The Circle, December 15, 1983.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 29 No. 10 - December 15, 1983
content
Happy Holidays
from
The Circle ... See you
in
'84
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Volume 29, Number 10
·
·
.
Marist College, Po·ughkeepslf!, N. Y.
December 15, 1983
Townhouse residents Upset' over mairitenance
by Sandy Daniels
~ade to correct thi;
·
situation.
the same time, I don't dismiss the
"Things have never - looked so
~
situation."
·
·.
.
.
-
Maintenance or'the townhouses
good;" said Tarantino.
-
.
The
comp I a int s
from
is becoming a major
.
concern for
Robert A. Heywood; director townhouse resideI)tS
.
have been
townhouse residents,accor<iing to
of housing, agreed that there is a
-
numerous,
.
according
to
an informal survey
.
recently
·
con-
problem that needs attention. Heywood ..
.
ductedbyaCirclereporter.
"The- .inaintenance
·
and
"How can the school justify
The survey
of
100 townhouse
·
housekeeping services have to im-
having a maintenance !=rew?"
residents shows that 920Jo of the
prove," said Heywood. Heywood asked Deb Qutil, resident of
interviewed
students
are
·
·
_
also said that each townhouse townhouse C-2. "We never see
dissatisfied with maintenance and
..
should be cleaned once a week.
them.''
housekeeping services.
.
.
..
..
He said that Tarantino is
turn•
Resident of townhouse B-3
.
However, acconiing to An-
-
,
ing the situation around.
"It
Donna Cashin said, "I;ve been
.
thony Tarantino, director of the takes time and
.
students should be trying to
.
·
get a
-
desk
.
lamp since
physical plant, an effort is being
.
patient," Heywood said,
"B~t
at
·-
early September, but I haven't
CSL-set
to ope_n
up
_
,
eval uati o
.
ns
'The c
·
oundl of Student Le~ders
·
will conduct its own evaluation of
Marist fa'culiy next week from a
desk in Donnelly Hall.
-
·
CSL officers
.
said
-.'
their
evaluation is
a
10 to
·12
ques
-
tion
-
form:
\Vhich -will
_be
hand-taUied
_
. _
.. and
-
made available next semester
;L
•
0
·
·•
711e
questions on the t:valu~tio11
·
·
were
-
designed from ''Seate,'.
_
'
·
the
·
·
:
Student Cou'rse
,
and
,
Teacher
·
Evaluatfons,
'
:Cr
.
om
. :
.
the
>
'
State
:,
-
University of New
,
York at
.
Buffalo.
·
·
'
..
CSL President Keith Galanti
-
said he plans to put
a
limited
·
edition of the results on reserve in
the library; Commuter
·
Lounge,
School of Adult Education office
and the CollegeActivides office .
.
.
·
James Barnes, president of the
College Uniori Board, said
.
the
·
evaluation form contains a series
of questions, which
will
·
use
a
rating systemto gathenesults
;
·:
..
The CSL' officers said that th'e
·
evaluation's
'
will
be
·
unbiased.
··
They added that'their aim is
·
not
to be vindictive · and is not
,
an
attack on the faculty.
-
·
-,.
,
·
.
.
-
Barnes said,. "We want to use
.·
members of the student body and
.
,_.
possibly students froin local.
·
· _
colleges to make t~e tallying
_
of
·.
the results more unbiased."
. ··
·
·_c· .,__·
ioep
·
_
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~
--
_
·
"Kris Ktingles" are
p~rt
oj
the
_
1
~
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more humorous side of holiday
tradition
at
;
·
Marist.
Here,
.
:
K
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r,·
.
n
'
g
·
_·.
'
le
·_.
'S
.
·
.
sophomore A~dy
Hall
.·
duinps .
water
on
a tolerant
.
Kringle.
-
_
·
·
_
__
_
.,
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.
·
· · .
_
victim, (Photo by Margo
.
K!Jcich)
received one,
·
so I bought it on my
own." "We were planning on a
nice Christmas dinner, but it is a
little difficult with only -four
chairs/' said 'Anne Markey,
another resident of B-3. ·
·
Gai - Poe, assistant resident
•
director of the north end, said
that a major problem is the length
of
•
time it takes to
.
answer com-
plaints. According to Poe, some
maintenance
.
requests
from
September have not yetbeen com-
-
pleted.
.
"It
is extremely frustrating to
receive punch lists of work to be
done from maintenance, check
with townhouse residents to see
if
the work has been completed and
find out that very little has been
done," said Poe.
·
Student complaints-have rang-
ed from the length of time it takes
to
complete requests to dirty
bathrooms and cockroach pro-
blems.
·
''Maintenance is slo_w to res-
pond," said Debbie Hyer of
townhouse B-2. "We
_
have to call
continued on
page
2
·over~the-ai,
-·
,staiion
won
'i
-
be
.here
soon
by Steven Berger
Trustees would have to accept the
_
prop9sal before any action could
Vassar College's
_
WVKR-FM
be taken
.
College officials said
·
radio station broadcasts with a
that President Dennis J. Murray
power of 1,000 watts to three
found the proposal. to be too
counties
·
. Dutchess Community much of an investment' in 1980 ;
College's
.
W42AE-TV station therefore
.
the decision was "not to
,
serves
·
,
all
-
Poughkeepsie go withh. "
·
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.
·i
Cablevision subscribers~
.
,·
Rober('
:.
Dyson,· trustee and
_ . ·• Marist College's
WMCR
radio owner
'
o(
.
Poughkeepsie stations
·
,
station
•
sends
.
a
\
modulated signal
·-
WEOK/WPDH, .
said
·
.
the
·
"."'."t,y'.c'able'tof400"'fe~iffiffif}t\1a_'ents;:·
-,c ;
pi'opos
·
it1
:•:
""i:>'ulcf be-~c6nsidered
·
as
·,
-
,:-,
_
.
:/
D5=spJt~
·-
~~ving
,
~~r~
}h<!~A<JO
\
par:(
,
_
qf
>
th~
:
.
Lo\Yeu
·.
Thomas
.
,-
commu111cauon arts
.
maJo.rs
_
an~ Commum_cauonsCenter package.
_
·
an
'.
established Commmii£_ation
.
:
:
·
However, faculty sources, who
·
Arts
>
cu
_
rriculuin;
-
.
the
.:
college
wished to remain
-
·
unidentified,
·
apparently
:
.
has
-
no immediate
--
said they
.
believed the proposal
plans for following the lead of-
would not be
_
accepted by the
rieigh~oring
:
.
c
·
olleges
.
..
by board, because a hands-on
establishing an over-the-air
·
facility like a radio station would
broadcast station.
.
go against the Marist liberal arts
-.
· The last time such a plan was--
·
concept of learning.
·
considered seriously was in 1980,
The
.
s
·
ources suggested that
_when
<
Robert
_
Norman,
.
associate
while
_
·.
Marist
encourages
professor
·-·
of'
·
_
Communication
broadcasting, the. college would
Arts,
·
proposed
.
·
that
.
the
.
college
never substantially invest in it.
.
invest ih a 3,000 watt commerical
-
Dr
.
Richard
.
Platt, chairman of
FM station to serve four counties
the
Communication
Arts
froni. Marist
:
.
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_ .
department; discounted such a
The
.
.
prop6sed station
·
would
theory. He said he was tired of the
-
occupy the last
'
available FM
·
argument
-
between technical
frequency allocated
·
to· the
learning and liberal arts learning .
.
Hudson Valley by the Federal
'-'It
.
-
doesn't have_ to be a
Cominunitations Commission. It
-
dichotomy; you. can· !;,lend
.
the
would broadcast
.
on 92.} , MHz .two," he said,
and cost
_
an estimated $20,000,
_
.
"One of
--
the advantages of
which incfudes engineering, legal
having a stationjs that it doesn't
and
·
application fees.
have
-
•
to
.
depend on making
The Marist College
·
Boa~d of
-
continued on page 3
)J.ffirfnilttve Attidn~·
H/J
.
i,vfar
hllve
we cof11e?
.
by Caroline Kretz
.
.
promotin
'
g of w~men
.
and
.
purpose of the task
.
force was to
-
peispective a~d intends to create
.
The report also docu~ents that
·
~
.
·
meIIlbers ofrilinority groups..
study
t~e eval~ation
~
rep()rt and
a:n
enVironment, a model
·
society,
5~6 percent of
·
"the faC1.;1lty are
·
.
In 1981 there were 13 women
'
_In· recent years,
.
Affirmative make recommendations to the ihatreflectsequalityandjtistice."
minority members.
In real
on
the Maristfaculty and 68 men.
Action has generated a great deal
college concerning
·
Affirmative
Prior to the
-
·
return visit of the
·
·
numbers, that translates to only
In 1983, there are 24 women .ind
.
of attention at Mari
.
st, par-
Action. The task force presented · Middle States team in November
five
·
of!he 89faculty members;
65 men.
·
ticularly following
.
the
.
Middle
its findings to
.
the president and of this year; a report was sent to
·
·
"Marist seems· to mask Af-
.
Two years ago there were four
·
states accreditation evaluation in
his cabinet in February.1983.
Middle States with the task force
firmative Action by hiring white
minority members
·
on the faculty
.
198_1 and again
·
in November ()f
."Basically, we are moving in a
reports
·
and the
-
president's
women instead of minorities,"
and 77 white· faculty members.
this year.
.
.
_
positivedirection," said Margaret response to the recommendations;:- said Tera Thomas, H.E.O.P.
_
Today
·
there is one more minority
In its evaluation of Marjst in
Gold, director of the Social Work
"What. we tried to do,t' ac-
director. "Marist is a white male
member and seven more white
1981, the
·
Middle
·
Sta~es team
.
Program, who serves a~ co-
·
cord
_
ing
-
to Anthony Cer
_
nera,
bastion," s~e said._"The statistics
faculty members.
pinpointed Affirmative Action as chairperson of the five-member
.
executive
·
assistant
to
ihe
reveal very httle."
·
.
The question remains, how far
an area. in need of improvement.
task force along with MarkAdin,
·
president, "was to document the
"Problems also
·
arise with
has Marist come in terms
·
of
·
The
team
cited
several director of'personnel.
progress that has been made.
regard to Marist's inability to p~v
Affirmative Action, and just how . deficiencies: The college does not
"The administration has acted
Progress is the key word."_
the salaries to lure the muc ;_
far does it still need to go?
·
adequately recruit or
-
·
retain
upon
.
our recommendations,"
The report documents that over
demanded minorities and women
The answers are not easy.
women and minorities; women
Gold said. Gold also said,
one half, 58.2 percent, of the new
faculty members," Gold said.
Despite obyious advances,
·
some
are under-represented in
the
however, that the adm
_
instration
employees in 1983 were women.
The task force recommended to
still question
the college's
faculty and are concentrated at
does not share the same view of-
However, the report also shows
the president that salaries
·
be
commitment to Affirmative
the lower levels; and the number
.
Affirmative Action that the task
that 100 percent of the new
competitive enough to attract and
-
Action.
of minorities atthe administrative
force:has.
secretarial/ clerical employees
retain women and minorities.
· The term "Affirmative Ac-
level is minimal.
_
-
"Generally, the administration
were women.
The report did show progress
tion" was first· used in 1965 by
An Affirmative Action task
has thought
-
of Affirmative
Forty percent of all the women
within the ranks of women
President Lyndon Johnson and
.
force was established by President
Action in terms of
.
fulfilling legal
·
who are employed at Marist
already employed at the college.
has come to mean those special
Dennis Murray following the
-
'
requirements," she said, "yet the
work in secretarial or clerical
.
Seventy-one percent
·
of
·
those
efforts made in the hiring and
Middle States evaluation. The
·
task force takes on a broader
positions, the report said.
continued on
page
9
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V'
---•Page 2 · THE CIRCLE --December 15, 1983
Maintenance ..
continued from page 1
more than once." Linda Glass of
B-7 was in agreement and said,
"So many things that we've had
to have done, · haven't been
done." Another resident of
B-7,
Kathy O'Connor, said that their
bathrooms have never been clean-
ed.
Ted
Kissel
and
Richard-
Laforce of townhouse A-4 .com-
plained of a serious cockroach
problem. "Early this semester we
brought this dilemma to the atten-
tion of the Residen_t Director, the
Housing
Office
and · the
Maintenance staff. Effective ac-
tion has yet to be taken," Kissel
said.
Heywood said that he is aware
of the delays.
"I
want to move to
the point where we are more
responsive to students needs,"
Heywood said.
"I
definitely do
not accept the present system."
According to Tarantino, an ef-
fort
is
made to answer a
maintenance request within a
week. He went on to say that stu-
dent use and a lack of pride seem
to be major problems.
"There is a whole different at-
titude in the townhouse area,"
said Tarantino .. "Studeri.ts are
more· out on their own and should
generally clean
up
after
themselves.
No
sooner
is
housekeeping being done -
students mess it up again."
Tarantino also said that the ad-
ditional
$100
that students pay to
live in 'the townhouses helps to
offset the cost of air conditioning
and kitchen utilities. "This ex-·
. pense exceeds
$100
so students
should expect a decrease in ser-
vice," said Tarantino.
Heywood said that he felt
students were getting their
money's worth, because it is a
nicer ar:ea. '.'But that doesn't
dismiss.the fact that there are pro-
blems
in
maintenance,"
Heywood said.
· He · also
said
that
the
changeover in the physical . plant
has been a good one. "Tarantino
has been here only a .short time
arid
we've see
major im-
provements," said Heywood ..
Tarantino agreed that there
have been improvements since he
took over the position. ''Many
· things have gone by for a long
time," Tarantino said. He added
th.at he is in the process of hiring a
new
superintendent for
day
housekeeping operations.
· However, Tarantino said that
he needs more cooperation and
less interference from Housing.
"I
would like a review with Hous-
ing as
to
what they expect in
various areas and to justify it,"
said Tarantino.·
"If
I k'new their
requirements and my obligations,
it would clear the air."
·Flea market .·
lends a
hand
Vendors from throughout the
tri-state area will be selling a wide
range of goods including an-
tiques, crafts, jewelry and other
miscellaneous items at the third
annual Friends of Marisr Flea
Market scheduled for Saturday,
February
11
from
10
a.m. to
4
p.m.
Proceeds from this event will
help fund projects for three on-
campus
groups:
the Marist
College Commuter Union, the
Marist Cheerleaders and Campus
Ministry. The groups' proposals
for funding were selected from
numerous submissions from
various· - college
clubs
and
organizations.
The
Commuter
Union
requested funds to help refusbish
the
Commuter
Lounge · in
Donnelly Hall with new plants,
wall coverings, and tables. The
flea market's profits will also help
the Marist College Cheerleaders
purchase new uniforms. The
Campus Ministry's project
to
help the disadvantaged of Ap-
palachia .. by sending Marist
students to spend a week with the
needy wili. also_ receive_aid. _
.
473-1576
PALACE
Diner·& Restaurant
Breakfast · Lunch · Dinner
Fresh Seafood -
·
Steaks - Chops
Cocktails·_- Baking on Premises
Show your college ID
and
get
a
FREE Glass of Beer
with yot.1r meal!
7%
DISCOUNT
194
.
WASHINGTON STREET
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
(Next to
All Sport. A short Walk
from
Marlst)
.
,..
,
'{
:.:-~
.:
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·,
.·...
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(.IJ
Stanley H.
Kaplan·
The
Smart
MOVE!.
CLASSES FORMING NOW AT
~-H.
IOIPIAN
EDUCATIONAL CENTER.LTD
Test Preparation Specialists .
-
Since 1938
For Information, Pleasf} Call:
.914-948·
7801
WINTER INTERSESSION
at
January
.
3-20
1984
MA.RIST COLLEGE
1984 WINTER INTERSESSION
JANUARY 3 - 20, 1984
DAY DIVISION (Monday: Friday, 9:00 a.m.-11:45 a.m.)
COMM 20102-29 Mass Communication
CMSC 21102-29 Introduction to Computing
CMSC 21232·29 . Language Study• Pascal
CORE 40103-29 World Views and Values
CORE 40170-29 World Literature
.
PSYC 78101·29 Introductory Psychology
Mark, Raphael
Kolibabka, lwona
TBA
TBA
Anderson, Don
TBA
EVENING DIVISION (Monday · Thursday, 6:00 p.ni.-9:30 p.m.)
BUSI · 15102-37 Business and
Society
•
Griffin,
John
(dual listed as CORE 40150-37)
..
BUSI 15220-37 Financial Management*""
. Gila, Raymond
BUSI
15140-37 Marketing Management
Maness, Jake
(dual listed as COMM 202"0·37)
COMM 20327-37 Writing For Radio and TV
·
(dual listed as Eng 30327-37)
CMSC 21101-37 Introduction to Computing
CORE 40150-37 Business and Society
(dual listed as BUSI 40150-37)
CORE 40110-37 Meaning of History
ENG
30312-37 Workshop in Technical
&
Professional Writing
Eng
30327-"37 Writing For Radio and TV
MATH 58100-37 Basic Algebra
MATH 58120-37 Pre-Calculus
PSYC 78215-30 Psyc of Interpersonal Comm•
PSYC 77545-50 Psyc of Communication•
REST 79392-30 Special Topics in Religion I:
Touring Egypt and_ Israel ..
REST 79393-37 Special Topics In Religion II:
Does God Exist?
Delcolle, Paul
Vivona, Bob
Griffin, John
White, John
C.
Micolas, Mark
OelColle, Paul
Pantaleo, Joe
Matuk, Frank
Scileppi, John
Scileppi, John
Best, Eugene
O'Callaghan,
Michael
SPONSORED LEARNING (VIDEO)
ART
08150-37 Shock of the New
Moore , Allen
ONE
CREDIT
EVENING DIVISION (Monday-Thursday, 6 p.m.-7:45
p.m.)
January 3 • 12, 1984:
CMSC 21390-37 APL Language
TBA
, •Forthe students traveling to Barbados.·
••For the students touring Egypt and Israel.
•••BUSI 15220 has been moved to Marlsl's
new
extension center In the DutchessM all.
/
THE CONCEPT:
Winter Intersession offers students· the
opportunity
to
complete college courses on an ac
0
celerated basis.
·
Courses run for three weeks, from January 3-20 .. Day
classes meet Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 11:45
a.m. Evening classes meet Monday through Thursday,6:00
p.m. to 9:30 p.m: ·
·
_,
·
. REGISTRATION: Registration will be accepted in person
thru December 22 at Room 200, Donnelly Hall. For further
· information 9all 471-3240, .ext. 221.
TUITION: Tuition is $140 per credit hour. There is a
· registration fee of . $10. Payment must be made by
December 28 in order to reserve a place in class.
LIBRARY: Open January 3-20, Monday thru Friday,
8
a.m ..
to 6 p.m.; Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
A
Marist ID or
Course Receipt is required.
WITHDRAWAL: A 50% refund will be allowed to
a
student
who withdraws after one class. No refunds will be permit•
ted after the second class meeting.
The college reserves the right to cancel a course due to
lack of enrollment or to make changes in the schedule.
Also avallable: MATH
58130-37
lntroduclory
Statistics
(evenings)
Prof NIison
.
.
December 15, 1983 ·
THE CIRCLE• Page
3 - - •
·
.,
$Chedllliflg
rri.iXllP fQfces dance to relocate
by
Christoph~r Serafini
·
•
·
·scarchilli, C.U.B
.
social chair-
person said. "Betty (Yeaglin) was
For some s~udents and f~c~lty
to
.
send in the notice (to the
at Marisi,
.
the big question this
·.
Mccann Center) requesting the
·
holiday season is
.
not what they
facility for Friday, Dec. 16. ". '
will find undfa the tree
·
next
·
That request was senc; ac-
Sunday
.
morning, but why
.
the · cording to Yeaglin, but not until
annual campus-wide Christtllas
.
late August. At that time, Yeaglin
dance will riot
·
be held in the
received no answer from Ron
Mccann Center -
as they had
Petro,
the
.
Mccann
.
athletic
. Quinn said that the Mccann
Center had published a booklet of
events al the same time Yeaglin
published the events calendar. A
copy was sent
10
·
her in early
·
September, he
.
said.
But Yeaglin said she did not
receive any list of events from the
Mccann .
.
planned last May.
-
director, or Dick Quinn, the
"We're taking the bull of the
The College Union
Board
assistant athletic director.
problem even though we are 1he
(CU.B.), which sponsors the
• "I assumed we had it (Mc-
ones who received no prior
event, and Betty Yeaglin, the · Cann),"
Yeaglin
said.
"We
notice,"
Quinn said.
"Belly
coordinator of college activities,
didn't receive word· that we
(Yeaglin) never sent us any
said they found out that they
couldn't have it, so I thought
request, but she assumed that she
could
not
use the McCann
there would be no problem."
had the facility. Does she allow
facilities for the dance less than a
By September, Yeaglin had sent · students to assume anytl)ing when
month before its scheduled date.
Petro the
·
events calendar for the
·
they request rooms from her in
Although they claim to have filed
campus and a
-
fist of events in a
.
the campus center?"
a
request
for
the
McCann
separate memo, she said
.
.
The conflict of events was
sometime last
·
summer,
·
the
Petro said that he never got the
discovered, according to Yeaglin,
faciiity will be used by IBM
calendar, the memo, or Yeaglin's
at a director's meeting between
.
,
employees
for
their
·
own
original request.
If
he had, he
Petro and herself
·
1ess than a
Christmas
dance
·
during
the
said, he would have told Yeaglin
month ago. With such short
weekend of Dec. 16.
·
that C.U.B. could not use the
notice, Yeaglin said, it would
·
"We did the C.U.B. calendar in
Mccann
because
IBM
had
have beem impossible to find any·
May before we left for summer
booked the facility a year in
other location for the dance, even
break, and at that time we had set
advance for its own annual · off-campus.
the date for the dance," Jane Christmas dance.
"We had no choice," Yeaglin
Zemba
-
gains
-
recognition
on national television
by
Veronica O'Shea
viding me with the opportunity to
_
really break into the fashion in-
Linda Zemba, winner
.,
of the dustry," said Zemba.
198 3
Cutty
Sark
Most
The national show will be the
Outstanding
U.S.
.
Student same segment that was seen on
Designer
Award
will
gain Albany's WTEN, in which Zemba
widespread recognition when she displayed her award winning sket-
appears
nationally
on
P .M. ches and designs. Zemba said this
Magazine at the end of this mon-
segment may be edited to shorten
th.
·
it but that it will still include most
Zemba, who was filmed by of her work.
P .M. Magazine at
.
Marist in
September was featured in a seg-
ment that was aired on Oct
.
13 on
Channel 10 (WTEN), ABC's af-
filiate station in Albany.
·
.
In
.
terms of national exposure,
· .
the upcoming segment
will
be
seen on 125 of ABC's affiliated
stations across the United States.
Zemba says she is very excited
about the national exposure her
Although certain the
..
show
will
be aired the last week
of
December, Zemba said she will
not know the exact date
-
until a
week before the show. "I am
-
waiting for the Albany based
P.M. "Magazine to be contacted
by the national based
P .M.
Magazine, so that they will con-
tact me," Zemba said.
·
.
designs will receive. "Hopefully I
"I am really looking forward
to
said, "but to hold the dance in the
cafeteria.•·
Quinn said that he believes
Yeaglin knew about the IBM
dance at least three months ago
because of the
various ad-
vertisements and memos he sent
out, and because of a con-
versation he had with Christine
Lapham, director of public in-
formation
.
While trying to arrange a
Marist
employee Christmas
social, Lapham was told by Petro
three months ago that she could
not use the McC:ann because of
the IBM dance scheduled for
Saturday, Dec. 17. According to
Quinn, Lapham then tried to
book
the cafeteria for
that
weekend, but was told by Yeaglin
that
the students'
Christmas
dance was going to be held there.
Quinn said that he believes
Y eaglin knew she could not use
the McCann Center before she
met· with Lapham three fnonths
ago, and had already reserved the
cafeteria for the dance. Then,
according to Quinn, she waited
until just a month prior to the
dance to tell C.U.B. about the
change in location.
Yeaglin denies having any prior
knowledge of the IBM dance or
that C.U.R could not use the
McCann during the weekend of
Dec
.
16.
Lapham denies ever speaking
to Yeaglin about the employee
social or saying that Yeaglin had
booked the cafeteria at least three
months ago for the student dance
.
Regardless of who, if anyone,
is at fault, the student Christmas
dance
will be held tomorrow night
in the cafeteria, and the IBM
Christmas dance will be held
Saturda
·
y night in the Mccann
Center. Although they will not be
held the same night, both dances
could not be held in McCann
because
lBM
needs at least a full
day to set up for their event,
according to Quinn.
"Although everything worked
out, I still think it's unfair that we
were notified so late," Scarchilli
said.
will gain en~ugh publicity with
·
all the exposure and opportunities
the
·
show
.
that
.I
will receive some this
.
show can provide
.
me with
job or internship offers
..
I
am
and I hope that my future career
hoping that the right people see
in fashion will benefit from it,"
·
the show and contact me, pro-
said Zemba.
·
Fashion major Linda Zemba at work
In
the fashion design studio. (Photo
by
Gina
Franciscovich)
Ryan explains
re~ign(ltion
by
Donna
Piper
Francis won't deal with that:'he
said, "because it will take away
Kevin Ryan, who left his job as
the fee that the hospital receives."
:
co-ordinator of health services at
. Ryan further
'
said that the
Marist in November,
.
said that the school should have facilities on
main reason for his resignation campus
that would
.
handle
was a lack of cooperation from emergency situations. He said
the school in expanding its health
that if a student has a medical
services.
.
problem, the emergency
-
room at
·
•~What I wa
·
s told was going to St. Francis will see that student
be an expanded health service in a
one time and then refer him to
·
·
progressive
·
atmosphere
really somewhere else.
didn'.t exist," said Ryan
.
"The emergency room is for
One of the reasons for this is
the community," he said.
·
"It
that.Marist _does not know what doesn't recognize any special
·
kind of health services it wants,
problems that college people
according to Ryan.
"Marist might have, such as follow-up
doesn't know how to gr~w
·
and care and education pertaining to
expand into what a college health their condition."
service could and should be," he
B
_
ecause of this, Ryan said that
said. He added that the potential St. Francis Hospital cannot give
for an improved health service the kind of health care that a
needs to be realistically evaluated
.
college health service can give.
by someone who is experienced in
·
"They're two totally different
the field of college health services.
fields," he said.
.
Several expansions could be
The Rev. Richard A. LaMorte,
experienced, according to Ryan, assistant dean of student affairs,
if the school performed certain said that while some aspects of
services ·on campus that
.
are the health services at Marist do
presently being handled at St. need to be improved, Ryan's
Francis Hospital.
ideas of expansion would be an
Ryan said that a number of unreasonable use · of student
laboratory tests can be done in the funds.
campus office, which
wo~ld
"Everyone like
10
see programs
reduce the time
·
and money m-
grow, but one has to be prac-
volved for the patient. However, tical," said LaMorte. "We could
"the
.
medical director at St.
'
·
continued on
page 9
Radio
continued from page
1
profits," s~id Platt. "It has to try
.
to
.
provide a service through
breaking even. It doesn
'
t have
10
put money in people's pockets
.
