The Circle, November 6, 1975.pdf
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 15 No. 7 - November 6, 1975
content
.,,
/
VOLUME 16~
·
NUMBER 7
MARIST COLLE9E, P,OUGHKEEPSIE,
.
NEWYORK
12601
ValldalS
Strike
- On
CampU~
•·
__
·
By Cl~udia Butler
,-
.
•,
'
assistance of the;,
•
Poughkeepsie
.·
.·
,
.
·
·
Police
;
Department; the
.
car
wa:~
_:.
"The
-
Marist
-
students
:
.
recovered~
-
-:·
<,-
·
,
··
,.
:
,i
i
\
:-.:'< .
.
responsible for the
·
vandalism
at
:
.
: :
Several cars were daniaged
·
by
.
·
_
:iyiarist
.
should
.
grow up and
.
:
act
••
·
two
·.
Marist s*derits mJiheahan
like adults, This
.
•
is 'their
:
corn~
:
lot
:
After witnesses orovided
:
in-
niunity'_...; their
-
home away
:
frorn
:
(onnation,'the studentsj,1.greeci to
.
honie,
-
They
·
sliould take care
:
of
·.
make restitutfori and are:now on
.
-
.
it!
'1
saict.
·:
P~_ilip . Mccready,
>
pro.t>ation, five rooms
in
le
_
o Hau
Director of Security;·1.'It's such a
w_e_
r e
b
u .. r
g
1
·a
r
Ti
e
d
.
.
,
:
.
small percentage of students
.
·
over
.
the ColUJ11bus Day-weekend ..
:
·
doing
.
the mischief. Lwowi:I illink J.'hese are under the investigation
·
•
· the rest of the
·
sti.idents would get
.
of
·
security
.
.
and
.-·
the
::·
Town of
·
.
tired of paying
·
for someone else-'s
·
Poughkeepsie Police
.
i:>ept
:
'.
:
,
mischief."
_
He
,
_
explained that
if
· -
Lastly; a
:
1ight
_
p_9st by Adrian
..
:
·
tl\e person responsible for
.
the Hall was damaged during the
.
.
da
_
mag~
,
i~
:
~<>t:
_
appr~~«:nd~ the
· ,_
weelt~!1~
.
o~Octo~er
25
'.
-
~
.
wo meri,
_.
·
• .
.
dorm:
_
_
liability deposit whi~h
•
all
:
•
•
botll ,v~s1ors, were accused of: the
,
resigerit
.
students P.ay
··
will
.
go
..
vandalism and . paid
--
for
.
.
:
the
.
toward the common: damage
-
in damage,
"
estimated at $150~00.
.
.
...
.
the;J)affor floor.
.··. ·.
.
. _
·
•
.
··
..
,
McCr'eady
'
.stiggested
.
several
.
,
·
·
-·
·
·,
•
.
.
'
Mc(;ready point.ed out that the
·
:-
wa.ys in which students can ~ssist
·.
- P
_
resident Foy and
Pblllp
McCready, Director of Security; insP.~ct the gr9unds. Lately the campus
the(ts
·.·
·.
and
•
'
damage• during
.
the
.
in
.·
.
..
creating· ·a. mote
"'
secure
-..::..
·
has
been
plagued
l>y
a rash of
.
destruction
by
vandals.
:, ,
(CIRCLE·. photo
by
,
·
Dave
·
Llvshin)
moillliofOctober
·
wez:e
:
uniisually ~aµipus
::,
erivironm
'
ent .
.•
;
n
_
e
_.
·
·· •·
.
··. ·
·
·
.
·
·
-
.
·
·
·
·· · ·
·
.
· ...
:-
·
-"-'
·
···
·
·
.··
·· ·
·
Ooiiceritrated .
.
Tli•
·
·
•
•iitciderits
·
recoriunends
-
-
thaF
-
students
C
bri'
'
Wh
·
·
;
· ·
·
J"F"/L
· .
·
-
,4
·
·
·
~~:ii
··
~tori;rf~~~~:edki!~:1!~~
:.
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.
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.
.
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.
.
.
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..
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o
.
-c.
~
-
.-
.
L
;
,
$
.
:
·
,
··
_.~
..
..
~
-,,,,
.
-,,o ·
,
:
;..
.
fl,
'"
n
O
.
u
·
n
;
C~ed.
·
.
se~ur
Y
?
or
::>
·
·
~u11agmg
,
:,.
an
.
_,,
s ot1
_
-
a so
·
assume
,
:..
sQme
.
·
.
.
.
-
.·
:,:c..
·
,
:
el~v~tor
~
The
'
:Case
"
was
::-
resolve.9
:
·
:
:
responsibiljtyfor the behavior
of
:.
.
,
,.
.
·:
·
c.':.
:
.
·,
by
chargirll{Jhevisitors
.
$50.9()Jo
'
tfleifyisitois;
•
:
/
'
-'
0:
?
-
,
;' ..
_
·
byGIGIBIROA,S
· ·
~
-
i
-
_>.
said, "Na
_
rnes of
~Ii
seniors ;ho evening
:
division ~t~dents.
.
--
-
.
cov.e~J!J~ ~epa_lr
·
,
<>,f
.
me e,eya,tor:
.
·
1:le
_
st~ess~d
:.,
thafexit
,
dgpi:sJn
:
.
.
.
...
;
·
i
.
0:
~:
'
.
:: .
_., _
voluntee!ed
:_
~o
.
be
-
"
<>i))~e '
~
:Who's
··
·
:
Rre
.
derick
::. .
.
Ashler,
._
Robert
.
•
•
·
Th,~
?
lll
.
~V!~U,~~
i
:-:
~ei:e
,
:
bcillil,e~
:-
tlie
.
4
~s1denc~·
·
hci
_
lls
t,
shoµ~d
\
be
,
,,·:
.
Twe!1ty .
.
·
rune
.··•
J'.f~ri_si
.~
Gcillege
. ·
,:
Wh?"
__
corrum~t~e \Vere
.
~ccepted:-
.
-Bo,ctratti;
.
Cht:istine Bryant;
-
01m
.•
.
·
:··
'
,
·.
·
:
,
~~OID
/
~flD.lPll~
_
Jc:,~•si;
;
pioqt
,
~
:
}f
,
.
:
i::,
!0<:~~
-
~~~
;119.tt_~PJq,
,
~rA~
-
r9p~t
:"-
~
-
~d~~ts
}
~~
-
~rf
,
'
nogilll
,
~t~~
:
.
;·
.
t~r
•
.
,
:
:-
~w-u~~~
th~
C
~~q~~!'.
~
~
_
lciSS
'.
mee!~g. •
·
·
·.
_
.
B\li:'kh~ft
/:
9f~gocy
~· .
.
gonoc_~!rl9li,
.•
,
.
:
·
__
.
.
.
;'.
.·
•
..
, ,
:;
'~'.-:
Als~
,
du11ng
:
October,"'a
:
car,was.
,;,:;:
open
i,:
for:
0"
convemence
:=
i:,
I.as~
r
r
mcI
_
us1on.mJhe
:
19.1a.'16
.
·
edit10n
•
of
i
,,
,held> o.n
°:
·$~p~mber
,\:
~~
;-,:.-
~The~e .
:·
SheldonDavIS
;>
Richard·Dinneen;
•
-
·
.
.
··:
-
.
. :
-
•
·
•
··'
keys
'
.was
:
aken
:r-
ftoiif a
,'
i:'oom
;
in
:
>
Ahonimity.
,
ic
of
'1,:
witnesses
'?:
is
:,
·
pat1onal,prog'ram
4
wti:i.ci{
>
honors
·
•
:.
approyalwas
;
g~yeJt
:
tiY
'!
the
:
senior'..::Edwar
'
cF
•.'i
McKenna;
;:; '
Michael
·
.
··
.
.
:
fr
,
~fi>a
.
~1a:
N
~~
1
f
\/
'fiJli
i
?.
~~
:
:
:·:
~t
.
u~~~
<:r
:
•·•·t·/
·
·
,.t•
,,:.);:,:··
:
;:
,
i
::
:.::
~i~:~rcg
:C
C::ri~~~l~~~~f§
~
?
~i)~~~t?~~~~
~
e:~tre!f
:
t;j}~n,~J:~;;~t;!!rJci1
.
~;~~~:
.:
''
.
>
.
·
·
w
·
.
.
.
--
-- ...
,
·
·
L
.
.
.
·,.
.
,
;
.
achievements, leadership ability, .n
·
ominations
·
,
r~ceived,
.
the
.
Mar1c
·
Pl~inondon, Peter
-
Pless,
-
:
.•·
o
·
_ I l l
.,
. .
.
en
·.
::
...
·
~·
.·
e
·
.
·
:·
·
a
'•
·
:··
r
··
·
n
·
.
·
..
.
and future
~
potential:
~
~
·
.
•. :,.
.·
.
.
.
.
·
c::umulaUve ihdex
~
of tbe
·
sti.iderit,
:
Fernailde
--
Rossetti,
:
catherine
·
.. ·
·
• .
·
•
.
·
·
•
. ·
-
·
.
. ·
.·
.•.
·
.
.
•
·
---
-
·
-~
NoniinaU6nswereinadebythe and
:
the
:
student'sinvolv~mE!J!t." Russo, Francis Synan,
.
Charles
·
·
.
·
·
· ·
·
·
-
·
~
<
-
· ,
·
.
':
· ·
'
·
'
·· ·
·
·
·
.
senior
·
class,
•
·
faculty~
.'
and ad~
·
.
·
'l}lefollowing students
will
;
be· Tackpey, Gary
.
Traube~ Richard
·
·
o
·
-
. .
·
·
·
f
.
.
.
:
-
,
.
.
·
.
.
,-
,
'
'
.
.
.,•
: · ·
ministration; The selections
_
were recognized in the
·
42nd edition of
.
.
Valinotti, K.athleen Walsh, Peter
.
.
e
··
,
:
e
.
:
.
·
n
·
..
·
se
made
·
by· the
.
''Who!s
.
Who!'
·
Who's Who Among
.
Students
-
in
-
Wilderotter, WilliamWright, and
--:
com~ittee
_
.. Richard
·
:
Dfn!Jeen;
_.
American
_
·
Universities and Gregory Welsh~
•
.
-
·.
,
·.
-
,
·
By
Barbara Magrath
When
'
asked
if
the size of the
·
·
·
· ·
-
girl makes a difference; the
·
in~
'cluiirm·an of senior committees Colleges. They include day
·
and
· ·
·
·
}!-3:rkJng
f
_
roliiem.~
.
P
_
ersi
•
sts
A free self,-defense crash structor said,
·
"No,
·
we
.
can't
•.
course
-
for girls was held in
.
the
:
:
make
·
a superwoman out of_you
,.
gym
.
Oct. 23 ~t 8 p.m. Two Marist
·.,
in
two sessions,
·
•
but we can give
.
·
~ollege juniors
;
·
Gary Zwerdling
.
.
fOU
-
,
!~e
:
:
basics
of. ·
kar
_
ate
,
~rid
·
and Le
.
nny Fedyniak instructed. J
.
udo.
.
·
,
~
·
·
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.c
:
The
.
mairi
"'
instructor, Mr
.
~
.
.
.
.
·
·
~e
·
_Jwo
~
;
~tt:~ctors
_
Jaught
.
,
·.•
..__
, -
Zwerdling said, (<The
•c:
Rape
.
basic hits; ~1cks,howtq
.
get out.of
~-..
,
Centei'oncampussparkedoffthe a
·
hold, and the e:orrect
·
v,ay to
.
_
.
,
By.EmestAri~oJ
_
r.
bulldm~d
-
over in
:
three or four
writing campaign to the ad-
.
'idea, The Center helps the ~ictirn
-
·
Iall:
-
·
·
.
.
.
·
.'
·
-
·.
·
and Candi Davis
·
days. To
·
rent
a
bulldozer would
ministraµon,. especially
to-
Dr.
'.
·
after the
:,
crirne,-
I thought
:
we
·
·
9a
_
9'
"
Zwerdh!)g_
>
l)egan
•
::
.
. ·.
.
. ..
.
.
cost $450 a
·
day .
.
·
·
Foy; yoicing their opinion about
_
·should help prevent tne
·
cristle
,.,,,,
stt1~ylllgs~l_f-def~ns~m
.
l~66· He
,
''The,;~ is not enoughroom
,
fcir
Andrew E>avelko,
.
he~d
'
of Jlie par~!Jlg problerp:
..
from happening,"··· .
. :
.
:
,,:
:
?
_:.
has ta1.1ght1I1 _Tl?,e House of ~ll~Q
_
parking;;'.,'~. says PhiHp Mc"'.
maintenance;
'
says;
-
the c<>ndition
·. Greenspan-
'
said
if
the ·act-
.
Ab
_
otit
<
25 girls att~ndectrne ·
.
and _Ifark~tbe
;lll
_
Qut
.
edell:3·
>
~W:
·
Cready;Director;of Se~t1i:ity:
A
·.
ofSheahanparkirig lot
w~~ dueto ministration wants an increase of
session .
.
·
Generally, the par-
Fec:I~a
.
egan
-
.s
.
~
.
ylllg se
(·
total'of
:
596·-parkmg
·
·
space
_
s are
a temporary sewer problem. · parking spaces;Jt ca
·
n be done:
·
ticipants $Silid they fe_lt- the course
.
de~~~e ab<>u
,
L
.
fiv
_
~
·
y~a
,
rs
-':
~~o
·
1ocatecr on
.
the
.
carnptis.
_-
Mc-'
>
.
·
.
''Sheahan ·has
·
to be
·
resurfaced,
.
Howev~r, .
/
the students
.
. should
.
was a good idea; One gi.'rr~~id
:
'
;'
lt
,
when
·
11~
:
b~ci:p:nec
.:
~t
.
erest
.
eg
.
.
!Jl
.
cready
<
sa'ys
i
)?0(r-
:
cars are
·
biit
·
no
·
.
¢ajorjob
"
will
be done notify the
:
administration oFthe
got nie really interested, now I'd
;
Easter~
~~
,
and
_
philos
.
()phY,;
i
.
· .
·
·
re
·
gister
,
ed
<
with
:·
·
security
;:
-
..
until
:
th~
:
field
:
house
.--
is coin~
·.
problem
.
.
!. .
,..~
·
·
·
..
•
. ·. •·
·.
like
'
tolearn
,
inor~
i
"
..
.
-
..
" .·.
.
-
.
.
.
.
. ;
7
Charii~griatJot has
:
273
.
sj)~~es,
-
P
,
leted/'
.
..
·-,:
-
·
.
:
'·
>-- · '_:
.
McCre~dy
-
~ys:
·
,
·
,;1 unde~stand
:
. 80 more since it has been newly
·
-
Donnelly hopes to relieve the
·
the problem of
"
the students."
,
pavecL
·
i36_spaces are located
ih
.
condition
.
9fthe
.
present Sheahan
·
Although
.
··
he enfor.ces
·
.
every
.
Donnelly, and'187
in,
Sh~ahanlot
~
lot by nlling in the·
·
holes-with
-
violation of parking; he
•
is lenient
·
· .
Br: Niltis Donnelly;
·
pfrectc;ir
cif -
grc1yel
·
during tlie Thanksgiving on par:,king violations
if
a·· good
Planning, says, "there has
·
been
.
a
recess. The
.
cosJ of this job
~ill.
be_ reaso~ is;involved.
If
temporary
shifUrom resident to
·
commuting . two. to three
.
thousand dollars. -· . parking is provided it would .be no
:"·
students." 'A tempoi'~ry parking
;merm
.
Looney,
.
President of problem for security, and tern-
·•·
:
Joi' was planned
~-
:
adjac~nf to
Commuter U¢on,~ida parking ... poracy. ;tightin~ facilities .. would
Sheahan •lot.
,
-Thi.s
.
·.
would
:
.
have
-
Jotadjacenttotheswimmingpqol
_
:
be SJlt
.
up;
·
..
·
'. "
•
·•·
.
·
madEl
room
for.150
·
more spaces.
.
area was being
_
considered, but -
·
:
·'.
Peter
.
.
.
mangaspr
.
o,
.
a
·
com-
.
When the
·
new
_
field dio
.
use
·
is
·
some
·
members
·
.
'.
of
-
tll~
•
ad::. muting student from Hopewell
::
conipleted
:
thislot
.
~
be
.
made
ministration
·.
feu
:
•.
students
.
Ju~<:t~ori
·
feel~ the_ parking
·
into a
,;
pennanent
~
lot
_
.
t4at
>
will
<
\\'Ouldn't walk
~~t
!3r.
-
.·
_
_
facilit~es c~uld unprove.
'~I
~
.
:-
accomodate
·
·
300
'.
cars
:
·· ·
·
.
.
.
·
·,
Looney
•
has _tried to get
.
surprised
·
.
·
tp.at
·
s
.
the
,
parkmg
·
:
'Lou
·
1s
'
Greenspan
~
:
.
Projects
.
c_ooperatfori
;
froin
.:
Jhe
.
:
.
)ld-
.
pre>blem still exists, and that the
.,
•.·
.
Director.- .of., the
:
McCann
"·'
F,oiiri-
·
ministration,
:
.
but
:
has
:
·
not · had
· ·.
•
administratio
'
rrhas not responded
.
· ::
:
datlon·· sal.d,-_'-'tlie
.:
t~i:nporary fot
:
, succ~s;
.-
He ~
,
~~d;
'
,
.
i,'.therl3
·
Js .. a
.
s_oon~rto
.
the pt_o~lem. ~• H
_
e would
·
·.
::
would have. been completed
.
if
Jhe
..
. poss~ble_
:,:
sttj~e
·.
,
of
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.
PAGE2
THE CIRCLE
Rape Conference Slated
~e Dutchess County W~men
I
York
City's
National discussion given by Mr.
Mur-
~~amst Rape, formerly 1d~n- Organization for Women :Rape dock. other topics may be
tifie<:!, . as the_ Dutchess ~ounty Prevention Committee, who will scheduled that evening.
~oali~on Against Rape, will hold address the topic "Fantasy and
Joanne Pinello
is
serving as co-
its first conference on Wed-
·
Facts About Rape";
•
and Susan ordinator of
·
the conference
nesday, November 12, 1975, at
.
Murdock, Director of
the steering
committee. Other
6:30 p.m. in the Marist College Women's Martial
Arts
C.enter, members of the committee are
Campus Center.
- New York City, who will Ethel Michelson, Susan Miller,
DCW AR
is
being coordinated demonstrate self - defense Lisa Rudikoff and Sue McMillan.
by Linda Bucove, a Marist techniques for women.
The public is invited to attend.
Psychology major who
·
is par-
The speakers will be preceded Registration will take place that
,
ticipating in a senior year in- by a
film
presentation entitled
-
evening and a voluntary · con-
ternship program through the "No More Lies." Made in 1973, · tribution of $1.00 will be asked.
College's Counseling Center. The the film is a dramatization
·
of a
·
Child care will
be
provided.
organization
has
been discussion with a rape victim.
DCWAR is currently engaged
established in association with
At the conclusion of the major in a training program of volun-
the
Mid-Hudscn
National
·
addresses, concurrent workshop teers who will be available to
Organization for Women.
sessions will be held. Topics and assist and counse
_
l rape victims.
Conference speakers
will
be workshop leaders are as follows: The group has also designated
Yolanda Bako, a member of
.
the "Consciousness Raising for one
.
of its objectives as providing
·
Mayor's Task Force on Rape, Women," Jane Lee Ya.re, positive input to public agencies
New York City, who will discuss Director of Women's Studies concerning rape and rape vie-
·
how
.
the fear of rape limits the
.
Department, State University tims.
·
·
freedom of women; Luba Ziin- College at New Paltz; and "Self -
merman, coordinator of
:
!'lew
,
Defense," a continuation of the
M.D.
·
To
·
Tillk
SeX
NOVEMBER 6, 1975
D.r. Don Sloan, director of the sessions will follow the address.
:
tftled
/
'
·
'The Sexual.Revolution '"
·
Sexual Therapy Center
.
at New The topic "Love and Sex"
-
will
_
be Has
'
There Been One?''
-
Parielists
-
,
~
.
.
·
.
d
•
·
!r~!nt~::~:no~
0
~:cfr~ss~~:
~~~~~
-
f~!aJr~f. J:~v~~ }°:nlh~~~:n::·~it:I'~:;inro;tt:
·
.aca en11.c
Integrity'
the Symposium on
·
-
Human
.
is a
'
member of the Religious Hudson
_
Legal Services;
.
Ernie
·
Sexuality scheduled for Tuesday, ~tudies Departm(tnt and the Shaw, psychiatrist with Green
November
IL
His topic "Let's
-
Counseling staff. Jacqueline street center,
.
Kingston;
. -
Sara·
ByKarenDuverneyJackman
''However," _Zuccarello went
Talk About Sex» will focus on the Curtis, academic counselor for Balogh, psychologist with Vassar
on to say, "we haven't been able
physiological aspects of hwnari
.
HEOP will lead the discussion,' studentCounselingServices; and
·
!'Marist must
.
maintain
a
.
toachievesuccessinthehiringof
sexl!ality, includiQg
.
recent "Our Bodies
Ourselves - the Rev. Fred Drobin, catholic commitment towards quaUty
minorities."
.
· ·
·.
r~search dof!e by Masters and Anatomy_and
.
_Identity'
\
A third ChaplinJor Vassar College .
.
,
education and academic in:.
Because of Affirmative Action
JQhnson, and by his own Sexual group will g1scuss · "Styl~s
·
of.
,
Two films "About Sex,,
,
by tegrity. We have been overly
·
guideliries,
·
Marist
,
is attempting
Therapy Center ~taff.
.
Sexuality'.'.
-
Locations_ for
·
the Angel Martinas arid •
•
Achieving
criticalof
ourselves in the past:
It
to reach
.
minority
.
and
·
female
,
·
The talk is design«:!d to provide groups
.
will
.
be
announced.
.
Sexual Maturity"
·
will be shown
•
·
·
is time we got over our inferiority
.
applicants by advertising jobs in
information on sexual behavior,
.
Earlier .in the day
.
Dr
.
Italo from 12:00 p.m.
,
in both
.
the comptex."
'
·
·
· ·
·
·
Black Scl!9lar
.
magazine;
The
·
which
will
lead to a better un-
Benin
of
the
•
Philosophy Campus Center Lounge and the
These were the words
·
of
New York Times
and· the local
-
derstanding of individual feelings Department will lead a
..
panel Donnelly Coriunuter Lounge.
Academic Dean Louis Zuc-
·
newspapers.
_
..
and
·.
attitudes;
Discussion discussion in Fµ-eside Lounge
·
· ·
carell9,
.
as he discussed Marist's .
:
Zuccarello didn't see the
.
future
,
Thursdayriight at Benoit
,
development
_
of
a
Black
.
Studies
·
•
·
.
ijouse
);
... ,
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.
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•
-
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,•
ci
lriajor,
·
but he_ did
,
.ni
_
ention
·
the
Bookstore Prices
·
Soa:r
·
.
.
.
•~Th'e
:
giowlli
and
-
development
.
'
j>ossibility of
:
a:
Nlitsifig
'
program
.
·
of our faculty js a positive turn
·
-~
being
,
iIJStituted at Marist.
toward the growth of- the
in-
.
>
Oil
:
the future of Marist, Zuc-
stitution,"
-
zuccarello
,
said,
c~rello
''
said JVe need
.
tiine for
stressing Maiist's commitment
reflection
,
.:
and ex~inil_lation
.
of
to diversifying the faculty
.
what we have already started.
By Candi Davis
"Suddenly when the
,
prices went their books out of pleasure. They
·
up we didn't have any diffi~ulty are
.
buying
.
them out of
"Absolutely ridiculous," said in getting paper materials."
:-
necessity," she
.
said. "The book
Jenny Guarino, a sophomore
Doreo finds that paper supplies store really has you over
a
SportS
·
DiscusS'3d:
Communication
Arts
major
.
have gone up also. Index cards in barreL Where else can you buy
A
-
,nate.ur vs .
.
Pro
"I went into the Marist 1974 cost 19½ cents
.
per pack, in college books from? You need the
bookstore to get a science book 1975 they went up to 32 cents per books at the price they are
which was 50 cents at the pack. Note book
irl 1974 cost 89 asking," the student said.
beginning of the semester; The
..
cents and 1975 the same note book
With the
·
increase in prices
bookstore ran out of the book, and cost 98 cents
.
_
In 1974 typewriter
··
more students have been forced
when they reordered
.
the book,I paper
cost
$1.06½ and in 1975
it
to
:.
buy
new books
this
year
.
·
Approximately twenty-five today owners of professional
had to pay $3.50 for it."
. . .
cost $1.17½.
.
"More students have been people - ~ttended
.
a
·
Free teams are probably more con-
.
·
"The prices have been going up
"The bookstore put an order for holding on to
.
their books; and not
.
University, disclissio1.1 on amateur
·
cerned with making money ttian
steadily over the last two and
a:
paper supplies in July of last year reselling t,pem to th~ book store
.
and professional athl~tics in wit~. t~e status of holding the
·
half years," says Tony Doreo a and didn't receive the order
.
until or other students•
.
• said
Mr
·
.
House "III,
.
Ghampagnat, on position, as
,
used to be the trend.
clerk of the book store. May of this year," said Doreo. Doreo
·
.
'
·
·
·
Qctob,er
'l:1
_
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
•
:
coaching is a job," Petro added.
"Especiallysincelastyear,there Tony Dangelo, manager of the
TheLibraryalsohasaproblem
-
..
Th~ d~tin~t~?n Qet~een_
.
.
''.th~
.
Pean ~ad~ theR~ugge1,ted
<
that
.
has been a
10
percent increase in bookstore said four orders had to with
.
the increase in
.
prices~'
a
, -
amateur
·
~n~
the pr~!ess1onal
.
the . ~1g mon~r and
·
the coI?
·
thepricesofbooks." An~xample be placed to ·four
- .
different novel in
-
1973 cost $6.95 in •74·u
.
was~eopemngtoprc. Youhave pet1t10n
mvolved
m
of this is a Calculus book in
.
1974
. ·
companies
·
ih
·
order
.·
for
.
the cost $7 .95. A book of
-
' complete · to defme the te~ sport, game professionalism fits with
·
a
cost $15.95. The sa_nie book when
·
bookstore
·
to
·
.
recei~e one
,
. order
.
. poems in 1~74 cost $1~.50, in 1975
·
and play in ~rder to def~e w~t capitalistic countcy such as ours.
reordered was pnced
.
a~ $17.95. when they w~n~~d
:
1t;
:
: _
.
,
·
it cost.$15.95, A paper back math
an amateur m
~ch
area
IS," said "Money is a major concern
-
of
The ~ollege bookst~re
lS
owned
~ue
.
to tlie ll.lCrease
·
m
.
the
.
book in 1973 cost$8.60, and in
·
74 it
·
Mr .
