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The Circle, March 28, 1985.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 30 No. 17 - March 28, 1985

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cr'isis,
·and.'.public
awareness: inay.

-
'. ,.·


···')elp
alleviate. the problem/'.
•'.


.
..

·.,·
.':.:.Both
D~nlap and
·oym·-agree

.

thaf the·.:statistics.
·.·on-
..
tee·nage_

·
Silicide',
afe·
mislea'cling,
•.
because·
;
·many
suicides are reported
'as·
ai::-~

·
,,ddehis.in,9r:d~r
to' protect ihe vie":
1
,
• :·
timsi·
...
families>:
"We·.:
have'· a,
.
:
tendency to· want to blame SC)-
.
ineone or
:
something for
..
the
·;
tragedy;•' Dunlap said.

·•.


··'-•;
..

.


..
,
.
Tltroughout her years. in the
••
teaching professiori,;Dilrilap said·


.
she has been able fo:talk with, and.'
:

relate· to students in high:
.crisis:

..
situations
..
"It·
is importa.'i\l' for

·,
schools to keep in touch· with

.
students,".shesaid.

·. ••
·,.
-_.:
Dunlap spoke of a tragic inci-
•:
dent in which a student commit-
.:
ted suicide and had been dead in:
~:',
his. dorm
1room
for. six\ weeks

·<before·
anyone
.
noticecl,
:his··
:
absence. This· tragedy illustrates;


''.the. isolation that many college

. \
::
studeri~s are faced with,''. said Dr ..
:
Dunlap.
.
.
.
.,
.
.
. •
'
.
:
.
Marist has a walk-in counseling

service available to an
'students
·
located in the lower level of the

cblJrici
I of Stud0nt L.S~der~f Rt"0sident
C6ff;ge Union Board Pr~Jident

:;,
-
.,
.
~-~·
.
,
.
r:.~
..
Stu'derit Academ._ic·.,Com:·mittee
..
President
-
·comm~t8r
:Union••Preifd:ent?
·.·•·.

•.
·~
1nfer-HOl.l~e
C~Uncil pf~sid~nt

...
•.:
...

...
.
..
.
:
.,
Campus Center.
,
.•
'
,
,
Roberta
.
Amato, • director
.

of
·
.
.
.
_
:_
couriseHng
'ser~kes
•• at. Marist.:
,.


assists students with personal pros.
.
;_.
:.,<·:1_:·_"·;
....
·.~:.;./·:_.~
\
:,_;_
Offi.cers
.f.or
the·.C~ass·
o·t
1·~·ee:·;-_.:198·7/·1.':988·.:·
.
.
'
•.

.
,

'
.
·••.

:
•.
blems.
'
The
.
counseling

service

• ;
:
'stress·es
persbnal growth and cop-

• •
ing skills, according to Amatp·.; If'·
•. ·


·
•. 1·.'
I
;
the problem is: severe, the ceriter
.

will }'.efer
.the.
studenf·to
·pr<>fes-:.
sfonal help;
.'
<,·.:
.'
J ".
'<
,
..
;,
Marist has a low rate of suicide.·

.•

attcl)'lpis.

AIJ.lato
,.say(
~~e.
'.f
eiis.
·•
this could. be a result- of. religious·,
Apr;i.1·:
..
1:,
·
..
2,
;~:'.····
'.'
..
ti/L,
·"\·•··

'


•.
' :);:.~
..
Vi¥:K:,fr£,ti;i;,~&~{.'.·,1~9~a
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.·••
•.....
·
···.·•··
·;;~i!Nii~!~~:t}t:

'

·:,Continued
froni
pager-
__
,_;,::-·.,;:·:.
:
:.·
:
.•
-~aid·:
;
most
'of
the.
:other'
..
'
-'
••.
_.
'.
.
·:
s'tuderits.
:'
ju'st: lo.oked
.'
on.··
•.
'?:;~~l!~Y?fil~tA;;;i;~~j}jJ'.~~~~:~
'.}~f
A·t~~;~~f
i~:'wi\f
Jll~~~

···
·
:'
'.'Alth<>.µgh
th~ir.-friend

\Va~.·•··
,
laying:in)he water,•.obvioilsli•
..
• ..
;
•.. :
irijiited~-•-!
~~she··.-said,-
-''ffiOst:.:of
.:
: :-:

-~.
·_
..
'
·
··.·':>.
..
.
>:;.'.::i~i;~f~!~
1
~~r,~~~}st¢9~~;!.
,.•.
,.-

.-Machines~.
i
~r·:~[.e:~zevv.ay
]~P.f/.~h.a-(iJpa_g.~:at-·.;t··~-
..
_
-
·,::.:.::~lri~·eill'd!~)1tatas~lif:tif~;:::
·:·
··:.
••



-.:-

--_.~,.-····
·\\)···<i:;.::·
.,,
··-:-:-·.-~··=·;•,.:··.-
•• -
-
···rt)\:

.
.'.'rieed_s\!11ore
/~efiilitiori'.'
.and
.

·'
•••

... '
that pqhce;>rallroad anq col.~·
-
/;:.//•:
·<·,
.•.

..
•1ege
officials must uformulate::·
.
.
..

:
a.nd communibate anf ~nforce
\.

..
a policy "
·
'
·,
-
·'
·,
'

,
• •
••
',
·~
..
'.
Breii~an said he· didn't.
think
:: .

·
..
that Sentcichnik should be ad-
·

:_
monished or~branded for
.the
.•
..
accident.
''.lt\s a
dangerous
..
. :,
·place·~
even
'i~.the
daytime,'':,
._
•.
he said; «Ifpe9ple were think-
..
• •
.
ing ih:.ould have been avoid;


_ed."··.'
·.: .- ·:)
·.•

:
i··.-·
.

Assitult·_·,.
••
_
.
.-·r··,
Conti~ued fro~
page
I
the rigl\tof the eleyato~, he said'.'
A struggle ensued and the victim
ran
·out
µie carport door,' ac-
cording to Waters.
: •
·,
·
~
.
According· to. security reports,
the. assailant in last week's case.
was a caucasian male, 5'10" to
..
,
•-...:
...
·,
..
'
..

..
·
...
-.
.
.
6'0", heavy-set muscular
.
build
and wearing a dark-colored ski
jacket. The assailant in Monday's
assault was male, medium height,
medium build with dark hair,
according to security reports.
Both victims were taken to St.
Thursday,_ 3/28/85~ 9:OQ p.m.
,.
-
.
.
•.
Francis Hospital where they were
treated
·and
released for minor
cuts and bruises; according to
Waters..
. . •
.
.
.
.
.

•.
Reporting on
·this
artide. were
Mary A.

wan,
Denise WllseJ,
Brian Kelly and Loa Aini Sedi1 .


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mif
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_
-
;:;'}/Jhe_,electiO:n:_(,f
t~e. Co.um;il
_of
·:.
resid~rit
,.,:,of
__
;
.the
Student_':
.'.<?lo!i:J~nt
_CSL ~res1_dent
,'rony_
• --
~
,•·:,·(
S_tu~e,u:L.eaders w~ll be held '."'.:.
-1cademic
Committee.
,
;'.
,

.
P~dhps.-said he 1s. d1sapJ?Om!ed
ca
complete with elecuon booths -,-

.
.
cc.
,
.
.
. .
:
-
_
,
with theJow ~evel of paruc1~atton
·:in,Dorinelly
HalI'andin the lobby
,
_.
Shn~tophe~
DesauteUe,


.
3
_
iri_theupcommg election._
'
...
-
,
of Champagriat'HaH on April
t~
2
::
Jumor • is runmn_g for
.CUB.
pre~i;
,.
-•i
•_'.The
people :,ve have ru_nmng
.•
,_.
and 3
;_.,
:;
>
.
.
.
·-.
.
.
;
.
dent. Desautelle 1s u~contest~~:

-
a~~ ~o,o~,,the said. :•.Butthere are
..
.
,.·-:·.'<;··:::,·..
;._-
:·,
.•,-
.
Su7:an.~e:_,_c;;
•·'-R.Y.:1-~t--·
-~, ..
other-.people quahf1ed_and for


1

:

,;-_··.
'i
.I~e
c,and~d,te, :forur!l,
.
wh1.c~
..... so~ho!Dpr~;_.
;: ~ri_d
:
c_~~,1~~0P,_~~!,.::
some

reason;· they,. are11
't taking
.
.
.
..
-:
consists
:
oL candidate speeches

Clements
.,a
jumor, are:· running
,.. ·
the time:"
·
·
..
.-
• .
·
•.
_
.
;,Jollo_wed.:·.
by·
.a
~question
.'.-.arid
for the p6sitiori of Cciu'ncil
of
Stu-,·
•. ·.:
John Albano the election com-
... c
/
,·ims~er
••
period,; will<·be: h~l.d, den.t Leaders preside~t .......
';.
·:,:O::
.•.
missioner,, said tonight's forum

:

:
:
-:
.~:o~igh,t;at?
p.m._ mthe thea~er
:.
--
• .•
••
Harry J,
,
Carleton
~amf
Nick may be filmed by MCTV and
:
-The
CSL comprises represen-
.
Kalogris, both juniors, will com~ s~multaneously
-
broadcast

over
,tath;es

of-
·
various
·
student
: •
petefodhe positori. of Commuter WMCR. If so, he· said that' the
.
'.
organizations: Two
·of·the
can-
,
LJnion:·president, Jwhil!! tp.e posj-
.
television 'club's videotape will be
• '_
.
didates running for office are run-··
'·tion'''lnter-hotise;
<;:<iuncH.
presi-
shown on channel 8 the weekend
·
.
riing unopposed.
,
,

';_
derif is sought by Brian Wicenski,. after the elections.·
·:.

·.

...
·~
....
'
,
.
.
..
.
·•.,
.
.
-

\'
.
Blowing U.p-tli~ Marist 'bubble'
<·
.

•.
b;;~,.~h.:.~~tfMueller
::_'-.
••
Aewspaper on' ca~pts:1:,irt·t~e
•·
memb~~; at'Marist ;h~~ld ta~e
-
-
,
_.,
..
-.
,
._
coffee
.
shop

..
during
.:
business·- more responsibility to initiate
•.··'.The.
physic,al plant office. and hours, which excludes weekends.

discussions
.
on
global topics·
Madst.facultY· meinbers
..
deny it·.-
··•···•Accordirtg
•.
tq
·,
son1e
'.
other··- b,ecause they know more arid have
·"'
-.
'exists.'Suiclents.daim
it ~oes. The
1
.:
students, actual discussions·:'and

greater access t9 outside speakers.
•~it'.'
.in
,this.
case is ••t~e Marist
..
debates ori global issues
_are
only She added she thinks that teachers
bubb~le, ''.
:

that
'.:°
iinag'iriary

likely in Classes like ethics~ ~nd
,
should also make an effort to let
,
transparent shield
_that
covers t.he
.
politica.Lsc,ience; .. Many: teachers students _know about outside lee-
•.
circtunference
of
the,campufand
..
rely- heavily. on
;
textbooks and
.
·
tures, a practice she says is not
a,;. __
. :

encloses itJike'a dorrie, supposed-
don'tleaveaforum
for discussion common at Marist..
.
Pup·
1ny
love

;;
.:
Iy
:
making
:
Marist
students . outside
.
of that realm," said
....
Even the fact that Dean's.con-

..
¥.
.
..
':
.
oblivious
'.io'
:the:·issues:· of-,·:the
Suzaruie
.:
Jlyan,
:
a
:·sophomore

_vocation
day has be~n: cancelled:
-
Mary Tyler Moore sticks close to her 12-week-

world around them;
....
:,: '..<,·>·from
Oyster Bay.

•••
• ••
'
demonstrates that administration·
old puppy, uoash," at the Hudson Valley Golden Retriever
.,.
.
,
Faculty and
.~tudents
interview-
.
However, other students are and faculty aren't making their
Club's annual dog show at the Mid-Hudson Civic Center on
'
ed pointed to several reasons \Vhy
;
optomistic that the bubble can be best effort to
.
make stud.ents
Sunday.

(Photo by Bonnie Hede)


students seem to become involved·

broken. According to Chrisiian aware of current event.s;'' said '-----------•-•-------•-----,
\.
onlyin_i~suesthathavcadirectef~:
·Morrison,
a junior from \Yater-
Colaizzo.
..Apathy.,-
breeds

.
. .
.
,
_
.;__:
fectonJheirroleasastudent.·
••
·rord,
Con!),, the.new.core pro-
apathy."
..
..

•.
·1·
K·f· ht b. th de· fects

-
.
:,;:
'":~ome
st~dents_ feel' that dif-
.
~ram is ••a.step_inthe right.direc~·
Todar•~ student, i_s basica_Ily_
1re
e.
.

i
1g-
s
If

.
.•
.
·~- ftcl!lty-)--tn
.,
purch_asing
••;a,.
uon/'.bec~~se it alJows for more conservative,
..
:~orns~n:
said...
_

.
:,
...
·

•.:,
~

·
-
...
~--
newspaper,
:
na'r'fow.

classroom·: current events·discussions to
..
be
"And conservatism doesn't'lead
:·-
by
Maria Gordon

which aids people in need· by
t,-
discussions,
'.infrequent
lectures
'.
implemented into the tradi_tional .-to protests or"students going out
,

.
••
-
C:,
holding fund-raisers, volunteer-
,
.•id·.·
andC::.the': trend/ towards
:
'con~
..
·;liberal
arts area;
•.
:

;:
,t:-::: .
'
oftheir way_for others/'
.
,

Circle K spon~ored .. Miss-A-; ing servi~e~
:~nd
assis~ins. other
.••

).'.;
serv~tisin~a"~)~t~(ed'f ~;'gen,¥~7-
';f•'
Jlyan;t~~t~i/S~~~~i-~~l<th,t.,
_:
:
,,.:(?~J!ic:
·o~he(
hand,
S()nlC
facul~
. :·
L~!'ch'.'
.
)'t:sterday' to he\p raise_\'·:
vo\~nteero
o'r~~n~zations: .

:
:'·,
•...
.
,
.:';t:,:.~i9,n~~~\1.i,.n~r-~~"~:"·,s_t~~e~!~tJ~:·'e~eca:u~e'l1~t~es-t,at~~a~st~afe,sp-;}r:~ember,s·.n~t~.!~at
ap~thy and·:: money-for tJte M.arch of Dimes.-··!,
~-
~he
pre~1d_e11_t
.•
of
·.9.rc~e
df:i
• •
•.
,.~
:::'.\~·>Mat1s_t
Gollege.-
:
.?:.
,
,;:.•:
:,::;.
:',:.':>;:
_.
..
:~
infrequent and poorly attendeq; 1t

umv(?IV~JDent_exist
on ~very cam-
:
-.•
'The
group asked students
td}_
JUn_1
or
.
Christina: ~as_c1_ato;
:
sa~d
:,~;:-:<l
:,.;:
_.~I(•·
ifi
a?
str.iiggle_Ao?:
get\A
:·,
derrioi'istratel!
that studentiriterest
::
pus; foday: and· that· s_9cicty.
has

give up lunch for one day •. The,
'thaf
she was·asked by the Council
..
·.·,c-,,
:~.
·iiews1>aper
ofr.this campus,'.' said
\
is
~
iow.
u•vassar<College\.,
has
~made.
,the
·current
generation, of


money that. the students' lunches·
.
ofStudent-Leaders to do this pro-
. .,
:
·•
'.J/
:Pete'.:.:colaiizo~~.
;a/jl,lnior :;:
from~·.·;
sev~rat: lectures:·
a
twd:ic:'}
·,
said
}~\;ol£cgc{":-
s_ttij:lents··
;/fo~~pdente_d~ .
wotild' have· c6st will
-_be•
d9nated
..

ject. She

then·· received • help on

; :
,
.;
\ .
'.C'e~~h.
Kn9lis}'
N!1
:-:
/~•~a)
a·\: Rya.11:.
,,
''Th_("depart01;~tiis
.·,.
•~ere
'.
·:
rath~f• thar{ issUN>ri~rited~
'
Tife•
fo
heii>. furth~_r research on birth;'.
,
this project from a representative


: / •

!lew~~aper 1s, ~he
.b_est
way to_ find·. a_re responsible for_ the orga!l,1~--
-
pr9fessors added that more effort
defect prevention.
.
.
.
.
·•
of the March of D.imes who pro-
.
•.

-~:.
_m-d~pth:
mformauon on curr_ent
.
uon of lectures; while.at Manst, 1t

should
_be
made by the faculty to
.
.
The Circle K at Marist is a divis
..
vided posters and buttons for the
,
~
events,'.'.
::,
,
, •
,
.
,
,
:
,
i~ I~rge}y the stmlent's resP.on~

helpmake_stud~ntmoreaware.,
sion of Circle K lnternati~nal_.·-~ ftind~raiser,
according
to
.
The only place t?
.
buy-_ a.• sib1hty.
_
Rya_n
added that facult~
Continue~ on page 12
....
collegiate.
·service.
organization
Casciato.
T'fi~
CaSe£CifJii'lii/tf;1(/lete;li¢t:,dooralmost.···
closed·
;.·
••
'
•..
;
__
...
·:
..
·~·
..
_\.
-
...
;
:.:
~
:
.
·-
--_.
:.
.
_.-
;
,,_
:;·

.''·
-~

•••

.
.
·
...•
·.----
.
..

·_
.
.

•.
~
.
.
i .

I
.
,,
·.
.
.
.. --




••
..
by
Julia E;:Murray_


flo:Or"
R.A./ Laura Schierenbeck.· have been tried on the door.,
·--
.
._
..
·:~:}
~
_·>
.:·
-:.-.-
..
~-
..
::_
l
;
..
_.
--~~
-
:-
•·
iii"·
:a~clitiO.ri,:::Corey,
Oi-msby and': U_tilizing
everything. frpm
-~ubber
.
• It looks no different from the Schierenbeck have
·all
talked to, stoppers on the door to a-p1_ece
of
rest. A simple slab of wood \Vith a Robert Heywood, the director of· paper taped to th~ inside of the
memo board on it, hinges on one ho.using, about the door..
,
frame.The only problem with. the
side, a doorknob on the other.

Ormsby said they have talked: latter method· was the wmd,
.
But· once you get through this

to Hey·wood about IO times, and:-· which blew the paper from the
-·door,
beware, for you may never each time he has sent someone-up: wall and slammed the door shut,

get out.:
....

..
.
to look.at tl_le
qoor, \Jnfptunately/

which, Corey said, locked them in
?
,The·
dc~upantir of Room
:617
'
Ormsby'added, each·mah decided·

their room. At one point Ormsby
'd1ainpagn~t,Hall;
the home of

something different
iwas
wr~ng_ said she us~d

a butter lmife to
, ::
0 .'
the uderehct door," ha.ve had with the door and each solution·· loosen 'the hmges and the bolt on
,
problems W.ith the door since the made the the door worse.
.. the· door, a method which they
"",,
;-beginning:-..<>f
t~e
·~choot

ye;u,
::
~

.. Before.they came we could get' said proved fairly successful. Un-
,;,,
)
·'..·
Katlil~erj'Corey of Farmingdale;
·:
in\vith problems: After
_they
ca~e
-
fortunately m~intenance cam~ the
,~
.. •
N;Y
:,
one of-the
.occupants, .was
.
we couldn't get m, penod," said, day before sprmg bre~k and fixed
~.
locked. out. the fi,rst day of fall Ormsby.
·
.

the broken lock, havmg not bee~

semester and
'the
residen~ ~s~istant~·.. Corey·saicf the first attempt at'. told what specifically was wrong
had to let her in-the room. Susan:
•.fixit1g,,.the
idoor
was made in', with the door.
.
.
.
R.A.
Laura
Scbltrtnbeck assists resident In opening tilt
.
.. derelk:t
door."
(P~oto by Maareen
llyaD)
.
.
.
.
-
.
-
.
Ormsby of Pleasantville, N.Y.,
November, when
a
maintenance.:
._
The day. Ormsby came back
_theoth~roc~upantof617,hadthe
mantoldherthelockw_asb~oken,:
from break she said she and her
honor m m1~-J~nuary to be the then stuck a matchstick m the.- father got locked in the room and
first one locke~ m the room - an
_l~ck.
Later, the. pro~lem was. it took the two of them pulling on
hour after mamtenance h,ad come diagnosed as an 1ll-fittmg door-., the door to open it. Ormsby said·
to !!x the door:
. .
frame, then a warpe~ door, and
:
she later tried to show her room-
.
I was pulltng an_~ k1ckmg the later as both, according to Orm-
mate what had happened and in
do.or for ~.bol!t 10 mmutes before sby.
.
.
the. process she, Corey
·and
I SO}
out, said Ormsby.
~~ywood said he was al~o;. another friend were locked in the
_
Smee that da:(, Corey ai:id Orn~- ongmally told the problem lay m
..
;
room.
sby have been locked m
.
their
the lock, at which point he sent
-
_:"c,.
~foo;n
six or sev:en t.if!I~, including for Paul Burke,

the campus;
-,
'one
occasion when Corey was locksmith. Burke told Heywood
_l~ked in and Ormsby ~as locked the problem was structural and
_ot.tt._ They can't esumate' the there was nothing he could do,
so·::
...
~
<number
of times they-have b~en
,the
door became maintenance's·
, ..
--locked
out· because,· as OrmsJ:,y

respansibility, Heywood'said.
said, they .. can11ot count that
.. It seems to me what's needed
high." On the average, Ormsby is a new door, which I intend to
••

-~
said
.
they· have been locked out mention to Anthony Tarantino
~
twice a day iri this semester alone.
(the director of Physical Plant) at

The door has been written up our next meeting," Heywood ad-
0
on maintenance request lists at ded.
least six times, according to sixth
A variety of temporary cures
,

Once again. maintenance was
summoned and this time their
solution worked fairly well, Orm-
sby said. The hole in the door
frame was hollowed out so that
the bolt slides in and out more
easily. Ormsby said they s.till need
a i,ew door, but at least their pro-
blems with the old one are not as
bad.
0
lt's not perfect, but it works
better now, so it will have to do,'!
Ormsb)'.~d.