"
Norman said a radio station
would "apply the liberal
·
arts
concept (of learning) " because
the
-
students would research,
. writ~, produce and create radio
programs.
·General Manager of WMCR
Robert LaForty
·
criticized the
current state of broadcasting at
Marist's radio station. He said
that
WMCR
has
·
a
small
listenership because stud~nt work
at the station is strictly extra-
curricular. If advanced radio
broadcasting
students
were
required to work at the station for
grades, said LaForty, the quality
of broadcasting would go up as'"'
well as the listenership.
"New Paltz promotes
the
college by promoting its station,"
said LaFony. "Vassar has no
communication majors and it has
a better station than we do."
LaForty added that other college
stations receive funding from
their college, but WMCR gets
money only from the Student
Activity Fee.
"A college-wide commitment is
needed," said Norman, in regard
to building his proposed FM
·
station. He said the station could
be
a
profit-making
venture.
"(Marist
·
has) sold 22 of 27
Division One basketball games to
WKIP
under Marist production.
We've made money
.
We make
$700 in commissions
.
We could
do that over our own station and
take it ail," he said, referring to
the fact that Marist must split
commissions with
.
WKIP on sales
and production.
Norman proposed that to help
in
station operation,
seniqr
4 charged in car vandalism
by Mark Stuart
Four Marist College students
were charged with third-degree
·
criminal mischief, a felony, in
connection with a Dec. 4 incident
in which two cars were damaged
at a local service station.
Stephen J. Davison, 19, of
Woodbury, Conn., and Robert
Man ng, 19, of Merrick, N.J.,
and two 18-year-old students,
whose names were not released
because of their youthful status,
were arraigned before Judge
George Marlow and remanded to
the Dutchess County Jail in lieu
of$100bail.
The four were set to appear in
court last Monday, but the case
was adjourned until Dec. 16.
According
to
Poughkeepsie
Town Police, an officer saw the
youths walking over cars at the
Inspection Store on Delafield
Avenue about 1:50 a.m. Sunday,
Dec. 4. Upon investigation, the
officer
found
that
a
1973
Chevrolet and a 1975 Oldsmobile
were dented and the windshield
wiper from one of the cars was
damaged.
student interns from the Arts and
Letters and Management Studies
divisions could work in
the
programming
and
sales
promotion areas.
The process of establishing a
radio station is a long and
complex one. A basic license
application -
Form 301 -
asks
the FCC for a construction permit
to build a station. This form is 30
pages long; it details personal and
financial qualifications and how
local
·
needs and, interest will be
served by programming.
At
this point, the FCC would
hold a hearing to address the
application. If a construction
permit is granted, the holder must
pass
transmitter
performance
tests before applying for a license.
_
The legal fees involved in this
were estimated in 1980 to be
$5,000. According to Norman's
proposal, the cost beyond that
point would be $15,000.
Should a license be granted, the
station can operate for seven
years before it must renew its
license. The FCC will halt license
renewal
if there exists
any
evidence that the station has
failed to serve the public interest;
an example would be a petition
from a citizens group opposing
the station's operation.
There also exists the possibility
that a would-be license might file
a
"mutually exclusive
ap-
plication," which claims that the
would-be licensee can do a better
job of operating the station than
the current owners. In this case,
the FCC would hold a hearing to
make a decision.
I
j
I
I
j
j
·'
·
1
J
.
I
j
.I
I
Page
4- THE CIRCI.E - December 15,
·
1983
CAMPUS
CONED
-
-
-
.
.
··.
,
.
__
..._
.
Right to
·
know
·
The students' right to know. Is it a right or
·
a privilege?
.
·
-
·
·
Are we registering for classes that will
turn out to be a bigger surprise than the size
of the add-drop line?
Who are all these names and numberswe
are paying $140 a credit hour to listen to for
14weeks?
·
.
Well, there are those who feel that the
information
·
on those student evaluation
sheets are privileged information
.
The in
·
formation on the sheets are looked at
·
by
staff supervisors and then stashed away
never to be seen by the people who need to
see them the most -, the
.
students. The
~tudents have no way of learning what kind
of teacher a professor is like except by word
of mouth. The course adviser handout
·
-
sheds no· light on
·
the different teaching
·
styles or personality of a professor. How
many times have
.
you heard of two or three
professors teaching t
_
he same course? It
seems that
·
·
these evaluations would
·
facilitate choosing
·
the correct instructor
for the students•individual needs.
.
-
But all we have now is word of mouth to
Judge by.
A sort of "Of the students,
·
by the
students" information system.
·
·
·
Mr. Toscano said he feels if people who
provide
·
feedback knew
.
the evaluations
would be seen publicly, their input could be
"ruined." If the evaluations are anonymou
·
s,
how could the input be ruined?
Now the CSL is planning
·
to have
evaluations of it own: a sort of "Of the
students, by the students" venture.
Will the Powers That Be stand by and be
outdone? Or will ~hey stop fooling them-
selves and the students by believing
In-
formation on professors is privileged for
themselves.
The students, above all, have a RIGHT to
-
know.
·
Be
·
merry
.
.
It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas.
- ·
.
But unfortunately, it doesn't always feel
person on an add-drop line for the Registrar,
I watched couples kiss and children gaze at
the famous tree that towers c:iver the plaza ..
It was then that I realized there was no
definable reason for our presence there - ·
that way.
·
-
·
Yes, the dorm lounges are glistening with
holiday decor, and the Christmas tree
·
stands colorfully decorated in the cafeteria.
Students
.
are shuffling
·
back
.
and forth
between their usual campus
·
activities and
.
.
Chr\stmas shopping. But there's something
·_
more to Christmas
·
that many of us just have
not
.
yet
·
experienced. It's something you
·
can't touch -
and
it
cannot be found in
:
pine-sce_nted air freshener
-
or even in
pres~nts
_under
the tree. It
.is
a feeling
_about
Christmas that encourages
.
a smile or wink;
it is often missing from people's holiday
agenda '-- people at Marist are certainly no
exceptions.
.
.
For the first time, I sen
_
sed this feeling in
the throng at Rockefeller Center last .week.
Many of the thousands of people who were
crowded
_
into the
.
small area actually
seemed happy to be there, although they
couldn't move without bumping a n
_
eighbor.
As I stood there, as frustrated as the last
·
except, perhaps, to catch some of the in-
tangible spirit.
·
·
•
_
·
.
You don't have to be in New York City to
~
feel it. This part of Christmas can thrive
·
_
.
wherever there are people. Remember that
person who
.
you always see
·
between
classes,
-
but
.
you never
·
bother to
·
acknowledge? Say hello. Maybe it's also a
good
,
time to stop your racial jokes in the
presence of your minority friend who has
been hearing them all semester. Try saying
-.
"sorry" and "thank you" more often. And
don't forget your professors. They are not
machines designed to blurt out knowledge
and slap you with a final grade; they are
humans with feelings.
.
.
Most of all, smile. You may be surprised
how contagious it is. Then you'll be able to
see what Christmas Is really about -
and it
doesn't even have to wrapped.
Editor
Christine Dempsey
Senior Reporters
Associate Editors
Cindy Bennedum
ReaderSWrite
.
.
All lellers must be typetl triple space with a 60
space
margin, and submllled to the
Circle ollice no later than 1 p
.
m. Monday. Shorneoers are preferred
.
We reserve the
fight to edit all letters. Letters must be signed, but names may be withhe!d upon
request. Letters will be published depending upon avallablllty ol space.
.
·,
Christmas dance
To the Marist Community:
As co-chairperson of the
C.U.B. Marketing Committee,
1
·
would like
.
to bring to your at-
.
tention a misrepresentation of the
advertisement pertaining to the
all-campus Christmas dance that
appeare
_
d in last week's
Circle.
The picture may have lead some
to believe that the dance was a
formal
·
and "couples only" event;
this is not the case.
·
The event is one for everyone to
.
.
attend either with friends or a
.
date. Although no formal attireis
required, we encourage people to
"dress to
.
impress" (because
Santa will be \Yatching!).
·
_
.
.
Everyone on the College Union
Board look forward to seeing you
at this very· special event to
celebrate the holiday season.
Very truly yours,
·
Andrew A. Crecca
Co-chairperson
CUB Marketing Committee
Winter intersession
To the Marist Community:
Registration for Winter In-
tersession has been extended'until
December
•
22.
Students may
register at the School of Adult
Education, Room 200, Donnelly
Hall.
Best wishes for the
"
holidays!
Robert F. Sommer
·
·
School of Adult Education
From
-
Ireland
·
-
Dear Editor:
_
filled with musicians
·
.
I
sang with
Just writing to say hello from
some of them who· were raising
the
1
Emerald Isle. Hello! ~ow that
__
money for a senior citizens home .
.
we re gotten that over with, we'll
.
The
·
Guiness was brilliant.
:
·.
-· .·:.
get down to business -
mainly·
-·
..
:
·;
.,
.
_
:}
,:;,_
·:
.:
.
·
.
,.<
·
-:
,
:"
_
.·
Guiness Stout;they say Guiness is
-
·
·
•
Ah well, f've also-been up to
good for you. Well, Dan Rogers
·
the Donegal on the Atlantic coast.
and I are feeling really good
·
. Dan
_
You haven't seen a sunset until
and
.
I live in relative sloppiness you've experienced one on the
across
.
the street from the college.
Donegal shore,
·
with
·
the sun
·
Although, Dan finally bought bed
fading
· ·
behind the Blue
.
Stack
sheets today, after surviving for
8
Mountains, as
·
the water in the
weeks without them. We are both . stin;s path reflects like shards of
involved in many extracurricular stained glass -:::- beautiful! Dan
activities; Dan plays basketball,
has been traveling as well. He's
drinks, studies, drinks and plays been to Glasnevin, Bellfield, and
more basketball. I'm· ·playing Drum·condra (Yeh, right, Una),
basketball, Gaelic football,
and he even went to the Jazz
drinking, studying, doing Karate Festival
.
in Cork, where
·
Joe
.
and mo.re drinking. Now don't get Cel
_
entano and Karyn Grogan are
-
me wrong, drinking isn't our. only studying. Ted Waters showed up
pasttime, but it does
Jake
u
·
p a lot
-.
on our doorstep a few
..
weeks
of our tii_ne
·
;
·
All. the sodalizing
·
back.He's having
a
great time
.
-
over here 1s done
m
the local pub,
we went to see Christy Moore, an
- ·
and Dan and I
.
-
are very
.
social.
Irish
·
ballad
·
singer:
. ·
Collett
_
e
Well, enough of the drink". Our Murphy was in Dublin's fair city
studies
·
are going yery well- Dan along with Ted. She stayed with
is learning how to be a militant
Bonnie
·
Hede
·
and
Grace
socialist and I'm teaching · -
him
Gallagher. Bonnie and Grace are
(Just kidding Dr. Lanning and doing very well. Bonnie made U:s
Mrs. Perrotte). The educational cookies last week and gof us
standards ~re higher over here
invited to the U.S. Embassy for
than at Manst. But, that is mainly Turkey day
·
dinner. Bonnie and
caused by the competition for Grace had seen a lot of Amie
jobs in this country; In Ireland
Rhodes Marianne Constantino
you have to be the best to
"
get a
and K~rry Guerin as well.
I
decent job, you can't simply get
haven't been to Limerick.yet, but
by w!th just a degree. This creates
I'm sure Belinda Kaake is doing
!1
senous atmosphere on campus,
•
fine. She'll get a surprise visit
m
contrast to the lively at-
soon. There are a lot of people at
mosphere of the local pubs.
Marist that Dan and l want to say
We've both
·
done extensive
hello to but you know who you
traveling since arriving in the
are. W~tch yourself Jet and
72
L_and of the Leprachautis. I've
.
Taylor.
h1tched to Galway where I visited
Marie Healy,
Liz Murphy and
Janice Willis; then down to Cork
for the Guiness
Jazz
Festival -
what a blow out! Every pub in the
city had jazz, and the streets were
.
Eileen Hayes
Jane Scarchilli
Business Manager
So long for now,
Patick McCullough
and Daniel J. Rogers
Dublin Ireland
P
.S. Sean Keenan says hello.
Stay tuned for
next
episode.
·
Jeannie Ostrowski
The
Mark Stuart
Cartoonist
Christopher Serafini
Advertising Manager
Sean Kenny
Circle
Sports Editor
John Bakke
Calendar Editors
Cathy Houlihan
Circulation Mana
.
ger
Cathy McGarity
·
.
Photography Editor
Jell Kiely
Peggy Hasson
Faculty Advisor
David McGraw
by Richard
Copp
animated specials on
10
its prime
lime line up. "A Snow White
·
With the
.
holiday season in full Christ mas"
has
the
.
classic
swing, the networks are-spreading
.
maiden
married
to
Prince
Christmas cheer with a mixture of ~harming,
and
once again
traditional
.
.
programming, threatened by the Wicked Witch-
seasonal series episodes, yuletide a special tailored only to Snow
musical specials,
.
and far
.
too White's biggest fans; the Peanuts'
much garbage and reruns.
"A Charlie Brown Christmas" is
Yule
tube
·
Christmas will always be a
time
of woe for the three networks
'·
because it is a time when viewers
are far too few, and worthwhile
offerings arc all but nonexistent.
This year promises to be no
exception. However, with the big
day only a week and a half away,
once again with us lo brighten the
holidays even more in a tale for
all ages; and Dr. Seuss' "How the
Grinch
.
Stole
Christmas,"
a
charming tale of togetherness in
the true Christmas spirit, will
always
·
remain
.
one of my
favorites.
and the shopping days left even
ABC has also jumped on the
less, the networks are dusting off bandwagon with its own specials
the old reliable ornaments for
for children. "Ziggy's Gift" and
thier familiar tree of Christmas
"Christmas Comes to Pac Land"
programming.
• ,
are a pair of inferior offerings if
CBS has sprinkled a
few
only for their direct relationship
As
'83
comes to an abrupt halt,
no one can deny the positive
musical influences which have
emerged.
Once can sec
·
that both videos
and music will be an unmatched
pair in future entertainments, for
example: Billboard's Music Video
Awards. The winners for this year
were:
Goodbye
to
1983
America has
finally
been
·
"rudely awakened" to the fact
·
that new music can be just as
good, if not better than, the old
.
standy-bys. This is, in part, due to
the overwhelming success of
MTV (Music Television).
MTV
has given many per-
formers the expoliure to a mass
audience that they may not have
otherwise received. Videos have
become a major factor con-
tributing to the newfound success
of a recording industry that had
been experiencing a large decrease
Best Overall Video Clip
·Best" Performance.by a Male
Best Use of Video to Enhance
Artist's Image/Song
Best Choreography
-"Beat
·
It," Michael Jackson
Best Overall Long-Form Video-
"Duran Duran"
Best Performance By A Group-
"Gimme All You Loving,"
ZZTop
Best Performance By A Female-
"Love Is A Stranger,"
Annie Lennox (Eurythmis)
Most Innovative
~
.·
-
---
--
·
·
r
j
\
..
.
. \
'
.
:\
;
•
~_I
,
.
in sales.
Songwriters today think in
terms of music, lyrics, and video
interpretation; which for the most
part, is fine. But when the order
begins to· place video first - then
we'll have a problem.
.
Marist College, continuing in
its spirit of Christmas,presents the
All Campus Christmas Holiday
Dance on Friday, December 16,
·
from 9:30 p.m. to 1 :30 p.m. The
dance will be held
·
in the Dining
Hall and includes a $1. admission
fee. Featured will be "Lovlace,"
who is sure to be a hit in starting
off the Marist College party
scene. Come out and enjoy and
·
have a good time! It's all in the
spirit of Christmas! Included are
hot and cold hors d'oeuvres, full
cash bar, and soft drinks as well.
And remember, dress to impress!
There
will
also be pre-dance
Best Art Direction -
"Rockit," Herbie Hancock
Most Effective Use of Symbolism
Best Special Effects-
·
"Pressure," Billy Joel
socials for each individual dorm
to get things rolling for what is
sure to be a "Rock 'n Eve"!
The Mid-Hudson Civic Center
is
·
presenting a Christmas concert
on Friday, December 16 at 8 p.m.
Imre Pallo will be conducting
music from
the
Nutcracker,
Hansel and Gretel,
H.V.P.
Children's Cliorus, the Cappella
Festival and the Community
Mix-
ed Chorus. Tickets will
be
available to student for $3 for an
evening of Christmas Culture.
Thursday, December 15
.
Friday, December 16 Saturd
_
ay, December 17
·
Sunday, December 18
Meetings:
Student ~ff airs
Directors, CC269,
9:30a.m.;
Food Committee,
Candlelight,
11:.15
a.m.;
Council of
Student Leaders,
Candlelight,
5
p.m.;
Psychology Club,
D105,
5 p.m.;
Black Student
CC248, 9:15 p.m.
Mass:
Chapel,
12
p.m.
Academic Review
Session:
Calculus Ill -
Leaming Room,
6:30p.m.
Auditions:
"The Fantastik~,"
theatre, 8 p.m.
Pub
Nile:
Bob LaForty,
9:30p.m.
Meeting:
·
.
Reception:
·
·Mass:
Student Life
Teams,
Gallery Lounge,
Candlelight,
12
p.m.
,
Benoit, Gregory,
·
.
.
.
Chapel, 11 a.m.
Film:
.
.
Commuters,
Champagnat,
New Dorm
Transfers,
.....
scrooge,"
admission
so•
with Marist
ID,
Theatre, 3 p.m.
>
Townhouses,
Garden Apartments
(pick up tickets at
Pre-Dance Socials:
Champagnat Hall,
Gallery and Fireside;
Leo Hall,
Sheahan Hall,
Marian Hall;
North End, Pub;
8p.m.
Holiday Dance:
"Lovelace,"
admission $1,
Dining Hall,
9:30p.m.
·
Commuter Union),
Sp.m.
Reception Dinner:
for above,
5:45 p.m.
Reception:
..
Gallery Lounge (Leo,
Sheahan;New Dorm);
Reception Dinner,
6:45p.m.
Film:
"Scrooge,"
Theatre, 8 p.m.
Bonfire and Caroling:
McCann practice
field, doughnuts,
hot coffee and
hot chocolate,
l0p.m.
Midnight ~ass:
Chapel, 12 p.m.
Lessons and Carols:
Chapel, 4
p.m •
Award Ceremony:
Literary Society,
.
Mosaic Cover Contest,
Fireside, 5:30 p.m.
Film:
"Scrooge,"
so•
with Marist
1,D.,
·
.
Theatre,
7
&
9:30
p.in.
Meeting:
Leo House Council,
CC269,
9 p.m.
.
- December 15,.1983 · THE CIRCLE· Pages--•
with commercialism: "Twas the
either. "familv Tics" on NUC,
Night
Ueforc
Christmas"
"Magnum,
l'.I." and
"The
(narrated by Joel Grey) is a
Jeffersons"
on
CBS,
and
plca
·
sant adaptation of Clement
"Hotel" on ABC arc but a few
or
Moore's ballad; the classic 1969
the weekly
shows
that have
cartoon "Frosty
·
the Snowman"
prepared episodes with Christmas
is still with us with Frosty still in
oriented themes.
fine form; and Burl Ives lends his
voice
to
the most
musical,
memoriable,
and
tearful
Christmas
'
special of them all
·
"Rudolph
the
Red-Nosed
Reindeer.''
NBC brings up
.
the rear every
year with the least number of
·
specials most of which are boring
and forgettable anyway. "Smurfs
Christmas" . and "Chipmunk
Christmas" are there if the kids
have any desire to see them, but
·
even · promotions for this pair
were
big yawns.
Regular series are not about
to
miss out on the holid~y spirit
Most Socially Conscious-
"Allentown," Billy Joel
Best Lighting-
"Every
Breath You Take,"
The Police
Best Editing-
"Maniac," Michael Sembello
Best
Use
of Computer
Graphics/ Animation:
-"Atomic Dog," George Clinton
-"New Frontier," Donald Fagen
Because this is the time of year
when many publications flood
their readers with "Best Of" and
"Top Ten" lists, I made an at-
tempt to assemble one and came
·
up with a list of records that
I
enjoyed immensely during
'83.
If
you haven't heard any of the
following (in no particular order),
try to give them a listen to if ever
possible:
Gang of
4 -
"Hard"
·
Hiroshima - "Third Generation"
Tom Tom Club - "Close To the
Bone"
Talking Heads - "Speaking In
The Hudson Va\ley
·
Country
Dance Co-op announces
it's
Christmas dance to be held on-
-Dec. 17 at St. James Church on
Route 9 in Hyde Park. Nick
Hawes will be the caller for this
dance which will start promptly at
8 p.m. Everyone is welcome!
The Meaning of History class
of Wilma Burke, adjunct in-
structor of history, is sponsoring
a public history exhibit on recrea-
tion and arts in the Hudson
Valley. The topics are designed,
researched and presented by the
students in coordination with
The seri
_
es and specials I have
discussed are only a handful from
the Christmas list of network .
holiday programming, and as
Dec. 25 nears, more and more
shows will make it on prime time.
·
Once the Christmas season
ends, however, we can expect an
upsurge in new programming by
all three networks and probably
some blockbuster movies and
miniseries by February. Until
then,
have
·
a
very
giving
Christmas and a riproaring New
Year, and until next semester,
keeo those TV tubes warm.
Tongues"
Shreikback - "Care"
B-52's - "Whammv"
Kate Bush - "The Dreaming"
Vanity6
·
·
Joan Rivers - "What Becomes a
Semi-Legend Most"
Ministry - "With Sympathy"
Waitresses - "Bruiseology"
Teena Marie - "Robbery"
English Beat - "What is Beat?"
Madonna
Will Powers - "Dancing For
Mental Health"
Golden Palominos
The Cure - "The Love Cats"
(Import)
Eurythmics -
·
"Touch" (Import)
Malcolm McLaren - "Buffalo
Gals"
Art of Noise - "Into Battle" (12"
Single)
Martha Muffins
-
"Danseparc"
(12" Single)
So until next year, keep those
ears open, have a happy holiday,
and let the music p\ay!
their community history projects.
The topics cover 300 years of
history and include the Catherine
St. Community Center, the Dut-
chess County Fair, Community
Theatre, Marist Theatre, Coll-
ingwood Opera
House,
Ice
Hockey in Dutchess County,
semi-pro baseball, ice boating
·
on
the Hudson, the Hudson Valley
Philharmonic, Regatta, Lacross,
the Y .M.C.A., and the James J.
McCann Center. These projects
will be on display on Friday,
December
16
in the library
- Cathy Houlihan
and Peggy Hasson
·.
·-
.
.
•
••
. ,
•
• • , _
•
.
•
~
.
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,
"'
•
p
•
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•
•
•
•
I •
•
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•
>
•
o
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• -
•
•
••
•
•
•
·
Architects
.
s·how
Thomas proposals
·
b)
·
Brian Kelly
Ten architects recently made
presentations
for
the
.
Lowell
-
Thomas building to the Board of
Trustees, administrators, faculty
and staff of Marist College.
Architects presented some basic
concepts about lhe building,
showed their previous work and
gave their ideas on how the
available space could effectively
be distributed between the areas
of communication
·
arts and
computer science
.
"During the lasi week of
October
and
the
first
of
November, eleven architects, who
had contacted us or were con~
.
tacted by us, were a
s
ked to come
to Marist to be b
r
iefed on the
basic
information
on
the
building
,
see the .site and have a
loc,k at the other buildings on
campus," said Edward Waters,
vice preside~! for administration
and finance. Of thos
e
eleven, ten
came back
.
to make formal
presentations
.
.
.
According to Waters, the size
of these architectural
firms
ranged from one person to more
than l00 people.
"Our goal is to get the best use
out of the space available at the
lowest possible cost, Waters said.
According to Waters
,
decision
s
on the distribution of space in th
e
building will be based on need
.
Members of the communication
arts and computer sci
e
nce faculty
we~
e
asked to put in requests
describing the amount of spac
e
they would need. Waters said that
59,000
feet
.
of space
were
requested, while only 25,000 feet
are available.
·
The architects were given a
block diagram of ttie ouilding,
which described how much space
is
available for th
e.
different
disciplines. At the presentations
they described how rhey felt that
space would
·
be be
s
t used
,
ac-
cording to Waters.
Waters said that no decisions
have been made concerning the
final selection of an architect or
exactly how
·
the space
will
be
distributed
.
That will be done by
a
committee con
s
isting of three
·
member of the coll
e
ge's Board of
Trustees. Final decisions should
be made in three to. six months;
Financial
aid notes
The Financial Aid Office i
s
·
now offering off-campus coJlege
Work-Study. opportunities,
_
for
the remainder of the 1983-84
acad
_
eniic year (includirig Winter
Intersession). Eligible students
may work up to tw,enty hours per
week, for minimum
·
·
wage or
moie,
-
at
·
work sites located in
·
several
Dutchess
·
and Ulster
·
county
communtt1es.
Par-
.
ticipating
.
non-profit
.
agencies
include:
The
Adriance
Memorial
Library-Poughkeepsie,
.
The
American
·
Cancer
Society-
Poughkeepsie, The American Red
·
Cross-Poughkeepsie, The· Cary
·
Arboretum~Millbrook~
The
·
Children's Annex-Kingston, The
Children's
·.
Home
of
Poughkeepsie-Poughkeepsie, The
_
Jewish
Community
.
Center-
Poughkeepsie,
The
Neigh-
borhood Services Organization
Center-Poughkeepsie,
•
Ne,
v
Horizons
for
the Retarded-
Millbrook, Poughkeepsie Day
Nursery-Poughkeepsie, Poughk-
eepsie Family Development and
Day Care Center-Poughkeepsie,
St. Regina Coeli School-Hyde
Park and The Y.M.C.A
.
of
Dutchess County-Poughkeepsie.
For
·
•
more information and
application materials, students
are
e
ncouraged to inquire a1 the
Financial Aid Office
,
Adrian
Hall.
.
.
.
·•.
,
·
:
·
·
•
·
"
•
.
.
.
.
•
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•
•
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.
..
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-
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.
..
.
..
-
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-
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.
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·
,
.
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~
.:-
.;:.
-
·
:·
;
.
.
..
.
.
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..
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.
·
•
·
·
•·
·•·
"
~ ·
•• ,.,
.
_
·
t• ·
·
·
•
·.
•
t
..
.
~
...
·
-·~·
·.:,;
.
....
.
,.
... ;
....
.
. . .
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·
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.
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.
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·
•
..,.
,
_
.,
END
OF
THE SEMESTER.
CLOSING PROCEDURES
.
.
.
.
.
The college residence hall; will close and no services will
-
be available
from December 22 to January 23, 1984.
·
•.
The residence halls
•
will close
·
at 1
l:00
p.m. ·on December 22,
1983.
The last meal of the te
·
rm
.
will be lunch on December 22. Dinner will be
.
served
on
Sunday, January 2
_
, 1984.
.
-
On or before December 22, rooms must be cleaned; all belongings must be taken home or placed in off
campus storage, except those items that ca'o be left in a dresser drawer or in the clQset. The college
will
riot
assume any liability for lost or stolen or damaged items. Y 9ur departure directly affects the ability of
students and professional residence staff to complete their work and move toward their own holiday
plans: therefore
you are to leav~ the residence balls in an orderly fashion on the day of your last exam .
