menapace, of Poughkeepsie, said
she saves a lot of money on food
alone.
"I
spent almost $200 a
month on the food plan at
Marist," she said. "I went to
breakfast four times last year an_d
I
ate dinner at work three nights a
week, so a lot of the money I
Continued on
page
i
J
LaForty will be holding•weekly
general meetings for anyone
interested in
WMCR.
The station
i~ open to anyone from the Marist
community.
WMCR
will be on the air from
8 a.m. to
2
a.m. seven days a
week. Requests for songs can be
made anytime during the working
hours by dialing extension 132.
·











































I
'
--•Page
10-THE
CIRCLE-Septe,;,,ber
22,
1983--------------------------------•
Marist learns
to
live With
f
flew
bottle law
by
LesUe
A.
Heinrich
New York's · new •nickel-a-
container deposit law went into
effect on Sept. 12, much to the
displeasure of area merchants and
consumers.
Under the law, the consumer
P.ays a minimum S cents deposit
when
buying
car.bonated
beverages sold in bottles, cans or
plastic containers at any retail
store in the· state. The consumer
then . returns the clean, un-
damaged empties to the store
where they were purchased, or to a
store that sells that type and size
container to receive the
5
cents
deposit back.

This statewide law has also had
an impact on campus life at
Marist. In the pub, draft beer
only is the new rule.
·For those students who go off-
boxes," he.· said. The boxes,
from trying," said Butern. ·
"We have no storage space to
campus to purchase their car-
provided by the distributors, are
Because of Rite Stop's location
effectively handle the bottles and
bonated beverages, the nickel-a-
able to hold 10 cases of empties.
on Washington Street,' across the
cans, so we decided to go with
container law may not be enough
When the distributor comes to
street from Scotty's bar, the store
draft beer only," said Sean Perry,
of an incentive to bring the
pick the boxes up, he pays Park
runs into additional proble_ms.
assistant food service director at empties back.
.
. .
Discount the nickel deposit, plus
"The kids go through Scotty's
Marist.
"If
we stayed with the
"I
think alot more beer goes
one. and one-half cents for
garbage and try to bring the dirty
bottled beer, we would have to
out of here than the empties that
handling, according to Sharp.
bottles in here for the deposit. I
pass the cost on to our customers,
come back,"· said Joe Sharp, an
"The boxes are unsightly, and can't accept a dirty bottle. That's
which we didn't want to 'do," employee at Park Discount
then tend to ·smell," said Sharp.
the law,'' said Butern: "You
Perry said.
Beverages in Hyde Park.
•~Personally, I w.ould like to see would be amazed at the parents
Keeping track of the bottles and
"We had to go to a lot of this law repealed. It's more work
coming with the kids and the dirty
. cans would have been nearly
trouble for-this law," said Sharp.
than it's worth."
bottles from Scotty's," said
impossible, according to Perry.
Among the inconveniences are the
Omelia Bu tern, an employee at Bu tern. ·
"When everyone starts getting
loss of one-quarter of the
Rite Stop on Washington Street, ·. · On the other side of the·'
drunk, they don't care about the· warehouse space, and the need to
has similar feelings about the counter, · the consumers don't
nickel that we would lose,'' he · hire one part time man "just to
bottle bill. "I hope it doesn't last seem to appreciate the bottle bill
said. There has been no adverse sort through empties," Sharp long, it's a pain in the neck," said either. "It's expensive,'' senior
reaction from the customers said.
Butern.
. Steve Bowman discovered.
"I
. concerning draft beer only, as
Sharp said the empties are the · · Rite Stop, a convenience store,
bought 2 cases of Bud in cans for
sales are running parallel to cause of many headaches.
does not sell beer in cans, $27 .90 at Hyde Park. That's
previous years in. the Pub, ac-
"When we get the empties, we
therefore they cannot redeem beer ridiculous," said Bowman. "But
cording_ to Perry.
sort them into brand names in
cans. "That doesn't stop· people I guess it's a necessa_ry evil."
.----------------
Reviews
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Now featuring CELLOPHANES, the new non-
peroxide haircolor/conditioning system with ·
unlimited color choices and excellent sheen.
l-1AIRCUTTt;RS
·
·
· $2 ..
06
off.-.·.·.
With Marist f.D.
. $~r.y/ng_ ...