.\
I,.
-
.-
,:·:.










































































































































































































































_,,,·.
,':
'--''ti-:~•'•:-
~-
..
:P•~•-4-.
THECIRC(~-M•r~-2~
1985,--
·-•~::-I{s/\f}:
~
;c_
A_jf~·S\'!r.
fo
'']~·f
···•·
.
{o
1'~~·'.·Jf
c~ •
.-Jfl,y
fo.l-r;,',;,o/
c..
.
.
•.
Sh!"rf
c ....
+
('1-, ...
,,,.._9h

Cc,,.,.,..,(A,,,,cc..f.
- c.e-:1-fe.,-
c<H1.JfrL+G-f-?O..,
Sl'jn(;
;•
·'
'
,
.. .
.
.
.
"
.
I
i'
I
,.
..
~:
_:,,
l.:·.
. .
.
.
'\
I

~
0
.:..de,
.
.:
.;,.;ny
.,....e
"'t've.,..
,
.
_f"1<:iv..Jhf
oF it -be f-o..-e
?
Essay
res~?~~~{-:ii:;}j);{}\):ki;~lJ:{{_
.........
: ..

Dear~dit~;;·:.
:-;,
>.
·.f
as Morrison's is now; When ask-·c/
•·

·After
reading_Christian,,Mor-
ed to taice.the.tax,buriien Qff:-ofY.·
rison•s>essay, .'.'Who Cares'!''
·on ••
niiddleainc:ome:
families
.he,
pro-
: ,
..•
the
:Vi~wpoint
•page'
~F~~; 28),
• 'I
''.bablY;.
wo~If
ii~ytf
~t:t~i:y,sh{ll_g~,:
:.
:
•_.,m1;1st
say-I
'_Vas
.•
verymsp1red: I_n~.. edand ~11;1d,.:;~Jol~
YC?l!;·~o.-'.'.F,:'\ft::·,'

spired to wr_1~.~
a.}etter to The .cir-
: .·
MOrris61{:, also
V'ciairtie,r:Y
lie
·::-:
.
c~e.
·,
-
·
;
•.
~.
. .
,
·

;
>
o'-,
-;
found no:o'iie:who-would-o\Yn\1p/:f:,,
.

:
::,
He said;
.
I hate
~?
generalize to voting. for President Reagan)\
.


.
;and
call

the·
,
Maqst
;
student.
IasL November/ Gee
r.
wisli'.he
':
•.·
·population ,_-self-.servingi/'·
but·.•
·liad
asked
me.;
Like·him
·•1·a11fa:
somehow.· I
,
can't h~lp·.

it/'
-:I•

registered independent
t,J'i
urilike
:.
wholehearte.dly agr~ ... 1

h~ve. hiµi), voted.·for:Ronald
ll~gari
:
never

seen
.
a
.
more self-servmg
,
and am. unashamed to say
so:.
I
essay printed in _The ~ircle t_han. also
feel''
that:·.
as::
part
iof··a
that~of M~. Mornson~S;
.•
;'
:
cc/'-


d~i:nocracy;
:
we
)re <?Wigaied
··~o
_Its as. If, he were
_run~mg
f<?r'. voice
:_our
.f
opinions. to·:: our
••
samt~ood and he.procl3:1med
~JS
represeniatiVC$.
It'is a t,rMlegelo
_
'· candJdacy to
,
~he :Manst • com-
.
,
do so but'also:imlike liim; I do not
,.:

~umty. ~-e felt:1t.
nec~ssary to use
•.
expect to be canonized
,f~r.it.:

.
his.space m the.paper for,.a self~
.
:•
.
•.
\ :-• ..
<
.
-•.
_,·
•·
••
.. •.

,,
righteous espousal of.~.•.1
,fold you
:
<
Younvere_ngpt, Mr_.,Mornson.':
_
so's'' and
'!hi:>lier.tharithoii?
'at:..
.'
I do not recaILyour.presence. at:
..

titudes,,l:wonder' if.Mr; MorrisOn
.•
the letter~writing assembly.
'But•,
• ••
would have•beeri so quick:fo:jump
»·
tµ_eµ'._aga\n/
tti'er1:
,\vc_:re
'(
lo( of)

up onto his soapbo,qf~r.-Mon-
;·~eople,,h~i;e
t~at_~er~ not directly
,_
-
dale were riow.in
.offi~e:an<l,t~ing.

:,affe<,:tc_:d
~y_._t~e
__
cut~. bµt ~.~~w:t~~t
.
the. heck out: oL,o.ur
-middle~

th~y ha~e a. nght to voice: their
..
income families'!
-<
>\
'.';,:
~-:
>..
.
opinion, without
'thinking
that it
Somehow I think Mondale's-at~

p~ts th~m above ariyope else:
''
··•
•·
titude would h~ve l:>eeri
tQe .same:


•••••.
Beverly Morlang
·
.
,,
.:.;1,r·;·--
....
,-:,::,•
.
.
..
•,
',·
:
.
;;
..

Ma.rist
·priori
ties •

:
Tot~~Edit6/:,\•/'-'<
.
fro'1nt~;;~bsidize;his-~rip?
,:,
-•
..


In light of re<:ent'headlines that
_ •
The College l).as been telling us

sparked campus. wide concern,)


thatthey
.-cannot
affoi:d to give
..
,

·
.
.
.
.
:;t
.-.
_
found
h
ironic that .Marist Col~ ciut
:any
more. financial ·aicl,. and'
,
..
Th,re~\ienior class• officers were ~sked to;
.
·system
to gete.rmlne the recipients, of the
lege had the audacity to cirriplain
•.
t~e. propo·sed. budget cuts would
.resign:
this week "because of
-
significant,
.
r~signatlon requests?
.

·:,_.

.
,,
abcfot

.tlie
: ·recently
,
proposed
.
probat:>lY
·effect.
th~
_number
.of
• ;_
repeated·, incidents•'_ thh3·. academic year

,.-:
,:-,:
lf
..
the
..
latter_ I~
t™e,
Jtl,en~ ~~rn-~thlng
)s;:_;,
0
.bµdget·~uts
iQhigher ed_uc~t!~.n.·;c
·-
stlide_11ts
{_rei:~iv_ingfa!d
{.fJ.C?~
,,
.
:_
wherein.
,el3tablistled
procedures, have· not.-:.··
,.
amiss. prily twp;o! the-senior. class.~fflc:9-rs
>
..
Marist fou_rid
it:
~f
paranioun,t.: Madst;:Jf,ttiese are seri.ous,Jimes-.
':
..
..
·•··
..
::,rN~t,ev:i~9J~;<,J~1:I'/r~~1~
1
n~f1dA'~i~b!iis).·;:;:••::
-~:i~:
..•
r~:~tc"6
....
~
1
~o~~~ii~~~~:;~~k~~~:::~e:~,~~lrilrli~i~~~8~ii;i?G~1:)~NJi~~iidri~i~£~t::::.-s~~;~;[a~~-:'•·•.
2
:· •.

·
rnay be' perfectly
:clear
to·
.the
Council
of
.
·. •
Romano>; and
>,Vice.:,:
Pre.sldent:: ~teye!i
::··the
students:werej,resenied.with
•\'
ing\'games
i"and'.
ge(down

to-the
:-
•••
••

··
Stu9ent
·•
Lea~ers,
ibut
:.ques~ions
r~main,
,,
<·_-
LoD~stro,.have:
been active foi';•Q'nly.:P~.!":i}>f_:
c~/the
t#ues
_a~:i~and
a~~-_w.ere
µrge.d
:\
real
:_b,µ~i.nesf.of
::"'.ha(
a
coUege
,•,·
.••
/fegarciing
the
'appropriaten·esspfthe
acUpn,;
••
",
the
<
ac.a_def!Ilt;'.
·year•·JRoman9.,;:for~
~pr.Ing;:
<::to.~r!~e
io t~ei_r
f~ngi~i~ri}en ~rid,
·;{
.s!io:i.t!.9
d_g;'
edµcate:\•,;/'
,•'t:; ::· ..
;<: .
'
;'-•First;
if
the senior·-cl.ass officers ha.ye
_ :
s.emester
-
an,d
;Lo
Destro for. fall
..
~emester),-

Senators to oppose the proposed
: . :;·:
fio~
can
~arist riot afforci
~jcl


bee11

openly ~lolating; cqllege regulations
••
yei,_qnly
R~mai:10
was ~sk~d
.to.
resign, 'N~Y?
biiclget cuts. At the sam.e•
tinie the
·:
'·-fot
its students. bµt still send thein
...
for
.the)t!'ltjre
academic· year, why: did the

••.
•.
'.

, •
,-:
.
''
·•··
·.•
:
>
·

-
-
.
c·i:
'.
,:>
Collegeerigaged ina•massinaHing.
to·
Maryland?'-•WHERE: j\RE

.

CSL wait until six weeks before graduation
_ . .
,
If the (?SL was_ couf1tl,ng days·
of.
actlv.e.
:.

·•.inviting
·the
en.tire student. body t.o
,
YOUR
.
PRIORITIES MA RIST

·
•·


totake·actlon?

..
·•
/', ·•

<
,


\
:
.
• •
• ·•
Involvement, bo.th Romano.and Lo[)estro
.or
_the
,
basketbalf·•to.ti'foamenLiri
':COLLEGE?'!'!·.'.<·,::-·::·•·',,;:/
...
-·•~·,Secon.d,
why.were only three of the four·
·'.nelthershouldhavebeenaskedtoreslgn;:
·•
<Maryfand,:
:pid.'anyone.-'.stopifo'_:.>·\):<;'.'

-
Yourstri.lly,
..
-
-
officers· asked to reslgri?Were they nofa.11
..
•.•
.
Unfortunately, Phllllps· refused ~o com-.
wondet:where the:~ortey came
:.::':-:--'.i-'·c:
.
-'' •'
GregLuna

.
equ~lly.•:re~ponsi~le for the actions of t~e
ment on the matter. The
.Issue
ce~_a!n.ly
•.
_
,
i'?}
,_:i,.;,<J:~;;::::,:7'\,
.•
..
>
.
.
.
sem.•~f
..
~la~s. or did the
9sL
use_
a ~elll:onty.
needs clarif!cation.

•••
,.
.••
·,
>;
·Notes·:ott;sa'.fety::
...
:,,.
,:;
··
Iri
:s·ecu·rfty.
..•
·..
:l:l~i~~I:lerf~i'~i.~·t~ic~~i'~~e:1!~~
·:··
::>
·,
·,··
...•..
:,,
•:.
•·
···:
-.
••
ways.:).''mayhave·gonetheway
:;:-◊fficer;,-ai:id.:Joseph,:Watet's,C:
.
.
.
'-
,
,,
·:
-
of
·:other".
archaic
·'.i:concepts.
:;;i>Jrei:tor 'of-Safety:a11d'Security.
••
Looking at ~he fro~(page of The; Circle;.'. patrol~,. be.; in~tlt~ted,
·:but·
·;,;,~~
;t~ld
'
by
.·.,
l·Iowfref,
•.•
prpgres_s
..
and,• gr~wtb/J;Jhe/pr.esent.· trat:fi~'sit_ii~ti~ni,a,,~d.
•'
this week one might wonder whether Mari st
--
.
Dlr,ecto(of Security ;,IC:>~Et~h
V'/~terf3
't~at
if
(.
:
.l
1
~Ye:
~~iµe te>-Man~!·
.sop~ge
a~t-tJ>Ja~,s,Jor
contl!J'.1ef1:
,,~a~~_tY;;i-f'.!
still has
.a·
seci:.-i-ity
:for~e;
Two wo.meii were·
:
_
.would
•be-impossible
..
because:
.security.was·,,
-
~e
..
can,:n·~·lq~~esth,ui~
:n
terrs<?.
..
,~.-~elllb~rs,of.p~e.~art~J
c9m~_u_
111

..
assaulted
,on.
campus in the pas(t~ri
'days,., '
understaffed.<··
..
,.,
.•
'
..

<''.
••.
,_.,_
>
·.•
..
•.•

'
'
••:
.·.
small
..
and
'
mti~ate~:
-yv,e
.1!1':1
st
.sd_Y:w,er~,dl~".us~ed~;f.~eC~II,l~lttee
·
..
an'd th'ere has been an.ave.rage.o.n.n
ore_than
.-.·•.·
.-.,,.
.
•.
·' '
:,
;
••
..
•·'.-: '-:.:
...
;;
,
.•
.•• .:
~-y_
.'
now.-: concern • ourselves:,; Wlt_h
·:.:commendnheManst
College;ad-;
·'
.
.
.
At:-a mee~lng last.
wet:tk;
·,-
m.e reslden~e
.
.
.
preserving sound:valuef of safety
,
/ministraiion:'fof
,.
its efforts
:;'.anci
:'
·
on~ brea~-m a mon~~ at C~nterbu_ry
Ga_rdens
.
cl_ir~ctor.
r~sponslble for
:th~
.apartment.~:
told
withfo

•ihe
:.ccintexf•of·increased
· ,
:'progress
'i:<>
date'.. irt.,
the,:
arca\'of<
this acad~mlc year.
.
.
- :
. .
.
.
,.
,
Canterbury Gard~ns unit coordlnators··that·

.
·
·
1
,,
....
•·.,···.
\.··-·ct·-.,
->·'1:.~ ··-~
11
·
•.
'·.
_
•.·
..
·
-~
·
·
:-
'•ct
-r·
.....
.,_;

·•.
r ·"'
,
..
::h,,.,.
·

·:
.•.
,·.·
lt's
...
a· stlalTle that. p·e_ople
-
h_ave
.to -.~e·:::.:
they.h.acno patrol 1hEH:oinptex on weekend>.,;,
•.
e~~o !ip~n~,~
11
,tP,~,
1
¥~.I~Y.
:.~x
·:(~a,e!}\·~~
.,;,~~,
1~~-,
<lf.~
1
&
\
..
i~
•••
terrified when,they_ walk'-across· their own..
nights.'
.
-

:r,··:···,.,
_,,_,
·:<.,
,,._
:•'
,,,-,:,,
-
·
pa~dmg,~_11.1.l?u.s,
-1.~.Jltrfa~f
<?f,.:_P.
1
,1,1J1
1
!1g,~o..~~-
01
cl.~~f?.Wt~1P
.,.
·camp_us,


