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Part of The Circle: Vol. 29 No. 3 - September 29, 1983

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Volume
29,
Number
3
MaristCollege, Poug~keepsie, N.Y.
September
29,
1983
Galanti is target of hearing
by
judicial board



<
'
by
Steven Berger
The college Judicial Board last
week held. a dosed· meeting to
hear a report . of the alleged
misconduct of Council of Student
Leaders President Keith Galanti.
did not take.action, btit a hearing student government Constitution · organizers of- the party, said the
helping a friend who wanted a
might be in order in upcoming·. states that "The (Judicial) Board
business c.ontract between Dirt Pit
new mattress for he;;r dorm rooin.
weeks: '. Dougherty - refused to has . jurisdiction oyer cases .. in- ... Manqr. and Buttt;rfield's. diet not . •·. - . LaMorte, ·· however,. said he
elaborate further.
volving student governance;: stich • · · invol.ve· anY: :money•: tr.ii!")sa¢tip~.s: ·: :: · .b~Heved· 9~fanti-.
was .. •
'in ·
direct
Dean · of Student Affairs as the· removal ·of student of- · He.: said. the. _-profits •:thar-were : violation oLcollege norms" by
Gerard A. Cox said the board is
ficers .. .''
made were d~posjted :iri
a
joint · "itioving · college ·property.· He ·
waiting for answers from Galanti
The first incident involved a
account at
:a
·bank and will be
further said he gave qalanti a
to some of the questions they have party given prior to· this semester
donated to Marist in the future.
chance to explain · himself· in
The Judicial Board was con-'
vened for an official meeting by
the Rev. Richard A. LaMorte,
assistant dean of student affairs,
at 2 p.m. on Sept, 21.
raised.
. by Galanti and. Dirt Pit Manor,
Barnes· is president of the · writing, but Galanti refused.
. The Judicial Board is a seven- · an unofficial · student group,
College Union Board and a
LaMorte said he went to the
member board, which administers which was held at Butterfield's on
member of the CSL.
Judicial Board to get its advice.
LaMorte produced accounts of
two incidents in which Galanti
had allegedly failed to maintaip a
responsible role model as stud.e.nt-
body president, according to
Richard Dougherty, chairman of
the Judicial Board.
all ·· hearings
pertaining
to SouthAvenue in Poughkeepsie.
The second incident involved
"(Considering) the nature of the
students.
Two · members
are . · . Galanti said the party had no
the movement of mattresses .from
situation, I felt there was need for
elected to office, while three connection with -Marist or the
Leo Hall to Champagnat Hall by
studentinput before any decision
others are appointed by the CSL. student government, He said Dirt
Galanti and a friend. Galanti said
on my part," he said.
These five members are students. · Pit Manor·made a profit from the
the incident was "ridiculous" and
The board may meet this week
The final two ·.members. are- ap-
Venture. O'We never intended to
that there was no intention to
to discuss the matter further.
pointed for the faculty .and ad-
make a ·profit," .said GalantL
steal. "All anyone had to say was
According to .CSL officers, the_
ministration.
''.The money will come back in
to put them back and I would
CSL was not notified of the
one ~ay or another."
·
.
· have," he said.
Judicial
Board'.s Sept.
21
Doughert'y,
a
senior from
Canterbury,
N.H.,
sai~ the board.
Article 4, section 6 of the
James Barnes, another of the
· Galanti said he was simply
Continued on page 2
Alumni, gam·e, <Janee
highlight homecOming
by Donna Piper
alumni affairs.
"The homecoming weekend
Between 600 and
700
alumni
furthers . the ties between the ·
are eJepected
on campus
college and the alumni;'' Maloney
throughout
this
weekend
to
said "It giv~s the alumni a chance
participate in. the many festivities .· to become. better infqrmed of the
for Homecoming '83, according . : recent developinerits of the schooF
•·
to . Bryan . Maloney,
·
•director -of: .. and-fe
0
estatiiishes. tlie:. prid~,tli~t
.
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·_\Yeek¢~d~\Vill-Pe:~a -_Oinriei-Jrh~tre_ ..
·.·.·l·s· :
..... c ...
·.o:

.. ·c·•
e·r·•• ..
·n· \
.
. · ... ••·. ·
this Friday··riighffrom 8:30 p;i:ii; .. :
.
. to
H
:30 p(m.
iri
the Colleg~
at
neW ddrrh ..
~~i~!'.'ZTh·~~::tt~~~::i!,
.Community .··••.·•· ExperhnentaL
'
Repertory : Theater, .... "Inc. · Son-
The residents . of . the - new ·: dheini won .. the ·coveted Tony
•freshman d. orm have
.. pe. titi.oned
.
:A:ward . for best composer and
• by Sandy Dariiels
Victor,. a ~foot~long ;bQa cc:instrictor owned by
himself at home at Dutch Gardens.
·
·
(Photo by Jeff Kiely) .
, lyricist · for
"Conipany,''
Marist
to
protest what they say is
"Follies;
u
"A-.· .
Little . Night.
a . lack of cleanliness in·•· their
Music', and "SweenyTodd.,,
dorin. ·
.•
.
Maloney pointed. out that the
· ·.·· .The biggest: complaint
.
: the
Dinner Theatre is one of several
students have. is the condition of
·
·
· ·
·
. the bathrooms, ''Theg· arba. g· e
.. is
events that will .be open to>all
students in an effort to involve
Victof
the
boa Con.Strictor
. nevefemptieg, there were three
the . student b
O
dy .·. with
fi
.
.
·. •
·a·._ ..
.
bags overflowing at one point. · Home. comin. gWeekend.
,>
•.
.·,n s
·we're always ·· running out · of
·
. toilet paper, and th.ere's black - : A,lso on Friday nig~t, from .
.
.
.· ...
·
· · •·th
h
e s·talls " sai'd
9.30 p.m. to 1 a.m. will be the
.
scum m . e s
OW
r .
' .
. Gala Wekome Home Cocktail
transfer student .Maureen Kelly.
·
Dutch GardeflS home
She-werit on to say tfiat there was
Party at. the Fireside Lounge .in
by Debbie Simone
also.
a
gray m.m in the. sin. k. s f.or. two
the Campus Centef. This eyent
.
Victor lives in a Dutch Gardens.apartment·with
will be restricted to alumni.
Along with ·his clothes, stereo, posters and couch,
three roommates. He is usually kept in a glass cage
.days at a. tinie, proving, that
On Saturday at lo:30' a-:m.,
Mike Hayden of Mountain Lakes, N.J,, decided to
heated at 85 degrees because, according to Hayden,
maintenance : did.· not comf' in
alumni oarsmen and women will bring his. pet, a ·6-foot-!ong boa constrict9r, to
that is comfortable for a snake.
"He
has no trouble
. daily
to
clean.
. ·.·
> •,
challenge the Marist crews at the Marist with him.
witf people," said Hayden. "Victor lived at a
Edward Waters, vice president
Annual Alumni Crew Race at the
The snake's name is Victor. He is 7 years old and
college for four years with his previous owner. He
of admlnstration .and firiarice, · Marist riverfront.
.
.
weighs 23 pounds Hayden acquired Victor· from a
has always been very good with people," he added.
said · that ·: the • maintenance
Also for alumni, the Great Pre-
close friend who had to get rid of him because he was
When asked
if
there was any doublt in his mind
problem was a result <>f .work .Game Tailgating -Party will be moving. "I volunteered to' take him in June," said
about the docility of his snake, Hayden said he can't
being done to ·finish the facility.
held in the McCann Center Hayden .. "Cknew that he has never hurt anyone and · be
100
percent sure. "There is always the possibility
''.We would have
·
liked to
-
have
P·ark1'ng Lot at noon.
t.h th. · 't d
"
·or V1'ctor attack1'ng ·but ·11 has· n't ha.ppened so far
had everyt.hing perfect w. hen the
At 1 ·.30 ·p.m·. 1'n the Mccann . a . e
ISO .
,an.gerous. . ... ·.
.. ' - . •. . .
. .

' .
. . .
. .
'
d
d ·
b
d'd •
Victor is a gold, black and tan snake. "It's hard to· and l hope it"never does;'' said Hayden.
.
·.
shtu entsh moye
!?•
Wuttwe
I
!1dt
Center, the Marist . Women's find a boa constrictor with colors as bright as his,"
"The problem is Victor hurting .himself, rather
ave
"t
e time, · · a ers sai ·
_Varsity Basketball team wilJ. be· said Hayden. .
than hurting someone else," he said. According to
"The dorm juSt opened; · in the
challenged by some alumn. i
· Hayden, Victor likes to wrap around things, and a
bl
"
There is not much of a buying market for snakes
process, pro ems came up.
women ba. sketball. pl. ayers in a
Id

few times it's been electric cords, which could
Residents of the new dorm had
as o. as 1ctor, according to Joseph Mossa, owner
.
h l
game that Maloney refers to as ofSelmer's Pet Shop in Connecticut. ''I had a very
electrocute him. Victor also has an instinct to hide
trhouble !ihndihng_ someon
1
e. to e P
"an alternative for the football hard time selling a boa some time ago and I won't do
under things where no one can see him. This could
t em
Wit
t eir comp amts, so - game_ kind of a new twist." All ·
· "
'd M
be dange. rous if someone decides to move a table or
they drew up a petition that was
It
agam; sat
ossa,
signed by everyone in the dorm.
students are invited.
Hayden• feeds hts snake once every three weeks. . chair' added Hayden.
"I don't think it should have ever
Also at 1 :3
o
p.m. will be the "He'll eat a ju~bo rat or two," said Hayden. Victor
Hayden's roommates don't miod the snake at all.
gotten to. the point it did," said
game we've all been waiting for,
also drinks and deficates only once every three
"Most people are afraid of Victor because they think
Marist vs. Iona at Leonidoff
he is very dangerous," said Hayden. "Their reaction
Kelly.
Field. All students are welcome to weekS, he added.
is 'get it away.'"
According to the residents of · witness the Red·Foxes attempt to
Before the snake eats, he ~beds an outer layer of
According to Hayden, the best way to hold the
the dorm, the pelition brought
snatch their third consecutive his skin,
·
which forms a shell. Hayden has one of snake is with one hand about six inches from its head
about a slight change. "Main-
homecoming victory.
Victor's past shells hanging on his wall. Sometimes
and to support the rest of his body from underneath.
tenance is cleaning the bathr<>oms
From 9:30 p.m. Saturday until these shells can be sold, depending or.i whether or not
"Don't grab his tail or around his head area," said
more often, but they could still be · 2 a.m. Sunday, the seniors are they are broken.
· . .
.
·
Hayden. "Also, don'.tlet him cross his body around
much cleaner," Kelly pointed out.
invited to join the alumni at the
Although boa constrictors may look poisonous,
your neck or you'll be sorry," he added.
She went on to say that it isn't
Homecoming Victory Dance in they are not. They kill their prey by wrapping
Hayden plans to keep Victor until he graduates
even close to what your mother
the Dining Hall, Campus Center. around and squeezing them. They also have large,
this year. "I'm fascinated by him," he said. "I
would consider clean. When
strong jaws and sharp teeth, so they bite at their prey
enjoy having him around."
·
Cop~inued on page 2.
Continuedon page 10
'
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l
·
·.
··
.
,
·
,
, Page2~
THECIRCLE~
·
Septemb
·
er29;· 1983
Dorm. _ _
_
Continued from page 1
asked what would happen if the
situation did not improve, Kelly
said that students weren't going
10
just let things go; "I think the
administration should have more
.respect for us and we should work
J
FRESHMEN
()
together," said Kelly.
·
According
to
Water,
the
problem is caused by the con-
struction around the area. "With
construction, dust is going to be
inevitable," Waters pointed out.
"The freshmen arc just having
trouble getting used to college life
arid how we keep up the place."
Waters went on to say that ad-
ditional help was hired and they
were working on the situation.
ll
Declaration
·
for can-
d
·
idacy and signed
petitions are due
_
in
CSL office by 5:00
The newly hired superintendent
for the physical plant, Anthony
Tarantino,
has
extensive exc
perience in the field, Waters said.
Tracy
Sterling,
residence
director for the new dorm, agreed
with the students that the physical
condition of the
.
facility needed
improvement. "Things here are
not acceptable -
they shouldn't
be for anyone," Sterling said.
"Hopefully,
with
the
new
superintendant in the physical
plant, changes will occur."
Waters stressed the positive
aspect of the. new facility. "The
location is ideal," Waters pointed
out. Waters went on to say that
the construction crew is working
overtime to complete the new
dorm, but that it can't kee
·
p going
night · and day. Waters
.
.
com-
mented that according to time
schedules, the crew is doing a
tremendous job.
Students living in the
·
new
residence hall were finally able
to
move into their assigned rooms
this past week. According to
Waters, construction of the new
dorm should be completed within
the week and the maintenance
situation will then begin~to im-
prove.
Galanti_
-
.
_____ __
Continued from page
I
meeting. The CSL says such
notification is required.
When the CSL officers learned
unofficially of the meeting, they
attempted to attend, but were
·
denied entrance by LaMorte.
LaMorte told them to get per-
mission to attend from Dean Cox,
according to Barnes.
Barnes said the CSL then met
with Cox and presented him with
.
a document which appointed
three new members to the Judicial
Bo
_
ard -
Ronald Young, Gene
Robbins and Steven Giacoma -
to fill vacant positions. The
document was sign
·
ed by all CSL
members at I p.m. Sept. 21.
--
The CSL is empowered by the
Constitution to appoint three_ of
the student members. The other
two members, Dougherty and
·
Lisa Crandall, were elected by the
student body at large and serve
until graduation.
Cox said he was led to believe
these appointments were made
back in the spring of 1983. He
said the delay was caused by the
strained feelings between the old
student government and Galanti's
government.
Article 4; section · 9 of the
student government Constitution
states that "At least five.members
of the College Judicial Board
3 Collegeview A venue
Poughkeepsie
OPEN MON .-SAT.
Open late Thursday Nights
f
471-4444
471-4067
·
·----~--------------,
I
.
.
: $10°
0
Haircut :
I
Monday
.
- Friday
·
:
1
for the
:
I
Month of October
1
: Present this· coupon with your Marist ID.
·
I
~---~------~--------J
CAPUTO'S
PIZZA
473~2500
Hot & Cold Subs
•Salads •Calzones
• Italian Dinners
Eat In • Take Out
·
p
·
.m.
Friday, Sept.
-
~o.
Campaign ·week
beg-ins Oct. 2
and will end
Oct.
9.
Candidates
_
For~m
will be he
.
Id on
bet. 9 at 8:00
ELECTIONS
OC
,
J. 10
and
·
.
:
11
must be present for business to be
Outward Bound is a shot of
Namr
conducted."
high
_
adventure in the wilderness.
According to Dougherty, he,
D 1•
5 00
t
Cl