Remember that the following fact9rs will be central to any decision on allowing a student to occupy a
room in Marist residence hal1s for next semester even if you have registered:
1. Disciplinary Recora
2. Academic Standing
.
3. Vacating of room on day of their last exam.
·
4. Condition of room at departure (cleanliness and lack of damage).
Students who have been denied a room for next semester
will
be notified
by
January
6;
1984,
if they have
registered.
If
you do not
intend to return to the reside.rice halls in January, please be sure to r~turn your key to the
resident director;
.
.
·
.
Failure to le
.
ave your room in a clean st~te can result in a
$25.00
fine.
Failure to leave on the day of your last exam can result in low housing priority for fall 1984. As well, an
.
-
authorized early return to the dorms can also result in low priority·
:
·
DEPARTURE PROCEDURES
Each R.A. must inspect each room and file a room inspection form. Students)must
make
an appoint-
.
ment with their R.A.
to
have their room inspected. Upon leaving, you must
_
secure the room (lights off,
appliances disconnected, curtains closed and door locked). Trash bags
will
be distributed by the R.A. to
each
-
resident on December 15 and 16.
We (Jncourage you to do your part to make this period enjoyable for ·all!
On behalf o.( all the residence hall staff, we wish you a safe, enjoyabie and Happy Holiday Season, and
offer our BesrWishesfor the coming New Year.
·
See you in 'January!
~-------------•------------------lllliliiiillii
.
December 15, 1983 · THE CIRCLE· Page
.
1--
7
·
students
·
resign
·
R~A. positions
. bf
Heinz
Warmhold
·
At least scve
·
n members of 1he
residence staff arc leaving their
jobs.
'
·
The
·
reasoris
behind
the
departures are not always exactly
the same, but all of those in-
terviewed described a feeling of
"job btirn out."
·
.
"I
don't
·
have the energy
anymore," said Rich Doughtery,
who has been a freshman
R.A.
·
for tl)e pa.!;t three semesters, most
receptly on Sheah~n first f~oor.
~
•It
·
took too much energy
anymore,'' said Kris Lawas, a
·
2nd semester R.A. who will be
leaving
·
Sheahan
·
third
floor.
Being
.
that Rick O'Donnell is
leaving from Sheahan 2nd, it
makes a clean sweep of
.
the
.
.
building's
R.f\.s.
A.R.D.
Adrienne Ryan noticed during the
.
·
.
semcs1er tha1 "they-lost a
.
lot of semester.
',
their enthusiasm."
_.
An unusual situa1ion exists in
that there arc few harsh words
Another feeling that some of against the. employers from the
the departing R.A.s xoiced was employees who are leaving. "The
·
that
of
·
disillusionment with the entire residence staff was
·
great, as
job. "I don't feel like I'm making were the students,"
said
Lawas,
a difference. I wasn't fulfilling
whose opinion was echoed by
any goals
.
An R.A. should be like others.
a big brother or sister and not just
.
The feelings were mutual from
a
disciplinarian,"
said Tana the Director of Housing Robert
Massaro, a 2nd semester R.A
.
Heywood, who wished chem all
who is leaving Marian 2nd.
luck, The effectiveness of the
·
Others have more pragmatic residence staff
.
should not be
reasons for leaving, "I have a full
effected, according to Heywood,
internship at N.B.C.," said John who described the 30 or so ap-
Garvey who will be leaving plicants as "good" candidates.
Champagnat 1st.
What makes a "good" can-
:
Other factors mentioned in 1he
decisionmaking processing were
things like grades, excessive work
hours, weekend shifts, never
being able 10 not be an R.A., and
the feeling that they just wanted
to be a "real" person
_
for a
didate? Some ideas from the
departing R.A.s are "somebody
who can get along with the
students and be their friend and
earn their respect as well," said
Garvey. "Don't get your hopes
up too high, but put a lot into it,"
said Massaro.
·
Marketing
presentation
Rob Simpson, a Miller Nor-
theast representative, spoke on
"Miller Marketing Strategy" in
the Campus Center last week.
Free Miller beer was available for
attendees. (Photo by Jeff Kiely)
Christmas dance
mistletoe to twinkle toes
.
by Christopher Serafini
many plans -
you
won't
recognize the cafe once we're
Despite
the
complications through."
encountered in
finding
its
The
-
committee had originally
location, the annual campus-wide tried to find an off-campus
Christmas dance will be held location for the dance when they
tomorrow night in the cafeteria.
..
found out they could not have the
The event, sponsored by the Mccann, but decided against it.
Colleg_e Union Board (C.U.B.),
"The biggest problem was
will be a semi-formal dance trying to find a facility that could
featuring the band Lovlace, and give us two rooms, so one could
will
be followed by a buffet be used as a 'drinking room,' "
breakfast.
Scarchilli said. "We also had to
Jane Scarchilli and
Eileen deal -with the problem of tran-
Dearie,
C.U.B.
social chair-
spoitation to and from
the
persons
;
had originally hoped the dance."
dance could be held in the Mc-
Scarchilli said that they are
Cann
.
Center but, because of a going
-
to stress the idea of this
conflict with the scheduling at being a dance-'- not a mixer -
iri
that facility, t_hey have-settled for
·
the cafeteria.
.
.
the cafeteria.
,
·
Despite its on-campus ad-
"Now that we know we have vantage, the cafeteria has at least
the cafeteria," Dearie said, "We
.
one disadvantage -
its size.
are really psyched. We have so Scarchilli and Dearie are ex-
SEASONS
GRE~TINGS
FROM
·
FrQm Tom Welsh, Campus
Rep, and Your Friends at
River Distributing
pecting 800 people to attend the
··
dance, which may result in a tight
squeeze, since they plan to have
various buffet tables and dining
tables set up as well as a large
dance floor in front of the band.
"With all that they are talking
about," Frank Scott, of the
Seiler's Food Service, said; "they
are going to run into some
trouble. It will probably be
packed."
Betty Yeaglin, the coordinator
_
of college activities, said that the
alumni dance held in the cafeteria
in
November had only 600
people, and it was "shoulder-to-
shoulder ." However, the alumni
dance did not use the new dining
room adjacent to the
1;afeteri~.
Yeaglin said that with this room
open, the Christmas dance would
be crowded, but not unbearable.
In addition to the live band
Lovlace, which has played at
several
·
other Marist events in the
past
·
three years, the Christmas
dance will
feature hot hors
d'oeuvres and a cash bar.
Also, pictures taken with Santa
Claus will be offered at $1 each.
In an attempt to keep the dance
more
"open,"
the
partition
between the new dining room and
the
.
cafeteria will be left open -
only the buffet table of hot hors
d'oeuvres will
separate the
drinking room from the dance
floor.
"We'll have 10 monitor the
flow of alcohol much more
closely, but it will be worth the
.
effort," said Jim Barnes, C.U.B.
president.
Barnes also said that he feels
that the Christmas dance is the
most important event of the
s·emester, because it is the last
.
The Council
Leaders would
of
like
Student
to en-
to
·
par-
al I
students
the first
Faculty
courage
ticipate in
Government
tion.
Student
Evalua-
·
Evaluations will be held:
Monday -
Thursday
December 19th-22nd
At the following times:
10-11
a.m.
1 • 2
p.m.
4 • 5
p.m.
8 • 9
p.m.
Outsi
_
de the Security Off ice.
chance students will have to get
together before exams.
"It's the total event that puts
·
the capstone on the semester,"
Barnes said.
"It's
the last chance
to get everyone together one last
time in 1983
.
"
The dance will be starting at
9:30 tomorrow night. Admission
will be $1 with a
cash
bar. Dress is
semi-formal
:
Marist, Vassar
plan joint effort
by Veronica O'Shea
and Cindy Bennedum
A program in Spe'cial and
Elementary Education
to
be
offered by Marist and Vassar
Colleges has been approved by
the Marist College
.
Academic
Affairs Committee
.
The program, approved by the
-
AAC after consultation with the
Faculty Executive Committee, is
now in the process of being
ap-
proved by the entire faculty of
both colleges.
According the
Elizabeth Nolan,
director of
Student Academic Affairs, the
decision on the faculty approval is
expected by Friday.
If the approval is granted by
both colleges, the next step would
be• to submit the proposal to the
State Education department for
its
sanction.
The Marist-Vassar program
will
give students from both
colleges the opportunity to gain
dual teaching
.
certification in
elementary and special education.
Although the existing resources
are strong, both colleges intend to
increase their holdings in the field
of special education in order to
strengthen the program. Com-
puter facilities
will
be
in
-
corporated into the design of the
special
education
·
curriculum by
.
both colleges
.
Marist and Vassar both plan 10
increase their library acquisitions
in special education, and Marist
will add a
full-time faculty
member for the program.
With the approval of the
program,
Marist's
current
sophomore
·
c1ass will be the last
class to graduate with dual
certificaton from
.
Marist and
Mount St. Mary
.
In the new arrangement, Vassar
will
modify some of its existing
courses
to highlight special
education,
while
Marist
will
introduce four new courses as
well as a special education student
teaching program.
Currently,
Marist commits
$28,000
10
the maintenance of its
program with Mount St. Mary.
According to the proposal, the
estimated costs of the Maris1-
Vassar program which includes
the expense of a full-time in-
structor, will amount
10
ap-
proximately $38,000 a year.
·
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Page8•
THECIRCLE·--·-
-
-----------
LOST: Pearl ring, 12/10/83 in
pub ladies' room. Sentimental
value. Reward offered. No ques-
tions asked. 473-0010.
To all my friends,
Merry
.
Christmas; Geoff. So-
Thanx for all the good times meone is going to miss you -
and support you gave me this
Your Special
K
Brian,
semester. Merry Christmas and
good luck on your exams.
Love always,
.
Tom "Murph"
I'm going to miss all of you so
much! Love always, Gina
ToF: mule
Happy New Year! Wishing you
luck for junior year in Europe!
·
Love from,
Kathy Meyers-
I can't deal with you, so don't
We know that crime doesn't
try and make me.
pay, but we hope for your sake
·
Grace
Jeanmarie,
Can you top California -
last
-
·
spring break? Sure can! See you
in March!
Grace
Bonnie, Kerry and Aime,
"Can we talk," 3,000 miles?
What's mail -
you tell me!
.
·
Lake Granee
Chris, Jean
&
Cindy,
"You're a real kinky girl -
from your head down to your
toenails" -
Miss ya-Party up!
Superfreak
To all the Football players with
super-inflated
egos
:
Good-
bye-Good-bye Forever!!
·
Love You Too:
?
that it does. Good luck in your
·
future endeavors!
Love,A3
Law student
A
.
quiet dinner sounds nice!
I'll
bring the Asti Spumanti and the
dessert. .... you name the time.
Guess Who????
John (1.H
.
C.)
·
.
Meet
us
in CC 268 for a secret
interlude ...
Your "butt buddies"
Karen & Karen,
We think you are the sweetest'
gals in the C.S.L.
Guess Who I &
II
Jim - Happy 19th birthday!
Enjoy yourself like I enjoyed
mine!
Your sophomore "friend"
Wanted -
A professional ·RCA
recordist -
inquire at Gregory
House.
To Lizzie-Bits:
We
wiJJ aJJ rni
_
ss
you, but you
·
know why I'll miss
you the most! Take
·
care. Don't
seduce any unsuspecting interns!
Mel, Patti, Lynne, Cammie,
·
Marie, Jeane, -Lisa and Casey,
Thanks for a great birthday!!
All my love, Rick
Dear Eileen, Susan, Jane, Chris,
Cindy, Cathy,
·
Jeannie, Kathy
and Diane,
Thanks for a great semester. I
hope all of you have a great
Christmas.
Love, Linda
Dear Bren, El, Kath, Jo, and Di,
Merry Christmas. Let's have a
great vacation to add to our many
great
high school
·
memories.
Thanks
for being the wonderful
friends you are. I love you all,
Joe's bound!
Love, Lisa
Lynne - You always seem
to get
the cutest W.P. guys!! How do
you do it???
Hutch, Leo
5 & Leo 6
Thanks for a great semester!
Good luck in the future.
KStarsky
Hey Bruso-
You have tuna fish on your
finger and here's a pair of
binoculars for the view.
Faria
To the Freshman Class
'
Have
a
really
super
Christmas!
·
Lin
_
da
Dear Mom, Dad,
J,
Weed, and
Marci,
·
Keep smiling and don't forget all
your friends up here at the Big M.
-
·
Love, Marta
I love you all. I wish you every
happiness in the coming year.
Let's
have
another
great
Christmas with lots of love and
no arguments!
All
my love,
Linda
Second Floor Sweethearts -
Have a super Christmas!
.
·:
Thanks for a great semester.
·
Love, Your
RA.
Annie
M. -
I'm sure Santa will
be gqod to you
,
you've been such
·
a
nicegirL
-Marl - Carleen-
.
.
.
Happy holidays, let it snow, let
.
it snow.
Annie - hope your holiday
season is made of moments to .
remember, Merry· Christmas.
.
Love your roommie
Lori & Billy
/
,
·
.
.
Thanks for everything, hope
·
your
.
holidays are all happy ones.
Kelly
Wynda Smit-
,
Everything's
O
.
K.
and I WUV
·
U!
-Marts·
Moe, Trisha, Kelly, Lisa,
_
Annie,
Martha, Cathy
Thanks for everything, It's
been a real Holiday .
.
Raul and Carlos
.Feliz Navidad
Col
Uds. sonJuerga Animales toda
la noche.
·
·
Col, Moe, Kelly
Marta, Maize
Kelly andDonna,
.
I'll keep an ear open for any
longdistanceP.K's!
,
.
··
Merry Christmas
Annie
Kelly,
.
Merry Christmas to my favorite
roomie!
·
·
Love, Annie
P ;S. Give my regards to the
peng1;1ins!!
Tore,
.
•
.
Rick,
:
··
.
Jeg elsker deg reldig mye, hele
-.
Maybe next year_ in Jersey!!
tiden; hvert sekund, hver · dag.
Merry Christmas, anyway!
Merry Christmas
'
·
Love, Annie
din, Kelly
·
- -
·
-
-
·
- - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Maureen
Colleen,
·
·
Raul a!Jd
.
CathJ
..
'
I
would never have m~de it
Carlos,
.
.
without you. Thanks for
·
always
Merry ,~hnstmas and a Happy
.
being there.
·
New Ear
•
•
Love sis
Love, Corn
Cheres Ryann, Patti, Lou Ann,
Je vous souhaite un Joyeux
Noel
·
et une tres bonne annee a
Paris ou ou que ce soit,
Love Maria
Dear Ladies - I'm very sorry for
my rudeness last weekend.
Gerry Mulligan
To THB's - Thanx for an In-
teresting
and enjoyable semester.
Have a Merry Christmas and
good luck on Finals.
YourU.C.
Tom "Murph"
Leo I- Have a great Christmas-
You guys are the best-
Here's to next year-
Tony
Maureen
Beware of steps! They trip peo~
pie up.
?Guess???
P .S. Have a nice Christmas.
·
Congratulations Teresa,
You now own the biggest
reputation on campus!
Guys,
Looking for a good time?
GotoC506
P .S. You won't have one.
KellyF.
Dear Santa,
All I want for Christmas
is ... You Know!!
Happy B-Day, Gary A. -Are
you legal yet?
. Gary A. is a virgin!
.
Even the crack of dawn turned
him down!
Hey Gary,
Are you really a d**k or is
everyone lying.
Gary
Just because it's your birthday,
it still doesn't mean that you can
crawl and blow
.
chunks on the
·
floor again
.
Hey Gary,
Are you really that good, or is
Kissalick lying?
Gary,
Poses in the nude: Live at 5
:
00
p.m., Thursday night, Room 513.
Come 1, come all.
To
a
special bunch of friends,
Merry Christmas,
Michael and Suzanne
WALLY,
BURP!
Merry Christmas -
yourroomie
Merry Christmas
Skippy, Beam, Hitch, Tootie,
Scavutz,
·
Ivan, Wally, Tony,
Opey, Tard, and the rest or "our
Gang."
Friends Always,
· Andre
To
mycrobear and all his buddies
Merry Christmas! I'm gonna
miss ya!
With Love, Paula
Pam, Thea, Erica and Sue,
Well, it was interesting, work,
the Murphs, OLP, and of course
puffs!
·
·
Love,
J.M.
To the Fag,
Someday I'm gonna tell ori
.
you!!
J
.
M.
Carol,
..
Have a good break! Maybe
.
next semester we'll
·
get past the
staring
and
accomplish
something!?
Pablo
591,
How's your hand? My box is
overflowing. Thanks a lot. The
Ball is in.
Your court, will you return the
volley?
524
LB.
·
Buddies
til
your
hair
straightens out wbile playing
with
Baby Huey in the bathtub while
throwing the Fridge
.
You are
a
nip! Glad we met.
Skinners leaver
.
To7 Ladies,
Two of you are headed to the
nearest
A.A
.
Club, I'm afraid to
light a match around yo
,
u two. I
hope the PF's treat you b_etter.
Naizret, thanks for smiling, yours
·
is the best on campus, you really
ar
_
e beautiful.
.
·
T.H. A-3 bottorri, you ladies
are the greatest: Thanks for keep-
ing me sane. I hope next semester
is just as fun! Jeannie, I hope
Santa brings you a boyfriend, it
will help your RTO.
Leslie,
Have a Happy
Mgr.
Next time you get drunk, I want
to pull you
·
around on the floors
of the Campus Center -
you put
on a good show.
Scruf
.
WINTER
INTERSESSION
.
.
.
HOUSING CHECK-IN
Check-in will take place
·
on· Monday,
January 2, 1984 from 12:00 Noon to 5:00
p.m.
in
the Housing Office Rm. 271
Campus Center~ -
Room assignments and keys will only
be issued to those who have registered
in the Housing Office and have receipt
of Housing Payment from the Business
Office.
·
·
,
All intersessio
·
n students will be hous-
·
ed on the 2nd, 3rd and 4th floors at
Champagnat.
QUESTIONS?
PLEASE
.
CQME
TO
·THE HOUSING OFFICE
.
.
.
.
.
·
•
.
' : .
The College Union Boatd
. invites the entire Marist
Coml11unity
to
·
·
attend
.
.
C
The ~llcampus
f)
(thriilmaS
·10ance
.
featuring the sounds
.
of
.
.
.
.
.
LOVELACE
Friday, December 16, 1983
9:30 P.M. to
.
1:30 A.M.
in the
Dining Hall
$1.00
hors d'ouvres, soft drinks, and cash bar available
Santa is watching so dress to impress.
.Affirtnative-Actiori·-
·
- - - - -
•
'
••
'
.
•
.,.,
< /
.
continued froni page 1
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
. persons promoted at Marist in the •
. last year were female.
.
According to statistics from the
C_ollege and University· Personnel
Administration,
. nationwide
• private
co-educational
inc
stitutions have
a ·
21 percent
female and 3.S percent minority
participation' rate on their ad-
ministration staffs, whileMarist's
current . figures show a 44.S
percent female and 13.2 percent
minority incidence.
· Despite the national averages,
,· the task force found 'that "the
avaiJabi!ity of members of
protected classes in the labor pool
exceeds · the.· incidence in the
College's workforce." This is
most evident, they reported, "in
the faculty and administrative
staff areas."
In its report to Middle" States,
the task force said that Marist
does have an adequate statement
regarding Affirmative · Action,
but "it is clear to us .that the
results currently being produced
represent only minimal progress
as Marist continues.to grow in the
number of women and minority
students.''
The task force also concluded
that "it is critical that faculty and
total staff provide appropriate
role models for the students."
"Marist has a history of
inertia," the report said. "That
can impede progress unless the
president, in concert with the
entire
Marist
community,
maintains a high Equal Oppor-
tunity
Employment/
Affirmative Action profile.''
Dr. Eugene Best, associate
professor of religious studies, has
been the head of the Affirmative
Action Office- at Marist since
1976. With the changing over of
_the college from an all-male
institution, problems arose as to
how to balance the faculty and
administration, Dr. Best said, "to
. provide the proper role models
for women once the '.women
students
entered
Marist. ''
The vestiges of the all-male
· institution that Marist once was is
evidenced ·in a number of areas.
For example, there are no women
. among thedivision chairpersons.
Until this· year, there were no
female residence directors. Now ·
_Ryan---
continued from page 3
never ·duplicate the services that
exist at the hospital.'' .
· LaMorte said that Ryan's
. opinions are global. "The present
health service fulfills the role that
it has been designed to fulfill at
this time," he said.
Another area that Ryan said
needed more attention is the topic
of
human sexuality. "I'm one for
presenting .education of human
sexuality on the vitalissues," he
said. "That gets down to con-
traception."
He said that ~bile employed by
Marist; he was · permitted to
answer questions on the topic, but
the school did not allow him to
take any active part on educating
the campus from a medical
aspect.
"There are people here making
choices every day who have no
knowledge
on
preventing
pregnancies or on · ·venereal
diseases," he said. "I was told
that I was not to approach the
college on either issue.''
Ryan also pointed out that
while- a small health fee has been
proposed for. the last few years,
which would improve the school's
health services, the idea has been
rejected by the school.
.
,
He concluded by saying that
while he was working at Marist,
the students were given adequate
medical care, but that "it could
have been better. I don't think
that it's all it could be."
Ryan is currently working at
Metro North Railroads in
Croughton, where he is opening
and running a medical fadlity.
One· woman's experience
by Caroline Kretz
Tera Jean Thomas is in a unique position.
.
She is a woman, she is black and she works at Marist.
What is
• unique about her is that unlike many of her
female counterparts at Marist, she is not a secretary, nor is she in
a low-ranking faculty position . .And unlike most minority em-
ployees at Marist, she serves in an administrative level position.
Thomas is the director of the Higher Education Opportunity
Program at Marist (H.E.O.P.), which provides support services
for educationally and economically disadvantaged students.
Thomas has been at Marist for six years and has seen a lot in
her years as a Marist administrator. "At the time I came, I was
the only black administrator," she said, "and since that time I
have know only three black instructors.''
"Marist seems to be saying that black people can only run
'black' programs for black people. The black administrators at
Marist are usually in government-funded programs," she said.
She gave as examples H.E.O.P. and the Upward Bound
programs, which are state and federally funded programs
respectively, with black directors.
"I don't believe Marist has a commitment to Affirmative
Action," Thomas said.
"We're missing something at Marist," she said. "Marist, and
colleges like Marist, claim that they cannot lure the professors."
When questioned about the chances for improvement at Marist
in light of the recent Affirmative Action Task Force proposals
and recommendations, Thomas said: "I see it as staying the
same. Marist has put their efforts elsewhere, and if they have to
stick to Affirmative Action guidelines, they are more inclined to
hire white females.''
Thomas said she was concerned about the lack of proper role
models for black students at Marist. "It is important that
minority students have these people at a college like Marist to
whom they can look up to and identify with."
there are two.
Among the
president's cabinet there is only
one female, Julianne Maher, dean
of the School of Adult Education,
and . since 19.79, all ,of the
valedectorians at graduation have
been female while all of the
commencement speakers and
most of the honorary degree
candidates have been fuale.
Another- area in which women
and . minorities are noticeably
absent at Marist is the Board of
Trustees. . Currently, there arc
only two ·female trustees. In the
Crannel St.
spring of last year, five new
appointments. were -made to the
Board of Tr_ustees, none of which
was a woman or a minority.
When President Murray was
questioned about the additions
recently at a faculty meeting, he
said appointments to the board
had "nothing to do with Af-
firmative Action" and were based
solely on the "influence and
affluence'' of those selected. He
did say, however, the board
planned to add female and
minority members.
473-7996
TONIGHT - THE ORIGINAL BLUES PROJECT
Outlaws
Herbie Hancock·
Closed
16th
.17th
18th
19th
20th
. 21st
22nd
23rs
24th;.
25th·
26th
29th
30th
31st
Monday Night Football
Female Burlesque
T~B.A .
Ramones
Hot Tuna
Closed for Christmas
Morse Code
The
Hurt
Twisted Sister
New Blotto - Eve. · Show
The_ Chance wishes Marist students a very Happy
Holiday Season.
For concert information and chances to win free tickets to
shows at The Chance, listen to · WMCR every day. WMCR
where the Red Fox Rocks!
·
We accept Visa, Mastercard
&
American Express. You can
charge tickets for any show
by
phone. For information
&
din-
ner reservations call 473-7996.
Your organization can rent· The Chance for a party of special
occasion. Call for details.
·
You can obtain a calendar, just send a self-addressed stamped
envelope to The Chance.
December 15, 1983 · THE CIRCLE·
Page 9
c4eaclemy
WINE
&
LIQUOR
$2.00 Off
With Marist 1.D.
Come visit
26
ACADEMY ST.
PO'KEEPSIE, N.Y.
12601
Tel.
452-41
JO
Wishin~
Marist Students
a very happy
Holiday Season!
The Cuttery,
For men, women
and
children, it's
The Cuttery for
the
very
best
in
professional
where
we've
been·
setting
hair
cutting
trends
f
OT OVeT
ten
years.
hair
styling,
shampoo,
conditioning;
perms,
body waves, cellophane
colorings, and more.
Serving
Marist College
Since 1975
The Cuttery
is located at
3
Liberty Street
in Poughkeepsie.
Stop by
OT
call
us
at
914-454-9239.
DO YOU NEED STORAGE
OVER INTERSESSION?
You can store your TV,
STEREO,
or
REFRIG
plus a
trunk
for only $12"50!
DATE:
Thurs., Dec.
21st
TIME:
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
PLACE:
Outside
.
Champagnat Hall
J"OE
SMITH
\
Nt\\-\ lM~
105.
SIGN UP WITH YOUR RA
-NOW!
This will give Arnoff's idea of how·
many students are interested.
,
..
--•Page
10 · THE CIRCLE·
December 15,
1983
.
.
.
·
·
skaters, at 2-~, will fac~·
-
Pos~
The Marisc College hockey
team is sitting on a 2-5 record
with the first part of the season
ending this week.
"It's inconsistency,"
says
senior
,
co-captain Jim McDonald.
"The attitudes are there, we just
have
to
try
and pull
this .
together."
McDonald
blames
some of this inconsistency with
the lack of ice time for the club.
"We're not a varsity sport so
.
we don't get any scholarships to
give away and we don't have the
money to by ice time. This lack of
ice time affects our team play,"
he said
.
With
last Wednesday's
·
10-5
home loss to the University of
Bridgeport, the club's record
stands at 2 wins -
13-3
over
Fordham and 11-5 over Patterson
-
and losses
·
to
Kings Point,
Ramapo, Ocean County College
and two to the University of
,
.
in the penalty box. Trabulsi this
Bridgeport.
season stands aF18 total points,
.
"We're starting to pull together
nine goals and nine assists with 12
as a team,>) said junior Bob
minutes in the box.
Caldiero," but right now it's
"We have the 1alen1
·
10
win
but
tough with our schedule and lack
we are still inexperienced," said
of ice time."
.
Pette
.