esp,ecla.Hy_.
'."hen
;
they:- ~ax
.'~~e :··:,';;there-;
ai~
;
t~re~
/unit,
•.
coo~ginator_s-·
~~~~:!h/ll~M6'\~!J~1\~ttet•~
1
J-\:~tJr~m.~~~gs:
':;/''~:·K:_;'.:'f;:,r,.,:
am,oun.t
of rngney they.90 t<>
llv~ ~~ere~-'

-
.
.
.
.
supervising
.
178
••
students at

Canterbury~
.
move''
aboui"campiis
•·'with''only
·•
..
,
,
••
The_, St,u,d!nt
,.Lift:-
-G<?mm1~~~e,
. Havl_ng.
SQ-_mu<:h
:frlme
occ~r on: c~mpu~.:
•.
1wo of the
.u~c
..
:s·a_re
women.
Should they be··,
Mom's
,iristniciion'to~.!J®k
both
\:h~
.m,de.r~t:~ntmendauons:.
a,~cl-
nght under ~equntx ~.nose.: Is poor
,enough:.·
forced. to walk around the. cc;,nipiex
at
1
a.rri.

,
wa s'.'.:~n.:
oqr'.'minds>we
,
m_ust
:_'/
<>rw~rded:
thep.
t<>'
the:A9-~el1lic
.•
but w):l~t aboutthe ~eopl,e UVll)Q
~~
t~.e off~
.by
~hem
selves? The answeno:·t~at seems·
.
enlance ou{kno_wledge of traffic

~ff airs _Go~m1ttee. These,recom~

.
campus. apartment, compleX:e~

of
.
Can
obvious. They should not have to perform
.
f.
.•.
h'
•.
·~
••
.

.·.·
-
.
~
_,
mend~t1~ns-ce~ter;· around-<!he.
·terl:>ury,·.·H.er!t~ge;.•an.d
tMa
1
n
1
c
1
hester hGar-
securlty'sjob .....
•,.· .. :

-
,_,
.. ·;
:u:fu.
1
!1
t is.~ye.r,,gr'?w_mg
~~,"L
-safetFof-:pc~~t~ans'.crossmg
dens?Mostofthestudens
vngoutt
ere
·
:
·•
.-•.
,, .,
...

,

,
·,:_
'>,:\,.:,·.>,
'.·,:'.:
:=:Route9;,:1he:amb1guityof,walk
are. not doing so
·out
of
choice; but have
.
Wa~ers said that t'!ls force Is ~nders~affed,
. •
The.Student Life'Comntittee
0(:
lighis,;at the
i
nonh
.campus•.•en-

been placed out there_
by the houslng··office
: •
and-he _Is rlght,i But the_-col~ege
must first

the
faculty
met; with Dean
Cox
,_,
tr~nce/ the.. needifor
-
ad~itioQal
•··
becaffse there is not enough room for
.them,
supply him:. W:lth t~e,_necessary fund.a to
.
and<
-'th~
-
CoundL•
of;
Student
"·';.sidewalks·:.1hroughout:

the
;cam-
..

on:carripus::
···- \. •
'.' '
-
•. \

'
''•
:;,

·.' •
upgrade lkThe administration Is well
aware·
Leaders-to,·ideritify issues
in
the
-•.:cj)us,-1h·e11eed
for;speed limii'sigris
Shouldn't they be· eritltled; to· security·
of the P.roblei:n, and If it Ignores Watf:?rs'
areaofstudeniolife·. Traffic·safety
':and
al'!:effeciive.speed· limit en-
.
protection as well?_The fact Is t.here_
are no·
-P.leas,
thmgs
~Ill
only get worse.
.
.
·;..
on. ca.mpus, bo.th vehicular.'-and
•Jo~cemcl)t'·
,program:-,
Further.

Marlst security patrols at those apartments.
.

What Marlst:n~eds is more s~curlty. Lets
pedestrian,·emerged·as the major
=
recommendations include pro-
: •
The fact, 1s·
the housing office submitted a
hope It ~~sn~t ta~e
a
fatal ~nr:r1e
for us to
cqncem. Individual,
·committee

viding
·pedestrian·
crosswalks

in
.
wr!Hen proposal requesting that security
get It.
members then mer with Edward
Continued on
page8
THE:
CIRCLE>
Edltor-tnoC!llef
Auoclate
EdHora
Spol1-Edltor
.
.
.
.

Pho.....,
Editor
·,
..
,
·"
...
;.,
Bflan
Kelly
Paul Raynls -
.· .
~nle
Hede
-


tan
o·eonnor
.
~

Mau~Ryan-

s.nto,EdltOfs
NeftEdlton.
~~
.
lualMM 11.....,-,..,
'
,_
r
.
-.
Chrfst17~=
,
.Adftltlslnsl
Staff

Cindy
Bennedum
.

Carl
Mac:Gowan
,
Certoonlst
.Amie
Rhodes
.,Ckaptllce,
. ..
<·,
.:'
··' ,:,•
':·
:.- •
:
Pete~
:_-
·fac8flJAdllNr''.
;.
:
; -BemleHeer
·_
Denlie WIisey
;.
·..
-
.
••
!

Laura Reichert
-·=--·.
\.
.:;,,,
Bever1yMor1ang

DaYldMcqtaw














































































































..
-· •-,~---•
...............
._.
/
.>t:et'·s·
...•
treat'0lyrtlpic
heroes like heroes
;
By. Michael Robert Murphy
is ye{an~th~r four y~ars ofh~rd
..
·
a,nd other Eastern European· na-
Nixon.
·
•·

.-
•••
,:-




·
work/ building expectations and
tions, the United States does not
With aU of the. current budget
government. Also, some sort of a
review board could be set up that
disperses the financial support to
each
.
individual athlete, with the
•.
:,
Vi~iting':·1h~
Lb~·-
Angeles area

keeping· a
-dream
alive until they
directly give aid to most Olympic-
cuts the USOC is lucky/ to get a
s~ven·:montJis:after. the' close. of get another:, shot at the- illtimate

potential athletes. In the Soviet crumb' from the government. For-
the
:Games·
of the. XXIII
._
Olym-
symbol of athletic achievement. Union, an athlete who shows the most part it is finan<;ially sup-
pia~, one. could stiU see remnants The gold medal:
•.
_'
'
some sort of potential in the
ported by the private sector and

USOC monitoring· the athletes

progress; and finally, the expan-
ofthe greatest
.sp~rting
.comp~ti,
...

• .
...
.
-·•
••


decathalon will recieve govern-
personal donations. That's right,
tion
)in
~history'
still scattered
Not many
.
Americans could
ment support. The athlete will you and me do play a part.

sion of the U.S. Olympic training
facility at Colorado Springs so
that more athletes could be· ac-
commodated.
.
throit~hout-the.city.
:
.
:
:'



.'
_.

easily· forgetsome of thif historic
train for his or her event each day
Private sector saves the day
.;
"
· .
• '
,

•.
_,
••

.
_..
•·
:
,
·
/
••
moments that-' came out of the· while the government supplies a
If it\ weren't for support by the
-··:.T~e
llluraL
0
f
U -~-;

mar~th0n Olympics: the
:
thrill
'of'
the

place to live, food, clothing,
private sector by such companies

S!~f
'!oan.
13
_ert?~q,ai~ted on the
.'American
=men's
'gymnastic team
money and any other iteccessity as McDonalds, Nike, Kodak, and
~i,d_e
of a bu,i_Idmg
is spll t~ere_; so as they won the gold'mecial; or the
the athlet_e and his family might The Southland
Corporation
is _t~_e
McJ?onaJds S~immmg ~nd

euphoria
·or
Jeff:Blatnick winning
need.

(owners of the 7-11 convienent
The three ideas that I just pro-
posed are. just that, ideas. I
believe that support for our
athletes in their drive for the
Olympics and a gold medal is •
Divmg Ce~ter wh!=re th~ (!mted the gold-for the U.S. in Greco~
.
While in America an athlete is stores), then the United States
Statercolle~.!ed;m,a stomsh_mg.
20
• ··Roman
style wrestling after: sue-
.
out in the cold. Not only does the would never have totalled the un-
• ,
go~d m~dal~. The_ L.A. Coliseum,. cessfully. defeating a. bout with athlete have to put in the hours of precedented 83 gold, 61 silver and
bpilt. ~~p,ie 1~~2 Summer Olym-. • cancer; or; even better
/yet;
the
.
training in his or. her particular
30 bronze medals that it did at the
pies and ~.h~ site ~( not· only th
e.
relief of Car1·Lewis, Kirk Baptiste
.
·event,
bi.it also work at a j9b 8 to summer games.
'
track a!1dfield eventS,.but
th
~_ex-
and
.Thomas
Jefferson· as
.they
·
1.0 hours a day in order
to
support
These corporations gave finan-
t~a-~udma~y
:
an~.·· someti~es
sweeped the 200-meter sprint 'for

themselves and their family.

,
·

..
cial support-to the US0C, athletic
·
vital,
but
everything always
revolves around government sup-
port. And the athletes need the
U.S. government's support in
some of the ways I just mention-
ed.

breath-t~~mg ?Penmg and closmg the'United States and bent down

Does this seem right? How can tcains and the athletes themselves
~eremomes, stdl stands,
-•
=
·.:
.
.


on their· kriees and gave thanks in
we ask our athletes to go out their so· that each· would be able to run
Heroes?
President Reagan, in a speech
for the U.S. Olympic team, is
quoted as saying, "You did us
proud. You're heroes, everyo11e
of you is· living proof of what
happens when America sets its
sights high and says, Let's create
a little excellence."
·' •
A~.-~~~-drives· ~toiind

the L~s·
.
front of 90,000
in
the Coliseum

and give it_ 11 O percent when their
.
a little more efficently without the

Angc_les'~rca·it-i_s
as though o'ne and millions on television.
:
••
·
·
.
government is not even giving it burden
·of
worrying about the


could still feel the excitement that

halfof that?
money needed to operate.
d:i.velqped the city;'ror:those· two.
Those

moments were. just a
Simon says...
My theme in this viewpoint is
..
weeks. fast
/sumrner. •
-•
·.
.
Tne
•.
culmination· of the years or-'hard
.
·
Sure, there is what is called the that

believe the United States
-
stadiums;
_arenas,
pools, tracks work that each athlete. put into in
·
United States Olympic Commit-
governm~nt should get on the
:
and playinf fields are
sdll
there, preparation' for represeriting-''the. tee
(USOC).
This
..
is
a . ball. American athletes do need
but t~ere is something missing;
United States at the 1984 Summer
,
government-sponsored. organiza-
their government's support and
Is leaving· an athlete out in the
cold for the four years prior to the
Olympics, both financially and
possi~ly even physically, the way
we treat heroes here in America?
.
. .
.
. .
•.

Games. • The sad aspect -· of
• .
tion based in Colorado Springs, not for just the two weeks in the
.
The athletes; coaches and spec~
..
America's Olympic success is that
Colo., that supervises the U.S. winter and the two weeks in the
tators, which are the essence of

the majority of the athletes had to
Olympic teams in such,areas. as, summer every four
.
years. The

the games, were. all gone, absorb-
train for their individual event
administration,
selection
.
and
:
athletes need
,
help 52 weeks a
ed into the,real world.of
1985
,and
without the support of their own~ training.
/
year, every year.
its politics, famines imd
_wars.
The government and for the mos~ part
Currently, the US0C is headed
More
money to {JS0C
- I certainly hope not.
_

_fairy.tale
is.over.
·..
>..
·
their own fellow citizens.

,
.
by William E. Simon, a Reagan
I propose thatthereshould be a

-
/
But for
·some
the fairy tale .is·.
.
U.S.: No direct aid

appointee. Remember who he us" substantial increase in
1
rhe money
Michael Robert Murphy is a
junior majoring in communica-
tion arts.
just beginning. For the athletes it
Uniike that of the Soviet Union
ed to work.fort Ju~t ask Richard budgeted. to the US0C by the
_\-'
-
.,.,
;
r:iJ~;\~::{zlt!l.lrllfJitf
11t
l'f
t~~:;{:f
,



,._..
·.c,::
.•..
.
·:;I
..
•:.•
.
• . .

"·
,:
.
by
~b~~
s~J-;s-beri~;</
<

:
ih;nking/criti~)
-~~t~.;~
corr·._· pfdcess
-~nd.
in a· sen~e. s'tudents'
•.
,·.
·
MENT:
The technicaLexpression

tuition.·
Rosem~ry Olsen'.s>article ~on~ in business for this is "situation
•.
1
But, any working professional
.
~ernjng.the recen(repori by the

analysis"-:- and there is an enor-
/iit
the advertising business will tell
American Association of Colleges nious literature concerning this,,'-' you,,you may be able to lie ove_r-
... ·causes.me
consideral:ile\:oii~c:m.
.
-
with a strong across-disciplinary
.
night,. but in the long term, a.solid
'.:
As your professor of ''adye,rtis-
mode between the social sciences/ • grounding of values pays best.
I
/
ing," If eel strangely compromis~

•.
>.
':




.
i
know n·o major advertising ex-
<·
ed by the need. to
.
defend
·
a
•.
2• Literacy:

writ!ng, readmg, ecutive who would disagree,

'-'vocationally-oriented"·_·
sub-
,
·,spealtl~g,
·H
ste'!i~g-'.-After
.•.
a.ll.;

publicly or privately.

:·ject
.. .-as
·described
in the report.
·
wha~: ~s; adver,iis!ng
.•
all_ apou!·.
7. Art: The comµrnnications
/:
Since{niajored in•philosophY:at· There is_ a 'f<>Jl_defful·cas~et~~
m
field ... and particularly advertis-
/:Yale,
aiui theI"eafter did extensive

the M~r.1st libr~ry ab~ut pohti~l ing ..
,
sponsors and subsidizes
, ,
·studies.
iri. French literature and
·
adyertismdg -b
..
-·.
wThere.,
.•
S~heh
.
.:
mam
•.
new
experimen;tation
and
-,·A·
-b·
,
..
d.
·_,·.
,.
·h···
k···J
-.pomt
ma e Y- ony c wartz, d
l

-

f
l ly
,'.
.
ra. 1c stll }~~• I
.t
m
~.
.

f h
·••dais
n-anti~war
.
,
eve opm_ent m _art, par tell ar

qualified to coiniflent.fr~m'an m- crea~or
-~
t e .
·
· ·
Y
=.

.


••
,
associaJed
with
the
new
.. ·:
i~llectual s~andpoin~:
:; .
:: •
-
~:

...
·
cl
om.11_1er~
1; 1
-
~
is.th at ~oubetust

t~chilol~gies (co_rnputer g~aph~cs,
>
>-'
What
.
'
makes
·.,
people think
earn to
·
5ten to peop e
·
ore
.
lazer-beam). Without us, artists

\
business activities.are not intellec-. Y~falt •~ them.di
,
.
,
1
coul~ n_ot_afford much more t~an

'foal?
In' the sense· that they. re-



-
:
ertan
ng
111
~~enca
magic mark~rs t1nd pa~tels ..
<-
, i:,
qu_irc,:_.
iptell~ctural chr~os_it~,.:
·:
a
.··•

:~~:~
.
:~;thiri! ir~i:~~;~ra~;

8'.
..
·
lnt~~tio~~i
.
·.
~nd_:
-~uiti~
.
...
:~tartms.lY~\V,ide

spe_ctr~~.
-9.f.
adveitisi_ng.·· If._ you have no cult~~l:ex~rien~;iBus1!1e!s to-
;
k~owledge,

c~!11~u,:ii,catJons
·,
lind~rsianding
:
of

.•.
stalistical
da>: 1s mher~n!lY mvolv~dm mter-_
_
skills (excelJe~ce m wntmg ~nd . analysis, and can'tread a balance nauonal act1~1ty - wh1c~, by_the
or~l presentation •••. and foreign-
sheet, you are 'Yasting our time!
.
way'
requires
a h1stoncal
·:language~,
·to.
hone
~n
....
-.
,
•.
••
·
·


_,\

.'underst~nding• which may not
-:und~r~t_a!ldmg
•.
of
..
al!ernat1ve
•·
'
4.

Histo,ricaL. c~nsciousness. seem required fof
µ.s.
business
.!possibllmes
·of.·. thmkmg ~nd _ Yes, of c~mrse.-Pos~1bly
the _great activity.·
.
.Jhe
.
burden
of
_
,
value-structures},
..
understan~mg weakness of ~m~ncan
.
business. geographic and historic multi-
..
;.of
s~quen:e, pnonty, and log1~l If_ ~e are havmg:trade problems cultural
.backgrou·nd
cannot be

.,
cla~1ty • •
•:
~aybe
:
success

m with .. th e

J a pane~':• or
·
th.e carried by courses in advertising,
.
busmes~
_
requ1~~ th:5e more than
.
Braz1hans, or the Bn_ush. co?ld 1t marketing,
·or
contemporary· com-
';
academic spec1ahzat10~. .

.
be that our memones d?n t_ go ritunications; It belongs to the


_,There
are-
·s9m':
thmgs _fairly back three ~r four centunes, a~d liberal arts regimens --'-' and they
d_1fficult.
to

learn m cl~rooms:
we are lear~ung now ~hat we
fad-.
should. bear the responsibility of
,
l~dersh1p, t~mwork, tnt?mg, pa-
ed to learn
m
the past.
.
.
.
· ·
·
. making this kind of information
.
:
uence, stamma •.. These, it wou!d
-
5. Science: Ev~r try tq wnt~ a relevant to the
·
future occupa-

seem,
.
ate. better
.
l~~ed
-'m
compu~er. ad without knowmg tional needs of students.
-.

·
athletics,. campus acuVJtles
·
and
.how
a computer works? Or an ad
.
,
,

.
,
.
;
-
.
.
..
.•
internships. Whether or not such

for
cosmetics,
without·
9. Study in depth of a discipline
.
• activities
. :
should
be
.
given
__
underst~nding on both a chemical_ or gi:oup of disciplines: We plead
..

"'academic·ctedit
is'moot. But sure.:

and psychological basis what the ·guilty; advertising and marketing


ly the editors of The Circle will
__
cosmetic contributes to the life of a_re
ind~ ".l?,u!l~les"
of inform~-
_.,
agree th_;t\
,heir activities
as
active
O
its purchaser?.
.
.•
.
.
uon; sk11Js, rouunes, and techm-
jouriialisis·add something to their
6. Values: -Admittedly, there 1s q~es
drawn
from
other
'\
academicformation.
,,;l
tendency
_in
busin~-oriented
d!s~ipline~;
•:cross-
Very relevant to the
AAC
study courses to
:und~nmne
value- d1SC1phnary?
-,,
So
true
1t
makes
is 1he' list of' nine "experiences" structures by presenting only the some of us cross!
.
';;
which should "inform all study."
.
positive side. There
_is
enormous
It
is easy.· to dismiss business
,
The fallacy; perhaps, is to think"~ pressure on business educators to education: as, • un-intellectual •.
. that
0
vocationally-oriented
0
do so, because:~large
,business
Many: .. pusm~roen,. for reasons
-~
·
education excludes these.
come up with grants and other of their own, are anti-intellectual.
~-1tz·'lnqiirf,0"~r.H·
::1oifaf-~'riiWnie'$rsubsialffii,™!educat~
•~.f.:-

·:.
~:Coll1iaaed
'Oll-pagel.O_·
rrne-coSt
.•
O.f
an education
\
by
Calvin Lee
\•

~ith education that makes them

._,
responsible to the working world
.
As a special academic student,
i
·
by way of their elit.e positions in
_
believe that our glorious system
society. For the most part, col-
of institutional control- shouid
leges are suppose to be conscious
_focus~on.
how to help.those who
enough· to provide curricula
.
are willing to help. themselves. I
which
·serves
the needs and in-
believe that I have been helped in
terest of the communities they
the sense that 'I have
a
better
serve. For students, it's supposed
understanding of the values,
to represent a way out of a poten-
. norms, . authority, class patterns
tial life of poverty and moral laxi-

anq
'bureaµcratic
struct_ures con-
ty. Colleges· should inculcate at-
cerning societies; dictates. The tax
titudes within us that are morally
cuts of 1986 have onlyjust begun
upright, industrious and pro-
to indicate the oppressive, deca-
fitable to our lives. It appears that
dent state of· world affairs. The
serving a student's specific talents
students of America
'have
got
to
.
isa lost cause for many. colleges
face up to the fact that; "we•• have

today.


a problem. lntelligenc~ is a terri-
.
Instead of President Reagan
ble thing to waste (regardless of
·focusing on the benefits of
. :
economic status), but it'is becom-
students employment eligibility,
.:·ing
more ~pparent that the focus
family ties and security for their

on; intelligence· is the kast of
.
future, military spending for the

·_
governmental concern.
security and death of our students


f
While reading the March 7 edi-
appear most realistic and creative-

tibn ofTJ)e'Cfrcle, I came across a
.
ly practical as a motivation
letter by Mr. Mark Ciesinski

toward governmental control.

which motivated me to print some
Reaganomics should be an upper-

of
.
the thoughts I have on his
most concern for all students
perspective
relating
to
the
·
since we are
·constantly
being
escalating cost of tuition as being
manipulated within
a
framework
a primary reason why families
of control for beyond the scope of
cannot continue to send their
any equal opportunity towards
children to college. But by the
success. Reagan seems to believe
.
• same. token, there can be no ex-
that it is a necessity to show those
cuse for th~ lessening of federal
who have it hard that it can in-
.funding_ being created by

the
.
deed get harder. The middle class
Reagan administration. Society,
will learn what it's like to be poor,
~
in my opinion, is truly the one at: and the poor will learn what it's
fault because they
.have
allowed
like to be poorer (increasing the
our government to put profit
likelihood of crime), while the
from
our
·rormal

system,
rich just simply get richer.
transmitting

cultural
.
yalues,
Student energies should focus
before the· social controls which
on some
aspect
relevant to both
combat _the ills of poveny and ur-
themselves and soci_ety~
The in-

ban chaos. Education, as it stands
herent good for,

all concerned
now, does not mean that the
should be achieved arid ac~
;
equality . of educational opwr".'
complished to serve, the interesis

tunities are relevant opportunities
of the-student first, ·tnen the col-
•.toward
students', present and/or
lege and society.
future lives.
.-
•.
,.
'

..
_,,
'
..
0
-
--
~
-

'i:
We are traditionally taught that
Calvin
Lee
ls
a sptdal academk
-i
co11eg~tovide"metr-and,wmnen:;,,~student at Marist.
:
.
''i"
. .
·
,';_~,.
:-~;
.,_
.
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;,;.,
;
••.
ii

-~

;
.'

by.Carl
MacGo~a1Pf.;.;
:::,
'.:·
.
,:it·

J
vcstm~nt
..
\
la~-'
\
says
t'
tha:e:·sucliFleven
·have
to. lower, ~hemselyes
)o
~v-:
no_ccrt~c~.~!~'tr~il1slation:1'.he.worJcfJ;t,·-.

·:
:,
:', :

.,
,::.: : . ·}
Curmudgeon's
Manifesto
: •
question ofi the•Washin'gton press
':
t>-lue::chip'..:
••
invesiiiient:\:-bvi i1{t:,:'.inay.
be'preparing to.violaieaii'old\',i:\'f~Wiifch"·f:ifings!iif
io:Nicaragua,\f,:;,ff:>:·:.>.r/:\\.
j
;t
•_
.•
::::::sJi~~h;:;t~!ti~!f~r::~:;_f~;,·,:;
.•
<f~r~~~!?tt::~t;{lijbltW~i11r~:~.i~~:t~iw:~1ji~ti\~i·;tJ:.t;I:;}:~M~t~¥R~~ttt1l~;¥;tt§t~ir:.:m}fl~ti::i;l:./-.[l/(:(\\t!
. •
..
·
:
And agam, ·Ronald'.:. Reagan
·:.
agree to. talk about<1alkmg,abo,u1·;rHe-iwantsfiJs.i to·'. believe ·-,,the;.•{.C~n,tras.hJher,e;\J:>uC.which,:Co,n,r,.:;;:,
:,·,
••
,:•
··:.:,~
·
;i{
.
delivers his us~al aris~er:. Why
"_
talks; • llntil, such t!~e::'as_;u~e.i<>f~/_istt~t~gi~_pe(1:~se
,IO.iljative
(''S~ar
i,~tf~s?}JJi~,r.~riir.~lt~o'.,isf:gup~~\on~:/\\'>/?i
/Ji
}'
•.•
,
.
sure! 1 can't wait to chat with. my
...
·
nuclear we~pons w1U
be mutually.\\Wars''.)' is>tlie: cure~an end~all:of;,~,;iµa~_!::up
of;sµpp,orters,ofthe late,,>);'.<:'.'..
'.
':'
Ji
..•
old pal Bresh,: uh,.'..Andro, er,·
...

beneficial.:

'·•.
:
.:
<:
:::\::
'.;;':·:
:,A;f~-:'~\the
nuclear
arms race.
Any
use
'of:,\di~tator;1t\tiastasio'
Sci'inoza/wlici'.
:.:;~·}
:
'.
_.c

\
,_
:i't~





Che, um; er Gorbachev!.
,; ·:

''
.
>:
Despite the minimal progress of'.,~riiiier;'Coih1nent'al
Si,Ballisffc
t<,wai
deposed~by.;:ihe<Sanafoistas;