Marist College
Since 1975
Tlil: CUTT~l2~
_3 Liberty
SL,
Main ·Ma\\, Poughkeepsie
. .
'
454-9239
.
·
Appointment Only
·
Poughkeepsie Classes
Beginning Soon.
Stanley
H.
Kaplln
The
Smart
MOVE!
. Lawyers in Love
..
for effect. The current. single
and title track contains Browne
After 1980's underrated
singing in
a
perfect falsetto and
"Hold Out'.' album and the
enough punch in the drums to
truly
boring
single
make it exciting.
"Somebody's Baby" Jackson
Unquestionably the bestsong .
Browne has decided to set things
on the album is "For A
straight. "Lawyers in Love" is
Rocker." With references to an
·Browne's more than musical
attempt (no lyric sheet?) to show
unbelievably bright shirt ("I bet
everyone he ca·n st1'll ro·ck ·1
·1
but
it's pink"), Peggy Sue and
dancing ("power supplies on the
. ends up more as an indecisive
soles of their feet"), Browne has
attempt to please everyone. ·
found the past, captured the
Obviously tired of his poet-
present and performed
it
all like
songwriter image, Browne omits
there's no tomorrow.
It's
a lyric sheet forcing one to listen
definitely a song for all ages and
to the album rather than read it..
an obvious choice for a second
Also, for the'first time, he at last
single.
fully credits his. band and even
The rest of the album is filled
puts their pictures on the jacket. with average ballads for the old,
The real star of the ban~ and devoted fan and a slick, tight .
_p~obab!y the whole a~bum 1s <?ne production for the new fan.
Rick V1t~, w~ose gmtar_pl_ayr~1g , Let's hope next time Jackson
.
,-ma~~S,Y?'fW_l~~ for_m~r i;u1ta~1~tt .commits hiihself one way·or the -
David Lmdley conu~ues m:1k1°:g) other, because Mr. ·· Browne ·
solo re<;or~s.c T~e product10n. 1s : makes
..
records · far too' in-
also. ternf1c with, ~nough" ·. up- ... freqµently for· him· to. come out
. fron~ druJ?ls and gu_1t~r runs .to , only half way.
. ·
.
qual_1fy t~us as a definite change
Kenneth F. Parker Jr.
of d1rect10nfor Jackson.
·
·
·
·
· · Unfortunately,
though
Browne · just doesn't seem t~
have the goods this time to carry
· it further than half way. With
only three certified rockers on
the album, the other five .seem
like mid-temp rock songs beefed
up with loud drums and guitar
Punch .the Clock
When Elvis Costello first
entered the music scene in
1977 ·
.
'
.
.
,
1t
wasn t exactly a dramatic .
. entrance.
Unless you read
various music magazines or had
access to a college radio station,
he was nowhere to be found .
But after six years, eight
albums, and . more · critical ac-
claim than anyone (except
maybe Springsteen), the -
Woody -Allen
~
of - rock may
have finally found his audience.
In "Punch the Clock," Costello
has struck a balance between his
early aggressive days and his
more recent compassionate
ones.
Costello backs up the At-
tractions this time with a horn
quartet and two female singers.
· Opening with "Le.t Them All
Talk," he sets the musical stage
right away by proclaiming
"these are the best years of your
life." It's a nice sentiment from
someone who once wrote
"Waiting for the End of the
World." It is followed by the
irresistable single "Everyday .
I
Write the Book.".
It
is simply
one · of his best vocal ..per-
formances; and if this one isn't
a
hit there just isn't any justice .
·, Devoted Costello fans may
yell "sell-out" with "Punch the
Clock," b1,1t with songs as good
as these it is easier to appreciate
• them for own.value rather than
pick them apart. Elvis Costello
has once again asked our- ap-
proval and once again he has
earned it.
·
Television~·---~~--------_..:_~-
Continued from page
9
Badman said:
"If
they (the
faculty) want to play tapes when
we're open, our student (workers)
can play them. If they waht to
play a tape when we're not ·here,
we'll play the tape on a timer.''
paperwork to legally put it (the . director; · Jim Mullan; a
club) on has been done and we're
sophomore,
as
produc-
waiting for confirmation."
tion/engineering director; Phil
· The club ·is planning to show
Boyle, a junior 'from the Bronx,
(<Flashdance"
as . its
first . as business advertising director;
broadcast Sept. 26 at 9:30 p.m.,
and Tara Scanlon, a sophomore,
said Robbins.