.
Ron Petro, M~rist CoUege
·
most professionals.
If
America
byManst, butthe~ncesc,f
.
books
.
pn,_c~,. th~ faculty has been
·
cost:$9.50.
'.
Thelibraryhas found
.
basketballand
-
tenrus
•
coach. "At
·
was to turn
.
to
_
amateur
,
sports
are set by
th~
publisher: says
Mr.
"c
_
onsc1entiou~
·
about
.
J>rices
·
of
tha\
~
t!}e greatest
·
-increa~ is in
'
·
Mari~t yoii _i:nust be ah amateur if.
.
supported
·
by the government
.
as
.
poreo. "~anst d?Csn't
.
have any the books,"
..
says Doreo
'.
"More magazines
·
.
and
-
journals: They
·
you are g<>mg to participate
·
in a do
·
other
.
countries, it inight
.
influence m
.
the mcrease
.
of ~e
.
paper back books have been
•
•
also say that they have
·
had a 10
·
sport
.
You can't be a professional
.
·
suggest
.
a trend away from the
·
prices in books. ~blishers give
·
chosen for co~es
.
"
percent. increase in
,
:
pfi¢es
.
of in a sport and play that sport' in traditional capitalistic mode
the excuse of the mcrease to
.
the
.
"Outrageous, it's enough to go books.
,.
·
.
. ,
.·
•
•
·
inter-collegiate competition," he
··
exhibited
.
.in America's
\
·
in-
.
·
paper shortage."
·
Doreo
·
doeim't bankrupt," says
a
Marist CoUege
.
.
_ _ _ _
.
added
,-
Mr, Petro also noted that
.
stitutions,'
'
he added.
.
.
believe in tJ:le paper
·
shortage. junior. "Students aren't buying
one
.
is
,
~
.
onsidered a professional
: ,
V~rious members of the
group
Fundraising Under,Wllj
--
.
.
,•
.
.
. .
By
Barbara Magrath
·,
•
in, a
.
particular sport·
if
one gets indi~ted tlle need for the spirit of
paid
.
for
·
playing
.
or teaching it. spcirtsµianship- to be introduced
''To~ay there
..
are -very few to children who are participating
· amateur sports left," said Marist
•·
in community
·
programs
·
such
·
as
.
· .
men's crew
.
team
.
~oach,
William
little league baseball teams
/
One
.
'
Austin
~
The discussion than per$Ozi noted the needfor careful
.
moved to
:
_
the amount
'
of money screening of those who will coach
:
involved in
·
professional sports. young children
'.
They must hold
.
renovation of the campus center. Business and industry of the mid-
:
Dean
.
':\fade
.
asked
:
the
-.
group the
.
value of the sport as being
This first phase will cost Hudson area
.
are also con~
wh~ther or
,
notthey are willing to more important than winning the
Marist College is conducting a
•
$4,170,000.
··
·
·
tributors.
.
.
pay11igh prices
to
watch sporting game, he added.
.
·
capitalfund raising campaign
.
to
'J.1le second phase includes
·
· Mr. Wayne
.
Strasbaugh of events
.
R;esponse came from
-
a
·
According to Mr. Petro,
be completed in two phases; faculW development, expansion Tamblyn and Brown Inc. a
femalem~ber of the group, '.tI'd professionals can be compared tc,
.
immediate andlong - range with
.
of gradµa~e prog~ams, stu~ent ,"fundtaising
·
consulting firm is
.
<iefiD!tely pay,
_
to
·
see· the-FlY,~~
-
.
a ~eater
:
c_ompany or even
~
a rock
..
,
.>j
r/
l
.
..
.
·"a·goal
:
of$15,000,000 .
.
,
.
.
aid endowment,
•
and
0
a venture Campaign Director.
_
:As of. P~Y
:
hC>Ck~y
(
/fhere was·com-
.
,
·
band
.
"Th,ey're·in front
_..:
.of an
The first phase now under way,
,
fund:
to
support: special
·
.
projects··
·
November l0
;
·
Mr. Thomas
-
wade
. _;
mon agreement by
•
the others
·
to
.:
..
audienc;e,
.
they~re
•
·
working
.
hard,
·
/
includes the
<
relocation
:
.
and
.
ex-
·
and
experiµiental: programs.
·,.
.
,
will
:
be
:
:
the
:
..
11ew
.-
Development
·
,
•
h,~r ~t{l~~
.
el}t~.
.
.
-•·
'.
·
.
·•
·
·
they're
:
·
getting
,
pai~
·
fo~
:
it;
.·
ai!d
· ·
.
.
.
pansio1_1 of the library, a
,
physi~l
· ·
:
·
C911tributing
••·
to
::
:
th~
::
:
dey~Io~
·
.
,
Director
•
teplac_irig
:
M~
;
;
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:
·
.
.
·
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.
~£
·
-
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pµrp_o.se
.,
.
th
_
ey
~
r
.
e
·
::.:
•
.
:
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.
pr'.oyi,cling
·
.
.
·
,.
en~
·
.
.
·
•··
·
.
educatio11 cen~r, ~e .remodeling
·:
ment
_
functare
.
alum,ru, paren,ts,
;:
,
O(.)ugherty
.
,ho
1S
c~ntinuing as a
,'.
:
be.~md
_:_:
Proress1ona!1sm.
·~
:was
.
}
e~~ent.:~
...
_
,
·
·
.
: . ,
of present bwldmgs,
:
and
r
trustees:,_
_
faculty
,
,
and
:,
staff
'..
-
consultant
.'
>·
·
.<
.
·
•'·/·.
·
:-<=
-
,
.
ra~
.,
Austin
.
commented
:
~ t
·
.
e;
•
.
:__.:::
·
.
,
.
·
.
•
:_
·
-
·_
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·
.
.
NOVEMBER-6, 1975
THE CIRCLE
Aris Editor Speaks
On Journalism
"Reading a newspaper
is
one of
the best ways to learn about
writing. You·should.develop your
own style,;Look at other articles
and look at its style, then try to
analyze it by comparing it to your·
own writing . ., Jeffrey Borak,
Arts Editor for the Poughkeepsie
Journal, gave this advice to the
Journalism class of Marist
College, Wednesday, October
29.
"Ke_ep~g your ears open may
result
m
a good story," said
Borak, stressing the importance
of "gathering the.news."· ..,
Jeffery Borak is the
Arts
editor
of the
Poughkeepsie Journal. A
former teacher and peace corps
- worker, he has been reporting for
the past four years.
- Borak said, "I became in~
terested in Journalism when I
wrote an article for the Southern
Dutchess' .News." Later· he
worked as Editor of the Beacon
Free Press. "The best place for
developing sources at that time
was at the Chamber of Com-
merce office." He would, "just
shoot the bull," to find good
sources.
"Journalism is a·certain art, it
has a certain rhythm, and a
certain instinct to it,". _ says
Borak. -"Instinct has a lot to do
with journalism. A person has to
· keep his senses aware, every
piece of information a person
comes in contact with _could be a
possible story." .
Advising the students of the
importance in background in-
formation, Borak said, "Keeping
it.filed in the back of your mind
always helps when you might
need-it."
Most of all,- Borak enjoys
reviewing plays. In reviewing
theatre he looks for "truth" in
performance. Borak defined
tru~h as consistency in character,
believability and quality. In
musicals he _ looks at the
choreography
and
singing
especially. "I write all 'over the
programs: a word, phrase, and
even a sentence," Borak said. In
reviewing movies a reviewer
must be honest. He said, "A
reviewer's first responsibility is
to love the art he is reviewing."
&tressing the importance of the
impact a play has on its spec-
tators,
Borak
concluded,
"Audience's have the right to
expect quality on the college,
community, and professional
levels:"
Mr. Borak was an actor at the
Regional Theater Festival and
won best actor for Arthur Miller's
The Price.
Higher Education Pursued
By
Haqdicapped
PAGE3
Poughkeepsie Journal
Arts
Edltor, Jeffrey Borak.
The Office of Special Services · · students also .
use,
the college .. cov_ers the ground and makes
was founded in
1974
to enable facilities but are given special · handling of canes rather difficult.
handicapped persons ill our consideration for auto parking
Usually when the word
.society to further their education spaces and are encouraged t<iuse "''handicapped" is mentioned,
,
hereatMarist.Theideagrewout elevators .for vertical tran-
thoughts turn to the wheelchair
Present Tense:
of atrend in the early •so•s·which sportatiori.
.
student.. These
individuals
. saw handicapped· students
Four general services are require more attention than all
enrolling·ih increasing numbers provided for the blind student:
1)
the others in terms of special
in the nation's .colleges · and Guides are acquired to orientate provisioQs and they are the most
. universities. The office, presently·· each incoming student
to .
the expensive to provide for..
·
·located in Room -
105
Cham-
different areas of the campus;
2)
Experience has shown that pre-
pagnat,
is
headed by Joe I:Iines, a A map has been prepared with planned facilities rarely are
graduate of Marist.
.-
raised areas and varied-textures exactly what is needed. The
The aim of 'the office is to so that they may get a visual l~itations of each student and
provide for guidance and special · picture of the campus layout;
3)
their ability to care for their own
facilities in order to· further the Special·rooms are provided for needs.vary so widely
i:t
becomes
concept of ·· "m,ainstreaming" readers to read to blind students difficult to plan for each specific
such disabled students, both or.
for
·}!stening to· recorded ·case. Naturally, the need for
'res!dent· and
,rQJ!llll.u!ei:,
~!tl)in ,=m.~terials, I;Imvev~r; it is up.to elevators{
-
.,., ramps,
-
,
·
·-•lower
.
: __ Jhe,', ;.siu~e11t .:b.ody:_.
,
, iSP.ec1al
".the
individtiaLto~ hire his
·()r
her telephones and· drinking foun-
.
::,
provisions have been made bY the,;' reader:· Funds 'for, readers' fees': : ta
ins .· ..
,
are •· universal.·•- The
college to ·accoinmodate the are available through the office; provisions·
for:
others such as
''Meals On Wheels''
Helps Aged
By
Charlie Tackney
Chairman
Social
Action Committee .
_
..
;.._:,,;..,,-~·-_
...
,.,.,_:_: ·.•,,
.
,;~;-
-
,
.
Jim Kennedy . and
l
stopped
in.
We
met some very fine people;
and
learned,,
while .. ser:ving a
few
· luriches, that the
center could use
If
you
walk
·up
North
Road to .
people
to volunteer"
to set ...
up
. bHnd, ,those.·· with·. c_ardiac and 4) Consideration is being toilet bar stools, shower facilities
problems and those conf111ed- to given· to the development of a and bed bars must be arranged
wheelchairs .. Those- with ·other beacon system on_ campus for on an individual basis to be most
types of disabilities normally use guidance and to mark hazards effective.
the same facilities as non-
such as excavations and traffic
Where special roo~s are
disabled students, .but are also inters·ections. The guidance provided, the college is prepared
encouraged to seek advice when system will consist of audible · to do a reasonable amount of
necessary.
sig'nals along with a braille ·adaptation to me~t the needs of
the
Martin
Luther King
apart-
tables,
serve
m~ls,
clean
up
_ments, yoti'll}ind among them a and, if we get ambitious, to .
white utility building with a small provide some entertainment
kitchen and a dining area. Stop in
("who plays instruments out
there on a weekday, around noon,
there, do you?"). The payment
, and you'll find it a .busy place. for tbJs service is• very simple:
Perhaps before . you know it, meeting people.
·
In. a recent year here, over 80 plaque to indicate the location of the student occqpying the room. ·
full and part-time students were the student as well as directions Ramps or grade level areas have
classified· as handicapped. ·
Of
and information of other facilities been constructed to virtually all
these
about
20
were
in· . in that area.
buildings on campus. Other
wheelchairs, some
15
had various
In the· near future the office problems
which
became
degrees of blindness and the · hopes to install these guidance minimum through special con-
. remainder fell · into such stations to indicate certain
im-
sideration include:
categories· as ·deaf, cardiac; portant places, such as the new
1)
toilet facilities - one or more
orthopedic, · etc. No particular library in . Fontaine and the toilet stools for each sex in every
architectural
accommodations Campus Ceilter,,so that they will building are available and
are made for . epilepUcs; have-every opportunity to utilize provided with .bars sufficient in
however, the college health· these facilities. This signal size
to
accommodate
~ervices take partic~lar interest system. WQ.Uld also -be ·par-
.
.
you'll be serving a lunch or two.
The Campus Ministry Council •
It
is a senior citizen nutrition Social Actiorr Committee will
center, one of six in the county.
It
gladly serve to introduce people
is sponsored by the Office of the to the Center. We've been asked
Aging, with the chow provided by to arrange a meeting between the
our own Saga Food Service -
manager
and
prospective
"Means on Wheels".
volunteers before they visit the
Between
11:30
a.m. and
1:00
Center to avoid confusion.
"
. p.m. some 40 people stop by to
Please consider this invitation .
have lunch, meet friends, and Are you tired of eating with the
socialize. The center manager, same people? Do you have a
Betty, keeps track of the many lunch to spare?
If
so, call Byrne
diets and attendance. She had 'Reisdence and let me know.
time too, last week, for a visitor's ·Remember, it's just a short walk
introduction to the center when up North Road ...
m the c~ses._ Cardiac-troubled·· ticularly
·
beneficial when snow
_CONTINUED ON PAGE
7
_Marist College Rec<>rd Keeping/Public !:µformation And _Release Of Information. Policy:
1. "A student has a right to see records . furnished by HEW for a tieari11g.
· tl)e counseling center, and Helen O'Connor
maintained by· the college .. Education
1. The hearing shall be conducted, and · ts. the College Nurse.
+records are described as those records,
decided within a. reasonable_ period of lime ·· Unless the student has flied a signed
files, documents, and .other materials
following the request tor the hearing._·
waiver,. submitted reference· 1etters and
directly related 'to a _student which· are ·
2.,The hearing shall be conducted, and the
recommendations may be reviewed by the
maintained by.
a
school or by one- of Its • decision rendered by an lnstltut1onal Official
stud_ent; A s!udent, If tie requests, wlll be
agents.'/ The followlng Marlst College of•·· or.other party Y(_ho does not have a direct
notified of the names of all persons making
fices maintain records on students: ·interest In.the outcome of hearing:
'
confidential recommendations ., If he does
Registrar, Assistant Dean of Students
Of
3. Students shall be afforded
a
full·and fair
agree to waive his right to access. This
Campus Life, College Nurse, Career
opportunity. to present evidence relevant to
notification would .Include not · only thos_e
Development, Flnanclal Aid, HEOP, Up-
the Issues raised.
Individuals suggested by the student as
ward Bound, M.B.A., and M.A.P. programs.
4. The. decisions shall be. rendered In. possible references, but also. any others
Astudentshouldmakea.wrlttenrequestto
writing within a reasonable period of time
solicited by the Institution or volunteering
the Office In which he would like to review hfs
after the conclusion
Of
the hearing. .
their comment. A person submitting a
records.· A request to see ones record ·must
Tlie Dean of Students. Office should be
personal recommendation for a student may
.. be compiled with no later than
45
days from
contacted by the office or student concerned
attach a signed waiver. whereby the student
the date'·request Is made. Students may
when an iml)!lsse has been .. reached regar: ·wavies his right to.review
It.
The career
receive copies of materials· that are
ding the contents·ot one's records.
Development office maintains resume
avallable to them, for·· the cost of
The.law p~rmlts Marlst.College to release . related ·material of the student and
reproduction; for example College grade
at varrous·· times the following, unless
references from rndlvlduals, requested by
transcripts cost $1.<XI.
·
requested nottodosoby the student: student
the student. Flies are currently maintained
2. "The·. Family ·Educatronal. Rights and
name, address, teJephOne number, date and
on a permanent basis: Larry Snyder Is the
· . Privacy Act of 1974 ls Intended to require
place .ot 'birth, ma(or fleld of study, par-
career Development coordinator.
educatlonal agencies and Institutions to
tlclpatlon 1n• offtcl11lly recognized activities . The HEOP office maintains records
conform·to fair Information• record keeping
and sports, weight and height of.members of
relating to pre-college and college academrc
practices. It Is not, Intended .to overturn
an athletic team, dates
of·
attendance,
achievement. flnanclal aid, and recom-
establlshed standards and procedures for 'degrees and awards, received and the most.
mendatlons relating to the Individual. These
the challenge of substantive decisions_ made
recent previous educational agency or In-
records are maintained untll graduation or
by the Institutions. Jl'ls Intended, hOwever, to
stltutlon attended by the student.
termination
Of
stud res by the lndlvldual.
open the bases on which decisions are made ; · A student's academic record Is maintained
After such time pertinent data Is maintained
tomorescrutfnybythestudentsaboutwhom
In the Registrar's office and rs rn actuallfy
for research purposes as needed
tor
decisions are being made, and to give .. the
one's transcript of college grades; credits
pr_ogram evaluation. The Director
Of
this
opportunity to challenge and to correct· or ' attempted and earned.-Thls Is a permanent
program Is Joseph Molinaro.
at least. enter an explanatory statement ,. record.' John Dwyer Is In charge
Of
.the · The financial aid Office maintains a
Inaccurate, misleading, or Inappropriate - Registrar's affairs.
stud.ent•s appllcatlon_for aid, documentatron
rntormatlon about them which may be In
Students wlll not
be
able to dlrectly Inspect_
supporting need and Office action on request
th·e1r
flies
and which may contribute or have- · medical, psychiatric,
or·
slml.lar. records·
tor
aid.
After.
graduation or termination
Of.
contributed to an Important decision made
which· are used solely In .connection with · studies various government requirements
.about them by the Institution.'' The. law · · treatment purposes and ;only avallable to
are followed In regards to malntalnance of
doesn't describe any specific format to
be
recognized professionals · or para •
records. Gerald Kelly Is the Director of the
followed
If
a disagreement does happen to :professionals In connec.tlon with:· such
Financial Aid .Program.
· '
· ·
arise over one•l!·record. "It Is. the Intent that
treatment. Such students are-able to have a· · T!J.e M.B.A. program retains In Its offices
. 11 rule
Of
reeson would
be
foll~ by
thou·
doctor
01',
other protesslonal
Of
their chOlce
flies on the lndlvldual studentfor. purposes
0(
particlpants,lnvotved/'
If·
lt,_can,. not
•be' ·
Inspect. their
.
records .. Heal.th records are ,., Academic counseling. In the lncllvldual's file
resolved · through .
mutual
understanding,
destroyed at graduation or upon separation
are· found one's grades per- semester,
, . .._,. then-.the·tollowlng are mlnl!!'lum
guidelines, .
from
th•
college. eagle Moore Is
In
charge
of :
curricular
programming . and department
•
.--
•
.
. -
•
•.
i . .
•
'
-. '
•
.
.
.
• •
.
.
.
,·
'
. .
•
.
. . ' . ,
~
' • . • .
-,
...
. •
, . • • ' . , ,
,·,
. . .
· ' · • • •.
.
•.
":'" .
-~.
:::
••
.
. , .
.
correspondence with the student. Or. John
Kelly Is chairman
of
this department.
The M.A.P. Office maintains a file on
11
student until one year after graduatron; This
Ille consists of faculty recommendations for
students
applying
to
go
abroad,
correspondence between the applicant and
the M.A.P. office, and grade results and
tutorial statements for the year abroad. One
· year after graduation all flies are destroyed
· except the most up . to .
date
addresses and
recommendations "written for• ma(ors In
French. Or. Joseph Bellanger Is the coor,
dlnator of the M,A.P. program.
The upward Bound program maintains a
student's application end materials related
· to the admission process • such as High
School transcript
and
recommendations. In
addition, where possible, test results from
testing performed by the U.B. program as
· well as examination papers are maintained.
As
required by the Federal Government
program guidelines, files are kept for three
years after a student either graduates or
terminates hfs or her participation In the
program. The Director
Of
the U.B. program
Is Joseph Parker.
·
All discipline records are maintained by
the office
Of
the Assistant Dean
Of
Students
for- Campus Life. They are kept separate
from academic recor<IS and are kept for the
duration of the student's. studies. Fred
Lambert Is the Assistant Dean of the
Students for ca·mpus Life.
Materials not available to Marls! students
are: personal papers • maintained by
a
professional.
parents
confidential
statement, employment records, and
recommendations completed prior . to
January 1, 1975, .(or where
a
student has
completed
a waiver voiding his right
Of
access to recommendations.)
·.1,
any material
or
document In th•
. !ducatlon record of a student Includes In-
. lormatton on more than one student, thltll
. each lndlvldua! only /'BS the right to revl_ew
material that pertarns to hrs own personal
!
needs. They are not allowed to review In-
'. formation that may pertain to others.
i
A student can not be requlre.;J to sign
a
· waiver, to•walvethelr right to confldentlallty
' Of or access to their records,
as a precon-
dition of application, or any other service ·
. normally provided to students at the In-
' stltutlon.
Personally identifiable records of
a
student cannot be . released without the'
written consent
of
the student to any_ one
other than the followfng: other school
of.
flclals, authorized representatives of the
U.S. Federal Government, those In con.
· nectlon with
a student's application for or
receipt
Of
financial
aid,
state and local
of.
:Jclals, organizations conducting studies for
ir
on the behalf of educational agencies,
, ,ccredltlhg organizations, l)!lrents of a
:lependent student, or In compliance with
a
ludlclal order.
,
. consent tor the release of education
records must be In writing, signed and dated
oy the person giving· such consent. When
Qranted permission to release records, the
college shall not release Information
on
a
student except on the condition that the
party to which the Information Is
being
·.transferred will not permit any othe• party
to have access to such Information w,:li out
the written consent of the student.
Complete copies of the Buckley Ameno-
11ent are avallable In the library.
.
+ "Record" means Information or
data
recorded In any medium, Including, but not
llmlled to hand,wrlllng, print, tapes, films,
microfilms, and mlcrotlche." • Guidelines
from HEW.
.
. .
1
1,2 quoted from Congressional Record
of
December 13, 1974 .as entered by
Senator
James Buckley and
senator
Pell •
PAGE
-
4
~
-THE
CIRCLE
coft'~~~'ls
Col~,· CIRCLE
Is
the
weekly
newspaper
of
the Students of
Marls!
by the Sou1t1er:'0u~ed INhroughouAg
t
the school year excluslve or vacation perlOdS
ess
ews
ency, Wappingers,
N-York.
' David Livshin
Mary
Beth Pfeiffer
.
Gigi Birdas
Gregory Conocchioli
FredAshley
ChipErmish
·
Tom McTernan
.
Patrice Connolly
·
Joan McDermott
Brian Morgan
-
Larry
striegel
Co-Editors
Associate Editor
Editorial Consultant
·
Photography Editor
Assistant Photography Editor
·
Sports Editor
Layout Editor
Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Distribution Manager
;
.
staff: Dave Kazdan, Gene Berkery, Rich Burke John Reilly
Ken Healy, Gene Heimers, Tom Hudak, Jack Mcctitcheon
Mike
O~Shea, ~ITY st~egeJ,
Patrice
COnnolly, Ernest
Arico,
Gigi
Bll'das, Bill Bozzone, Claudia Buller, John
·
Byrne,
_
Daniel
Dromm, Karen Duverney, Mary Foster, Fred Kolthay Barbara
Magrath, Philip
_
Palladino, Pat Perretto. Dave Roberts Ed
Rubeo, W~e Saitta, R~ch Sellers,
J{amar
Sumrall, Do~oth
Teevan, Tina
.
Iraca, Julie Schott,
.
Peter Van
··
Aken, Eliza:
beth !Godbout,
_
Candi Davis.
Editorial
A
··
Suggestion
.
TIIECIRCLE
NOVEMBER 6, 1975
" l l i i i ! ! ! ! ! I I I " " ~ - - - - ~ ~
• NE.W
Y.ORK WILL)-1.A.VE-lOEND
IT'S PRQFWGAi~
.
WAYS
.
!';
.
.
~olleges
.
No
Lo~ger.
_
·
''S~
_
cro,~ari~t!~
as~ ..
•• •
•
•
•
•
•
•
-
.
••••
•
.
•
;-
••
. .
•
•,
'
r
0
r
,
•
•
•
·
Rapes
'
RamI)~Ili
.
Qn_J~aippl.J;ses
.
•,
·'·
.
'
"
~
,,
,
.
.
.
..
. ·
..
;
.
.
·:;
-:~
.
·•
~
,
..
by CYNTHIA C~OSSEN
have be}n
:.'
springing
)ip
.
_09
-
-
h~vejoi.Jled in
,
the battl~
:
ag;ins~
:
-
_
.
.
.. _
·
.
ca~puses all
·
over
.
the C!O'!Jltry ,
,,
,.
rap
,
e
;
At
least 10
:
states cllanged
.,.
(CPS)
-Last
.
sprmg, a woman
,
tram worn~ to react
.
more
.
their_rape laws
·
in
-
1974 and 12
-
-
w~s a~tacke~ and raped by a man c9nfident1y
:
to
.
surpri!;e
'
'
..
en~
-.
,
other revisions · in . state•f
·
faws ·
:
wielding a .f1reh9se nozzle ~n, the
-
)
:ounters.; "The
·-
courses are ef-
>
were·
-
under
/
consideration
-
The
10th
floor
of
the
·
cal)1pus
_
libr~ry
i
!~ctive,
_
''
C:
one
..
~tructgr
:::
said,
· .
cllanges
"
ma,rked the beginning of
at . Memphis
.
~ta~e
·
l!mv,e~s1ty.
_ -
beC!a~se
_
they
.
teach
a
perso~ not
.
_
a
.
shift
µt
.
soci
_
ety's attitudtfaway
·
_
_
_
_
_
.
ThIS past
.
summer a ~ruvers~ty of
t~
pamc."
__ ·
·..
.
•
-
_
·•
-
·.
.
_•
-
.
:
~~9m
cc:msiderijlg the victim
.
the
In a IIlemo se~~ to faculty and staff last week, :president Foy an-
·
T~xas
:
coed
,
-~as
.
dragged_ ffom.
,
a
..
Mostofthe coijege se}!-defense
:
·
0
provocateur
.
of att,ac~s .
. ;
·-. ;
: · ·
·
•
n
Qunced th~_appomtIµent of, the present Dean of Students, Toni Wade city
.
J~undro_mat
·
at J~nife-~omt
.
co11~es, often offered for regular
:
.· In many
·
states,
J!~W
rape.Jaws
_to
~h~
position or- Development Director. Whether or not the new and
.
r~ped
_
m
_
a
:
D~~rby field. . credit,
·
teach
"
wo~en to
<
protect
.
specify th?tevidence". of
:
a rape
y
position serves as a
.
promotion or demotion for- Dean Wade remains to _Early
:
~
-
~e.ptelll~r, a
J
~olorado
•.
