The Circle, October 30, 1975.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 15 No. 6 - October 30, 1975
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THE CIRCLE
VOLUME l6,-NUMBER 6
· .MARIST COLLEGE, POUG~KEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
OCTOBER 30, 1975
/11,ter-House._Council:
-''Freeze
Student Funds''
Gampilii Terms Request
''lJestructive ,,
"More destructive than con-
the validity of Ermish's position. Council include: Dean Lambert,
structive." · is how business
Kevin Wolfe, president of. In-
co-ordinator, Dean --Cox, Don
manager/ Anthony.· Canipilii terhouse Council feels
-the
Honeman, Dr. Italo Benin, and
termed lastweek's request_by the allocation of funds was not students Kevin Wolfe, president,
:Inter~House Council to freeze performed "legally"_ according George
Gainbeski,
Denise
student activity funds. The In-. to the constitution. Wolfe also Gershki, Ellen Benoit, Ginny
terhouse Council is an elected stated, "We realize sonie people Albano, !<'ranees Sariabrie,
group of :resident_ students in will be hurt, but this effects the Reginae·
Green,
Michael
addition to faculty. -and ad-
general attitude held on student Labackas, and Joan McDermitt.
ministrative -representation· government"
· ..
·
The present-situation of the
formed to legislate campus ~wide
-· On Wednesday, October . 22, student government is a result of
residence policies.
.
· Kevin Wolfe, representing the last year's attempt
to
institute. a
On Monday,October 20, a final Iriterhouse Council·· apprQ'1ched ne\\'..• student government con-
draft was voted on bythe .Council Anthony CanipiHi-•. with the stitution. In April of last year-a
memoers to present to the req_uest
to
freeze all funds. group of· students felt the con-
: student body in
-
a le_tter ex-
Campilii, at this time stated he stitution was in need of revision.
pressing
.
their feelings on the believed they had legitimate
It
was presented to the student ·
:allocation .of stu~ent• funds_. concerns· ·but also felt their body and voted down. As a result
Presently studentfunds are be\ng request was channeled in the student government elections
allocated under- the direction of wrong direction. He did noUeel under the old constitution, were
past Vice President and acting the freezing--of funds. was· the not held, appointments to the
President Chip _Ermish.
·
The action· needed.
~
.
financial board and t.o the juclicial
· Interhouse' · C::oµncH questioned
· Members of. The Inter-House board,_were not made.
~
~~=-".-s'.-'-i-
1
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3
l-,:~-~-:-b;__'i,~,e,:_----y-,,_j·.,;·:••>·•··,:::.:~~J;~~~::~r~!~!~!·~!:!·f
::.'·
·
~;g:,
be
. c··. ' . : . .
.
·L··.
·i·
men in the eyes oUhe law.·. It
jg
prohibit~d. Preferential treat~
,,..
. . a. ~p.u_
·S . •· .
··z e_·
_A lecture on .the Equal RighUi neec!E:<1 to cl~rify t~e la~ and e. n. d
mentof w'ome_n would be _ended.
.
•-• .,.
_ _ ... · ··
_
.
. AmendII)~nf was given on the mcons1stenc1es m court
Locally, the supporters 'of the
-
··
·
"
·
·
Tuesday evening, October 21st, in d e c i s.i on s
i n v o l v in g
amendment are organized into
Students · in th_e Community · large sample of 20-25 perc~nt in Sheehan Hall. About 25 students discrimination based . on sex.
the Mid-Hudson Coalition for the
P~ychology class, under the an effort ·to assess more ac- attended the·explanatory lecture Personal privacy .. and private
Equal Rights Amendment and
mentorship . of -Dr. Mclean·, -are curately dor:-m living. conditions. given · by· Mr .. Steve Lipton;· a relationships between individuals
the opponents of the· Amendment
planning a field survey that will .. Conseque_ntly, if through the graduate of Coli1mbia Law would not be affected in any way.
call- themselves "Operation
attempt. to·. assess · various. at- process of r;mdom· selection, you School.
·
·
-
Similar provisions in fifteen other
Wakeup" a coalition opposed to
_ tributes of dorm life ·at Marist'. are chosen to assistin this· sur-
l'h~Equal Rights Amendment, state constitutions · have not
the amendment.
This survey is the applied part of ·. vey, the students. 'would ap- whi~h :will be ~n. the ballot _this disrupted family life. Laws based
The meeting was organized by
the course which involves the predate your•. sincere effort in, November, states:. "Equality of on real.· physical· differences. Judy Strigaro and· Bob Galenz,
second hall of .the semester. The completing the· question: items .. rig~ts under ~he law shall not be between men and women would
and was sponsored by the
first
half
of the. course dealt with Data analysis and interpretation -
·
.•. demed or abndged by the S~a.t~ of still be valid,_
Political Science Club. Mr.
the theoretical groUJ1dwork out of - will be conducted by the students Ne~ York ., or . any subd1v1s!on
Opponents ·of· .the · proposed
Lipton is a member . of both the
which· this survey has gr_own. _
· and forwarded to. the campus tl)ereof on account of sex." Like amendment state .. that the . Speakers Bureau of the Mid-
. The. questionnaire .that will be community in' future'. Circle. ar- · t~e proposed federa_l .· Equal amendment. _
1s _not, needed
H!!dson · Coalition for· the Equal
used is a standardized test en- tides. A formal presentation will. R1gh~' Amendment, 1t wou!d because legislation ·already· Rights Amendment and the Mid-
titledthe University Residence · also be• given to all interested require_tga.t sex not be a factor m · · prohibits · sex discrimination in
Hudson Chapter of the American ·
Environment Scale: In addition _administrative personnel and all - determmmg,the legal rights
.
of· employment, extension of credit, -:--.Civil Liberties Union ..
to the
URES,
the students have intereste~ students With the men and ·women.