Anda lot more.
Crandall
and
Mary
Ellen
e
IV8ry :
.
0
0Stng
It"satripthat'llshowyouwhat
Muzikowski filled the student
you"n•
made of.
State•
requirement
for
an
·
official
LARGE Pl
$
Youcandiscovervoucando
meeting. Irma Casey, associate
E 5.00
almost anythingyoi.1 want-if you
professor of Spanish, and Betty
try.
Yeaglin,
director
.of
campus
Extra Items
··$1.00
Our
3-wcc-k expcric-nce
in
self-
.
· ·
r·11 d h f
I
d
(
'
Ollfidencc sun: isn't easv. But
it
Sc
·
h,ml
Phom
·
Zip
ac1Jv111es,
1 e
t e acu ty an
might just last you the rc-"st of\·our
<'h...-k 1h,·
rn11r,,,·s
1ha1 1111rn

s1 ~·011.
administrative requirements for
life.

C.
1111
w
111
11
-
n.-,,·r1
,·xp,·<1111011,_
an official meeting.
It
is not clear
·
Your first challenge: send for
\\
'
ho,· w,11,·r
Wilct,
·
rn,
·
, ,
if the Judicial Board's Sept. 21
full information.
rafimc
1>a,
·
kp
.
1<
·
k111,: ·
meeting was legal.
-
$5. 00 M
i
n .
-
~-•illng
~lounlailltTring
M 'k
k' b
h
OutwardBound,DeplCG,
uz1 ows
I
ecause s e was
I'
3S4Fiekf PolntRd.
.
appointed by last year's govern-
De 1very Order
Greenwich,CT 06830

ment, has been officially removed
~ ~ ~
11000
phonetollfree(800)243-8520
from the board. Yeaglin will also
O
O
Outward
Bo
.
d'
.
.Vo
e.,pert,•nc
·
,
·
iwce
.
,
~
an1
.
be
removed,
according
to
;
~
un
Oul«·ard Bound adm11s
·
s111den1s of any
·,
..
..
~
The course 1hat never ends
sex
.
race. color and na/lonal or eihnlc
Dougherty, because she is . in-
origin. We
are a nanpro(II
orgnnlzauon.
directly related to the case.
·--------------------------.1
·--------------■S-ch·a·laiirs.h~lp-
s
~a~v;a;;;lla~b~le~·
-
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----------------------------------September
29,
1983 · THE CIRCLE·
Page
3 - -
Protes tan t
·
chaplain position still open
by Christopher Serafini
Marist College has been
without a Protestant chaplain
since
the Rev. Rhys Williams
retired last May.
For the approximately
300
Protestant students enrolled at
Marist, this may be a problem.
Then again, it may not.
The Campus Ministry is an
interfaith council, made up of
both students
·
and staff, which
seeks to provide f~r the religi9us
needs of the Marist community.
When the council began planning
for its fall term, it had
·
three
chaplains:
the
Rev
:
Richard
LaMorte, the Catholic chaplain;
Mrs. Elaine Newman, the Jewish
chaplain; and Ann Freidland, the
Protestant chaplain.
-Howe·ver, before the school
year began, Freidland declined
New elevator
will soon
·be
installed
f
~r
handicappe4
by Leslie A.
_
Heinrich
After four years of trying to fit
it into the college's construction
plan, the installment of an
elevator to serve the needs of
handicapped students in
the
campus
center
has begun. The
·
elevator is due to be completed by
early next year
,
according to
Gerard Cox, dean of student
affairs.
-
.
the invitation to work at Marist
.
because of scheduling conflicts,
according to Sr. Eileen Halloran,
assistant
campus
.
minister.
Freidland's replacement has not
..
been found yet.
"We're in touch with several
prospects now," Sr. Eileen said,
"but there has
_
been nothing
definite sofar. We're stilt hoping,
though."
The duties of a Protestant
chaplain include providing for the
Protestant students of the college
and arranging for individual
counseling
.
when
needed.
However, these services have not
been in demand in the past, ac-
cording to Sr. Eileen.
"In the last few years," Sr .
.
Eileen
said,
"we've
held
Protestant prayer groups and
services. Many Catholics attended
these events but no Protestants."
Sr. Eileen also said that few
Protestants have sought
the
services of the Campus Ministry
in the past despite the presence of
a Protestant chaplain.
"There just may not be a need
for one (Protestant chaplain),"
Sr. Eileen said.
.
·
This is the first year, however,
that Marist has had a Jewish
chaplain, Elaine Newman. Only
·
one percent of the Marist student
population is Jewish,
-
-
according
to Sr. Eileen.
Sr. Eileen said: "We're open to
providing for students of all
faiths if they express the interest.
There are a number of people I
can call upon -
local churches,
religious groups, even some of
9ur own faculty who have shown
an involvement with their own
ministries.
·
There is no one at
Mai-ist we
couldn't
provide
for
and no problem we couldn't
handle. We just have to be asked
first."
Sr. Eileen also said that she is
the second
vice
president of the
Dutchess County Interfaith
Council and has the resources to
contact any ministry in the area.
. Sr. Eileen also pointed out that
members of any faith can ap-
preciate the various activities
planned by the Campus Ministry.
"All our activities are designed
to challenge the individual to
reflect
upon
himself,
his
relationship with God and the
.world around him," Sr. Eileen
said
.
"It
really doesn't matter if
he's Catholic, Jewish, Protestant,
or even
_
Hiridu. The Campus
Ministry can help him."
Although Beverly Morlang, a
junior, was raised as a Southern
Baptist, she said she did not mind
not having a Protestant chaplain
on campus,
"It
may
offend
some
Protestants," Morlang said, "but
it doesn't offend me. l feel no
qualms about seeking advice from
someone outside my religion.
However,
I've never
sought
advice
from
the
Campus
Ministry."
Barbara LaDuke,
a
senior at
Marist and an Episcopalian, said
she was not offended either but
did
hope that a Protestant
chaplain would be found soon.
"I
recognize
the fact that
Marist comes from a Roman
Catholic heritage and, therefore,
it is understandable," LaDuke
said. "But, I do feel
that
Protestant students
are
overlooked to a certain extent,
and an active Protestant chaplain
may be able to change that."
Aid office alters
employment program
by Kathleen Driscoll
Some students
have ex-
perienced difficulties in resuming
on-campus
employment
at
Marist, d
_
ue to a revamping of the
work-study program.
·
in most cases, difficulties are
because students were not aware
.
of the
correct
procedures
necessary
to receive campus
employment or work-study jobs.
the payroll," Lane said.
Present work-study allocation
procedures have been in
effect
for
two years, according to Atkin.
This is the first year that the
Financial Aid Office has assumed
total responsibility for disbursing
work-study.
"Whereas coor-
dination
of work-study
was
dispersed
between
Career
Placement and this office in
previous years, we arc now trying
to coordinate the effort," said
Atkin.
"We repeatedly ran into
physical plant needs that were
greater at the moment," said
Cox, "but now the board is clear
·
of pressing
·
projects
·
and we
.
can
-
Many jobs that were formerly
listed under the
-
campus em-
ployment payroll are now part of
the work-study program, ac
-
cording to Karen Atkin, director
t->
;
~:i~
;
~t
,:,,
,_.
.
:
\
'.
:~~~f
f
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i~i~:a~~o
i~r~~:~~~
{f;f}!);~~
~
;w
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·
·

:;~:,::::::~~:::;::?::~
Atkin
said that in order to
package a student for work-study
or any other financial aid, the
student must
fi\\
out and return to
the Financial Aid Office the
Financial Aid Form (FAF), the
Marist application for
.
ai.d
.
and a
copy
.
.
ot: their parents'
.
tax returns
before May I .
-
-~·
.. ,
< /-
Jlfuceed;'':....~
.
--~,.~..:
.-
.;
.-·
-
-
-
--,
..
,
,.--: _
_
_.
_
_
}
~~.._....,_
.
· ·.
The elevator, whose final
cost
is
estimated at
$110,0Q(),
is due to
be completed by February l,
1984;
and
will
be equipped to aid
-
handicapped students in getting in
.
and around the campus center.
According
to
Jack
Shaughnessy,
director
.
of
mechanical services, the
.
new
elevator will originate on the
bookstore/pub level in the area
where
_
the handyman's room is
currently located. The first stop
will be
·
on the post office level
:
ne
.
ar the mailboxes,
·
the second
The construction sue or campus center elevator, to be
completed by February. The elevator is to be used by han-
dicapped students.
stop will
be on the main
lobb.y/campus center entrance
level and the third stop will be in
the campus
··
center near the
campus activities office.
"The elevator is ·currently
IO
percent
completed,''
.
said
Shaughnessy. "They are digging
(Photo by
Jeff
Kiely)
now, before the frost sets in, then
the inside work will begin.''
There have been no real
problems caused by the con-
struction yet. However, "the real
problem is people learning to Jive
with the sound of
a
jackham-
mer," said Cox,
"and
that is no
easy task."
'
bursed for work-study funds, but
must pay campus employment
workers itself. ·
·
-
Carol Lane, a senior, had been
working one week when she was
notified by Al Doscher, assistant
manager of the copy room, that
she might Jose her position as a
copy room employee because she
had not been allocated work-
study.
.
"I
was told to stop working by
Al
Doscher because Financial Aid
was going to take my name off
Lane, who had previously
worked through campus em-
. ployment said that she felt the
Financial
Aid
Office
was
negligent in that they did not
inform students that the campus
employment program would be
greatly reduced.
"I
didn't
fill
out
an FAF because
I
hadn't known it
would be necessary to do so in
order to work this year." said
Lane. "I haven't b~en eligible for
work-study for the past three
years, so
I
didn't bother with it
Continued on page
7
Reactions to townhouse restrictions are mixed
by Veronica O'Shea
·
To have a party, or not to have
a party? Legally that is, of course.
This is
·
·
the
·
·
question many
townhouse residents are pon-
dering as the weekend gets closer.
·
There is
.
a great deal of

dissatisfaction among some
students on the north end of
campus in regard
to.
townhouse ·
party procedures
.
·
John Malatestinic, a junior
from Bayside, N.Y., said, "They
give us more responsibility in all
.
other areas of townhouse living
and
_
then they take it away when
we want to have a good time."
·
To have a party in the
townhouse, the number of guests
is limited to 25 people, including
the
10
residents of the house.
.
The residents must fill out a
social registration form at least
two weeks in advance to get 'the
party approved. No ·kegs are
permitted, and there must be food
TV club faces budget problems
by c;laudla Bruno
A "paper work foul-up" in the
approval process for the Marist