··
the~elves using a smattering
of:
victi.gl's
:-,·
_
se11:ilal
.
cojidu
¢
,t
.
other
_.
be seen by
.
som~
-
members
-
of the community
.
:
._
;
·
· · _
_
Colleg.e
.
:r,or_nar;i was
_
i;-apecJ. by_ two mat11al arts ~n
_
d common
_.,
seri$e:
:\'
.
!ha11
,
with µie defendant caiiriot be
..
-
.
In that mein.o
:
Presidentfoy also announced that"Vic~ President me~
,
w~~ ~h.tand ller boyfnend
.
;
Women
,
are
,
taught
.
to us_e
·
their
;:
mtrodu~ed
,.
at the suspect's trial
·
·
Waters will temporarily su~rvise the functions presenUy operating
·
slept C?~ts1de 11ear
_
campll~.
·
:
-
·_
han~ ancl
::_
fee~
-
~
~
:
~
puhc'?lng,
. .
unless the vict~ ~trocliices it. ,In
..
lffl:d~r
.
th~. aegis
.
of fu.e _ Pean
.
of
•
students;••
-
He
:
also said, "ad.:
•·
· -
,
ID:
.
~p~~~
.
o~ harsher legISlat!on
·
stab~g_ and k~~
.
k~g motions..
.
other
,.
sta~es;
"!:
v
.
1~tirn~
..
n
_
o
_
!onger
.,-
.
_
muustrative
,
~estructuring sJ~ould take place around January
1.,,
.
In _}ga!-1,1$~ rapists and the ~rowmg
.
Other measure~ l!lvolve the
.
use
.
-
need_ ~~caJE)_v1d_~nce of
~
rape.
_
t~t
,
co~umque
..
he
.
asked that
.
''should
_
iil~yiduals
;
or co~ittees
:
pop
,
ular1ty of wom~n
.
~
: self-
.
.
of
..
pressure. po~ts,
~:
such as
'.
the
:
Now_ ~
-
rape v1ctip's
·
wor~
fqat
.
.
_
-
~~
~~
_
off~~
_
suggestl_onsi~ encom:age themto
.
commimicate
·
orally
.
or
:I,
def~ns~ classes,
-
ra~
;
stµi.
runs.
,
>-
~yes
a
_
nd ~r.Ocl
t
~ruch arr~el?'
.
gh~
,,
W,~~
:.
:c
!'i1Ped
:
:
1s
;
;
-
~~;i<!ient
.
· .
.
-
m
~~~t~:
t:2t11~~~:io~!?~~~i
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?:tw
rnr
<:
·
.
.
_
{rorµstudents as weU as s11ggestionsJi::t?rti faculty
:
c1ndstaff;
_
<
•
·
.
,
_
.
·
.
·
_-
·
-
_
alort~
-
~t
-
~ght
, __
Co
_
lle
_
ge
.-
~~aei:its
_
:"}:
to b!:?li~\Te
,
t)Jat
•
t~ef'.C!an
~
t
,
~~f~nd
j
,
,-
•Anotller
·
J
e~_!sl~t~~e
:
ch~11~~
:
•.
;
·
.
··
The~efor~ ~e•e<f:itors _would
·
Iilte,
,
tiffuake a suggestion:· that
-:
w~ nQt
have
_
a
:.
false, sense
,
<>f
·;
secur1ty
/
i
th~
.
~sely~~/
:
."
~n
:
Jow~
,
:fiape
u
:
(!oncei::~~cl
.
tg!
i-
~e~i.ni~i~n
-
_
or rape
'
.
.
corrumt the cr:11Pe ofin~e~ as '!e
~ o~~e~ do at M~tin choosing new _
__
beca~
,.
th~y feel
_.
·
seclud~,
~
-a
·
::
.
<:;r1S1S Cent~I" wox:,~ei:: said,
'o
'J:3t1t.
;J.
an_ct,~~µ:tl
::;,.
assaaj~;
,,
Jn
~·
rnary
.
people for new
~
roles; and µu&t
.
we
.
take on a new face with new values, Deputy !_)
_
1st
_
r~ct
_ :
~ttorn
.
~y
:..
m
::
tg~re
_:
are
,
~~~s Wllme~_ca
.
n leam
:
..
.
SE3!es,
.,
if
i
.,
a
;,
sex~11
_
l
5
assauit
-
oc-'
·
·
_
ne:wideas and a}}ew 9uUoo~
;
WeJ?e:Ueve tlien that
a
breath of fresl! air
·
folorado
,
-·
Springs
·
··
;
sa1d;
__
__
~ut
·
:
to :do
_
to
·
p.r.~v~Jlt
:
ra~'. _
,
We do11't
,
,:
:
ctµ.T~d
f
l:>1;lt
,
~o.t-a)·~~l>.er
i.e,
t_he
,
might be ui.e very thing which
~
college and student services need
:
-
colleges
.
are
·-
no
.
longer always haye to giye
_
m t~ nien
,
»
~
.
assailan~
s
Wll~
c
charged
·
orily with
,
In saying this we
:·
are hoping J~t
:
~e
pr~serit Assistant
-
Deaff_of
,
sacrosanct;
;
~ey
:
have
.
bec;ome
_ :
B~t
.
one
·
_
man
'
who
·
believ~ the
'.:
:_.
disordei:1y;condu
_
ctw~ch in D!9St:
_
~tudents not be na~ed to the position if the restructuring committee target areas,: _wa~ed a ~olo_rado
..,.
rapISt
.
should be
_
ap~sed rather
:
_:.
plac~
_
;
-
~
.
.
o~ly: a
"°
WJS~emeanor
_
-
·
finds that
we
do in fact need a Dean of Students.
.
-
.
·
.
.
·
•
College
.
dean.
_
·
.
.
·
..
· .
.
. .
._
·than aggravated
·
1s
·
Frederic
:
carrymg a
'
rnaxunum sentence of
-
We suspect that the period between
'
now and
January
1 is a testing
·
_
·
.
4ccQ~ding . to
:
FBI statistics,
'
S~oraska,
.
author
:
of ·a·
.
book
.
Ori
~:
six montl}s irijai.LBoth
·
Michigari
periocUo see w~t
·
comes together and what falls apart under the th~re
..
1s one
_
-
rape every_ ten r~pe ~nd a
_
lectui:er
-
~11 the college
·
-
.
an~
J
}Qwa
br~adened
,
the
.
absence of a f1:111 time Dean ~f students, !Ve do kno~ that student input mm_ut~s nabo~al~y. Natlo!lal c1rc~t.,Storaska believes th~t the defm1bons
·
of
-
crunincll
_,
seX11al -
·
-
?n the executive level of
this
college
w.ill
come to a halt during the
·
stat1Stics
.
also
--
.
~dicate
.
that
-
~
-
·
wo~aAs
_
best defe~e:aga1!18~
:
a
·,
: _._
assa
_
ultla~tyear
:
ancl set differ~nt
interim.
-
.
_.
.
.
.
_
_
·
.
p~r~ent of rapISts
;
•
know the.tr rapISt 1s
_
to "alter
his
.
infenonty punishments
·
for
.
.
·
different
Some inay argue that the present Assistant Dean Fred Lambert v1ctiins
;
But knowing the at-
·
complext
-
.
·
. ·
· ..
.
.
·
. --
··· .•
degrees
,
ofassault.
_
_
·:
:
should rise to the occasion as we have seen
him
do rapidly
within
the tacker has ra~ely helped a
.
'.l,:o achiev
_
e
-
thIS, storaska said,
·
women's groups
,
have
_.
b~en,
lastfew years and
.
receive the position of D~n of Students should the woman escape
h~
successfully.
·
.
.
·
•
t~e
.
w<>man sl_lould try to evoke credited with the new impetus for
.
.
restructuring not take place.
If
this
does occur
-
that would vacate
his
.
To
·
elude
.-
~ rapISt, the w9mau
.
pity for herslef. She could te}! him revising
·
-
rape
;
laws.
:
But
position, which would then need to be filled by another
person.
·
Our
·
~hou~d
•
either
·
.
outwit
him
·
she's pregnanto
_
r handicapped
oi
lawmakers
-·
.-
often
·
agreed
·:
that
_
()oint
is
that there would then
-
be two positions which would
.
require
'
.
e':Ilotlonally, as
.
one expe~ ad-
that she had f?een raped by h!!r
_
traditional rape laws had put the
appropriate settling in time•and training and
.
that wouldJurther halt. vise~,
•-
~r
defend
h~rself
·
stepfather ~h}.le
-
an adol~~cent
·
_
'!r?ng pe~scin
.
on
•
triat
:
_
"Skep-
the student input into
.
executive decisions. By keeping Fred Lambert phys1c~Uy ~s others
.
.
re~ommend
;
··
..
Th
_
e
-
b_estmethod of a~,
_
St<>raska
t
~1c1~m towa~d women
.
was built
where he is only one
,
position
·
would need training and this
,
we
·
feel
,
The
·
rapISt, ~ccording to a
_
.
sa1~, 1s to go ~long_ ~th
him.
'.'If
~1.1~0
·
_
fu,e :iaws -buVit
_
wasn't
would help to make student services run more snio<>thly during the)?enve,~, CO
.
p~lic_eman, usuallY.
- .
you
.
treat
him
li~e
.
a
:
raving
:,-
.n~ce~ary;'' ~ew York Assistant
training periods.
·
.
·
_
-
_.
_
tests
,_
the
v1~tim
befo~
.
e he
,
_
ma~ac~ the,n
_
_
believe
•
m
_
e,
:
~e DIStric~
_
Attorney Jack
_
Litman
·
.
Let it be known then that the
-
editors would like to see new-blood on
,
attacks
.
-
·
·
He
will
.
make
_
some
·
.
won t
.
disappomt you/'. storaska
'.
said,
_
'
'
since it already
·
existed
iri
.
this
campus and that we would disapprov_~ of rtiakihg Fred
Lambert
sugg~tive
·
_rema~k
.
arid
.
if
:
th~. warn~d;
.
:
.
-
-
,
~
·
>
:
-_,
:
:·,
.
_
. .
.
•
-
th~. police
;
:
~e
jury
t
the judges;
Dean of students or the abolishment of the Dean
.
of Studen~ position. reac~1on
·
.
is
·
fr1gptened • un-
_
WM.e college~mstall elaborate
_ .
eve~
_
t~e J?.A •~ of!ic~.
-
What ~
-
e're
We
_
saythissimplybecausetoomuchtooso<>nisnogoodforanyone, c~rtamtyor embarrassment,_ he
.
security
devices
_
to
.
keep gettmg
_
n~~
1s 1ust long-needed
not even Fred Lambert.
:
-
.
·
,
·
·
-
~
.
.
-
.
will assume that the person can
•·
strangers
·
·
.
off-
·
campus
. ·
and
.
balancmg."
,.
·
.
- _
.
-
.
.
_
:
be in~id~ted into
·
·
submission.
.
campus ~en's groups set
·
up
·
· ·
·
·
Self. defense classes,
.
which
:
escortservkes
,
state legislatures
,
.
_
,
,
.,...:;:;
-
.
.
:
_
.
::'-::,,;
~
,_
~·:~~<
~--
.
,
·
.
_
,
>
.
--·
-
'
.
(
:
..
_
j
4~l1
ti~~~gtii!f
:,1~
c;IJ~
;.,1}?£
·.
·
ic:t:
L>::
·--
~
:
.
....
...
.
.
_
-
i·• •
.
;.
;
·
;•
,
..
NOVEMBER 6, 1975 .
THE CIRCLE
Director To Retire
By Kamar Sumrall
''I'll be here until the end of
"Essentially I'll be doing the
1977.
I
don't
believe · in · same work I've been doing since
The man responsible · for retirement. I have valuable skills 1964 when I began working for
mailing campaigns, fund raising, and a
lot to offer any Marist. The biggest difference is
_ and promotional campaigns for organization,"
says
Mr. that, now, I'll have the flexibility
Marist is ?'.etiring next. week. He Dougherty.
of working my own hours."
is John Dougherty, head of the
He will be assisting Mr. Wade; - Mr.· Dougherty plans to con-
Development Office. Although, presently the Dean of students, tinue working "as long as I am
technically, considered retired, who will be his successor, and able to." After leaving Marist, he
he will continue to work for -temporarily, continue to work on intends to offer his services
.Marist as a consultant to the Alumni News, a tri-monthly elsewhere, although, that won't
President Foy.
Marist paper.
· be !or another two years.
Gene's Disc.Review
by
GENE BERKERY
Ratmg System:
. ¼
\7olume - poor
½
volume
~
Good
3
/4
vQlwne - very good
full volume - excellent
to the Top
10,
or to the Top 100 for
that matter. ''Tommy'.' . is · no
exception. For some reason; such
as eye stimulation, the music
always sounds better in · the
theatre. "Tommy"
is
a
two' .·
album set .. The original, wllich is
a
full volume recording, is· a
3-
·z_z
Top ~•Fandango" .(London)
album -set. ·
.
·1t
is somewhat traditional that
The vocals of Ann-Margaret,.
Development Director, John Daugherty
HEOP
Helps
-Frosh
PAGES
wh_en a band comes.up to their
. Oliver Reed and Alison Dowling
fourth album, a live recording is
were good in the movie; but lack
!JY
Karen Duverney Jackman
training program and have
made witlf previous materlal. ZZ
depthin the albu,n. This is one of
training sessions throughout the
:Top fias _broken this' tradition and Hill,, · bass .and Frank Beard, the faults in "Tommy." The main · The Higher Education Op-
year.
· released ·an album with side one drums. Side one
.of
"Fandango't faulus· the factthat nothing can portunity Program (H.E.O.P.)
There are two students to every
.
live, new. material,· recorded at is _pure live-rock and · roll with compare to the original "Tom- has gone into their third year of counselor. The counselors must
, <'The \Varehou~e,"
Iii
New "ThundeJbird," ·. · "Jailhouse _my" which is going on _eight the Peer Counselor program deal with problems which
Orleans, and side two done.in-the Rock" and "Backdoor Medley." years old.
offering freshmen- a· counseling developed before the program
studio:•-
./
.
· · . · · · · . · ··
It
is.recorded very
:well,
iµainly
«TheWho" are good but do not situation with successful up-
was started. Before 1972 there
.. ZZTcip
is
a
rock and ro!.l bapd · because
0
there is no studjo. gim-
play up to their. ability. The perclassmen.
·
were no counseling services for
from· Texas which consists of mickssuch-as added voices. Side .. bright spots of the album, few
.
-
the H.E.O.P. students.
Billy Gibbons, lead guitar~ Dusty two
is
equally good with
''Blue .
and far between, are 4'Eyesight
· The Peer Counselor program is
"This year. it is hoped that
· ·. · ·• ··· ··
·
· Jean Blu~," "Balinese,"
and
to the Blind" with
Eric
Clapton, also a training program for because of the positive support
their .current radio hit, "Tush." "Sparks,'.' the ''.Who,'' "Pinball. future leaders in the MariSl given by the peer counselors to
.
If
you·have.a chance to see
zz ..
Wizal'.(l.". by .. Elton. John. and cotmmnity.
the freshmen, the attrition rate
,. Top
in
concert, you af.e a~ured of Company a.rid "Acid Queen" by
O
be a peer counselor students for the Higher Education Op-
having. a r~ckin?.'time.
If.
not, sit Tin,!J'umer. · .
·
. · ._ . ·
mySt be in the Higher Education portunity Program
will
be
. back and·: ·enjoy_: their ·.·.album• .. • ·
·
The movie was . good only , Op~ort~nfry Program, they _muSt . lowered and the · skills of the
which is rated .at
full
.volume, ; becauseir:was stimulating to the be s_ocia y and academically counselor~/ will be enhanced,"
-especiallyj;ide otje_: .... ·
>·, ..
·.
·
· , ..
:eye,c Ir•yQu want to hear.,'.,'Tom-· suc~essful, and they muSt be able says Jackie Curtis, coordinator of
' 'Tommy''.-·~
d
Sound
tr
adc) , my?'• buythe,original. '·':';l.'ollllllyJJ to K~ep -~ther persons problems the_ Peer Co~~s~lor program.
Ii:===.===.=====.=.=.=.===.
=R
•_-{P<>lydorh::Yi
;Jc•/:+>>/.o
.
'
- ·
/the
.sounddrack--is,,r:ated,.at;,¼-:.
s.onfldential:
.. ·.. · .. .
. .
it+l)Jf,.tj!Vii
irf!i•rH%\iJ.;:;::,C
':D~:i~~Hf?Y{~jf!P,1~~-~.eie.t~a.~e
lt
f"
yo~~e~i;:, ;;/ :.
,.,L .. :.),:.
>,: ..
··:o.·:•• ..... ; . :
,Co4ns~~~~s.;~ttend a
o~e
m~mth
.J ;
. ·•·· Uiifet'
''Yt~:;:_:}?YJ~iY~YlJt:t'ff
~:ii~~jilf'' ..... __
s
....
3ii,ii,i,,·_· •·· ....
3 ......
49--s __
o
__ · .......
o
.......
-0-0-----0--------
.· .. S l c a t k '
,'_ . .
·.
.
The'--Marist-College Tlieatre. -~e tit1e;role of Jane will be
Unelaim.ed
.
·.
. Guild wm ·present'a musical,
:;.played
by Chris Seaman. other,
s
h
I .
h. .
·
.
.
:
"l.eave.It:To Jane,'' November actors include, Tim DeBaun as
.
e · o ars_ Ips
· 112A
.. l_bany Post Rd.
20-22
at'7:30 p:m. and November Billy, Leslie Sprinstun as Bessie,
_
-
.
23
at 2:00 p.m.
in
the theatre;
,.and
,J.R.
Dempsey as Stubby . .
· The play;· directed by Glen
General admission for the play
Hyde Park
lGrand Union
Shopping
Center)
- Res·urrection
plants
.
s,o<t
·ferns·
r-eg.
$1 ~50
Now·
.ONLY ..•
ITALIAN .
.
.CAMBIWSCO
.. 9-9
..
1h
·..
.
BTL
·
1~99 VAL_UE :,
-.:: ~~LJ{RGESTSE[ECTION
:. ·. OFWiNE
& :
LIQUOR ··.
· JN'Df.!TCHESS COUNr.Y"
..
-;
.
'·
.,.
·LIQU_O~APttA
HYDE
PARK
MALL~·-RT~9
. ·/ NEXT
TO
SHOPRt''f~- ·
Cassale,. focuses on life on a is $2.0(t Marist.· students will be
· college campus in the early admitted free.
·
·
· 1ooo•s.
·
AIR
CONDITIONED
.
.,__
-
XOUISIT
ROOMS
229-7720
NEAR
GOOD FOOD
♦
POINTS OF
-INTEREST.
♦
At
Reasonable Prices .
.
.
u. s.
~OUTE 9,
HALF ~ILE_
N~HTH
f?F
F.D. R.
SHRINE
...................
r11-cUTTlll
1.
. _· Ul'IISEI HAillCUT.Tll'IG
-
Call 454-9239
Closed Monday
·Thursday.·11
-,9
•·.;,
·:··
..
;
.
~
.
;
;
'
... ·
'
,•
:
:
..
'
,·.
.
'
. 3 Ube, LY Street
On
the
Main
Mall
Poughk~epsia, N.Y.
12601
;
Over $33,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, grant&, aids, and
fellowships ranging from $50 to $10,000. Currenflist
of
. these sources researched and compiled as of Sept. 15, 1975.-
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS
11275 Massachusetts Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90025 ·
□
I am enclosing $9.95 plus $1.00 for postage and handling .
-------------------------
I
·
PLEASE RUSH YOUR CURRENT LIST OF
1
I
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS SOURCES TO:
I
I
I
I
N a m e _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I
-1
I
I
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I
I
City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
State
z·
I
I
· - - - -
• P -
I
I
(California residents please add 6% sales tax.)
I
L---~------------------~-J .
r--------------------,
I
I
I
I
I
1.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
RIP THIS OFF AND SAVE
1
I
AT THE
1
Houseplant
·
Shop
:
I
10%. OFF!
ON ALL PLANTS
WITH
THIS AD
NOVEM~ER
6-13
I
I
I
.
I
I
.,._Highest Quality-Wide assortment of c;ill size potted
I
I
·
plants an~ hanging baskets-Personalized Advice .
I
'Main,
'7HE..
. ·
1
all .
F1ZM
·
313
MAIN MALL
1
1
·
·
·
· · · THE
Open Mon-Sat 8:00-6:00
l •. . 4'Fkf)t
:/TY" .. ·
.
-
Thurs
'til
9:00
I
-----------
-----~-~-~
PAGE6
L
THE CIRCLE
'
.
·
In the time it takes to drive
for
killing
.
young people are m~st
your friend home, you could save
.
often other young people.
his life.
·'
. .
.
.
.
_
Take ten minutes. Or twenty .
.
If
your friend's been drinking
.
Or
an
hour. Drive your friend .
.
·
·
too much, he shouldn'tbe driyi1,1g.
:
home.That's all
.
If
you can't do
The
.
automobile crash is the
•
•
that, _call a cab. Or let him sleep
number one cause of death of people on your couch.
_:
your
a
·
ge. And
the
ironic thing is
.
W,e're
not asking
you to be
that the dru~k drivers responsible
a _doctor or a cop. Just
a
friend.
:
roRuN1<'.'oa1vER'.,
oiP=i.
Y* - - -
·
7
·.
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BOX 2345
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'YPt 111 im;111,,w ~AM
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NOVEMBER 6, 1975
IF YOU LO A FRIEND DRIVE DRuNIC1toU'RE 1() FRIEND.-o
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111,"~l'llll
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llll:-0 • '<Al_
lll:-.,\1, IIIGIIW,\Y 'l'RAFFIC SAFF.TY AOMINISTRAf:tON
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NOVEMBER 6, 1975
THE CIRCLE
Harriers Capture Title
Led by Fred Kolthay's record-
31:13 clocking. Charley Gysin, was _a very strong team effort
setting individual championship, still suffering from a physical when you have five of the first
. the Marist college cross cowitry ailment, placed 39th with a time eleven runners · in · a state
team proved that they were the of 32:56. Seven teams competed championship meet against some
best in the 9th annual New York and 46 runners finished the race. top teams."
State Ups~te Championship held
· Marist won the team cham-
Meanwhile the Marist B team
last Saturday on the campus of pionship with 31 points. Niagara ran as 'the varsity at the
the Rochester · Institute of University was second with 39. Collegiate Track Conference
Technology.
Despite never Plattsburgh was third with 87; St. Championship at VanCortlandt
having
run as
long a course as the John Fisher fourth . with 97, Park. Paced by a very fine
5.7 mile distance, the Long Red Oneonta fifth with 145; R.I.T. performance by Will Morrison,
Line showed their strongest sixth . with
156;
and
St: where he ran 27 :50, the B team,
performance of the season (and - Bonaventure seventh with 157. running against some of the· top
~robably _ever) as they placed Last year Marist placed fourth teams from around New York
five men
m
the top eleven of the while in 1973 Marist's first year in City, were able t~ place 12th
race with three team members the meet,. the team placed sixth. among the 23 teams that had
being named to both the state Niagara beat MaristJ~st.year as varsity squads there. Also rtin-
cross country Hall of Fame and they placed third while
Platt-
ning
for
Marist in
the varsity
this year's All-State first team. sburgh · won and Albany State race were Ric · Bond, Bill
Two.runners were named to the placed second.· Albany did. not Krernpel, Steve VanKeuren, .
second
~
team all - state and attend the inee~ this year so that · Steve Meier, Cp.ris Pofcione;and
another Marist runner' was · they coufd ~:"participate in the· Dave Schools; finishing in that
named to the _third team an· -
Capitai District , .CoHegiate order for Marist. Quint Johnson
state.
Chahipionships with Siena, RPI, · placed 13th and grabbed a medal·
Fred Kolthay set a course· and Union College. However; -in the-JV race there while Tom
record of 29: 27 .2 in winning the Marist beat Albany one week ago Gibbons also ran in the JV. race
Jndividual championship by, 6.8 in th~ Alt?any Invitational and for Marist.
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secondi,_over Steve Heinbockel of was expected·: to defeat them , This Saturday the entire team
Niagara University. Bob 'Coufal again in this meet . ·
. . · ; -completes its regular season with
and Brian Costine tied for fifth
Coach Rich Stevens called the a double - dual meet at Van-
place with· 30:22 clockings. All performance ofthe itarrierstruly · Cortlandt
Park
against
three of these were_ nameclJo the outstanding with a-_ wolid team Manhattan College's JV teani
first team all :. state and Hall of · effort.
"It
was our best- race of and the varsity team from
Fame. Marist then. showed its the year aswe had hoped. We StonyBrook. Marist brings a.19-1
massive strength and team depth handled the extra mile-over our regular season record into the
PAGE?
· as Tom Luke placed eighth with course nicely._- St.
John
Fisher meet and a consecutive win
30:26 and George Mccutcheon . went out too fast, but our boys did streak of 17 at Vanny and a
eleventh with 30:31, bothWere not go with them and exhaust season win streak of
18
into the
named to the second - teani all ~, themselves. I heard many nieet:
.
A double win would
state-team. Jeff Blanchard was comments from fans atthe meet establish a new Marist record for .
named to the third team all - state who were highly impressed
with
20 consecutive wins.
Fred Kolthay
OB
his way to a new Marist course record against New
Haven last Wednesday.
(C~CLE photo _by Fred Ashley)
team as. he· placed i1st with . a
our team st(ength and depth. It
Freshman A
Key To
X-C
Success
byTHOMASMCTERNAN
.
the varsity.
.
most steady and dependable most dependable runner," was runners on the squad, Charlie
This year is no exception. In runner all year, usually our 6th inthe CACC, 16tlrin the SMU, Gysin, worked his way up to the
J'he I~ong RunningUed Line fact,,-this year's newc_o:mers second man in dual meets and and 21st Upstate, good for third tciptenbuthasbeenhamperedby
closes oubits. most successful comprise .t~e. strongest addition · fourth man in big meets.»-
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team all-state. .
physicat-ills as of late. He was
season in history-• next Saturday eyer . to -Jl;!~JJe~W,>;~~,i~,(:9!!94-~.LµKf!i::..,w.l:11>~,came.~~o ,.M~ri~Lto.! c.2..An,. ~merlc:all j;tuuies major,
well
enough to
win
_the
J;
V.
race
·at the NCAA Division
III
cross~ freshman record
has been
broken "get'an edU:caticin, nieet people, · ·Blanchard - came to _ Marist _at Albany with a st_i:ong
22:22.6
· country
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, ch~mpionships/ : in on ,virtually. every course-• they and· run".also played basketbaU· because
"it is small
and per-
clocking for the 4.25'mile
course ..
Bosto_n. This weekend they take
a:
competed and th_eyhave qad five and baseball on an organized sonaI,.has an excellent brand
of
Earlier he placed
third in the
J.V.