"Four to five guys can't do
So far this year Jim McDonald
all the work. We should try for a
leads the Red Foxes in three
.
team victory, not
·
·
how many
areas: total
.
points (with 26),
,
points you cari get in a season.•·
·
penalty minutes (with 24) and
The freshman sensation this
goals (with 17). McDonald is
year is goalie Chris Sked. Sked
followed closely
.
by sophomore
.
has already saved 256 shots this
standout.
year and has the rest of the season
Tim Graham is all of those
categories. Graham has 19 total
points, nine goals and JO assists
and 16 minutes in the penalty
box.
Senior Al Pettc and junior Rob
Trabulsi take up the bulk of the
rest of the scoring with Pette
having 13 tocal points, three
goals, 10 assists, and 14 minutes
to improve on that.
.
·
uwithout Chris," said Mc-
Donald,'' we would have lost
some of those games by larger
margins."
Marist played an exhibition
game with the Culinary Institute
.
of America on Monday night and
tonight they are in the Nassau
Coliseum facing off against C. W.
.
Post.
·
B a s k e t b a l l - - - - - - - - - - - -
continued from page 12
game," he said.
He said he thinks the Foxes can
do well in its upcoming games.
"If
we keep the attitude we have
now," he said, "we should do
alright."
Friday's defeat of Dartmouth's
Green was a 77-66 walkaway. The
Foxes opened up their biggest
lead of the game with 12 and a
half minutes left to play, going up
52-39. While Dartmouth rallied to
pull within seven at 67-60; time
began to run out on the com-
eback.
The going was a little rougher
one day later in a three-point
vic-
tory over Rider, 67-64. Senior
Steve Eggink led Marist with 17
points, followed by Taylor's 14
arid John
Donovan's 10, though
the game was won and lost on the
foul line. Marist shot 17 of 24 to
Rider's 8 of I 9.
Ironically, it was a missed free
throw that helped seal the game
for
the Foxes. With seven seconds
left in the game and Marist ahead
by one, Taylor went to the line to
shoot two. Making one of two
would have almost certainly in-
sured
a
tie
and, had both been
successful, a victory.
However, Taylor
·
missed both
throws. The second miss rebound-
ed over two Rider players and in-
to the hands of Donovan, who
shot the game's final basket from
six feet out to put the tournament
title on ice.
Last Tuesday, the Foxes lost at
Fairleigh Dickinson 98-92 in a
game that included two overtime
periods. Marist hit 43 field goals
against FDU's 30, but was
vic-
timized by the home team's large
quantities of free throws.
FDU went to the line
55
times,
more than Marist opponents had
in the Foxes' first two games com-
bined, and
.
garnered 38
un-
contested points. Marist, on the
other hand,
·
had only 10 free
throws -
fewer than any team in
any Marist game so far this year
-
and managed six points.
Senior John Donovan goes up for yet another rejection against Rider Saturday night in
tournament championship as Tom
.
Meekins (4) looks on. (Photo
by
John
Bakke)
·
:
NOTICE
:
REGARDlNll
:
·
\
.
.
.
'
HOUSING
.
FOR
,.
·
·
·
.
.
.
•
.
·
WINTER
·
1NTERSESSI
_
ON
January 2,
-
1984-January
20,
1984
All those interested In being housed on cam-
pus for the 1984 Winter Intersession should
come to the Housing Office by
.
December 9,
1983 to make these arrangements.
.
.
.
.
.
NO FOOD SERVICES WILL BE PROVl
·
DED
DURING THE WINTER INTERSES$10NS.
QUESTIONS?
PLEASE COME TO THE HOUSING OFFICE
The
·
Room Rate
will
be $8.00/day. The total
,
amount. covering the length of time you
will
be on campus must be paid to the Business
Office prior
·
to the finalization of any Inters es-
·
sion Assignment:
.
·
·
·
'
Everyone
·at
>
Caputo
:
'~
.
.
.
·
:
,
·Pizzaria
:
·
wishes
/
a
,
.·
·
.
fe;y
Happy
_,
iloliday
.
·
Season
to
.
,
the
Matisi
'.·
.
·
•·
C()llJglc<JlllmurtitY
.
.
··-
,.~·
-
~
/
(:
~,
... ·.!-
.
·:
_,.,,
~,-.,
Open daily
at
11:00
_.
; •
:
~
'
f
·
.
~
473-2500
J.
.
,
._
,.
I
·
;
•
,
•
- ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - December 15, 1983· THE CIRCLE - Page
11·--•
. Thursday
Morning Quarterback
Rule 4 8 - - - - - -
continued from page 12,
On the ·111 her hand, some sug-
blacks. possibly because or the re-
!!CSt there will be a cutback in rhe
· · cem black dominance in the ma- , ;111mbcr or black st ude111-athlc1es
jor sports'? Many bl,1ck leaders
.
at 1he major institutions. Stone
· feel
the answer
to
this question is expressed this when ·he said the
obvious.
.\
·
white scliools no lonc.er want
The Reverend Jesse Jackson, black athletes. Drakcf~rd, who
dvil rights leader and presidential went to a prcdomina111ly black
John Bakke
For the record
There· has been relatively little
fuss· over Ron Petro's forced
resignation as basketball coach,
which is, of course, just the way
That leaves Cox and Murray.
One works for the other -
who
do
you
think had the last word?
coaching job. Nonetheless, it
would have been a position with
far less security than athletic
director.
· candidarc, was quoted in The school hi'msclr, said that black
New· York Times as saying the athletes will tend
10
stay aw_ay
NCAA "has no regard for the
from 1hc major institutions in the
color of the meat that is being
future. "More· black student-
ground in the athletic factories.
It
athletes will go sour
Ir.
to rhc
does
1101
surprise me at all that
predominantly black schools," he
these J.iypocrites would not stand said.·
. the whole affair was designed to
work.
The point' here is not to say
what a nasty affair the thing real-
ly was -
not at all. But we've all
been given· this image of Petro,
Cox and Murray sitting arund in
front
of
a fireplace somewhere
sipping brandy, when all of a sud-
den Cox says, "How about split-
ting your two jobs, Ron?"
Cox offered this opinion in
light of Petro's position and the
two options he had: "I would
have been surprised if he had
stayed on as coach."
the test of protecting the interests
The most serious speculation
of black reople."
centers around the threats of
Edward B. Fort, chancellor or many black institutions to leave
North Carolina State, has said,
the NCAA ahoge1her. Some feel
''The bo11om line is the color of this could cause a major rift ·
the majority of the kids ,vho take within
the association, while
the flpor in the Final Four," others feel the NCAA wouldn't be ·
referring 10 the NCAA basketball
hurt at all. Nevertheless, the
championships, where the majori-
threats have been made, and it
1y of players have been black.
will be up to the leaders of the
Jesse N. Stone
Jr.,
president of black schools lo carry them· out
Southern University in Louisiana,
when Ruic 48 goes into effect in
said he feels somc•of tlie delegates
1986.
of the ACE committee inten-
With the violations and scan-
tionally discriminated in their ac-
dais that have plagued .college
tions. "They knew just what they
athletics over the years, the
were doing," he said. _ "The NCAA realized that changes had
message is that white schcols no · to be made in order to start
longer want black athletes." ,
"cleaning up the mess" that exists
While the intent of the ACE
today. Rule 48, in the eyes of its
committee will continue to be
supporters, is a step in the right ·
questioned, speculation· concern-
direction. While many claim the
ing the possible results of Rule 48
rule will discriminate against
also continues tq gro\l', Will the
blacks, others feel it will ultimate-
major institutions have an even
ly benefit black athletes who have
greater monopoly
011
available
been deprived of a sound educa-
athletic talent?
tion. -
·
Athletes who do not meet Rule
48's standards can be given
Joe Paterno, Penn State's well-
scholarships, but cannot par-
known football coach, expressed
ticipate in intercollegiate sports this belief: "We have raped a
during thcii: freshman year. If;_ generation and a half of young
these students satisfy progress black athletes. We have taken
rules, they can become eligible to
kids and sold them on bouncing a
play at the beginning of their ball and running with a football
sophomore year.
·
.and that being able to do certain
While the major ins1i1u1ions
things athletically was going to be
have the budgets to support a
an end in itself," Paterno said at
· number of inactive freshman
the convention last January. "We
... -. recruits,.,-black ._schools_ generally
canno,t _
affo_td ..
_to .. _
cl9
,H1at_ _to_ ...
do not. Black schools could then
anothergeneration.'?
lose athletes they usually are abl~
But many black leaders feel
to get.
Rule 48 will do just that.
· Wendy Pryor cheers on basketball team in recent victory
. over
Utica · College.
(Photo
by
John
Bakke)
In any case, little can be gained
by rehashing the whole affair.
''I'd really like to put it all behind
and get"on with the season," said
Petro, and it's a fair request from
someone in the midst of his
toughest schedule as a coach.
On the other hand, it seems like
a few issues should be addressed
-
for the. record -
before the
whole thing is forgotten like bad
midterm grades.
The decision to split the two
positions -
not necessarily a bad
one - ultimately rested with Den-
nis Murray. Gerard Cox said that
Murray, Petro, himself and the
board of directors were all "in-
volved in the decision," and if he
says so, I believe
it.
But of all those "involved"
people, one had the final say_. The
board . "reviewed" the decision,
but never voted on it. Petro has
said he didn't choose to be only
the athletic director, so his ob-
viously wasn't the voice of
authority.
And Petro says, "That'd -be
great, Gerry. It would sure take
some pressure off me. What do
you think, Den?"
"Anything you guys say is
OK
with me," says Murray, who
pours more brandy to mark the
occasion.
Well, that's not the way it hap-
pened. The dedsion to split the
jobs was made independently of
Petro, who then decided which
job to keep.
Another point: Could Petro
have choosen the coaching posi-
tion, or was it a case of choosing
either one as long as it was
athletic director?
From talking to a few people
who should know, and in my own
opinion, he could have had the
Enough about
that.
What
about the new coach (whomever
he may be)? A selection commit-
tee has yet to be formed, accor-
ding to Cox. The subject makes
for
interesting
conjecture
anyhow.
Cox said that the committee
would not be made up entirely of
administration members, seem-
ingly implying that someone from
the athletic department would be
included. It would certainly seem
logical to include someone from
Mccann.
But Cox also said he didn't
know if Petro would be on the
committee, which raises a ques-
tion: Who else would they want,
if not the athletic director and the
man that knows Marist basketball
better than anyone?
Perhaps the girl that takes rac-
quetball reservations
will
be
available.
Effectiveness of rule is argued
Ru le
48,
the
Nati o na I
institutions to recruit any athlete
torily completed 48 credits toward
Collegiate Athletic Association's
they wanted
to.
He referred to
a specific baccalaureate degree.
new academic standard which is
this practice (loophole) as the
A similar ruling now requires a
set to go into effect in 1986, has
"slave trade."
junior college transfer student
been subject to a great deal of
According to Dr. Edwards, the
who has a grade point average of
criticism from many presidents of
"slave trade" involves scouts
at least
2.0,
but who has not
predominantly black institutions,
being paid by four-year s1=hools to
graduated from junior college, to
and black leaders in general. But
search
out
talented
but
satisfactorily complete 24 credit
one well~known blacLeducator,
academically, "high .risk'_' black
hours toward a specific bac-
-Dr-.·,·
Harry--Edwards, .. a: professor._ . athlete.s,~- and .. .Rla9.{ng __
.th~'.!1.JP _
calaureate degree.
of sociology at the University of junior
colleges where they earn -
-Before
-chese· rulings-weflf"irifo
California at Berkeley, said the
grades that they need to transfer
effect, a student under a
2.0
cum
standards set in Rule 48 are
to .the
sponsoring
four-year
did not have
co
graduate
from
basically too low.
·
school.
their junior colleges, and just had
Jn an article published in "The
Although this still remains a
· to earn 48 credits. Marist College
Atlantic," Dr. Edwards expressed
common practice, the N.C.A.A.
Athletic Director and Head
his ·· dissatisfaction
with
the
has taken steps to limit its abuses.
Basketball Coach Ron Petro
mm1mum
Scholastic Aptitude
Under new legislation, a transfer
pointed to the fact that degree-
Test score which was established,
student from a junior college,
related courses must now be
say that it is "so low as to con-
who has a grade per average
taken. "Before, kids would take
stitute no standard at all.'' As Dr.
under
2.0,
is not eligible to
lesser courses and just get their 48
Edwards saw this as a weakness in
participate in
intercollegiate
credits," he said. "Now, with the
Rule 48, he also claimed that one
sports in Division One, unless the
new rulings, kids have to work
major loophole in Rule 48 would
student .has graduated from the
toward degrees. This curbs the
really allow the big-time athletic
junior college and has satisfac-
abuses."
Cheering is hard work,
Foxes
say
by John Bakke
Down on the basketball court,
dressed in red and white, they are
a visible part of every game,
. although they never handle a
basketball.
Unlike the players, though, the
cheerleaders carry pompoms and
wear - · with one exception -
skirts rather than shorts.
This year's squad is made up of
10 women and one man. It is a
young group -:-: more than half
are freshmen -
and an active
one. They put in
two-hour·
practice sessions three days a
week and before every game.
Angela Cimorelli is in her third
year as the squad's coach. She has
been involved with cheerleading
for most of her life, and is an
instructor affiliated with the
United States Chcerleading
Association. As such, Cimorelli
teaches
cheerleading
every
summer.
She said she is happy with the
progress and efforts of this year's
members. "I think the girls have
come a long way this year, and
we've gotten more support for the
program," she said, and cited· the
face chat 55 girls auended the first
meeting for tryouts.
The coach said there are still
more things the group could do
with more resources. "It's tough
without our·own band," she said.
"Also, we could really use more
guys -
we could do so much
more with a few
on
the team."
Cimorelli is a tough coach, one
who works her people hard,
according to many in the group,
but her relentless push for per-
fection has its rewards. "The
compliments we get make the
hard work very worthwhile," said
Wendy Pryor, a freshman from
Levittown, Long Island.
That sentiment was echoed by
freshman Pisamai Jaigla, among
others. "It's a-lot of hard work,"
she said, "but it's worth it.
Putting in the time and then
seeing it pay off gives you a sense
of accomplishment."
Pryor was part of che football
cheering group as well, and she
said basketball cheering is very
different. "We only did the home
games in football," she said.
"And mostly, during the football
season, we got ready for the
basketball season."
Both the crowd and the players
play a part in the cheerleaders'
efforts. "We get good crowd
participation," said Cimorelli. "I
chink it's improved 100 percent."
Marist's cheering troupe does a
_ loc of traveling to road games -
more than most college's squads.
They have been at all three road
games so far this year, including
Notre Dame.
If
there's any area where the
group could use more support,
said some, it is from the athletic
department. "We ·get absolutely
no cooperation,"
said one
cheerleader. "We just get shoved
under the carpet sometimes."
Some of that, they said, could
result from the attitude towards
cheerleading at the college. "The
school is indifferent towards us,"
said another.
"There's no
prestige in being a cheerleader
here."
Gai Poe, the squad's manager,
said the contributions to the
basketball team are just as im-
portant as the cheerleaders' i;o!es
in stirring up a crowd. "We're
here
to
cheer them on," she said.
"It's especially good on the
road," said Poe. "There usually
isn't much of a Marist crowd to
support them, and we're a lot
better than having no one to cheer
them on."
Don Kelbick,
one of the
assistant basketball coaches, is
also the cheerleaders' advisor. He
said the team is aware of the
cheering efforts and appreciates
them. "They're great to have
behind you on the road," he said.
«Any support you can get is
appreciated."
:,...
-
Page12-THEC/RCLE-Decefflbertis.e
()-FtmS··
L=:=,✓
.... -
Foxes win
· tournament,
lose
at·FDU.
The Red Foxes, having won last
week's four-team tournament at
. home, looks strong as they
prepare for three games during
the next week.
·
Marist was . scheduled to play
nationally ranked Iona at the Mc~
Cann Center on Tuesday.
·
--
The team. travels 'to St. Peters
on Saturday, then has home _con-
tests against Long Island Univer~
sity and · the University of
Massachusetts next Tuesd,;1y a:nd
Thursday, respectively.
. The. LIU game. -
one of 16
conference games this season -
is
an important one for the Foxes;
LIU will most likely be one of the
. primary contenders for- the con-
ference title, fqr it was LIU that
eliminated Marist from last year's
playoffs.
·
•
Marist won the second annual
Greater Poughkeepsie Auto
Dealers' Classic last weekend by
-defeating Dartmouth on Friday
and tournament· runner-up Rider
on Saturday. Dartmouth ~eat
last-place Colgate in the consola-
tion game to (inish third.
Junior guard Bruce Johnson
was named to the all-tournament
team - and Ted Taylor, _Mari~t's
leading· rebounder,
took · the
weekend's most valuable player
honor by scoring 14 points in each
victory and pulling down 23 re-
bounds overall.
.
Taylor said. the award. was his
, first asan
MVP.
"I just coul~~•t
see myself getting
MVP,'.'
he said.
"It was a hard game·, the intensity
was tough."
· .. . . . ·
.
Johnson pointed to fiis role in
the team's second-half comeback
as his· major cq_ntribution. ''When
· we were down by seven and · I
started
giving: . the •· ·assists,
everybody got .· ba~k into _· the
continued on page 10
. J,i"~i~r
Ted
Tay1Jr
p~Ds
d~~D
.
9h~oi
!)k.:fa
-
rebounds
in
_
..
· leading :the_ Foxes--to. a· 67"64 · vktory
!,
Taylor
was· voted the .
tourniment's MVP.
(Photo
by - J~hn·. Bakke)·
MtfiCalf
to
rejoin
team-in fall ·of 1984
by
John Bakke
· Chris Metcalf, a starting for-
ward for the Foxes last year, will
reforn to Marist in January and
expects to rejoi~ the team in the
fall of next year, the Circle. has.
learned.
__
·
~- Metcalf left Marist after the
1982-83 season due to academic
difficulties.
·
A transfer student from the
Universtiy of · Rhode_ Island, he
played here only one semester -
spring 198r -
before leaving.
Metcalf . arrived at Marist in
January 1982 but couldn't play
· until December of that year due to
NCAA eligibility requirements.
· back on scholarship if he can keep
things up academically," - said
Petro. "He'd have a scholarship
iil the spring arid then be back
with the team in the fall." . '
Metcalf confirmed- those ar-
rangements and said that he's
been taking courses this past
semester to raise his· cumulative
·grade point average. He will ·
return as a junior with a Com-
munications Arts major.
Petro said Metcalf's value to
the team in 1984 will depend on
the effort he puts into it. "I think
it's entirely up to Chris, how hard
he works academically, first of
all, and then physically," he said.
''Once I got
OU( .
of
school, I changed
my
mind~
I'd like.
to
finish.
my career at ·-Marist,,
A 6-foot-8, 205 pound for-
ward, Metcalf played . 24 games
last season, starting 19 of them.
He averaged 7
.5 points and 3.3 re-
. bounds per game, making him
last year's fifth-leading scorer:
"I was having trouble with my
grades-,'' saidMetcalf, contacted
this · week -at
his
home , in
·southbury~ Conn.; "and I decid-
. ed I just didn't want to. do it any
more.·
.
.
"But.once I got .out of school, I
change4 my mind," he said. "I'd
iike to . finish
.
my career at
Marist." . / .. •• ._ .
"He can be effective if he really
pushes himself."
· Metcalf said he expects to be
training in the spring despite n_<?t·
playing,
although Petr~ 1s
undecided as to whether he will be
able· to practice with the team, ac-
cording to Metcalf.
He played at Pomeraug High
School in Connecticut and was ..
named to an all-state team. He
spent his freshman college year at
Rhode Island, but left after five
games of his sophomore season.
Head Coach Rori Petro said he
didn't know. of Metcalf's inten-
. · _ tions. «I told him he can ~ome
Metcalf said he left Rhode
Island because · of a coaching
change. He said· he was one of
five freshmen recruits there, only
one of which is still at the school.
~
,
'I_··'
.....
RUle
48:
RrOgfess
or
racial di,sCrimination?
by
Ian O'Connor-
member, says the black presidents
in<bivision. One, e~pedially·_ the
Rule' 48·, disagreed with the posi-
widespread support.
~vere il1¥ited. The blacks say they,
historic!!IIY b._lack colleges, who
tion of the blackj:iresidents and
Ron · Petro, Marist College
' NearlyJOO college and universi-
were•not..
.•
have a _distinguished record of. said the' new legislation is "a
athletic director and head basket-
ry presidents assembled at the Na-
The black 'presidents also 'feel
educating the marginal students._. move in the right direction."
ball coach, said he firmly agrees
tional
. Collegiate
Athletic tha·t applying academic standards . ir( higher education."
· ..
·
·
-
• : :.:~ Murray said he "didn't buy the. with the establishment of required
Association.· convention in San-
·
will be unfair to ·,he- historically
.'. The ·use· of standardized .test
arguments of the black_ leaders'.'
core courses in order to better
Diego, Calif., l_ast January, seek-: · black.- schools.. Dr. Frederick
scores a~ an academic require-
concerning the use of the standar-
prepare the student for higher
ing to ·enact an effective set of Humphries, · p'resident
of··. ment for eligibHityis the major
dized test scores because the "set
education. "There is no doubt
. academic standards for athletes
predominantly·- black Tennessee
area of
·
opposition to: Rule
48:'
.
standards are
so
minimal.''. .
that student-athletes can come in-
entering college.
.
State University, supported this
.·
Studies have shown
·
.that blacks
Dr. Harry Edwards, professor
to college without scoring 700 on
They. hoped to enhance the
-
point in a New York Times arti-
score lower than whites on stan-
·or sociology at-the Univ.ersity of
the SAT, and be successful,"
public. image of collegiate sports cle.
-
.
The
average
entering - - - - - - - - - -...... - - - - - -
California at Berkeley and na-
Petro said. "But without the pro-
..:c__
an image, that has been tar-
freshman al both the University·
R .
· .··
-
1
• ·· ·: · •· ·"'· · · · • · ·.
tionally known. bla
·
ck educator,
per high
school
courses as
nished by severalrecent scandals.
of California at Los Angeles and
•
..
eac ion' is. mix-'
agreed that the minimum scores
preparation, there could be trou-
lnstead, those who voted for
the University of Notre . Dame..;
·•d·
t· ·.
·(·h
. · •
are too 1o·w,_although-he too ques-
ble."·
·.
the new\ academic standard (both schools were on the ACE -
e. -
0
e new .
tioned 'the use- of standardized
. Murray also supports these re-
(known as Rule 48) were called committee) SC?re~·over_ I ,ooo-on ' ,.,._
r.c•
A_A. ·:
·r· ·u···
·
le--
·th·a"
-I.,
tests as a
'
requfrement for eligibilis
.
quirements. He saidhigh schools
~•racist," prompting the most , the SAT exammauon-,- well over·
.
LY-!
~
·
.. • _
. . .
ty. In an article published in The , will·now have to give more educa-
heated racial 'controversy in the
·
the required composite score .of· .
. ~-
· .
·
·d·
·1 · .· ·.
-
~ ·
Atlantic, Edwards. said, "The
tional attention to the student-
NCAA since the onset of racial 700.
m
Q
n ·
Q -.
e-
S, . ·
NCAA.action is ·worthy of sup-
athlete in order to prepare them
integration
in
major college
In .comparison, . the . average
.
.,/
• ..
C
•
•
•
•
•
port even if it is ·a very small or
for college. "I support the core
athletics·_during the 1950s .and freshman.· student
at
QCQuemlC
_
nor_m~ ·
perhaps even inept step i_n clean-
curriculumandtherequiredgrade
'60s.
predominantly blacks"chools such
1 ·
o·r _
'
f ·
resh m
·
e·n_··
i~g ~p educat_icmal proble~ns in
point average because it will
· Rule -~8 says that college as Tennessee State University
·
·• .. , ...
,
.
b1g-t1me collegiate sports."
eliminate students from bypassing
athletes entering in 1986 are re-
(which uses the. ACT. examina-
t
.d· en·1· at· h"te· te'S . .
"I support the NCAA's actions
the basic courses," he said.
quired to meet three requirements tion) scores in the range of I L-13,
S U
.
- . .
.
. ·_ •· ·
because l believe that black
Poughkeepsie High School
· in order to-be eligible for inter-
below ihe required ACT score of
.
parents, bl~ck eQucators, and the
Head Basketball Coach Tony
- collegiate competition. They are: · 15. Therefore;-csaid Humphries,
dardiz(:°d tests, th~t 55•percent of black com·munity must insist that
Drakeford said that although he
a minimum American College Rule 48 will permit schools ·such . all ol~cks .who take the SA_T,ex-
black children be taught and that
feels the SAT examinations' are
Test score of 15 or a composite as Notre Dame and UCLA to
amination score below 700, and
they learn whatever subject mat-
discriminatory he supports the ·
Scholastic Aptitute Test score of recruit athletes who do not meet
that over 65
.
percent of all blacks
ter is ·· necessary to· excel on. other · requirements. Drakeford
700, to have enrolled in a core their average freshman scores. On
,vho take the ACT examination
diagnostic and all other skills
said he basically agrees with th~.
curriculum of 11 high . school the other hand, he maintains that
score lower than 15.
· ·
tests," he said.
opinions of Edwards on the issue
courses, and to have passed these Rule 48 will .force schools like
The black pi:esidents point to
While the controversy con-
of the core curriculum.
"It
is very
courses with a 2.0 grade point TSU ·
10
recruit athletes. with
srudies rhat have shown standar-
tinued over the use of standardiz-
agreeable," he said.
"It
will
average.
greater acade.mic qualifications
dized tests as being di_scriminatory
cd test scores,: the other re-
clefinitcly be good for the high
The presidents of the tradi-
1han
their average entering
against blacks and poor whites, . quirements of Rule 48 have mer
school student-athletes."
tionally black colleges and·univer-
freshman student.
and say they are concerned that
with · tittle opposition .• Black
.
While the controversy over the
sities opposed Rule 48 in several
According to Humphries, Rule
setting minimum scores on these
presidents and civil rights leaders · requirements of Ruic 48 con-
major areas. They point out thar· 48 "will have minimum impact on
tests -will dispropor1ionately af- · have · apparently accepted 1he
tinucs. a deeper, more serious
no black sat in on any meetings of the major institulions who
feet black athletes as opposed t"o
establishment of 11 required core
question is being examined. ·oid
the special commi11ee of the generated it to clean up athletics
whites.
courses and a 2.0 grade point
the special committee of rhc ACE
American Council on Education, and who have produced academic
Mari"st College Presidcnr Den-
average in
these course!> as
thar formulated Rule 48 purpose-
which formulated Rule 48. The credibility problems, and max-
nis
J.
Murray. who a1tcnded the
legitimate standards. In general,
ly
intend to discriminate against.
ACE of which Marist College is a imum impact on those institutions
NC AA convention and supported
these requirements have received
continued on page 11
29.10.1
29.10.2
29.10.3
29.10.4
29.10.5
29.10.6
29.10.7
29.10.8
29.10.9
29.10.10
29.10.11
29.10.12
from
The Circle ... See you
in
'84
.