College

·
Television Club has
"indefinitely postponed"
the
club's scheduled broadcasts of
"Flashdance," according to the
club's acting general manager
Gene Robbins.
The "foul-up" between the
Council of Student Leaders and
the
Student
Government
Financial Board which
tem-
porarily voided the club's
allocation of $62, Robbins said.
"Due to the complications with
student government, we're (the
club) indefinitely postponing the
presentation of any movies," said
Robbins,
"until the proper
procedures have been followed
and we are allocated the funds
necessary
.
to present the film
('Flashdance').''
According to Robbins, the club
has resubmitted a copy of its
budget allocation to the Financial
Board.
The club planned to show
"Flashdance" on Monday, Sept.
26 over Channel 8 as its first
broadcast and to repeat the
·
broadcasts during theweek.
Budget allocations for clubs are
first sent to the Financial Board
for approval and then to the CSL
for the president's signature of
approval.
.
Asked whether he signed the
television club's budget allocation
before it was sent to the Financial
Board, the president of the CSL,
Keith Galanti said that the budget
wasri'i signed out of order.
·
"We did it (signed the
allocation) to expedite the paper
·
·
work," said Galanti who referred
to a previous meeting with the
Financial Board.
"The
chairman
of
the
Financial Board (Stephen Funk)
was there (at the meeting) and he
said he would fill everyone in,"
said Galanti.
Both the budget allocation and
.
the club's constitution are in the
process of being approved. "The
amended constitution is still
pending approval by the full body
of the CSL, which had the
constitution at their last meeting
but did not look at it," Robbins
said
.
To avoid complications in the
future, Robbins
said,
"Our club
is going to be working very closely
from now on with Betty's office
(College Activities)
.
"
served. The party must end by I
·
a.m.
Hillary Palawsky, a senior
townhouse resident, said, "I
don't think the townhouse party
procedures are at all practical.
Regulations I can understand, but
don't go overboard. The limited
amount of guests is ridiculous;
you can't
_
even consider that
-
party. Fifty is a much more
realistic number."
According to G_erard Cox, dean
of student affairs, the number 25
was selected in relation to the
number of students arid because
-of fire safety concerns.
Most students said they felt
that the fire precautions were
adequate. One resident said, "It's
easier to get out of a townhouse in
an emergency than any of the
other buildings on campus, and
there are fire extinguishers in full
view."
Robert Heywood, director of
housing, said, "Our basic con-
cern is the wear and tear of the
townhouse. Normal usage is a
concern, let alone a party.''
The overuse of bathroom
facilities was cited as a major
factor to housing. Heywood said
that they have had many
problems with the downstairs
bathrooms.
The majority of residents
agreed that filling out a social
registration form two weeks in
advance was too much trouble.
However,
if residents
are
charging at the
-
door it is
necessary to have one to obtain a
liquor license
.
According to Betty Yeaglin,
director of college activities,
obtaining a liquor license is a very
complex process. The rules in
effect come from the State Liquor
Board in Albany, and the state
ruling must be approved five days
before the event. "Between all the
paperwork and the mailing time,
the form should be in at least a
week and half before the party,"
she said.
Palawsky said," Students are
more apt to have a party anyway
without even
considering
authorization because it is such a
bother."
Many students said they would
rather have a party and risk
getting caught than fill out a
social registration form
.
Cox said that if people were to
have unauthorized parties it
shows that there is spirit missing.
"I don't want to see that kind of
spirit here at Marist," he said.
"People should be able to sit
down and reason with the R.D.
and work things out in a
responsible manner."






















































































~-Page
4 · THE CIRCLE -
September
29,
1983' _ _
;._ ____
.;_..;.. ......
_ _;. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
••••■..--~------~~~
·
·
PIIS
COMID
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
'
'
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
:
.
~
nusr.
·
W
. .
------=m-----=AA~,
ST~
.
.
<!OJIS{~
-COLLE
Speaking f r~ely
Readers
Write
:
All letters musi be typed trlple space with a 60 space margin, and submllied to the
..
·
Circle olllce no later than 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 will be published depending upon
·
avallablllty of
sp
_
ace
.
_
.
Dorm name
To the editor:
Last week's issue of The Circle
contained an article on the
naming of our newest residence
hall. Within the article several
direct quotati0ns were attributed
to me. Actually, each was closer
to "a free translation" of what I
said than an accurate quotation.
The proposal to name the new
facility Marian Hall is based on:
(I) location, (2) structural design
and (3) symbolic value.
·
Location:
The new dorm is
located immediately adjacent to
the site of the college's original
classroorri building which was
called
·
.
the Marian Building._ All
that remains of the Marian
Building are the terrace, furnace
room and smoke
-
stack between
the new dorm and the Fontaine
Building.
·
Structural Design:
Our
·
newest
residence has been built within
and around the old gymna'sium.
The old gym was the _first
structure to be built by the Marist
Brothers themselves (students and
faculty alike) after the four year
college was chartered in 1946.
Their success in building the gym
·
themselves ushered in
.a
period
during which "the Marist con-
struction gang"
erected
five
major buildings between 1947 and
-
1961.
.
Symbolic
Value:
Today there is
no single commemoration of the.
·
original four year college, Marian
College, ori our campus. The
design of the new residence and
its location
.
make it an ap-
propriate reminder of
·
how the
new Marist College
_
continues to
build on the foundations laid
_
by
the students and faculty who were
Marian College.
..
In looking back and in finding
reason to honor those who came
before us, we are reminded
.
that
some day future
·
generations of
.
Mai-ist students, faculty, and staff
·
will look back at the 1980s
:
It
will
be their opportunity to assess
·
the
·
contributions we are making to
·
.
the growth and development of
-
this college and to (ind ways to
.
say that they appreciate what we
did for them.
Sincerely yours,
Gerard A. Cox
Auditions
Dear Editor,
shoe, that is why we try to provide
On behalf of the Marist College
as many productions as possible.
Council on Theatre Arts, I would
Tonight there will be a meeting
like to· thank
those
who
concerning
the
musical
-
auditioned for
The Weatherman.
production,
·
The Threepenny
.
.
M.C.C.T.A. normally produces
Opera:
This play
.
will
be directed
How free is the press in America?
that happens when an error occurs is a lot of
two productions in
·.
the Fall
by two professional actors .
.
On
Ask any journalism teacher and he or she
yelling on the part of the offended. That's
semester. However, this year we
.
Oct. 3rd
&
4th Dean Cox will be
will tell you that the press is free to print
natural.
-.
.
.
decided
.
to add another show to
.
holding auditions for his play,
anything it wishes, without censorship. Yet
·
·
But did you ever think that if Marist would -, ,-p~~,-
-
~ch~d~le,
-·.a..
,
.
o!1e-acf.,. pl~y

Lead Me ~ome.
We sincerely
despite their freedom to ··pr.int
·
what· they
hold·
.
,
more
··
press---;
~
conferences
r
·--:
allow
-

...
wr1tten
:
;
.
byfM11n~t
:-.
~~uxnnus.,
,
B1U
.
.
,
,
hope
-•
:.
everyone
interested.
like,
most
·
,:iewspapers
·
do
,
_
not
,
·
print
•.
reporters into more meetings; and tell it like
•.
C:.
Dav_1s.
,
- ;
-
·
<
"
.,
_
_
·
auditions.
·
everything that they believe to be gospel
it
·
is instead of giving
_
reporters
.
the runs
.
.
Castmg this producuon was not
M.C.C.T.A.
,
holds
·
regular
truth iust for the sake of printing it. Certain
around by sendir:ig them from one office to
-
an easy task. The three character
board meetings every Monday
types of "news," such as the latest scoop
·
another for information, misunderstandings
cast and !~e talent of the students
night at
5
p.m. in the Candlelight
on the private life of a famous person,- is
would be less likely to happen? Clarity
who aud1uoned made the process
room.
If
there are any questions
.
often left out of a newspaper so that the
would conquer confusion.
.
.
.
· of elimination very difficult.
or comments
or just plain
publication may stay within the boundaries
Some authorities on campus withhold
The M,C.C.T.A. board hopes
curiosity,
please
join us.
of good taste for the
·
sake of its own
information for fear that it will make a
these talented people continue to
Sincerely,
reputation.
..
·
.

·
· -
.
•·
pertain person or department look bad if
hold an interest in the t~el\tre.
Alannah Molloy
So most newspapers have a pretty good
_
_
published. Chan·ces are that the person or
Not everyone can be casted m one
M.C.C.T.A. president
deal: not only are they technically able to
department will look
10
times ·worse when
print whatever they want, but they often
the spokesman refuses to comment on the
have an abundance of information left over.
issue -
for that is precisely what will go
Not at Marist.
into The Circle.
Basic information for a story, whether it's
The Circle is here
.
to, inform the
·
Marist
an eyebrow raiser or a simple feature story,
community on the goc;>d as well as the bad.
is often kept from the Circle reporter. In
Our reporters cannot even begin tu write a
other words, people at Marist don't like to
story when their sources of information are
talk. Why not?
dodging them or beating around the bush.
O.K., The Circle's slate is certainly not
How free is the press at Marist? Think
clear of mistakes. Lucky for us, the most
.
about it.
·
Truth
Truth. Its something everyone wants to
know, may not like to tell, and may make
some people sorry they hear it.
·
_
.
.
Its also something that is hard to come by
here at Marist.
.
.
,
·
.
Now,
far be it for me to call someone a
liar, but it is true that finding out certain
things on campus is almost'lmpossible.
Let's
-
start with the townhouses.
Sometime back in
1981
they were proposed,
but were not completed until Sept.
1982.
The
delay was not the college's fault. The town
had put a halt on any new water systems.
But why hadn't the college checked this out
before announcing the building of the
townhouses?
·
·
Then· there was some talk about a media
center to be built in the old gym. In
1980,
it
Editor
The
Associate Editors
Circle
Sports Editor
Photography Editor
.
seemed as though it would· be possible
before
1984.
It never happened.
What did happen was the old gym would
become a freshmen dorm. And it too, like
the townhouses, would be late to·r
·
its
.
completion date. Both the college and the
b~ilders had their excuses, but in the end
the students lost out.
Now we hear
of
another projecr in the
making; the Lowell Thomas Communication
Arts Center. As of now there is only a lot on
the North End of campus and the question
is this: Will the center become a reality
before the Class of
'87
graduates? Also, will
the proposed date be the realistic True date.
Perhaps a little foresight by college officials
will make our four year stay here a little
more pleasant.
·
Christine Dempsey
Senior Reporters
Cindy Bennedum
Mark
Stuart
Cartoonist
John Bakke
Calendar Editors
Jeff Kiely
·
The Weatherman
Dear Editor,
Being the lucky :recipient
of
nine paragraphs
_
worth of
complaints concerning "The
Weatherman" auditions, I feel it
necessary to clarify my objectives
as director, a
_
s
y.,ell
as
·
defend
those who
_
,vere unnecessarily
insulted by the letter. First, alloi
me to
·
correct particular com
-
ments from last week's letter tha1
- were; dtie to their false nature,
obviously_ unsearched
·
·
by the
author.
·
In the beginning of the first
night o_f auditions, I stated my
past experience in theatre, in-
cluding the fact that it was my
secqnd,
·
not first, encounter as a
director. Now I feel it necessary

to be so bold as to mention that
the first play I directed merited
.
two MCCT A awards. The author
was, however, correct in men-
tioning unprofessionalism, as I
never ~!aimed to be p~ofessionaL
But I am aware that in a college
theatre group, the tension must be
lessened by a lighter atmosphere,
so as to avoid the cut-throat
competitiveness that the author
.
would seem to have preferred.
.
Has the author considered Bard?
.
.
The frequent referral to many
of those who auditioned as my
·
"friends" would
_
lead one to
·
guess that t
_
he author either
.
did a
great
-_
deal of spying

on who I
.
spend my spare time with
;
or
assumed that my ~ongeniality was
reserved only for my,eomrades. I
made a genuine effort to
·
be
friendly to all (dealing with thirty
plus doesn't make it easy) to
relieve sonie of the nervousness
that I well know accompanies
auditions. This includes my jokes
and laughter - had I not been
concerned with the individuals
Continued on page 8
Correction
Last week's story on Bob Fink was-in error. Fink should
·
·
have been quoted as saying: "The state police did a good job;
they did the best they could within the guidelines of the law."
Eileen Hayes
Business Manager
Jane Scarchilli