19-1 regular season.record to Van tosevenrunner~_in the team's top level.
,
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education, and offers me a race at SMU and was ninth in the
Cortlandt against Stony brook and ten every meet. Even Stevens
Bob Coufal is a graduate of chance to continue my running CACC. His best finish with the
Manhattan
(J.y.).
They hope to conceded,
"If
they were· a Maria Regina H.S., the same . career."
varsity was fourth place against
extend their unbeaten string at separate team, they would beat school that sent us George Mc-
· After a strong start, Ric Bond Siena here Oct.
18.
Vanny to
19.
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most of our regular season op- Cutcheon the year before.
has
slowed down and dipped to
A graduate-of Roy C. Ketcham
Already this year Marist has ponents and would have a win- Currently ranked fourth, Coufal eighth in _the rankings. "Ric ran H.S. who lives in Wappingers
won the CACC and the Upstate ning record."
·
set the. school frosh record too much speed :work and ran too Falls, Gysin is taking up business
New York championships, placed-
The top five freshmen runners
(26:47)
at Van Cortlandt Oct.
11,
many races over the summer," at Marist.
second in the SMU-Invitational, include Tom Luke, Bob Coufal, finishing just 10 seconds 6ehind said Stevens, adding, "The
"Charlie has been showing
fourth in the Albany Invitational Jeff Blanchard, Ric Bond, and Kolthay's new· school record. beginning of ·our season was the constant improvement until
and fifth in the Glassboro In-
Charlie Gysin; Currently they are "Bob ran there often in high end of his physiologically."
recently," notes Stevens. "He is
vitational. A trtily remarkabie all ranked in the Varsity's top ten school and always runs well
Bond, a Mathematics major very strong and very fast and
record!
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· runners.
A
short biographical there," noted Stevens.
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from Cicero, N.Y., was the should be a good half-miler in-
Once. again the team has been sketch on· each,.follows.
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He also has finished 23rd at team's fifth man in the Glassboro doors."
· led across the finish line by junior
The top runner in the Class of Glassboro, tenth at SMU (frosh meet with a time of 26 :47. H also
With only one senior ( co-
co-captain Fred Kolthay. The '79 is Tom Luke, a business major course record) third in the CACC, placed eighth in the CACC, just captain) and the promise of more
incomparable Kolthay, ·who set from Warners, N.Y. Luke, who and made the state cross-country missing all-conference honors.
newcomers next season, it seems
course-records. while capturing was
X-C MVP
in his senior year Hall of Fame by placing fifth in
Bond, who also took up that the Foxes will have to seek
the CAC_C and New York Upstate at West Genesee-H.S., set a new the Upstates· last weekend,
wrestling at Cicero H.S., came to new worlds to conquer. But first
individual titles, has . been the frosh . record for the Marist "Coufal always comes through
Marist because he was impressed is their trip to Boston next week,
·Red Foxes' number 1 man all course when he covered the 4.7 for us in the big meets," praised
with the "academic standards and the freshmen will help them
season. But one man does not
a
miles in 24:49 against New Haven ·stevens.
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and the depth in the cross- : conquer the "runner's world" of
team make, and Kolthay has last Wednesday. He also placed
A
resident of Merrick, L.L, · country program."
, the NCAA.
been aided by the strongest and 21st at Glassboro, 15th at SMU, Coufal came here because
One of the most improved
deepest group of runners ever 27th in Albany, 2nd in the CACC "Marist has ·a good psychology
assembled here at.Marist. ·
and 8th upstate, where he (hismajor)departmentandgave
HANDICAPPED Cont._
· Eve'r . since Rich · Stevens qualified for the second team all- me a chance:to continue run!llflg, wheelchairs;
became.head coach in 1972, the state. ,
f
Jeff Blanchard, the sixth-
. Long ; Rwinmg Red Llne. has
Currently fanked second on the ranked member of the team,
2) classes and activities
shown·strong' improvement_ a_ nd team, Luke was a surprise to the hails from Penacook, N.H., special space has been given to
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wheelchair
.developme
__ rtt each yea_ r. A_ bia coach. "He was strong in high where he also compe e
m
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k tb
11
t students in the classrooms, the ·
reason'for
this
is the continued school, but.has really come into track
and
bas e a
a
theater and tqe
gym;
_ addition of quality freshmen that
his
own here at Matjst," Steyens Merrimack Valley. H.S. Blan-
3) Meals in cafeteria _ at-
proviqe
an
immediate boost_ to commented; "He has.• been
~ur,
chard, . who .Stevens called "a tendants who assist blind . and
Fantastic ~cisb: (from left
to
right) Jeff Bla~cbard, Ric Bond, 'Bob Coufal, C~arlie
:Gysin,
Tom
-Luke. _ :
(CmCLE
photo
-by
Fr~
Ashley) . ..
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wheelchair
stufients
have
minimized the difficulties . in-
volved in carrying food and
trays.
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There are students here at
M~rist who are so severely
handicapped that they require
round-the-clock attendants for
their daily needs. Arrangements
are made to house the student
and his or her attendant in the
same room, provided the. at-
tendant
is
also registered here.
Funds for the services provided
by the office come from the
college and a grant from the
Health,
Education . and Welfare-
department (HEW) of the federal
government.
NEXT WEEK: A
profile of Joe
Hines
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HYDE
PARK
ARMY
-NAVY
10%
DiSCOUNT
g<)OD THRO N ~ WEEK
·oN RT. 9
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NOVEMBER 6, 1975
Quarterback Plin Colangelo (18). running off triple option against Oswego as Dave Pilon (44) and
Mike Altomare
(22)
look on.
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Dro
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Wn•.:Lakers
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byTHOMASMCTERNAN
·threeplaysto)heViking30, but. year's-match iri·--which .. the
Jim"Van Voorhis (left). reaching for two Points
with
Oswego
.· .,
Dave-. Stankavage· booted: .a
~7-:
Vikings scored two touchdowns in ;: defender in
ptirsui~ ..
(CIRCLE
P!!)!OS
by Fred As~ley)
Quarterback Phil Colangelo_ yard field goalwtih 5Jl.5.g~ne by ·the final quarter of the ~24
..
·· plunged for two touchdo)!ris and to make it 1~3.
. . .
. .. · .shocker, .. commented, ~','!'hat.
the VikiJig defense c~ine _up with
:
·_, Marfat came back following the touchdown .:·(I>Uon's) was" a big
several key playsto spark M~rist lfickoff on ·
a .
78-yard drive . that . one; ·I felt that .if we didn't score
to a36-19 victory over Oswego ended· with• Mike Altomare· they_ would come bacK' and
. State
at
Leonidoff-· Field ~satur.:. carrying' the•·-final five: f<i1>l'>'i possibly wiri.'.'
C-
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High
On
~ports
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By
Thomas McTernan
day. ··
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· seventh ;TD: o,f the sea: :·
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There·. wbas really nothing to
"lt
was the best:: game we AUoniare'who gained U3 yaro in .
,W<>I:I'Y
a
ouk ·c:I'i1ike · Laffih'
. played all year," declared _head:· 18 carries, also had the big gain in recovered.
a
Lak«:!r fumble ·on the
·coach Ron Levine. "The defense the sedes,
a
37-yard'sprlntdowri
:·
kicko.ffllut Marist'coJ;!Idn't:move ,KOLTHAY NMIED ATHLE~ OF
'.fHE
WEEK
played. very _strong and the of-i ·
the
sideline into Laker tefritory. > .the b~Uand Trotta. was shorton a
· fense made few mistakes.· .. •
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Trotta's kick opened up :a -21:-3 53~yard field goal try.~Roh Clarke
_ Fred Kolthay, a juriiorJroni'New. Hairiburg,
N. Y.,
has been named:
· The -·first key -defensive play bulge,.·rriidway•: through.:, the ·~hell_:.~a~e
_up
w,ith J}is · secorid
Mar.istCQllege:Athlete of the.Week fe>r the w:eek ending November
1.
came ,when: ·linebacker: Bob period.
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ThismarksthethirdtimeKolthayhasbeennamedtotheaward. ·
CunningJ)afu'intercepted a Laker
Before the sparse crowd could returned it 21 ~~rds ~or hissecond
Kolthay, ·nuinber·.r man ·on the Marisf cross- country team, set a
-
p13ss
giving Marist.PQSSessfon on ·· ~~or the score!:Ron Osinski, the ·TD.,of .· t!te _ year._ Jim pesmond
new.course re-cortl at ~ I While.\Viiiiling the individual championship
the Laker 39, Colangelo wasted visitors' open-field threat, found found Jim
,V~m
Voor.his ~oi_:,.2 -intheUpstateNew.Yorkchampi9rfshipsandthusqualifiedforthefirst
·no time coverlng
28
of ·them on an opening in
.
the left side ofthe points f'-nd.a 36-10 margin.·
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. team·all-sta~e~ Last W~esday he set a new record for the Marist
· · . the gr~und himseµ _)Jefor~_scorillg .- V_iking line and gallopeq_ 61 yards- ~: }'h_e_ ~eferu.e, , espec_ially: Jo~ course in a meet withNew,Haven and Vassar. .
· .
· "ff<im
tlle
two with 9:07 remaining ·
for,;
the
·TD ...
stanka¥a~e ::then __ P~tte,nburgh, :Bi!Jy· D~~<Jer,ry ..
->
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in the quarter. Tim Trotta made·
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. bo,oted ·the pomt ·after to·narrow, Punenna, Mike:. ~hlitte, Cun-
.NOTES FROM
THE
SPORTS 'DESK:
the.:J>oinLafter for a 7-0lead. the lead to_, 21-10 with\ 4:58 _ningham; :Pagano :an.~:,,Clarke
•
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. Neither:: team· could manage
·_a
remainllig in•.the third
:period;:'.<
-1imited.-th1:
00
visitors)tojust;,204 : Aside~fr.om- the Vikings\36-10 win over: Oswego Stat~,there were·
first down the:·rest of. the period, . : . ··• N'ick
~
Mancuso
:
flllllbl~
,_
a
way ,. yards; a.11d Just 171 .. on the' gr:ound.. some big upsets in.~lub football last: weekend as ttie ~op
teanµ;
,in both·.
~uttl}~ y_i~i~or~_ <>Jien~~tile. second. ~a.~st's _final; chan_ce:ofthe' th.ird~.
::cM.e~r\Vllile}<tlleiV~irn~s;;_w,e,re_
.th~ ~et-8, .Confer~n~e ~nd the National Clu? Sports Associatio:11
_ quarte,1;rwi\h .. ~;:dtj~e~._th~t: put
1
.
peri.~ :_aiul•· .!he;:':~k~fSL;ot.ook.:.:::a~~g~up;"~4:();:rar4s_:~?a~tAie.~. ra~mgs suff~red_their.firs~ defejlt: Pace, commg off
an
lf7
wµi
over
t}Jl;l~
~n tile ·Yµung 6 . .with a -!1rst possession ;
~t.
midfie,lq:·
,J}Y-.
·
th,e
.- _.big
:_ Lal{er,,,def~nse,: ;_ ; Y!,~-~;w:er._e-:_ Matjst,, ;held,, 9ff. rj3rooklyn -: 1
~
12
in: Brooklyn Frida:y.-.
night. The
_ !i<l':Vfl~,,~Itji_
Pag~~o the!} made the :-'- s~~, .. of ~e. ~inal '. Q!Jart~i:,_, ~he
.
·
abll: t~
~~
to.t!!,1; ~!)rners, : s~ted
·-:-·'Kingsmen·n9w:Iead
Pace:in_the-Met-8 standings
by
only a half-game.• •. • • ...
· second. key '.Pl?~\ irlterc~pting-' ~n : v1S1tors ha_~ moved_ tcr;
t!te.
VIJt~g ..•
Le\'.!11~.· ,
)J:11al
IS:
~Ile.~ key~ t~ ·
oµr · •
Ionas~ocked: NySNs top :: ta.nked
w
estche~ter
17:~4
as q~rterbac_k
: attemp~ .pa~m.the e.n~c:zone 30; Butthed~f~~.~-13ga_mheld_1ts .... offell$e as,~~,do~t•h,~v~_a ye.ry, Pat Garvey:c.o~ected on a.22-y~rd 'I'l}_-p~ss to_J1m0Idin·.\!lth:27
and returnmg 1t 67sards to, the · gro~nd 'and ,an incomplete· pass ·., stro!!g, offensiye line. .·
~. · :<·<
secon~s remairimg. Westco was 6--0,and their defense had allowed an
·r;aker:,:. 35'. ....
,FJ-ve
'plays>· .. later · on fourthdown at'.the-28 returned :
•··
.. ··Sat~rday:the-Vil{irigs•.travel:to .. average of3'poin~ a ganie .. ::: Top'.gamethis. weekend is Brooklyn at
Colangelo.
i:;~ri
four yards,
~~r
:the the .ball to ~arist with 1~:
25,
l~ft; Jamaica, t~.·Jlleet t~e R~dmep ._of Io~a tomorr.o\V n~ght,
;If
Brooklyn wins they dinch the Met-8 title., A
.TDandTrotta•s PAT made 1t
14-0 .
,Dave !>Hon,· who-gamed
·
76_ St. _Joh!) s. :'!,'he RecJ.niel), are.
~~d
loss,,1!,l_)w~v:i~r,- will :give both"Tona. and Pace-a.chance to pass the
· with 11:
0I-t<!
go in ·the· half. . . . yards in 12. attempts, led: the bf the_, rushing o~ :.b~cks Charlie
King~inen . . : :In other_Met-8 games·: Manhattan beat Concordia· 23-20
.. Oswego St;took advantage of . _Vikings on a 72-yard march to the- Vito a?d. ~al_ Ali and a_, str~ng forits first wm:since,1973; St. John's' blasted. F.D.U. 33-7 . . . Con-
one of the few offensive mistakes,-- clinching· touchdown wi~h- a defensi~e line,.t~rm~ by Levme;. ference· stats show several_:Vikings ranked second in
·individual
-· a fllillble by C_olangelo; to get on plunge fronl : the one .... Trotta's . as "possibly the best m the con~
statistics: Mike .Antomare in !"UShing
_and
sc;oring, Phir Colangelo in
- · the scoreboard _in .the third fourth extra point made.it 28-10 ference.
passing,.Jim Van Voorhis in receiving, and Ron Clarke. and Mike
quai:ter. The
.
Lakers managed with 6:14 left. .
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Laffin
iri
~terceptioils...
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only
t<:>
~ovethe ball
ty.ro
yar~ in
Lev1ne;'.·:_-~exµen_1ber1ng last
... .-
.~The
Mans_t
cross -..
-cowiiry._'.team
plac~d
s~.
~erS _on the_ seven ..
. , - ... . ., -r., .. · . ,. . .
L< .. :·
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m~nAll~~CCte8-m-1:hey~re:FredK~lthay,Tom·Luk~,,BobCoufal,
. . . ..n..Oo ters ··.·.
Os
e..
~~r4go~i~~~~~gd:~~~i:i~~\;riet~i:~:~~::R~a~!~~
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Club of America ·cross : co11Dtry championship at Van Cprdlandt
. But.
R
e.t ....
J,ii,,
Lead·
:::~-.f~.~~:~~din=~:J.~~~u~::::i.~:-~fuaw~
· --
thr~e ~. ~an.
basketba~.
toUnJf.trr;tent·
Was. scheqµIed ·
to
begin yesterday
by
THOMAS
MC TERNAN ,-
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to :their narrowJield.,,
session.' The second· atthe 2 :5<> :while men's and women's volleyball begins n~xt pmrsday, Nov. 13 ...
, - · <
,
,
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Ray' Boa. and Steve. Kon~ 'mark;-was 'the res~lt
cif
a
fine -Don't forget: .the 11_!,tram~ralTu,~key Trot ~ill,be_ h~ld Monday, Nov.
After suffering their first stantiniois scored for the
win".
passing,-combination between-: ~4· · ·
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defeat
of
the season at the hands ·· ners,.both .early in the first half.
Zerione and rus·brother, Firminci;
.Ramapo ~emamed
10
contenti_o!i for the .CACC soccer title with a 3-2
of we~t
'Cormecticut_
S~te. in
Marist ·outshot West Conn ·•12-11 · .''He (Zerione) ':.and Finnino wm ove~ ~mgs•~0nday. IfM~ristand Ran?,apo end the conference
· .Danbury··1ast :Wednesday,· the
anikJ~y Metzger., made nine
have-been playing on\heirown," schedule_m _a_tie th~ team with great~r:differenc~ b~tween __ goa1:5
. : Marist soccerteain bounced back
saves m_ goal. · . .
.·
_ noted Goldman/'.'When he passes scored and allowed.will be declared chaJ?pion: SoJon
.
t be surpris~d if
from
a::
2-0
deficit Saturday to.
That- '-'.casual" ~tyle continued · off,andmoves t<.iward the goal he Red Fo~~s show.no .mercy ~n.Bl_o9mfi~ld.nexLTuesday. ; .. ,Mixed
wallop.;;.Siena. 9-3 at· Leonido!f
iri'.the first·pertod against Siena. , becomes'•
a
d()uble' · threat." doubles fmal of M~ri:st TenIUs, Touz:nan1ept ha~ been pq~tponed . . .
Field
!D
their final home game of, The Iildi~ns got goals from .Rick · Golclman ·Je~ls that ·• tlie · Red Freshme.~:crew beat I~aca last we_e~end,·Jj~t.\\'ome_n}os~,~gain.:. ,
the year.• . __ -.. · .·• _ , ., . -.
~ ... Griggs and K.ev_in _Guthrie;_a~d , Fo:ices Jiave·- been relying-· too .,B~th men s~nd women_s bas~etba~ teams _have been pr~cticmg smce
·
. The 2-0.·Joss_ to
.the
Colomals. had a·2-01ead with 7:12 to go. m -much on the Naitza twins. ''There mid"'9c,tober
.
for season openers witll Iona ijov. 29 _at l)utchess Com- .
. preventedMarist, now
i0:.:1;
frcim'··:the
ha:lf. -
~
. . · ,: . • : ·- ·
·.are ~lev·e_n·g!lysout there-and no mumty Coll.ege. Full coverage of.the 19!5-'16,b.as~etb;:ill season ~egins
clinching·.· :.their
·first·
··CACC
Goldman :attributed the poor ma~er }iow good two of .them · next week llJ,;~e CffiCLE..
'
·
·· .. - • -. "
.. ,
championsliip;
It
may·.onlybe .a: start.to: two factors.·"F'ir~t;·.tlie··, ma:j"be~ everyone else also has to . THIS-WEEK IWMARIST·sl'OR.
ts
(Nov/G~l2). ·. .
.. , - :
· •
'"short delay}howev~r, as the 'Red: wind was against us and second,. ·play well/1 /-
. . . .
.
.
.
Foxes·:can wrap it :up
0
with a· a team thatis winning.tends,to_ : .. Th~·visitors.cut the'Jead to 5-3
· Saturday, Nov. 8 - S9ccer: at RPI':1:30.p.m. - Football: at St.
. victory:J>ver .winless ml_)omfi~ld.· lose_some.of-theiraggre~s.iveriess . .wllen •. Mik,e'.l)~rioyin;h~aded-in.a :John's . _tp;m.
:t
.Women's.c:rew, ~. at'Wesleyan·~·c;ross
·
Country:
m·New.,· .. ·
... -J,er. sey Tu_esd
.. a.
Y.~·_:'.-·'.°': -.· · •.: .
..and c __ o. ncen. trationi!' . He .. · a .. cld
.. ed,-.· c<>.rri,e. r
·
k
..
ic
.. k.J.rom ... T. om.·.
N.
a_r .. o. li
.. ·. •.a
.. t · ~anhattan (
JV),
stonybroqk • at Van Cortlandt~:.c:
n
'·a.m~·-·- Sailing:
· -
··
:Minor·Regatta -
.
atWebb:. • .
···
,,<·
..
•':'· .. ··· .. •,. .
· ·
·
· ·•:::- ·
.Danny- .Wakely - scored four
"After those- two goals we ·-19_:14. John McGraw got,- 1t b~ck.
.
.
. goals arid Zenone .·
Nai~
·added
·
changed.·. our.
attitµde ·
about :the. two minµtes Jjter byJwnverting
a ··
.'.Sfulday, Nov. 9.
~ Sailing: Minor.Regatta at Webb:: ...
·
three :in: Saturday's
.
non-league· game·."
< · , . • .- .•.
. .
·
ce>rn·er .kick ·from :Zerione;~ TQen
~~da~,}iov: 11 :'-~ccer:: ~t ~ 1
<>.
0~~~ld
~
~,:;3~
I>~~.-
...
· contest: Zenon_e also, had five·
·
Wakely started __ the_· change;· Wa:kely and Zenone combined for
.
_
:'assists';:as·:-he set··new schoor :fjurstingthroughthedefense'arid· twomorescciresbeforethe·subs" ,.,..
·
t,
'8 E · -t'b ll
··c.·
1
,4-c-· c·
S
·.-
•
C
:season··records· for/ goals :·(14),,
'taking
a:beautiftil lead pass fyom took over with13:0ileft: Russell
1,.1.
e -
'00 .
'ti.. .
./1-_ , · .. ,
occer -
- · · Lassists:(14) and ·l)Oints _(~).'. Anf .:Zen_one,which tie d,eposi~ed to_the Beckley sc.ored the· finaL goal;
..
there•ar1fstill.two gam:es:on tl}e .:.Jower: right <:;c_>rner pastlndian ~assisted by McGra-w; at ~1:5.3. ,
-:-... Mets Football
.. · CA.CC.SOCCER
·.
· · schedul~_-afteryesterqay's tough goalie;·-George
.Ulrich;~
Marist, ·:The Red Foxes-outshofSiena.·
w
L.
T .
·
•w
L .-
. , . gain~jit Km.gs •Poi~~< _: . _ . , P}llle<;l ~ve~ ,at :2~2: whe~ ~none· ~7~11:·~j~ Da~o ·mad,~f~ursaves.. Brooklyn .
. 5
1· ·
O .·
MARIST, : .
·4~---
i
:·, ;'.l'hEfGolo~1als;closmg.out;then:_- 'centered a:pass forW~kely fr9m m t!le.;first -J}alf and?'Metzger Pace~:: .
.-----
·4
T
I .. ·
Ramapo·
" --
;r:-l ·.
-.. ·season•after.defeating Kings.-two .·•the_.corner;:Wakely:heade.d
·
it:to
·
-.addecLanother, in .. the·.second:··
·:·1ona . .-.;' .... · ···
. : ..
,f·
1 •.·1 ·•••.W:·Coiln-St·
-•• 4' 2-_·:· .··"
1
~ayll
_eafHe1\''.-were' really up for, · ~ c f s rg~t."-i,t_ll
5:33
le~'in''the ,;_:.·.•·~efore
getting
a_..c}:lance"tciwin .·.MARIST .
-
-<.:3
';,2
-o:-
:.Nyack
,
:·· .
-·.•.·.• .. ··
...
··.··.·_·.·•.·.·· ..
!l_-.·.;.•· ..
•.~2.·.·.·
·
··:•·:
·
··
. t./~\••~f~f?t~t:13Jf
~~
.:-~~~~~ri;~~tjf~~;,;~j~;~::g;en •• : ..
~;::~:fi:::~~;!~ttl-t;Jt!J{
,
::~i:t~ -. : .
·
; :::··•·.··:.·.
•
.·.····.·
.•
•·· ..
.
,; ..
_
'.~ .•. •.
3
0
1
1
•·.·.-.· •. :··•:::•'.:.·_._::·· .•
:·::· ___ .·:.·
..
··•·.··,:.···'.1~
1
.·.-•.·_,_,.-.:.~.,.:.·.-,,•.·.•._·.D~.K-.:_
.
~
_ . ~
..
··~·.w
.
....
0
~.·.··.:·-.··~•.··s
•...•.
· •.
··.-:·
.
:.&:·.·~_.g·-~.·.·:e:···:·.·~·.·.·d•_.~:·,· ..... :.' ... :·.··.···. :.·-.
>-,-...
.·
-,,=·.· .
.
_·
.·._· ..
o,1,· .··.•·.:.•._
4
..
·•.·.·.· .. ·:
.. · •.....
. · :'coacJi'..,.)fI)oc~r:··Goldman.'~:J'We
:WIµttru:e~qUICk·gO~ls,mtheJu:s.t .. wttlra·strpng··ijPlJeam'iri\Tro}"·/'F;D;U>~----.
.
- , . . ·
l l ~
. ,
,
,
... ;·:·p~~~;M:it1~.¥i.a.,.t~~fil.~i~1f1{1f
·_;!w.~Iyei;~lll~~~r~~ i·;~
,
t~_e"_/fin~!.,•
·
S.~t~~r::·.:\.{•~:~;·~·./:/:·,;:t _,-.
::co~~ff~~~.·. .·,· .. ,,
.•·.,
---
.':'."'::
·'•
•'\I• '
"'.: '· ·\
~::;'.•
1it~f
:i_}/d _
:;.:::.:);_.;:~·:~. · ;:~::~, .. --~ _
.
:
,-
-
.;
15.7.1
15.7.2
15.7.3
15.7.4
15.7.5
15.7.6
15.7.7
15.7.8
/
VOLUME 16~
·
NUMBER 7
MARIST COLLE9E, P,OUGHKEEPSIE,
.
NEWYORK
12601
ValldalS
Strike
- On
CampU~
•·
__
·
By Cl~udia Butler
,-
.
•,
'
assistance of the;,
•
Poughkeepsie
.·
.·
,
.
·
·
Police
;
Department; the
.
car
wa:~
_:.
"The
-
Marist
-
students
:
.
recovered~
-
-:·
<,-
·
,
··
,.
:
,i
i
\
:-.:'< .
.
responsible for the
·
vandalism
at
:
.
: :
Several cars were daniaged
·
by
.
·
_
:iyiarist
.
should
.
grow up and
.
:
act
••
·
two
·.
Marist s*derits mJiheahan
like adults, This
.
•
is 'their
:
corn~
:
lot
:
After witnesses orovided
:
in-
niunity'_...; their
-
home away
:
frorn
:
(onnation,'the studentsj,1.greeci to
.
honie,
-
They
·
sliould take care
:
of
·.
make restitutfori and are:now on
.
-
.
it!
'1
saict.
·:
P~_ilip . Mccready,
>
pro.t>ation, five rooms
in
le
_
o Hau
Director of Security;·1.'It's such a
w_e_
r e
b
u .. r
g
1
·a
r
Ti
e
d
.
.
,
:
.
small percentage of students
.
·
over
.
the ColUJ11bus Day-weekend ..
:
·
doing
.
the mischief. Lwowi:I illink J.'hese are under the investigation
·
•
· the rest of the
·
sti.idents would get
.
of
·
security
.