\;
.•
>:·
; .
:,.
"
.10
Dlsarmln
.
g
.
Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet

SALTs

One
••
arid. Two/:'Old
':_:Missil~swould
be made obsolete,'·
and
'aiiottieY}coniposed_:of
'ex-':/.,·
• •
;}~
.
,
1
1

,
Union's (le\¥ Communist earty dou~le~R likes to make
.a
big de~l
::•he:believes;·
by_ the laser defense
••
Saridiriist~~:\Vho'mafor ma}(notj:;:
..
-(
:.•
:
:ti
. d'.
. / .
. .
.
.
.
-
.
.
chief; is unique. as far as Soviet
•.
<lUt
'.
Qf
'.',
t~e
·:Soviets'.
<al~eged
/shield
he~wants:toinsfall.
'.
• '. 'F" .'
w.ant
,deµici~tacf
·.lf'orie
side:suc~
;'
'; :::·..
.
;
'
~l
1
eas
.
.
'
kaders got He has·
a:
Jirm
'harid-
,cheating
;-.on
•.
the
:£:agreements;
::·:·:\•;Is
this";system.for real?'It. may;·., ceeds;
1
,iiftoverthrowin.g,the·
Sari~'


'

,.
·;'~~
shake and holds the distinction of Curiously,·.
he·
hasn'( produced''5'be;'i
given)·'
past
::
technological
·
diriista governinetlf;-'itie
other side
.
.
j(
.
being able to siand. without
·the
any evidence· of 'Cheating,-and>' achievements accomplished· for .• will
\likeiy,i=contibue\its
.:-fight
i-
'.\?

assistance of a nearby chair.·
.
neither has he· asked an interna-

·: the
··'military~:'.;
Bue it..' is
.
not ... a :
:against'a'new
enemy;'presumably··
·/·
,
A
. Although reform
fo
the Soviet tionaJ. tribunal to
-
look into
:the
;
·
realistic defense f
pr
iu
least three·
i
with·;assisfance,Jrs:,m')ne: .oust eel-':.,
Union is always impossible
.
to
-
matter. Reagan bnly' uses the ap-·., :· re~sons:{1)
:HJhe.·soviets·
really • Sandiiiistas;
'?>
(.:· ·.;':''
(.
'.;
;
• •
••
:· •
Reel
.
.
1m press1 ons
foretell, Gorbachev's
·
physical
•.
pealing stereotype ~f Soviet cot-
are planning
a
ntl~lear takeove(of
.,.-
; :
.
.':
;
:·:
:,
-
:
·.'·
••
•, .:


dexterity and the fact that ne has ruption as rhetorical fodder,
.
.
the Unite4·Sfates;-.wouldn't they


Big choice .
.:
·'
-:··>
;-..
•,:;
,.·
:,·
....
visited Canada:and Great Britain
TJ:ien; if one proposes making strike before
.the
S.D.L satellites
,
The Reagan administration has·
••
indicate that
.
he may seek the next set of arms reduction ac~
.
are launched?-· If they wouldn't,
.•
got it all mixed up. Why not take
'
substantial changes after he con- cords
verifiable,
Reagan
·wm
say
...
we
;,
woulcinY'.:,'.need
.'
:nuclear,
'.',
the
'.'covert'-'._aid:no~
gqin.g to,tlt!=
.
.
so Ii dates his power.
.
, _
that verifiabil~ty is an impossibiH-
.•
/we~pons
int~~ firstplace;'2) laser··:' Contr.as
,
and.
;:use •.
it-,

to~,, fund.
-~.
For the first time in a while, the ty.He's lying.
•'
', •.
·
:
..
,'
.
C.
;
satellites
:,:f
woiild/
1
-rio't{:
proiecC
freedom··
,fighters •'i,n/the :So'viet \
world's
••
·events··
will· not
:
be
_
The
,.
Uniteo
.·States·,
has·· against Cruise missiles/-whfoh'·re-'','.
Union, for the, purpose o(:_over..::f
.
overseen by a pair of old fogies. photographic. evidence !hat the
..
main. near' gr_ouri_cr_ieyel
\ji{
th~if~
•.
throwing
..
the
·y~oyi_e~
:/feglitie?
'
Gorbachev is a young.
54.
_Will
~oviets are

.building
satellites.· deadly mi_s~\9ns·;})Jll~traditiohal

(
tvteanwhi~~.
let's 9pen.up:n:ucle~r,
.
_
this change the course of the arms Horrors! How did
"we
get.these . ieJi.ance
:>.on.''
the.;,:;qeterrent . an~s
,talks;
with the Nicaraguan·.·
:,.
• ·
talks? Probably
not.
..
- •
.·.
·,·
.. •
photos? Why, they were taken by
..•
•• capabilities of,
.nticl~ar
weapons
:t
gov.ernm~Jlt;
This should
be
enor-
-
:
.
On nuclear ar.ms
.th~
S~~iets

our spy satellite hovering
·over
the • "'.iH
be
deterred;
0
le~ding
t<>
the in- ·; n:iou~Jr benefid11l to the United

..
·
••
and
_the\
United States are·. in Soviet Union.·. .

. •
'
tr';'~uct\~n
·.or,:-_:~
,;,:r~dical::
~ew

States,; whicli clin
_sign
any old
'
,

.
perfect agreement. They. spend
• .
If such satelht.e.s a~e accurate
··.
m1lttary_ ~oncept,;
;c<>n_:,'.en_t1onal,
.
agree~ent.
,a!l~
then ac~u_se:,th,e:-
.
billions· of dollars and rubles to enough
:-to
-find·
other:
·
satellites
•.
warfa~e (tan~Si plal)es,,nfles;.'.).
;_
.S.and
ofrenegmg on their agree~


construct\ these ultra-genocidal, unde~ construction; t~ey wouid
-
:
_R,eagan'
h~J~pUed t_h~t,.~e
,~s::'.
ment
__
·to:
cu!:·-bac~ J.h~ir nuclear
.
weapons; ~nd they're ilot about to certainly. 1;,e 1:1ble
~

t9_
•.
~e~~ct
=_.
wtlhng_ l'?,
_.b~~~_:;f~C
..
r~,es_.~.-ln_:_hts.-·.:--:_
~!~e~al(~wh.de_
:the.
Yn1ted·_.St~~es

••
··--
·----,.
...
dismantle; so many of them that weapons- placed in violation of
St~te of,: the ~mcm,: ~cld.res~,.
_he
;
r~tau~s
its !JWn
nudear_ forces!
<.; ,
.
they.won't be able to destroy the arms. control: agreements; The
st~ted, )\'~ ~n.µo·lon_ger be !n-

Thu~· wdl pea,ce be br~ught to.
planet
.10'
times each. Basic in-. Soviets_andAmericanswouldilot
nocents m.a ~orld without m~ thenauonsoftheworld.
:·.

i
'·~_','{-~-···
.,·
;;
...
'·.,
by
B.everl~
M~rlang
And during this time, there is· mask. His
··;~th~r
is a·,modern-
~udi~~c~'s
·te~i
ducts, but
'.~ther
,



.'
1

-


,
considerable drain at the box of-\ day hippie who
..
takes drugs and
than, that,' it-
.~n_not
be· truly·
_;
,
It~s that joyous time ~f yea~
.
fice for the Christm'as films have
;
hangs
:out':with
a
motorcycle faulted:
• •
•.
.
.
.
again. For i~e majority of people;

all but passed' away, and movie gang.Thes·etwo idone take on the
.
••
Performances are
,;admirable.
:':
_
the vernal e~uinox represents a audiences
_
ever~here anxiously
'
systeni and:
a
:.wodc,l
of prejudice

-
butif.pec\al medt mt.(stgo
fo
Cher,
rene\\'.al of hfe.
·
The days grow await
_
the
·
upcoming·.: summer'
·
that must

be
·-overcome
:before
as the motlier; who has become a
.
continually, longer; the. buds ap~
,

blockbusters. The movie audience
,
others recognize the bea.uty;of the·
..
phenomenal•
_dramati<:
:acfress
in

.
;\
•·
.

pear~<_on
the. trees,. and the first-~ can aff9rd· to
:be
inore sele~i.ve. ingiyidiial-< locked
·:
behind
':his
--.
her own right._Her presence alon~
.
~
:
robm"of-spnng returns fre>m'·his
:,
during this· time, btidgeting'their': disfiguring mask;:')~:;,:;:,:'·"\·'-,::'
:
••
would make this film worth\Yhile;,·,:
.:
.
.
j
••
:
.

,
.
winter abode.
<
··
;
....
> -:,
:>
.•
expenses-·towards tfie:-filrris that',•
:-It
is":iiitere~tiiig
-tQ.
note
:that·:
and,one:can:,only pray.that.she
;•:> ""
l
, 1\:ll
.
1,.,.
-
,


.....
-Priina'~ily.
unaffected· brLthis':

are
re~Jly':
worth· it.· Duiirig)~is:-,a(te~istrllg~llrig·l}is ~-~<*.1~fe:fo:···
wi!J: ~~''.;re~ll!~#ed
::'ci~~:"year.
\t,
>: .
•··
\J
'.,,-1v1aS1\
.
.
· ·
..
';
-;
,.change;'
m.
the.,,.'!YC~ther{-.1S1_.the
··.,dry
season, onemm·,.thatis WQrtli·:'._make
p¢ople)ee'thebeauty 1nslde,:
..
·-•
h.encc:,:a( next/year'.s
"Acaciemy,',
·.;;,·
:,, .·.:··.
,-

,-
" '
'.

.-

1
,
.... -.

:
·".

,,
:
.'moyiegoer~•,.who
i
pr~fers:'fo
isp'~Ild}
sccirig°is
·«Masktf
~~/>
~;_:1·~~•;:($(:C::
y:
1
·';2:·.,<whetf·
het
fir~t\'falis:<:iiY\ti>-ie:"it;·:'1s'
,-;~A
i.ards:c.eremony?
f
7
:'f:;'fi!;,i;}:<;:_;·_:;/i;~·-!::>··;.,
-t :: -·
:
.
·
,
,
:

'·..
·,
'.
:
the ma~ority:~f.·his
'or
he~,ti~e in--~·-:,
J'Mask'~
'is
a> dramatic. sto&-'.' with''a:girl_'that
he·s~s''fioni:afar;·,1,.:
f{~~~Mas~:•.·.,1(oy:_iio,
ajean,s
.a'te'af?l'.'\.
,,: •
::
~-'
~

the.environirien~ally
controlled.at-·
.
based on the frue-Jife"account of a a pretty
blind
girl.·,:-•,·-
..
·-· •
"':,

..
~-:.
,je~~ef;'.
lt'is·;~i'ather, a story of. the,.:.:./·...
: .

• ••
~
·,
mosphere : o_f.
-~he

darkene_d
::
b6y

whose
_
face·'• is.
:
horribly:::
.. _;'l_'he_
fi!~
'is_'f1:~i~d_,.~(Jts::etji:t:.<.jpr
_'<>ft!if~-.:_:H:i~:,~~iuit-tl!1d)n-.
·,:·.:.
• '.'
··,r
.
/J
..
thea\re. This JS ~cademyAward
:
disfigured by a raredis_ease;:thus,
<when
ifsttiv~S::fott<>.<(nJuch·sen~·YSPlrat~onil.l::
a'!,cl''JU.st~:the:kmdpf./·,:-:
.::
.
::. ,:

'• •
time ••
:

'
••
he, is
_oft1:n
'accUSf~
-~f}ve~r!1g•:t:_'
ti1t1e,@d!~t,a~~
~fllrfs,~/~,r.:ti~;{
:m~~~~-{~tl
~-~~
f
P,?~1·:~,!f.~~~g.
//
'.
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.
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.-
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f
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l-
1
.

..
•.
$
ingl
ef
l11i,~~~$:;l;~;0-;:1:f
;[
by
Kenneth
F. Parker Jr. •
WHAM'!
i,:,;FEATURING·\
_
.
i
.
l

.
aEokaE:-x,>rvfrciiA1fL:.·\.<
,
USA FOR AFRICA - "We Ate,·, '.'Careless Whisper••qnhiadhis
the World".;~
Of
course
it sounds
{·damn
record one tnbre time,
so-.
like a bad Coca-Cola• jingle>but:;. m'ec,ne'sgoing to'.gediurL..F.
:' :'
obviously· the
.t~ought:
is:.th~re:
'<··.·•·•.SHEENA
'EASTON
-~,:•·•sugar_
Buy
'.·it,;
and,\ ask',. questi_oris

Walls" _. How did
'this
one' ever

later.:.A+.:
·: , \
,,
'.
'< ·;:'.~-
.
pass 'the censor?
:sure
It's
fun to
·
>'PA.V_ID:
LE,f; ROTH-;.-.
be\silggestive, buiatleasi-Jeave'
"California Girls'! - Despite it;be~
'
some element of doubt ... D.':,.
ing onlyMarch;
I
think it's safe to
.
TINA TURNER -
-
"Private

say: thc1t

the "Most Useless
·naricer"
- The ciuiracters ill ihis•;
Record
:of'the
rear'' award·, is- record are·· the'. same· ones th~tif"
.
wrapped up ... D.·
••
··•.
::·'.•
.
~•' •
.
.-
.:
.

Sheena Easton smgs about, except

..
A~HMOTION - "Obsession" -
.
Turner takes the idea; throws it
in

I originally liked this'one. Then I

their faces and shows how empty-:

saw the video with band members headed the idea really' i~. Righi
,

• •
in space suit~ and Roman soldier on.:.A:
'

· :·

•.·;
·
regalia dancing by a pool (?). So
NEW EDITION
-
·"Mr.
much for the promotional use of
·
Telephone Man" -

ital Sure ital
:
video ... D.
they 'look like tht;.. old>Jacksqn

MICK ~Aq?ER
. •
-
"Just
Five,. ital Sure ital they-sound like
1
.
Another Night.
~
Not a bad the Jackson Five. And ital sure


record if someone else sang it. I ital the record sounds good. I Just
'
like Mick's. sneer as much as hope

their putting a'_Vay.
some
anyone,

but something just
royalties for college ... B.
doesn't jive here. The_lyrics state
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
his

desire
for
__
love and
"I'm On Fire" - Bruce is getting
"tenderness," while recent inter-
more mileage from this album than.
views state that !te'll never ll!arr~, from most of the cars he sings
much less settle down. Which JS about. Columbia said they plan to
it? You need the Stones more.than pull a total of six singles from the
you think, Mick ... C
+.
"Born in the USA" album. So sit
THE SMITHS - "How Soon Is back
-and
enjoy the ride. By the
Now?" - Right now, The Smiths way, the song is terrific ... A.
are probably the most popular
FRANKIE
GOES
TO
cult band in America. Their latest HOLLYWOOD - «Relax" - The
single is a dramatic eitamination only significance in remembering
of shyness and self-arlalysis. either this band
·or
its records is
,_
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Ne~rly. ten· yearS'._ago~
;'Or\·A.Pfif
30,
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~75/
the·
city/qf($aigo~:
.
.f~i1//
'
marktng. the off1Cial·-end
..
of the
Vietnam
War-.
It mark·e·cs-
the
end
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a
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tumultdous·
period.°~n'
fhe
)ii.~~ory"o't_
thi.s'
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years: later.\
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• On Aprif25/'.Jhe!,Vie_wpoint pag·e ofJhe. Circie will- recognize the,
ten-year ~riniversary~o(Jh~ ~nd
of
an e_ra
bi:dedicatin~
-th~
e(ntire
-
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The Cfrcle wel:<?}>mes
submission$
from
anyone who was directly
or indirectly involved in the war.
• • •


•••

Es$ays
should be typed,.double-spaced,
500-700
words. Send
to.
Pete Colai_zzo, c/o The Circle, by April 22.
I
!)on't miss it -
if you can find

Continued on paae
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opomore
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,
as ion _nsuue
o •
' ':A
recent administrative deci- of Dix. 'Hills, N.Y., shares a
Technology)," Weinstein said.
,-startj_Frlday:MJrci(~9
: _.
• .. Ribhtiird.G'e're{ .• /
KIN:Cj·~DA\,.ID(R)
HELD OVER1 .
.
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REvE·~~e~IR),
HELD OVER!.
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.MARlST co·L·LEG'E ··_
- U-'N-ION
'BOAR·o·.
-
. seFUNG·
FORMAL
-~:with:
music by
EAST-,COAST.

-_•:s:Ay·-_._
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• Cocktail.-Hour--,7_:45·iri
·the
Pub·
·cDinner-
Danc.e
·-.g:p:.m.-t
a.m. -
Advan~Ef"tic:kets·;.ortSale , .
sic,n rtot'to renew the contract of similar concern. "I'm.· worried
- The program originally came.to
, the director of the fashion design that when we graduate and look
Marist . about . seven years ago
program . bas ·raised _. concerns forjobs.in our field, if Marlst's
from Bennett College, a twp.-year
among some students about the fashion design program no longer
institution in _ Millbrook, which
future direction of the depart-
exists .; or
is not
adequate,
·_was closing. Leigh was hired from
ment.

Bennett to start the Marist pro-
·Professor
Ilya
Perlingieri,
'If Mar1·st·
do·esn·
't st1·c·k
gram. •
.director of the fashion design ~rid
According to Perlingieri, she
merchandizing program of about •
to
a
progressive plan, jn
was hired last year to pull the
120 students, •has.been'told that
-
department together by revamp-
her contract will not
be
renewed.
tim~ the program will
ing the curriculum and upgrading
She came to Marist in September
simply peter out and die
academic quality.
_ of
1984
. .
College administrators·
h
.
,
Perlingieri,
who
previously.
refused .. to . comment on _
the
away on t e vme.
taught at San Diego State Univer-
reasons for the nonrenewal.
-
David Klein
sity in California, said she has
- During her first eight months at -------------
"created a sense of academic ex-
Marist, -Perlingieri made several employers will not hire us if they
cellence about this department
significant changes in the fashion don'tthink we got a good educa-
that has not been here before."
program and proposed others, all tion," she said.
"I
don't think it. According to -Perlingieri, more
• of ~hich were intend~d, she said,
is fair that we are paying all this
solid academics were created
to ·upgrade the academic quality money and the administration is
under her direction through the
ofthe'department.
_,

.
playing around with our future."
addition of five courses, including
In the wake of the decision not
David Klein, who has been an
Costume History and Fashion
to renew Perlingieri's contract,
adjunct instructor: in the depart-
Public
Relations,
and
the
fashion design 'students who were ment for five years, said that
establishment • of
writing re-
interviewed complained about a under Perlingieri, for the first
quirements.
sense' of i_nstabiHty in a depart-
time there seemed to be a plan for
Also, the internship program
ment thatowill be changing direc-
the whole department. Klein said
was expanded. According to,.
.: tOfS
fpr/
the • thirc~ time in. two that while there was only so much
W ~instein. next year as many_ as
years. Some of the majors ques- • a director could accomplish in •
tioried whether recent progress in • one year, Perlingieri's experience
'The program will go
.
making lhe program more com-
arid knowledge had "gotteri 'the
o·n and imp-rove. It will
, petitive would be hindered by the program on the right track."
;change.·
.
"Many of the students feel that ·._
not come,to
a.
standstill ... --
• l
<'l came .3,200 miles to Marist the inside is caving away from •
W_
-e h_
·'1_;
v._~e
___
-
_·_t_•-_,_o
___
:-_J_'foci
our_ ._niche •
College on the basis of Professor - them. Perlingieri was starting a
~ •
Wed. March 20, thru -Thurs. April 14
.in .D.onneuy·
and Dining Hall_ :
/Perlingieri's recommendation for
progression of changes that need-
in ;_,
terms·
-Of
i
fashion,.
- this
program,'; . said. junior
ed
to
be made. She was attemp-
_
s'clfools.' , _
-' --transfer student Beth Stroeder -of ting to create a program that
• -
• • -
Seaitle,Wash.
"I
researchecl a lot would produce
professionally
-, •
.. /,
:.:...:..:,:Jiaula
Weinstein
. $16.0()·per pers9n •
• $30~00_.
per couple
-·of. schools until I decided on trained students," Klein said.-"If
___ -,_-
----------
f.lRST
COME, :FIRST.SERVED!.·
: Marist . because- of the good Marist doesn't. stick to a pro-
JO
to 12 students may be par-
academics ,here and the promise gressive plan, in time the program
ticipating in internships.
of progress in the department. I will simply peter out and die away
Perlingieri also pointed to other
ha".e'. no i_de!l about' next year," .on the vine ..
" •
.
changes this ·year: the expansion
•--------
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•.,
._
Robert:.:Sadowski;. chairperson.
of New
Y
or!(
City.and· interna-
of tlie'Division ·o(Arts·ancrI:et~
tional industry ties, the addition
.-ters;:said/
howev~t,
h·e-wanted to
of - three more
_
adjunct faculty
,
dispeli concerns about -the -future
members, _
the creation of a stu-
of the program. -The program is • dent lounge for research and con-
·solid,
'he
said, and he reaffirmed
ferences and an increase in library
his coµimitment to the, fasl,lion . holdings in fashion design.
.,.._.
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.
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OPEN
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DAYS
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design \major. Sadowski • also ex-
Also, ~ccording to Perlingieri,
- pressed his willingness to meet
.when she. came there were 20
with students
to
discuss-their con-
students working on six sewing
cerns. '
: . - •
macl)ines; with each student re- •
The administration , is moving
quired to make one garment per
ahead with its search· for a neW semester. Now, she said, there are
-director, acc.ording\to Sadowski.
12 students on 12 machines, each
Although no' interviews have been· making
four: garments
per
held, the job has been advertised
semester.
in The New York Times and the
This spring. Perlingieri propos-
, Poughkeepsie Journal.
·ed a revised curriculum that called

"The growth of the department • for a four-year program requiring
wUI depend on who they bring • additional courses; a proficiency
)n;!/.
sai~ _senior -P?n!elle. Mon~: in • a language and a research
!~n~ro of J:ra1:1k~i,°
~akes; ~-L ,_ paper.


Wtth Perlmgien s mtroduct1o_n ·-'). Weinstein said that while pro-
of new courses, the prog~am 1s ,;.:gress was made·this year, it is dif-
much better. now than 1~
.was .•
ficult to judg.::. acad_eQiic
progess
before. But 1_f we -hav~ a tern-
in
-
such -a. short .period· of time. __
P?rary coordinator agam, \there • S.uch a radical change in the cur-
will be_ no real growt~ unul the
riculum
.as
proposed by Perl-
new dire~tor comes m," Mon-
ingieri will not likely be accepted
tanaro said. .
in the future/
according to
In the·sprmg of 1984, the pro-
Weinstein.
-
gr~~ was run by a tempor~ry ~d-
"Radical
changes may be
mimstrato!, • ~aula
We!nstem,
disruptive and even ·counter-
after Dayid L~igh, the d1r~ctor, productive. There are many side
became di. Leigh later resigned _ effects to such a .. program that
for hea~th reasons.
mgst be considered," Weinstein
Despite the concerns expressed
said
by some students, Weinstein, who •

is now instructor of fashio•n
Academic Vice President An-
design and internship
c
9
or-
drew Molloy was not available to
dinator, said she is optimistic
comment on the reasons Perl-
about the future of the program.
ingieri's contract was not renew-
"The program will go on and im-
.
ed, and Sadowski declined to
prove.
It
will not come to a stand-
comment.
still. Though the curriculum does
• For her part, Perlingieri said
need to be revised, it cannot be
that she has had backing from the
done overnight. Student needs
students and some faculty, but
have to be evaluated. We have to
she claimed she received no sup-
find our niche in terms of fashion
port from the Marist administra-
Sound __
Continued from pa~e 6
the
fact that by next year their
credibility will be reduced
to
a
question in the 1986 edition of
Trivial Pursuit. Let's hope. so
anyway ... D-.
♦.
:_,~:-
~. '~
l;
,. ; , . -
..
• ,,/
tion.
Perlingieri said she believes her
contract was noc renewed because
she exceeded her budget, raised
objections to the administration
about another faculty member
and failed to follow proper pro-
cedure in submitting the revised
curriculum. She nows says those
procedures were not made clear to
her when she began the revision.
,,
.
.-
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• __