.
Jeannie Ostrowski
Christopher Serafini
Advertising Manager
Sean Kenny
.
Cathy Houlihan
Circulation Manager
Cathy McGarily
Peggy Hasson
Faculty Advisor
David Mccraw
-





























~~~-------------------------------september
29,
1983 ·
THE CIRCLE. Pages---
by
Tom
Fisher
police work in
·
this film is stun-
ning.
Reel
·
thing.
husband.
.
.
1mpress1ons
The plight of the aging actor is
·
·
Speaking of police, there aren't
.
certainly a depressing one. The any in this !J10vie. Lt. Bracken is
only offers made to him are either always complaining that he's so
for a guest spot on "The Love short-handed on men, and he
Boal" or a
·
starring role rn a
finally enlists tlie help of one of
Toward the end of the film,
Mary is about to be
·
done in by
the killer, so Bracken, the kid,
and another investigator race to
her aid in a Datsun arid a Ford
Pinto. They don't have police
cars, either. Despite the fact that
Mary could be killed al any
moment, they walk up the stairs.
Then
to
top it off, they stand
.
outside the door and argue about
whether or not the kid should be
allowed to go in. This scene is like
watching a Three Stooges routine
.
I could go on and on describing
everything that was wrong with
this movie.
All
of the dialogue is
dumb, and seems to have been
adlibbed on the spot. The gore
effects look like they borrowed
some old
mannequins from
Alexander's
and
splattered
ketchup on them. Most of the
sound seems to have been dubbed
in at a gymnasium, because the
voices echo and are never in sync.
Pieces
-
Record

cinematic extravaganza like the college kids (Ian Sera)
10
help
Pieces.
him in his search for the killer.
Pieces,
or as it is more com-
Realistically, police would never
monly known by its working title,
let any unauthorized person work
Tax
Write-Off,
is
about a
on a case like this. But since they
psychotic killer who goes around didn't want to pay any extras in
carving up college
.
coeds with a
this movie,
I
guess it's O.K. Not
_
chain saw. How's that for an only aren't there any policemen to
original premise?
speak of, you never see any other
Christopher
·
George,
who
hasn't had this much fun since
.
Grizzly
arid
Day of the Animals,
plays
·
the -often confused Lt.
Bracken.
·
A top-of-his class
graduate of the "George Kennedy
School of Acting." George walks
around for the whole movie with
an unlit cigar in his mouth
·
while
delivering earth-shattering lines
like, "We know the killer is either
on or around campus." The
by Bill
Coleman
Little Robbers - The Motels
kids on the campus. The place is
always deserted except
for
whoever the next victim is.
Linda Day (who is Christopher
George's wife) plays tennis pro
Mary Riggs. The tennis scenes are
hilarious because she never has to
run for the ball. She just stands
there and hits
it. The tennis outfit
she wears is about two sizes too
small for her out-of-shape frame,
and
if.
she had moved, she
probably would have split the
title cut, and "Monday Shut-
down,"
give Goodroe and
J ourard vehicles to showcase their
talents
with
"Shutdown"
resembling the rock/funk of early
Prince.
"Little Robbers;" as the fourth
Ip from The Motels, is, as always,
refreshing and a welcome change
from much of the "teduim" in
·
today's popular music.
The ads for
Pieces
proclaim,
"It's exactly what you think it
is!" No it's not. It's worse. There
was a husband and wife in front
of me who got up and left ten
minutes into the movie. This was
right after they showed the killer
hacking his mother with an ax,
and later dismembering her with a
handsaw. "I don't want to watch
.
this stupid thing," said the wife
.
"Then
why did you come?,"
asked her obviously intellectual
This movie is so bad, it's
hilarious. I laughed so hard, tears
were rolling out of my eyes. I
could go on telling about
everything else that was stupid or
wrong in this film, but this is only
a four-year school.
Pieces
has to
be seen to be believed; it's a hack
movie in every sense of the word.
The other tag line for
Pieces
says: "Now you don't have to go
to Texas
for
a
chainsaw
massacre!" I think it's so nice of
them to save us the trip. Don't
you?
vocalists, collectively titled, The
Coconuts (Adriana Kaegi, Cheryl
Poirier, Taryn Hagey), who take
center
stage
in their newest
release,
"Don't
Take
My
Coconuts," produced by no other
than
mentor,
"Kid Creole"
Darnell.
reviews
The new album from the
Motels displays the group as a
progressive vehicle in today's
rock market. The Motels have
once again released an Ip "chock-
full" of interesting upbeats and
haunting ballads. Martha Davis'
(guitar) sultry, emotionally taut
vocals are still
.
in tact,
.
while
accented by the presence of band
members:
Marty· Jourard
Doppelganger -
Kid
Creole
&
The Coconuts
Don't Take my Coconuts
- The Coconuts
the days of the now defunct Dr.
Buzzard's Original Savannah
Band, lead vocalist from Dar-
nell's old
group,
Cory Daye,
guest vocals on the lively track,
"Distractions," which very well
may have that "pop appeal" -
catchy
rhythm
and
vocal
arrangement -
to open up to a
new audience. Other favorites
include: "The Lifeboat Party,"
"Underachiever,"
"Broadway
Rhythm" and the humorous
"If
You Wanna Be Happy," whose
lyrics are quite simple in
The album not only is an ad-
v;rncement from the usual rhythm
associated with the Kid's music,
but the vocal harmonies are quite
pleasing to the ear. As drums,
percussion, and bass lines play a
key factor in the musical in-
strumentation, the trio handles
their first Ip like pros (years of
experience). So well, in fact, that
this album is a mock "live benefit
concert
from
the
Hendrix
ballroom" with the Coconuts
exchanging dialogue with the
band, audience, and themselves,
in between the studio cuts.
"Classics" include, "Naughty
Boy "
"Maladie D' Amor "
· "Indiscreet," and the curr~nt
Teleview
-
The tube
tries again
Thursday;
Friday:
·
(keyboards,
sax),
Michael
Goodroe (bass), Brian Geascock
(drums, percussion), Guy Perry
(guitary); and newcomer Scott
_
Thurston (keyboards, guitar).
Ms. Davis wrote or co-wrote all
of
·
the tunes and executes them
with a style arid energy uniquely
her
_
O'\Vn; while the band enjoys
some good riffs. Besides the
current hit single, "Suddenly Last
·
Summer,"
a.
romantic ballad, key
·
cuts irichide
·
the
:
guitar· and
·
'drum
syncopation of "rockers"
·
such
·
as: "Trust Me"
(a
likely AOR
.
favorite), "Where Do We Go
From Here (Nothing Sacred),"
which borrows the guitar lick
from _the '60s classic "Money,"
and "Into The Heartland" (co-
written with Bernie
.-
Taupin). The
by
Richard
Copp
_
As September nears an end,
crisp, cool, comfortable tern.
peratures have broken the final
heatwave of the summer, worries
·
about pressing due dates plague
the average Marist student,
·
and
television reruns have all but
disappeared. Fall
-
has finally
arrived, arid for the t!!levision
industry
this is the most im-
portant time of the year.
Gone are the failures of the
past, the shows that simply could
not meet the grand Nielsen's
expectations, and in their place
Saturday:
Mini-Concert,
Chapel
Alumni Crew
Race, 10:30 a.m.
12 Noon
" ... The
.
saga
·
continues ..
:"
reads the inner sleeve of
"Doppelganger," and indeed it
does. Picking up where "Wise
Guy" left off, Kid Creole and
The Coconuts have again come up
with an appealing blend of
Carribean
new
wave
and
pop/funk. Unlike "Wise Guy,"
this- lp co
_
ntains varil;,us sounds of
the, contemporary.
·,--August-"Kid ·
Creole"
.

Darnell
·
along
.-
with
partner/sidekick;
."Sugar-Coat-
ed" Andy Hernandez, manage to
maintain a style very much their
own, with Darnell serving as both
producer and co-writer on 10 of
-
the 12 cuts.
Although it's been years since
suggestion:
·
"If
you wanna be happy
for the rest of your life,
Never make a
pretty
woman your wife. So from
my personal point of view,
Get an ugly girl to marry
you."
·
The only disappointments here
·
are "Back lri The Field Again," a
filler
tune
and
.
"There's
Something Wrong in Paradise,"
which sounds like a reworked
version of Malcolm McLaren's
"Double ·Dutch." This "race
music" is well understood, as
"Doppelganger" should prove
success worthy.
On the other coin, one should
not underestimate the talents of
Kid
Creole's
background
T.K. Carter as a genie who pops
into the life of
.
a boring
weatherman (this one will need a
lot of luck up against NBC's
smash hit "The A Team"); "We
Got It Made" is a flip version of
"Three's
Company" when
two
come 22 new series to kick off the
l
983s84
television season. This
year's crop promises few new
ideas, but the networks are
banking on established
stars
and
variations on old themes to grab
the audience from the ever
growing
.
world of cable.
The long awaited premiere of
"AfterM*A*S*H"
is on the CBS
line up, and with Harry Morgan,
William Christopher, and Jamie
Farr as well as
·
good scripts, this
series sequel should survive the
departure of Alan Alda.
Other new comedies include
"Just Our Luck" on ABC with
..bachelors
hire a knockout maid;
"Webster" has a newly married
couple (Alex Karras and Susan
Clark) stuck with a small black
child
orphaned after his parents'
death (ala "Diff'rent Strokes);
and
"It's
Not Easy" deals with a
man (Ken Howard) living with his
mother across the Street from his
ex-wife and her new spouse. One
Sunday:
.
Movie, "Doctor
Strangelove,"
Monday:
MCCTABoard
_
Meeting,
5
p.m.
single, a remake. of
~•lf
1
Only
Ha·d A Brain," from "The
Wizard of Oz" ("dedicated to all
the dizzy blonds all over the
world").
"Don't Take My Coconuts" is
fun, upbeat, and original in both
style and content. Take Kid's
Coconuts, please.
promising
series
is
"Oh,
Madeline" with the
·
hilarious
Madeline Kahn in a modern day
marriage farce.
Two comedies rounding out
NBC's Friday night schedule are
"Mr. Smith," about a talking
orangutan and "Jennifer Slept
Here," about a ghost haunting a
house. Enough said.
Joining the ranks of
"Trapper
John,
M.D."
are two medical
dramas that look as exciting as
"The Return of Marcus Welby,"
but ABC's "Trauma Center" is
hyping the presence of "In-
Continued on page 11
,,
Wednesday:
Lecture (Social
Work)
Free Slot Film
Series, "Pegs
vs. the Freaks,"
"Easy Street"
"The Prejudice
Film" D245
Soccer Game:
vs. Siena
3p.m.
Homecoming Parade,
I p.m.
7
p.m.
&
9:30 p.m.
Theatre
Tuesday:
l.ecture, Dr.
Chaim Potok,
Coffeehouse,
9p.m.
Soccer,
vs.
NYU,
3:30 p.m.
I a.m.
·coffee House:
Musicians
Organization
9p.m.
l.ecture:
Sexuality
on
the College
Campus. Fireside
8p.m.
Sr. Class
Moonlight Cruise
6-9
p.m.
Dinner Theatre:
Community
Experimental
Repertory Theatre,
Inc., musical
re,·ue, "Strictly
Sondheim,··
8:30p.m.
Dining Room
Football: ,·s.
Iona, 1:30 p.m.
Senior Cocktail
Party.
8
p.m.
Senior/ Alumni
Dance, 9:30 p.m.
At The Barda,·on,
"Pump Boys and
Dinetts,"
3& 7:30 p.m.
Saturda)·, October I, at
1:30
p.m. is the Homecoming
Football Game against Iona. Half-time activities in-
clude the Marist College Cheerleaders performing tlwir
own dance routine.
On Sanda}·, Oct. 2 and 3 at
7:30
p.m., the Bardavon
is featuring "Pump Boys and Dineus. ·• Nominated for
Best Musical of
1982,
this high octane re,
·
ue romps and
stomps through a down-home country
sampler
of
bluegrass, rockabilily, gospel, ballads and blues at the
Double Cupp Diner and gas
station.
Single ticket prices:
Matinee Sl6,
12,
8; Eve:
$20, 16, 12.























































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WHEN:
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October 13-December 8
WHERE:
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· Mr. Sausage will also cater for
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100Jo Discount to Marist Students and Faculty.
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Ladies Drink FREE 8-11
Sat.
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8 - 11
Sun. -
$1.00 Nite!
Student
government
informer
by
Council of
Student Leaders
As the Alumni prepare to
journey back to the place of their
academic achievement on Oct. I,
1983,
the CSL is busy with the
plans for Homecoming weekend
and the returning graduates from
years past.
The Marist Red Foxes will
battle Iona at
1
p.m., and there
will
be
a victory celebration for
the · Alumni Saturday night
following the game.
In addition to the preparations
for Homecoming, the CSL has