"Flashdance,"
as creative consultant.
according to Robbins, will also be · .; · Whether the Marist College
broadcast again at 9:30 p.m. over
Television Club will · be able to
(;hannel 8 on Sept. 28, 30, Oct.
1
broadcast from !he equipment in
and2.
·
the
Activities
Office
is
The Media Center can play a:s
many tapes as needed before
9
p.m. and only one tape after
9
Jim., said Badman.
_---::::::_-······=::
, Since students living · off
h~:-:.r==~;;;.:.;.:;;;;;:.:.;;.;.;;;;;;;;;:.:."4:.-.,,,..,.a
campus won't be able to see either
questionable.
"The only • budget · we've
According .to
Badman~
submitted now has been for
Channel 8 was put in by the Rev.
'Flashdance.' They've (College
Richard LaMorte and Betty
Activities) given us· $62 to show
Yeaglin, Director of · College
PREPARATION FOR:
GMAT • LSAT • GRE
c ~ - H .
l
!!A~N
CENTERLTD.
.
For more information
can
914-948-7801
channels, said Badman, the tapes
for Channel 6 will be kept in the
Media Center, so students can
watch them off the carrels: ·
The Media Center is also
working on getting a computer to
make Channel 6 into a 24-hour
message center, said Badman.
Although · Channel 8 was
operational as of Friday, Sep-
tember 2, the · Marist College
Televison Club, which plans to
run Channel . 8, is still in the
process of being approved by the
CSL.
The club is . having its second
meeting tonight at 9:30 p.m. in
room CC248-A, . said acting-
general manager Gene Robbins, a
junior from Connecticut.
"The club's goal is to produce
its own programs, but, right now,
it (the club) will be represented as
a service for Marist students,"
said Robbins.
·
Asked about the club's status,
Robbins said, · "All possible
'Flashdance,' " said Robbins. .
Activities.
To avoid any problems with the
Asked about his role regarding
• copyright Jaws, the club will
Channel 8, LaMorte said, "Anhe
license the video cassettes that it
request of Dean Cox, I looked
broadcasts with Films In-
into .the feasibility of showing
a
corporated and
SWANK
Motion
film in the dorms and
I
spoke to
· Pictures, both located in New
the people at AV/TV (Beirne
. York state, said Robbins.
Media) about it, since Channel 6
The club plans to show at least
has the capability to be pumped
five more programs, said Rob-
into every facility on campus."
bins:
According to LaMorte, $1,800
According to Robbins, the
was spent on equipment
for
the
following video cassettes are
capability of using
VHS. ·
being considered by program
"I arranged to purchase what
director ·Robert
Weinman:
we have,'' s·aid LaMorte, "but it
"Gandhi," "The Outsiders."
has nothing to do with the T. V.
"Psycho 2," Monty Python's
club."
"The Meaning of Life," Pink
"The VHS that was there (in
Floyd's "The Wall," "The Lords
the College Activities Office) was
of Discipline,'' and "48 Hours."
lent by Campus Ministry for the
Officers of the club's
purpose of running films for
management
staff
include:
freshmen on their first night here
or for anyone who was in the
Robert Weinman, a senior from
I ounge at the time," said
upstate New York, as program
LaMorte.






































































Seni
-
or Cla
_
ss
Moonlight
Cruise
Thursday
_
Sept.
.
29th
6
p
·
.m. -
9
p.m.
Refreshments, Buffet Dinner
and D.J.
$11.00
Per Person
Tickets will be
on
Sale
Friday, Sept.
23rd
1 O
a.·m.-
2
p.m.
;n. Donnelly
Hall
FRE
-
SHMEN
.
CLASS
Petitions for Class
·
officers
are
_
_
now available
-
in
CSL Of-
f
ice CC-268.
POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
President
Vice President
Trea
.
surer
Secr_etary
Signed
Petitions
are
due
Fri•
day Sept.
30th at 5:00 p.m. in
CSL
Office.
ELECTIONS
Will Be Held
OCT. 10-11
ALSO: Position
·
on Judicial Board is
open. Inquire in CSL Office.
~
-
-
--
-
- ~
--
-
--
-
-
-
---------~---------------
September 22,
-
1983 ·THE
.