.
..
'
•
.
',
.
:
.
,
•
.
.
;
1
...
·.•
.
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€1RCEE
..
Volume 29, Number 10
·
·
.
Marist College, Po·ughkeepslf!, N. Y.
December 15, 1983
Townhouse residents Upset' over mairitenance
by Sandy Daniels
~ade to correct thi;
·
situation.
the same time, I don't dismiss the
"Things have never - looked so
~
situation."
·
·.
.
.
-
Maintenance or'the townhouses
good;" said Tarantino.
-
.
The
comp I a int s
from
is becoming a major
.
concern for
Robert A. Heywood; director townhouse resideI)tS
.
have been
townhouse residents,accor<iing to
of housing, agreed that there is a
-
numerous,
.
according
to
an informal survey
.
recently
·
con-
problem that needs attention. Heywood ..
.
ductedbyaCirclereporter.
"The- .inaintenance
·
and
"How can the school justify
The survey
of
100 townhouse
·
housekeeping services have to im-
having a maintenance !=rew?"
residents shows that 920Jo of the
prove," said Heywood. Heywood asked Deb Qutil, resident of
interviewed
students
are
·
·
_
also said that each townhouse townhouse C-2. "We never see
dissatisfied with maintenance and
..
should be cleaned once a week.
them.''
housekeeping services.
.
.
..
..
He said that Tarantino is
turn•
Resident of townhouse B-3
.
However, acconiing to An-
-
,
ing the situation around.
"It
Donna Cashin said, "I;ve been
.
thony Tarantino, director of the takes time and
.
students should be trying to
.
·
get a
-
desk
.
lamp since
physical plant, an effort is being
.
patient," Heywood said,
"B~t
at
·-
early September, but I haven't
CSL-set
to ope_n
up
_
,
eval uati o
.
ns
'The c
·
oundl of Student Le~ders
·
will conduct its own evaluation of
Marist fa'culiy next week from a
desk in Donnelly Hall.
-
·
CSL officers
.
said
-.'
their
evaluation is
a
10 to
·12
ques
-
tion
-
form:
\Vhich -will
_be
hand-taUied
_
. _
.. and
-
made available next semester
;L
•
0
·
·•
711e
questions on the t:valu~tio11
·
·
were
-
designed from ''Seate,'.
_
'
·
the
·
·
:
Student Cou'rse
,
and
,
Teacher
·
Evaluatfons,
'
:Cr
.
om
. :
.
the
>
'
State
:,
-
University of New
,
York at
.
Buffalo.
·
·
'
..
CSL President Keith Galanti
-
said he plans to put
a
limited
·
edition of the results on reserve in
the library; Commuter
·
Lounge,
School of Adult Education office
and the CollegeActivides office .
.
.
·
James Barnes, president of the
College Uniori Board, said
.
the
·
evaluation form contains a series
of questions, which
will
·
use
a
rating systemto gathenesults
;
·:
..
The CSL' officers said that th'e
·
evaluation's
'
will
be
·
unbiased.
··
They added that'their aim is
·
not
to be vindictive · and is not
,
an
attack on the faculty.
-
·
-,.
,
·
.
.
-
Barnes said,. "We want to use
.·
members of the student body and
.
,_.
possibly students froin local.
·
· _
colleges to make t~e tallying
_
of
·.
the results more unbiased."
. ··
·
·_c· .,__·
ioep
·
_
.. ·-
~
--
_
·
"Kris Ktingles" are
p~rt
oj
the
_
1
~
-
more humorous side of holiday
tradition
at
;
·
Marist.
Here,
.
:
K
_
..
r,·
.
n
'
g
·
_·.
'
le
·_.
'S
.
·
.
sophomore A~dy
Hall
.·
duinps .
water
on
a tolerant
.
Kringle.
-
_
·
·
_
__
_
.,
:
.
·
· · .
_
victim, (Photo by Margo
.
K!Jcich)
received one,
·
so I bought it on my
own." "We were planning on a
nice Christmas dinner, but it is a
little difficult with only -four
chairs/' said 'Anne Markey,
another resident of B-3. ·
·
Gai - Poe, assistant resident
•
director of the north end, said
that a major problem is the length
of
•
time it takes to
.
answer com-
plaints. According to Poe, some
maintenance
.
requests
from
September have not yetbeen com-
-
pleted.
.
"It
is extremely frustrating to
receive punch lists of work to be
done from maintenance, check
with townhouse residents to see
if
the work has been completed and
find out that very little has been
done," said Poe.
·
Student complaints-have rang-
ed from the length of time it takes
to
complete requests to dirty
bathrooms and cockroach pro-
blems.
·
''Maintenance is slo_w to res-
pond," said Debbie Hyer of
townhouse B-2. "We
_
have to call
continued on
page
2
·over~the-ai,
-·
,staiion
won
'i
-
be
.here
soon
by Steven Berger
Trustees would have to accept the
_
prop9sal before any action could
Vassar College's
_
WVKR-FM
be taken
.
College officials said
·
radio station broadcasts with a
that President Dennis J. Murray
power of 1,000 watts to three
found the proposal. to be too
counties
·
. Dutchess Community much of an investment' in 1980 ;
College's
.
W42AE-TV station therefore
.
the decision was "not to
,
serves
·
,
all
-
Poughkeepsie go withh. "
·
•
, ..
.
.
·i
Cablevision subscribers~
.
,·
Rober('
:.
Dyson,· trustee and
_ . ·• Marist College's
WMCR
radio owner
'
o(
.
Poughkeepsie stations
·
,
station
•
sends
.
a
\
modulated signal
·-
WEOK/WPDH, .
said
·
.
the
·
"."'."t,y'.c'able'tof400"'fe~iffiffif}t\1a_'ents;:·
-,c ;
pi'opos
·
it1
:•:
""i:>'ulcf be-~c6nsidered
·
as
·,
-
,:-,
_
.
:/
D5=spJt~
·-
~~ving
,
~~r~
}h<!~A<JO
\
par:(
,
_
qf
>
th~
:
.
Lo\Yeu
·.
Thomas
.
,-
commu111cauon arts
.
maJo.rs
_
an~ Commum_cauonsCenter package.
_
·
an
'.
established Commmii£_ation
.
:
:
·
However, faculty sources, who
·
Arts
>
cu
_
rriculuin;
-
.
the
.:
college
wished to remain
-
·
unidentified,
·
apparently
:
.
has
-
no immediate
--
said they
.
believed the proposal
plans for following the lead of-
would not be
_
accepted by the
rieigh~oring
:
.
c
·
olleges
.
..
by board, because a hands-on
establishing an over-the-air
·
facility like a radio station would
broadcast station.
.
go against the Marist liberal arts
-.
· The last time such a plan was--
·
concept of learning.
·
considered seriously was in 1980,
The
.
s
·
ources suggested that
_when
<
Robert
_
Norman,
.
associate
while
_
·.
Marist
encourages
professor
·-·
of'
·
_
Communication
broadcasting, the. college would
Arts,
·
proposed
.
·
that
.
the
.
college
never substantially invest in it.
.
invest ih a 3,000 watt commerical
-
Dr
.
Richard
.
Platt, chairman of
FM station to serve four counties
the
Communication
Arts
froni. Marist
:
.
•
_ .
department; discounted such a
The
.
.
prop6sed station
·
would
theory. He said he was tired of the
-
occupy the last
'
available FM
·
argument
-
between technical
frequency allocated
·
to· the
learning and liberal arts learning .
.
Hudson Valley by the Federal
'-'It
.
-
doesn't have_ to be a
Cominunitations Commission. It
-
dichotomy; you. can· !;,lend
.
the
would broadcast
.
on 92.} , MHz .two," he said,
and cost
_
an estimated $20,000,
_
.
"One of
--
the advantages of
which incfudes engineering, legal
having a stationjs that it doesn't
and
·
application fees.
have
-
•
to
.
depend on making
The Marist College
·
Boa~d of
-
continued on page 3
)J.ffirfnilttve Attidn~·
H/J
.
i,vfar
hllve
we cof11e?
.
by Caroline Kretz
.
.
promotin
'
g of w~men
.
and
.
purpose of the task
.
force was to
-
peispective a~d intends to create
.
The report also docu~ents that
·
~
.
·
meIIlbers ofrilinority groups..
study
t~e eval~ation
~
rep()rt and
a:n
enVironment, a model
·
society,
5~6 percent of
·
"the faC1.;1lty are
·
.
In 1981 there were 13 women
'
_In· recent years,
.
Affirmative make recommendations to the ihatreflectsequalityandjtistice."
minority members.
In real
on
the Maristfaculty and 68 men.
Action has generated a great deal
college concerning
·
Affirmative
Prior to the
-
·
return visit of the
·
·
numbers, that translates to only
In 1983, there are 24 women .ind
.
of attention at Mari
.
st, par-
Action. The task force presented · Middle States team in November
five
·
of!he 89faculty members;
65 men.
·
ticularly following
.
the
.
Middle
its findings to
.
the president and of this year; a report was sent to
·
·
"Marist seems· to mask Af-
.
Two years ago there were four
·
states accreditation evaluation in
his cabinet in February.1983.
Middle States with the task force
firmative Action by hiring white
minority members
·
on the faculty
.
198_1 and again
·
in November ()f
."Basically, we are moving in a
reports
·
and the
-
president's
women instead of minorities,"
and 77 white· faculty members.
this year.
.
.
_
positivedirection," said Margaret response to the recommendations;:- said Tera Thomas, H.E.O.P.
_
Today
·
there is one more minority
In its evaluation of Marjst in
Gold, director of the Social Work
"What. we tried to do,t' ac-
director. "Marist is a white male
member and seven more white
1981, the
·
Middle
·
Sta~es team
.
Program, who serves a~ co-
·
cord
_
ing
-
to Anthony Cer
_
nera,
bastion," s~e said._"The statistics
faculty members.
pinpointed Affirmative Action as chairperson of the five-member
.
executive
·
assistant
to
ihe
reveal very httle."
·
.
The question remains, how far
an area. in need of improvement.
task force along with MarkAdin,
·
president, "was to document the
"Problems also
·
arise with
has Marist come in terms
·
of
·
The
team
cited
several director of'personnel.
progress that has been made.
regard to Marist's inability to p~v
Affirmative Action, and just how . deficiencies: The college does not
"The administration has acted
Progress is the key word."_
the salaries to lure the muc ;_
far does it still need to go?
·
adequately recruit or
-
·
retain
upon
.
our recommendations,"
The report documents that over
demanded minorities and women
The answers are not easy.
women and minorities; women
Gold said. Gold also said,
one half, 58.2 percent, of the new
faculty members," Gold said.
Despite obyious advances,
·
some
are under-represented in
the
however, that the adm
_
instration
employees in 1983 were women.
The task force recommended to
still question
the college's
faculty and are concentrated at
does not share the same view of-
However, the report also shows
the president that salaries
·
be
commitment to Affirmative
the lower levels; and the number
.
Affirmative Action that the task
that 100 percent of the new
competitive enough to attract and
-
Action.
of minorities atthe administrative
force:has.
secretarial/ clerical employees
retain women and minorities.
· The term "Affirmative Ac-
level is minimal.
_
-
"Generally, the administration
were women.
The report did show progress
tion" was first· used in 1965 by
An Affirmative Action task
has thought
-
of Affirmative
Forty percent of all the women
within the ranks of women
President Lyndon Johnson and
.
force was established by President
Action in terms of
.
fulfilling legal
·
who are employed at Marist
already employed at the college.
has come to mean those special
Dennis Murray following the
-
'
requirements," she said, "yet the
work in secretarial or clerical
.
Seventy-one percent
·
of
·
those
efforts made in the hiring and
Middle States evaluation. The
·
task force takes on a broader
positions, the report said.
continued on
page
9
..
;
'
.
·,
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,. ;
..
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i"1)
-
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~
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-.
,
.
':,
'i
~-·
·
'-
1
·
.
V'
---•Page 2 · THE CIRCLE --December 15, 1983
Maintenance ..
continued from page 1
more than once." Linda Glass of
B-7 was in agreement and said,
"So many things that we've had
to have done, · haven't been
done." Another resident of
B-7,
Kathy O'Connor, said that their
bathrooms have never been clean-
ed.
Ted
Kissel
and
Richard-
Laforce of townhouse A-4 .com-
plained of a serious cockroach
problem. "Early this semester we
brought this dilemma to the atten-
tion of the Residen_t Director, the
Housing
Office
and · the
Maintenance staff. Effective ac-
tion has yet to be taken," Kissel
said.
Heywood said that he is aware
of the delays.
"I
want to move to
the point where we are more
responsive to students needs,"
Heywood said.
"I
definitely do
not accept the present system."
According to Tarantino, an ef-
fort
is
made to answer a
maintenance request within a
week. He went on to say that stu-
dent use and a lack of pride seem
to be major problems.
"There is a whole different at-
titude in the townhouse area,"
said Tarantino .. "Studeri.ts are
more· out on their own and should
generally clean
up
after
themselves.
No
sooner
is
housekeeping being done -
students mess it up again."
Tarantino also said that the ad-
ditional
$100
that students pay to
live in 'the townhouses helps to
offset the cost of air conditioning
and kitchen utilities. "This ex-·
. pense exceeds
$100
so students
should expect a decrease in ser-
vice," said Tarantino.
Heywood said that he felt
students were getting their
money's worth, because it is a
nicer ar:ea. '.'But that doesn't
dismiss.the fact that there are pro-
blems
in
maintenance,"
Heywood said.
· He · also
said
that
the
changeover in the physical . plant
has been a good one. "Tarantino
has been here only a .short time
arid
we've see
major im-
provements," said Heywood ..
Tarantino agreed that there
have been improvements since he
took over the position. ''Many
· things have gone by for a long
time," Tarantino said. He added
th.at he is in the process of hiring a
new
superintendent for
day
housekeeping operations.
· However, Tarantino said that
he needs more cooperation and
less interference from Housing.
"I
would like a review with Hous-
ing as
to
what they expect in
various areas and to justify it,"
said Tarantino.·
"If
I k'new their
requirements and my obligations,
it would clear the air."
·Flea market .·
lends a
hand
Vendors from throughout the
tri-state area will be selling a wide
range of goods including an-
tiques, crafts, jewelry and other
miscellaneous items at the third
annual Friends of Marisr Flea
Market scheduled for Saturday,
February
11
from
10
a.m. to
4
p.m.
Proceeds from this event will
help fund projects for three on-
campus
groups:
the Marist
College Commuter Union, the
Marist Cheerleaders and Campus
Ministry. The groups' proposals
for funding were selected from
numerous submissions from
various· - college
clubs
and
organizations.
The
Commuter
Union
requested funds to help refusbish
the
Commuter
Lounge · in
Donnelly Hall with new plants,
wall coverings, and tables. The
flea market's profits will also help
the Marist College Cheerleaders
purchase new uniforms. The
Campus Ministry's project
to
help the disadvantaged of Ap-
palachia .. by sending Marist
students to spend a week with the
needy wili. also_ receive_aid. _
.
473-1576
PALACE
Diner·& Restaurant
Breakfast · Lunch · Dinner
Fresh Seafood -
·
Steaks - Chops
Cocktails·_- Baking on Premises
Show your college ID
and
get
a
FREE Glass of Beer
with yot.1r meal!
7%
DISCOUNT
194
.
WASHINGTON STREET
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
(Next to
All Sport. A short Walk
from
Marlst)
.
,..
,
'{
:.:-~
.:
,
·,
.·...
.
..
(.IJ
Stanley H.
Kaplan·
The
Smart
MOVE!.
CLASSES FORMING NOW AT
~-H.
IOIPIAN
EDUCATIONAL CENTER.LTD
Test Preparation Specialists .
-
Since 1938
For Information, Pleasf} Call:
.914-948·
7801
WINTER INTERSESSION
at
January
.
3-20
1984
MA.RIST COLLEGE
1984 WINTER INTERSESSION
JANUARY 3 - 20, 1984
DAY DIVISION (Monday: Friday, 9:00 a.m.-11:45 a.m.)
COMM 20102-29 Mass Communication
CMSC 21102-29 Introduction to Computing
CMSC 21232·29 . Language Study• Pascal
CORE 40103-29 World Views and Values
CORE 40170-29 World Literature
.
PSYC 78101·29 Introductory Psychology
Mark, Raphael
Kolibabka, lwona
TBA
TBA
Anderson, Don
TBA
EVENING DIVISION (Monday · Thursday, 6:00 p.ni.-9:30 p.m.)
BUSI · 15102-37 Business and
Society
•
Griffin,
John
(dual listed as CORE 40150-37)
..
BUSI 15220-37 Financial Management*""
. Gila, Raymond
BUSI
15140-37 Marketing Management
Maness, Jake
(dual listed as COMM 202"0·37)
COMM 20327-37 Writing For Radio and TV
·
(dual listed as Eng 30327-37)
CMSC 21101-37 Introduction to Computing
CORE 40150-37 Business and Society
(dual listed as BUSI 40150-37)
CORE 40110-37 Meaning of History
ENG
30312-37 Workshop in Technical
&
Professional Writing
Eng
30327-"37 Writing For Radio and TV
MATH 58100-37 Basic Algebra
MATH 58120-37 Pre-Calculus
PSYC 78215-30 Psyc of Interpersonal Comm•
PSYC 77545-50 Psyc of Communication•
REST 79392-30 Special Topics in Religion I:
Touring Egypt and_ Israel ..
REST 79393-37 Special Topics In Religion II:
Does God Exist?
Delcolle, Paul
Vivona, Bob
Griffin, John
White, John
C.
Micolas, Mark
OelColle, Paul
Pantaleo, Joe
Matuk, Frank
Scileppi, John
Scileppi, John
Best, Eugene
O'Callaghan,
Michael
SPONSORED LEARNING (VIDEO)
ART
08150-37 Shock of the New
Moore , Allen
ONE
CREDIT
EVENING DIVISION (Monday-Thursday, 6 p.m.-7:45
p.m.)
January 3 • 12, 1984:
CMSC 21390-37 APL Language
TBA
, •Forthe students traveling to Barbados.·
••For the students touring Egypt and Israel.
•••BUSI 15220 has been moved to Marlsl's
new
extension center In the DutchessM all.
/
THE CONCEPT:
Winter Intersession offers students· the
opportunity
to
complete college courses on an ac
0
celerated basis.
·
Courses run for three weeks, from January 3-20 .. Day
classes meet Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 11:45
a.m. Evening classes meet Monday through Thursday,6:00
p.m. to 9:30 p.m: ·
·
_,
·
. REGISTRATION: Registration will be accepted in person
thru December 22 at Room 200, Donnelly Hall. For further
· information 9all 471-3240, .ext. 221.
TUITION: Tuition is $140 per credit hour. There is a
· registration fee of . $10. Payment must be made by
December 28 in order to reserve a place in class.
LIBRARY: Open January 3-20, Monday thru Friday,
8
a.m ..
to 6 p.m.; Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
A
Marist ID or
Course Receipt is required.
WITHDRAWAL: A 50% refund will be allowed to
a
student
who withdraws after one class. No refunds will be permit•
ted after the second class meeting.
The college reserves the right to cancel a course due to
lack of enrollment or to make changes in the schedule.
Also avallable: MATH
58130-37
lntroduclory
Statistics
(evenings)
Prof NIison
.
.
December 15, 1983 ·
THE CIRCLE• Page
3 - - •
·
.,
$Chedllliflg
rri.iXllP fQfces dance to relocate
by
Christoph~r Serafini
·
•
·
·scarchilli, C.U.B
.
social chair-
person said. "Betty (Yeaglin) was
For some s~udents and f~c~lty
to
.
send in the notice (to the
at Marisi,
.
the big question this
·.
Mccann Center) requesting the
·
holiday season is
.
not what they
facility for Friday, Dec. 16. ". '
will find undfa the tree
·
next
·
That request was senc; ac-
Sunday
.
morning, but why
.
the · cording to Yeaglin, but not until
annual campus-wide Christtllas
.
late August. At that time, Yeaglin
dance will riot
·
be held in the
received no answer from Ron
Mccann Center -
as they had
Petro,
the
.
Mccann
.
athletic
. Quinn said that the Mccann
Center had published a booklet of
events al the same time Yeaglin
published the events calendar. A
copy was sent
10
·
her in early
·
September, he
.
said.
But Yeaglin said she did not
receive any list of events from the
Mccann .
.
planned last May.
-
director, or Dick Quinn, the
"We're taking the bull of the
The College Union
Board
assistant athletic director.
problem even though we are 1he
(CU.B.), which sponsors the
• "I assumed we had it (Mc-
ones who received no prior
event, and Betty Yeaglin, the · Cann),"
Yeaglin
said.
"We
notice,"
Quinn said.
"Belly
coordinator of college activities,
didn't receive word· that we
(Yeaglin) never sent us any
said they found out that they
couldn't have it, so I thought
request, but she assumed that she
could
not
use the McCann
there would be no problem."
had the facility. Does she allow
facilities for the dance less than a
By September, Yeaglin had sent · students to assume anytl)ing when
month before its scheduled date.
Petro the
·
events calendar for the
·
they request rooms from her in
Although they claim to have filed
campus and a
-
fist of events in a
.
the campus center?"
a
request
for
the
McCann
separate memo, she said
.
.
The conflict of events was
sometime last
·
summer,
·
the
Petro said that he never got the
discovered, according to Yeaglin,
faciiity will be used by IBM
calendar, the memo, or Yeaglin's
at a director's meeting between
.
,
employees
for
their
·
own
original request.
If
he had, he
Petro and herself
·
1ess than a
Christmas
dance
·
during
the
said, he would have told Yeaglin
month ago. With such short
weekend of Dec. 16.
·
that C.U.B. could not use the
notice, Yeaglin said, it would
·
"We did the C.U.B. calendar in
Mccann
because
IBM
had
have beem impossible to find any·
May before we left for summer
booked the facility a year in
other location for the dance, even
break, and at that time we had set
advance for its own annual · off-campus.
the date for the dance," Jane Christmas dance.
"We had no choice," Yeaglin
Zemba
-
gains
-
recognition
on national television
by
Veronica O'Shea
viding me with the opportunity to
_
really break into the fashion in-
Linda Zemba, winner
.,
of the dustry," said Zemba.
198 3
Cutty
Sark
Most
The national show will be the
Outstanding
U.S.
.
Student same segment that was seen on
Designer
Award
will
gain Albany's WTEN, in which Zemba
widespread recognition when she displayed her award winning sket-
appears
nationally
on
P .M. ches and designs. Zemba said this
Magazine at the end of this mon-
segment may be edited to shorten
th.
·
it but that it will still include most
Zemba, who was filmed by of her work.
P .M. Magazine at
.
Marist in
September was featured in a seg-
ment that was aired on Oct
.
13 on
Channel 10 (WTEN), ABC's af-
filiate station in Albany.
·
.
In
.
terms of national exposure,
· .
the upcoming segment
will
be
seen on 125 of ABC's affiliated
stations across the United States.
Zemba says she is very excited
about the national exposure her
Although certain the
..
show
will
be aired the last week
of
December, Zemba said she will
not know the exact date
-
until a
week before the show. "I am
-
waiting for the Albany based
P.M. "Magazine to be contacted
by the national based
P .M.
Magazine, so that they will con-
tact me," Zemba said.
·
.
designs will receive. "Hopefully I
"I am really looking forward
to
said, "but to hold the dance in the
cafeteria.•·
Quinn said that he believes
Yeaglin knew about the IBM
dance at least three months ago
because of the
various ad-
vertisements and memos he sent
out, and because of a con-
versation he had with Christine
Lapham, director of public in-
formation
.
While trying to arrange a
Marist
employee Christmas
social, Lapham was told by Petro
three months ago that she could
not use the McC:ann because of
the IBM dance scheduled for
Saturday, Dec. 17. According to
Quinn, Lapham then tried to
book
the cafeteria for
that
weekend, but was told by Yeaglin
that
the students'
Christmas
dance was going to be held there.
Quinn said that he believes
Y eaglin knew she could not use
the McCann Center before she
met· with Lapham three fnonths
ago, and had already reserved the
cafeteria for the dance. Then,
according to Quinn, she waited
until just a month prior to the
dance to tell C.U.B. about the
change in location.
Yeaglin denies having any prior
knowledge of the IBM dance or
that C.U.R could not use the
McCann during the weekend of
Dec
.
16.
Lapham denies ever speaking
to Yeaglin about the employee
social or saying that Yeaglin had
booked the cafeteria at least three
months ago for the student dance
.
Regardless of who, if anyone,
is at fault, the student Christmas
dance
will be held tomorrow night
in the cafeteria, and the IBM
Christmas dance will be held
Saturda
·
y night in the Mccann
Center. Although they will not be
held the same night, both dances
could not be held in McCann
because
lBM
needs at least a full
day to set up for their event,
according to Quinn.
"Although everything worked
out, I still think it's unfair that we
were notified so late," Scarchilli
said.
will gain en~ugh publicity with
·
all the exposure and opportunities
the
·
show
.
that
.I
will receive some this
.
show can provide
.
me with
job or internship offers
..
I
am
and I hope that my future career
hoping that the right people see
in fashion will benefit from it,"
·
the show and contact me, pro-
said Zemba.
·
Fashion major Linda Zemba at work
In
the fashion design studio. (Photo
by
Gina
Franciscovich)
Ryan explains
re~ign(ltion
by
Donna
Piper
Francis won't deal with that:'he
said, "because it will take away
Kevin Ryan, who left his job as
the fee that the hospital receives."
:
co-ordinator of health services at
. Ryan further
'
said that the
Marist in November,
.
said that the school should have facilities on
main reason for his resignation campus
that would
.
handle
was a lack of cooperation from emergency situations. He said
the school in expanding its health
that if a student has a medical
services.
.
problem, the emergency
-
room at
·
•~What I wa
·
s told was going to St. Francis will see that student
be an expanded health service in a
one time and then refer him to
·
·
progressive
·
atmosphere
really somewhere else.
didn'.t exist," said Ryan
.
"The emergency room is for
One of the reasons for this is
the community," he said.
·
"It
that.Marist _does not know what doesn't recognize any special
·
kind of health services it wants,
problems that college people
according to Ryan.
"Marist might have, such as follow-up
doesn't know how to gr~w
·
and care and education pertaining to
expand into what a college health their condition."
service could and should be," he
B
_
ecause of this, Ryan said that
said. He added that the potential St. Francis Hospital cannot give
for an improved health service the kind of health care that a
needs to be realistically evaluated
.
college health service can give.
by someone who is experienced in
·
"They're two totally different
the field of college health services.
fields," he said.
.
Several expansions could be
The Rev. Richard A. LaMorte,
experienced, according to Ryan, assistant dean of student affairs,
if the school performed certain said that while some aspects of
services ·on campus that
.
are the health services at Marist do
presently being handled at St. need to be improved, Ryan's
Francis Hospital.
ideas of expansion would be an
Ryan said that a number of unreasonable use · of student
laboratory tests can be done in the funds.
campus office, which
wo~ld
"Everyone like
10
see programs
reduce the time
·
and money m-
grow, but one has to be prac-
volved for the patient. However, tical," said LaMorte. "We could
"the
.
medical director at St.