altered the Judicial Board by
activating new apointees.
The new appointees were in-
stalled_ as of Wednesday, Sept.
21
at
I
p.m.
Following
the
decision
to
appoint new members to the
board, the subsequent appointees
are Steve Giacona, Resident
Sophomore;
Ron
Young,
Commuter; Gene Robbins, Off-
Campus Junior.
As far as campus issues are
concerned, the CSL is currently
involved with the question of the
Work/Study program.
-
The Council is probing the
financial aid requirements for
receiving a job on campus
because many students returning
after the summer had no job
waiting for them.
An investigation will
be
conducted to determine why
returning ·students have been
dropped form their previous jobs.
The CSL would like to be
informed as to why these steps
have been taken and the reason
for the failure to notify students.
If the job situation stems from
new financial aid procedures or
the · promising _ of jobs
to
Freshmen, the CSL hopes to
inform students of the new
procedure to secure an on-campus
job.
The CSL will keep the student
body aware of the standing of this
issue, and more information will
follow at a later date.
Work _ _
_
Continued from page 3
this year," she added.
Atkin explained that the F AF
determines a family's traditional
needs. "The FAF is
a nationwide
analysis which determines the
student's need for aid according
to various factors such as family
size, income and the number of
students enrolled,in college," said
Atkin.
She advised students who did
not file the F AF do so now.
Atkin also said that students
who were not eligible for work-
study should look for jobs off-
campus., Students should see
Marge Palmer, coodinator of Job
Location and Development, who
is in the Career Placement Office,
. for possible jobs outside campus.
Play auditions
begin Monday
Auditions for the full-length
mystery play, "Lead Me Home,"
are scheduled for Monday and
Tuesday of next week.
Marist College students are
invited to audition for any of the
ten speaking pans in the play.
The major characters are two men
and two women.
Auditions for the play, a work-
in-progress by Gerard Cox, dean
of student affairs, will be held on
Oct. 3 at 6:30 p.m. in the Campus
Center Theatre. On Oct. 4,
auditions will be held at 6:30 p.m.
in Campus Center, 249.
"Lead Me Home" will be
presented in the theatre on Dec. 8,
. _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ . . _
_ _ _ _ _
.,,a _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ .
9, IO and 11.
\
,_
























































































































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--•Page 8 · THE CIRCLE·
September 29,
1983
---More .letters-
:
-------
Conlinued from
page
4 .
auditioning, I would not have
been bothered kidding with them.
As for the individual who was
supposedly
drunk
during
auditions, that, too was a
·
false
assumption. The individual to
whom the author referred has a
slight
congenital
speech
im-
pediment,
which
the
person
prefers to handle in a humorous
manner. Those of us who are
closest to this person are aware of
· how the individual prefers to. deal
with it, and often tease the person
as though it were due to drinking.
Perhaps the author was made to
feel
•~like
a
fool"
while
auditioning with this individual,
but to blame his or her own
uneasiness on a
.
false situation is
hardly rational, not to mention
how completely unfair to abase a
stranger by all but calling
_
the
person a drunk.
As for the tap dancing. It is
beyond me why that should effect
the auditions. Perhaps we best
blame that display on the old
"tempermental actor" excuse.
Forgive my happy feet.
The results of the audition were
posted slightly after twelve noon.
Since Friday is my day off, twelve
noon
was
first thing in the
morning for me. Again, forgive
me, this time, for my laziness
.
Perhaps
-
I should consider af-
ternoon naps on Thursday instead
of sleeping late Friday.
The explanation
·
the author of
last week's letter offered for not
revealing his or her name was
fair, except in comparison to
the
\vay the author chose to deal with
1he identities of both myself, and
the MCCTA president. Granted,
he or she may have saved his or
her name from prejudice in future
auditions, but both the positions
of
·
director
and
MCCTA
president are public enough for
anyone
-
t<> identify us by name
and subject
:
us
to
·
the prejudice of
any impressionable student.
·
Since
l
am not an officer,
questioning me matters
.
little.
However, the author's audacity
to question the credibility of a
person so- respectable as the
MCCT A president, as well as the
MCCT A board (in questioning
the wonhiness of the remainder
of the productions, one directly
questions the worthiness of t
_
he
board) is beyorid any tactlessness
I may have indulged in during
auditions. Especially since, as a
freshman, a Marist stude111 of
only three weeks, the author felt ·
confident enough to doubt the
credibility of as honorable an
organization
·
as the MCCT A.
Since the author's name cannot
jade his or her audition, certainly
his or her auitude will. The issues
in the letter that l refrained from
addressing, I fell were too petty to
be
·
bothered explaining. Sour
grapes will frequently cause one
to nit pick.
·
My objective as the director of
"The Weatherman" is the same
as most of the MCCT A directors -
to put on as fine a show as
possible, with the talent and
creativity available, and enjoy a
pleasant learning experience.
Perhaps if the author wasn't so
consumed in
·
noticing my per-
formance as a director, he or she
would
have
performed
well
enough to earn his or herself a
part in the production. Had the
author received a part, would he
or she be as willing to complain?
ln closing, I can only hope that
I
have clarified any misun-
·
derstandings and answered the
disapproval that existed relative
·
to the auditions. I will assume
that the situation· is clear and
those who had doubts about
MCCTA
or it's
president's
abili1ies are now informed of jus1
how able an organization it is. If
the clari1y of the situation is still
in ques1ion in the eyes of the
author, I am left to the words of
an actor that I feel I may safely
assume
the author
respects:
• Sincerely,
.
employment budget. This year~ as
·
Jeanne
M;
Fahey the number of college students in
Director, "The Weatherman" my family increased to four, I was
P .S. Bill Davis, the playwright told
·
I may not be "needy"
responsible for "The Weather-
enough for a campus job.
man," as well as the Broad-.yay
I feel this practice is very unfair
,
play (soon to be a Paramount to the student _ caught in the
Picture)
Mass Appeal is a Marist middle. Once again it is the
graduate.
He was
frequently middle class person, not eligible
known to giggle during MCCTA for aid yet still in need · of
productions.
financial
assistance,
who
is
Pre-school
To the Editors:
We of the Marist Pre-school
Center would like to use this
opportunity to express our thanks
to
all
and
particularly
the
commuters for bearing with us
during our emergency occupation
of the Browsing Library.
.
Our building was delivered
Thursday night, Sept.
22 and we
hope to
.
be occupying it by the
time you read this.
So to all of you who missed
"All My Children," '
.
'As
.
the
World
Turns,"
·
"General
Hospital" or whatever, we are
indeed grateful and maybe as glad
as
-
you are to have your room
back.
slighted.
Many
students
,
regardless of their parent's in-
come, pay all or a large portion of
their own tuition, yet factors such
as these are not taken into con-
sideration when a student is
-
evaluated for financial aid.
·
Students who
.
receive
·
large
amounts of
.
financial
_
aid, in
addition are securing work study
jobs
.
while other students are
given nothing. We are not asking
for a handout, only to be able to
work
.
In these economic times a
job for a college student is not
just something they engage in for
pocket money but a necessity
.
.
This new policy must have been
in the planning stages for some
time. Why weren't the students
notified of this coming change
earlier so other employment
All the "Munchkins" alternatives could be sought?
· and their teachers
What alternatives does this new
Housing idea
system
·
1eave students such
·
as
myself? Many students due to a
lack
of transportation and
To the Editor:
crowded class schedules cannot
Marist College has come up secure off campus jobs.
with great solutions to its housing
·
Campus jobs should provide
an
·
problems:
equal chance for all students to
:
I. Put students in townhouses.
work.
Iritegrate
·
government
2. Put students in houses on supplemented work study jobs as
North Road.
part of the financial aid program
3.
Ship students to outer but also set jobs
to
allow students
Siberia,
otherwise
known as who want
to
work and, regardless
Canterbury
and
·
Manchester of what the government says,
Garden Apartments
.
need to work.
·
The apartment
·
t
_
hat we are in
was not even cleaned before
.
school started. Over the summer
the apartment was broken into
and
.
,.
vandalized
_
with
-
fire ·ex-
tinguishers. We ad
.
mit that these
are unique circumstances, but. we
shouldn't have had to clean up
this mess. We haven't had clothes
bars in our closets since we moved
in, and there are people living in
Canterbury
-
without
dressers
and/or functioning ovens.
-
North Road, townhouses and
all other on-campus housing is
-
provided with some son of
window coverings. Ca111erbury
and Manchester are not. Each
person, usually four to a two
bedroom apartment, pays $840
per person; that's
·
$3
,
360 per
.
semester. Couldn't Marist at least
provide shades?
There are no laundry facilities
in either complex, so if you don't
·
have a -car, you can hike to the
laundromat, or haul it
10
campus
·
by way of crowded vans.
Carol Lane
Cheerleading
DeafEditbr
;
-:.
i
,·:
;
_,
.
.
,
0ri Sep'fember 23; 1983, tryouts
for the
>
}983~84
.
Cheerleading
Squad
took
_
place.
For the
previous two
·
weeks,
_
all
.
.
of the
girls were taught several cheers
and a routine for the homecoming
.
game. All girls who had made the
football squad would be allowed
to tryout again for the basketball
squad. At this time, some girls
left, others stayed, and still others
came to practice
·
at
.
their con-
venience. The cheerleaders here at
Marist have
a
constitution which
stated
that
six. . prev
-
ious
cheerleaders
will
be placed on the
squad for the following season.
·
The coach, knowing
-
that it will be
an inconvenience to her, voided
the constitution
.
On the night of tryouts,
15
girls
showed up to compete
fo_r
the
12
positions on the squad. One of the
.
girls had a family problem so she
didn't tryout, and another girl at
the last minute decided not to go
through with her tryout. At the
Marist seems to have forgotten
that we exist. Well, we do and we
are alive and not well
.
If we have
to live off
-
campus beca,use of an
overcrowded housing situation,
Marist should at least maintain
these apartments and treat us as
they do other rooming students.
Sincerely,
Maureen Fincken
Kathy August
Residents/Canterbury
.
tryouts, the candidates were told
.
that on Friday morning at 10 a
.
m.
the list would be posted as
to
who
made the 1983-84 cheerleading
squad.
Job policy
Dear Editor:
There is a new policy on
campus this semester -whereas a
student must be on work study in
order to be employed in most on-
campus jobs. As a result, students
previously working in numerous
campus jobs, under the campus
employment program, ranging
from
cafeteria
workers
to
teacher's assistants, are being
fired
to
make room for less ex-
perienced work
s
tudy students,
including a large number of
freshmen promised jobs when
they came to Marist.
To
_
the surprise of everyone,
one name that was on the list
belonged to a girl who had never
tried out the prior night; and if
she did tryout that morning,
where and who judged it? The girl
who had the family problem was
not even named to the squad. This
entire situation is unfair to those
who put in long hours and time to
be cheated by a coach who plays
favorites to underclassmen or
those who agree with her.
In a few weeks there will be
tryouts again for the basketball
squad which will only be opened
to those who made it last week. I
feel this is wrong becau
s
e they
should be opened again. If the