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be~-.yecn.
• ~tersstaring at
me.\.<..•,:· .• ::~.
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t~': J?.onnelly·i>arkfog
lot, cautio~ . .' cars~and truck.s ,of.~1(fe~mg
s!~•. :; ·.,
!h~
b~ot.h~~~-'.~ho
s~t~~~' h~re ;;:-~ Raina E_. ,¥aissel,•£ha1rperson. . :repla~~g_i.t.~·-,z:;;::-·.:
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:y
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, :, signs at. Jot entrances. and con- . albe1~ d~monstratmg • so~e • skill : ~rom; Fran~e ; .. ~ust"-; have~,.been::i-: Sch<?lars~.1p
Comrnltt~;·
Y+ •.
:·,>:,.::.What ··.caused-the·:
'dents .sand:.

·
• sideration
·of
potential pedestrian ·: f?), is da~g~rous! Many,' crossers. :: pleased :to find· ttiaf the ,creat~re
·:\1/
16 Smoke Rise"Lahc
't
~·-,.~.f
fii:. ;:. ;·
scratcli~
~ .under'.,"
my'
car?·
Marist· • '
.
safet)'. proble~s at the· south en-- ar~ beginnin~ to ~~velop a _reper- of !egend _in thei~ homeland ,was a.--:: Wappingers. Fa_lls,
.
N~\1~~~

..
·_,<;:oll\e!e
spe_ed
bu~ps'. ' . .,::,._
.. :,,"J~t-d~'.~.,
_trancetocampus .. · .. .'· .• ... _. .· - to1re o! ha1!,-r~1smg ~tones of . r~s1dent. 1~ their :ne~ su,rroun
7 ·,-

. -

•. "··
. •
Smc~~~_IY,;
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: : Considering
..
the )!111'ortance cif '. near. misses while. mo".mg a~out '. dmgs. .
.
.


.
• '
<)
'. • • /
' • •• • •
:
~enneth·
~?
f'<?~~!s
;)J.t.~a,t
Jpe~J)le.i~r~ • ~~if ing:J~ :Jis((; •
the.safetyconcernshsted,theStu~
the, campus. Many· <?f· t~ese •. f:wof!der 1fother _alums have
:,,,Asst:Dire~or?f.,:_.on.-campus;,In-.order~toi·combat?'
dent Life Committee offers the .. hazards ~·
be :·avmded < by
fox stones to share with the co.m~.
.

.•.. ·
• '.- ,.fmanc1alAid • the problein{the school.'installed./:
following recommendations · to carefully observ!ng S(.)undtraffic· '. ~unity. . , ,
,: ·• :. ·, •
. • • ••
<:·'.','
·./
?t:.•.\ :,: };/·
/thr«
n~W,
speed
bumps':'·. two'<>n{ :·
- the Marist CO~f!IUnity>" •
•• an~ safety rul~s and .. co.~irion
<
,
'.
Bob s.oniriter.'~74

• '
Sp~ed
bu.rilps?·;/:t'f~(\\'._a~er.~~~~s.:Rd:Jthe.'~~a:d you~r~(-t _
For Pedestrians:
sense. So now, mstea~•of . look:-
." .
School of Adult Educat1011. ,
,
, .: .•.. ,
.
·:: ,,.· ..
_:·';
;:.":.:~•~:c,n,wheniyou
turn·m the North en~·:;,\
'l.
·Cross Route 9 only .at · ing both ways .... ," lookfourteen
, _,. ·:. ·- To the Editor:.
._.:.
:.j>t::'',:-,t:\\\t\\traiic.e);,}arid: one cm :the lroad' :, •
d~sigl!at~d areas' arid _under the . , w~ys before crossing. th~. street.
..
Scholarship

... .-,.:
·'
_
Two·: 't'~ke11ds,_._ago;/
I:::ien( ': toi"a~ds.:, I>,o,ni:i~l!Y
:.off-/:\Va~cr-::
..
_
••
direction of the traffic hghts. .
Be careful out the~e! · • . , •. •. ••
, ... -.-
, . ,
.· ..
··
.. •
.
. . . home for the. firsC tnrte'Hhis.<'works
Rd. f.c::t': •:/:
0
:.r:,'.:F
:.,:,.:..\·::tt
,:.:
• 12.
While walking on campus,
!: ·.·.
·st~dent Life'Com~ittee
Dear Editor,•• ••
;>;
h ·.:·

•••
·: ··)·
:_se~ester. B~!JS~ f<?taJJ{~llt_~~\('.''Jf .~h,e~e,~1r:cf
P~!~::·~~11~pf~tli~~r,:·
.. ;
.w~lk ~o the sides of the r?ads.. .
_ . . . •.
. Eileen..T.
•Appleby ·.· : . Applications are· nowia"vailable :. ,,5,~11',
llly,_f.ree.
V~~
_is h~1~~.-s~}. • ,~,1~1
i
s~d, \,b~~~s,
,;J,
w.~!-ll~~J ..
:
; .
. 3; ,.Whenever·.· poss1blt: us~
. ,
.
·Joh·nLGJiffin
foe
1985~86,.,zonta :Scholarship
_:;Wl!S
lo?kt~ .f.orwa.rdt\?:.s.e~mg•:r.~~Ur,;~o"!pl8.11J::~~~wev~r;_;.~~~;{·<:.
side'Valks_
~nd _cr~ss~alks'. ... , . ·.
Catherine E. Newkirk,
Awards. Outright. tuition.grant~
..
::; ~o~e f.nertd
~l~4
f~r8:~!1ns
8.-~~
11
~,, • Ill~ur.tatils, :~M,IS~-•.~ns~~
1
~::
m:
..
-
• . , ..
1•
- . For Drivers. . . . . . . . . . . .
: ·.
Chairperson
of.$100 to $500'per.,year:willcbe. ·:· 'YC?r~
.C?.f:at1Y
~•~~-Js~oul.d ..
~~y.~
~.noc~11~ly
marked•-, ~un1ps'°-/.b~., .. ': ..
/
.. 4. ·
O~y
_-the posted
10
MPH
awarded .. by-, the.' Poughkeepsie·•, l<rt<?wn
I .~<>ul~n•~,~9~~~.~~~~~.tfo
pr~!r Ye!l<>~trafffo
s1~n~~
ar~m~t: : ,
/.
speed . _I1m1t
... Watch out for
.
F .
t .
Club oCZonta· International,,
(a. :
.~IIY:. . : :. . ; .
•,
, .-c· ,.
·.:.
;_·, , . on.It
u_nn~~~~r~,~~~t
~~s?
~~d,lt
ped~stn~ns, · . · · · .
· . , .. ·
• ; O.X
t?,fY
world-wide -servicej,organization /' Wh~n 1 ~ve~ ~()in~•.
11
~f>ll~.ed,:
1
?
Y~~I'~:·
·:+/·r.;
.. . ::--. • •} .. '.'.: ::,. ,· • .
· F'or P,~destr,ans 0nd Drivers.
.
. ·. .
.
·.
of executive women. in, :business':::
t.h,L:
!11.Y.
,c:.:~,r.-,'.,.,'~v~~-

..l~~k,!.~, .: ·: ·: .. ~eo,ple ~~vc: ~?1,11P
1a!?ed ;,bl;>u~.: . . •
,
5.·
B~\~ware,that _the Qonnelly Dear Editor,,.:
c.:.
,';
.. . .
. , .
and the professions) to qualified .. t.~an.~Jl!1~s109;.'i.:,9~1~f;:-'.£l1ip!>,~8,-;.
the;~~~P~•~~f,o_rer~!-!!~
of.:1:0~rs~r
·• •.
'parking .. Jot'.·
1s ·.~ls~_ a ·•· ,_ My
_comp~1m~~ts.to
John Can-• applicants~
.
• ,
,.i·
..
underyi~ath.,<,J;
?~.
gr~~'~
!>Y.·_;:'
Ma.r.1st•;~d _t1<>~~1_ng.
1
i\Jt~r<:t~e·:·
.. thoroughfare.
•- •· , .. : , ._. _ non. for his .article on the Red
_ ,,· . , . • ; , ..

... "; . • dents and·scratches along:the·en~ ·", amount·of,money•.mySanuly has
- •
·:' •
.•
-

Hari~icapped suiclerits _ s~i:m ·.
to
f
OX.;
'I
~ould onl,Y

aM to,
~~e
in-
.
•·
1'"em~le r~.i,de!#S ,
of
Dutf µes_~
\
t~rf'
µ~~#sidf
~fmy
car/ 1-"~r~al~
;. ' iriyestect:at
·;
this )scli~i;:-' 1,: d~f t\
be.parucularly vulnerable at the formation· assembled•. by John· .county are encouraged to apply. • ly, I wouldn'tcare; :the car·has
.-thmk-I;·.should:Mve
to •shell ouL
-··
present time and \ve. ~re asking • ti)at Brother Patil' Sto}ces.
did not
.
• Firsf
.
consideration is
·given.
·to
<
enough·
dents'.and
scratches
up
tp;' \ $25" nu~re
roe
repla,cement • 'parts .·,
that all students take responsibili-
have to go far iri pursuit
of
foxes. wo~en
.over
the age:of 25 with •· so why shouldri'tthe bottom mat~ .·for: • my;.:·car,- • necessary ·only::.
ty for each other.'s safety .. :, .
> · •
.~s
a security gua~d on. thC:-dog-
dep~ndents~
.. ·-: ... · :' . :· .·_ ;, .• :ch?,l,begari to
care,
though wheii< becau~e .Marist is':,t~o·stubborn; • •
Some· students, ·fresh from the watch dufingthe early s~venties,.I . . The applicatioµ: deadline :is
:i
noticed thafmy transmission-oil .:lazy· or:'. cti.eap:·
too remove\ob-:
victory of the elusive B +, have had only to pan my. flashlight .. April l,
')9~5.
AppHcatioris are
.
pan was ·creased, so badlydt' had viously ;unpopular.:· ~nd • useless •
been observed to
.
be willing to across the woods bel)ind Sheahan . available in tltc::F.iriancial
A,icl
Of- ;: cracke~_and .was no'N:dripping;:,J •. speed_~umps;~
: :
' •••

• •
t~e
Q~
a 2,0QO pound car or a Hall to find one or twp of the crit,-
!ic~
(D20()) a11d
by writing to:,
'.: sp~rit ~he; rest.•Of; the· afternoon ); ,;;,·; • .• :
.
: '.°\ :·

c'OotigD~tt~h·
'.
fOR
:A·
..
TOTJlt
• SUMflt·
EXPERIENCE·.
·f
• l
'L.i.U •• C.W.· POST;~.
:·: \: 'c
.(S16) 289-2431
O; •:•
•Over 1200.
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courses • .·
••
...
.
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.
• ••.
• •
•Flexitilii'schedules, Days,:-:·,·

• Evenings & Weekends •

; • •
.
•Convenient location-less than 25 miles
from Manhattan; near beaches: _. • . :
•BreaJl)takingly beautiful 400-acre
cam-

pus·, residence _halls; restaurants, •. •
theatres, sports facilltles. • , , ·

\ •
' LI.U.-BRENTWOOD.~516)273-S112
•A
wide range of undergraduate & .
:grac!uate pr,,grams. -.
:


•Convenient to Nassau & Suffolk • :
residents. •

- ·
;
. • LI.U.-SOUTHAMPTON~516)283-4000
• 110 acre resielenlial campus by the sea
•Situated in the nearby colony-of famous
artists and writers_ .
'
Fo,

co,ry
otth•
COMBINED
BULLEnN
11,11ng
of•
• '
ft!tlngs
at
3 campuses
rer,pnone.
UU..C.W. POST .................
(51~2431
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.
.
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.·· . ··•
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remain .in ·
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permission

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the
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9f.fice.-
~
by.
;·,$.:OQ
p.JTl~
Frfday ~.
· March 29, 1985.

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,.·..
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'













































.·•·.·····>\l)?ileStti(fib:,,,:tcr-.f)C•:
..
vocatiOil
...
··•l'ieitf
;;2,
·if
titlJfit~'I
ar,,Marist··

!',
,.
- ~' . .~
1 .
..-y•

,

.._.',
.,.:,
,
-~
,.·:~::/
:
••
-~·
,•,
, ••
::

,"
:,-,,,;
:
r

<•>~··:;-t.',
::·by~inny~iilte_ ,;
c ::,.,~·,,.,.-:.
::
tpdge.
,i-,.;-, .. -~ . .:-., .. :·'

•.

theyhave.completedthist{aining,
.. _ .-:-'<''.-f,'.-,:.~:/~:-:;
'~·_,:
.. '. .'
,}>·
,i:;,-...
'-·'-Lavergne,"a senior. history ma- . they .will. be. ordained Catholic
;- c'
,:Ma_ny,students
go to college in • jor/'saJd'
he·, wants· to. live. a; priests and will be assigned to any·
l:.
hopes of later;_finding
ajob.with a,
1
religfoti's
life and serve the Lord as·: , parish in·the Archdiocese of New
~iglf:-p,ying

s,a~ary;
how~er tw_o
·'..-'~esfbe:,
can.' L~ver~~e currently ''
y
ork. ;
>,< :, ' •• ' .• •
'
'
' ' :,
'·. -~~~st :G<?llege:stude_nts-arc:.
~eek-\ !ives ttt !h~_J
~h~
Pau.U S_eminary _
..
Accor.ding t? L~vergne, jo~ning·
· .,._.mg
Jobs at· which m,oney will ~e
m
Hyde
Park
becausehe wants to: the, semmary is. not a final com~'.
• '. the ,;:
farthest thirig •. from -their · experience '.'both a religious life

.. mitment to the priesthood. ''It's•
·: minds. > :
· . ,-;:
. ,· .. .
.··
.,. , : ·. • . and a ,c:ollege
life,
.I
feel it is
im-•
your decision if the priesthood :is ,
?"-'_
Donald'Partridgearid;Michael
• portant to.understand my.life as a-: right for .you; Yciu can leave at·
\
\
Don Partridge (photos by Maureen Ryan) Michael Lavergne
· Lavergne< plan .to ::_\
become
studerif , and \
my life .' with . any time up to ordination."
.

, C;itholic priestql,fter, graduating , reljgion/'.

~\;° ;~;
, . ; . · ,,. , . , . • ·Partridge and Lavergne • said in the transportation and mental
; frQm'.Maris('arid,~fter,:~<>!f!pletjng
'.
<
_Paifri_dge
:;: ~lso : livect '
at '
the: they ; feel that • a • big
!
pad>• of health units. He also participates .
.
the follO\ving :t]:iree year~:'~t~
~t- .
s~.minar)':
_hi_s.
freshmeii"year but •
•··
themselves-is being able
to
give to • in the . Community Friend pro-
Josephts ;,Seminary .Jn .-Yonkers, : la~er 'mo.y~d 011,~ampus to make
others. , Both are involved
,c
with • gram which sends its volunteers to
N_.Y,
.
.' •·:>.,,,> -:'; ,. ·. ;; •.• •.
:,i,,
·su~e,that a life as a priest is.what
volunteer work in thePoughkeep~ • be supportive friends to people •
it helps me to strengthen my own
faith," Lavergne said: · , . .

Partridge
agreed
with
·:~artridgc;, a;se~e>r psycllolo~y .. he wants.·
·J . ;,.· · '·:· ,. ~. .
siearea .. :.,.
• .: • .
who_
have recently been discharg-
maJor from Fishkill;
.l'tY..,
sa~d • ., Both Partn9ge, an~ Lavergne
··_.
Lavergne volunteers • as.· a ed from the hospital. .
Lavergne, adding that as he learns
more about his own spirtuality,
he knows that he has made the
right decision. ·


he
has
,chosen .to become a priest .
wiU
'
Qe'':•j9ining ' St'.· Joseph's • catechism teacher at Holy Trinity
Making the decision to become
because he.· wants ·to help· many· Semin,ary after graduation: There
and · _ ReginaCoeli • s·econda·ry • priests was the right decision for
different, pee>ple
,with their lives· they
will study. theology for three · schools. · ,
• • • :·'
them, according to both. men.
"I will be my happiest when I
am serving the Lord,by using my
abilities, talents and love to help
others. My· happiness . and peace
from within is greater than any '
material possession I could ever
• : ~d ~heir.spirituality. ~•1·
w.antto •• ye,a_rs:
Mfer, which t_h~Y-·_,will
be .. Partridge,. an intern with' the Lavergne said he is not prejudice
,:. help a lot of peop~e:and _any:.
other assignef:1 to ,a parish to practice as
Rehabilitation Center on North . against people with other faiths or
•• careenvould liiriit the aniounfof •·. dellcons , f9r a '. yea( under the
Road in Poughkeepsie, has.been a • .no faith at all. "I like hearing the
· . people I could help;'~. said ~ar-
authority
_of
othe~ priests .. Once • volunteer at St: Francis Hospital ' different ideas or beHefs because . have," Partridge said.
·-
..
Balik.-·1s·
tar·get·_
:for: protester·s:-.
'
'
~
·,
.
.
-

· By Brian Kelly . .
want·. Barclays out of South Namibia, .. which : is. currently

• • '
• • • •
• Africa as well," she said.
occupied • by South African
.. ~_:(· A gr.oup
1
°~of,_a)?o~t-:i~Q
;peop!e.-,: ·.' ',~Our-short-ter!D goal is • the_ miHtary.force_s.
• .. • . .
.
_>,picketed":'l~st Friday•itj:{ront:·o( ·more realistic. of tht:, two,": she' • It said' that: :·the ·bank's.•
:··Barclays in New· Paltz to protest _said, conveying what seemed to · "financial operations in Namibia •
• ~"S\.!NY's -dealings with. the bank, , be a -widely .held opinioriwithin- • bolster the South African Regime
,· :whose parenfcompany~ controls JQe coal~tiori
.. -•. :
._,·· .
.. as ~tc9ntin~e~ to\ defy United
•.• more • • than • one-third ': of :. the
-
··-The age of ., the protesters • Nations
••
declSlons
!
calling for
banking in South Africa.
ranged from 8 to 80. "We want military withdrawal • and • in-
. The. march;. which· lasted :two • peopldo take·their money out of dependence for Nainibia. •
• hours, was marked with chants of the •
'C
bank,''.
said
Damien
During the protest the Hudson
"Barclays isa blood bank," and -Williams, 9, of Accord,
N.Y . .
Valley Federation of. Coops
''U.S. corporations out of South "They're killing people in South. announced that it • would be
Africa."
•• • ·: •
••
•••
Africa."
• -
• removing its more than $1.5
South·.
Africa,
wh'ose
One woman marcher painted million .in assets from Barclays
. J>OpuJation is more than
70-
her face white '_and wore a Grim

bank .. The federation is a .group
• . perce~t black, is con_trolled by a Reaper costume.
••
• /·., • . •
of. consumer-owned and . con-
white minority government:
.
• '. ''I'm sym~oHzing the dea_th of .. trolled businesses, and will • be
:
:•'
Th
• • h
.

. d • b- • hundreds of thousands of,;black moving its funds to the First
•. ,:. e

mare was orgamze

Y ·
s· ·
h Af • •
·th • h • ,r.d- f
N •
I B k f H. hi d b
· .>.the:Coalition·A'gainst-Apartheid

~ut .· _r,1~1?-s.at --~
-.~':1
~.<>,,,~
- at~on~.
}r;.
?, . .,
1
8_
a°:
...
Y
·
""'d'R·' · • ,.,cAA·R·) •···· ------~f mmonty, .white, racisL-regime,
Apnl4.,
••. ,

.
.• _·an
acism,
, a group·o

··ct·L",
d R tlun •• .. •/~·
c· - ·
B
l
• f • ·d· t

t
;-: •:about
:t
ten · campus
:.
and- ··local ,,
~a~
··.· 1~--a. ,.
0
ap.~-~;p_art-
..
1
.m,~
,>:· ~,. .~i:c ays. re ~se .
0 ..
c:;,~mmen\'.
.
, . t- •
organizations; arid was· sche,duled ~~ude~t

,1
.'~Utrr
.,-New.
Paltz.
:<
on eit~er, th~ • protest or the _

f
iii corinectlon/with
a' two,;.weeict Tl~e:Ameru:~m
C<?1JlO_ra~ion~
ar~
_f
ederatio.~
S
withdrawal.

· period·.· of;"protest._called:'by'the _,there.out ~f_greed·,r-,d.expl'?1t
the ••· ~ccordmg to Owen Mc~onald,
American_ Committee
011
Africa'. - poor of t~e cou~try, she said._ . ..
,
editor of the SUNY New Paltz
The protest period ends'April 4,
• .~MR·s . gn~vanc~ _-agamst .,stu?ent newspaper The Oracle,
and
.
co~merilorates ,. the:: 2~th( Barday~ "fere ~tat~d
ma
pam~ :whi~~ e~dorses - CAAR,
'
t_he
·' anitlversai'y•<or· ·thd>liarpville P,hl~~ dist~i~~t~ at th~ protest •. coahtion 1s_also ~oncer!led w~th
_
.
,
tnassacre;"at which.more than
65
B1trcl~ys u~com~ fr_om bla~lc _,,
SUNY New Paltz s dealmgs with
:'. · blacks were killed. .
,
,. .
sav.ers ts mu~h high~r ,than
1ts
IBM,.
a coml?an~ that h~s .
.. . .
..
. ·.. . .,.·_. .
.
.
·
, . . loans to South Afnca s . black . extensive economic • mtersts • m
...
• .-;.: . • ''Barc~ity~

••
h~, ,the I_argest_,
in- _
population,''
.
, the :: pamphlet·: South Africa.
; : '· vestm~nts 9C1tn)' baQk; m South . siated.. :'.'This_.,
means: Barclays . : "SUNY at New Paltz received
' ?,
Africa/! , saici •. Susan.· Geier;' channels moi,.ey away from the ' over ., $400
ooo·
in cash . and
___
", project coordinator 'for the New: black community towards white
:
. computer ;qi.iipment from
IBM
-:::::;·:·
Yo~~ Public Interest Relations c~nsumers ·and
_investors,
helping 'this year for :_its engineering
t:
Group· (NYPIRG), ·one of· the to perpetuate economic inequality • program " McDonald said_-
!
<.
organizations iri the coalition;

between the races," it said.
.
Marist has received millions of
. ;/ "We'no,fonly;~ant_ SUNY ~outof • The, ~amphlet charged th~t . dollars in grants from IBM in the
. ..
.
. _} Barclays, but _m the long teTll! yve Barclays 1s also the largest bank m

past.
. .
, • -
-
, • l- : •
"•·' ·-~
.•
.J
~
The Marist CoDege Women's Chorale earned a gold medal
Gold
medalists
at the 23rd Annual Catholic Intercollegiate Women's Glee
Onb Association Competition, hosted by Marist CoDege
during Spring Break, All groups were judged on appearance
. _-,--_
as w~I as musicala_l>ilUJ..
. ,--
... (Photo by~aureeo Ryan)
Senior class officers
face impeachinent
By Amie Rhodes
• ·• ' •
,. Proceedings for the impeachment of three senior class officers
began this week, as they were informed in a letterfrom Council
of Student Leaders President Anthony Phillips.
Tuesday, senior class President Jim Murphy, Secretary Jane
Piecuch and Treasurer-Roger Romano received hand-delivered
letters from Phillips stating that the CSL· has made a motion to
.remove them from their positions. It also recommended that they
resign voluntarily before CSL takes action. .
• According to the letter, the resignations were requested
because of "significant,- repeated incidents this academic year
·wherein established procedures have not been followed."
It
continued that a meeting would be held the following evening for
the officers and CSL members to discuss the matter.
Friction between CSL members and senior class officers came
to a head shortly before spring break, after the senior class held a
• raffle.· CSL and Financial Board• members • claimed was· in-
consistent wHh co]Iege poHcy. ,' ','
',
.·-
' :-~According
to
Financial Board:
member
Susan
Brunner, the •.
officers were originally charged by the Financial Board, although •
it did not recommend impeachment. "We recommended that the
senior class give the money from tl1e raffle as· a donation to the
• library,''. she said.
Phillips refused to comment.
Steven LoDestro, senior class vice president, said that he
thinks he was not included in the impeachment action because he
was absent from school for five weeks due to illness, during the
tirµe the raffle was planned.

. However, he said that he. is unhappy with CSL's decision.
"There have been hundreds ,of violatiqns of CSL rules by every
class and if they,'re going to .pick on the seniors with only five
weeks left to go; they should check into every class,'' he said.
Murphy said that he feel~ that the action is unfair and that
_ there is no doubt that he will appeal.
.
• "I'm ticked off that CSL .is punishing us because my record
this year has, overall, been good, even though I lacked a few .
bask responsibilities. Instead of worrying about this, the CSL •
should be worrying about girls getting stabbed at Marist College
-' they should be trying to think of ways to protect the
' stud_ents.".
.
.
' . . :
.-· . .

"It's down to a personal ·conflict," Murphy added.
"I
take
this as
a
personal attack ·of Tony trying to get me. But, to Tony
Phillips I say, 'You could tie me up by my ankles, slap me 'til I'm
silly pink, but I'm not- going • to ·.resign· to you.' "
CoIIlpUterized
dating
draws·
.the
mate-less
by Dan Meyersol\
Money can't buy you love, but
a dollar may help you find a date.
Last week, in Donnelly Hall,
over 100 students filled out ques-
tionnaires that will be used for a
computer dating service run by
the Inter-House Council.
The participants will be given a •
list of names of people who pair
up compatibly, said Patricia Kel-
ly, the social committee chairper-
son for Inter-House Council.
"We started out with the idea
of having a dating game, but we
decided that maybe a dating ser-
vice would get more interest and
be more fun for people on cam-
pus," said Kelly.
According to Kelly, 61 males
and 52 females participated. Each
person is to receive a list of five
names of people .who the com~
puter matched.
During the first week of April,
the names will be mailed out and
the participants will decide who
ihey want to call, said Kelly.
.
The sign-up table advertised the
service to be a good way for peo-