.
and
.-·
the
::·
Town of
·
.
tired of paying
·
for someone else-'s
·
Poughkeepsie Police
.
i:>ept
:
'.
:
,
mischief."
_
He
,
_
explained that
if
· -
Lastly; a
:
1ight
_
p_9st by Adrian
..
:
·
tl\e person responsible for
.
the Hall was damaged during the
.
.
da
_
mag~
,
i~
:
~<>t:
_
appr~~«:nd~ the
· ,_
weelt~!1~
.
o~Octo~er
25
'.
-
~
.
wo meri,
_.
·
• .
.
dorm:
_
_
liability deposit whi~h
•
all
:
•
•
botll ,v~s1ors, were accused of: the
,
resigerit
.
students P.ay
··
will
.
go
..
vandalism and . paid
--
for
.
.
:
the
.
toward the common: damage
-
in damage,
"
estimated at $150~00.
.
.
...
.
the;J)affor floor.
.··. ·.
.
. _
·
•
.
··
..
,
McCr'eady
'
.stiggested
.
several
.
,
·
·
-·
·
·,
•
.
.
'
Mc(;ready point.ed out that the
·
:-
wa.ys in which students can ~ssist
·.
- P
_
resident Foy and
Pblllp
McCready, Director of Security; insP.~ct the gr9unds. Lately the campus
the(ts
·.·
·.
and
•
'
damage• during
.
the
.
in
.·
.
..
creating· ·a. mote
"'
secure
-..::..
·
has
been
plagued
l>y
a rash of
.
destruction
by
vandals.
:, ,
(CIRCLE·. photo
by
,
·
Dave
·
Llvshin)
moillliofOctober
·
wez:e
:
uniisually ~aµipus
::,
erivironm
'
ent .
.•
;
n
_
e
_.
·
·· •·
.
··. ·
·
·
.
·
·
-
.
·
·
·
·· · ·
·
.
· ...
:-
·
-"-'
·
···
·
·
.··
·· ·
·
Ooiiceritrated .
.
Tli•
·
·
•
•iitciderits
·
recoriunends
-
-
thaF
-
students
C
bri'
'
Wh
·
·
;
· ·
·
J"F"/L
· .
·
-
,4
·
·
·
~~:ii
··
~tori;rf~~~~:edki!~:1!~~
:.
,t
.
:
.rh~~.
·
-td~~yt~lre~~~tirjtr~u:~~~~~
.
.
:
.
.
.
•
..
..
o
.
-c.
~
-
.-
.
L
;
,
$
.
:
·
,
··
_.~
..
..
~
-,,,,
.
-,,o ·
,
:
;..
.
fl,
'"
n
O
.
u
·
n
;
C~ed.
·
.
se~ur
Y
?
or
::>
·
·
~u11agmg
,
:,.
an
.
_,,
s ot1
_
-
a so
·
assume
,
:..
sQme
.
·
.
.
.
-
.·
:,:c..
·
,
:
el~v~tor
~
The
'
:Case
"
was
::-
resolve.9
:
·
:
:
responsibiljtyfor the behavior
of
:.
.
,
,.
.
·:
·
c.':.
:
.
·,
by
chargirll{Jhevisitors
.
$50.9()Jo
'
tfleifyisitois;
•
:
/
'
-'
0:
?
-
,
;' ..
_
·
byGIGIBIROA,S
· ·
~
-
i
-
_>.
said, "Na
_
rnes of
~Ii
seniors ;ho evening
:
division ~t~dents.
.
--
-
.
cov.e~J!J~ ~epa_lr
·
,
<>,f
.
me e,eya,tor:
.
·
1:le
_
st~ess~d
:.,
thafexit
,
dgpi:sJn
:
.
.
.
...
;
·
i
.
0:
~:
'
.
:: .
_., _
voluntee!ed
:_
~o
.
be
-
"
<>i))~e '
~
:Who's
··
·
:
Rre
.
derick
::. .
.
Ashler,
._
Robert
.
•
•
·
Th,~
?
lll
.
~V!~U,~~
i
:-:
~ei:e
,
:
bcillil,e~
:-
tlie
.
4
~s1denc~·
·
hci
_
lls
t,
shoµ~d
\
be
,
,,·:
.
Twe!1ty .
.
·
rune
.··•
J'.f~ri_si
.~
Gcillege
. ·
,:
Wh?"
__
corrum~t~e \Vere
.
~ccepted:-
.
-Bo,ctratti;
.
Cht:istine Bryant;
-
01m
.•
.
·
:··
'
,
·.
·
:
,
~~OID
/
~flD.lPll~
_
Jc:,~•si;
;
pioqt
,
~
:
}f
,
.
:
i::,
!0<:~~
-
~~~
;119.tt_~PJq,
,
~rA~
-
r9p~t
:"-
~
-
~d~~ts
}
~~
-
~rf
,
'
nogilll
,
~t~~
:
.
;·
.
t~r
•
.
,
:
:-
~w-u~~~
th~
C
~~q~~!'.
~
~
_
lciSS
'.
mee!~g. •
·
·
·.
_
.
B\li:'kh~ft
/:
9f~gocy
~· .
.
gonoc_~!rl9li,
.•
,
.
:
·
__
.
.
.
;'.
.·
•
..
, ,
:;
'~'.-:
Als~
,
du11ng
:
October,"'a
:
car,was.
,;,:;:
open
i,:
for:
0"
convemence
:=
i:,
I.as~
r
r
mcI
_
us1on.mJhe
:
19.1a.'16
.
·
edit10n
•
of
i
,,
,held> o.n
°:
·$~p~mber
,\:
~~
;-,:.-
~The~e .
:·
SheldonDavIS
;>
Richard·Dinneen;
•
-
·
.
.
··:
-
.
. :
-
•
·
•
··'
keys
'
.was
:
aken
:r-
ftoiif a
,'
i:'oom
;
in
:
>
Ahonimity.
,
ic
of
'1,:
witnesses
'?:
is
:,
·
pat1onal,prog'ram
4
wti:i.ci{
>
honors
·
•
:.
approyalwas
;
g~yeJt
:
tiY
'!
the
:
senior'..::Edwar
'
cF
•.'i
McKenna;
;:; '
Michael
·
.
··
.
.
:
fr
,
~fi>a
.
~1a:
N
~~
1
f
\/
'fiJli
i
?.
~~
:
:
:·:
~t
.
u~~~
<:r
:
•·•·t·/
·
·
,.t•
,,:.);:,:··
:
;:
,
i
::
:.::
~i~:~rcg
:C
C::ri~~~l~~~~f§
~
?
~i)~~~t?~~~~
~
e:~tre!f
:
t;j}~n,~J:~;;~t;!!rJci1
.
~;~~~:
.:
''
.
>
.
·
·
w
·
.
.
.
--
-- ...
,
·
·
L
.
.
.
·,.
.
,
;
.
achievements, leadership ability, .n
·
ominations
·
,
r~ceived,
.
the
.
Mar1c
·
Pl~inondon, Peter
-
Pless,
-
:
.•·
o
·
_ I l l
.,
. .
.
en
·.
::
...
·
~·
.·
e
·
.
·
:·
·
a
'•
·
:··
r
··
·
n
·
.
·
..
.
and future
~
potential:
~
~
·
.
•. :,.
.·
.
.
.
.
·
c::umulaUve ihdex
~
of tbe
·
sti.iderit,
:
Fernailde
--
Rossetti,
:
catherine
·
.. ·
·
• .
·
•
.
·
·
•
. ·
-
·
.
. ·
.·
.•.
·
.
.
•
·
---
-
·
-~
NoniinaU6nswereinadebythe and
:
the
:
student'sinvolv~mE!J!t." Russo, Francis Synan,
.
Charles
·
·
.
·
·
· ·
·
·
-
·
~
<
-
· ,
·
.
':
· ·
'
·
'
·· ·
·
·
·
.
senior
·
class,
•
·
faculty~
.'
and ad~
·
.
·
'l}lefollowing students
will
;
be· Tackpey, Gary
.
Traube~ Richard
·
·
o
·
-
. .
·
·
·
f
.
.
.
:
-
,
.
.
·
.
.
,-
,
'
'
.
.
.,•
: · ·
ministration; The selections
_
were recognized in the
·
42nd edition of
.
.
Valinotti, K.athleen Walsh, Peter
.
.
e
··
,
:
e
.
:
.
·
n
·
..
·
se
made
·
by· the
.
''Who!s
.
Who!'
·
Who's Who Among
.
Students
-
in
-
Wilderotter, WilliamWright, and
--:
com~ittee
_
.. Richard
·
:
Dfn!Jeen;
_.
American
_
·
Universities and Gregory Welsh~
•
.
-
·.
,
·.
-
,
·
By
Barbara Magrath
When
'
asked
if
the size of the
·
·
·
· ·
-
girl makes a difference; the
·
in~
'cluiirm·an of senior committees Colleges. They include day
·
and
· ·
·
·
}!-3:rkJng
f
_
roliiem.~
.
P
_
ersi
•
sts
A free self,-defense crash structor said,
·
"No,
·
we
.
can't
•.
course
-
for girls was held in
.
the
:
:
make
·
a superwoman out of_you
,.
gym
.
Oct. 23 ~t 8 p.m. Two Marist
·.,
in
two sessions,
·
•
but we can give
.
·
~ollege juniors
;
·
Gary Zwerdling
.
.
fOU
-
,
!~e
:
:
basics
of. ·
kar
_
ate
,
~rid
·
and Le
.
nny Fedyniak instructed. J
.
udo.
.
·
,
~
·
·
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.c
:
The
.
mairi
"'
instructor, Mr
.
~
.
.
.
.
·
·
~e
·
_Jwo
~
;
~tt:~ctors
_
Jaught
.
,
·.•
..__
, -
Zwerdling said, (<The
•c:
Rape
.
basic hits; ~1cks,howtq
.
get out.of
~-..
,
Centei'oncampussparkedoffthe a
·
hold, and the e:orrect
·
v,ay to
.
_
.
,
By.EmestAri~oJ
_
r.
bulldm~d
-
over in
:
three or four
writing campaign to the ad-
.
'idea, The Center helps the ~ictirn
-
·
Iall:
-
·
·
.
.
.
·
.'
·
-
·.
·
and Candi Davis
·
days. To
·
rent
a
bulldozer would
ministraµon,. especially
to-
Dr.
'.
·
after the
:,
crirne,-
I thought
:
we
·
·
9a
_
9'
"
Zwerdh!)g_
>
l)egan
•
::
.
. ·.
.
. ..
.
.
cost $450 a
·
day .
.
·
·
Foy; yoicing their opinion about
_
·should help prevent tne
·
cristle
,.,,,,
stt1~ylllgs~l_f-def~ns~m
.
l~66· He
,
''The,;~ is not enoughroom
,
fcir
Andrew E>avelko,
.
he~d
'
of Jlie par~!Jlg problerp:
..
from happening,"··· .
. :
.
:
,,:
:
?
_:.
has ta1.1ght1I1 _Tl?,e House of ~ll~Q
_
parking;;'.,'~. says PhiHp Mc"'.
maintenance;
'
says;
-
the c<>ndition
·. Greenspan-
'
said
if
the ·act-
.
Ab
_
otit
<
25 girls att~ndectrne ·
.
and _Ifark~tbe
;lll
_
Qut
.
edell:3·
>
~W:
·
Cready;Director;of Se~t1i:ity:
A
·.
ofSheahanparkirig lot
w~~ dueto ministration wants an increase of
session .
.
·
Generally, the par-
Fec:I~a
.
egan
-
.s
.
~
.
ylllg se
(·
total'of
:
596·-parkmg
·
·
space
_
s are
a temporary sewer problem. · parking spaces;Jt ca
·
n be done:
·
ticipants $Silid they fe_lt- the course
.
de~~~e ab<>u
,
L
.
fiv
_
~
·
y~a
,
rs
-':
~~o
·
1ocatecr on
.
the
.
carnptis.
_-
Mc-'
>
.
·
.
''Sheahan ·has
·
to be
·
resurfaced,
.
Howev~r, .
/
the students
.
. should
.
was a good idea; One gi.'rr~~id
:
'
;'
lt
,
when
·
11~
:
b~ci:p:nec
.:
~t
.
erest
.
eg
.
.
!Jl
.
cready
<
sa'ys
i
)?0(r-
:
cars are
·
biit
·
no
·
.
¢ajorjob
"
will
be done notify the
:
administration oFthe
got nie really interested, now I'd
;
Easter~
~~
,
and
_
philos
.
()phY,;
i
.
· .
·
·
re
·
gister
,
ed
<
with
:·
·
security
;:
-
..
until
:
th~
:
field
:
house
.--
is coin~
·.
problem
.
.
!. .
,..~
·
·
·
..
•
. ·. •·
·.
like
'
tolearn
,
inor~
i
"
..
.
-
..
" .·.
.
-
.
.
.
.
. ;
7
Charii~griatJot has
:
273
.
sj)~~es,
-
P
,
leted/'
.
..
·-,:
-
·
.
:
'·
>-- · '_:
.
McCre~dy
-
~ys:
·
,
·
,;1 unde~stand
:
. 80 more since it has been newly
·
-
Donnelly hopes to relieve the
·
the problem of
"
the students."
,
pavecL
·
i36_spaces are located
ih
.
condition
.
9fthe
.
present Sheahan
·
Although
.
··
he enfor.ces
·
.
every
.
Donnelly, and'187
in,
Sh~ahanlot
~
lot by nlling in the·
·
holes-with
-
violation of parking; he
•
is lenient
·
· .
Br: Niltis Donnelly;
·
pfrectc;ir
cif -
grc1yel
·
during tlie Thanksgiving on par:,king violations
if
a·· good
Planning, says, "there has
·
been
.
a
recess. The
.
cosJ of this job
~ill.
be_ reaso~ is;involved.
If
temporary
shifUrom resident to
·
commuting . two. to three
.
thousand dollars. -· . parking is provided it would .be no
:"·
students." 'A tempoi'~ry parking
;merm
.
Looney,
.
President of problem for security, and tern-
·•·
:
Joi' was planned
~-
:
adjac~nf to
Commuter U¢on,~ida parking ... poracy. ;tightin~ facilities .. would
Sheahan •lot.
,
-Thi.s
.
·.
would
:
.
have
-
Jotadjacenttotheswimmingpqol
_
:
be SJlt
.
up;
·
..
·
'. "
•
·•·
.
·
madEl
room
for.150
·
more spaces.
.
area was being
_
considered, but -
·
:
·'.
Peter
.
.
.
mangaspr
.
o,
.
a
·
com-
.
When the
·
new
_
field dio
.
use
·
is
·
some
·
members
·
.
'.
of
-
tll~
•
ad::. muting student from Hopewell
::
conipleted
:
thislot
.
~
be
.
made
ministration
·.
feu
:
•.
students
.
Ju~<:t~ori
·
feel~ the_ parking
·
into a
,;
pennanent
~
lot
_
.
t4at
>
will
<
\\'Ouldn't walk
~~t
!3r.
-
.·
_
_
facilit~es c~uld unprove.
'~I
~
.
:-
accomodate
·
·
300
'.
cars
:
·· ·
·
.
.
.
·
·,
Looney
•
has _tried to get
.
surprised
·
.
·
tp.at
·
s
.
the
,
parkmg
·
:
'Lou
·
1s
'
Greenspan
~
:
.
Projects
.
c_ooperatfori
;
froin
.:
Jhe
.
:
.
)ld-
.
pre>blem still exists, and that the
.,
•.·
.
Director.- .of., the
:
McCann
"·'
F,oiiri-
·
ministration,
:
.
but
:
has
:
·
not · had
· ·.
•
administratio
'
rrhas not responded
.
· ::
:
datlon·· sal.d,-_'-'tlie
.:
t~i:nporary fot
:
, succ~s;
.-
He ~
,
~~d;
'
,
.
i,'.therl3
·
Js .. a
.
s_oon~rto
.
the pt_o~lem. ~• H
_
e would
·
·.
::
would have. been completed
.
if
Jhe
..
. poss~ble_
:,:
sttj~e
·.
,
of
·
'
~ornmutmg , like
°'
the
;,
adrnmIStr~tion ·
..
'
to
be
·
.
;
need
'.
.was knowri.'-'
:: .
:\'
:
•
•/
:'
::
-
:
·
. stµdents
••·
planjied
,
f~r
>::
a:fter
.-
tlle '.·more
·
,
~esponsible
:-
:for ··student
·
.
'
.
/:
•'Pitparking)ot::w,~sJi~#¢q~d ,
~:
1'ha~~gi'ymg frec~s,
•
if':th~ : ~d-., p~rk
;
ing nt?e@.
.
a~~
~ou,J.d:supi>?l'.t
··
.
,.
Jiutthe
dirt
from the consti:uction
,
·
mirustrag:on doe~
.
not ta}te actiim .:
.
both
.
tll~
·
lett~r
,
wnting
.
campa,1.gn
.
.
.
.
,
·
.
.
·
,
::
of
.
thetie1a·house
·
w~
'
tdwnped on
..
on:mcr.~s~g theJ>i!r~~g spaces
:
a11d
·
th~
:
strik~J
·:
-<;
.
>:;.,
:;
.:;
>.<,
_
.
.
· :
··
'·
·
, :
.
.
,
.
,
·
c
..
<
:
.
-.
,
.
·
>
.
.
-
.:
·
:'
·
·
/
>·
{~
.
..
:.
',
.
>'.-:
,:
·
:
the
".c:
i'eirip
'
1frary<
?
pa
·
rkirig
':
1ot
:
C
on·campus.''
.
Looney
;
would-
·
like
:>' ..
·,i;::(•.
::
.
',:•:
·.:·
.
-
.
·
·
·
·
.
.
.
-..
·
.
..
·.
:
mailequateparldng space
ls
beco111m,g
a
:
realproblem,
:
on
~tµP.US
;
··
,
,'
Gre(fospari
:
said theiand couid)e
'
):
)iil
/
students
:
,;
to
:
•
start
·
/
a
,:
letter
<.:::_.
·
.
;
,:-
.;·
.
,:
·c
:
:
S.:·
:
:
··:
·
.
..-
.
.
;
~
:
.
c
.
·_
.
.
c
.
.
..
:_;.
rQ~
.
~
;_
p
.
!oto
~Y
·.
Fr~ A
;
s,~ey)
·
·
.
:
··
.·
'
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
--.•
•
·
.
.
.
·
'"';
"
?J,/_
</
.(<-
~
\
-
:•
?)
~
:
:
:
.
)
""'
'
'
·
·
·
·::::
.:>:Oc:
•:i;,fi
:
·
,
::
.
,
.
'
/
·•:
'
,:'.
~
~
;_
,n
:
~
/:_\( \:·
.
,
'
;
;
.
.
•::::
·
;
_
-_
'
:
.
-
··-
.
.
.
•
:...
.
.
...
,
'
,·,
-,
,
'
..
...
.
. .
.
PAGE2
THE CIRCLE
Rape Conference Slated
~e Dutchess County W~men
I
York
City's
National discussion given by Mr.
Mur-
~~amst Rape, formerly 1d~n- Organization for Women :Rape dock. other topics may be
tifie<:!, . as the_ Dutchess ~ounty Prevention Committee, who will scheduled that evening.
~oali~on Against Rape, will hold address the topic "Fantasy and
Joanne Pinello
is
serving as co-
its first conference on Wed-
·
Facts About Rape";
•
and Susan ordinator of
·
the conference
nesday, November 12, 1975, at
.
Murdock, Director of
the steering
committee. Other
6:30 p.m. in the Marist College Women's Martial
Arts
C.enter, members of the committee are
Campus Center.
- New York City, who will Ethel Michelson, Susan Miller,
DCW AR
is
being coordinated demonstrate self - defense Lisa Rudikoff and Sue McMillan.
by Linda Bucove, a Marist techniques for women.
The public is invited to attend.
Psychology major who
·
is par-
The speakers will be preceded Registration will take place that
,
ticipating in a senior year in- by a
film
presentation entitled
-
evening and a voluntary · con-
ternship program through the "No More Lies." Made in 1973, · tribution of $1.00 will be asked.
College's Counseling Center. The the film is a dramatization
·
of a
·
Child care will
be
provided.
organization
has
been discussion with a rape victim.
DCWAR is currently engaged
established in association with
At the conclusion of the major in a training program of volun-
the
Mid-Hudscn
National
·
addresses, concurrent workshop teers who will be available to
Organization for Women.
sessions will be held. Topics and assist and counse
_
l rape victims.
Conference speakers
will
be workshop leaders are as follows: The group has also designated
Yolanda Bako, a member of
.
the "Consciousness Raising for one
.
of its objectives as providing
·
Mayor's Task Force on Rape, Women," Jane Lee Ya.re, positive input to public agencies
New York City, who will discuss Director of Women's Studies concerning rape and rape vie-
·
how
.
the fear of rape limits the
.
Department, State University tims.
·
·
freedom of women; Luba Ziin- College at New Paltz; and "Self -
merman, coordinator of
:
!'lew
,
Defense," a continuation of the
M.D.
·
To
·
Tillk
SeX
NOVEMBER 6, 1975
D.r. Don Sloan, director of the sessions will follow the address.
:
tftled
/
'
·
'The Sexual.Revolution '"
·
Sexual Therapy Center
.
at New The topic "Love and Sex"
-
will
_
be Has
'
There Been One?''
-
Parielists
-
,
~
.
.
·
.
d
•
·
!r~!nt~::~:no~
0
~:cfr~ss~~:
~~~~~
-
f~!aJr~f. J:~v~~ }°:nlh~~~:n::·~it:I'~:;inro;tt:
·
.aca en11.c
Integrity'
the Symposium on
·
-
Human
.
is a
'
member of the Religious Hudson
_
Legal Services;
.
Ernie
·
Sexuality scheduled for Tuesday, ~tudies Departm(tnt and the Shaw, psychiatrist with Green
November
IL
His topic "Let's
-
Counseling staff. Jacqueline street center,
.
Kingston;
. -
Sara·
ByKarenDuverneyJackman
''However," _Zuccarello went
Talk About Sex» will focus on the Curtis, academic counselor for Balogh, psychologist with Vassar
on to say, "we haven't been able
physiological aspects of hwnari
.
HEOP will lead the discussion,' studentCounselingServices; and
·
!'Marist must
.
maintain
a
.
toachievesuccessinthehiringof
sexl!ality, includiQg
.
recent "Our Bodies
Ourselves - the Rev. Fred Drobin, catholic commitment towards quaUty
minorities."
.
· ·
·.
r~search dof!e by Masters and Anatomy_and
.
_Identity'
\
A third ChaplinJor Vassar College .
.
,
education and academic in:.
Because of Affirmative Action
JQhnson, and by his own Sexual group will g1scuss · "Styl~s
·
of.
,
Two films "About Sex,,
,
by tegrity. We have been overly
·
guideliries,
·
Marist
,
is attempting
Therapy Center ~taff.
.
Sexuality'.'.
-
Locations_ for
·
the Angel Martinas arid •
•
Achieving
criticalof
ourselves in the past:
It
to reach
.
minority
.
and
·
female
,
·
The talk is design«:!d to provide groups
.
will
.
be
announced.
.
Sexual Maturity"
·
will be shown
•
·
·
is time we got over our inferiority
.
applicants by advertising jobs in
information on sexual behavior,
.
Earlier .in the day
.
Dr
.
Italo from 12:00 p.m.
,
in both
.
the comptex."
'
·
·
· ·
·
·
Black Scl!9lar
.
magazine;
The
·
which
will
lead to a better un-
Benin
of
the
•
Philosophy Campus Center Lounge and the
These were the words
·
of
New York Times
and· the local
-
derstanding of individual feelings Department will lead a
..
panel Donnelly Coriunuter Lounge.
Academic Dean Louis Zuc-
·
newspapers.
_
..
and
·.
attitudes;
Discussion discussion in Fµ-eside Lounge
·
· ·
carell9,
.
as he discussed Marist's .
:
Zuccarello didn't see the
.
future
,
Thursdayriight at Benoit
,
development
_
of
a
Black
.
Studies
·
•
·
.
ijouse
);
... ,
:.·>,
l
'
·._.:·
.
:
:
,
,
_
,•
·
.. ·
'
•
-
~
·
,•
ci
lriajor,
·
but he_ did
,
.ni
_
ention
·
the
Bookstore Prices
·
Soa:r
·
.
.
.
•~Th'e
:
giowlli
and
-
development
.
'
j>ossibility of
:
a:
Nlitsifig
'
program
.
·
of our faculty js a positive turn
·
-~
being
,
iIJStituted at Marist.
toward the growth of- the
in-
.
>
Oil
:
the future of Marist, Zuc-
stitution,"
-
zuccarello
,
said,
c~rello
''
said JVe need
.
tiine for
stressing Maiist's commitment
reflection
,
.:
and ex~inil_lation
.
of
to diversifying the faculty
.
what we have already started.
By Candi Davis
"Suddenly when the
,
prices went their books out of pleasure. They
·
up we didn't have any diffi~ulty are
.
buying
.
them out of
"Absolutely ridiculous," said in getting paper materials."
:-
necessity," she
.
said. "The book
Jenny Guarino, a sophomore
Doreo finds that paper supplies store really has you over
a
SportS
·
DiscusS'3d:
Communication
Arts
major
.
have gone up also. Index cards in barreL Where else can you buy
A
-
,nate.ur vs .
.
Pro
"I went into the Marist 1974 cost 19½ cents
.
per pack, in college books from? You need the
bookstore to get a science book 1975 they went up to 32 cents per books at the price they are
which was 50 cents at the pack. Note book
irl 1974 cost 89 asking," the student said.
beginning of the semester; The
..
cents and 1975 the same note book
With the
·
increase in prices
bookstore ran out of the book, and cost 98 cents
.
_
In 1974 typewriter
··
more students have been forced
when they reordered
.
the book,I paper
cost
$1.06½ and in 1975
it
to
:.
buy
new books
this
year
.
·
Approximately twenty-five today owners of professional
had to pay $3.50 for it."
. . .
cost $1.17½.
.
"More students have been people - ~ttended
.
a
·
Free teams are probably more con-
.
·
"The prices have been going up
"The bookstore put an order for holding on to
.
their books; and not
.
University, disclissio1.1 on amateur
·
cerned with making money ttian
steadily over the last two and
a:
paper supplies in July of last year reselling t,pem to th~ book store
.
and professional athl~tics in wit~. t~e status of holding the
·
half years," says Tony Doreo a and didn't receive the order
.
until or other students•
.
• said
Mr
·
.
House "III,
.
Ghampagnat, on position, as
,
used to be the trend.
clerk of the book store. May of this year," said Doreo. Doreo
·
.
'
·
·
·
Qctob,er
'l:1
_
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
•
:
coaching is a job," Petro added.