'
·
continued on
page 9
Radio
continued from page
1
profits," s~id Platt. "It has to try
.
to
.
provide a service through
breaking even. It doesn
'
t have
10
put money in people's pockets
.
"
Norman said a radio station
would "apply the liberal
·
arts
concept (of learning) " because
the
-
students would research,
. writ~, produce and create radio
programs.
·General Manager of WMCR
Robert LaForty
·
criticized the
current state of broadcasting at
Marist's radio station. He said
that
WMCR
has
·
a
small
listenership because stud~nt work
at the station is strictly extra-
curricular. If advanced radio
broadcasting
students
were
required to work at the station for
grades, said LaForty, the quality
of broadcasting would go up as'"'
well as the listenership.
"New Paltz promotes
the
college by promoting its station,"
said LaFony. "Vassar has no
communication majors and it has
a better station than we do."
LaForty added that other college
stations receive funding from
their college, but WMCR gets
money only from the Student
Activity Fee.
"A college-wide commitment is
needed," said Norman, in regard
to building his proposed FM
·
station. He said the station could
be
a
profit-making
venture.
"(Marist
·
has) sold 22 of 27
Division One basketball games to
WKIP
under Marist production.
We've made money
.
We make
$700 in commissions
.
We could
do that over our own station and
take it ail," he said, referring to
the fact that Marist must split
commissions with
.
WKIP on sales
and production.
Norman proposed that to help
in
station operation,
seniqr
4 charged in car vandalism
by Mark Stuart
Four Marist College students
were charged with third-degree
·
criminal mischief, a felony, in
connection with a Dec. 4 incident
in which two cars were damaged
at a local service station.
Stephen J. Davison, 19, of
Woodbury, Conn., and Robert
Man ng, 19, of Merrick, N.J.,
and two 18-year-old students,
whose names were not released
because of their youthful status,
were arraigned before Judge
George Marlow and remanded to
the Dutchess County Jail in lieu
of$100bail.
The four were set to appear in
court last Monday, but the case
was adjourned until Dec. 16.
According
to
Poughkeepsie
Town Police, an officer saw the
youths walking over cars at the
Inspection Store on Delafield
Avenue about 1:50 a.m. Sunday,
Dec. 4. Upon investigation, the
officer
found
that
a
1973
Chevrolet and a 1975 Oldsmobile
were dented and the windshield
wiper from one of the cars was
damaged.
student interns from the Arts and
Letters and Management Studies
divisions could work in
the
programming
and
sales
promotion areas.
The process of establishing a
radio station is a long and
complex one. A basic license
application -
Form 301 -
asks
the FCC for a construction permit
to build a station. This form is 30
pages long; it details personal and
financial qualifications and how
local
·
needs and, interest will be
served by programming.
At
this point, the FCC would
hold a hearing to address the
application. If a construction
permit is granted, the holder must
pass
transmitter
performance
tests before applying for a license.
_
The legal fees involved in this
were estimated in 1980 to be
$5,000. According to Norman's
proposal, the cost beyond that
point would be $15,000.
Should a license be granted, the
station can operate for seven
years before it must renew its
license. The FCC will halt license
renewal
if there exists
any
evidence that the station has
failed to serve the public interest;
an example would be a petition
from a citizens group opposing
the station's operation.
There also exists the possibility
that a would-be license might file
a
"mutually exclusive
ap-
plication," which claims that the
would-be licensee can do a better
job of operating the station than
the current owners. In this case,
the FCC would hold a hearing to
make a decision.
I
j
I
I
j
j
·'
·
1
J
.
I
j
.I
I
Page
4- THE CIRCI.E - December 15,
·
1983
CAMPUS
CONED
-
-
-
.
.
··.
,
.
__
..._
.
Right to
·
know
·
The students' right to know. Is it a right or
·
a privilege?
.
·
-
·
·
Are we registering for classes that will
turn out to be a bigger surprise than the size
of the add-drop line?
Who are all these names and numberswe
are paying $140 a credit hour to listen to for
14weeks?
·
.
Well, there are those who feel that the
information
·
on those student evaluation
sheets are privileged information
.
The in
·
formation on the sheets are looked at
·
by
staff supervisors and then stashed away
never to be seen by the people who need to
see them the most -, the
.
students. The
~tudents have no way of learning what kind
of teacher a professor is like except by word
of mouth. The course adviser handout
·
-
sheds no· light on
·
the different teaching
·
styles or personality of a professor. How
many times have
.
you heard of two or three
professors teaching t
_
he same course? It
seems that
·
·
these evaluations would
·
facilitate choosing
·
the correct instructor
for the students•individual needs.
.
-
But all we have now is word of mouth to
Judge by.
A sort of "Of the students,
·
by the
students" information system.
·
·
·
Mr. Toscano said he feels if people who
provide
·
feedback knew
.
the evaluations
would be seen publicly, their input could be
"ruined." If the evaluations are anonymou
·
s,
how could the input be ruined?
Now the CSL is planning
·
to have
evaluations of it own: a sort of "Of the
students, by the students" venture.
Will the Powers That Be stand by and be
outdone? Or will ~hey stop fooling them-
selves and the students by believing
In-
formation on professors is privileged for
themselves.
The students, above all, have a RIGHT to
-
know.
·
Be
·
merry
.
.
It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas.
- ·
.
But unfortunately, it doesn't always feel
person on an add-drop line for the Registrar,
I watched couples kiss and children gaze at
the famous tree that towers c:iver the plaza ..
It was then that I realized there was no
definable reason for our presence there - ·
that way.
·
-
·
Yes, the dorm lounges are glistening with
holiday decor, and the Christmas tree
·
stands colorfully decorated in the cafeteria.
Students
.
are shuffling
·
back
.
and forth
between their usual campus
·
activities and
.
.
Chr\stmas shopping. But there's something
·_
more to Christmas
·
that many of us just have
not
.
yet
·
experienced. It's something you
·
can't touch -
and
it
cannot be found in
:
pine-sce_nted air freshener
-
or even in
pres~nts
_under
the tree. It
.is
a feeling
_about
Christmas that encourages
.
a smile or wink;
it is often missing from people's holiday
agenda '-- people at Marist are certainly no
exceptions.
.
.
For the first time, I sen
_
sed this feeling in
the throng at Rockefeller Center last .week.
Many of the thousands of people who were
crowded
_
into the
.
small area actually
seemed happy to be there, although they
couldn't move without bumping a n
_
eighbor.
As I stood there, as frustrated as the last
·
except, perhaps, to catch some of the in-
tangible spirit.
·
·
•
_
·
.
You don't have to be in New York City to
~
feel it. This part of Christmas can thrive
·
_
.
wherever there are people. Remember that
person who
.
you always see
·
between
classes,
-
but
.
you never
·
bother to
·
acknowledge? Say hello. Maybe it's also a
good
,
time to stop your racial jokes in the
presence of your minority friend who has
been hearing them all semester. Try saying
-.
"sorry" and "thank you" more often. And
don't forget your professors. They are not
machines designed to blurt out knowledge
and slap you with a final grade; they are
humans with feelings.
.
.
Most of all, smile. You may be surprised
how contagious it is. Then you'll be able to
see what Christmas Is really about -
and it
doesn't even have to wrapped.
Editor
Christine Dempsey
Senior Reporters
Associate Editors
Cindy Bennedum
ReaderSWrite
.
.
All lellers must be typetl triple space with a 60
space
margin, and submllled to the
Circle ollice no later than 1 p
.
m. Monday. Shorneoers are preferred
.
We reserve the
fight to edit all letters. Letters must be signed, but names may be withhe!d upon
request. Letters will be published depending upon avallablllty ol space.
.
·,
Christmas dance
To the Marist Community:
As co-chairperson of the
C.U.B. Marketing Committee,
1
·
would like
.
to bring to your at-
.
tention a misrepresentation of the
advertisement pertaining to the
all-campus Christmas dance that
appeare
_
d in last week's
Circle.
The picture may have lead some
to believe that the dance was a
formal
·
and "couples only" event;
this is not the case.
·
The event is one for everyone to
.
.
attend either with friends or a
.
date. Although no formal attireis
required, we encourage people to
"dress to
.
impress" (because
Santa will be \Yatching!).
·
_
.
.
Everyone on the College Union
Board look forward to seeing you
at this very· special event to
celebrate the holiday season.
Very truly yours,
·
Andrew A. Crecca
Co-chairperson
CUB Marketing Committee
Winter intersession
To the Marist Community:
Registration for Winter In-
tersession has been extended'until
December
•
22.
Students may
register at the School of Adult
Education, Room 200, Donnelly
Hall.
Best wishes for the
"
holidays!
Robert F. Sommer
·
·
School of Adult Education
From
-
Ireland
·
-
Dear Editor:
_
filled with musicians
·
.
I
sang with
Just writing to say hello from
some of them who· were raising
the
1
Emerald Isle. Hello! ~ow that
__
money for a senior citizens home .
.
we re gotten that over with, we'll
.
The
·
Guiness was brilliant.
:
·.
-· .·:.
get down to business -
mainly·
-·
..
:
·;
.,
.
_
:}
,:;,_
·:
.:
.
·
.
,.<
·
-:
,
:"
_
.·
Guiness Stout;they say Guiness is
-
·
·
•
Ah well, f've also-been up to
good for you. Well, Dan Rogers
·
the Donegal on the Atlantic coast.
and I are feeling really good
·
. Dan
_
You haven't seen a sunset until
and
.
I live in relative sloppiness you've experienced one on the
across
.
the street from the college.
Donegal shore,
·
with
·
the sun
·
Although, Dan finally bought bed
fading
· ·
behind the Blue
.
Stack
sheets today, after surviving for
8
Mountains, as
·
the water in the
weeks without them. We are both . stin;s path reflects like shards of
involved in many extracurricular stained glass -:::- beautiful! Dan
activities; Dan plays basketball,
has been traveling as well. He's
drinks, studies, drinks and plays been to Glasnevin, Bellfield, and
more basketball. I'm· ·playing Drum·condra (Yeh, right, Una),
basketball, Gaelic football,
and he even went to the Jazz
drinking, studying, doing Karate Festival
.
in Cork, where
·
Joe
.
and mo.re drinking. Now don't get Cel
_
entano and Karyn Grogan are
-
me wrong, drinking isn't our. only studying. Ted Waters showed up
pasttime, but it does
Jake
u
·
p a lot
-.
on our doorstep a few
..
weeks
of our tii_ne
·
;
·
All. the sodalizing
·
back.He's having
a
great time
.
-
over here 1s done
m
the local pub,
we went to see Christy Moore, an
- ·
and Dan and I
.
-
are very
.
social.
Irish
·
ballad
·
singer:
. ·
Collett
_
e
Well, enough of the drink". Our Murphy was in Dublin's fair city
studies
·
are going yery well- Dan along with Ted. She stayed with
is learning how to be a militant
Bonnie
·
Hede
·
and
Grace
socialist and I'm teaching · -
him
Gallagher. Bonnie and Grace are
(Just kidding Dr. Lanning and doing very well. Bonnie made U:s
Mrs. Perrotte). The educational cookies last week and gof us
standards ~re higher over here
invited to the U.S. Embassy for
than at Manst. But, that is mainly Turkey day
·
dinner. Bonnie and
caused by the competition for Grace had seen a lot of Amie
jobs in this country; In Ireland
Rhodes Marianne Constantino
you have to be the best to
"
get a
and K~rry Guerin as well.
I
decent job, you can't simply get
haven't been to Limerick.yet, but
by w!th just a degree. This creates
I'm sure Belinda Kaake is doing
!1
senous atmosphere on campus,
•
fine. She'll get a surprise visit
m
contrast to the lively at-
soon. There are a lot of people at
mosphere of the local pubs.
Marist that Dan and l want to say
We've both
·
done extensive
hello to but you know who you
traveling since arriving in the
are. W~tch yourself Jet and
72
L_and of the Leprachautis. I've
.
Taylor.
h1tched to Galway where I visited
Marie Healy,
Liz Murphy and
Janice Willis; then down to Cork
for the Guiness
Jazz
Festival -
what a blow out! Every pub in the
city had jazz, and the streets were
.
Eileen Hayes
Jane Scarchilli
Business Manager
So long for now,
Patick McCullough
and Daniel J. Rogers
Dublin Ireland
P
.S. Sean Keenan says hello.
Stay tuned for
next
episode.
·
Jeannie Ostrowski
The
Mark Stuart
Cartoonist
Christopher Serafini
Advertising Manager
Sean Kenny
Circle
Sports Editor
John Bakke
Calendar Editors
Cathy Houlihan
Circulation Mana
.
ger
Cathy McGarity
·
.
Photography Editor
Jell Kiely
Peggy Hasson
Faculty Advisor
David McGraw
by Richard
Copp
animated specials on
10
its prime
lime line up. "A Snow White
·
With the
.
holiday season in full Christ mas"
has
the
.
classic
swing, the networks are-spreading
.
maiden
married
to
Prince
Christmas cheer with a mixture of ~harming,
and
once again
traditional
.
.
programming, threatened by the Wicked Witch-
seasonal series episodes, yuletide a special tailored only to Snow
musical specials,
.
and far
.
too White's biggest fans; the Peanuts'
much garbage and reruns.
"A Charlie Brown Christmas" is
Yule
tube
·
Christmas will always be a
time
of woe for the three networks
'·
because it is a time when viewers
are far too few, and worthwhile
offerings arc all but nonexistent.
This year promises to be no
exception. However, with the big
day only a week and a half away,
once again with us lo brighten the
holidays even more in a tale for
all ages; and Dr. Seuss' "How the
Grinch
.
Stole
Christmas,"
a
charming tale of togetherness in
the true Christmas spirit, will
always
·
remain
.
one of my
favorites.
and the shopping days left even
ABC has also jumped on the
less, the networks are dusting off bandwagon with its own specials
the old reliable ornaments for
for children. "Ziggy's Gift" and
thier familiar tree of Christmas
"Christmas Comes to Pac Land"
programming.
• ,
are a pair of inferior offerings if
CBS has sprinkled a
few
only for their direct relationship
As
'83
comes to an abrupt halt,
no one can deny the positive
musical influences which have
emerged.
Once can sec
·
that both videos
and music will be an unmatched
pair in future entertainments, for
example: Billboard's Music Video
Awards. The winners for this year
were:
Goodbye
to
1983
America has
finally
been
·
"rudely awakened" to the fact
·
that new music can be just as
good, if not better than, the old
.
standy-bys. This is, in part, due to
the overwhelming success of
MTV (Music Television).
MTV
has given many per-
formers the expoliure to a mass
audience that they may not have
otherwise received. Videos have
become a major factor con-
tributing to the newfound success
of a recording industry that had
been experiencing a large decrease
Best Overall Video Clip
·Best" Performance.by a Male
Best Use of Video to Enhance
Artist's Image/Song
Best Choreography
-"Beat
·
It," Michael Jackson
Best Overall Long-Form Video-
"Duran Duran"
Best Performance By A Group-
"Gimme All You Loving,"
ZZTop
Best Performance By A Female-
"Love Is A Stranger,"
Annie Lennox (Eurythmis)
Most Innovative
~
.·
-
---
--
·
·
r
j
\
..
.
. \
'
.
:\
;
•
~_I
,
.
in sales.
Songwriters today think in
terms of music, lyrics, and video
interpretation; which for the most
part, is fine. But when the order
begins to· place video first - then
we'll have a problem.
.
Marist College, continuing in
its spirit of Christmas,presents the
All Campus Christmas Holiday
Dance on Friday, December 16,
·
from 9:30 p.m. to 1 :30 p.m. The
dance will be held
·
in the Dining
Hall and includes a $1. admission
fee. Featured will be "Lovlace,"
who is sure to be a hit in starting
off the Marist College party
scene. Come out and enjoy and
·
have a good time! It's all in the
spirit of Christmas! Included are
hot and cold hors d'oeuvres, full
cash bar, and soft drinks as well.
And remember, dress to impress!
There
will
also be pre-dance
Best Art Direction -
"Rockit," Herbie Hancock
Most Effective Use of Symbolism
Best Special Effects-
·
"Pressure," Billy Joel
socials for each individual dorm
to get things rolling for what is
sure to be a "Rock 'n Eve"!
The Mid-Hudson Civic Center
is
·
presenting a Christmas concert
on Friday, December 16 at 8 p.m.
Imre Pallo will be conducting
music from
the
Nutcracker,
Hansel and Gretel,
H.V.P.
Children's Cliorus, the Cappella
Festival and the Community
Mix-
ed Chorus. Tickets will
be
available to student for $3 for an
evening of Christmas Culture.
Thursday, December 15
.
Friday, December 16 Saturd
_
ay, December 17
·
Sunday, December 18
Meetings:
Student ~ff airs
Directors, CC269,
9:30a.m.;
Food Committee,
Candlelight,
11:.15
a.m.;
Council of
Student Leaders,
Candlelight,
5
p.m.;
Psychology Club,
D105,
5 p.m.;
Black Student
CC248, 9:15 p.m.
Mass:
Chapel,
12
p.m.
Academic Review
Session:
Calculus Ill -
Leaming Room,
6:30p.m.
Auditions:
"The Fantastik~,"
theatre, 8 p.m.
Pub
Nile:
Bob LaForty,
9:30p.m.
Meeting:
·
.
Reception:
·
·Mass:
Student Life
Teams,
Gallery Lounge,
Candlelight,
12
p.m.
,
Benoit, Gregory,
·
.
.
.
Chapel, 11 a.m.
Film:
.
.
Commuters,
Champagnat,
New Dorm
Transfers,
.....
scrooge,"
admission
so•
with Marist
ID,
Theatre, 3 p.m.
>
Townhouses,
Garden Apartments
(pick up tickets at
Pre-Dance Socials:
Champagnat Hall,
Gallery and Fireside;
Leo Hall,
Sheahan Hall,
Marian Hall;
North End, Pub;
8p.m.
Holiday Dance:
"Lovelace,"
admission $1,
Dining Hall,
9:30p.m.
·
Commuter Union),
Sp.m.
Reception Dinner:
for above,
5:45 p.m.
Reception:
..
Gallery Lounge (Leo,
Sheahan;New Dorm);
Reception Dinner,
6:45p.m.
Film:
"Scrooge,"
Theatre, 8 p.m.
Bonfire and Caroling:
McCann practice
field, doughnuts,
hot coffee and
hot chocolate,
l0p.m.
Midnight ~ass:
Chapel, 12 p.m.
Lessons and Carols:
Chapel, 4
p.m •
Award Ceremony:
Literary Society,
.
Mosaic Cover Contest,
Fireside, 5:30 p.m.
Film:
"Scrooge,"
so•
with Marist
1,D.,
·
.
Theatre,
7
&
9:30
p.in.
Meeting:
Leo House Council,
CC269,
9 p.m.
.
- December 15,.1983 · THE CIRCLE· Pages--•
with commercialism: "Twas the
either. "familv Tics" on NUC,
Night
Ueforc
Christmas"
"Magnum,
l'.I." and
"The
(narrated by Joel Grey) is a
Jeffersons"
on
CBS,
and
plca
·
sant adaptation of Clement
"Hotel" on ABC arc but a few
or
Moore's ballad; the classic 1969
the weekly
shows
that have
cartoon "Frosty
·
the Snowman"
prepared episodes with Christmas
is still with us with Frosty still in
oriented themes.
fine form; and Burl Ives lends his
voice
to
the most
musical,
memoriable,
and
tearful
Christmas
'
special of them all
·
"Rudolph
the
Red-Nosed
Reindeer.''
NBC brings up
.
the rear every
year with the least number of
·
specials most of which are boring
and forgettable anyway. "Smurfs
Christmas" . and "Chipmunk
Christmas" are there if the kids
have any desire to see them, but
·
even · promotions for this pair
were
big yawns.
Regular series are not about
to
miss out on the holid~y spirit
Most Socially Conscious-
"Allentown," Billy Joel
Best Lighting-
"Every
Breath You Take,"
The Police
Best Editing-
"Maniac," Michael Sembello
Best
Use
of Computer
Graphics/ Animation:
-"Atomic Dog," George Clinton
-"New Frontier," Donald Fagen
Because this is the time of year
when many publications flood
their readers with "Best Of" and
"Top Ten" lists, I made an at-
tempt to assemble one and came
·
up with a list of records that
I
enjoyed immensely during
'83.
If
you haven't heard any of the
following (in no particular order),
try to give them a listen to if ever
possible:
Gang of
4 -
"Hard"
·
Hiroshima - "Third Generation"
Tom Tom Club - "Close To the
Bone"
Talking Heads - "Speaking In
The Hudson Va\ley
·
Country
Dance Co-op announces
it's
Christmas dance to be held on-
-Dec. 17 at St. James Church on
Route 9 in Hyde Park. Nick
Hawes will be the caller for this
dance which will start promptly at
8 p.m. Everyone is welcome!
The Meaning of History class
of Wilma Burke, adjunct in-
structor of history, is sponsoring
a public history exhibit on recrea-
tion and arts in the Hudson
Valley. The topics are designed,
researched and presented by the
students in coordination with
The seri
_
es and specials I have
discussed are only a handful from
the Christmas list of network .
holiday programming, and as
Dec. 25 nears, more and more
shows will make it on prime time.
·
Once the Christmas season
ends, however, we can expect an
upsurge in new programming by
all three networks and probably
some blockbuster movies and
miniseries by February. Until
then,
have
·
a
very
giving
Christmas and a riproaring New
Year, and until next semester,
keeo those TV tubes warm.
Tongues"
Shreikback - "Care"
B-52's - "Whammv"
Kate Bush - "The Dreaming"
Vanity6
·
·
Joan Rivers - "What Becomes a
Semi-Legend Most"
Ministry - "With Sympathy"
Waitresses - "Bruiseology"
Teena Marie - "Robbery"
English Beat - "What is Beat?"
Madonna
Will Powers - "Dancing For
Mental Health"
Golden Palominos
The Cure - "The Love Cats"
(Import)
Eurythmics -
·
"Touch" (Import)
Malcolm McLaren - "Buffalo
Gals"
Art of Noise - "Into Battle" (12"
Single)
Martha Muffins
-
"Danseparc"
(12" Single)
So until next year, keep those
ears open, have a happy holiday,
and let the music p\ay!
their community history projects.
The topics cover 300 years of
history and include the Catherine
St. Community Center, the Dut-
chess County Fair, Community
Theatre, Marist Theatre, Coll-
ingwood Opera
House,
Ice
Hockey in Dutchess County,
semi-pro baseball, ice boating
·
on
the Hudson, the Hudson Valley
Philharmonic, Regatta, Lacross,
the Y .M.C.A., and the James J.
McCann Center. These projects
will be on display on Friday,
December
16
in the library
- Cathy Houlihan
and Peggy Hasson
·.
·-
.
.
•
••
. ,
•
• • , _
•
.
•
~
.
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,
"'
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p
•
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•
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•
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•
>
•
o
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• -
•
•
••
•
•
•
·
Architects
.
s·how
Thomas proposals
·
b)
·
Brian Kelly
Ten architects recently made
presentations
for
the
.
Lowell
-
Thomas building to the Board of
Trustees, administrators, faculty
and staff of Marist College.
Architects presented some basic
concepts about lhe building,
showed their previous work and
gave their ideas on how the
available space could effectively
be distributed between the areas
of communication
·
arts and
computer science
.
"During the lasi week of
October
and
the
first
of
November, eleven architects, who
had contacted us or were con~
.
tacted by us, were a
s
ked to come
to Marist to be b
r
iefed on the
basic
information
on
the
building
,
see the .site and have a
loc,k at the other buildings on
campus," said Edward Waters,
vice preside~! for administration
and finance. Of thos
e
eleven, ten
came back
.
to make formal
presentations
.
.
.
According to Waters, the size
of these architectural
firms
ranged from one person to more
than l00 people.
"Our goal is to get the best use
out of the space available at the
lowest possible cost, Waters said.
According to Waters
,
decision
s
on the distribution of space in th
e
building will be based on need
.
Members of the communication
arts and computer sci
e
nce faculty
we~
e
asked to put in requests
describing the amount of spac
e
they would need. Waters said that
59,000
feet
.
of space
were
requested, while only 25,000 feet
are available.
·
The architects were given a
block diagram of ttie ouilding,
which described how much space
is
available for th
e.
different
disciplines. At the presentations
they described how rhey felt that
space would
·
be be
s
t used
,
ac-
cording to Waters.
Waters said that no decisions
have been made concerning the
final selection of an architect or
exactly how
·
the space
will
be
distributed
.
That will be done by
a
committee con
s
isting of three
·
member of the coll
e
ge's Board of
Trustees. Final decisions should
be made in three to. six months;
Financial
aid notes
The Financial Aid Office i
s
·
now offering off-campus coJlege
Work-Study. opportunities,
_
for
the remainder of the 1983-84
acad
_
eniic year (includirig Winter
Intersession). Eligible students
may work up to tw,enty hours per
week, for minimum
·
·
wage or
moie,
-
at
·
work sites located in
·
several
Dutchess
·
and Ulster
·
county
communtt1es.
Par-
.
ticipating
.
non-profit
.
agencies
include:
The
Adriance
Memorial
Library-Poughkeepsie,
.
The
American
·
Cancer
Society-
Poughkeepsie, The American Red
·
Cross-Poughkeepsie, The· Cary
·
Arboretum~Millbrook~
The
·
Children's Annex-Kingston, The
Children's
·.
Home
of
Poughkeepsie-Poughkeepsie, The
_
Jewish
Community
.
Center-
Poughkeepsie,
The
Neigh-
borhood Services Organization
Center-Poughkeepsie,
•
Ne,
v
Horizons
for
the Retarded-
Millbrook, Poughkeepsie Day
Nursery-Poughkeepsie, Poughk-
eepsie Family Development and
Day Care Center-Poughkeepsie,
St. Regina Coeli School-Hyde
Park and The Y.M.C.A
.
of
Dutchess County-Poughkeepsie.
For
·
•
more information and
application materials, students
are
e
ncouraged to inquire a1 the
Financial Aid Office
,
Adrian
Hall.
.
.
.
·•.
,
·
:
·
·
•
·
"
•
.
.
.
.
•
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•
•
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.
.
..
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.
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.
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.
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.;:.
-
·
:·
;
.
.
..
.
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..
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.
·
•
·
·
•·
·•·
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~ ·
•• ,.,
.
_
·
t• ·
·
·
•
·.
•
t
..
.
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·
-·~·
·.:,;
.
....
.
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....
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. . .
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·
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.
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·
•
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,
_
.,
END
OF
THE SEMESTER.
CLOSING PROCEDURES
.
.
.
.
.
The college residence hall; will close and no services will
-
be available
from December 22 to January 23, 1984.
·
•.
The residence halls
•
will close
·
at 1
l:00
p.m. ·on December 22,
1983.
The last meal of the te
·
rm
.
will be lunch on December 22. Dinner will be
.
served
on
Sunday, January 2
_
, 1984.
.