athletic director is watching his
coaches he would make sure that
things were done fairly and not at
the convenience of the coaches
.
Thank you,
Shereen Wright
&Gai Poe
30th
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
5th
6th
7th
8th
9th
10th
11th
12th
13th
14th
15th
16th
17th
18th
.
19th
22nd
23rd
24th
28th
30th
31st
6 CRANNEL ST., POUGHKEEPSIE
473-7996

Tonight -
Marshall Crenshaw
Melanie
'
'
COMING IN OCTOBER:
Tower of Power
·
.
.
-
Warren Zevon: A solo recital - 9 p.m
.
Monday Night Football
Aztec Camera
The Bongos
'Michael Stanley Band
YeUowman
Alvin Lee: 2 shows - 9 & 11 :30
Father Guido Sarducci
Monday Night Football
R.E
.
M.
The Band
The Band
John Mayall and Canned Heat -
2
shows
9
& 11:30
Foghat
Foghat
Monday Night Football
Video: Monty Python's Holy Grail & Rocky
Horror
·
·
Nazareth
Hot Tuna: 2 shows - 9
&
11 :30
Nils Lofgren
Monday Night Footba11
Blackfoot
Blottoween
Monday Night Football
We accept Visa, Mastercard
&
American Express. You can charge tickets
for any show by phone. For information
&
dinner reservations call 473-7996.
Your organization 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.
Dr
-
inks - Food - Music

-11:00 a.rri.
~
4:00
a.m .
Sandwiches
11 :00
a.m. -
8:30 p.rn.
Rte.
9
Poughkeepsie
914-473-4725
"Frankly, my dear ... "
After being denied financial aid
all of my four years at Mari~t, last
year I was finally able to secure a
job on-campus in
the copy center
under
the now
obsolete
campus
Seniors 1984 ._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
. .










































_
;
;
ff!'
- - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - • - - • •
.
••••--•---------------------------------•----------------•--------------~September
29,
1983 · THE CIRCLE· Page
9•••••
r
...
MariS.t recruiters .Seek
·more
foreign students
.
'
.
.
..
.
by Kerry Judge
.
philosophies,"
.
Anderson said
.
"The most important
travel expenses.
thing is finding
out
what really makes them tick.''
Marist
will
also be
sending
college view books,
Foreign students who select Marist are typically
catalogs and other information to U.S. embassies,
.
·
Marist College has launched a new effort to expand
foreign student enrollments .
.
'
.
·

·

interested in either business administration or computer
foreign educational agencies and private secondary
·
Representatives of the college will be contacting
students in some 230 countries with information about
science, he said.
··
schools.
Although Marist is not well known internationally,
In addition, Anderson plans to visit South America in
·
Marist.
..
·
Marist currently has 30 foreign students who are
studying in this country under an
F-1
student visa,
·'
according
·
to William Anderson, assistant dean of
admissions. The college is hoping
to
increase that figure
Anderson said he believes the college can attract
January as part of a group of
I
5
representatives from
enrollments abroad. "Marist offers a student social and
various American colleges seeking foreign students.
cultural development, and a chance
to
get
to
know its
Among the countries in which Marist will be
faculty members very \Yell, without getting lost in the
recruiting are Zimbabwe, Guyana, Panama, Belgium
shuffle of a large institution," he said
.
and the Republic of China.
·
·
to 100, Anderson said.
.
As part of the college's recruiting efforts, Anderson
The college does not provide financial aid to its
Anderson said
.
he believes expanding the number of
·
roreign students will benefit the college's American
students
.
"We will get the benefit of having a world
.
perspective and picking
·
up different cultures
.
and
is having Marist students now studying abroad visit
foreign students except for soccer scholarships, ac-
high-school students and guidanc
·
e counselors in Italy,
cording to Anderson.
England; France, Spain and Ireland .
.
The student
Marist has had a foreign student program for more
recruiters will be reimbursed by the college for some
than 15 years, he said.
....
New video
·
system
introduced·
on
campus
by Paul Beckerle
A new medium which utilizes
the integration of video and
computers,
called interactive
video, was introduced to Marist
.
'
in a seminar at the Beirne Media
Center last week.
·
·
According
·
to Frank Ribaudo,
director
.
of
.
media and in-
structional
technology,
in-
teractive video is the abilty to
control a video tape with a IBM
:
personal computer. "The system
can be used as a learning aid. The
.
·
faculty can create programs on
videotape to aid students," said
Ribaudo.
The computer system which
responds
to
English commands,
as opposed to Colbolt or APL, is
·
a· self-instructional learning aid
.
designed to help the student with
step-by-step
instructions.
For
.
ex~
_
mple,
.
ifa
stµdent js -working
on a math problem ~n
.
d
.
makes a
:
_
mistake in the problem, the
-
~
computer, with the aid of the
·
;
video, will analyze that mistake,
explain where the error is made,
.
arid work with
_
the student on
Jewish author
to
-
speak Oct.
-
4
by Jeffrey Desantis
Author Chaim Potok will be
speaking ln the Marist College
-
Theater on Oct.
4
as part of
the annual Jewish studies
-
lecture series.
Potok's novels have won
c,::itical and popular acclaim
and
are
considered
in-
ternational best sellers and
contemporary classics.
"The annual lecture series is
a valuable addition to the
offerings at Marist College,
giving students and members
·
of the
·
community a
full
awareness of the history and
cultural achievemnents of the
Jewish
people,"
said
Dr.
Milton Teichman, coordinator
of Jewish studies.
-
.
Potok has written four
novels," The Chosen," "The
Promise,"
"My Name is
Asher Lev," and
·
"In the
Beginning."
He · has
also
written
-
a nonfiction book,
"The
-.
Wanderings: Chaim
Potok's History of the Jews."
In addition to being an
author, Potok is an ordained
rabbi.
Potok was born in New
York City on Feb. 17, 1929.
·
He got his
B.A.
from Yeshiva
·
College in 1950, graduating
summa cum laude. He ob-
tained his M.H.L. from the the
Jewish Theological Seminary
in
1954. Potok received his
Ph.D. from the University of
Pennsylvania in 1963.
'
-
The lecture series began
seven years ago as part of the
Jewish studies program. The
departments
of English,
religious studies and history
·
are involved in the program.
correcting,
as
well
as un-
derst~mding why there was an
error.
The Interactive Video system,
which was purchased under
.
the
Title III grant, runs in the range
of $6,000 for one system
.
As of
now Marist owns
.
two of
·
these
~The system should be
used as an addition
to aid the student'
systems, but Ribaudo hopes to see
more in the years to come.
"Hopefully if the money from
·
Title Ill keeps up we could have
up to seven· more systems
in
the
next few years," said Ribaudo.
As of now the system is not in
_
full operation, but will be used as
_
soon as grants can be made for
Frank Ribaudo, director of media and instructional technology, tests out the new personal
computer at
·
Beirne Media. The computer is hooked up to, and interacts with, a video
monitor and video tape player.
:
te~chers;
.
so tha
_
t they can
_
develop
:
should be used as an aid to
their
OW!}
programs.

- ·
'.
:
student for additional ~ork in a
··
According
.
to Ribaudo, the
,,
class and
·
not to be used in place
response from the faculty has
:C:
of the class.
"I
don't want to see
.
a
been very good. He wants to
teacher use this system in place of
emphasize the fact that this sytein
their class;'' said Ribaudo, "The
system should be used
.
as an
addition to aid the studenL''
·
According to the
·
Chairman of
Division of Arts & Letters,
Dr.
Richard Platt, said that the
system will be very effective.
(Photo by Paul Beckerle)
"This system will work anywhere
and can be integrated into dif-
ferent systems
-
when the Lowell
Thomas building is built," said
Platt,
"I
will push its use in my
department."
Marist grad program sees increase
by Marci Medoro
While undergraduate students
at Marist are tucked away
in
their
-
rooms in
_
the evening, finished
with a day's work, a large
segment
of
~he
college's

population is just beginnirig its
-
classes.
Four
.
hundred
and
·
nine
graduate students come on
campus each week and attend
evening courses toward their
master's degree
.
The college's graduate program
is one that is increasing with time.
In 1972 the degrees of master's of
business administration and a
master
.
of arts in psychology were
instituted. In 1979 the degree of
master of public administration
was established and in 1982 a
master of science degree program
in computer science was ap-
pro.ved.
,
Along with these master's
programs Marist also offers a
graduate certificate in:
ac-
counting and financing, human
resource
·
management public
management,
criminal
justice
management and human service
management. A graduate cer-
.
tificate is less advanced than a
master's degree.
Marist has also submitted an
application to Albany to in-
troduce a doctoral program in
psychology. If approved, the
college will
begin accepting
students into the program in
September 1984.
It seems as though, since Marist
is a small college, it would not
have the
facilities
to ac-
commodate such a program.
Therefore, Marist offers courses
in their
·
graduate programs to be
given at John Jay High School in
.
Fishkill and at Ulster Community
College in Kingston. This is for
the convenience of the students.
Another plausible -problem of
having graduate students on the
Marist Campus would be housing
them. However, none of the
Marist graduate students reside
on campus.
"We have
35
full-time students
and 374 part-time students," said
William Anderson,
Dean
of
Graduate Admissions. "None of
them reside on campus. However,
most of them work on campus in
the different offices or what have
you."
·
According to Anderson, Marist
was the first institution in this
area to introduce a graduate
program. "We had to .meet the
needs of the cornmunity," said
Anderson. "Marist is nestled in
the 'silicon valley
.
'
Because of
such companies as IBM; the
area's need for people with
master's
·
degrees increased. We
conformed to the needs of the
area."
Although
the
graduate
program at Marist is increasing,
the rumor that Marist College will
become a university is not true.
"In five years
I
can see
·
the
Marist graduate program growing
and becoming a very promising
program," said Anderson. "As
the graduate program increases,
so will the number of students.
However, Maris! becoming a
university was just someone's
misinterpretaton on the topic."
College set
.
to
·
extend writing requirements
by Clal!dia Bruno
Students and-faculty can expect
writing requirements to change
under Marist's new director of
college writing;
Professor Allan Steinberg,
former director of
.
creative
writing and composition at Idaho
State University, plans to im-
plement
"writing across
the
curriculum" -
the concept of
requiring students to write in all
disciplines -
as a means to
improve students' writing.
With the move to writing across
the curriculum, the teaching of
writing will no longer be the sole
responsibility of those teaching
freshman compos
i
ton, according
to Steinberg.
"In the past, colleges
.
required
writing for class projects in every
class, then moved to the idea of
having one section responsible for
·
writing," said Steinberg.
"Hopefully, if we reach some
success,
students can expect
writing will be a significant part
in all their classes," Steinberg
said.
If
writing is to be a useful and
important part of the Maris!
experience, the administration,
.
according to Steinberg, must
·
encourage and support faculty
who want to achieve this and keep
other faculty from impeding the
progress.
Three signs of the ad-
ministration's encouragement,
according
to
Steinberg, are his
hiring, the appointment of an ad
hoc committee composed of one
member from each division and
announcements by
President
Dennis
Murray
and
Vice
President Andrew Molloy of their
concern and support for writing
improvement at Marist.
The ad hoc committee, said
·
Steinberg, will meet to generate
proposals for making writing a
college-wide activity.
Steinberg said
the ad-
ministration and faculty must
make sure that the writing in
courses is done in a meaningful
way.
A change in the attitudes of
students
·