CIRCLE~ Page 11
-
- -
Th
U
rSday
-
Morning Quarterback
-
-
John Bakke
Undefeated, for noW
"
'
After one game, it's one down
and two to go, just like it was last
year
.
And the year before.
Anything would be better for
the football team than going two
and seven again. Even one and
eight
would
show
a
little
mathematical creativity.
But judging from last Friday's
defeat of St. Peter's, this just
might be the year they break that
22
.
percent mold. Maybe a catchy
slogan would help. Remember
"One for the thumb," the Pitt-
sburgh Stecler's arrogant slogan
the year they tried for a fifth
world championship?
I've ~ot something a little less
cocky in mind.
How about
"Three, for God's sake, three!"
·
Well, enough of that. The Steelers
never got a fifth, so maybe
slogans aren't all they're cracked
up to be.
The St. Peter's Peacocks
(I'll
dispense with any comments on
that nickname, tempting as they
may be) went into Friday's game
with
a
young,
hence
inex-
perienced, team. Of their 22
starters, 13 were freshmen.
So what does first-year St.
Peter's coach Bob Morgan do?
·
He uses an old coaching ploy, and
feeds the Poughkeepsie Journal a
·pile of hokum (to use a polite
term) that gets dytifully printed in
Friday's sports section.
"I
just hope they don't score
80
points on us," Morgan was
quoted in the Journal as saying.
-
-
,
"We'.rejust hoping
,
w

g\.ve them
.
a
close game; We'd like to win, but
l have to be realistic about ii."
Sure, Bobby. St. Peter's went
into Friday's game with every
intention of beating Marist. The
trick here was getting the Marist
players to see the article (they
did), start counting their points
before they're scored (it looked
like they might have) and let an
inferior St. Peter's team squeak
by in a close game (they almost
did).
Maybe Morgan's comments
had nothing
to
do with it, but
Marist seemed to fall into partial
disarray at the first sign of
trouble. Penalties were the most
telling
symptom,
and
lasted
through most of three quarters -
this game had more flags than the
United Nations.
Marist was penalized
14
times,
losing
118
yards in the process.
The team actually lost more yards
through penalities than it gained
rushing. The foxes ran for a net
total
115
yards.
Their first touchdown came
only after St. Peter's quarterback
fun:ibled the ball away deep in his
own tel'ritc>'ty; The
'
second was on
a beautiful 72-yard pass play in an
otherwise ho-hum third quarter.
The defense had ample op-
portunity to put the game
out
of
reach. Several interceptions were
missed, including at least two that
were sinful. There were 10-year-
olds on the sidelines tossing a ball
around who made tougher cat-
ches. Really.
-
~
)~ut they won, right'! And they
-
got it together in the end, right?
WELCOME
BACK!
From Your Campus Rep.
Robert LaForty
Distributed locally by
National Beer
Distributors
20 Pershing Avenue
Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
.Right. Marist really did outclass
St. Peter's, a fact that became
obvious after the Foxe
s
stopped
defeating themselves. Once in
gear, the offense went downficld
like a knife through butter,
covering the 63 yards between
them and the winning score in a
minute and a half.
The defense looked good for
much of the game as well,
dropped balls aside. Granted,
they
'
re going to need more of a
pass rush against St. John's, and
granted, there were some missed
tackles, but they held up well
against an offense that looked
.
fairly sharp at times.
If
the team had played that way
the whole game, it would have
wiped the Peacocks out. Ob-
viously,
Mike
Malet's squad has
the ability to play better than they
did last Friday. The question is,
Will
they?
The answer depends on whether
or not the team can eliminate the
kind of foolish, and at times
costly, mistakes they made last
week.
If
they
,
don't, it'll be
another long season.
-
But' if they
do .
.
. dare I say more than two
wins this year?
It's
possible, but I'm certainly
not going
·
to stick my neck out
and say so -
not yet, anyway.
Beating St. Peter's isn't exactly a
great omen; Marist defeated them
in the opening games of the past
two season, only to lose seven out
of the following eight games both
years.
Housing __
Continued from page
9
spent on the food plan at Maris1
was wasted."
-
Sandy Olson of Madison, Ct.,
agreed that living off
-
campus is
less expensive. "I figured out that
..
I save close to $100 a month,"
Olson said. "I eat what I wam
without spending extra money.
No more Marist food
;
"
·
Another Marist student, Mary
Jones, of Mahopac,
N.Y.,
said
·
she feels more comfortable living
on her own
.