-
On or before December 22, rooms must be cleaned; all belongings must be taken home or placed in off
campus storage, except those items that ca'o be left in a dresser drawer or in the clQset. The college
will
riot
assume any liability for lost or stolen or damaged items. Y 9ur departure directly affects the ability of
students and professional residence staff to complete their work and move toward their own holiday
plans: therefore
you are to leav~ the residence balls in an orderly fashion on the day of your last exam .
Remember that the following fact9rs will be central to any decision on allowing a student to occupy a
room in Marist residence hal1s for next semester even if you have registered:
1. Disciplinary Recora
2. Academic Standing
.
3. Vacating of room on day of their last exam.
·
4. Condition of room at departure (cleanliness and lack of damage).
Students who have been denied a room for next semester
will
be notified
by
January
6;
1984,
if they have
registered.
If
you do not
intend to return to the reside.rice halls in January, please be sure to r~turn your key to the
resident director;
.
.
·
.
Failure to le
.
ave your room in a clean st~te can result in a
$25.00
fine.
Failure to leave on the day of your last exam can result in low housing priority for fall 1984. As well, an
.
-
authorized early return to the dorms can also result in low priority·
:
·
DEPARTURE PROCEDURES
Each R.A. must inspect each room and file a room inspection form. Students)must
make
an appoint-
.
ment with their R.A.
to
have their room inspected. Upon leaving, you must
_
secure the room (lights off,
appliances disconnected, curtains closed and door locked). Trash bags
will
be distributed by the R.A. to
each
-
resident on December 15 and 16.
We (Jncourage you to do your part to make this period enjoyable for ·all!
On behalf o.( all the residence hall staff, we wish you a safe, enjoyabie and Happy Holiday Season, and
offer our BesrWishesfor the coming New Year.
·
See you in 'January!
~-------------•------------------lllliliiiillii
.
December 15, 1983 · THE CIRCLE· Page
.
1--
7
·
students
·
resign
·
R~A. positions
. bf
Heinz
Warmhold
·
At least scve
·
n members of 1he
residence staff arc leaving their
jobs.
'
·
The
·
reasoris
behind
the
departures are not always exactly
the same, but all of those in-
terviewed described a feeling of
"job btirn out."
·
.
"I
don't
·
have the energy
anymore," said Rich Doughtery,
who has been a freshman
R.A.
·
for tl)e pa.!;t three semesters, most
receptly on Sheah~n first f~oor.
~
•It
·
took too much energy
anymore,'' said Kris Lawas, a
·
2nd semester R.A. who will be
leaving
·
Sheahan
·
third
floor.
Being
.
that Rick O'Donnell is
leaving from Sheahan 2nd, it
makes a clean sweep of
.
the
.
.
building's
R.f\.s.
A.R.D.
Adrienne Ryan noticed during the
.
·
.
semcs1er tha1 "they-lost a
.
lot of semester.
',
their enthusiasm."
_.
An unusual situa1ion exists in
that there arc few harsh words
Another feeling that some of against the. employers from the
the departing R.A.s xoiced was employees who are leaving. "The
·
that
of
·
disillusionment with the entire residence staff was
·
great, as
job. "I don't feel like I'm making were the students,"
said
Lawas,
a difference. I wasn't fulfilling
whose opinion was echoed by
any goals
.
An R.A. should be like others.
a big brother or sister and not just
.
The feelings were mutual from
a
disciplinarian,"
said Tana the Director of Housing Robert
Massaro, a 2nd semester R.A
.
Heywood, who wished chem all
who is leaving Marian 2nd.
luck, The effectiveness of the
·
Others have more pragmatic residence staff
.
should not be
reasons for leaving, "I have a full
effected, according to Heywood,
internship at N.B.C.," said John who described the 30 or so ap-
Garvey who will be leaving plicants as "good" candidates.
Champagnat 1st.
What makes a "good" can-
:
Other factors mentioned in 1he
decisionmaking processing were
things like grades, excessive work
hours, weekend shifts, never
being able 10 not be an R.A., and
the feeling that they just wanted
to be a "real" person
_
for a
didate? Some ideas from the
departing R.A.s are "somebody
who can get along with the
students and be their friend and
earn their respect as well," said
Garvey. "Don't get your hopes
up too high, but put a lot into it,"
said Massaro.
·
Marketing
presentation
Rob Simpson, a Miller Nor-
theast representative, spoke on
"Miller Marketing Strategy" in
the Campus Center last week.
Free Miller beer was available for
attendees. (Photo by Jeff Kiely)
Christmas dance
mistletoe to twinkle toes
.
by Christopher Serafini
many plans -
you
won't
recognize the cafe once we're
Despite
the
complications through."
encountered in
finding
its
The
-
committee had originally
location, the annual campus-wide tried to find an off-campus
Christmas dance will be held location for the dance when they
tomorrow night in the cafeteria.
..
found out they could not have the
The event, sponsored by the Mccann, but decided against it.
Colleg_e Union Board (C.U.B.),
"The biggest problem was
will be a semi-formal dance trying to find a facility that could
featuring the band Lovlace, and give us two rooms, so one could
will
be followed by a buffet be used as a 'drinking room,' "
breakfast.
Scarchilli said. "We also had to
Jane Scarchilli and
Eileen deal -with the problem of tran-
Dearie,
C.U.B.
social chair-
spoitation to and from
the
persons
;
had originally hoped the dance."
dance could be held in the Mc-
Scarchilli said that they are
Cann
.
Center but, because of a going
-
to stress the idea of this
conflict with the scheduling at being a dance-'- not a mixer -
iri
that facility, t_hey have-settled for
·
the cafeteria.
.
.
the cafeteria.
,
·
Despite its on-campus ad-
"Now that we know we have vantage, the cafeteria has at least
the cafeteria," Dearie said, "We
.
one disadvantage -
its size.
are really psyched. We have so Scarchilli and Dearie are ex-
SEASONS
GRE~TINGS
FROM
·
FrQm Tom Welsh, Campus
Rep, and Your Friends at
River Distributing
pecting 800 people to attend the
··
dance, which may result in a tight
squeeze, since they plan to have
various buffet tables and dining
tables set up as well as a large
dance floor in front of the band.
"With all that they are talking
about," Frank Scott, of the
Seiler's Food Service, said; "they
are going to run into some
trouble. It will probably be
packed."
Betty Yeaglin, the coordinator
_
of college activities, said that the
alumni dance held in the cafeteria
in
November had only 600
people, and it was "shoulder-to-
shoulder ." However, the alumni
dance did not use the new dining
room adjacent to the
1;afeteri~.
Yeaglin said that with this room
open, the Christmas dance would
be crowded, but not unbearable.
In addition to the live band
Lovlace, which has played at
several
·
other Marist events in the
past
·
three years, the Christmas
dance will
feature hot hors
d'oeuvres and a cash bar.
Also, pictures taken with Santa
Claus will be offered at $1 each.
In an attempt to keep the dance
more
"open,"
the
partition
between the new dining room and
the
.
cafeteria will be left open -
only the buffet table of hot hors
d'oeuvres will
separate the
drinking room from the dance
floor.
"We'll have 10 monitor the
flow of alcohol much more
closely, but it will be worth the
.
effort," said Jim Barnes, C.U.B.
president.
Barnes also said that he feels
that the Christmas dance is the
most important event of the
s·emester, because it is the last
.
The Council
Leaders would
of
like
Student
to en-
to
·
par-
al I
students
the first
Faculty
courage
ticipate in
Government
tion.
Student
Evalua-
·
Evaluations will be held:
Monday -
Thursday
December 19th-22nd
At the following times:
10-11
a.m.
1 • 2
p.m.
4 • 5
p.m.
8 • 9
p.m.
Outsi
_
de the Security Off ice.
chance students will have to get
together before exams.
"It's the total event that puts
·
the capstone on the semester,"
Barnes said.
"It's
the last chance
to get everyone together one last
time in 1983
.
"
The dance will be starting at
9:30 tomorrow night. Admission
will be $1 with a
cash
bar. Dress is
semi-formal
:
Marist, Vassar
plan joint effort
by Veronica O'Shea
and Cindy Bennedum
A program in Spe'cial and
Elementary Education
to
be
offered by Marist and Vassar
Colleges has been approved by
the Marist College
.
Academic
Affairs Committee
.
The program, approved by the
-
AAC after consultation with the
Faculty Executive Committee, is
now in the process of being
ap-
proved by the entire faculty of
both colleges.
According the
Elizabeth Nolan,
director of
Student Academic Affairs, the
decision on the faculty approval is
expected by Friday.
If the approval is granted by
both colleges, the next step would
be• to submit the proposal to the
State Education department for
its
sanction.
The Marist-Vassar program
will
give students from both
colleges the opportunity to gain
dual teaching
.
certification in
elementary and special education.
Although the existing resources
are strong, both colleges intend to
increase their holdings in the field
of special education in order to
strengthen the program. Com-
puter facilities
will
be
in
-
corporated into the design of the
special
education
·
curriculum by
.
both colleges
.
Marist and Vassar both plan 10
increase their library acquisitions
in special education, and Marist
will add a
full-time faculty
member for the program.
With the approval of the
program,
Marist's
current
sophomore
·
c1ass will be the last
class to graduate with dual
certificaton from
.
Marist and
Mount St. Mary
.
In the new arrangement, Vassar
will
modify some of its existing
courses
to highlight special
education,
while
Marist
will
introduce four new courses as
well as a special education student
teaching program.
Currently,
Marist commits
$28,000
10
the maintenance of its
program with Mount St. Mary.
According to the proposal, the
estimated costs of the Maris1-
Vassar program which includes
the expense of a full-time in-
structor, will amount
10
ap-
proximately $38,000 a year.
·
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Page8•
THECIRCLE·--·-
-
-----------
LOST: Pearl ring, 12/10/83 in
pub ladies' room. Sentimental
value. Reward offered. No ques-
tions asked. 473-0010.
To all my friends,
Merry
.
Christmas; Geoff. So-
Thanx for all the good times meone is going to miss you -
and support you gave me this
Your Special
K
Brian,
semester. Merry Christmas and
good luck on your exams.
Love always,
.
Tom "Murph"
I'm going to miss all of you so
much! Love always, Gina
ToF: mule
Happy New Year! Wishing you
luck for junior year in Europe!
·
Love from,
Kathy Meyers-
I can't deal with you, so don't
We know that crime doesn't
try and make me.
pay, but we hope for your sake
·
Grace
Jeanmarie,
Can you top California -
last
-
·
spring break? Sure can! See you
in March!
Grace
Bonnie, Kerry and Aime,
"Can we talk," 3,000 miles?
What's mail -
you tell me!
.
·
Lake Granee
Chris, Jean
&
Cindy,
"You're a real kinky girl -
from your head down to your
toenails" -
Miss ya-Party up!
Superfreak
To all the Football players with
super-inflated
egos
:
Good-
bye-Good-bye Forever!!
·
Love You Too:
?
that it does. Good luck in your
·
future endeavors!
Love,A3
Law student
A
.
quiet dinner sounds nice!
I'll
bring the Asti Spumanti and the
dessert. .... you name the time.
Guess Who????
John (1.H
.
C.)
·
.
Meet
us
in CC 268 for a secret
interlude ...
Your "butt buddies"
Karen & Karen,
We think you are the sweetest'
gals in the C.S.L.
Guess Who I &
II
Jim - Happy 19th birthday!
Enjoy yourself like I enjoyed
mine!
Your sophomore "friend"
Wanted -
A professional ·RCA
recordist -
inquire at Gregory
House.
To Lizzie-Bits:
We
wiJJ aJJ rni
_
ss
you, but you
·
know why I'll miss
you the most! Take
·
care. Don't
seduce any unsuspecting interns!
Mel, Patti, Lynne, Cammie,
·
Marie, Jeane, -Lisa and Casey,
Thanks for a great birthday!!
All my love, Rick
Dear Eileen, Susan, Jane, Chris,
Cindy, Cathy,
·
Jeannie, Kathy
and Diane,
Thanks for a great semester. I
hope all of you have a great
Christmas.
Love, Linda
Dear Bren, El, Kath, Jo, and Di,
Merry Christmas. Let's have a
great vacation to add to our many
great
high school
·
memories.
Thanks
for being the wonderful
friends you are. I love you all,
Joe's bound!
Love, Lisa
Lynne - You always seem
to get
the cutest W.P. guys!! How do
you do it???
Hutch, Leo
5 & Leo 6
Thanks for a great semester!
Good luck in the future.
KStarsky
Hey Bruso-
You have tuna fish on your
finger and here's a pair of
binoculars for the view.
Faria
To the Freshman Class
'
Have
a
really
super
Christmas!
·
Lin
_
da
Dear Mom, Dad,
J,
Weed, and
Marci,
·
Keep smiling and don't forget all
your friends up here at the Big M.
-
·
Love, Marta
I love you all. I wish you every
happiness in the coming year.
Let's
have
another
great
Christmas with lots of love and
no arguments!
All
my love,
Linda
Second Floor Sweethearts -
Have a super Christmas!
.
·:
Thanks for a great semester.
·
Love, Your
RA.
Annie
M. -
I'm sure Santa will
be gqod to you
,
you've been such
·
a
nicegirL
-Marl - Carleen-
.
.
.
Happy holidays, let it snow, let
.
it snow.
Annie - hope your holiday
season is made of moments to .
remember, Merry· Christmas.
.
Love your roommie
Lori & Billy
/
,
·
.
.
Thanks for everything, hope
·
your
.
holidays are all happy ones.
Kelly
Wynda Smit-
,
Everything's
O
.
K.
and I WUV
·
U!
-Marts·
Moe, Trisha, Kelly, Lisa,
_
Annie,
Martha, Cathy
Thanks for everything, It's
been a real Holiday .
.
Raul and Carlos
.Feliz Navidad
Col
Uds. sonJuerga Animales toda
la noche.
·
·
Col, Moe, Kelly
Marta, Maize
Kelly andDonna,
.
I'll keep an ear open for any
longdistanceP.K's!
,
.
··
Merry Christmas
Annie
Kelly,
.
Merry Christmas to my favorite
roomie!
·
·
Love, Annie
P ;S. Give my regards to the
peng1;1ins!!
Tore,
.
•
.
Rick,
:
··
.
Jeg elsker deg reldig mye, hele
-.
Maybe next year_ in Jersey!!
tiden; hvert sekund, hver · dag.
Merry Christmas, anyway!
Merry Christmas
'
·
Love, Annie
din, Kelly
·
- -
·
-
-
·
- - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Maureen
Colleen,
·
·
Raul a!Jd
.
CathJ
..
'
I
would never have m~de it
Carlos,
.
.
without you. Thanks for
·
always
Merry ,~hnstmas and a Happy
.
being there.
·
New Ear
•
•
Love sis
Love, Corn
Cheres Ryann, Patti, Lou Ann,
Je vous souhaite un Joyeux
Noel
·
et une tres bonne annee a
Paris ou ou que ce soit,
Love Maria
Dear Ladies - I'm very sorry for
my rudeness last weekend.
Gerry Mulligan
To THB's - Thanx for an In-
teresting
and enjoyable semester.
Have a Merry Christmas and
good luck on Finals.
YourU.C.
Tom "Murph"
Leo I- Have a great Christmas-
You guys are the best-
Here's to next year-
Tony
Maureen
Beware of steps! They trip peo~
pie up.
?Guess???
P .S. Have a nice Christmas.
·
Congratulations Teresa,
You now own the biggest
reputation on campus!
Guys,
Looking for a good time?
GotoC506
P .S. You won't have one.
KellyF.
Dear Santa,
All I want for Christmas
is ... You Know!!
Happy B-Day, Gary A. -Are
you legal yet?
. Gary A. is a virgin!
.
Even the crack of dawn turned
him down!
Hey Gary,
Are you really a d**k or is
everyone lying.
Gary
Just because it's your birthday,
it still doesn't mean that you can
crawl and blow
.
chunks on the
·
floor again
.
Hey Gary,
Are you really that good, or is
Kissalick lying?
Gary,
Poses in the nude: Live at 5
:
00
p.m., Thursday night, Room 513.
Come 1, come all.
To
a
special bunch of friends,
Merry Christmas,
Michael and Suzanne
WALLY,
BURP!
Merry Christmas -
yourroomie
Merry Christmas
Skippy, Beam, Hitch, Tootie,
Scavutz,
·
Ivan, Wally, Tony,
Opey, Tard, and the rest or "our
Gang."
Friends Always,
· Andre
To
mycrobear and all his buddies
Merry Christmas! I'm gonna
miss ya!
With Love, Paula
Pam, Thea, Erica and Sue,
Well, it was interesting, work,
the Murphs, OLP, and of course
puffs!
·
·
Love,
J.M.
To the Fag,
Someday I'm gonna tell ori
.
you!!
J
.
M.
Carol,
..
Have a good break! Maybe
.
next semester we'll
·
get past the
staring
and
accomplish
something!?
Pablo
591,
How's your hand? My box is
overflowing. Thanks a lot. The
Ball is in.
Your court, will you return the
volley?
524
LB.
·
Buddies
til
your
hair
straightens out wbile playing
with
Baby Huey in the bathtub while
throwing the Fridge
.
You are
a
nip! Glad we met.
Skinners leaver
.
To7 Ladies,
Two of you are headed to the
nearest
A.A
.
Club, I'm afraid to
light a match around yo
,
u two. I
hope the PF's treat you b_etter.
Naizret, thanks for smiling, yours
·
is the best on campus, you really
ar
_
e beautiful.
.
·
T.H. A-3 bottorri, you ladies
are the greatest: Thanks for keep-
ing me sane. I hope next semester
is just as fun! Jeannie, I hope
Santa brings you a boyfriend, it
will help your RTO.
Leslie,
Have a Happy
Mgr.
Next time you get drunk, I want
to pull you
·
around on the floors
of the Campus Center -
you put
on a good show.
Scruf
.
WINTER
INTERSESSION
.
.
.
HOUSING CHECK-IN
Check-in will take place
·
on· Monday,
January 2, 1984 from 12:00 Noon to 5:00
p.m.
in
the Housing Office Rm. 271
Campus Center~ -
Room assignments and keys will only
be issued to those who have registered
in the Housing Office and have receipt
of Housing Payment from the Business
Office.
·
·
,
All intersessio
·
n students will be hous-
·
ed on the 2nd, 3rd and 4th floors at
Champagnat.
QUESTIONS?
PLEASE
.
CQME
TO
·THE HOUSING OFFICE
.
.
.
.
.
·
•
.
' : .
The College Union Boatd
. invites the entire Marist
Coml11unity
to
·
·
attend
.
.
C
The ~llcampus
f)
(thriilmaS
·10ance
.
featuring the sounds
.
of
.
.
.
.
.
LOVELACE
Friday, December 16, 1983
9:30 P.M. to
.
1:30 A.M.
in the
Dining Hall
$1.00
hors d'ouvres, soft drinks, and cash bar available
Santa is watching so dress to impress.
.Affirtnative-Actiori·-
·
- - - - -
•
'
••
'
.
•
.,.,
< /
.
continued froni page 1
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
. persons promoted at Marist in the •
. last year were female.
.
According to statistics from the
C_ollege and University· Personnel
Administration,
. nationwide
• private
co-educational
inc
stitutions have
a ·
21 percent
female and 3.S percent minority
participation' rate on their ad-
ministration staffs, whileMarist's
current . figures show a 44.S
percent female and 13.2 percent
minority incidence.
· Despite the national averages,
,· the task force found 'that "the
avaiJabi!ity of members of
protected classes in the labor pool
exceeds · the.· incidence in the
College's workforce." This is
most evident, they reported, "in
the faculty and administrative
staff areas."
In its report to Middle" States,
the task force said that Marist
does have an adequate statement
regarding Affirmative · Action,
but "it is clear to us .that the
results currently being produced
represent only minimal progress
as Marist continues.to grow in the
number of women and minority
students.''
The task force also concluded
that "it is critical that faculty and
total staff provide appropriate
role models for the students."
"Marist has a history of
inertia," the report said. "That
can impede progress unless the
president, in concert with the
entire
Marist
community,
maintains a high Equal Oppor-
tunity
Employment/
Affirmative Action profile.''
Dr. Eugene Best, associate
professor of religious studies, has
been the head of the Affirmative
Action Office- at Marist since
1976. With the changing over of
_the college from an all-male
institution, problems arose as to
how to balance the faculty and
administration, Dr. Best said, "to
. provide the proper role models
for women once the '.women
students
entered
Marist. ''
The vestiges of the all-male
· institution that Marist once was is
evidenced ·in a number of areas.
For example, there are no women
. among thedivision chairpersons.
Until this· year, there were no
female residence directors. Now ·
_Ryan---
continued from page 3
never ·duplicate the services that
exist at the hospital.'' .
· LaMorte said that Ryan's
. opinions are global. "The present
health service fulfills the role that
it has been designed to fulfill at
this time," he said.
Another area that Ryan said
needed more attention is the topic
of
human sexuality. "I'm one for
presenting .education of human
sexuality on the vitalissues," he
said. "That gets down to con-
traception."
He said that ~bile employed by
Marist; he was · permitted to
answer questions on the topic, but
the school did not allow him to
take any active part on educating
the campus from a medical
aspect.
"There are people here making
choices every day who have no
knowledge
on
preventing
pregnancies or on · ·venereal
diseases," he said. "I was told
that I was not to approach the
college on either issue.''
Ryan also pointed out that
while- a small health fee has been
proposed for. the last few years,
which would improve the school's
health services, the idea has been
rejected by the school.
.
,
He concluded by saying that
while he was working at Marist,
the students were given adequate
medical care, but that "it could
have been better. I don't think
that it's all it could be."
Ryan is currently working at
Metro North Railroads in
Croughton, where he is opening
and running a medical fadlity.
One· woman's experience
by Caroline Kretz
Tera Jean Thomas is in a unique position.
.
She is a woman, she is black and she works at Marist.
What is
• unique about her is that unlike many of her
female counterparts at Marist, she is not a secretary, nor is she in
a low-ranking faculty position . .And unlike most minority em-
ployees at Marist, she serves in an administrative level position.
Thomas is the director of the Higher Education Opportunity
Program at Marist (H.E.O.P.), which provides support services
for educationally and economically disadvantaged students.
Thomas has been at Marist for six years and has seen a lot in
her years as a Marist administrator. "At the time I came, I was
the only black administrator," she said, "and since that time I
have know only three black instructors.''
"Marist seems to be saying that black people can only run
'black' programs for black people. The black administrators at
Marist are usually in government-funded programs," she said.
She gave as examples H.E.O.P. and the Upward Bound
programs, which are state and federally funded programs
respectively, with black directors.
"I don't believe Marist has a commitment to Affirmative
Action," Thomas said.
"We're missing something at Marist," she said. "Marist, and
colleges like Marist, claim that they cannot lure the professors."
When questioned about the chances for improvement at Marist
in light of the recent Affirmative Action Task Force proposals
and recommendations, Thomas said: "I see it as staying the
same. Marist has put their efforts elsewhere, and if they have to
stick to Affirmative Action guidelines, they are more inclined to
hire white females.''
Thomas said she was concerned about the lack of proper role
models for black students at Marist. "It is important that
minority students have these people at a college like Marist to
whom they can look up to and identify with."
there are two.
Among the
president's cabinet there is only
one female, Julianne Maher, dean
of the School of Adult Education,
and . since 19.79, all ,of the
valedectorians at graduation have
been female while all of the
commencement speakers and
most of the honorary degree
candidates have been fuale.
Another- area in which women
and . minorities are noticeably
absent at Marist is the Board of
Trustees. . Currently, there arc
only two ·female trustees. In the
Crannel St.
spring of last year, five new
appointments. were -made to the
Board of Tr_ustees, none of which
was a woman or a minority.
When President Murray was
questioned about the additions
recently at a faculty meeting, he
said appointments to the board
had "nothing to do with Af-
firmative Action" and were based
solely on the "influence and
affluence'' of those selected. He
did say, however, the board
planned to add female and
minority members.
473-7996
TONIGHT - THE ORIGINAL BLUES PROJECT
Outlaws
Herbie Hancock·
Closed
16th
.17th
18th
19th
20th
. 21st
22nd
23rs
24th;.
25th·
26th
29th
30th
31st
Monday Night Football
Female Burlesque
T~B.A .
Ramones
Hot Tuna
Closed for Christmas
Morse Code
The
Hurt
Twisted Sister
New Blotto - Eve. · Show
The_ Chance wishes Marist students a very Happy
Holiday Season.
For concert information and chances to win free tickets to
shows at The Chance, listen to · WMCR every day. WMCR
where the Red Fox Rocks!
·
We accept Visa, Mastercard
&
American Express. You can
charge tickets for any show
by
phone. For information
&
din-
ner reservations call 473-7996.
Your organization can rent· The Chance for a party of special
occasion. Call for details.
·
You can obtain a calendar, just send a self-addressed stamped
envelope to The Chance.
December 15, 1983 · THE CIRCLE·
Page 9
c4eaclemy
WINE
&
LIQUOR
$2.00 Off
With Marist 1.D.
Come visit
26
ACADEMY ST.
PO'KEEPSIE, N.Y.
12601
Tel.
452-41
JO
Wishin~
Marist Students
a very happy
Holiday Season!
The Cuttery,
For men, women
and
children, it's
The Cuttery for
the
very
best
in
professional
where
we've
been·
setting
hair
cutting
trends
f
OT OVeT
ten
years.
hair
styling,
shampoo,
conditioning;
perms,
body waves, cellophane
colorings, and more.
Serving
Marist College
Since 1975
The Cuttery
is located at
3
Liberty Street
in Poughkeepsie.
Stop by
OT
call
us
at
914-454-9239.
DO YOU NEED STORAGE
OVER INTERSESSION?
You can store your TV,
STEREO,
or
REFRIG
plus a
trunk
for only $12"50!
DATE:
Thurs., Dec.
21st
TIME:
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
PLACE:
Outside
.
Champagnat Hall
J"OE
SMITH
\
Nt\\-\ lM~
105.
SIGN UP WITH YOUR RA
-NOW!
This will give Arnoff's idea of how·
many students are interested.
,
..
--•Page
10 · THE CIRCLE·
December 15,
1983
.
.
.
·
·
skaters, at 2-~, will fac~·
-
Pos~
The Marisc College hockey
team is sitting on a 2-5 record
with the first part of the season
ending this week.
"It's inconsistency,"
says
senior
,
co-captain Jim McDonald.
"The attitudes are there, we just
have
to
try
and pull
this .
together."
McDonald
blames
some of this inconsistency with
the lack of ice time for the club.
"We're not a varsity sport so
.
we don't get any scholarships to
give away and we don't have the
money to by ice time. This lack of
ice time affects our team play,"
he said
.
With
last Wednesday's
·
10-5
home loss to the University of
Bridgeport, the club's record
stands at 2 wins -
13-3
over
Fordham and 11-5 over Patterson
-
and losses
·
to
Kings Point,
Ramapo, Ocean County College
and two to the University of
,
.
in the penalty box. Trabulsi this
Bridgeport.
season stands aF18 total points,
.
"We're starting to pull together
nine goals and nine assists with 12
as a team,>) said junior Bob
minutes in the box.
Caldiero," but right now it's
"We have the 1alen1
·
10
win
but
tough with our schedule and lack
we are still inexperienced," said
of ice time."