"Especiallysincelastyear,there Tony Dangelo, manager of the
TheLibraryalsohasaproblem
-
..
Th~ d~tin~t~?n Qet~een_
.
.
''.th~
.
Pean ~ad~ theR~ugge1,ted
<
that
.
has been a
10
percent increase in bookstore said four orders had to with
.
the increase in
.
prices~'
a
, -
amateur
·
~n~
the pr~!ess1onal
.
the . ~1g mon~r and
·
the coI?
·
thepricesofbooks." An~xample be placed to ·four
- .
different novel in
-
1973 cost $6.95 in •74·u
.
was~eopemngtoprc. Youhave pet1t10n
mvolved
m
of this is a Calculus book in
.
1974
. ·
companies
·
ih
·
order
.·
for
.
the cost $7 .95. A book of
-
' complete · to defme the te~ sport, game professionalism fits with
·
a
cost $15.95. The sa_nie book when
·
bookstore
·
to
·
.
recei~e one
,
. order
.
. poems in 1~74 cost $1~.50, in 1975
·
and play in ~rder to def~e w~t capitalistic countcy such as ours.
reordered was pnced
.
a~ $17.95. when they w~n~~d
:
1t;
:
: _
.
,
·
it cost.$15.95, A paper back math
an amateur m
~ch
area
IS," said "Money is a major concern
-
of
The ~ollege bookst~re
lS
owned
~ue
.
to tlie ll.lCrease
·
m
.
the
.
book in 1973 cost$8.60, and in
·
74 it
·
Mr .
.
Ron Petro, M~rist CoUege
·
most professionals.
If
America
byManst, butthe~ncesc,f
.
books
.
pn,_c~,. th~ faculty has been
·
cost:$9.50.
'.
Thelibraryhas found
.
basketballand
-
tenrus
•
coach. "At
·
was to turn
.
to
_
amateur
,
sports
are set by
th~
publisher: says
Mr.
"c
_
onsc1entiou~
·
about
.
J>rices
·
of
tha\
~
t!}e greatest
·
-increa~ is in
'
·
Mari~t yoii _i:nust be ah amateur if.
.
supported
·
by the government
.
as
.
poreo. "~anst d?Csn't
.
have any the books,"
..
says Doreo
'.
"More magazines
·
.
and
-
journals: They
·
you are g<>mg to participate
·
in a do
·
other
.
countries, it inight
.
influence m
.
the mcrease
.
of ~e
.
paper back books have been
•
•
also say that they have
·
had a 10
·
sport
.
You can't be a professional
.
·
suggest
.
a trend away from the
·
prices in books. ~blishers give
·
chosen for co~es
.
"
percent. increase in
,
:
pfi¢es
.
of in a sport and play that sport' in traditional capitalistic mode
the excuse of the mcrease to
.
the
.
"Outrageous, it's enough to go books.
,.
·
.
. ,
.·
•
•
·
inter-collegiate competition," he
··
exhibited
.
.in America's
\
·
in-
.
·
paper shortage."
·
Doreo
·
doeim't bankrupt," says
a
Marist CoUege
.
.
_ _ _ _
.
added
,-
Mr, Petro also noted that
.
stitutions,'
'
he added.
.
.
believe in tJ:le paper
·
shortage. junior. "Students aren't buying
one
.
is
,
~
.
onsidered a professional
: ,
V~rious members of the
group
Fundraising Under,Wllj
--
.
.
,•
.
.
. .
By
Barbara Magrath
·,
•
in, a
.
particular sport·
if
one gets indi~ted tlle need for the spirit of
paid
.
for
·
playing
.
or teaching it. spcirtsµianship- to be introduced
''To~ay there
..
are -very few to children who are participating
· amateur sports left," said Marist
•·
in community
·
programs
·
such
·
as
.
· .
men's crew
.
team
.
~oach,
William
little league baseball teams
/
One
.
'
Austin
~
The discussion than per$Ozi noted the needfor careful
.
moved to
:
_
the amount
'
of money screening of those who will coach
:
involved in
·
professional sports. young children
'.
They must hold
.
renovation of the campus center. Business and industry of the mid-
:
Dean
.
':\fade
.
asked
:
the
-.
group the
.
value of the sport as being
This first phase will cost Hudson area
.
are also con~
wh~ther or
,
notthey are willing to more important than winning the
Marist College is conducting a
•
$4,170,000.
··
·
·
tributors.
.
.
pay11igh prices
to
watch sporting game, he added.
.
·
capitalfund raising campaign
.
to
'J.1le second phase includes
·
· Mr. Wayne
.
Strasbaugh of events
.
R;esponse came from
-
a
·
According to Mr. Petro,
be completed in two phases; faculW development, expansion Tamblyn and Brown Inc. a
femalem~ber of the group, '.tI'd professionals can be compared tc,
.
immediate andlong - range with
.
of gradµa~e prog~ams, stu~ent ,"fundtaising
·
consulting firm is
.
<iefiD!tely pay,
_
to
·
see· the-FlY,~~
-
.
a ~eater
:
c_ompany or even
~
a rock
..
,
.>j
r/
l
.
..
.
·"a·goal
:
of$15,000,000 .
.
,
.
.
aid endowment,
•
and
0
a venture Campaign Director.
_
:As of. P~Y
:
hC>Ck~y
(
/fhere was·com-
.
,
·
band
.
"Th,ey're·in front
_..:
.of an
The first phase now under way,
,
fund:
to
support: special
·
.
projects··
·
November l0
;
·
Mr. Thomas
-
wade
. _;
mon agreement by
•
the others
·
to
.:
..
audienc;e,
.
they~re
•
·
working
.
hard,
·
/
includes the
<
relocation
:
.
and
.
ex-
·
and
experiµiental: programs.
·,.
.
,
will
:
be
:
:
the
:
..
11ew
.-
Development
·
,
•
h,~r ~t{l~~
.
el}t~.
.
.
-•·
'.
·
.
·•
·
·
they're
:
·
getting
,
pai~
·
fo~
:
it;
.·
ai!d
· ·
.
.
.
pansio1_1 of the library, a
,
physi~l
· ·
:
·
C911tributing
••·
to
::
:
th~
::
:
dey~Io~
·
.
,
Director
•
teplac_irig
:
M~
;
;
_
Jorur
J
:
·
.
.
·
·::-
Tl!~
~-
9µestion
.
~£
·
-
!h~
pµrp_o.se
.,
.
th
_
ey
~
r
.
e
·
::.:
•
.
:
:
.
pr'.oyi,cling
·
.
.
·
,.
en~
·
.
.
·
•··
·
.
educatio11 cen~r, ~e .remodeling
·:
ment
_
functare
.
alum,ru, paren,ts,
;:
,
O(.)ugherty
.
,ho
1S
c~ntinuing as a
,'.
:
be.~md
_:_:
Proress1ona!1sm.
·~
:was
.
}
e~~ent.:~
...
_
,
·
·
.
: . ,
of present bwldmgs,
:
and
r
trustees:,_
_
faculty
,
,
and
:,
staff
'..
-
consultant
.'
>·
·
.<
.
·
•'·/·.
·
:-<=
-
,
.
ra~
.,
Austin
.
commented
:
~ t
·
.
e;
•
.
:__.:::
·
.
,
.
·
.
•
:_
·
-
·_
.-
: ..
·-
-···
.. -~
... :
.
·
:
,
-
~
·-
,;:·
.-.
_
•·
.·
·
-
....
,-,
·.
..
-
·
·
.
:
·
.<··.
_-
•
.-
--
-
_
_
, __
.
_
·
:
:
··, ·
_
.,
·-
:-
-
~--
.
.
·
_.
:
:•
.
-.
~
;>_
· •
·
.
.
NOVEMBER-6, 1975
THE CIRCLE
Aris Editor Speaks
On Journalism
"Reading a newspaper
is
one of
the best ways to learn about
writing. You·should.develop your
own style,;Look at other articles
and look at its style, then try to
analyze it by comparing it to your·
own writing . ., Jeffrey Borak,
Arts Editor for the Poughkeepsie
Journal, gave this advice to the
Journalism class of Marist
College, Wednesday, October
29.
"Ke_ep~g your ears open may
result
m
a good story," said
Borak, stressing the importance
of "gathering the.news."· ..,
Jeffery Borak is the
Arts
editor
of the
Poughkeepsie Journal. A
former teacher and peace corps
- worker, he has been reporting for
the past four years.
- Borak said, "I became in~
terested in Journalism when I
wrote an article for the Southern
Dutchess' .News." Later· he
worked as Editor of the Beacon
Free Press. "The best place for
developing sources at that time
was at the Chamber of Com-
merce office." He would, "just
shoot the bull," to find good
sources.
"Journalism is a·certain art, it
has a certain rhythm, and a
certain instinct to it,". _ says
Borak. -"Instinct has a lot to do
with journalism. A person has to
· keep his senses aware, every
piece of information a person
comes in contact with _could be a
possible story." .
Advising the students of the
importance in background in-
formation, Borak said, "Keeping
it.filed in the back of your mind
always helps when you might
need-it."
Most of all,- Borak enjoys
reviewing plays. In reviewing
theatre he looks for "truth" in
performance. Borak defined
tru~h as consistency in character,
believability and quality. In
musicals he _ looks at the
choreography
and
singing
especially. "I write all 'over the
programs: a word, phrase, and
even a sentence," Borak said. In
reviewing movies a reviewer
must be honest. He said, "A
reviewer's first responsibility is
to love the art he is reviewing."
&tressing the importance of the
impact a play has on its spec-
tators,
Borak
concluded,
"Audience's have the right to
expect quality on the college,
community, and professional
levels:"
Mr. Borak was an actor at the
Regional Theater Festival and
won best actor for Arthur Miller's
The Price.
Higher Education Pursued
By
Haqdicapped
PAGE3
Poughkeepsie Journal
Arts
Edltor, Jeffrey Borak.
The Office of Special Services · · students also .
use,
the college .. cov_ers the ground and makes
was founded in
1974
to enable facilities but are given special · handling of canes rather difficult.
handicapped persons ill our consideration for auto parking
Usually when the word
.society to further their education spaces and are encouraged t<iuse "''handicapped" is mentioned,
,
hereatMarist.Theideagrewout elevators .for vertical tran-
thoughts turn to the wheelchair
Present Tense:
of atrend in the early •so•s·which sportatiori.
.
student.. These
individuals
. saw handicapped· students
Four general services are require more attention than all
enrolling·ih increasing numbers provided for the blind student:
1)
the others in terms of special
in the nation's .colleges · and Guides are acquired to orientate provisioQs and they are the most
. universities. The office, presently·· each incoming student
to .
the expensive to provide for..
·
·located in Room -
105
Cham-
different areas of the campus;
2)
Experience has shown that pre-
pagnat,
is
headed by Joe I:Iines, a A map has been prepared with planned facilities rarely are
graduate of Marist.
.-
raised areas and varied-textures exactly what is needed. The
The aim of 'the office is to so that they may get a visual l~itations of each student and
provide for guidance and special · picture of the campus layout;
3)
their ability to care for their own
facilities in order to· further the Special·rooms are provided for needs.vary so widely
i:t
becomes
concept of ·· "m,ainstreaming" readers to read to blind students difficult to plan for each specific
such disabled students, both or.
for
·}!stening to· recorded ·case. Naturally, the need for
'res!dent· and
,rQJ!llll.u!ei:,
~!tl)in ,=m.~terials, I;Imvev~r; it is up.to elevators{
-
.,., ramps,
-
,
·
·-•lower
.
: __ Jhe,', ;.siu~e11t .:b.ody:_.
,
, iSP.ec1al
".the
individtiaLto~ hire his
·()r
her telephones and· drinking foun-
.
::,
provisions have been made bY the,;' reader:· Funds 'for, readers' fees': : ta
ins .· ..
,
are •· universal.·•- The
college to ·accoinmodate the are available through the office; provisions·
for:
others such as
''Meals On Wheels''
Helps Aged
By
Charlie Tackney
Chairman
Social
Action Committee .
_
..
;.._:,,;..,,-~·-_
...
,.,.,_:_: ·.•,,
.
,;~;-
-
,
.
Jim Kennedy . and
l
stopped
in.
We
met some very fine people;
and
learned,,
while .. ser:ving a
few
· luriches, that the
center could use
If
you
walk
·up
North
Road to .
people
to volunteer"
to set ...
up
. bHnd, ,those.·· with·. c_ardiac and 4) Consideration is being toilet bar stools, shower facilities
problems and those conf111ed- to given· to the development of a and bed bars must be arranged
wheelchairs .. Those- with ·other beacon system on_ campus for on an individual basis to be most
types of disabilities normally use guidance and to mark hazards effective.
the same facilities as non-
such as excavations and traffic
Where special roo~s are
disabled students, .but are also inters·ections. The guidance provided, the college is prepared
encouraged to seek advice when system will consist of audible · to do a reasonable amount of
necessary.
sig'nals along with a braille ·adaptation to me~t the needs of
the
Martin
Luther King
apart-
tables,
serve
m~ls,
clean
up
_ments, yoti'll}ind among them a and, if we get ambitious, to .
white utility building with a small provide some entertainment
kitchen and a dining area. Stop in
("who plays instruments out
there on a weekday, around noon,
there, do you?"). The payment
, and you'll find it a .busy place. for tbJs service is• very simple:
Perhaps before . you know it, meeting people.
·
In. a recent year here, over 80 plaque to indicate the location of the student occqpying the room. ·
full and part-time students were the student as well as directions Ramps or grade level areas have
classified· as handicapped. ·
Of
and information of other facilities been constructed to virtually all
these
about
20
were
in· . in that area.
buildings on campus. Other
wheelchairs, some
15
had various
In the· near future the office problems
which
became
degrees of blindness and the · hopes to install these guidance minimum through special con-
. remainder fell · into such stations to indicate certain
im-
sideration include:
categories· as ·deaf, cardiac; portant places, such as the new
1)
toilet facilities - one or more
orthopedic, · etc. No particular library in . Fontaine and the toilet stools for each sex in every
architectural
accommodations Campus Ceilter,,so that they will building are available and
are made for . epilepUcs; have-every opportunity to utilize provided with .bars sufficient in
however, the college health· these facilities. This signal size
to
accommodate
~ervices take partic~lar interest system. WQ.Uld also -be ·par-
.
.
you'll be serving a lunch or two.
The Campus Ministry Council •
It
is a senior citizen nutrition Social Actiorr Committee will
center, one of six in the county.
It
gladly serve to introduce people
is sponsored by the Office of the to the Center. We've been asked
Aging, with the chow provided by to arrange a meeting between the
our own Saga Food Service -
manager
and
prospective
"Means on Wheels".
volunteers before they visit the
Between
11:30
a.m. and
1:00
Center to avoid confusion.
"
. p.m. some 40 people stop by to
Please consider this invitation .
have lunch, meet friends, and Are you tired of eating with the
socialize. The center manager, same people? Do you have a
Betty, keeps track of the many lunch to spare?
If
so, call Byrne
diets and attendance. She had 'Reisdence and let me know.
time too, last week, for a visitor's ·Remember, it's just a short walk
introduction to the center when up North Road ...
m the c~ses._ Cardiac-troubled·· ticularly
·
beneficial when snow
_CONTINUED ON PAGE
7
_Marist College Rec<>rd Keeping/Public !:µformation And _Release Of Information. Policy:
1. "A student has a right to see records . furnished by HEW for a tieari11g.
· tl)e counseling center, and Helen O'Connor
maintained by· the college .. Education
1. The hearing shall be conducted, and · ts. the College Nurse.
+records are described as those records,
decided within a. reasonable_ period of lime ·· Unless the student has flied a signed
files, documents, and .other materials
following the request tor the hearing._·
waiver,. submitted reference· 1etters and
directly related 'to a _student which· are ·
2.,The hearing shall be conducted, and the
recommendations may be reviewed by the
maintained by.
a
school or by one- of Its • decision rendered by an lnstltut1onal Official
stud_ent; A s!udent, If tie requests, wlll be
agents.'/ The followlng Marlst College of•·· or.other party Y(_ho does not have a direct
notified of the names of all persons making
fices maintain records on students: ·interest In.the outcome of hearing:
'
confidential recommendations ., If he does
Registrar, Assistant Dean of Students
Of
3. Students shall be afforded
a
full·and fair
agree to waive his right to access. This
Campus Life, College Nurse, Career
opportunity. to present evidence relevant to
notification would .Include not · only thos_e
Development, Flnanclal Aid, HEOP, Up-
the Issues raised.
Individuals suggested by the student as
ward Bound, M.B.A., and M.A.P. programs.
4. The. decisions shall be. rendered In. possible references, but also. any others
Astudentshouldmakea.wrlttenrequestto
writing within a reasonable period of time
solicited by the Institution or volunteering
the Office In which he would like to review hfs
after the conclusion
Of
the hearing. .
their comment. A person submitting a
records.· A request to see ones record ·must
Tlie Dean of Students. Office should be
personal recommendation for a student may
.. be compiled with no later than
45
days from
contacted by the office or student concerned
attach a signed waiver. whereby the student
the date'·request Is made. Students may
when an iml)!lsse has been .. reached regar: ·wavies his right to.review
It.
The career
receive copies of materials· that are
ding the contents·ot one's records.
Development office maintains resume
avallable to them, for·· the cost of
The.law p~rmlts Marlst.College to release . related ·material of the student and
reproduction; for example College grade
at varrous·· times the following, unless
references from rndlvlduals, requested by
transcripts cost $1.<XI.
·
requested nottodosoby the student: student
the student. Flies are currently maintained
2. "The·. Family ·Educatronal. Rights and
name, address, teJephOne number, date and
on a permanent basis: Larry Snyder Is the
· . Privacy Act of 1974 ls Intended to require
place .ot 'birth, ma(or fleld of study, par-
career Development coordinator.
educatlonal agencies and Institutions to
tlclpatlon 1n• offtcl11lly recognized activities . The HEOP office maintains records
conform·to fair Information• record keeping
and sports, weight and height of.members of
relating to pre-college and college academrc
practices. It Is not, Intended .to overturn
an athletic team, dates
of·
attendance,
achievement. flnanclal aid, and recom-
establlshed standards and procedures for 'degrees and awards, received and the most.
mendatlons relating to the Individual. These
the challenge of substantive decisions_ made
recent previous educational agency or In-
records are maintained untll graduation or
by the Institutions. Jl'ls Intended, hOwever, to
stltutlon attended by the student.
termination
Of
stud res by the lndlvldual.
open the bases on which decisions are made ; · A student's academic record Is maintained
After such time pertinent data Is maintained
tomorescrutfnybythestudentsaboutwhom
In the Registrar's office and rs rn actuallfy
for research purposes as needed
tor
decisions are being made, and to give .. the
one's transcript of college grades; credits
pr_ogram evaluation. The Director
Of
this
opportunity to challenge and to correct· or ' attempted and earned.-Thls Is a permanent
program Is Joseph Molinaro.
at least. enter an explanatory statement ,. record.' John Dwyer Is In charge
Of
.the · The financial aid Office maintains a
Inaccurate, misleading, or Inappropriate - Registrar's affairs.
stud.ent•s appllcatlon_for aid, documentatron
rntormatlon about them which may be In
Students wlll not
be
able to dlrectly Inspect_
supporting need and Office action on request
th·e1r
flies
and which may contribute or have- · medical, psychiatric,
or·
slml.lar. records·
tor
aid.
After.
graduation or termination
Of.
contributed to an Important decision made
which· are used solely In .connection with · studies various government requirements
.about them by the Institution.'' The. law · · treatment purposes and ;only avallable to
are followed In regards to malntalnance of
doesn't describe any specific format to
be
recognized professionals · or para •
records. Gerald Kelly Is the Director of the
followed
If
a disagreement does happen to :professionals In connec.tlon with:· such
Financial Aid .Program.
· '
· ·
arise over one•l!·record. "It Is. the Intent that
treatment. Such students are-able to have a· · T!J.e M.B.A. program retains In Its offices
. 11 rule
Of
reeson would
be
foll~ by
thou·
doctor
01',
other protesslonal
Of
their chOlce
flies on the lndlvldual studentfor. purposes
0(
particlpants,lnvotved/'
If·
lt,_can,. not
•be' ·
Inspect. their
.
records .. Heal.th records are ,., Academic counseling. In the lncllvldual's file
resolved · through .
mutual
understanding,
destroyed at graduation or upon separation
are· found one's grades per- semester,
, . .._,. then-.the·tollowlng are mlnl!!'lum
guidelines, .
from
th•
college. eagle Moore Is
In
charge
of :
curricular
programming . and department
•
.--
•
.
. -
•
•.
i . .
•
'
-. '
•
.
.
.
• •
.
.
.
,·
'
. .
•
.
. . ' . ,
~
' • . • .
-,
...
. •
, . • • ' . , ,
,·,
. . .
· ' · • • •.
.
•.
":'" .
-~.
:::
••
.
. , .
.
correspondence with the student. Or. John
Kelly Is chairman
of
this department.
The M.A.P. Office maintains a file on
11
student until one year after graduatron; This
Ille consists of faculty recommendations for
students
applying
to
go
abroad,
correspondence between the applicant and
the M.A.P. office, and grade results and
tutorial statements for the year abroad. One
· year after graduation all flies are destroyed
· except the most up . to .
date
addresses and
recommendations "written for• ma(ors In
French. Or. Joseph Bellanger Is the coor,
dlnator of the M,A.P. program.
The upward Bound program maintains a
student's application end materials related
· to the admission process • such as High
School transcript
and
recommendations. In
addition, where possible, test results from
testing performed by the U.B. program as
· well as examination papers are maintained.
As
required by the Federal Government
program guidelines, files are kept for three
years after a student either graduates or
terminates hfs or her participation In the
program. The Director
Of
the U.B. program
Is Joseph Parker.
·
All discipline records are maintained by
the office
Of
the Assistant Dean
Of
Students
for- Campus Life. They are kept separate
from academic recor<IS and are kept for the
duration of the student's. studies. Fred
Lambert Is the Assistant Dean of the
Students for ca·mpus Life.
Materials not available to Marls! students
are: personal papers • maintained by
a
professional.
parents
confidential
statement, employment records, and
recommendations completed prior . to
January 1, 1975, .(or where
a
student has
completed
a waiver voiding his right
Of
access to recommendations.)
·.1,
any material
or
document In th•
. !ducatlon record of a student Includes In-
. lormatton on more than one student, thltll
. each lndlvldua! only /'BS the right to revl_ew
material that pertarns to hrs own personal
!
needs. They are not allowed to review In-
'. formation that may pertain to others.
i
A student can not be requlre.;J to sign
a
· waiver, to•walvethelr right to confldentlallty
' Of or access to their records,
as a precon-
dition of application, or any other service ·
. normally provided to students at the In-
' stltutlon.
Personally identifiable records of
a
student cannot be . released without the'
written consent
of
the student to any_ one
other than the followfng: other school
of.
flclals, authorized representatives of the
U.S. Federal Government, those In con.
· nectlon with
a student's application for or
receipt
Of
financial
aid,
state and local
of.
:Jclals, organizations conducting studies for
ir
on the behalf of educational agencies,
, ,ccredltlhg organizations, l)!lrents of a
:lependent student, or In compliance with
a
ludlclal order.
,
. consent tor the release of education
records must be In writing, signed and dated
oy the person giving· such consent. When
Qranted permission to release records, the
college shall not release Information
on
a
student except on the condition that the
party to which the Information Is
being
·.transferred will not permit any othe• party
to have access to such Information w,:li out
the written consent of the student.
Complete copies of the Buckley Ameno-
11ent are avallable In the library.
.
+ "Record" means Information or
data
recorded In any medium, Including, but not
llmlled to hand,wrlllng, print, tapes, films,
microfilms, and mlcrotlche." • Guidelines
from HEW.
.
. .
1
1,2 quoted from Congressional Record
of
December 13, 1974 .as entered by
Senator
James Buckley and
senator
Pell •
PAGE
-
4
~
-THE
CIRCLE
coft'~~~'ls
Col~,· CIRCLE
Is
the
weekly
newspaper
of
the Students of
Marls!
by the Sou1t1er:'0u~ed INhroughouAg
t
the school year excluslve or vacation perlOdS
ess
ews
ency, Wappingers,
N-York.
' David Livshin
Mary
Beth Pfeiffer
.
Gigi Birdas
Gregory Conocchioli
FredAshley
ChipErmish
·
Tom McTernan
.
Patrice Connolly
·
Joan McDermott
Brian Morgan
-
Larry
striegel
Co-Editors
Associate Editor
Editorial Consultant
·
Photography Editor
Assistant Photography Editor
·
Sports Editor
Layout Editor
Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Distribution Manager
;
.
staff: Dave Kazdan, Gene Berkery, Rich Burke John Reilly
Ken Healy, Gene Heimers, Tom Hudak, Jack Mcctitcheon
Mike
O~Shea, ~ITY st~egeJ,
Patrice
COnnolly, Ernest
Arico,
Gigi
Bll'das, Bill Bozzone, Claudia Buller, John
·
Byrne,
_
Daniel
Dromm, Karen Duverney, Mary Foster, Fred Kolthay Barbara
Magrath, Philip
_
Palladino, Pat Perretto. Dave Roberts Ed
Rubeo, W~e Saitta, R~ch Sellers,
J{amar
Sumrall, Do~oth
Teevan, Tina
.
Iraca, Julie Schott,
.
Peter Van
··
Aken, Eliza:
beth !Godbout,
_
Candi Davis.
Editorial
A
··
Suggestion
.
TIIECIRCLE
NOVEMBER 6, 1975
" l l i i i ! ! ! ! ! I I I " " ~ - - - - ~ ~
• NE.W
Y.ORK WILL)-1.A.VE-lOEND
IT'S PRQFWGAi~
.
WAYS
.
!';
.
.
~olleges
.
No
Lo~ger.
_
·
''S~
_
cro,~ari~t!~
as~ ..
•• •
•
•
•
•
•
•
-
.
••••
•
.
•
;-
••
. .
•
•,
'
r
0
r
,
•
•
•
·
Rapes
'
RamI)~Ili
.
Qn_J~aippl.J;ses
.
•,
·'·
.
'
"
~
,,
,
.
.
.
..
. ·
..
;
.
.
·:;
-:~
.
·•
~
,
..
by CYNTHIA C~OSSEN
have be}n
:.'
springing
)ip
.
_09
-
-
h~vejoi.Jled in
,
the battl~
:
ag;ins~
:
-
_
.
.
.. _
·
.
ca~puses all
·
over
.
the C!O'!Jltry ,
,,
,.
rap
,
e
;
At
least 10
:
states cllanged
.,.
(CPS)
-Last
.
sprmg, a woman
,
tram worn~ to react
.
more
.
their_rape laws
·
in
-
1974 and 12
-
-
w~s a~tacke~ and raped by a man c9nfident1y
:
to
.
surpri!;e
'
'
..
en~
-.