ple to find dates to the Spring
Formal. However,. according to
the secretary of Inter-House Con-
di,
Teresa Lantos, the Spring
Formal was just a tie-in.
"The idea of the service is
basically just for fun," said Lan•
tos.
"If
they wind up with friends,
they might freak out," said Lan-
tos. "It's only a dollar, you want
to see who you end up with."
Kelly said that people should
match up with some people they

Continued on
page 11
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M~m~>: said;, that ··,
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~1
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MarisLCoUege has.signed two vances:
,-.-/ifthey.don'i:
they'_
will
·
fof:graduatirig studenis;'Recruit~-,>
f.~:
·.
:·.
.:
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f
ull~time
_
;Jatuity
{is?

J.
.•··
.:
, :
Fishkill _11;\M,
.the·;pther
with
_the·
The,n~d_'for this ty~ qfooilli<;:..eiihanced/ ~au_se the;possibUityC:
;~
•·
;
·.,
Poughkeepsie site, which
.will
pro~ n'uing ed~cation. is
.especially
im~-:,.
•of
·tl=aching-
·professional·
classes
e:'
/:

vide students: with new
"computer .
portant-{ in> high".

t.echiio.logy
::
·attra:cts

high. quality/professors,.
,.

resources; as weR as special equip~ businesses such as
IBM,·.·
.
said
'
said Murray.';_''..
:,.,:;,
;
.
't,i
> '.
,,.,
'-
~
y·.,'.
nient for training in robotics
'and

Maher·:
in
the past this re-training
-But, said Maher, teaching these.,~
personal computing, according to was done by the. company itself; professionaL~lassenhould,.rievei-;,'
Jy_lianhe
·•Maher,
.·dean
·.of.
the··. riow. instiiutii:ms
..
like,Mar)st
:are•:take·prior~ty'·ovei'
a.•p,rofe_ssor{s.
;-
~¢liooL-of: Adult' Educ!}tion
·
at
'
taking some of the resp·onsibility/ firstresponsibility :-:the needs
of::-
Marist:'
<·,
,,
.-:
.
.
.
.
.
said Maher.
-:
:-.·'
_.;.,;_<
;:.--,
;,
·'.--
.,
his-: or
her·
..
undergraduate

I
I

\.
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Thes¢new contracts, providing

But comput~rs and IBM classes.· students; Workingi~:the'profes-
:-
30 new personal computers and are not the only professional pro- sional programs.is really a part-

the cost·for
·extendirig
classroom grams provided by
·Marist.
Skills ·'time job and should•be treated as

:

space in Marist East,
_are
'paft
~fa
,
in communications, time manage- such, said Maher
..
:
..

:' ·.;
:,.,:.
<>
,: •
larger trend in higher:: edu~ation

ment and finance and accoi.mting
.
·This /responsibility·:·
to
:
the

that is Marist- is.-feeling, said

are· taught, in
.
a,_ number: of. undergraduate,:.: program

.will
..

Maher/


•·
•.•
:-
·•:•
••



,f

..


•.
•·
••
workshops
•either
on campus or in
'always
.·come
fii:st; Maher· said,
••
A
·change
in views concerning the work site itselL
:
' ::
.

..
>
::

even·. when. Marist's involvement
...

• continuing education
'is
behind.; ;,_It can.'t be denied that IBM is· with continuing education grows;·

.••.
this
,
trend; "There's
:been
.
a
'
Marist's • biggest customer
.
for "Marist will always be 80 percent.
gradual
change in:_ society's · th.ese workshops.~ but itjs not. traditional)--·studeritsi'';
said
perception of education,"
.said
.
the only patronag1Hhe school has:

Maher. ''The strength of the col-
.

M.aher. "It,µsed to_be_something
·Companies.
such
..
as. Vassar, iege is the,camp.ukthe:relativelY
..
.
.
you did bef9re you we~e,
21.
and
.
Brothers'

Hospital,
.-.
the
'.
Hyde
,
smalCsize and thC:,
personal rela-
<.
after that you went. to work, !hat
-
Park • School

Distri~t

and the: tio~sh_ips
that· develop tiere. •
~
. :
has started to change dramaucal-
Chamber of Commerce have used
<

Continuing··
·education,
:accor-
ly; it's no)onger·possible to con-
..

Marist's programs,'said•Maher.
'
ding to Maher,: keeps Marist Col-
fine your education: to
.
those

.
.-It
may5eem that Marist's in° lege from becoming
.-stale;
"The
• • •
years."
.
. .
.
. "
. .
creased involvement
·
with these whole non-traditionaL'area is a
.
·
Marist College President Den-

companies would take away from
.
way of making Marisr visible,
nis Murray. agrees.
:
'.'We.
will
.
the undergraduate PfOgi-am, but opening some·:doors and• getting•
never J:ie abl_e to say that you're a
••
Maher said the opposite is true .. ~ome fresn air in our campus pro-
well educated. young
.man
or
,''It•
generates·- reve_n_ue:,''.
said grams," saidMaher;''so·thatwe
woman," said Murray. '.'When

Maher. '.'Marist's. involvement is aren't ivory towered, remote and
you- get your diploma
.it's
·not
a an optionth~t the college_
has and isolated from· the; 'realworld.'J'
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''lntJUect'ual'.- in
'business
is', iri'
• .
fact~:a dirty word,
.
.
.

Forget'it.
A
good grounding in
.
.
the liberal arts is absolutely essen-

;.,
tial to success in business
7"'
and
government!
You
cannot
understand what is going on

without
some
background in what

is going on ... because, specifical-
ly, you will not be able to perceive
-
the information which· is being
presented
·,to
you. Which is an
epistomological
_comment
with.
hermeneutic implications... but
everybody in advertising knows
it. Before you knock us, know us.
Albert Stridsberg is an assistant
professor. of ••
advertising
at
·
Marist.
,;•
••
Show your colleg~ Ip and get


·FREE
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_with
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::-:·,,:·;,~additiyes,Kon,eofthereasonsfor·
;: :r
'.'You'vdried .alt the rest,:now:' the 9uality of.his pizza/ "It's mat-
' try)he ~ery:•beifrif,cotild vehhe· Oter'of'philosophy'~
we're health
•• " 1ll()St
famous slcigan on the Maris( food nuts;," he said. ,.
• '
'
• campus..
.·• .: ,
. ._._ •
. Overall,,. although C.J .'s pizza .

.. ,
. ::, Recent_ly
,': a./c'!distingui~h~d'.' . was the best tasting, it is
·more
ex-
•• : panefoFsfoderiis:iaste
0
tested:five,~ pensive~ ln·;,addition, ,their no.: :
' area· pizias ·to· .firid ou't just· who delivery policy makes. this. pizza
does make the very'best., ·:. • ·•. .
harder for fof the average Marist
O[J~e pizza~ tested, C.J .'s
Pii-
student to g~t. · . .

'
,.za Plus was unanimously con-·
Hyde Park Pizzeria-D~li -
'sidered the bestpizza in the area:-
Hyde Park Plaza, Route 9 -:-: cost
•.
··: On Frid_ay night at 9:30, t_heJ0 ':.Js $6.50. Thi~· pizza is one,. on
•• panelists
,
: ordere_d' ., pizza
··:
from /which. the panelists disagreed :
c:J:>s :Pi"zza P.Ius;, 'Hyde ·Park : heavily, Most people agreed that •
Pizzeria-Deli,
:
Mister • Sausage, it .was the "best looking>t_pie, but •
Provenzano's and Sev's. •
that is where the agreement end-
, The panel agreed that all of the ed.
.
.
-' •
•. pies were good, with C.J .'s being
Half of the panelists liked the
the best. Mister Sausage was se-
sauce, the other half said it wasn't
fond .. and the either·· three. were spicy enough. The crust also tend-
basically even. • ' • .. . __
·
. . ed to be chewier than the other
,\The large cheese pies were not • pies tested
'~-•
a quality some
ddivered ·(although all but ~.J?s
paneUsts ~idn't like.
:_ .
will
deliver) because delivery may. _.
.ffhe'.
consensus was that the pie
. have some effect on
the
quality of is inor'e than adequate, but for the
. the. pizza. Most· "delivery charges .• • money, C.J,'.s was better.
are$L
.:··
....
•. ·._ ~-

'
Mister Sausage -
,Route 9,
. These . are . the comments on Hyde · Park -'-- .. cost - is $4.50
each pizza (listed in alphabetical . (including a 10' Marist discount).
order). : - . • ,
•·_
•.. •. ...
This pie was by far the panelists'
Pizza testers savor slices and note preferences in Gregory House.last week.

_
••
C.J .'s Pizza Plus ,_·Route 90,
sentiment~! favorite because the
Hyde Park·-
cost $6.50 . .This _owner, Jim Raimo,. is a 1981
was overwhelmingly the panelists'
graduate of Marist and was resi-
favorite pizza. Santa
A:
Zaccheo dent . director for the freshman
said;C'This
is
a cheese pizza!"
dorms\ from 1981-1983. The pie would~'t stick to the top ·of the
$5. This is a Sicilian _(square) type·· Street -
cost $5 (buy 12, get 1
• Mary. , Walker•·•· and
other-
was also the cheapest.
box. • .
pizza with a very thick, chewy
free). The panelists agreed that
panelists -agreed that C.rs
had
Sentimentality put aside, Mr.
. Another feature in favor of the
crust. For' people who like thick
this was a very average pie.
an: overabundance of cheese -
Sausage Pizza was considered a Mr, Sausage pizza: was the· ten
crust, this is a good pie. However,
Neither great nor awful.
• and the crust was«delicious.''
"best buy.'' There: was lots of· percent Marist ·discount that
many of the panelists preferred
Sev's probably had the best
._,
Only C_.J
.'s sauce. was· dissa
0 •
sauce and cheese over a very tasty .Raimo gives because he said that
the thin crust.
.
sauce, and the cheese was ade-
pointing, . said several of the crust. . . .
.
.
.
.
.
.· he loves to -serve Maris(students
Other than the . thick crust,
quate, but there was too much oil
paneHsts, who noted that there
Some panelists complained that due to his connection with the.col-
critics said Provenzano's sauce
on· the pie which made the crust
wasn'Lenough,
and, what . was .there_
was too much garlic in the
lege over the ·years.·However, all
j
~asn't spicy enough, nor was
soggy. However, it was ready in
there wasn't spicy enough. ,
·_.
• .•
•• - sauce although -·
• one ..
· panel. ist. things considered, because of the
there enough of it on the pie.
ten minutes and the price is right.
·; C.J.'s pizza \Vas
once
in.-
the -·defended it saying, "I'm Italian • disappointing sauce, Mr. Sausage
Robert Haughton said, "Just
This is just a brief synopsis of
~ew: York Daily News \vhere it . ""'"'there's nevertoo much garHc/'
finished second. "A sad story' of
as a round pizza comes in a
some of the area's pizzerias -
wasratedasthebestpizzainDut-
•-.· Another.Jeature'the·.panelists
wastedpotential,"notedJoeDid-
squar~ box, so it should follow
and by no means scientific.
c~ess~CountY,
.. according t{) C.J:
liked was.that Mr. _Sausage,'s
piz"" _ ziulis,\ < ·' ··:;


.
. that a square pizza should come
Because pizza tastes are very per-
• 'owtierJohn·S_tS:gnaro.-( .
:'>.'~"-/~--

za. also~came;'-with a lidisuppoit· > •-·
.. Provenzano Italian ·P1zze~1a_
-
_ in a r_ound box.'': _. •
sonal, the only way to judge a pie
.. -~--
.y""~~agnarci•:~a.i<t~~i.fem~~~iszo~,.l~fo!i•_the·,;_b~x~·/59,0,J~e~~;c~
7
~et~h8
0
:,!°f?:~P!.Ca~-~!1,I~la7.e,-,;-
costi! •• '•'·'"-Sev•s
'P:iiza~ -"--"_,S_2
~!~Bridge''·, ..
~s to try it.yourself.
·coLUMBIA PICTURES
PRESENTS
1'N
IVAN REITMAN FILM
<:
r.r·Bil,L
·MURRAY
IN .

·sTRIPES
*HAROlDRAMIS*WARRENO.ATES*.
-·_ *
P.J.
SOLES-* JOHNCANDY

MUSIC
BY
ELMER
BERNSTEIN
SCREENPLAY
BY
LEN BLUM
&
.,
.:; DAN GOLPBERG
AND
HAROLD
RAMIS • ... ,
• • .. _ PRODUCEDBYIVANREITMAN
ANDDANGOLDBERG·e,
l~J!E~~~!:;:I
DIR~BY IVAN R;~
.. '"'"'"''·~
=
In the- Marist College Theatre
Friday March 29th· at 7:30
Sunday March ~1s~ at
7·&-9:30 p.m.
$1 admission with Marist I.D~
From the Film Committee of
the College Union Board
·TIME
1$-_RUNNil.NG.OUT!
·lET
MARiST
1
ALUMNI
HELP
\
~.OINT YOU \IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION
:~•Have your res.ume critiqued

·;•Learn how
fo
target ·your.job search
/•Gain helpful hints towards the interviewing process
;•Learn what coursework or background is desired
··in. ea·ch particular field
.;'.COME
TO: AL_UMNi CAREER DAY
;WHER.E:·Gallery
Lou_ng~,.'
:!WHEN: Frid~y, Mar.ch 2.9
~Tl
ME: 11 :30 a.m: · 2:00 p.m~
{:featuring these Marist Qraduates .. :
Brendan Burke '68
Personnel Manager
ABC, Inc.
_Ned Kane '74
Vice President
Bankers Trust Co.
William Kuttner '68
Vice President
Citibank,
N.A.
Virginia Luciano '82
Program Director
W.E.O.K.
AND MORE ...
Paul Palmer
'84
Newswriter/Reporter
WRGB-TV, Schenectady
. Theodore Brosnan -'70
Mgr.,. Human Resources
Union Camp Inc.
Stephen Digilio '69
Account Executive
Merrill Lynch
Timothy Keneally '69
General Sales Manager
Union Camp Corp.
Edward Anderson '71
Development Engineer
1.8.M.
Corp.
•To register - Bring your resume to the Alumni
Office,
Adrian
Hall,
by
Wednesday, Marcil 27th or
can
Extension 283 for further information.
Dates ____ _
; Continued from page 9
don't know because the turnout
was good.
"It
was a very good
turnout as compared to anything
else .that goes on in this campus,"
said Kelly.
People may have been in-
•terested in signing up, but too em-
barrassed to, said Jessica Amato
and Jeanne Marie Altieri,· two
students who were working at the
sign-up table.
• However, 113 people did sign
up, said Kelly, noting that there
was a good mix of upperclassmen
_and underclassmen.
·: "I
was surprised that ·there
_,were a lot of off-campus people
::who signed up, but basically it
was a general mix," said Kelly.·
Who· signed up also depended a
.lot on the people working at the
ta)Jle, said Lantos.
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THE CIRGLE
• M~r:
21,
1985-----------------::::::::::::·:::._:.- .....
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·These•'arethecharacteristicsof
:·rnovirig;:·.Jo!in,ttingj:"St(?ring.,
10.
.computer··.
angµageS:.
.·.,
··•0\.r:7;~f0t0?.";0\'\.f
_'
Jtfmc;,i11i~;i~}lt~:Y'
by
Rose Hazelton
·. :, :,·: . APL:,,acronym
'for:.:Applied
• ·COBOL: ;;r:>//'.>'.. • :, , •
?-c
·1anguage than.APJ.,: according _to teraction bet~een the· mairi pro~.
-Programming Language • : -.• •also., 'a
business • oriented •
Mea'clowcroft.
Although APL has cessor Which executes ·the ·pre>~·. •a symboliclanguage.used in •• language • •. •
__
,., .

'•:

•. Despite the growing concern a tremendous number of func-
•·
gram;
'and
the memory
:.which •
.the scien~i_fi_1c
.. co,
mmunity • •

P
.. ·.ascal.
: ..
· ',·.·r.·;~;~.f\.:
.. lan·g·
ri.ag···
~.>
among· computer majors about • tions 'that _can be performed on .• stores the data, or where;the data •
the use of Pascal instead of APL
data,. the_. language is_ -symbolic exists transiently-. while . the. pro-
••• ';
0
.'.': .developed within the academic
:

in coursework,. Marist faculty will • and is often· ·difficult• .·
for the . grain is operating on it. - _ . · .... _ ·•
·..
FPRTRAN: acre>nym
for'For;- . ·co_niniun~ty_-
t~:>J~~ch
program-·
continue to .suppo'rt the us.e of
beginner to . understand, said
, "I found;it rather difficult to
.
mulaTranslatiori • '· ·, • ·
muig basics >:;:..: ; ' · ·
Pascal, accordjng to.. Robert • Meadowcroft;

teach the basics about a computer ;. . •developed for 10 to is~years • •pr~d<>~ir1
11
riJ_

:: -,teac~ir1g.
Meadowcroft, a professor in · • J>ascar, is • a bridge between with APL,»•
he,
saidi
tAPL.is:a
before APL
·>" ·,, :. , l~~guilgei-throughout _umver~
computerscienceatMarist.
.English and-APL; he said; With self-containedenvironment.•Con- •
-•also
used in scientific com--
sitiesa ntlc9lleg~·-_. '·
'
--

• Students are. ~oncerried that.· Pascal; program solutions are sequently,. the sfudent does.'not '
• munity

•. ·

-. • • ·• ::·,,~;.;:~
•.
"c:.:y
•.
:\.
~:,J'· \:'/'_.:,.,,;
Pascal is strictly an academic written in English-like. e.xpres- ·r.eadily grasp ·the : interaction
:_:
••
•• : •
• 1'IOTE:· rfhe·aboveJanguagi:s
I
h

d • • h

CO.
BO.
L.: acron.
yin for .. Com-.
.

are converted into. a; machine.
anguage t at 1s not use m t e
sions."For example, we form ex- - betweenthecompo'nents:'' ,-.<· • •
-
- •· • · ,
.•
d'
1
· • ·.
"real world" and _that ~PL is. _
pressicins like, 'if this is true, then . .:· Another. ·advantage. Jn •. using
._
mon . '.Business ;-. Oriented
···language ·wh,ich irect f:~-~~n-
~
. But Meadowcroft c,ted many do that, otherwise do this/Pascal·
Pascal is that'it is easier for the
Language·
,
-
•:
.

trols thecomputer?s exesuuon
.advantages of. Pascal
I
as ari in-
is a • natural conversion • from student to learn· other business-
*developed .· for ; the b~sin,ess ·Assembler':·.:'is
.•
the machine
troduction to, prograrhming. and
English-language .
I .
solutions • to ·.·
oriented languages

like ~OBOL
community •·.·
·::

. :
.,
•··' ··•- .. Janguage, which . instructs ' the
stressed its importance as a learn-
computer
solutions,'.'
• said:. arid
-.:.PL/1
which· , are .. very
. *heavily . oriented
.
towa~ds .• computer,:.::.
~-• ,,... • • •. ,.,';<\

ing tool. • . , , • ·:,
.
Meadowcroft.
. .
,.
, . . . . . marketable : at .. this
time,
"Marist is not a vocational
• Another advantage, according Meadowcroft adcied. _
i.-< .• ••
language," Meadowcroft said,. .
.another ~oncei;:n
among-students·
school. We .do not give the stu-
to Meadowcroft, is that Pascal
For the student who has learned. - "It's ·•the same_\idea: be~een , concerning;.
the
two_' version~ of
dent a hammer so that he or she can execute multiple instructions. : to program in Pascal, the transi-
foreign languages.
If -
you learn , Pascah

Maristhas used Stariford
can go out and hi_t a nail.
per line - APL can only execute tion _ to COBOL
~
arid PL/1
Spanish, thenleaming Italian or ·, Pascal for years; .he noted. "But
Hopefully ourprogram helps pro-
one instruction per line.
.
. . .
.
.. languages is easy. ~'The basic in-
Portuguese is much easier because : the Pascal language is fairly stan~
duce students ·who are able to
Also, programming with Pascal structions .-are-/ essentially> the . the : wordstem_s and syntax ·are ;dard. Wh~th~r Y,ou µ~·e. the VS·:
think and· adapt in· the environ-
allows 'the. student to. understand same.>The '.syntax; the .punctua- ;- similiar.'' COBOL. and.PL/1 will •• Pascal '.compiler or- th¢ Stanford·_
ment
that • ·, they

choose,"
how
,
computer componcmts in-
tion, is a little :different; but it'.s • be .. taughtduring
.the
Fall '85
Pasc~lc~rnpiler_, there i,s l!ttle.or
Meadowcroft said.

• teract, he said. For· example, the easy to. transfer
.the
Pascal pro-. 'semester; he said.
·_
• ,· .-• • ., '
no difference: for the ·basic pro-
p_ascal--is
-
a' better beginner
student can understand the in- gramming.knowledge,tf another. • M,ea'dowc·roft : l;lddressed
gra_mming
rc:~~_ir~ni~nf~:••·
• ;
-Comp-uter
horizons·
tO
be· i!Xp!Ored
this
S.aturi/llY
•••••
,

,,
~
.~
.,'
1,



'
'
~

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'
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;.··:

,

•:.•~·.-;•,.'-
..
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~
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,.·.: •. :_. •• ·.·,_._ .. _·.~';
'
by Toin Renten
Marist has some exposure, so presentations will be for people . FoHowing the. lectures, accor~ ·terested in atteriding_
horizons day
\ •· •·
people can: see how the Marist who are,familiar with computers : ding to Curley, a panel'discussion . sh_ould
pre-register/since there is:
The Marist Cbilege. Computer computer center has grown.since , and the other setwiU,be for those
will' take place. "The: panel

limit .on attendance;· Registra~
Society will.be sponsoring "Com-
receiving the grant from IBM." '. who are not.,,,


'discussion will be
a
chance
for
the ' tion ·begins at' 9a:m. on· March
puter Horizons Day" on Satur-
''We_ also want to give the
The day will start.·~jth
a, people to give their opinions·or.
30,'inthecampuscenter, •
day, March 30. •.•
1
• .. • ·:
Computer Society ~orite exposure . keynote· from Dr., Winifred 'ask questions about the topic of •• • · Curley.· said· that ··registration ,
Th·e day will consist of several to let•people know what we do; .. Aprey, an IBM fello\V and ad- \ technology; in,· society,'r: sai~ forms .can be picJ{ed,~up_
in Dr.-
presentations ' and lectures on and tty and inake the club bet-
juncf computer science teacher at
Cu~ley
.. uEach . member! of :th_e John Macponald'.s·offi~e:,in·Dori-"'----...
computers, and how.they are used ter/' said Curley: .
.
._,_.. Marist, talking abouhthe impl.ica~ • panel ~will speak ,thi:1£.to five
.
rielly Hall; room
J0l;
Forms:may
on
technical ahd non-technical • • The day will riot only :benefit :tions of technology.: on ,modern
~
minutes on the :sµbj~ct before the
also b_e found.on the .majn floors
Jevels;:
.• .
;,
• •
, •
people who are·experienced with society. After the, keynote; the,. people,·att~nding 'giv.e tb~ir feels, ofall on-campushousirig.'.':'~ .. ;
. • One of the.; purposes of the computers. ..There." wilL·be two two sets: of lectures and presenta- : ings or ask questioris/t ..
·:
--<
Fee~ ai:e.$2.()()
for students_
with:
horiz<>ns
d,yJ$(to give the area

tracks,'' said Curley. "One set of. tions will start. '. -.


, • ·: Curley,_ said' thaC.·those in~
ID and$5.00 for.non-students.·:' '..
,cha~ce. tci Je~,¥atist's rie'Y_,c~m~
........