and faculty towards
writing is needed, according to
·
Steinberg. "Restructuring has to
·
be latitudinal -
people (faculty
and students) have to come to
think of writing as a learning
process. That's the fundamental
i:;hange,'' he said.
According to Steinberg, most
instructors and students think
of
writing as
something
done siTT1ply
for the purpose of grading.
If students and instructors
think of writing as a learning
process, they can devise ways to
make writing a part of the
curriculum,
said
Steinberg,
without
overburdening
in-
structors or making students
defensive because it's going to be
graded.
Steinberg said he is closely
watching this fall's experiment in
which the computer is being used
in freshman writing. Steinberg
said,
"I think computer-aided
instruction in writing can be a
tremendously useful tool in aiding
writing across the curriculum."



































I,"
'
.
'
--Page 10 - TH.E CIRCLE - September
29, 1983
Soccer Standout ineligible
by Robert R. LaF orty
·
After scoring 26 goals and 12
assists in his first season with
Marist, soccer player Wayne
Cargill is ineligible to play this
season.
Cargill, a sophomore from the
Bronx, is ineligible to play due to
a misapplicaton of the rules,
according to Marist. college soccer
coach Dr. Howard Goldman.
"It
was my mistake,"
said
Goldman.
"Obviously the way the season's
going, I'm taking the shot for it."
X-C places
3rd at meet
by Joe Didziulis
The Marist cross country team
came in third place at The King's
College Invitational last Saturday
in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y.
Sophomore Pete Pazik paced
the Red Fox harriers by finishing
sixth overall with a time of 28
minutes, 53. 7 seconds for the 5.3
mile course. Coming in second
for Marist and fourteenth overall
was sophomore ·Mike Mueller.
Rounding out the Marist top five
were junior-transfer Kevin 'Lydon
.
(20th) and, sophomores
Mike
Barker, (30th), and Christian
.
"Vark" Morrison (32nd). Pazik,
Mueller, and Lydon received
individual awards for finishing in
the top 20.
When a Division One
·
athlete
transfers from one
.
school . to
anotht';r, he is required to sit out a
year to be eligible for post-season
· play in the National Collegiate
Athletic Association.
Goldman forgot to inform the
Eastern

College Athletic Con-
.
ferencc about Cargill last year.
According to ECAC regulations,
Cargill was ineligible last year,
although he still played for
Marist. Goldman is
·
sidelining
Cargill in
.
order not to jeopardize
his future
eligibility.
"It's hard adjusting to not
playing," said Cargill. "I really
·
feel this year will be a set back to
my career.'
.
' Cargill said he does
not just play
·
soccer. "Most
players only go through
·
the
motions. It's very different when
you play for the
·
love of the
.
game," he said.
·
·
·
"It
definitely hurts us to have
Wayne sitting on the bench," said
Joe Vasile-Cozzo, a senior from
Long Island. "When Wayne was
'out
on the field, it made the whole
team play better.''
Wayne Cargill in action last year. He is ineligible to play in
1983 and
will
spend the season at the sidelines.
The U.S. Merchant Marin~
Academy won the meet with a
total of 51 points, led by Larry
Hadley who pa
_
ced the field with a - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
27:31.2 time. Hunter College
etA~
ED6
finished
second
with 83 points.
.
·
f
I
·
Marist's 102 points placed the
team third in a field of
·
20 teams
and almost
-
200 runners, despite
the fact that Red Fox coach Steve
.
.
.
Lurie held out two of his top four· To the wild chicks m 511 and 512:
runners..
.
We'l
1
1 be on your "chart" this
Those top four runners were y_e_a_r._--'---'----------
already selected to go to the Cleo -
Next' time grab my thigh!
Nation~! C~tholic Invitational ~t
Yo Frank Happy Birthday! Love
the Umvers1ty of Notre Dame m
y u Kris'
South Bend, Indiana this Friday.
_o_, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
They are Pazik, Mueller, junior 1;>utchman, too bad you are just
Jim Hegarty and
sophomore
hke all'the rest.
------------'---
captain
Mike
Murphy
.
Lydon, K.E. -
You're my friend because
Barker,
and
Morrison
were you're you, and not because
tapped to round out the Marist you're someone's cousin.
se
·
vcn-man contigent.
Love, P.T.
Coach Steve Lurie was not
available
for
comment
but
sophomore harrier Morrison said,
"We are cautiously optimistic
Jean,
Take a walk on the wild side!
Matt
about our chances at Notre The next best feeling in the
Dame, but we feel that we should world
...
coming home to the ones
·
finish somewhere in the top half
I
love.
of the field. Simply put, we will
·
be highly competitive.''
Homecoming
Continued from page
J
-
Katie B.
To the P.F.'s
&
Rick-
Thanks for this week! We'll have
a hell of a
.
year
.
Love, Rommi
&
Jay
M.
Two New York Club bands, Hey 116-
"Bookends"
and"Shock Yeah, you're shy, but I stillthink
Treatment," will be providing · you're cute.
musical entertainment for the
Love-811
evening.
McGandrews-
1
t 's an old joke -
but it's still
funny! LY 9u're the best!
-
·
Yo Schleps:
,
How are the women this week?
Keep up the good work on and off
the field.
Love Always,
Coach
Wanted:
One
relatively
nice
young female for snuggling with
on rainy
·
nights. Most have
fireplace and brandy.
·
See Chris M., Ext. 148
Lor
So you had P .E; once! Thank
God you got over it, or didn't
you?
Love Always
YourParHime
Roommate
Margaret, your pizza's ready!
Diane,
Where the
.
hell is Blauvelt? It
wasn't really clear.
Gail
SPROUSE get a real middle
name
.
Just prior to that
,
the senior
clas!wVill
be host to the alumni at
the Senior Cocktail Party.
·
Sunday's activities
will
begin at
11
a.m.
when the Alumni
Memorial Service is held at
·
the
lliEMc\ll
Executive Management Consultants
Seat of Wisdom Chapel.
From noon to 3 p.m. the Grand
Reunion Brunch will be held at
Mariner's Harbor Restaurant in
Highland. All alumni will par-
ticipate in the celebration of the
reunions of the classes of '48, '53,
'63,
'68, '73, and
'78.
·
The final event of the weekend
will be the Sunset Cruise for the
alumni, on the
·Hudson,
from
3
p.m. to
6
p
.
m.
Maloney pointed out that the
main reason for the event's·
continual success is a strong bond
between students. "There's a
strong bond between
Marist
graduates. Alhough the school
has changed tremendously in the
last 20 years, there is still a certain
core of experiences that two
people feel who graduate from
the same school, and a certain
loyalty to it," Maloney said.
'
.
·
PERSONNEL RECRUllMENT
Job Placement
:
Assistance
Are you having trouble writing your
.
.
?
resume .
.
Don't know who to call?
Well, you're not alone!
Executive Management Consultants, with over ten years in
Professional Placement,
will
help you. We
will
prepare
your resume, Custom Design your cover letter and arrange
to mail your completed resume/cover to prospective
employers.
Completed Resumes Begin at $40.00.
Evening Appointments Available-831-6099 Fishkill
Tonight at 9-11 p.m. in the
·
Theater a
·
General Meeting
for fall musical.
Information on
and
auditions
rehearsals
EARN WHILE
·
YOU L
-
EARN
Become an Encore Travel Campus Rep.
Training Provided/Send Resume and Cover Letter
STUDENT DISCOUNTS
Fly anywhere in domestic U.S.A. on
Air Florida for HALF PRICE
Obtain a one year
Student' Discount Card for $15:00
316 Main Mall
Poughkeepsie, NY
enc~e
TRAVEL INC.
Open Daily 9-5 p.m., Saturdays
Campus Delivery
485-S800
Th
·
e Creative Full Service Agency
Renaissance Pub
VARAZZANO BLVD.
486-9278
Monday Nights -
9
p.m. til
4
All Bottled Beer
$1. 00 !
Shots
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.
.
Thutsday
Morning:
·
Quarterback·
_,
...
--:J~o~h·n-=~~a~k~k-e _______ .....
.__;;.;;:;;;..;.;;.;.~:;.,;~-----..;...-....;,..;.;.;.....;.,;...;~--~~September 29, 1983 •
THE CIRCLE. Page 11----
•Lif e-
:
after Mc.Cahn: sweat and disappointment
·
1u;t over four y~ars ~go, Steve
not to be in 1983, but there was
. Smith arrived at Marist College as
talk of European basketball, of
an unheralded freshman, one of
the continental
league and
the members of a Division Two
possibly later of the
NBA.
So
basketball team.
what's happened? I got in touch
Since then, Smith has earned
with Smith, who talked about his
himself a place in the small
busy summer and his plans for the
journal known as the Marist
future.
record book. He is the first Marist
"As soon as I graduated, I sat
player _, in any division -
to
down with my parents to discuss
score more than 2000 points. He
what I would be doing with
was twice an Associated Press
basketball. We decided that I'd
All-America honorable mention
pursue basketball for a while; so
I
player.
·
haven't been working a regular
Smith
was
the
Eastern
job. We felt it would take away
Collegeiate Athletic Association's
from basketball," he said.
Rookie-of-the-Year. As a senior,

"At first I was waiting for the
he was the ECAC's Player-of-the-
draft, but then that fell through.
Year.
It was something that surprised
In short,
-
Smith was Marist
me, I was disappointed. So I sat
College basketball. When he
down
.
and said
'What
are my
graduated as a Communications
options, where can I go from
Arts major this past May, there
here'?"
was the prospect of ·the National
Smith decided to try for a
.
Basketball
Association
draft.
league overseas, but he soon
Several teams had expressed some
found out that the NBA draft
interest in drafting him, and he
wasn't the only disappointment in
was figured by many to be a
store this summer
.
"I was sup-
middle-to-low round pick.
posed to fly to Israel, but the
Smith was going to be the first
money fell through three hours
.
Marist alumnus to get a shot at an
before I was going to leave," he
NBA team. And if the longshot
·
·
said.
"It
was a bad situation all
came through, if Smith made the
around..
_
team; you can bet there would
.
Despite the problems, Smith
- have been some celebrating at
·
has kept active and in hot pursuit
Marist.
·
.
of a
professional
basketball
.
But there was no
NBA
tryout,
career. He played in five leagues
for Smith wasn't drafted, not by
over the summer, ranging in
any team. It was a rudely abrupt
location from his hometown,
end to the hopes not only of White Plains,
N.Y.,
where he
Smith himself,. but of everyone
currently lives with his parents, to
who followed Marist basketball.
Manha~tan to New Jersey.
Or was it? O~viously, it was
"They
kept me busy," said
.
Steve Smith
Smith about the leagues. "I had a
game almost every night. I played
·
more games over the summer
than I did all last season in
school. ·
-
·
"Also, the leagues taught me
what I have to do to be successful,
because
I
was playing against
some professional players, guys
like Sugar Ray Richardson and
Gus Williams.
I
learned that I
(Photo by Ron Waters)
need more upper-body strength,
and that's what I've been working
on," he said.
Smith has• a tryout with a
Continental
Basketball
Association team in Puerto Rico
in about a month. "they were in
Montana until last year, this will
be their first season in Puerto
Rico. I already t
_
i-ied out for them
in New York and they invited me
WQmen 's team impressive
.
in tennis victory
..
~
~
,
.
:
' '
'
,:
,,
.
.
.


·
Six of seven matches went to
pro set by the score of 8-6.

·•
..,,...Marist-
in
.
.,
the women?s
-
tenni~
..
-
.
.
First~year coach
.
J
aric Heiss
..
team's 6-1 defeat of Bard College
said she is pleasecfwiifi'
'
i}ie tennis·
·-
.
.
_
last
.
Friday
.
at the Dutchess
'
program
.
and with the team's
·
Racquet Club in Poughkeepsie.
performance. "You have to be
Junior Cindy Krueger of Marist
positive about things. I think
·
played in the first singles spot and
we've got a good program here
won the first of her best-of-three
and I think the girls have played
set match 6-0 before Jessica Klein
well," she said.
.
of Bard retired with a knee injury.
Heiss said some players were in
Donna Graziano, a freshman,
new spots against Bard. "Donna,
won her match 6-1, 6-0, while
Josie and Sharon were all playing
sophomores Michelle Pisano and
·
singles for the first time and they
Sharon Taplin both won easily, in
all played well, so obviously I'm
.
straight sets.
.
pleased with that," said Heiss.
·
The only loss came in a lengthy
The tennis Red Foxes were
three-set contest,
with Kim
·
scheduled
.
to
play at Siena