,
other revisions · in . state•f
·
faws ·
:
wielding a .f1reh9se nozzle ~n, the
-
)
:ounters.; "The
·-
courses are ef-
>
were·
-
under
/
consideration
-
The
10th
floor
of
the
·
cal)1pus
_
libr~ry
i
!~ctive,
_
''
C:
one
..
~tructgr
:::
said,
· .
cllanges
"
ma,rked the beginning of
at . Memphis
.
~ta~e
·
l!mv,e~s1ty.
_ -
beC!a~se
_
they
.
teach
a
perso~ not
.
_
a
.
shift
µt
.
soci
_
ety's attitudtfaway
·
_
_
_
_
_
.
ThIS past
.
summer a ~ruvers~ty of
t~
pamc."
__ ·
·..
.
•
-
_
·•
-
·.
.
_•
-
.
:
~~9m
cc:msiderijlg the victim
.
the
In a IIlemo se~~ to faculty and staff last week, :president Foy an-
·
T~xas
:
coed
,
-~as
.
dragged_ ffom.
,
a
..
Mostofthe coijege se}!-defense
:
·
0
provocateur
.
of att,ac~s .
. ;
·-. ;
: · ·
·
•
n
Qunced th~_appomtIµent of, the present Dean of Students, Toni Wade city
.
J~undro_mat
·
at J~nife-~omt
.
co11~es, often offered for regular
:
.· In many
·
states,
J!~W
rape.Jaws
_to
~h~
position or- Development Director. Whether or not the new and
.
r~ped
_
m
_
a
:
D~~rby field. . credit,
·
teach
"
wo~en to
<
protect
.
specify th?tevidence". of
:
a rape
y
position serves as a
.
promotion or demotion for- Dean Wade remains to _Early
:
~
-
~e.ptelll~r, a
J
~olorado
•.
··
the~elves using a smattering
of:
victi.gl's
:-,·
_
se11:ilal
.
cojidu
¢
,t
.
other
_.
be seen by
.
som~
-
members
-
of the community
.
:
._
;
·
· · _
_
Colleg.e
.
:r,or_nar;i was
_
i;-apecJ. by_ two mat11al arts ~n
_
d common
_.,
seri$e:
:\'
.
!ha11
,
with µie defendant caiiriot be
..
-
.
In that mein.o
:
Presidentfoy also announced that"Vic~ President me~
,
w~~ ~h.tand ller boyfnend
.
;
Women
,
are
,
taught
.
to us_e
·
their
;:
mtrodu~ed
,.
at the suspect's trial
·
·
Waters will temporarily su~rvise the functions presenUy operating
·
slept C?~ts1de 11ear
_
campll~.
·
:
-
·_
han~ ancl
::_
fee~
-
~
~
:
~
puhc'?lng,
. .
unless the vict~ ~trocliices it. ,In
..
lffl:d~r
.
th~. aegis
.
of fu.e _ Pean
.
of
•
students;••
-
He
:
also said, "ad.:
•·
· -
,
ID:
.
~p~~~
.
o~ harsher legISlat!on
·
stab~g_ and k~~
.
k~g motions..
.
other
,.
sta~es;
"!:
v
.
1~tirn~
..
n
_
o
_
!onger
.,-
.
_
muustrative
,
~estructuring sJ~ould take place around January
1.,,
.
In _}ga!-1,1$~ rapists and the ~rowmg
.
Other measure~ l!lvolve the
.
use
.
-
need_ ~~caJE)_v1d_~nce of
~
rape.
_
t~t
,
co~umque
..
he
.
asked that
.
''should
_
iil~yiduals
;
or co~ittees
:
pop
,
ular1ty of wom~n
.
~
: self-
.
.
of
..
pressure. po~ts,
~:
such as
'.
the
:
Now_ ~
-
rape v1ctip's
·
wor~
fqat
.
.
_
-
~~
~~
_
off~~
_
suggestl_onsi~ encom:age themto
.
commimicate
·
orally
.
or
:I,
def~ns~ classes,
-
ra~
;
stµi.
runs.
,
>-
~yes
a
_
nd ~r.Ocl
t
~ruch arr~el?'
.
gh~
,,
W,~~
:.
:c
!'i1Ped
:
:
1s
;
;
-
~~;i<!ient
.
· .
.
-
m
~~~t~:
t:2t11~~~:io~!?~~~i
:
? ~ ~ ~ e
;
i~~~
~
J
:1i~~j,~i
-
;~1}:;;
_.
o~::;~;rt
)
v
.
j1~~;.r;ri"t{a
i
~~
.
e~
'
ci
~
dit
!
~
'.
n~
;;:
~~~~
}
~
t
,
;
:1*
f
~
}t
\
?:tw
rnr
<:
·
.
.
_
{rorµstudents as weU as s11ggestionsJi::t?rti faculty
:
c1ndstaff;
_
<
•
·
.
,
_
.
·
.
·
_-
·
-
_
alort~
-
~t
-
~ght
, __
Co
_
lle
_
ge
.-
~~aei:its
_
:"}:
to b!:?li~\Te
,
t)Jat
•
t~ef'.C!an
~
t
,
~~f~nd
j
,
,-
•Anotller
·
J
e~_!sl~t~~e
:
ch~11~~
:
•.
;
·
.
··
The~efor~ ~e•e<f:itors _would
·
Iilte,
,
tiffuake a suggestion:· that
-:
w~ nQt
have
_
a
:.
false, sense
,
<>f
·;
secur1ty
/
i
th~
.
~sely~~/
:
."
~n
:
Jow~
,
:fiape
u
:
(!oncei::~~cl
.
tg!
i-
~e~i.ni~i~n
-
_
or rape
'
.
.
corrumt the cr:11Pe ofin~e~ as '!e
~ o~~e~ do at M~tin choosing new _
__
beca~
,.
th~y feel
_.
·
seclud~,
~
-a
·
::
.
<:;r1S1S Cent~I" wox:,~ei:: said,
'o
'J:3t1t.
;J.
an_ct,~~µ:tl
::;,.
assaaj~;
,,
Jn
~·
rnary
.
people for new
~
roles; and µu&t
.
we
.
take on a new face with new values, Deputy !_)
_
1st
_
r~ct
_ :
~ttorn
.
~y
:..
m
::
tg~re
_:
are
,
~~~s Wllme~_ca
.
n leam
:
..
.
SE3!es,
.,
if
i
.,
a
;,
sex~11
_
l
5
assauit
-
oc-'
·
·
_
ne:wideas and a}}ew 9uUoo~
;
WeJ?e:Ueve tlien that
a
breath of fresl! air
·
folorado
,
-·
Springs
·
··
;
sa1d;
__
__
~ut
·
:
to :do
_
to
·
p.r.~v~Jlt
:
ra~'. _
,
We do11't
,
,:
:
ctµ.T~d
f
l:>1;lt
,
~o.t-a)·~~l>.er
i.e,
t_he
,
might be ui.e very thing which
~
college and student services need
:
-
colleges
.
are
·-
no
.
longer always haye to giye
_
m t~ nien
,
»
~
.
assailan~
s
Wll~
c
charged
·
orily with
,
In saying this we
:·
are hoping J~t
:
~e
pr~serit Assistant
-
Deaff_of
,
sacrosanct;
;
~ey
:
have
.
bec;ome
_ :
B~t
.
one
·
_
man
'
who
·
believ~ the
'.:
:_.
disordei:1y;condu
_
ctw~ch in D!9St:
_
~tudents not be na~ed to the position if the restructuring committee target areas,: _wa~ed a ~olo_rado
..,.
rapISt
.
should be
_
ap~sed rather
:
_:.
plac~
_
;
-
~
.
.
o~ly: a
"°
WJS~emeanor
_
-
·
finds that
we
do in fact need a Dean of Students.
.
-
.
·
.
.
·
•
College
.
dean.
_
·
.
.
·
..
· .
.
. .
._
·than aggravated
·
1s
·
Frederic
:
carrymg a
'
rnaxunum sentence of
-
We suspect that the period between
'
now and
January
1 is a testing
·
_
·
.
4ccQ~ding . to
:
FBI statistics,
'
S~oraska,
.
author
:
of ·a·
.
book
.
Ori
~:
six montl}s irijai.LBoth
·
Michigari
periocUo see w~t
·
comes together and what falls apart under the th~re
..
1s one
_
-
rape every_ ten r~pe ~nd a
_
lectui:er
-
~11 the college
·
-
.
an~
J
}Qwa
br~adened
,
the
.
absence of a f1:111 time Dean ~f students, !Ve do kno~ that student input mm_ut~s nabo~al~y. Natlo!lal c1rc~t.,Storaska believes th~t the defm1bons
·
of
-
crunincll
_,
seX11al -
·
-
?n the executive level of
this
college
w.ill
come to a halt during the
·
stat1Stics
.
also
--
.
~dicate
.
that
-
~
-
·
wo~aAs
_
best defe~e:aga1!18~
:
a
·,
: _._
assa
_
ultla~tyear
:
ancl set differ~nt
interim.
-
.
_.
.
.
.
_
_
·
.
p~r~ent of rapISts
;
•
know the.tr rapISt 1s
_
to "alter
his
.
infenonty punishments
·
for
.
.
·
different
Some inay argue that the present Assistant Dean Fred Lambert v1ctiins
;
But knowing the at-
·
complext
-
.
·
. ·
· ..
.
.
·
. --
··· .•
degrees
,
ofassault.
_
_
·:
:
should rise to the occasion as we have seen
him
do rapidly
within
the tacker has ra~ely helped a
.
'.l,:o achiev
_
e
-
thIS, storaska said,
·
women's groups
,
have
_.
b~en,
lastfew years and
.
receive the position of D~n of Students should the woman escape
h~
successfully.
·
.
.
·
•
t~e
.
w<>man sl_lould try to evoke credited with the new impetus for
.
.
restructuring not take place.
If
this
does occur
-
that would vacate
his
.
To
·
elude
.-
~ rapISt, the w9mau
.
pity for herslef. She could te}! him revising
·
-
rape
;
laws.
:
But
position, which would then need to be filled by another
person.
·
Our
·
~hou~d
•
either
·
.
outwit
him
·
she's pregnanto
_
r handicapped
oi
lawmakers
-·
.-
often
·
agreed
·:
that
_
()oint
is
that there would then
-
be two positions which would
.
require
'
.
e':Ilotlonally, as
.
one expe~ ad-
that she had f?een raped by h!!r
_
traditional rape laws had put the
appropriate settling in time•and training and
.
that wouldJurther halt. vise~,
•-
~r
defend
h~rself
·
stepfather ~h}.le
-
an adol~~cent
·
_
'!r?ng pe~scin
.
on
•
triat
:
_
"Skep-
the student input into
.
executive decisions. By keeping Fred Lambert phys1c~Uy ~s others
.
.
re~ommend
;
··
..
Th
_
e
-
b_estmethod of a~,
_
St<>raska
t
~1c1~m towa~d women
.
was built
where he is only one
,
position
·
would need training and this
,
we
·
feel
,
The
·
rapISt, ~ccording to a
_
.
sa1~, 1s to go ~long_ ~th
him.
'.'If
~1.1~0
·
_
fu,e :iaws -buVit
_
wasn't
would help to make student services run more snio<>thly during the)?enve,~, CO
.
p~lic_eman, usuallY.
- .
you
.
treat
him
li~e
.
a
:
raving
:,-
.n~ce~ary;'' ~ew York Assistant
training periods.
·
.
·
_
-
_.
_
tests
,_
the
v1~tim
befo~
.
e he
,
_
ma~ac~ the,n
_
_
believe
•
m
_
e,
:
~e DIStric~
_
Attorney Jack
_
Litman
·
.
Let it be known then that the
-
editors would like to see new-blood on
,
attacks
.
-
·
·
He
will
.
make
_
some
·
.
won t
.
disappomt you/'. storaska
'.
said,
_
'
'
since it already
·
existed
iri
.
this
campus and that we would disapprov_~ of rtiakihg Fred
Lambert
sugg~tive
·
_rema~k
.
arid
.
if
:
th~. warn~d;
.
:
.
-
-
,
~
·
>
:
-_,
:
:·,
.
_
. .
.
•
-
th~. police
;
:
~e
jury
t
the judges;
Dean of students or the abolishment of the Dean
.
of Studen~ position. reac~1on
·
.
is
·
fr1gptened • un-
_
WM.e college~mstall elaborate
_ .
eve~
_
t~e J?.A •~ of!ic~.
-
What ~
-
e're
We
_
saythissimplybecausetoomuchtooso<>nisnogoodforanyone, c~rtamtyor embarrassment,_ he
.
security
devices
_
to
.
keep gettmg
_
n~~
1s 1ust long-needed
not even Fred Lambert.
:
-
.
·
,
·
·
-
~
.
.
-
.
will assume that the person can
•·
strangers
·
·
.
off-
·
campus
. ·
and
.
balancmg."
,.
·
.
- _
.
-
.
.
_
:
be in~id~ted into
·
·
submission.
.
campus ~en's groups set
·
up
·
· ·
·
·
Self. defense classes,
.
which
:
escortservkes
,
state legislatures
,
.
_
,
,
.,...:;:;
-
.
.
:
_
.
::'-::,,;
~
,_
~·:~~<
~--
.
,
·
.
_
,
>
.
--·
-
'
.
(
:
..
_
j
4~l1
ti~~~gtii!f
:,1~
c;IJ~
;.,1}?£
·.
·
ic:t:
L>::
·--
~
:
.
....
...
.
.
_
-
i·• •
.
;.
;
·
;•
,
..
NOVEMBER 6, 1975 .
THE CIRCLE
Director To Retire
By Kamar Sumrall
''I'll be here until the end of
"Essentially I'll be doing the
1977.
I
don't
believe · in · same work I've been doing since
The man responsible · for retirement. I have valuable skills 1964 when I began working for
mailing campaigns, fund raising, and a
lot to offer any Marist. The biggest difference is
_ and promotional campaigns for organization,"
says
Mr. that, now, I'll have the flexibility
Marist is ?'.etiring next. week. He Dougherty.
of working my own hours."
is John Dougherty, head of the
He will be assisting Mr. Wade; - Mr.· Dougherty plans to con-
Development Office. Although, presently the Dean of students, tinue working "as long as I am
technically, considered retired, who will be his successor, and able to." After leaving Marist, he
he will continue to work for -temporarily, continue to work on intends to offer his services
.Marist as a consultant to the Alumni News, a tri-monthly elsewhere, although, that won't
President Foy.
Marist paper.
· be !or another two years.
Gene's Disc.Review
by
GENE BERKERY
Ratmg System:
. ¼
\7olume - poor
½
volume
~
Good
3
/4
vQlwne - very good
full volume - excellent
to the Top
10,
or to the Top 100 for
that matter. ''Tommy'.' . is · no
exception. For some reason; such
as eye stimulation, the music
always sounds better in · the
theatre. "Tommy"
is
a
two' .·
album set .. The original, wllich is
a
full volume recording, is· a
3-
·z_z
Top ~•Fandango" .(London)
album -set. ·
.
·1t
is somewhat traditional that
The vocals of Ann-Margaret,.
Development Director, John Daugherty
HEOP
Helps
-Frosh
PAGES
wh_en a band comes.up to their
. Oliver Reed and Alison Dowling
fourth album, a live recording is
were good in the movie; but lack
!JY
Karen Duverney Jackman
training program and have
made witlf previous materlal. ZZ
depthin the albu,n. This is one of
training sessions throughout the
:Top fias _broken this' tradition and Hill,, · bass .and Frank Beard, the faults in "Tommy." The main · The Higher Education Op-
year.
· released ·an album with side one drums. Side one
.of
"Fandango't faulus· the factthat nothing can portunity Program (H.E.O.P.)
There are two students to every
.
live, new. material,· recorded at is _pure live-rock and · roll with compare to the original "Tom- has gone into their third year of counselor. The counselors must
, <'The \Varehou~e,"
Iii
New "ThundeJbird," ·. · "Jailhouse _my" which is going on _eight the Peer Counselor program deal with problems which
Orleans, and side two done.in-the Rock" and "Backdoor Medley." years old.
offering freshmen- a· counseling developed before the program
studio:•-
./
.
· · . · · · · . · ··
It
is.recorded very
:well,
iµainly
«TheWho" are good but do not situation with successful up-
was started. Before 1972 there
.. ZZTcip
is
a
rock and ro!.l bapd · because
0
there is no studjo. gim-
play up to their. ability. The perclassmen.
·
were no counseling services for
from· Texas which consists of mickssuch-as added voices. Side .. bright spots of the album, few
.
-
the H.E.O.P. students.
Billy Gibbons, lead guitar~ Dusty two
is
equally good with
''Blue .
and far between, are 4'Eyesight
· The Peer Counselor program is
"This year. it is hoped that
· ·. · ·• ··· ··
·
· Jean Blu~," "Balinese,"
and
to the Blind" with
Eric
Clapton, also a training program for because of the positive support
their .current radio hit, "Tush." "Sparks,'.' the ''.Who,'' "Pinball. future leaders in the MariSl given by the peer counselors to
.
If
you·have.a chance to see
zz ..
Wizal'.(l.". by .. Elton. John. and cotmmnity.
the freshmen, the attrition rate
,. Top
in
concert, you af.e a~ured of Company a.rid "Acid Queen" by
O
be a peer counselor students for the Higher Education Op-
having. a r~ckin?.'time.
If.
not, sit Tin,!J'umer. · .
·
. · ._ . ·
mySt be in the Higher Education portunity Program
will
be
. back and·: ·enjoy_: their ·.·.album• .. • ·
·
The movie was . good only , Op~ort~nfry Program, they _muSt . lowered and the · skills of the
which is rated .at
full
.volume, ; becauseir:was stimulating to the be s_ocia y and academically counselor~/ will be enhanced,"
-especiallyj;ide otje_: .... ·
>·, ..
·.
·
· , ..
:eye,c Ir•yQu want to hear.,'.,'Tom-· suc~essful, and they muSt be able says Jackie Curtis, coordinator of
' 'Tommy''.-·~
d
Sound
tr
adc) , my?'• buythe,original. '·':';l.'ollllllyJJ to K~ep -~ther persons problems the_ Peer Co~~s~lor program.
Ii:===.===.=====.=.=.=.===.
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•_-{P<>lydorh::Yi
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.
'
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.sounddrack--is,,r:ated,.at;,¼-:.
s.onfldential:
.. ·.. · .. .
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-0-0-----0--------
.· .. S l c a t k '
,'_ . .
·.
.
The'--Marist-College Tlieatre. -~e tit1e;role of Jane will be
Unelaim.ed
.
·.
. Guild wm ·present'a musical,
:;.played
by Chris Seaman. other,
s
h
I .
h. .
·
.
.
:
"l.eave.It:To Jane,'' November actors include, Tim DeBaun as
.
e · o ars_ Ips
· 112A
.. l_bany Post Rd.
20-22
at'7:30 p:m. and November Billy, Leslie Sprinstun as Bessie,
_
-
.
23
at 2:00 p.m.
in
the theatre;
,.and
,J.R.
Dempsey as Stubby . .
· The play;· directed by Glen
General admission for the play
Hyde Park
lGrand Union
Shopping
Center)
- Res·urrection
plants
.
s,o<t
·ferns·
r-eg.
$1 ~50
Now·
.ONLY ..•
ITALIAN .
.
.CAMBIWSCO
.. 9-9
..
1h
·..
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BTL
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1~99 VAL_UE :,
-.:: ~~LJ{RGESTSE[ECTION
:. ·. OFWiNE
& :
LIQUOR ··.
· JN'Df.!TCHESS COUNr.Y"
..
-;
.
'·
.,.
·LIQU_O~APttA
HYDE
PARK
MALL~·-RT~9
. ·/ NEXT
TO
SHOPRt''f~- ·
Cassale,. focuses on life on a is $2.0(t Marist.· students will be
· college campus in the early admitted free.
·
·
· 1ooo•s.
·
AIR
CONDITIONED
.
.,__
-
XOUISIT
ROOMS
229-7720
NEAR
GOOD FOOD
♦
POINTS OF
-INTEREST.
♦
At
Reasonable Prices .
.
.
u. s.
~OUTE 9,
HALF ~ILE_
N~HTH
f?F
F.D. R.
SHRINE
...................
r11-cUTTlll
1.
. _· Ul'IISEI HAillCUT.Tll'IG
-
Call 454-9239
Closed Monday
·Thursday.·11
-,9
•·.;,
·:··
..
;
.
~
.
;
;
'
... ·
'
,•
:
:
..
'
,·.
.
'
. 3 Ube, LY Street
On
the
Main
Mall
Poughk~epsia, N.Y.
12601
;
Over $33,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, grant&, aids, and
fellowships ranging from $50 to $10,000. Currenflist
of
. these sources researched and compiled as of Sept. 15, 1975.-
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS
11275 Massachusetts Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90025 ·
□
I am enclosing $9.95 plus $1.00 for postage and handling .
-------------------------
I
·
PLEASE RUSH YOUR CURRENT LIST OF
1
I
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS SOURCES TO:
I
I
I
I
N a m e _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I
-1
I
I
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I
I
City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
State
z·
I
I
· - - - -
• P -
I
I
(California residents please add 6% sales tax.)
I
L---~------------------~-J .
r--------------------,
I
I
I
I
I
1.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
RIP THIS OFF AND SAVE
1
I
AT THE
1
Houseplant
·
Shop
:
I
10%. OFF!
ON ALL PLANTS
WITH
THIS AD
NOVEM~ER
6-13
I
I
I
.
I
I
.,._Highest Quality-Wide assortment of c;ill size potted
I
I
·
plants an~ hanging baskets-Personalized Advice .
I
'Main,
'7HE..
. ·
1
all .
F1ZM
·
313
MAIN MALL
1
1
·
·
·
· · · THE
Open Mon-Sat 8:00-6:00
l •. . 4'Fkf)t
:/TY" .. ·
.
-
Thurs
'til
9:00
I
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PAGE6
L
THE CIRCLE
'
.
·
In the time it takes to drive
for
killing
.
young people are m~st
your friend home, you could save
.
often other young people.
his life.
·'
. .
.
.
.
_
Take ten minutes. Or twenty .
.
If
your friend's been drinking
.
Or
an
hour. Drive your friend .
.
·
·
too much, he shouldn'tbe driyi1,1g.
:
home.That's all
.
If
you can't do
The
.
automobile crash is the
•
•
that, _call a cab. Or let him sleep
number one cause of death of people on your couch.
_:
your
a
·
ge. And
the
ironic thing is
.
W,e're
not asking
you to be
that the dru~k drivers responsible
a _doctor or a cop. Just
a
friend.
:
roRuN1<'.'oa1vER'.,
oiP=i.
Y* - - -
·
7
·.
I
BOX 2345
.
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,
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ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND 20852
···
.
.
I
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l
~~nt to save
·
a friend's life.
.
_·
·
1
~
I
Tell ~e.~hat
_
elseJ ca? do;
I
My name 1 s - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - , - -
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Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I
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City
·
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State
Zip
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...:.._
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J
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'YPt 111 im;111,,w ~AM
:
IY All\"ho11Yu>\IMll'rt
-:
~.
NOVEMBER 6, 1975
IF YOU LO A FRIEND DRIVE DRuNIC1toU'RE 1() FRIEND.-o
;
I ~: Ill
l',\10
\IL:-. I Pl
111,"~l'llll
1,\
llll:-0 • '<Al_
lll:-.,\1, IIIGIIW,\Y 'l'RAFFIC SAFF.TY AOMINISTRAf:tON
.
·
,
·
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NOVEMBER 6, 1975
THE CIRCLE
Harriers Capture Title
Led by Fred Kolthay's record-
31:13 clocking. Charley Gysin, was _a very strong team effort
setting individual championship, still suffering from a physical when you have five of the first
. the Marist college cross cowitry ailment, placed 39th with a time eleven runners · in · a state
team proved that they were the of 32:56. Seven teams competed championship meet against some
best in the 9th annual New York and 46 runners finished the race. top teams."
State Ups~te Championship held
· Marist won the team cham-
Meanwhile the Marist B team
last Saturday on the campus of pionship with 31 points. Niagara ran as 'the varsity at the
the Rochester · Institute of University was second with 39. Collegiate Track Conference
Technology.
Despite never Plattsburgh was third with 87; St. Championship at VanCortlandt
having
run as
long a course as the John Fisher fourth . with 97, Park. Paced by a very fine
5.7 mile distance, the Long Red Oneonta fifth with 145; R.I.T. performance by Will Morrison,
Line showed their strongest sixth . with
156;
and
St: where he ran 27 :50, the B team,
performance of the season (and - Bonaventure seventh with 157. running against some of the· top
~robably _ever) as they placed Last year Marist placed fourth teams from around New York
five men
m
the top eleven of the while in 1973 Marist's first year in City, were able t~ place 12th
race with three team members the meet,. the team placed sixth. among the 23 teams that had
being named to both the state Niagara beat MaristJ~st.year as varsity squads there. Also rtin-
cross country Hall of Fame and they placed third while
Platt-
ning
for
Marist in
the varsity
this year's All-State first team. sburgh · won and Albany State race were Ric · Bond, Bill
Two.runners were named to the placed second.· Albany did. not Krernpel, Steve VanKeuren, .
second
~
team all - state and attend the inee~ this year so that · Steve Meier, Cp.ris Pofcione;and
another Marist runner' was · they coufd ~:"participate in the· Dave Schools; finishing in that
named to the _third team an· -
Capitai District , .CoHegiate order for Marist. Quint Johnson
state.
Chahipionships with Siena, RPI, · placed 13th and grabbed a medal·
Fred Kolthay set a course· and Union College. However; -in the-JV race there while Tom
record of 29: 27 .2 in winning the Marist beat Albany one week ago Gibbons also ran in the JV. race
Jndividual championship by, 6.8 in th~ Alt?any Invitational and for Marist.
. .·
_ ,
secondi,_over Steve Heinbockel of was expected·: to defeat them , This Saturday the entire team
Niagara University. Bob 'Coufal again in this meet . ·
. . · ; -completes its regular season with
and Brian Costine tied for fifth
Coach Rich Stevens called the a double - dual meet at Van-
place with· 30:22 clockings. All performance ofthe itarrierstruly · Cortlandt
Park
against
three of these were_ nameclJo the outstanding with a-_ wolid team Manhattan College's JV teani
first team all :. state and Hall of · effort.
"It
was our best- race of and the varsity team from
Fame. Marist then. showed its the year aswe had hoped. We StonyBrook. Marist brings a.19-1
massive strength and team depth handled the extra mile-over our regular season record into the
PAGE?
· as Tom Luke placed eighth with course nicely._- St.