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Conti~ue~fr'o~;page3,.
''Colle~~-age: ~i:ople. are• at a
point in· their.·•
lives where. they
haven.'t developed . mature at-
titudes about:issues,'' said Paiil
·-. Del Colle, communications . pro-
fessor.
''I
wouldn't· describe the
situation· as apathy, bt.it rather.
unenlightened s~lf-interest. It ex-
ists everywhere/'_ ..

. ''Ii
may appear;·_ that the
students of the S0's fyare less • in-
volved than: the ·students of the
60's," Del Colle said, "butViet- •
nam and ~ivil Rights Acts were
issues that affected them directly,·
it was impossible not
to
be involv-
ed.'~
. •
_ ..••
Del Colle said the fact that
there is'no-war or major political
movement t_oday that affects
Am·erican youth directly, has lead
students to put_ their. interests .
elsewhere. He added that issues of
the day, like • world hunger are
abstract and difficult for students
to protest against. •
'
Careers and the job market is
• the modern student's
:
priorty,
claimed : Casimir Nor!celiunas,
a professor of German and Rus-
sian. "Students are more concern-
ed with getting
a
job than they are
in being political crusaders . and
activists,''.hesaid .. •. ,

• •
Students are more practical and
pragmatic about needing jobs
after graduaJion and • are,
as
a
result, • electing ~to study. areas
other than from traditional liberal
arts, said NorkeliunaS: -Students
today are realizing the need to·ac-.
quire skills to compet_e
iQ the.~er-
changing job mar~et .. "The_
f
a'~l- •
ty tries very hllfd.
to
involve
students in issues, said Del Colle,
"but
··1 -•
wonder ·-if
we.
would.
do
·more .. _by _
-btjnging : more .. global
issues into the· classroom." .....
PRINCE ~GENESIS/,:
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.
•, ',..
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ct
:D
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HUEY LEWIS• RUSH~-
~,t
..;.
:_,SUNDA,Y:-BRU.NCH·.,t1.•2:30·-
NIGHTLY :DINNER:-$P.ECIALS
.,
"'
•·
~
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••










































































·. ·. .
•··
. .·
_
.
_ _
.
Mar. 28, 1985-
THE
CIRCLE.
Page 1a--
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1iJJt{1r<in
~tr~~~~;f~t
perfOf:rnSJf.or
tough.
critics
,; ._ · byPtfariaGordon--•:-;·;
• : . .
are. the audience/~.·said· Dean.t • "The· students .sacrifice their
projects," Jarose said. "That is Day, a day when physically and
. ·· 1;-;,,.+_,:C::
a:•·;
<
.,__::pOcs\:
...
•F·•
,1· , \-; • -·.
-.·••-
Gerard .Cox,, the fc1c~lty;
c1dvisor -: classtime, ''. 'Ann -Michelle Sousa;-. • why so many people get involved. mentally h&ndicapped children
_ •.
·since:
1967, the Mari~t-College -.-
to
MCCTA. ''They (the children) •• a first-year member of ty1CCTA, Everyone is out to have fun,
from local facilities come to the
.. : Council on Theater 'Arts has per~ are willing to .give of themselves .·saici, "but it is a learning ex-
especially on Marist Night. "
campus and spend the day with a
formed
for
some of the toughest fully to what the: performers .are
perience for the cast and the
student host.
critics iri'the world: • Children,
m:ing to do:"
children."
iMarist Night is a children's
-
• A.
d'
· · J
"f · h
• ,,
•·.
• •
theater exclusive. The cast revises
.
.
. ~cor l~g . .to •• ar?,s~. .1 : t ey . : According to Cox, not only do
.
-''Ttiey are not'polite; If they see thmk the -~ood guy ts_ m-tr?u- ·- members of children's theater get
the script in a way that only the
' ,,_ a mistake,they will let you know ?,le, they will try to warn him.
to irite~act with children, but they
Marist
•• community
can
aboutit',"Joitdly,•;_
Susan Jarose; a
They_a~~ually beco~e
~ part of . develop their talents in diffeI~nt understand. Marist College gets a
•• tw_o'.year member of:·.Mc<;:TA, the_ play, Jarose sa~d ... 1:he. ac-
areas of theater;
"If
you don't
look at itself - but the reflection
.
_said..
.
. .
.
tors ?ave. to deal with this. Vfe wantto act, you can direct, pro-
is i<>ften
that of
~
funhouse mir-
-: Though
!t mar, be tou~h, t~e. must ,play to them __
anri- with duce,·. work: on costumes, do
ro/~esid
.• es . enJ·oying .· what
is
.,.cast- and• crew .. of • Chtldren s them.
__ .. • •
. • .
bl' - 1 •
• th' -
1 _,,
-··
Th~af_e~;
an_M,CCTA-
project', wiU
In - ordef • •
to
have the . ~er-
~~
s;{ie ations.or
a~~
mg e se,
childlike, Marist College has
try·agam:th1s year to m~et the ap- . fomance ready for these critical
• --

! ;·
al~ays had a tradition of being in-
prov'al'-of{he·younger .audience, critics,--the cast must.rehearse
Although the chtldren- want
volved with the ·children in the
when they perform ·their-version diligently. Rehearsals are held . perfection, the atmosphere during
Mid-Hudson
area.
Besides
ofThe·Wizard of Oz
from
April _ every night prior to. opening the play's production is relativ_ely_ children's theater, MCCTA occa-
··
12 through April 18. '
_ _
• _ ·night,

and during performance
rel~ed, Jarose said. "There is so
sionally sponsors a story hour for
"There is a kind of uninhibited week . 9 to twelve shows are
much to do in children's theater,
children. It also works with the
<response you ·get 'when· children_ prese~ted.'
as compared to other MCCTA
Psychology Club for One-on-One
MCCTA has won many awards
as a result of its participation with
children. It _has been voted "Club
of the Year" many times because
of its community service.
"It
. represents the hard work and
dedication shown by a large
number of the students," Cox
said.
But, the • children's _ theater
group cannot rest on past sue~
cesses. They must face their
young critics once again. But, ac-
cording to Jarose, they haven't
gotten a bad review yet.
Future ·Fair .comes _to Po'town

By
Jana
Muf!1lY

· In ho~~r
or'
Passriy_er, Campus Ministry
wiU
celebrate with
a
: Seder.in the Pub_ on Monday. , • •
Accprding,to ElaineiNewman, .assistant campus minister,. the _
• Seder. is
a
traditional ritual and meal, held. on the first two nights· •
of Passover. The_
hoiiday itself lasts for. eight days, -beginning this
year on April 6. ·•

, . _
.
"The Seder begins:. with • the youngest , child asking four
. questions aboufwhy this night is different from any other,"·
Newman explained; "The r~t of. the Seder is spent answering
those andany other questions the children might have."
:.-),be'add~i! 't~at;the:ri~als_fodh~ Sed~r are traditici~al ana are
-
w1;'itten
in a ..
bcfok caUcd.theHaggadah,.whlch
is·.read ,aloud
-; dtiring_th_e
Seder cere111ony,
Basically, said Newman,-Haggadah
mean~-"telling," _and-the Haggadah tells.the story.of.the Jews
exqqu~ froni:Egypt, which is the focus of Passover.' •
• - • •
• ._ Ne~m~n'said ~he see~ Passover as a variety of things.· "It's
a
holiday ofnature;
a
spring holiday.and a holiday of awakening.
--; It-is also
a
holiday of-commemoration and a time for remem-,
beringJewsa~otindtheworld."
. • .:, - ,
-
\:
,c:
_
_ •.
!'Most of.all/? she said,'."it is a holiday for freedom against •
\•.c'tyranny/' ' • "'

:
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Letter Qfi8-.litY-Prihter -
~
••
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.
'
'
• D13.ta
_Storage

·.c
~$pe•9ifica.tions • Form:s:
• Maili 11g
_l.:i§ts

_
Reports
_--
• 49-_B.[lli
ng
:!
F>ers·onal
ized
~-
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··-+,_.::;;··•~~
~
'
'
·•:
'
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• Maniiscri pts _·•_ResuJites·"
•Cover Lette·rs
Professional/Quick
·Turnaround
Mail-ins
·Acceptecf'
• • •
(914) 297-2449
6(): ALL'.'ANGELS>HILL
ROAD
-WAP!3ING:ERs'.•i=ALLS~
-N~Y;
·
by
Michael Ruseskas
The Mid-Hudson Civic Center,
Poughkeepsie, will be holding a
trade show on March 29 and 30,
_ according to Don Verity, account
executive for WEOK/WPDH, the
sponsors
of
the show. -• ·•
Billed as "Future Fair," this
will be-"an exposition of tomor-
row's innovations today," Verity
said. "We've approached dif-
ferent retailers who have.new pro-
ducts on the market, or types
which are the wave of the future,
and have invited them to •show
their wares."
The fair will be open from • 10
a:m. to
9
p.m. on Friday,. March
29, arid from 10 a.m.
to 6 p:m; on
Saturday, March 30. There will be
more than 40 exhibitors on both
days.
_
Verity hopes ro attract two en-
tirely different crowds within
these times. "On Friday we'll
probably pull from the business
area around the civic center,"
Verity said. " Saturday
will
probably bring the people from
home."
There
will
be no admission fee,
and door prizes will be awarded
hourly.
WEOK will
broadcast Jive
from the civic center.
• ,Nf:ilitary
lure college grads
/
.
i
.
.
.
,
ByJuliaMurray
assistant campus minister, the
Seder is a traditional ritual and
meal, held on the first two nights
of PassoveL The holiday itself
lasts for eight days, beginning this
. In honor-of Passover: Campu~
Ministry. will celebrate with.
a
Seder in the Pub on Monday,
April 1.• - • •
year on April 6.
According to Elaine Newman,
"The Seder begins with the
;c.jjE~<lnHi~G
AS
Ac
'ECXREEit
C1101cE
-·._
•.
.
PANEL
DISCUSSION-_
.-
.
Thursday, March 28, ·t985 -
.
.
I
• 4:10 P.M.
I
:FIRESIDE
LOUNGE
**********
Join the panelists, -teachers from
Garrison
Union
Ftee_ Sch-ool-
. District, as th~y discuss -their pro:~--
f essional world. •
**********
ALL ARE INVITED!-
.
youngest
child asking
four
questions about why this night is
different
from
any other,"
Newman explained. "The rest of
the Seder is spent answering those
and , any . other questions ·the
children might have.''
She added that the rituals for
the Seder are traditional and are
-• written i-in a . book cailed . ,'the -
• Haggadah, which is. read aloud
.• during . the. Seder ceremony.
Basically,
said
Newman,
• Haggadah means "telling," and
the Haggadah tells the • story
of
the Jews exodus from Egypt,
which.is the focus of Passover.
Newman said she sees Passo, er •
as a variety of things. "It's a
holiday of nature, a· spring
holiday
and
a holiday
of
awakening. It is also a holiday of
commemoration and a time for
;emem.bering Jews around the
world."
-• "Most of all," she said, "it is a
holiday for freedom against
tyranny~"
Theft __
Continued from page
1
reported on March· 17 and 18 by
jtmior Gary Artist of apartment
2A, and junior Viny Furlani of
apartment 1 C. Artist reported the
theft of a television,. stereo turn-
table, and assorted frozen foods
and liquor. furlani reported the
theft of
a tape player, jewelry and
a jacket, police said. _
Police said apartments 88A, 2A
and
l
C were entered by breaking
and removing sections of glass
in
the windo_ws:
Accordi,:ig to Detective Jim
Hamburger,
police feel that
students may have been responsi-
ble for the thefts in l C and 2A .
.
"We have reason to believe that
a student
oi:
students is involved
because only Marist apartments
. were entered; the burglars knew
it
was vacation time, and they knew
who lived where," Hamburger
said.
Hamburger added that in-
vestigations into the thefts ofthe
other two apartments are continu-
ing.
_ .· . _
..
,.
'•
..

,,.
~-
~
..
------------------------,..__;~~~
..
-------------------------·
Quinn· was arraigned before
Town Justice • Ira Pergament
Saturdayj1ight and released on
his
own
r~gnizance. He will ap-
pear in
;,::Town
Court . before
Justice_Pcrganient
on March 29 .

••• •· -----:,:::::,,.~-
.. \'•~:>·4·
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New
ride
t"._.a:ves
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w.
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by ~lln ~~e~raf~s! ''>:"

co(ri
0
p~titive with a dozen girls,"
~ulle
wfhllcb8·)~iT;~sh:
into ~ffectjnh_:t~e Wo~en's .~r:os~ . C~u~try ~ea~ ..
':t~a:.m
·fijpAwiriga';cqij~~e'~si111ii,i~


, • ....
Luriesaidinarecentinterview.·
·: 1al o. 9 6 •. ·erulesayst
at.a
Lune ,accepted the i~ec1, from, :tothe,onethenientook.wlienthey:·
• The:• first meeting of the new • • In order'to p;omote Women~s ·.:.sch()oFwith nine• m~n~svar_si~y Goldman a~d to<.>k
the:Job as,the /first,: siarted:'\The~ meh~s'-\team·-'
Marist Women.'s. Cross Country
Cross Country the team is hang~ .-sports. has to, have, six wo~.~n s . hc:ad coach o_fthe,\V<lme~_•s.·~ro:c;~
started:c,u{slo'wly·'inJis first:year: •
te.ani was:lield Iast·.:r~ursday. at __
1·ng.up'post·ers
a'round cam·
pus·.an- • -vars_i_ty
spo_r_
ts_; .'>
_,-;_··:.·
~·!:,·::;
Country team· ·' .•• _.,,
s
"··-:
:
• •

• •
• •• • ••• c ••• •
••

.•
''d
·, •• ,. ,,,• • .• ·
. theMcCarinCenter-and drew five•.
. ...
·-•··
. ·:.,;>:' :-,;;_;.,
, ..
:1 :;.•.
/,•
.•
and 1scurrently_rea y,to:enter~ts
'- potential team members.
'
nounci~g their firSt practice: ~Il~ _, Sin~e. ~ari~t already:.had five :,
,.~·ir~~ril
~ddi~·~:
th~
~e~~
t~ -b~ :··:?.e~f-s·eas'o~;:~~!=C?rdi~g·_t~:f:-~ie/).
Monday at 4 p.m.
. _ • · ... : .. _ womens varsity sports-: Bask~t- · • a good idea.because we.have the • .,, ,,.Th_e,.~orn~n
~ho1:1I~;
h~t:fh~ir · •
Steve Lurie, who also coaches
Anyone interested in joining
•.
oall, ·.swimming,
.
Crew, ·, Tennis :
f · men!~: team· and· a coach," Lurie r.eak in_; <>~t~l:,e~,.'~;
,~a.1(!,:;!,up~.:
the Men's Cross Country team;
the team, but who did not attend :' arid•Volleyball .'.""':.
MarisLneed,ed ' said-:. • .,.,.
.
: : .
.
; •.. •.·•
.
•>': • • .•
They,v.:111
im,1>.rov_e
eyery :Y~~ .~,
will coach the.women's team in its
the March 21. meeting, will be per~ : o~e niore ·team to meet 'the re~
.
•• -··:< •· •.
- . . ·
.
• .,.:'
: .\Ve
rc:cru1tm_o~~:fo.rJh~t~mY,;;-
.,
~-
first .season this fall.·
mitt ed. to· attend Monday's. prac~ , . quirement. The nine men'.s varsity • , • Lu~i~ . said he sees, ) 1
n:i
1
t.~d
·•
:_;;.,:
-J:he
·;
~.on.i~n.
,~1~1
:' ha"~ •~ Jm~y ,
1 •
tice according to Coach Lurie. • ., :spprts at.Marist are: Basketball, ,rec.r~JUng
for
t
h
e
te~~
t~~~.
Y~.~r
: $hed1de,~h1sJall, ~n~l.uding
~;ra<:e ,·
The turnout 'Ya~. a disappoin-
' .·
•·
• .. .. •
Tennis; . Crew,
Ice . Hockey, • . because )nost. recr,u1t~.
:
w~t • to .

at,.~ibany St~te, •.
the
Wagner
.In~ :
ting one for Lurie, who hoped
After -a . summer break,
.~he • •
L • ._.·
.. ·• -s'·s ·· . . . .
C
.
·
know what a team has ~pne ~n the. ,_ .vitational .: and <the
r
Collegiate
that a dozen participants would •· team , will ·•begin practi'c~ng.
_on .
c
acr 9t.
sse,
5
::. ~.immdiFng,tb.
1
{oss
past befor(: they deci_de
to_
attend a. ;Track,..iCi::mference.:'i
Champion~': .
be present at the meeting .. -August 17 to prepare for_.1ts
first • oun ry, oc~eran
°
0
a • •
school.'·_,

. _
.. , • ••..
ship;;: .. ·'.
,:d,·
• .'. .:. ,. :. ,.
,.
• .tNonet~eless, he said he expects
meet at Fairfield Universitf . .
. Physi·c~L\Education Directo~
Lurie; who has no idea what his . , The 's~as'on may8Iso include a ••
/ the team to grow and improve.
Marist had to start the women'.s Dr. Howard Goldman went to ,women's· : team _ ~embers, have .;·trip.
to
SoutJ:t Be~d'
for
a
meet
at
~
1
"The team will be internally
program because_
of a new-NCAA Lurie with the idea of starting a
done or could do, said he sees the Notre Dame.
• • •
·•

.
-
'
.
'

)
SkClters end seaso'n with sights on 1JiV.isiOfl>T'h/r~¢>
.:>·.:
:-... ,
..... • :,:
by
John Ca~non ..,.
p_erfor~ance: ~{ter\i:i~~,~~f
a
Manhattan College in December. sp~rts/'. •.
too ;a~y iildividualsta'rs;'~ ;>'..'

••
horrendo·us ·::'1-16'.' record last
"We then lost to Kings Point the
<.
The major. problem for this :<As ·far as next:season Js •con;..
• It was a season in:which evety
season, the. team expected to im-
next game, and team enthusiasm. 'year's team; however;:was·a lack . cerned; the-.•teani:.wm be: losing-.·
game was unpredictable.
prove its .record and make the • went down the tubes," he said. .
• oL- leadership;'' according

to two of'its mi:>st
consis.tent player$. •
I
Consistency and team motiva-
·playoffs. :'· • , ' .. •~ , •
..
, ..
• Following those two losses, the ·•Peeler: "We lacked team leader- • Senior.··
co•captaiit\Rob·. T;rabulsi :·
tion were in constant battle with
The team did have seven more • Foxes began· to
play
two. games . ship over'Hie
H:
gatnes;'.' he•said;;
wiU
be graduating this spring~·aitd
one another.
victories than.· last season, but
each week arid practices seemed to
.'~We
needed so'mei;in~10 step
:up
spphomofe·goalterider Chris Sked
: .The 1984-85 Marist men's.: Coach Jim Peelorsaid that he was have been forgotten, accordirigto
·to
the plate.arid take control';but ··wm·.be· transfei:ririgto, Rutgers.
hockey team ·hung up its skates,a
i
·,not happy with his:team's perfor-
Peelor. ''The: ·team enthusiasm ·no on~:did.'·'.-···. '.'.:.
:.:
.
: .• :university.,J'lie ..
other two··depar-
few weeks ago·w.ith adisappoin-
1
.mance: ~•we wanted to, go 14-4 suffered ,,\Vithout the
,
practice : • ','A,fotof players did •not have ting, seniors ;are-, Rob Caldiero .•
tirig 8-9~1overall record, The Red,/· this year when· we started at the time,
0
.,he· said .. '.'We·just ,had: a • the· desire· to ,.win ,game. in and .. (who quit· the·teain·:earlier)· and
Foxes -did end the year on a
outset. of .. the_:.,season,". Peelor heck of a time trying•to:get,ice
game .out,"·,duriior .. co-captain . John Maher; '_:-:,:'.•·t·,::;-:,·,,:,,,;;_:·:'?.
·--:-----..·.
• positive note with a thrilling,Jl-10
said. "We started: off'well, and time.,,/.
..-;:-
,. .
,:,~;'.>r :_ -
Craig:,ThieC said:,<~'.We,
;really.·,,, The;team may•.begoing.Jrom a
victory oY-er.
Pace University at
then began to Jail apart 'in.:mid~ ,-'Practices: have. be~n Iimited:in-

-didn1t get, ·motivated, until :the •··•
clilb:•sport tor'a :oivision:,;Three.
• the.Mid-Hudson Civic Center.
season.''
:
·;
. ·

:..:,::.
, . ,
. years~past because ohhe: cost-of
final two games~ when· w_e·made .prograni-nexfseason,which c~uld
. • But de~pite ending the y~r on a\ .,~Peelor :~.s.aid·.:tl).at_:
\the\; turnin,g ,
._reservingdce·
0
tim~_
.. •T~e.:icei-co~~s,-
:-the {orward:ci,efensemeh'sliifL:'
'i/ -:
;mean;:an. increase:.ip. ,~he..:team:s•
.
.
..
high·. riote; , the Eoxes: weje· 'nof )
:
point:· in-:tlie.,,tnid-se~oi1·
..
slump ·: more~:than
;~·100
~i>er:'.lioi\rifand:;,
ni1otaham
~alsol;had
fa/somcwbai' .:.'r.t:unding;f,.accor'ding}:to::.t~~j:oach
.
pleased with·their ·overall season/ was a tough loss at.the hands of takes

major chunk out:of.•the • :different/.,view.-Yotf:the::-teani?s••:.·
and players·. The decision,~ill:be ,



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• • •
• •
• •

: just 'can't. findi_an
·.:open field. tof ,~onaI .. sta~isiics/~ ~qraham\ s_11id\:\:
rpli~r/cqijter.-,· season/: ii(\~hi~l,i'J'
S:' •
play on. like. any. of the. othei!·~•''Ifrmost:ofthe-·games; )11e-had;. ·every game was a'different i;ide'. =;:
.
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·•
. • _.Maristlacrosseteamuriaerthe
Mercy College·onThursday.
·
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·-·:<··,,,,_
...
• • ••.
>t
• .....
·
guidance of second-year Head : The squad; underJhe tutelage
·
h)'.
Dan Pietrafesa
:rf \
She says it· is doubtful. th,at sh~ , .Toria clidn't have • t6 ciepe~di_c,h/.
Cciach:MikeMaletexp«;nei\ced.
·of Head·Goach
Gerry Breen,
. : ..
, ·~ .:• :"•·, ,
, ,·
<\will play professioriaUy<in:the-C,'ineasinudn'isshedidla~tYear.''.f,;
a
great ·deal
'Of
Succes~
on
the /opened 1.ts' regular ?season: at,:
• : A.Marist••Seriior
will ·be'leaving ·rUnit_e9
-~t~t~Sj;..
"I,'i.don~.t, see-·-a
,-'_"7
-<:.-;
·:-.i_;,:;._.~.,.
:.:, i;-: •!...
"':'
.::·:, ·;
ro·ad against
a
P.air of.Jocal ,.: .13~idgeport-,y~t~rday.;; The
campus this year for Ii:eI_and
hopt ;~\vo.ni~n!s
0
P,rgfes,sicina_IJeagtje
ge{:4;
'':••;;\£i~,t~rr-w~~
ITl!~s~~
Wl},Y.
on~,..
- te. ams/.
J
0 ,;
:az·;co. ntrolle~ {.._
..
crew • teajn;'•;.
coming ':off\its
: ing that, she has br9~ghf rec;:ognk-
Uing --off,.i',the.
':grouna,'~ Winter:..(.
g!lnJ~.
1~ her ~llege_.care:r, ~pent~:

1
•• d.


-b·
tk
k
·ct
·tion··lo'Jhe''Marist··Women's~said.
• ·\'·"-.:•-':
,., ·.>-,··
.so~e,,t!me.:asa.secon~stnngeq·
scrimmage ast Thllrs ay; the , sppng •
•• rea .• wor outs own
·: Bas.
ketbal_l
p-rogram:
. " • ,: } . -The criminal J·ustice·
niaJ·
or saicl':. _th1si:.-Ye~r
• when
.•
~nst
. He_aq,:-.
Red Foxes . m.
ore.· ,th.
an he.
Id . in.\. Florida, -
w.m
be·· hos.tin.
g··.
.

• ..
c
h Pat T
t
h
their own againsi:ihe·B: squad-.'.,\Mfmhattan
·,and
Lowell thts'
i
"c.
~Go~~ptaiwUrsul11~Wi~ter, th.~ r~he w_oul~
Iikt: to.g~t~-j~b ~rJtf.f:::-.~~;~;!.
,·.
?~~.o/~~
st
~F
mg_
t
.~if:·
from Army ·ai'-:·West··'.Point:' 'Saturday at
·s·
a.m:.;: That'
'··
5-10
forward from FortI.:ee, Ne\Y!,1mg
w1th1uveniledebnquents after,•,;:.-,~:- ·., ·' • -,.



-•~·
~~~:~tn ~~~e
!r~m~:!~t;
1
! .
:::c: ~:u~m c6:p~~! itiidof~