Jioffman of Bard defeating Josie
yesterday and have a busy week
Traponi 6-2, 4-6, 6-l.
coming up
·
They face the State
.
In
doubles action,
Diane
University
·
College at Purchase
Scavuzzo teamed with Kathy
tomorrow, Western Connecticut
Mulligan
.
·to
.
beat Christina
next Monday and
.
SUNY New
·
.
Griffith and Alli Wentworth 6-4,
Paltz next Wednesday. ALI three
6-J.
·
Playing second doubles were
upcoming meets are away, but the
·
valer.ie Petrini adn Cindy
next and final home meet is
Krueger, who won an eight-game
Friday, Oct. 21, against Ramapo.
. Notre Dame's Phelps
at Mccann Center
for coaching
_
seminar
Notre Dame basketball coach
Digger Phelps was the featured
speaker at a basketball coaching
seminar held in the Mccann
cen
.
ter last Thursday.
demonstrator teams were on hand
to play out the various aspects
discussed.
The seminar culminated with
Phelps' presentation of the trap
defense
and
various
drill
techniques.
·
After this, Phelps
gave an extended talk on the
Diane Scaruzzo
and
Kathy Mulli~an.
(Photo
by
,John
Bakke)
The evening's program con-
sisted of four coaches -
Ronald
Petro, Marist basketball coach;
Carol Schachner of Mercy
College;
Les Wothke, Army
basketball coach and Phelps -
speaking about different phases
of the game. Topics included the
transition offense, motivational
techniques,
fast-break offense
and others.
importance of a good education • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
for
the student-athlete.
He
The seminar, sponsored by
Champion Products Inc., was
attended by hundreds, many of
whom were high school coaches
·
and players.
The coaches gave tips on how
to play a more effective game. To
emphasize
their
points,
two
stressed that th·e primary role of a
college athlete is that of student
and that without an education, an
athlete has little future.
Phelps emphasized the need for
stricter
academic
standards for
student-athletes, citing his own
personal rule that if a basketball
player for Notre Dame misses a
class, he is ineligible to play in the
next game.
·
Finally, there was a quesiion
and answer session with the
audience and Coach Phelps.
1983 Homecoming Game
Marist
vs.
Iona
•Saturday at 1: 30
•Marist students free with I.D.
•No alcoholic beverages at game
down, so they've seen me play
before," he said.
"They told my agent that I'd
get a fair shot at making the
team," said Smith. "That's all
I
can ask for, and it's good because
with a lot of these everything's so
political. It'll be tough, all tryouts
are tough because everybody's
trying to impress."
Whatever happens in Puerto
Rico, I wish Steve the best with
his career, as I'm sure everyone at
Marist docs. Even• if he never
makes
it
to the
NBA,
even if he
doesn't make a living throwing a
ball through a metal hoop, there
are still some fond memories for
Marist fans.
How many people who saw it
will forget his 2000th career
point? Indeed, sports are en-
tertainment for the spectator, and
Smith has provided more than
enough for a small, relatively
unnoticed Division One college.
Marist
will
always
have,
somewhere in its record boo!<., a
very special spot for the retired
number 12.
Football _ _
_
Continued from page 12
Rich Penfield was thrown for a
loss on the first play, followed by
one of Marist's
10
penalties on
the next. With third and goal to
go, quarterback Jim Cleary rolled
left and threw an interception that
was returned to the 10.
That, if anything, was the
turning point. St. John's then
began a 16-play, 70-yard drive to
the 20, where it ended with a 26-
yard field goal. From then on,
Marist never seemed to get back
into the game .
The offense couldn't sustain a
drive

giving
.
punter Thomas
Huber a lot of unwanted work
and
forcing the defense back on
the field time and time again. The
fourth quarter saw Jamison pick
apart
a tired Marist defense and
throw for two touchdowns .
Clearly acknowledged
the
offensive problems. "Pressure
and
quickness were the keys.
They
blitzed a lot, so there wasn't much
time to throw. Their linemen arc
quick, so it was tough to run on
them either," he said
.
T.V. _ _
Continued from page 5
credible Hulk" Lou Ferrigno and
CBS's "Cutter to Houston" has
former "Charlie's Angel" Shelley
Hack.
Another Angel, Kate Jackson,
stars in "Scarecrow and Mrs.
King" as a housewife who teams
with a U.S. spy. "Hardcastle and
McCormick" is a hardhitting
action show all the way with
Brian Keith as a retired judge;
"The
Rousters"
stars Chad
Everett as
_
the head of a bounty
hunting family; "The Whiz Kids"
is strictly Saturday morning stuff
for young viewers and computer
buffs; and "Manimal" deals with
a scientist who, believe it or not,
can change into a mixed bag of
species from the animal kingdom.
Continuing dramas are still in
style, and there certainly is no
shortage this year.
·
Two military
soaps,
"Emerald Point, N.A.S."
and "For Love and Honor,"
promise more steam than
sub-
stance;
"Bay City Blues" is a
"Hill Street" type show about
minor league baseball; and "The
Yellow Rose" is a large cast
western pot boiler.
Which of these shows will
survive? The answer to that
question will unfold in the coming
weeks, and in this column I will
examine the new series (as well as
a few old ones) to see which ones
deserve
.
to escape that ever
looming executive axe -
·
can-
cellation.
















.
.
FOotball
teatrr
trounce-cl,
21-7
The early ones were the only , endedthe game with 217 pa~sing
ones for . the football team as
yards.
·.
seven early Marist points were
._ . Redmen senior running .back
followed by 27 for St. John's in
Dennis Bliden had a good outing
last Saturday's loss to the Red-
against the Red ·Fox defense as
.men
in
Jamaica, N.Y'. The defeat
well, running for 168 yards on 26
put Mai"ist's record at 1-1.
carries.
The Red Foxes' defense, aided
Marist took the lead just one
by six St. John's turnovers, kept
and a half minutes into the game
th_e game close until two fourth-
after Chip Shepard recovered St.
quarter . touchdowns by an
John's fumble . of. the opening
overpowering - Redmen · offense
kickoff on -the Redmen 21-yard
secured the 27-7 victory and kept
line; Marist: was-. on the one
St. John's unbeaten at 3-0.
several plays later, and Roy
The Marist squad will be at
Watterson ran the yard to put the,
home this Saturday against Iona
Foxes on top 7-0.
·
·
at . I :30 p.m. in this year's · · That quick score apparently .
homecoming game. Iona defeated
helped· St. John's coach Bob
the Foxes · 27-20 in last .year's ... · Ricca decide -to start Jamison,
· matchup at Iona.
who was suffering from an ankle
The Redmen were held to just
injury that limited his mobility. ·
IO first-half points even though
Ricca had been considering giving
their 158 offensive yards nearly
Jamison .a day off until Marist
· doubled. the Foxes' 84. Marist . jumped quickly on top.
recovered two fumbles and senior
The injury forced the Redmen •
defensive back John· O'Leary
to rely less on their quarterback's
intercepted two passes. in the
running ability. "Jamison stayed
second quarter to help limit the
in the pocket, we were expecting
scoring. ·
him to run more,'' said Marist
. But . the powerful Redmen
defensive end . Timothy Dunn.
offense continued to wear down
"Instead, he handed off .. They·
the defense into the second half, · · ran a lot more sweeps than .we
advancing the ball 332 yards
expected."
through the final two periods for
Marist's lead held until the
a total of 490.
second quarter, when Nick Casa
"l think the defense played
ran in from the seven-yard line. A
great, it just played too much,"
field goal put the Redmen up 10-7
said Brian Sewing, a defensive
four minutes later.
lineman. "They've got a good -
Then, in the third quarter and
offense, though. We did the best
with- the score unchanged, Marist
we could withwhat we had."
got the ball on the St: John's six,
.Todd Jamison;
St:
John's All- ·. courtesy.oLa,fumbled lateralby
America quarterback, could
Jamison on an option play. Down
complete only 10 of 20 first~half
by three, the Foxes lined up with
passes bill paced his team by
first down and six yards to go for
finding receivers- for 9 of 13
the lead. ·
throws in the second half. He
Continued on page 11
-
Redinen tailback,Dennis Bligen is tackled after gaining a few of his 168 yards in last Satur-.
day's game. St. John's beat the Foxes 27-7.
(Photo by John Bakke)
_Soccer team· loses to Southern
Cditnecticut, then tie.S
FOirJieid
handful of shots on goal. But the
non-potent Marist offense.did not
·. One goal is hard to come by
pose many threats as S. Conn.,
these days for the Marist College
ranked second in Division Two in
soccer team. Through last week, . the country, shut out the Red
the Red Foxes have won only one Foxes 1-0.
.,
.
.
by Frank Raggo
game while losing four and tying
Marist then traveled to Fair-
one ..
'
In those ,six games, they
field. University Saturday, hoping
scored only. three tiines, once in a :. for a much-needed victory against
losing effort.
·
·
· a team that was winless in three
· As Southern Connecticut State tries. The gaine started well as
visited Marist last Tuesday; one freshman Jim McKenna. opened
of the main objectives going into the scoring for the Red Foxes with
the game for
.
Marist was to stop an assist from Vasile-Cozzo.
Ron Brasile, the star forward for
The score remained unchanged
S. Conn. St.
It
was
up._
to senior until 25 minutes into the. second
Joe Vasile-Cozzo to take care of half when Fairfield tied the game.
that. :
.
._·.
..
The score . was tied through
The
·
team captain did_ it well,
regulation time,. so two 10 minute
·matching· Brasile throughout the periods were played.
game and .. limiting him to a
No goals were scored during
by Peter
Colaizz~
. - only the third week of p;actice
and I've already seen im-
The Marfst ·College women's
provement,"
Cally . said.
''I
voHeyball • team lost a tough . · expect more improvement from
match to Pace. University last . the team."
·
Thursday at · Pleasantville. The
loss cropped the team's record to.
There are only two returning
the extra periods as·Marist played
without the services of their
coaches, . who were both ejected
from the game. The. game· ended
in a
l~l tie and left a long trip
home for Marist.
"A tie in this case is considered
a loss," said Marist head coach
Howard Goldman. "We played
fairly well, but missed several
· opportunities.
Opportunities
have
been
created for Matist but there is no
one there to finish them. "We
lack speed and · a finisher up
front," said Goldman.
· The long season continued with
an away game yesterday against
Hartwick University. Tomorrow,
Siena College travels here to play
the Red Foxes .
more difficult because the team
moved
from · Division B to
Division
A
in the Hudson Valley
Women's Conference. The team
won the championship in Division
Blast year.
. starters from last year's team;
. 0-3, following two straight losses
according to Cally. She· said the
in their season opener,. a tour-
team is "just learning to play as a
nament ·ac Williams College in
cohesive unit." .
Williamstown, Mass."
·.
It
is a young team; with only
After Tuesday's · match at
Army,
the team
travels to
Manhattanville
College
at
· Purchase, N.Y., on Saturday.
Digging.in
at··Marist
Notre Dame basketball .coach
Digger Phelps was at the Mccann
Center last ,Thursday for a
basketball coaching clinic. · · See
story on page 11.
.
.
(Photo by John Bakke)
At
Pace, the team lost the best-
two seniors: Hillary Palawsky
of-five match in five games. The · and Kathy O'Connor. "The team
team lost the first game, 10-15,
has a lot of potential, but we're
but came back to win games two . not near realizing it yet," Cally
and three with scores of 15-11 and
said. "We are getting a little
15-13. After building early leads
better each game,
the team lost both games four and
The key
to improvement,
five along with the match.
according to Cally, is "the in-
Despite the team's poor per-
tangible. thing of six bodies
formance so far-this season, first-
playing in unison."
year coach Valerie Cally is op-
.Cally . admitted
that
the
timistic.about the season. "This is
competition this year would be
$ports inside
•Women's tennis
•Cross country
•Digger Phelps
•Thursday Morning
Quarterback


29.3.1
29.3.2
29.3.3
29.3.4
29.3.5
29.3.6
29.3.7
29.3.8
29.3.9
29.3.10
29.3.11
29.3.12