"The atmosphere of
our house is more relaxed than it
ever was in the dorms," she said.
"We don't worry about any
-
resident advisors bangil)g on our
doors because our' stereo is
too
loud or because we are making
too much noise. The only person
we have to think about is our
landlord and he lives 20 miles
away
.
"
Although off-campus life may
seem like the thing to do, there is
one big disadvantage as stated by
Lisa Holleman, of New Canaan,
Ct. She said transportation can be
a problem
.
"Right now I have a
moped which is fine, but when it
starts snowing
,
I'll be in trouble,"
she said. Holl~man also had some
good things to say. "I feel more
like I am at home. The dorm
rooms were so small and there
was really no ,vhere else you could
go. In my apartment, I am not
restricted to one room;" she said.
Judith
Cunningham,
of
Nanuet, N.Y., said she enjoys the
privacy of her own house. "There
are always so many people
around in the dorms and the only
time it was quiet was late at
night," she said. "My house is so
much more private than the
dorms."
· Tracy Sullivan, of Nanuet,
N.Y., looks at off-campus living
from another point of view. "We
can have parties and kegs that
were never allowed at Marist,"
she said.













































































.
IL
-
-
=P•v...,•
12•THE~IRCLE
-Seplemb•s
..
p o·El.i-S
:
FoOtball
·
foxes


·•
wih opener,
def eating St. Peter's
19-13
Quarterback Jim Cleary passed
from Westchester Community
·
Early in the fourth quarter, the
for one
·
touchdown
,
and ran 22
College; ran for
·
the game's first
Peacocks had third and goal on
yards for another as the football
touchdown from six yards out.
the six-yard line when Marist was
foxes won their first game of the
St.
:
Peter's tied the score at
penalized for pass interference,
season last Friday night at
St.
seven in the second period on a
giving
St.
Peter's a first down on
Peter's Breslin
_
Field in Lyn-
two-yard touchdown run. The
·
the one.
·
.
dhurst, N.J.
.
.
score remained unchanged into
Quarterback Ken Flora scored
Cleary's run came with }ust
-
59.
the thir<;I period.
·
on a keeper on the next play, but
Jim Cleary, who starred In
the team's opening victory.
seconds left to play and the score
Then, late in that· quarter,
_
_
the two~point conversion attempt
tied 13-13, and finished off a 63-
Cleary threw a 76-yard touch-
failed, knotting the score at' 13
:
way to the end zone, aided by a
yard,
·
game
-
winning scoring
down pass to senior
.
wide receiver
.
That's where things stood
with
block from Simpson
.
. ·
drive.
Warren Weller. Cleary connected
2:30 to go, when the Red Foxes
The score set off a celebration
It was a good night for Cleary,
·
on a
_
_
first
0
and-l0 play as Weller
defense held off the Peacocks on
on the Marist sideline
.
"I'll tell
who passed for 136 yards and led
turned up the left sideline near
·
fourth down at the Marist 37
.
you one thing," heaC;i coach Mike
all Marist runners with 65 yards
midfield. Having outrun his only
Marist then put together a
Malet said to his players,' "we
rushing. After completing only
defender, Weller raced the rest of scoring march that included three
·
showed a lot more character here
three of eight passes in the first
the way for the score.
·
.
more passes from Cleary to
than we did all of last year."
half,
·
c1eary was a flawless five
"I knew he could beat his man
·
Weller and
.
an 11-yard run by
Malet referred to a strong final
for five after the intermission
.
on that pattern," said Cleary
;
fullback Peter ~impson. As the
'
showing
-
by the offense, which
Marist took an early lead
. who picked up more than half of clock approached one minute, the
had been plagued with penalties
halfway through the first quarter
his 13~ passing yards on the play.
foxes had a first down on the 22-
and inconsistent play throughout
when Tony Oliver,
.
playing in his
Following the
_
pass, the point-
,
yard line.
.
most of the game.
·
:
first year as a junior transfer
after kick was blocked.
"We
-
had run the same play
He
.
also noted a strong per
-
.
.
-
before on the drive," said Cleary
·
formance
.
by the defense.- "We
·
D
d'
Z,.