••
• •

• .. ·
•;
• • •
• ;·:
;n~~
i~aJ~lti~~sk~~~fc~gs~ )hf'-,.·)'.:~
.2'.?::
-
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r\: / ·;.· • :
,,

~~~e~~!~d
:ae~}!c~fv~
=~~~,
• .. ~:~s~f:/!a~~!\l
0
~~~r.
<lre~.~:d
l
!o_
0
_/
ntie
~:.i.~.:.1_ba':·.ki·%.·e.:11.··,.·;·f_~
..
-~:°.t~~-s.·.\i.
r.-
..
:~_,d.tii
..
~.-y_a.·~.faf.r_-.·~.:}7····_.i_:_'.·J!
.•.
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·~~P._}!_._·".~n..·
...
::./~1\i·e···.J·~.,.>._
._·,_a
..
l:_t.-.~.,.
:;
'
•••.
led by junior attackman Tom,
-
Metro
Basketbal_L _;ro~r1 ; .. .
. .
-/
P
••• •
'1.·
__
::,pla_yed.~{oi_.;Fo.tt.,
··~_._.,
(_H,
i_~ S
__
i:?h,o_
,o._tff_,.'f_:'.'
W.:,
OftlJ_l~h_~._s
__
p,rQ_
,"J;..·!-.
gs_,qµa
_,._·;,
.
Daly . .
In the . regular season
•··
nament, it looks like the Foxes • • perience
,
,
.
c;
-
. -
.
-
'
I'
h
opener • at_ New ._ Paltz on !would have_ta~en on M_ichigan.: ,. · · ··
• :
-
1lwhe~e she led B~rg~n;;,_,,oup.tf)n~

.
getf:1-ng:>:
:
p/f •
1
e
2:-
satur
.day,
the Foxes .b•
r'ok·e·_•a'
~
..
··.in~_•Dayt_on).··.
F
.. D.l;J,·' .·.
w
.. ho-~ '·~ ' •-.,~•
~
1~cormg and rebounding •m··her'. '
'
•'
'a· . ., ·
·
·,
'f


-

.t.
fcenior year. Despite th_is, sh.e was
gro_
Un ; _·
""
tight game wide open iri the·
·::repfeseni_ed·
thje conference,
-------------""'!
.,,.,
".

·

h
• "
.

.. ·
.~ '.·oniy named to the Second '.'(ea,n
__
---~''"\:~~.
~-,. ••
.-.
;..·.
·,
ses,ond quarter .• with eight :, pu~ .~Y!,te,;
a_-scare .mJo -~ e - '~·Jer~~Y,
."'.ill be teaying Marist.
!S::
tAll-County.
-.~ : • '
',·
>-~ '
J
unanswered goals, and took a ·Wolyen~
• J>efore; fallmg ' ·Ahe .all-time leadmg scorer
._m:i
-i:.
,; , .
convincing
18-4
win.
: down· the stretch.
·aut
ESPN ·-:
~ Manst Women's Basketball wtth-; ':i She sparked as, a Jumor. at .
..
·.. .
..
.
'.':·
Sophomore attac.km~J!. Tim ,.and_I)h:k
Vitale,
di~n't giye.qi~
,
.:mo~~ tMn 1,S00 career points-:--{ tMari~J.~ •._~~,,en:;.
s~.e .•. l~<h·>:t~~t: pfar,ers'sh«HelE;w;er\HhbiittsJ:
ag2:
Dunn put in five·talli_~·and.: ..
,~nights·or the-~CA.C tvfe~ro
~-- •··aplateau reached two weeks ago: ,Cosmopobta.A;,:~.Confe'renc.e,.:.·
in--~-
•->~•.::1,,, ~,, · -:-.:. ·:,.,.
~
... • -•·,~- • : ..
_
• ed ff f

h I l
f
t V tal
.
. .
. •
,_;
~
. .• .. •
"
. ,.-,· •. ·-,.. ,,"' •. , .. • :·,. "~~:g(e'lis1ve.,m
P,racuce. -,:~
J,f •. ~" ... ,: -
pass
o
or two assists...
w o e ot o . respec '. • 1 e,
. agamst Cosmopolitan Conference ..
,,sc~rmg-,?:"."'._av~agmg.1elose
to-: b-~--, ;:;:
<! ...
,,,.?,_ -. .. _,_
!
a·-
v.,
:-_
The 31-manJax squad has no ···the :9lble ;netw.orr.s_:expert:". :'.rival Fairleigh Dickinson Univer-\·Cpomtsagame~a~d.w~th~}ugh,
• i/!The ~yst.em·"~ good, but it~
seniors this y~r, somethfog · com_rnent_ator;·
:s
re·peatedly .
sity.
. •
. ,; ;scorer for Manst m-c20 of:1ts:'29r-·· would have '·been ·better if she:-·
which aoesn't seem to concern
belittled FDU by saying the
.
.
.
.
,.
.
·) ~games. She also led the Foxes in
started ik.at the start of the":
Malet. "We're looking for a
team didn't beloqg . in the
"I hope it will'give recog~ition·; t..rebounding =:;-iavef?-ging
:8,8,a.
season," Winter.said ....
.:'::···~-:. ~;
winning season, and I tliink we
NCAA field of 64. It was one
to Marist and make recruiting:i' ;_game (eighth in the conferenc~) . .
. .... •
.
. . .
.
~-
have a very good chance of
of Vi tale's few mi~takes during
}?etter for the . progr<1m,','
, said\ •·and finishing with the fe<1m
high·
!
~Vmter, who, said, ·she•-sees ,a.
co.nt,ending for _the·.
Knicker- . ~.he
network's c9verage of !he
WinJer in a recentinf~rview.
"I':
i:..in 13games-free.throwperc~n.:, :,bngh~:/~lqr-;Jor,-t'1:
.women\
bocker Co.nference tide," .he
tourney::. St. John's superstai
would' have given up· the t ;500-:< .tage (. 724) and steals with
so
..
,
.
Pr<?gral'!l
an? a _possibl,~ 1,~;•t
said
recently.
"Without
Chris
Mullin
recently visited
point plateau for a better season •
.


., •• • pomt. scorer m Michelle . Magic •:
seniors ; on • the . squad, _o)lr the Marist campus, but not to .
for the team)'

,
~
- '; •
.
;. ;.'. This season has been dis;ip- • Mi_chel; ~onsiders beating .Siena~
experiencedju·nfors.willfillthe ·;apply for the· now-vacant
..
•f
: •• -
:: ;:pointing personally ·ancLteam- .twice. this ·tea! 5_and the Long;
leadership roles. And we have
assistant basketball post. The
Wmter will be gomg t(!. play;, 'Wise
.. Winter said-she,(eels that. -~(sland µl{J~ers~y~game.last year
some
excellent
lacrosse
6-6 forward and consensus
semi-pro basketball" -in·· ~reJand:: !the team shouici have.won half of • ·.when
,.team!ii~te.
Lyrine Griffin,
players." ... The Foxes host the
All-America pick took a break
• next _year, even though_-'she
f~ls:; :its lost games, and her stats were
scored h·er l ,OOOth
J><?int
as some,
Setters from Pace University.. from NCAA tourney action to
she_ could play pr~fess1onally m .. also down.
of her thrills at Manst. She also
~t •
Leonid off Field • this
visit a cousin of . his who
England.
• •


,._
considers her 32 points in the.
Saturday. Game time is 1
resides in Marian ~all._
"I'm going for the experience ;' :
..
"We had a more balanced team
same game against L:I.U. as her:
5:._ _______________________
....
notto be paid,'' said Winter. ,. • '~ this .year," said Winter. "Coach.. own personal thrill.
?
·
..
•,,.
















































































































































































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-

••

Mar. 21,:1985· THE CIRCLE
•Page
15•·•.··--•
·-
·-;_
·<rtiifrsda5(
Mornfi,•g·
'."Qiiarterbac:
•.

k·::·.-
_·_-,"·:
.
.<
-
::·_-•.
_.:
.,.-,
- • _,:-·_:··;_.:
_/.
·
.-. ·•
1:·:--
••
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·

·
.-
..
-
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,..

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••
i".
,.,
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.
-,ili~:;t~§\ti;t,t~
•·i()f':·th~
b
Usin
esS


.
•:·,
_,.
.
'
'
.
,
'
,'
'
.
'
.
.
,,

.
.
'
~
·. l~-
..
·!\_-:-)i:·/
.
.-.
-.:
.-
.•.
:~~?:;_._:_-;·:.:.
>
b~ lan'O'Conilor
.
: _
.
.
.
,;-
.0
to hav·e paid off. Under Perry, he
:.
·•-
'.
,>:
:j/,p.:;;::i~•-t,t;:,:
;-_;
.;·_\'.~:·.'
,'""'.
,c.]';;.
would be
'given
a: great~ deal':of::
~
\1{:The
.s~on
hadjus(endedjn
:,_:
responsitiiliiy. While the bbsfwils::
·
'::.Jiu.ite.
a,
shocking m·anner. Joi·:;
,out:
scouring the playgrounds;of<
:
:

-M~rist's; _men!s:
basketball team.· Europe/
:his
:,
number
·one·:
man
-;
, ·
A
••
buzzcr~beating, heartbreaking
'would
·be
handling a' lot: of.X's

.
loss in ~ouble

overtillle
_to.
the.·:
arid
O's and game strat~gy, Jim
.Greyhciunds'from'Loyola
College:
'>J'odd/.Perry's
second·
·assistant,
.
.
.
:
in the' EGAC·Mefro Tournain:enC'
:would
'.
primarily:"
,serve
i'as::
a
.

·•
..•.
.
:~ad:
ab~i.!P.!.ly·J~riish~d
!lie
1
_dre,m_s
)(
r~I~i~~r, '.:¥v.~r}1liii:i~\s#ri:i~d·
J_o·
.
.
.
~f-
N(?AA'.
glqry-f~r-the
.Red
Fo?{~
:1
l!e~gomg;
ngl_it.-.};ha~
.1s,

unul tlie .
-~s:·A
·y~r
:of
t~rmoil;: triumph
-.,.iriost:·.~mbarr~~sing···moment-
in'-.
·•··.·.
and
·surprises._was
now c~iiipJ~t~:;;:.;;.
·•
Mari$t:;
spqrifhistory ,,ook'-place.

• ;
:

And t~en'.~
John' Qtiattfocchi
;
Perry.was senfpackirig.
/<,,_, •
··.-:·.:
..
r.
>,
handed in his resignation,'
.
>
:/
.; :
_i.
The period ·just-after this inci-
:
·

:'/::_The•
decision. by

the full-time

,dent, was an anxious one for
·
·a:ssistantfo 'leavc·his
post· here at_: Quattrocchi
•.
Heseemed to )lavt a
't'S>zt,•u-:,:-,,,:,,
;,,<
Marist.,was seen
'by:
the castial>Iegitimateshot'at 1:epfadng Perry
;~b~e·ryer.
as ariot~_er.
in a series
:or
·
-·;
0~,
ari
interim basi~, something.

.
~tarthng. events· the men's pro-
that
would have been.an.extraor-.

gram has <>ffered
this year: Buffo
:
diriary lift. for the coach

who
the, hard_ core follower; the
"in-
·
languished· in the sniaU time of
_sider_,'.'
this_ move by no
.means~ .Division
Three only a year ago.·

came as. a surprise .. The writing, Btit the longer the search commit-
..
as they often say, had been·on the',,: t~e
'took
to firid a neW,head coach,

..
·'·
wall.
·'
~-.
.
.
. '·,:.--:/:'

·
.•
..
:itlie-more
dearer it.became that-,:·.
.
.
,..
To
,understand
why Quahroc~
I
;
the. choice WO\lld be'. an·· outside
>

chi's departure had been immi-._·,:
candidate. Arid so
;the
mart,:was
.
.
neitt, one needs to·, know. the·'
·former-·,:Robert
-
Morris.
,:Head
..
background

on· how the'.; ~oacfr:: Coach'.Matt·Furjariic,
·wtio'·
even-
•.
, ,cidginally
arrivea
-in:
Pcmghkeep-

tually led Marist to its first winn-
.
sic last summer. As the Jiead man ing season on the: Division One
.,
.:
at

Rensselaer Polytechnic. In-
. :
level.

,
·,
.
.

..
~i~ute, Quattrocchi had, gained
:..
Furjanic's arrival.· eventually
:respect
.by;
turning around that
,brought
on,a switchoin respon-
.,
·,,,~::·-;::
..
,

:.
i:m~e
dormant Division Three pro-
• ·sibilities
:for,
bis: t~9
..
assistants.

·
gram; His credentials, which: in~ Todd:assumed ·the fole of
.chief•
,
.
.
.
eluded
.
coaching
,
experience in·
.
assistani,and
:bench
coach,-while
.
.
.
.
An
assistant at work. (Photo by
Judy
Weiner)

Sweden, were enough·to convince, Quattrocchi took-on the duties.of

• ,:
..


.
•.

;
•.
•·
fori:Jler,1Red·
:Fox-mentor
,Mike
,'.·scout
:and-recruiter;
The.;former
_every
right to. He'~ the~boss, and
to primarily handle game strategy
'-P,erry
to·hire:hirn·as.hisJirst'assis-
.
RPr coach
·:was
on the road·· so he certainly has the right: to have

and to be a bench coach," Todd
.
tant,.,
It,
was:. the'.-opportunitY:
all
:
much that he hadn'tseen:a Marist assistants wh~.will best help. him
recently said. "When Matt
:came
.college
,coaches•;jait,for.:-lt
was

game since-January/In fact; he.'. to win.;·
It was adass move when in, John's role•was changed; Matt.
-
the opportunity.to be a i>!rt of-the
.
wasn;t even· present· at. the
.con-
Furjanic
-
decided to keep both
pretty

much, handles all of. the

big timeofDivisfonOne>·.
,
;,
..
;
•ference
tourriamertfih,Baltimore
Quattrocchi and Todd
·when
he
game strateg)·. He's the type of
.•
-'·.,_J.!'Fwas;·told,
l;)Y()UlcLnever
be
·.It-:was
;obvious:that:the
situatio~ was ffrst
1
hited. After a period of.,
·coach
thaL likes'·to
.run
his own
:
.·!'ired,.asLhea'd
coach
:a_t,.llPI;''·

.was_less'than. suitable for:·Quat~·
--
evaluadon,,he decided what roles show/-'
/..-
i:
.
,;
:
..
.
.
·-:Qtiaitfocchi
.said:cJntSepteD1ber.
,-
,fro~cbi~,·•··•·,.,:_
\
.
·
.:.;,,(•,.',i''°:;'. :•·
..
woulg be.best _for
..
his.· two
_aides
..
·-...
_For
'Q\lattrocchi,.
it·
was
.pro-
.•.•-'.'.
It_, ~as
)'L
gaml>le .·t9°?make;
the
>,
'
This is ;not lo lllake,ir sound· as
.•

Qil_attrocchi obviously
• •
••
wasn't

• •••
.bably
.
~he,:
right·• decision.
,
. At • 3 5
_.move,.to:~arisG:bui~Uelt:l,h'~dto
.:.,jf,;F..urjanic~b'anishcd,:,his,assisfant·
satisfied;with his.detcrmi.ned role, -·years of'"aget he-;was the·.second
;
Jakethe·oi,oorttinity.
~·-:·-·•··'
,-:.•;
.- '
·.
and,fotced
:him-.-o.uti>-Ever{if:he
..
·SO
t_feJeft.
;
'.;>.:.,
-: ,,;";
',
'<;
•.
:';;:;
.•
assistant in' what is currently con•
~:
;
\Qu~ttro_cchi's;:,
gamblf s~ed,:", did{-:furjanic:',:wotild
.
ti~~i('.
Jiad,):"•:--,;<'John
\Vas hired by
M.i~e
Perty,
•.
sider~d. a low Divi~Ion
~One
pro~
gram. The process of moving up
and getting a head coaching job at
this. level can be a long· and
tedious one. Actually,
that
oppor-
tunity may never even
·come.
And

all those who have been head

coaches can
O!'IIY
take b~ing as
,
assistant for so long. There's
always that desire to return to the
•top.
.
.And,
:no
.matter on. what level,
John Quattrocchi will return to
the top.
··'"
.--:.'·-
'
\Al

'
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I
:

' : •.
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-
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••
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·L..00
1ngl..
tf'!7J~§ffi4!'!1:f
":;:/'.'-FRIDAY:

.--·~l~(:ii'l.~~-
<·SATURDAY_'·
.•
t
;,.fO
lo
'9


'.'"''lljll''''.'·""
111
tfljll'.'''.'.'..
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to 6
...
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POUGHKUPSre. N,Y,
::
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••
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'DO0.R
PRIZES
EACH
ilouif,


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--
.
_.
~
~
.
.
-
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<

~-
'._:,
.
~ee wha_ts new on the market
.
COMPUTERS
··COMMUNICATIONS
HOME IMPROVEMENT
AUDIO
SATELLITE/CABLE
T.V.
FURNISHINGS
HE Al. TH CARE
VIDEO
Liscen to
~
~
for more detail
.
·
. .
~~m~·~-
for.peOple f,o ti/ipo$iti0ns
on Th8
\{Cir-Cle
Staff Jor··.19a5~1986. Among
.,the~_·.posltlons·
to. be
:filled
are:
'
,'
.
,
:
;

...
'••
:,
._.
.. ,.:
•·. 1
_,
~·---Edllor.:-
-
.-~-
A·sso·ciate,::Editor

_: sports Editor
-
Busin~ss
·fy'lanager
-
Advertising Director
:·Interested
tact Lou
6.101 .
students
should
·con-
·extention
.Ann Seelig,
.
...,
...
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