.
Pette
.
"Four to five guys can't do
So far this year Jim McDonald
all the work. We should try for a
leads the Red Foxes in three
.
team victory, not
·
·
how many
areas: total
.
points (with 26),
,
points you cari get in a season.•·
·
penalty minutes (with 24) and
The freshman sensation this
goals (with 17). McDonald is
year is goalie Chris Sked. Sked
followed closely
.
by sophomore
.
has already saved 256 shots this
standout.
year and has the rest of the season
Tim Graham is all of those
categories. Graham has 19 total
points, nine goals and JO assists
and 16 minutes in the penalty
box.
Senior Al Pettc and junior Rob
Trabulsi take up the bulk of the
rest of the scoring with Pette
having 13 tocal points, three
goals, 10 assists, and 14 minutes
to improve on that.
.
·
uwithout Chris," said Mc-
Donald,'' we would have lost
some of those games by larger
margins."
Marist played an exhibition
game with the Culinary Institute
.
of America on Monday night and
tonight they are in the Nassau
Coliseum facing off against C. W.
.
Post.
·
B a s k e t b a l l - - - - - - - - - - - -
continued from page 12
game," he said.
He said he thinks the Foxes can
do well in its upcoming games.
"If
we keep the attitude we have
now," he said, "we should do
alright."
Friday's defeat of Dartmouth's
Green was a 77-66 walkaway. The
Foxes opened up their biggest
lead of the game with 12 and a
half minutes left to play, going up
52-39. While Dartmouth rallied to
pull within seven at 67-60; time
began to run out on the com-
eback.
The going was a little rougher
one day later in a three-point
vic-
tory over Rider, 67-64. Senior
Steve Eggink led Marist with 17
points, followed by Taylor's 14
arid John
Donovan's 10, though
the game was won and lost on the
foul line. Marist shot 17 of 24 to
Rider's 8 of I 9.
Ironically, it was a missed free
throw that helped seal the game
for
the Foxes. With seven seconds
left in the game and Marist ahead
by one, Taylor went to the line to
shoot two. Making one of two
would have almost certainly in-
sured
a
tie
and, had both been
successful, a victory.
However, Taylor
·
missed both
throws. The second miss rebound-
ed over two Rider players and in-
to the hands of Donovan, who
shot the game's final basket from
six feet out to put the tournament
title on ice.
Last Tuesday, the Foxes lost at
Fairleigh Dickinson 98-92 in a
game that included two overtime
periods. Marist hit 43 field goals
against FDU's 30, but was
vic-
timized by the home team's large
quantities of free throws.
FDU went to the line
55
times,
more than Marist opponents had
in the Foxes' first two games com-
bined, and
.
garnered 38
un-
contested points. Marist, on the
other hand,
·
had only 10 free
throws -
fewer than any team in
any Marist game so far this year
-
and managed six points.
Senior John Donovan goes up for yet another rejection against Rider Saturday night in
tournament championship as Tom
.
Meekins (4) looks on. (Photo
by
John
Bakke)
·
:
NOTICE
:
REGARDlNll
:
·
\
.
.
.
'
HOUSING
.
FOR
,.
·
·
·
.
.
.
•
.
·
WINTER
·
1NTERSESSI
_
ON
January 2,
-
1984-January
20,
1984
All those interested In being housed on cam-
pus for the 1984 Winter Intersession should
come to the Housing Office by
.
December 9,
1983 to make these arrangements.
.
.
.
.
.
NO FOOD SERVICES WILL BE PROVl
·
DED
DURING THE WINTER INTERSES$10NS.
QUESTIONS?
PLEASE COME TO THE HOUSING OFFICE
The
·
Room Rate
will
be $8.00/day. The total
,
amount. covering the length of time you
will
be on campus must be paid to the Business
Office prior
·
to the finalization of any Inters es-
·
sion Assignment:
.
·
·
·
'
Everyone
·at
>
Caputo
:
'~
.
.
.
·
:
,
·Pizzaria
:
·
wishes
/
a
,
.·
·
.
fe;y
Happy
_,
iloliday
.
·
Season
to
.
,
the
Matisi
'.·
.
·
•·
C()llJglc<JlllmurtitY
.
.
··-
,.~·
-
~
/
(:
~,
... ·.!-
.
·:
_,.,,
~,-.,
Open daily
at
11:00
_.
; •
:
~
'
f
·
.
~
473-2500
J.
.
,
._
,.
I
·
;
•
,
•
- ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - December 15, 1983· THE CIRCLE - Page
11·--•
. Thursday
Morning Quarterback
Rule 4 8 - - - - - -
continued from page 12,
On the ·111 her hand, some sug-
blacks. possibly because or the re-
!!CSt there will be a cutback in rhe
· · cem black dominance in the ma- , ;111mbcr or black st ude111-athlc1es
jor sports'? Many bl,1ck leaders
.
at 1he major institutions. Stone
· feel
the answer
to
this question is expressed this when ·he said the
obvious.
.\
·
white scliools no lonc.er want
The Reverend Jesse Jackson, black athletes. Drakcf~rd, who
dvil rights leader and presidential went to a prcdomina111ly black
John Bakke
For the record
There· has been relatively little
fuss· over Ron Petro's forced
resignation as basketball coach,
which is, of course, just the way
That leaves Cox and Murray.
One works for the other -
who
do
you
think had the last word?
coaching job. Nonetheless, it
would have been a position with
far less security than athletic
director.
· candidarc, was quoted in The school hi'msclr, said that black
New· York Times as saying the athletes will tend
10
stay aw_ay
NCAA "has no regard for the
from 1hc major institutions in the
color of the meat that is being
future. "More· black student-
ground in the athletic factories.
It
athletes will go sour
Ir.
to rhc
does
1101
surprise me at all that
predominantly black schools," he
these J.iypocrites would not stand said.·
. the whole affair was designed to
work.
The point' here is not to say
what a nasty affair the thing real-
ly was -
not at all. But we've all
been given· this image of Petro,
Cox and Murray sitting arund in
front
of
a fireplace somewhere
sipping brandy, when all of a sud-
den Cox says, "How about split-
ting your two jobs, Ron?"
Cox offered this opinion in
light of Petro's position and the
two options he had: "I would
have been surprised if he had
stayed on as coach."
the test of protecting the interests
The most serious speculation
of black reople."
centers around the threats of
Edward B. Fort, chancellor or many black institutions to leave
North Carolina State, has said,
the NCAA ahoge1her. Some feel
''The bo11om line is the color of this could cause a major rift ·
the majority of the kids ,vho take within
the association, while
the flpor in the Final Four," others feel the NCAA wouldn't be ·
referring 10 the NCAA basketball
hurt at all. Nevertheless, the
championships, where the majori-
threats have been made, and it
1y of players have been black.
will be up to the leaders of the
Jesse N. Stone
Jr.,
president of black schools lo carry them· out
Southern University in Louisiana,
when Ruic 48 goes into effect in
said he feels somc•of tlie delegates
1986.
of the ACE committee inten-
With the violations and scan-
tionally discriminated in their ac-
dais that have plagued .college
tions. "They knew just what they
athletics over the years, the
were doing," he said. _ "The NCAA realized that changes had
message is that white schcols no · to be made in order to start
longer want black athletes." ,
"cleaning up the mess" that exists
While the intent of the ACE
today. Rule 48, in the eyes of its
committee will continue to be
supporters, is a step in the right ·
questioned, speculation· concern-
direction. While many claim the
ing the possible results of Rule 48
rule will discriminate against
also continues tq gro\l', Will the
blacks, others feel it will ultimate-
major institutions have an even
ly benefit black athletes who have
greater monopoly
011
available
been deprived of a sound educa-
athletic talent?
tion. -
·
Athletes who do not meet Rule
48's standards can be given
Joe Paterno, Penn State's well-
scholarships, but cannot par-
known football coach, expressed
ticipate in intercollegiate sports this belief: "We have raped a
during thcii: freshman year. If;_ generation and a half of young
these students satisfy progress black athletes. We have taken
rules, they can become eligible to
kids and sold them on bouncing a
play at the beginning of their ball and running with a football
sophomore year.
·
.and that being able to do certain
While the major ins1i1u1ions
things athletically was going to be
have the budgets to support a
an end in itself," Paterno said at
· number of inactive freshman
the convention last January. "We
... -. recruits,.,-black ._schools_ generally
canno,t _
affo_td ..
_to .. _
cl9
,H1at_ _to_ ...
do not. Black schools could then
anothergeneration.'?
lose athletes they usually are abl~
But many black leaders feel
to get.
Rule 48 will do just that.
· Wendy Pryor cheers on basketball team in recent victory
. over
Utica · College.
(Photo
by
John
Bakke)
In any case, little can be gained
by rehashing the whole affair.
''I'd really like to put it all behind
and get"on with the season," said
Petro, and it's a fair request from
someone in the midst of his
toughest schedule as a coach.
On the other hand, it seems like
a few issues should be addressed
-
for the. record -
before the
whole thing is forgotten like bad
midterm grades.
The decision to split the two
positions -
not necessarily a bad
one - ultimately rested with Den-
nis Murray. Gerard Cox said that
Murray, Petro, himself and the
board of directors were all "in-
volved in the decision," and if he
says so, I believe
it.
But of all those "involved"
people, one had the final say_. The
board . "reviewed" the decision,
but never voted on it. Petro has
said he didn't choose to be only
the athletic director, so his ob-
viously wasn't the voice of
authority.
And Petro says, "That'd -be
great, Gerry. It would sure take
some pressure off me. What do
you think, Den?"
"Anything you guys say is
OK
with me," says Murray, who
pours more brandy to mark the
occasion.
Well, that's not the way it hap-
pened. The dedsion to split the
jobs was made independently of
Petro, who then decided which
job to keep.
Another point: Could Petro
have choosen the coaching posi-
tion, or was it a case of choosing
either one as long as it was
athletic director?
From talking to a few people
who should know, and in my own
opinion, he could have had the
Enough about
that.
What
about the new coach (whomever
he may be)? A selection commit-
tee has yet to be formed, accor-
ding to Cox. The subject makes
for
interesting
conjecture
anyhow.
Cox said that the committee
would not be made up entirely of
administration members, seem-
ingly implying that someone from
the athletic department would be
included. It would certainly seem
logical to include someone from
Mccann.
But Cox also said he didn't
know if Petro would be on the
committee, which raises a ques-
tion: Who else would they want,
if not the athletic director and the
man that knows Marist basketball
better than anyone?
Perhaps the girl that takes rac-
quetball reservations
will
be
available.
Effectiveness of rule is argued
Ru le
48,
the
Nati o na I
institutions to recruit any athlete
torily completed 48 credits toward
Collegiate Athletic Association's
they wanted
to.
He referred to
a specific baccalaureate degree.
new academic standard which is
this practice (loophole) as the
A similar ruling now requires a
set to go into effect in 1986, has
"slave trade."
junior college transfer student
been subject to a great deal of
According to Dr. Edwards, the
who has a grade point average of
criticism from many presidents of
"slave trade" involves scouts
at least
2.0,
but who has not
predominantly black institutions,
being paid by four-year s1=hools to
graduated from junior college, to
and black leaders in general. But
search
out
talented
but
satisfactorily complete 24 credit
one well~known blacLeducator,
academically, "high .risk'_' black
hours toward a specific bac-
-Dr-.·,·
Harry--Edwards, .. a: professor._ . athlete.s,~- and .. .Rla9.{ng __
.th~'.!1.JP _
calaureate degree.
of sociology at the University of junior
colleges where they earn -
-Before
-chese· rulings-weflf"irifo
California at Berkeley, said the
grades that they need to transfer
effect, a student under a
2.0
cum
standards set in Rule 48 are
to .the
sponsoring
four-year
did not have
co
graduate
from
basically too low.
·
school.
their junior colleges, and just had
Jn an article published in "The
Although this still remains a
· to earn 48 credits. Marist College
Atlantic," Dr. Edwards expressed
common practice, the N.C.A.A.
Athletic Director and Head
his ·· dissatisfaction
with
the
has taken steps to limit its abuses.
Basketball Coach Ron Petro
mm1mum
Scholastic Aptitude
Under new legislation, a transfer
pointed to the fact that degree-
Test score which was established,
student from a junior college,
related courses must now be
say that it is "so low as to con-
who has a grade per average
taken. "Before, kids would take
stitute no standard at all.'' As Dr.
under
2.0,
is not eligible to
lesser courses and just get their 48
Edwards saw this as a weakness in
participate in
intercollegiate
credits," he said. "Now, with the
Rule 48, he also claimed that one
sports in Division One, unless the
new rulings, kids have to work
major loophole in Rule 48 would
student .has graduated from the
toward degrees. This curbs the
really allow the big-time athletic
junior college and has satisfac-
abuses."
Cheering is hard work,
Foxes
say
by John Bakke
Down on the basketball court,
dressed in red and white, they are
a visible part of every game,
. although they never handle a
basketball.
Unlike the players, though, the
cheerleaders carry pompoms and
wear - · with one exception -
skirts rather than shorts.
This year's squad is made up of
10 women and one man. It is a
young group -:-: more than half
are freshmen -
and an active
one. They put in
two-hour·
practice sessions three days a
week and before every game.
Angela Cimorelli is in her third
year as the squad's coach. She has
been involved with cheerleading
for most of her life, and is an
instructor affiliated with the
United States Chcerleading
Association. As such, Cimorelli
teaches
cheerleading
every
summer.
She said she is happy with the
progress and efforts of this year's
members. "I think the girls have
come a long way this year, and
we've gotten more support for the
program," she said, and cited· the
face chat 55 girls auended the first
meeting for tryouts.
The coach said there are still
more things the group could do
with more resources. "It's tough
without our·own band," she said.
"Also, we could really use more
guys -
we could do so much
more with a few
on
the team."
Cimorelli is a tough coach, one
who works her people hard,
according to many in the group,
but her relentless push for per-
fection has its rewards. "The
compliments we get make the
hard work very worthwhile," said
Wendy Pryor, a freshman from
Levittown, Long Island.
That sentiment was echoed by
freshman Pisamai Jaigla, among
others. "It's a-lot of hard work,"
she said, "but it's worth it.
Putting in the time and then
seeing it pay off gives you a sense
of accomplishment."
Pryor was part of che football
cheering group as well, and she
said basketball cheering is very
different. "We only did the home
games in football," she said.
"And mostly, during the football
season, we got ready for the
basketball season."
Both the crowd and the players
play a part in the cheerleaders'
efforts. "We get good crowd
participation," said Cimorelli. "I
chink it's improved 100 percent."
Marist's cheering troupe does a
_ loc of traveling to road games -
more than most college's squads.
They have been at all three road
games so far this year, including
Notre Dame.
If
there's any area where the
group could use more support,
said some, it is from the athletic
department. "We ·get absolutely
no cooperation,"
said one
cheerleader. "We just get shoved
under the carpet sometimes."
Some of that, they said, could
result from the attitude towards
cheerleading at the college. "The
school is indifferent towards us,"
said another.
"There's no
prestige in being a cheerleader
here."
Gai Poe, the squad's manager,
said the contributions to the
basketball team are just as im-
portant as the cheerleaders' i;o!es
in stirring up a crowd. "We're
here
to
cheer them on," she said.
"It's especially good on the
road," said Poe. "There usually
isn't much of a Marist crowd to
support them, and we're a lot
better than having no one to cheer
them on."
Don Kelbick,
one of the
assistant basketball coaches, is
also the cheerleaders' advisor. He
said the team is aware of the
cheering efforts and appreciates
them. "They're great to have
behind you on the road," he said.
«Any support you can get is
appreciated."
:,...
-
Page12-THEC/RCLE-Decefflbertis.e
()-FtmS··
L=:=,✓
.... -
Foxes win
· tournament,
lose
at·FDU.
The Red Foxes, having won last
week's four-team tournament at
. home, looks strong as they
prepare for three games during
the next week.
·
Marist was . scheduled to play
nationally ranked Iona at the Mc~
Cann Center on Tuesday.
·
--
The team. travels 'to St. Peters
on Saturday, then has home _con-
tests against Long Island Univer~
sity and · the University of
Massachusetts next Tuesd,;1y a:nd
Thursday, respectively.
. The. LIU game. -
one of 16
conference games this season -
is
an important one for the Foxes;
LIU will most likely be one of the
. primary contenders for- the con-
ference title, fqr it was LIU that
eliminated Marist from last year's
playoffs.
·
•
Marist won the second annual
Greater Poughkeepsie Auto
Dealers' Classic last weekend by
-defeating Dartmouth on Friday
and tournament· runner-up Rider
on Saturday. Dartmouth ~eat
last-place Colgate in the consola-
tion game to (inish third.
Junior guard Bruce Johnson
was named to the all-tournament
team - and Ted Taylor, _Mari~t's
leading· rebounder,
took · the
weekend's most valuable player
honor by scoring 14 points in each
victory and pulling down 23 re-
bounds overall.
.
Taylor said. the award. was his
, first asan
MVP.
"I just coul~~•t
see myself getting
MVP,'.'
he said.
"It was a hard game·, the intensity
was tough."
· .. . . . ·
.
Johnson pointed to fiis role in
the team's second-half comeback
as his· major cq_ntribution. ''When
· we were down by seven and · I
started
giving: . the •· ·assists,
everybody got .· ba~k into _· the
continued on page 10
. J,i"~i~r
Ted
Tay1Jr
p~Ds
d~~D
.
9h~oi
!)k.:fa
-
rebounds
in
_
..
· leading :the_ Foxes--to. a· 67"64 · vktory
!,
Taylor
was· voted the .
tourniment's MVP.
(Photo
by - J~hn·. Bakke)·
MtfiCalf
to
rejoin
team-in fall ·of 1984
by
John Bakke
· Chris Metcalf, a starting for-
ward for the Foxes last year, will
reforn to Marist in January and
expects to rejoi~ the team in the
fall of next year, the Circle. has.
learned.
__
·
~- Metcalf left Marist after the
1982-83 season due to academic
difficulties.
·
A transfer student from the
Universtiy of · Rhode_ Island, he
played here only one semester -
spring 198r -
before leaving.
Metcalf . arrived at Marist in
January 1982 but couldn't play
· until December of that year due to
NCAA eligibility requirements.
· back on scholarship if he can keep
things up academically," - said
Petro. "He'd have a scholarship
iil the spring arid then be back
with the team in the fall." . '
Metcalf confirmed- those ar-
rangements and said that he's
been taking courses this past
semester to raise his· cumulative
·grade point average. He will ·
return as a junior with a Com-
munications Arts major.
Petro said Metcalf's value to
the team in 1984 will depend on
the effort he puts into it. "I think
it's entirely up to Chris, how hard
he works academically, first of
all, and then physically," he said.
''Once I got
OU( .
of
school, I changed
my
mind~
I'd like.
to
finish.
my career at ·-Marist,,
A 6-foot-8, 205 pound for-
ward, Metcalf played . 24 games
last season, starting 19 of them.
He averaged 7
.5 points and 3.3 re-
. bounds per game, making him
last year's fifth-leading scorer:
"I was having trouble with my
grades-,'' saidMetcalf, contacted
this · week -at
his
home , in
·southbury~ Conn.; "and I decid-
. ed I just didn't want to. do it any
more.·
.
.
"But.once I got .out of school, I
change4 my mind," he said. "I'd
iike to . finish
.
my career at
Marist." . / .. •• ._ .
"He can be effective if he really
pushes himself."
· Metcalf said he expects to be
training in the spring despite n_<?t·
playing,
although Petr~ 1s
undecided as to whether he will be
able· to practice with the team, ac-
cording to Metcalf.
He played at Pomeraug High
School in Connecticut and was ..
named to an all-state team. He
spent his freshman college year at
Rhode Island, but left after five
games of his sophomore season.
Head Coach Rori Petro said he
didn't know. of Metcalf's inten-
. · _ tions. «I told him he can ~ome
Metcalf said he left Rhode
Island because · of a coaching
change. He said· he was one of
five freshmen recruits there, only
one of which is still at the school.
~
,
'I_··'
.....
RUle
48:
RrOgfess
or
racial di,sCrimination?
by
Ian O'Connor-
member, says the black presidents
in<bivision. One, e~pedially·_ the
Rule' 48·, disagreed with the posi-
widespread support.
~vere il1¥ited. The blacks say they,
historic!!IIY b._lack colleges, who
tion of the blackj:iresidents and
Ron · Petro, Marist College
' NearlyJOO college and universi-
were•not..
.•
have a _distinguished record of. said the' new legislation is "a
athletic director and head basket-
ry presidents assembled at the Na-
The black 'presidents also 'feel
educating the marginal students._. move in the right direction."
ball coach, said he firmly agrees
tional
. Collegiate
Athletic tha·t applying academic standards . ir( higher education."
· ..
·
·
-
• : :.:~ Murray said he "didn't buy the. with the establishment of required
Association.· convention in San-
·
will be unfair to ·,he- historically
.'. The ·use· of standardized .test
arguments of the black_ leaders'.'
core courses in order to better
Diego, Calif., l_ast January, seek-: · black.- schools.. Dr. Frederick
scores a~ an academic require-
concerning the use of the standar-
prepare the student for higher
ing to ·enact an effective set of Humphries, · p'resident
of··. ment for eligibHityis the major
dized test scores because the "set
education. "There is no doubt
. academic standards for athletes
predominantly·- black Tennessee
area of
·
opposition to: Rule
48:'
.
standards are
so
minimal.''. .
that student-athletes can come in-
entering college.
.
State University, supported this
.·
Studies have shown
·
.that blacks
Dr. Harry Edwards, professor
to college without scoring 700 on
They. hoped to enhance the
-
point in a New York Times arti-
score lower than whites on stan-
·or sociology at-the Univ.ersity of
the SAT, and be successful,"
public. image of collegiate sports cle.
-
.
The
average
entering - - - - - - - - - -...... - - - - - -
California at Berkeley and na-
Petro said. "But without the pro-
..:c__
an image, that has been tar-
freshman al both the University·
R .
· .··
-
1
• ·· ·: · •· ·"'· · · · • · ·.
tionally known. bla
·
ck educator,
per high
school
courses as
nished by severalrecent scandals.
of California at Los Angeles and
•
..
eac ion' is. mix-'
agreed that the minimum scores
preparation, there could be trou-
lnstead, those who voted for
the University of Notre . Dame..;
·•d·
t· ·.
·(·h
. · •
are too 1o·w,_although-he too ques-
ble."·
·.
the new\ academic standard (both schools were on the ACE -
e. -
0
e new .
tioned 'the use- of standardized
. Murray also supports these re-
(known as Rule 48) were called committee) SC?re~·over_ I ,ooo-on ' ,.,._
r.c•
A_A. ·:
·r· ·u···
·
le--
·th·a"
-I.,
tests as a
'
requfrement for eligibilis
.
quirements. He saidhigh schools
~•racist," prompting the most , the SAT exammauon-,- well over·
.
LY-!
~
·
.. • _
. . .
ty. In an article published in The , will·now have to give more educa-
heated racial 'controversy in the
·
the required composite score .of· .
. ~-
· .
·
·d·
·1 · .· ·.
-
~ ·
Atlantic, Edwards. said, "The
tional attention to the student-
NCAA since the onset of racial 700.
m
Q
n ·
Q -.
e-
S, . ·
NCAA.action is ·worthy of sup-
athlete in order to prepare them
integration
in
major college
In .comparison, . the . average
.
.,/
• ..
C
•
•
•
•
•
port even if it is ·a very small or
for college. "I support the core
athletics·_during the 1950s .and freshman.· student
at
QCQuemlC
_
nor_m~ ·
perhaps even inept step i_n clean-
curriculumandtherequiredgrade
'60s.
predominantly blacks"chools such
1 ·
o·r _
'
f ·
resh m
·
e·n_··
i~g ~p educat_icmal proble~ns in
point average because it will
· Rule -~8 says that college as Tennessee State University
·
·• .. , ...
,
.
b1g-t1me collegiate sports."
eliminate students from bypassing
athletes entering in 1986 are re-
(which uses the. ACT. examina-
t
.d· en·1· at· h"te· te'S . .
"I support the NCAA's actions
the basic courses," he said.
quired to meet three requirements tion) scores in the range of I L-13,
S U
.
- . .
.
. ·_ •· ·
because l believe that black
Poughkeepsie High School
· in order to-be eligible for inter-
below ihe required ACT score of
.
parents, bl~ck eQucators, and the
Head Basketball Coach Tony
- collegiate competition. They are: · 15. Therefore;-csaid Humphries,
dardiz(:°d tests, th~t 55•percent of black com·munity must insist that
Drakeford said that although he
a minimum American College Rule 48 will permit schools ·such . all ol~cks .who take the SA_T,ex-
black children be taught and that
feels the SAT examinations' are
Test score of 15 or a composite as Notre Dame and UCLA to
amination score below 700, and
they learn whatever subject mat-
discriminatory he supports the ·
Scholastic Aptitute Test score of recruit athletes who do not meet
that over 65
.
percent of all blacks
ter is ·· necessary to· excel on. other · requirements. Drakeford
700, to have enrolled in a core their average freshman scores. On
,vho take the ACT examination
diagnostic and all other skills
said he basically agrees with th~.
curriculum of 11 high . school the other hand, he maintains that
score lower than 15.
· ·
tests," he said.
opinions of Edwards on the issue
courses, and to have passed these Rule 48 will .force schools like
The black pi:esidents point to
While the controversy con-
of the core curriculum.
"It
is very
courses with a 2.0 grade point TSU ·
10
recruit athletes. with
srudies rhat have shown standar-
tinued over the use of standardiz-
agreeable," he said.
"It
will
average.
greater acade.mic qualifications
dized tests as being di_scriminatory
cd test scores,: the other re-
clefinitcly be good for the high
The presidents of the tradi-
1han
their average entering
against blacks and poor whites, . quirements of Rule 48 have mer
school student-athletes."
tionally black colleges and·univer-
freshman student.
and say they are concerned that
with · tittle opposition .• Black
.
While the controversy over the
sities opposed Rule 48 in several
According to Humphries, Rule
setting minimum scores on these
presidents and civil rights leaders · requirements of Ruic 48 con-
major areas. They point out thar· 48 "will have minimum impact on
tests -will dispropor1ionately af- · have · apparently accepted 1he
tinucs. a deeper, more serious
no black sat in on any meetings of the major institulions who
feet black athletes as opposed t"o
establishment of 11 required core
question is being examined. ·oid
the special commi11ee of the generated it to clean up athletics
whites.
courses and a 2.0 grade point
the special committee of rhc ACE
American Council on Education, and who have produced academic
Mari"st College Presidcnr Den-
average in
these course!> as
thar formulated Rule 48 purpose-
which formulated Rule 48. The credibility problems, and max-
nis
J.
Murray. who a1tcnded the
legitimate standards. In general,
ly
intend to discriminate against.
ACE of which Marist College is a imum impact on those institutions
NC AA convention and supported
these requirements have received
continued on page 11
29.10.1
29.10.2
29.10.3
29.10.4
29.10.5
29.10.6
29.10.7
29.10.8
29.10.9
29.10.10
29.10.11
29.10.12