·
of the foHowing play. "I was
held them off three times in the
r
O
~
,,am Ra ms
d
Own
~:~!~:nJ~ut~~J:nri: g~~
th
:~
[~~~~~~r
;~-~:/:~rn~~~
h~hta~~ll
·
·
·
option to run in that situation
.
"
' Marist will travel to Queens,
R~d
-
Fox soccer
,
;
f
eam
roJ:t~~tut~ ~h~a~i:~td~1ci2
1
~:;~
.
r~:~.s~e~~/~triha: ii~dfa~~x~!;
.
cut back to the left and ran all the
.
strongest 1983 opponents, in their
·.
in
.
·home opener,
4-J
·
by Frank Raggo
Berisha scored
-
what proved to be
Fordham
.
l.Jniversity handed
th
e
wining goal with a shot that
the Marist College soccer team its
eluded Marist goaltender John
third · defeat of
.
the year
·
1ast · Montanaro for a two goal lead.
Saturday with a 4~ 1 victory in the
The lone goal for Marist was
<
Red
-
Fc>xes'
.
ho
m
e opener.
·
:'·>


.
·
,
scoi:e
_
d
· .
.
by
.
.
freshman
_
-
.-
:
s
_
te
-
~e
·
·
··
The only victory Mari
s
t has was
Thomp
s
on eight niiriut
d
info
the
last Tuesday
·
at
Renrisclaer
.
second half but it \vas a
.
little too
·
Polytechnical Institute as junior
late as a late second half goal by
Raul Verne scored_ the Jorie
.
goal
Fordh
a
m put the game away.
·
of the game, and the first of.the
Tuesday the Marist team
.
season for Marist in a
1-0
contest.
played host
·
to South
e
rn
·
Con
,
·
·
Once again the lack of a goal
·
necticllt State
·
an
·
d hopefully the
scorer hurt
·
the Marist team as
.
offense s_tarted
·'
to
.
put things
they fell
_
behind
·
3-0 in the
.
first
.
tog
e
ther.
·
Frank Schnur, head
half against
_
Fordham. Marist
coach of Fordham.said that of
seemed
·
to don:iinate the earlypart
course, Marist is going to have
.
of
.
the game but were
.
unable
to
·
Problems
.
without their

star
penetr,He
1
hro~gh thr
:
F,ordham
\
playe_rs
of
last
_
·
t~
~~
N
:
~
Vv_ayn_e
defense.
·-~
•'::-
··
;:;--
·
.
'"
·
'
-
·

·
.,,
·
Cargill and Mark
-
J\clams
;
·
and
·
ll
While
-
-•
Marist
.
~-
was having
would probably take a few more
.
problems,
.
Fordham was building
·
games for their offense to mature.
an.insurmountable lead, Forward
Marist will travel to
·
Fairfield
Billy Vogel
-
scored his third goal
University on Saturday and to
oftheyear only eight minute~
·
into
Hartwick next Wednesday before
the game fe>r the quick 1-0 le
.
ad
.
.
coming home
.
to play
-
Sieria
.
Nine minutes later, forward Jim
College onSept
.
39,
Other
-
Action
Wornen
's
tennis
..
match of the day for
'
the Red
·
.
·
seco~d
,
of
·
·
f<>~r
::
Conference games.
SUMMARY
Marist
7 0
·
6 6
·
St.Peter
'
s
O 7 0 6
.
Mar -
Oliver 6 run (Huber kick)
St P .:,_ Nash 2 run (Mustac kick)
·
Mar -
Weller 72
.
pass (kick·
failed)
St P --: Flora 1 run (pass failed)
Mar -
Cleary 22 run (run failed)
First downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Return yards
·
Passes
·
Punts
Fumbles-lost
·
Penalties-yard
Mar
12
.
_
,42-141
136
17
8-13-1
8~32
2~1
14-118
StP
20
41-166
114
5
12-41-1
6-36
3-1
10-70
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
:
Rushing -
.
Marist, Cleary 17-
44, Oliver 7-35, Difalco 6-16,
Simpson 5-16, McKinney 2-4. St.
Peter's, Shalhoub 23-114, Nash
8-
28, Flora 8-(11).
Passing -
Marist, Cleary
8-13-
1
-
136. St. Peter's, Flora 12-41-1-
114.
Receiving -
Marist, Huber 7-
214, Weier 1-41. St. Peter's,
Yaniero 3-29,
Hurst 3-25
,
Gleeson
3-25,
Nash
1-14,
Forrester 1-11, Ciallella 1-10.
-
.
·
·
-
.
Foxes.