John
Fisher meet and a consecutive win
30:26 and George Mccutcheon . went out too fast, but our boys did streak of 17 at Vanny and a
eleventh with 30:31, bothWere not go with them and exhaust season win streak of
18
into the
named to the second - teani all ~, themselves. I heard many nieet:
.
A double win would
state-team. Jeff Blanchard was comments from fans atthe meet establish a new Marist record for .
named to the third team all - state who were highly impressed
with
20 consecutive wins.
Fred Kolthay
OB
his way to a new Marist course record against New
Haven last Wednesday.
(C~CLE photo _by Fred Ashley)
team as. he· placed i1st with . a
our team st(ength and depth. It
Freshman A
Key To
X-C
Success
byTHOMASMCTERNAN
.
the varsity.
.
most steady and dependable most dependable runner," was runners on the squad, Charlie
This year is no exception. In runner all year, usually our 6th inthe CACC, 16tlrin the SMU, Gysin, worked his way up to the
J'he I~ong RunningUed Line fact,,-this year's newc_o:mers second man in dual meets and and 21st Upstate, good for third tciptenbuthasbeenhamperedby
closes oubits. most successful comprise .t~e. strongest addition · fourth man in big meets.»-
.
team all-state. .
physicat-ills as of late. He was
season in history-• next Saturday eyer . to -Jl;!~JJe~W,>;~~,i~,(:9!!94-~.LµKf!i::..,w.l:11>~,came.~~o ,.M~ri~Lto.! c.2..An,. ~merlc:all j;tuuies major,
well
enough to
win
_the
J;
V.
race
·at the NCAA Division
III
cross~ freshman record
has been
broken "get'an edU:caticin, nieet people, · ·Blanchard - came to _ Marist _at Albany with a st_i:ong
22:22.6
· country
-
, ch~mpionships/ : in on ,virtually. every course-• they and· run".also played basketbaU· because
"it is small
and per-
clocking for the 4.25'mile
course ..
Bosto_n. This weekend they take
a:
competed and th_eyhave qad five and baseball on an organized sonaI,.has an excellent brand
of
Earlier he placed
third in the
J.V.
19-1 regular season.record to Van tosevenrunner~_in the team's top level.
,
·
education, and offers me a race at SMU and was ninth in the
Cortlandt against Stony brook and ten every meet. Even Stevens
Bob Coufal is a graduate of chance to continue my running CACC. His best finish with the
Manhattan
(J.y.).
They hope to conceded,
"If
they were· a Maria Regina H.S., the same . career."
varsity was fourth place against
extend their unbeaten string at separate team, they would beat school that sent us George Mc-
· After a strong start, Ric Bond Siena here Oct.
18.
Vanny to
19.
·
most of our regular season op- Cutcheon the year before.
has
slowed down and dipped to
A graduate-of Roy C. Ketcham
Already this year Marist has ponents and would have a win- Currently ranked fourth, Coufal eighth in _the rankings. "Ric ran H.S. who lives in Wappingers
won the CACC and the Upstate ning record."
·
set the. school frosh record too much speed :work and ran too Falls, Gysin is taking up business
New York championships, placed-
The top five freshmen runners
(26:47)
at Van Cortlandt Oct.
11,
many races over the summer," at Marist.
second in the SMU-Invitational, include Tom Luke, Bob Coufal, finishing just 10 seconds 6ehind said Stevens, adding, "The
"Charlie has been showing
fourth in the Albany Invitational Jeff Blanchard, Ric Bond, and Kolthay's new· school record. beginning of ·our season was the constant improvement until
and fifth in the Glassboro In-
Charlie Gysin; Currently they are "Bob ran there often in high end of his physiologically."
recently," notes Stevens. "He is
vitational. A trtily remarkabie all ranked in the Varsity's top ten school and always runs well
Bond, a Mathematics major very strong and very fast and
record!
·
. .
· runners.
A
short biographical there," noted Stevens.
·
from Cicero, N.Y., was the should be a good half-miler in-
Once. again the team has been sketch on· each,.follows.
-
He also has finished 23rd at team's fifth man in the Glassboro doors."
· led across the finish line by junior
The top runner in the Class of Glassboro, tenth at SMU (frosh meet with a time of 26 :47. H also
With only one senior ( co-
co-captain Fred Kolthay. The '79 is Tom Luke, a business major course record) third in the CACC, placed eighth in the CACC, just captain) and the promise of more
incomparable Kolthay, ·who set from Warners, N.Y. Luke, who and made the state cross-country missing all-conference honors.
newcomers next season, it seems
course-records. while capturing was
X-C MVP
in his senior year Hall of Fame by placing fifth in
Bond, who also took up that the Foxes will have to seek
the CAC_C and New York Upstate at West Genesee-H.S., set a new the Upstates· last weekend,
wrestling at Cicero H.S., came to new worlds to conquer. But first
individual titles, has . been the frosh . record for the Marist "Coufal always comes through
Marist because he was impressed is their trip to Boston next week,
·Red Foxes' number 1 man all course when he covered the 4.7 for us in the big meets," praised
with the "academic standards and the freshmen will help them
season. But one man does not
a
miles in 24:49 against New Haven ·stevens.
· .
.
·
and the depth in the cross- : conquer the "runner's world" of
team make, and Kolthay has last Wednesday. He also placed
A
resident of Merrick, L.L, · country program."
, the NCAA.
been aided by the strongest and 21st at Glassboro, 15th at SMU, Coufal came here because
One of the most improved
deepest group of runners ever 27th in Albany, 2nd in the CACC "Marist has ·a good psychology
assembled here at.Marist. ·
and 8th upstate, where he (hismajor)departmentandgave
HANDICAPPED Cont._
· Eve'r . since Rich · Stevens qualified for the second team all- me a chance:to continue run!llflg, wheelchairs;
became.head coach in 1972, the state. ,
f
Jeff Blanchard, the sixth-
. Long ; Rwinmg Red Llne. has
Currently fanked second on the ranked member of the team,
2) classes and activities
shown·strong' improvement_ a_ nd team, Luke was a surprise to the hails from Penacook, N.H., special space has been given to
·
- ·
--
t d · b th accommodate
wheelchair
.developme
__ rtt each yea_ r. A_ bia coach. "He was strong in high where he also compe e
m
o
-
40
·
..
k tb
11
t students in the classrooms, the ·
reason'for
this
is the continued school, but.has really come into track
and
bas e a
a
theater and tqe
gym;
_ addition of quality freshmen that
his
own here at Matjst," Steyens Merrimack Valley. H.S. Blan-
3) Meals in cafeteria _ at-
proviqe
an
immediate boost_ to commented; "He has.• been
~ur,
chard, . who .Stevens called "a tendants who assist blind . and
Fantastic ~cisb: (from left
to
right) Jeff Bla~cbard, Ric Bond, 'Bob Coufal, C~arlie
:Gysin,
Tom
-Luke. _ :
(CmCLE
photo
-by
Fr~
Ashley) . ..
..- · .. -
_
.· . · : _ . .. -· -
, .
. .
. _
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..
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
wheelchair
stufients
have
minimized the difficulties . in-
volved in carrying food and
trays.
.
.
There are students here at
M~rist who are so severely
handicapped that they require
round-the-clock attendants for
their daily needs. Arrangements
are made to house the student
and his or her attendant in the
same room, provided the. at-
tendant
is
also registered here.
Funds for the services provided
by the office come from the
college and a grant from the
Health,
Education . and Welfare-
department (HEW) of the federal
government.
NEXT WEEK: A
profile of Joe
Hines
·
·
HYDE
PARK
ARMY
-NAVY
10%
DiSCOUNT
g<)OD THRO N ~ WEEK
·oN RT. 9
j
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NOVEMBER 6, 1975
Quarterback Plin Colangelo (18). running off triple option against Oswego as Dave Pilon (44) and
Mike Altomare
(22)
look on.
. : · -
-
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.
···-··
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--
-
.
--~ Gridders.
Dro
·
Wn•.:Lakers
:
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•
•
•
- -
•
a •
•
•
.·
- - \
·_
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•
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byTHOMASMCTERNAN
·threeplaysto)heViking30, but. year's-match iri·--which .. the
Jim"Van Voorhis (left). reaching for two Points
with
Oswego
.· .,
Dave-. Stankavage· booted: .a
~7-:
Vikings scored two touchdowns in ;: defender in
ptirsui~ ..
(CIRCLE
P!!)!OS
by Fred As~ley)
Quarterback Phil Colangelo_ yard field goalwtih 5Jl.5.g~ne by ·the final quarter of the ~24
..
·· plunged for two touchdo)!ris and to make it 1~3.
. . .
. .. · .shocker, .. commented, ~','!'hat.
the VikiJig defense c~ine _up with
:
·_, Marfat came back following the touchdown .:·(I>Uon's) was" a big
several key playsto spark M~rist lfickoff on ·
a .
78-yard drive . that . one; ·I felt that .if we didn't score
to a36-19 victory over Oswego ended· with• Mike Altomare· they_ would come bacK' and
. State
at
Leonidoff-· Field ~satur.:. carrying' the•·-final five: f<i1>l'>'i possibly wiri.'.'
C-
.
.
High
On
~ports
----
-
By
Thomas McTernan
day. ··
.. _ ' : ·
,
~
· ·
· seventh ;TD: o,f the sea: :·
i. :
There·. wbas really nothing to
"lt
was the best:: game we AUoniare'who gained U3 yaro in .
,W<>I:I'Y
a
ouk ·c:I'i1ike · Laffih'
. played all year," declared _head:· 18 carries, also had the big gain in recovered.
a
Lak«:!r fumble ·on the
·coach Ron Levine. "The defense the sedes,
a
37-yard'sprlntdowri
:·
kicko.ffllut Marist'coJ;!Idn't:move ,KOLTHAY NMIED ATHLE~ OF
'.fHE
WEEK
played. very _strong and the of-i ·
the
sideline into Laker tefritory. > .the b~Uand Trotta. was shorton a
· fense made few mistakes.· .. •
_
, ,
Trotta's kick opened up :a -21:-3 53~yard field goal try.~Roh Clarke
_ Fred Kolthay, a juriiorJroni'New. Hairiburg,
N. Y.,
has been named:
· The -·first key -defensive play bulge,.·rriidway•: through.:, the ·~hell_:.~a~e
_up
w,ith J}is · secorid
Mar.istCQllege:Athlete of the.Week fe>r the w:eek ending November
1.
came ,when: ·linebacker: Bob period.
·. ..
. ·•.
., '· -
-- mterc:ept~on of th_e ga_me cind
ThismarksthethirdtimeKolthayhasbeennamedtotheaward. ·
CunningJ)afu'intercepted a Laker
Before the sparse crowd could returned it 21 ~~rds ~or hissecond
Kolthay, ·nuinber·.r man ·on the Marisf cross- country team, set a
-
p13ss
giving Marist.PQSSessfon on ·· ~~or the score!:Ron Osinski, the ·TD.,of .· t!te _ year._ Jim pesmond
new.course re-cortl at ~ I While.\Viiiiling the individual championship
the Laker 39, Colangelo wasted visitors' open-field threat, found found Jim
,V~m
Voor.his ~oi_:,.2 -intheUpstateNew.Yorkchampi9rfshipsandthusqualifiedforthefirst
·no time coverlng
28
of ·them on an opening in
.
the left side ofthe points f'-nd.a 36-10 margin.·
..
··
. team·all-sta~e~ Last W~esday he set a new record for the Marist
· · . the gr~und himseµ _)Jefor~_scorillg .- V_iking line and gallopeq_ 61 yards- ~: }'h_e_ ~eferu.e, , espec_ially: Jo~ course in a meet withNew,Haven and Vassar. .
· .
· "ff<im
tlle
two with 9:07 remaining ·
for,;
the
·TD ...
stanka¥a~e ::then __ P~tte,nburgh, :Bi!Jy· D~~<Jer,ry ..
->
.· · · / ., ..
:
·.· · ·· · .-· ·
·
· ··
·
in the quarter. Tim Trotta made·
-
. bo,oted ·the pomt ·after to·narrow, Punenna, Mike:. ~hlitte, Cun-
.NOTES FROM
THE
SPORTS 'DESK:
the.:J>oinLafter for a 7-0lead. the lead to_, 21-10 with\ 4:58 _ningham; :Pagano :an.~:,,Clarke
•
· ·
''
-
.. ·
· · · ·
. Neither:: team· could manage
·_a
remainllig in•.the third
:period;:'.<
-1imited.-th1:
00
visitors)tojust;,204 : Aside~fr.om- the Vikings\36-10 win over: Oswego Stat~,there were·
first down the:·rest of. the period, . : . ··• N'ick
~
Mancuso
:
flllllbl~
,_
a
way ,. yards; a.11d Just 171 .. on the' gr:ound.. some big upsets in.~lub football last: weekend as ttie ~op
teanµ;
,in both·.
~uttl}~ y_i~i~or~_ <>Jien~~tile. second. ~a.~st's _final; chan_ce:ofthe' th.ird~.
::cM.e~r\Vllile}<tlleiV~irn~s;;_w,e,re_
.th~ ~et-8, .Confer~n~e ~nd the National Clu? Sports Associatio:11
_ quarte,1;rwi\h .. ~;:dtj~e~._th~t: put
1
.
peri.~ :_aiul•· .!he;:':~k~fSL;ot.ook.:.:::a~~g~up;"~4:();:rar4s_:~?a~tAie.~. ra~mgs suff~red_their.firs~ defejlt: Pace, commg off
an
lf7
wµi
over
t}Jl;l~
~n tile ·Yµung 6 . .with a -!1rst possession ;
~t.
midfie,lq:·
,J}Y-.
·
th,e
.- _.big
:_ Lal{er,,,def~nse,: ;_ ; Y!,~-~;w:er._e-:_ Matjst,, ;held,, 9ff. rj3rooklyn -: 1
~
12
in: Brooklyn Frida:y.-.
night. The
_ !i<l':Vfl~,,~Itji_
Pag~~o the!} made the :-'- s~~, .. of ~e. ~inal '. Q!Jart~i:,_, ~he
.
·
abll: t~
~~
to.t!!,1; ~!)rners, : s~ted
·-:-·'Kingsmen·n9w:Iead
Pace:in_the-Met-8 standings
by
only a half-game.• •. • • ...
· second. key '.Pl?~\ irlterc~pting-' ~n : v1S1tors ha_~ moved_ tcr;
t!te.
VIJt~g ..•
Le\'.!11~.· ,
)J:11al
IS:
~Ile.~ key~ t~ ·
oµr · •
Ionas~ocked: NySNs top :: ta.nked
w
estche~ter
17:~4
as q~rterbac_k
: attemp~ .pa~m.the e.n~c:zone 30; Butthed~f~~.~-13ga_mheld_1ts .... offell$e as,~~,do~t•h,~v~_a ye.ry, Pat Garvey:c.o~ected on a.22-y~rd 'I'l}_-p~ss to_J1m0Idin·.\!lth:27
and returnmg 1t 67sards to, the · gro~nd 'and ,an incomplete· pass ·., stro!!g, offensiye line. .·
~. · :<·<
secon~s remairimg. Westco was 6--0,and their defense had allowed an
·r;aker:,:. 35'. ....
,FJ-ve
'plays>· .. later · on fourthdown at'.the-28 returned :
•··
.. ··Sat~rday:the-Vil{irigs•.travel:to .. average of3'poin~ a ganie .. ::: Top'.gamethis. weekend is Brooklyn at
Colangelo.
i:;~ri
four yards,
~~r
:the the .ball to ~arist with 1~:
25,
l~ft; Jamaica, t~.·Jlleet t~e R~dmep ._of Io~a tomorr.o\V n~ght,
;If
Brooklyn wins they dinch the Met-8 title., A
.TDandTrotta•s PAT made 1t
14-0 .
,Dave !>Hon,· who-gamed
·
76_ St. _Joh!) s. :'!,'he RecJ.niel), are.
~~d
loss,,1!,l_)w~v:i~r,- will :give both"Tona. and Pace-a.chance to pass the
· with 11:
0I-t<!
go in ·the· half. . . . yards in 12. attempts, led: the bf the_, rushing o~ :.b~cks Charlie
King~inen . . : :In other_Met-8 games·: Manhattan beat Concordia· 23-20
.. Oswego St;took advantage of . _Vikings on a 72-yard march to the- Vito a?d. ~al_ Ali and a_, str~ng forits first wm:since,1973; St. John's' blasted. F.D.U. 33-7 . . . Con-
one of the few offensive mistakes,-- clinching· touchdown wi~h- a defensi~e line,.t~rm~ by Levme;. ference· stats show several_:Vikings ranked second in
·individual
-· a fllillble by C_olangelo; to get on plunge fronl : the one .... Trotta's . as "possibly the best m the con~
statistics: Mike .Antomare in !"UShing
_and
sc;oring, Phir Colangelo in
- · the scoreboard _in .the third fourth extra point made.it 28-10 ference.
passing,.Jim Van Voorhis in receiving, and Ron Clarke. and Mike
quai:ter. The
.
Lakers managed with 6:14 left. .
·
.
.
.·
-
. ..
- - - -
Laffin
iri
~terceptioils...
. . . .
•·
·
.·
.·
,.·
only
t<:>
~ovethe ball
ty.ro
yar~ in
Lev1ne;'.·:_-~exµen_1ber1ng last
... .-
.~The
Mans_t
cross -..
-cowiiry._'.team
plac~d
s~.
~erS _on the_ seven ..
. , - ... . ., -r., .. · . ,. . .
L< .. :·
.
m~nAll~~CCte8-m-1:hey~re:FredK~lthay,Tom·Luk~,,BobCoufal,
. . . ..n..Oo ters ··.·.
Os
e..
~~r4go~i~~~~~gd:~~~i:i~~\;riet~i:~:~~::R~a~!~~
- ··
· -
.
·
.
··
· ·
·
Club of America ·cross : co11Dtry championship at Van Cprdlandt
. But.
R
e.t ....
J,ii,,
Lead·
:::~-.f~.~~:~~din=~:J.~~~u~::::i.~:-~fuaw~
· --
thr~e ~. ~an.
basketba~.
toUnJf.trr;tent·
Was. scheqµIed ·
to
begin yesterday
by
THOMAS
MC TERNAN ,-
.
to :their narrowJield.,,
session.' The second· atthe 2 :5<> :while men's and women's volleyball begins n~xt pmrsday, Nov. 13 ...
, - · <
,
,
·'•.·
Ray' Boa. and Steve. Kon~ 'mark;-was 'the res~lt
cif
a
fine -Don't forget: .the 11_!,tram~ralTu,~key Trot ~ill,be_ h~ld Monday, Nov.
After suffering their first stantiniois scored for the
win".
passing,-combination between-: ~4· · ·
. . · · .' ''. .
· .
-
. ·•··.•
,
.
0
,
•
-
•
defeat
of
the season at the hands ·· ners,.both .early in the first half.
Zerione and rus·brother, Firminci;
.Ramapo ~emamed
10
contenti_o!i for the .CACC soccer title with a 3-2
of we~t
'Cormecticut_
S~te. in
Marist ·outshot West Conn ·•12-11 · .''He (Zerione) ':.and Finnino wm ove~ ~mgs•~0nday. IfM~ristand Ran?,apo end the conference
· .Danbury··1ast :Wednesday,· the
anikJ~y Metzger., made nine
have-been playing on\heirown," schedule_m _a_tie th~ team with great~r:differenc~ b~tween __ goa1:5
. : Marist soccerteain bounced back
saves m_ goal. · . .
.·
_ noted Goldman/'.'When he passes scored and allowed.will be declared chaJ?pion: SoJon
.
t be surpris~d if
from
a::
2-0
deficit Saturday to.
That- '-'.casual" ~tyle continued · off,andmoves t<.iward the goal he Red Fo~~s show.no .mercy ~n.Bl_o9mfi~ld.nexLTuesday. ; .. ,Mixed
wallop.;;.Siena. 9-3 at· Leonido!f
iri'.the first·pertod against Siena. , becomes'•
a
d()uble' · threat." doubles fmal of M~ri:st TenIUs, Touz:nan1ept ha~ been pq~tponed . . .
Field
!D
their final home game of, The Iildi~ns got goals from .Rick · Golclman ·Je~ls that ·• tlie · Red Freshme.~:crew beat I~aca last we_e~end,·Jj~t.\\'ome_n}os~,~gain.:. ,
the year.• . __ -.. · .·• _ , ., . -.
~ ... Griggs and K.ev_in _Guthrie;_a~d , Fo:ices Jiave·- been relying-· too .,B~th men s~nd women_s bas~etba~ teams _have been pr~cticmg smce
·
. The 2-0.·Joss_ to
.the
Colomals. had a·2-01ead with 7:12 to go. m -much on the Naitza twins. ''There mid"'9c,tober
.
for season openers witll Iona ijov. 29 _at l)utchess Com- .
. preventedMarist, now
i0:.:1;
frcim'··:the
ha:lf. -
~
. . · ,: . • : ·- ·
·.are ~lev·e_n·g!lysout there-and no mumty Coll.ege. Full coverage of.the 19!5-'16,b.as~etb;:ill season ~egins
clinching·.· :.their
·first·
··CACC
Goldman :attributed the poor ma~er }iow good two of .them · next week llJ,;~e CffiCLE..
'
·
·· .. - • -. "
.. ,
championsliip;
It
may·.onlybe .a: start.to: two factors.·"F'ir~t;·.tlie··, ma:j"be~ everyone else also has to . THIS-WEEK IWMARIST·sl'OR.
ts
(Nov/G~l2). ·. .
.. , - :
· •
'"short delay}howev~r, as the 'Red: wind was against us and second,. ·play well/1 /-
. . . .
.
.
.
Foxes·:can wrap it :up
0
with a· a team thatis winning.tends,to_ : .. Th~·visitors.cut the'Jead to 5-3
· Saturday, Nov. 8 - S9ccer: at RPI':1:30.p.m. - Football: at St.
. victory:J>ver .winless ml_)omfi~ld.· lose_some.of-theiraggre~s.iveriess . .wllen •. Mik,e'.l)~rioyin;h~aded-in.a :John's . _tp;m.
:t
.Women's.c:rew, ~. at'Wesleyan·~·c;ross
·
Country:
m·New.,· .. ·
... -J,er. sey Tu_esd
.. a.
Y.~·_:'.-·'.°': -.· · •.: .
..and c __ o. ncen. trationi!' . He .. · a .. cld
.. ed,-.· c<>.rri,e. r
·
k
..
ic
.. k.J.rom ... T. om.·.
N.
a_r .. o. li
.. ·. •.a
.. t · ~anhattan (
JV),
stonybroqk • at Van Cortlandt~:.c:
n
'·a.m~·-·- Sailing:
· -
··
:Minor·Regatta -
.
atWebb:. • .
···
,,<·
..
•':'· .. ··· .. •,. .
· ·
·
· ·•:::- ·
.Danny- .Wakely - scored four
"After those- two goals we ·-19_:14. John McGraw got,- 1t b~ck.
.
.
. goals arid Zenone .·
Nai~
·added
·
changed.·. our.
attitµde ·
about :the. two minµtes Jjter byJwnverting
a ··
.'.Sfulday, Nov. 9.
~ Sailing: Minor.Regatta at Webb:: ...
·
three :in: Saturday's
.
non-league· game·."
< · , . • .- .•.
. .
·
ce>rn·er .kick ·from :Zerione;~ TQen
~~da~,}iov: 11 :'-~ccer:: ~t ~ 1
<>.
0~~~ld
~
~,:;3~
I>~~.-
...
· contest: Zenon_e also, had five·
·
Wakely started __ the_· change;· Wa:kely and Zenone combined for
.
_
:'assists';:as·:-he set··new schoor :fjurstingthroughthedefense'arid· twomorescciresbeforethe·subs" ,.,..
·
t,
'8 E · -t'b ll
··c.·
1
,4-c-· c·
S
·.-
•
C
:season··records· for/ goals :·(14),,
'taking
a:beautiftil lead pass fyom took over with13:0ileft: Russell
1,.1.
e -
'00 .
'ti.. .
./1-_ , · .. ,
occer -
- · · Lassists:(14) and ·l)Oints _(~).'. Anf .:Zen_one,which tie d,eposi~ed to_the Beckley sc.ored the· finaL goal;
..
there•ar1fstill.two gam:es:on tl}e .:.Jower: right <:;c_>rner pastlndian ~assisted by McGra-w; at ~1:5.3. ,
-:-... Mets Football
.. · CA.CC.SOCCER
·.
· · schedul~_-afteryesterqay's tough goalie;·-George
.Ulrich;~
Marist, ·:The Red Foxes-outshofSiena.·
w
L.
T .
·
•w
L .-
. , . gain~jit Km.gs •Poi~~< _: . _ . , P}llle<;l ~ve~ ,at :2~2: whe~ ~none· ~7~11:·~j~ Da~o ·mad,~f~ursaves.. Brooklyn .
. 5
1· ·
O .·
MARIST, : .
·4~---
i
:·, ;'.l'hEfGolo~1als;closmg.out;then:_- 'centered a:pass forW~kely fr9m m t!le.;first -J}alf and?'Metzger Pace~:: .
.-----
·4
T
I .. ·
Ramapo·
" --
;r:-l ·.
-.. ·season•after.defeating Kings.-two .·•the_.corner;:Wakely:heade.d
·
it:to
·
-.addecLanother, in .. the·.second:··
·:·1ona . .-.;' .... · ···
. : ..
,f·
1 •.·1 ·•••.W:·Coiln-St·
-•• 4' 2-_·:· .··"
1
~ayll
_eafHe1\''.-were' really up for, · ~ c f s rg~t."-i,t_ll
5:33
le~'in''the ,;_:.·.•·~efore
getting
a_..c}:lance"tciwin .·.MARIST .
-
-<.:3
';,2
-o:-
:.Nyack
,
:·· .
-·.•.·.• .. ··
...
··.··.·_·.·•.·.·· ..
!l_-.·.;.•· ..
•.~2.·.·.·
·
··:•·:
·
··
. t./~\••~f~f?t~t:13Jf
~~
.:-~~~~~ri;~~tjf~~;,;~j~;~::g;en •• : ..
~;::~:fi:::~~;!~ttl-t;Jt!J{
,
::~i:t~ -. : .
·
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3
0
1
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:·::· ___ .·:.·
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·•.·.·.· .. ·:
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. · :'coacJi'..,.)fI)oc~r:··Goldman.'~:J'We
:WIµttru:e~qUICk·gO~ls,mtheJu:s.t .. wttlra·strpng··ijPlJeam'iri\Tro}"·/'F;D;U>~----.
.
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t~_e"_/fin~!.,•
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---
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:;.:::.:);_.;:~·:~. · ;:~::~, .. --~ _
.
:
,-
-
.;
15.7.1
15.7.2
15.7.3
15.7.4
15.7.5
15.7.6
15.7.7
15.7.8