.
They
both
:
played
loses_
:
t<J.
$age
'.
diligently in losing the first set
.
_
.
,
.
. ,
.
.
.
6-7
,
then dropping the second,
0-6.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
·.
.
The Marist women's tennis
.
te~m
·
_
Jost

to Russell
·
Sage
·
college in a tournament at
Siena College last Saturday.
_
The team did bounce back
to beat the College of St; Rose
.
.
on Sunday.
Senior Paul Sutherland
opening loss.
by a
.
Fordham defender in Saturday's home
(Photo by Gina Franciscovich)
. The only victory for Marist
in singles play was scored by
Diane Scaduzzo
as
she
defeated Jennifer Embreee in
three sets, 6-3, 4-6, 7-5.
·
.
.
Volleyball team·
drops opener
·
Doubles action saw Sharon
The women's volleyball
Taplin and Michelle Pisano of
team fared poorly in its season
Marist get
.
by easily with a 6-0,
opener, a
tournament at
6-4 win over Sage's Donna
Williams
College
in
Reed and Mary Lasewicz,
Williamstown,
Mass., last
while Donna
:
.
Graziano and
weekend
.
-
Mary
-
Ann Dolan teamed up
The team won
its first
game
for a come from behind
against Vassar, only
to
lose the
victory o~er Coleen Miller and
second in its first best-of-three
Darleen Foote, 4-6, 6-2, 6-2.
match. The
_
third game was
Cindy Krueger and Kathy
lost 17-15 after the Red Foxes
M~lligan_
>
P
_
lii~~
-
d hard. in _a
.
__
were up 15-14 and serving for
losmg effort
..
for Manst
·
m
the match
.
·
·
singles play. Krueger lost to
On Sunday, the foxes were
Susan
.
Getchel of Sage, 1-6, 4-
. beaten by Williams College in
6, while Mulligan also lost in
two games, 15-8, 15-7.
.
.
straight sets, 2-6, 3-6.
.
.
The team is scheduled · to
Carol Maloney and Valerie
play
t
onight at face and next
Petrini lost the only doubles
Tuesday at West Point.
Cr()ss country shut out by Navy team;
'looki_ng toward Notre
·
oa~e invitational
The cross country team
·
was
shut. out by the U.S. Naval
·
Academy in
a:
dual meet last
Saturday at Annapolis, Md.
Twelve runners from each
school competed, with Navy
taking the ~op eight spots and
twelve of the first fourteen
positions. Their top five finishers
earned Navy 15 points, winning
..
the met and leaving Maris!
.
with
the maximum allowable 50
points.
Junior harrier Jim Hegarty
finished in ninth place
,
the
highest among Marisf runners,
·
with a time of 26:26 on the five~
.
mile cours~: Hegarty was 1
:04
beh~nd the meet's top runner,
D
_
w1ght Woodru
_
ff of Navy.
Pete Pazik,
a
sophoiiiore who
.
missed last Saturday
'
s
·
meet at
Fairfield,
_
Conn.,
.
because of an
injury, finished 12th at 27:19.
.
Coming in behind the last
'
Navy
Runner were sophomores Mike
Mueller (15th, at 27:26), Mi~e
Barker (16th, at 27:43) and Mike
Murphy (17th, at 28:01).
·
The other seven Maiist runners
c:ompleted the field
·
in 18th
-
throygh 24th place;
First-year coach Steve Lurie
·
said his team performed about as
.
he had e~pected. "You've got to
·
remember that they're probably
the best team Marist has ever run
a dual meet against," said Lurie.
"I think it's plus for tis to go
against these type of teams.
"If
you want to be
·
the b
_
est,
you've got
to
run against the
best," he said. "I believe we can
be successful in Division One, and
I believe we can do it without
·
scholarships."
·
Lurie said the team's looking
toward the National Catholic
Invitational at Notre Dame
University on Sept. 30. "Four of
the seven positions
·
for Notre
Dame are set, and the other three
should be decided next week " he
said
.
.
'
_
·
The harriers will be at King's
·
College in Briarcliff Manor, N. Y .
for a meet. "This was supposed
to be a week off for us ''
·
said
Lu~ie, "but thi
_
s meet will help me
decide _who will be going to In
-
diana."
.. .
.
_


29.2.1
29.2.2
29.2.3
29.2.4
29.2.5
29.2.6
29.2.7
29.2.8
29.2.9
29.2.10
29.2.11
29.2.12