-- - hous_i~g etc. It might affectthe
At the close of the meeting, six
.. devised a brief open -~·- ended class~s• suggestions of initiati?g
.
As a propone~t of th~ amend-
trad1honal role of women as students signed permission slips
questionnaire asking stu_dents to poss1b!e cb~nges. Future. m- ment, Mr .. Lipton explained the ho~emakers and threaten for their names to be used by
comment on either.
·
areas of· formation -will also be pr.ov1ded legal ramifications of · the pr~sent'
family . support supporters of the amendment in
campus life.
.· . , _ · ,-
'through periodi~ announceme~ts amendment and ·spoke against obligations. It is uncertain how
advetisements ·
in
local
•. The survey conducted',by the • on WMCR, Mar1st.College Radio. the argumen_µ;. raised. by )hose· far the. courts. would go in in-
newspapers urging the passage
studen~ will. uti~ize _an unus:ually
·,
·
who
do"
not support it. ·
_
terpret~ng this amendment.
of .the amendment. . ·
Suppo_rters.oUhis amendment _Singl_e-s~x scpool~, colleg;es,
• say· that
it_.
would establ.ish clubs,
dormitories,
toilet
-· Sexy.a.lity -·
l)ay -
Set
.,,..
.
.
•·•
,.,·
·,,_
'
_A :Symposium. on Human OBSs64N at the· New York •·
Sexuality will be held Tuesday, Medi!'.!al College::' .. ,.·;_·
tibrary
to
Feature
.-
,
.,
...
--
...
--
'
.. November
U,
1975. §ponsored by · Dr. 3loan's talk will·be followed .
.. the Couns~li!1g Center . and . : by workshops in the dormitories
Ca~pus • _M~ms~ry, _the.:. Sym- designe_d. to . gi~e students a
pos1wn w1U begm
WI
th .. a . panel .. chance . to .. discuss· issues raised
discuss!on: :. ''.The · .. Sex-µal during the ,day, to ask questions· ·
~'Tattle Tllpe"
Revo!?t10n_ :- Has There .. : Been and to probe further into the issue
By Claudia Butler
~
such a way that if a person leaves
One?,
Ch~ired
_
by '-Dr ... Italo of sexuality; -
.
the Hbrc1ry without having
Be~m, • .with paneli~ts. f_rom
Topics_ of discussion. wm · be,
The new Library in Fontaine che_cked out ··-their books, an
y~nous_ prof~ss1onal d1sc1plines, "Love and Sex,"·."Our Bodies, will be. equipped with .the· 3M alarm,will go off,,. explained the
d1scu~10~ · w1_H be held at. 3:00- Ou_r .. Selves,'' '' Anatomy · and 'Tattle . Tape' secu_rity "system. ·rnrector of Leaming Resources.
P:m. m Fireside Lounge.
• .· Identity "
and "Styles of
l'his. systein, the most widely
Altl1Qugh the · system will
-At 7:30. Dr. Donald Sloan- will Sexualit~."
· · ·
, u~ed :in. the country, will cost . reduce the casualtheft of books it
speak in the· theater. His topic: ,.. ..
.
Fihns will be shown
iri"
the ~pproximately $16,000 to install. may present another problem.
"Let'.t _Talk: About Sex;'' Dr. Campus, Center from noon on "The·system will pay for.itself "In the past,
if
a person .took a
. Sloap is Co-,D1rector of th,e Sexual ,through the afternoon. A special within -four
)•,~rs:
,The Marist book without having it checked
,Therapy Center at· New . York .dinner
wm
be--served · from 5:.00 library has an estimated $2,000t<> ; out,.. it. was .,.
_
sometimes
M~~icaL College,· as. · _w~ll as . 1Hn.,with speciaHnvitations and.
,$3;000
worth of book~ stolen ~very anono,mouslf: ·retµmed _to . the
Assistant Pr<>fe~~or,and·D1rector · rates for ,faculty, staff. and year;'' :said Vin.cent Tosca·no;
library'. But now, due to fear of
of_
P~yc:~ps,:Ill~tizs, _?epartme~t.
,corrimut~rs:,
"The books ·will be ,treated in' being caug~t by .the ,system,
a.
student may cut out the parts of a
book which he needs," said Mr.
Toscano.
.
This · practice is especially
prevalent when te_achers .assign
readings to be done· by their
· classes in a book which is in the
1
library. Mr. Toscano feels, "that
w:ith the cooperation·· of the
faculty this·
0
practice can be
eliminated.
··If·
tear'lers · · assign
readings, they should ·make sure
they provide enough' copies of the
readings for their classes.';
\ ,
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1
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PAGE2
•
THE CIRCLE
The Mllrlst College CIRCLE IS the weekly newspaper
.of
the students
Of
Marls!
College and Is published thr01111hout the school year l!xcluslve
ot
vocollon periods
by the southern Dutchess
News
Agency, Wappingers,
New.
York.
·
David Livshin
Mary Beth Pfeiffer
GigiBirdas
Gregory Conocchioli
FredAshley
ChipErmish
Tom McTernan
Patrice Connolly
. Joan McDermott '
Brian Morgan
Larry Striegel
Co-Editors
Associate Editor
Editorial Consultant
PhotographyEditor
.
Ass~tant Photography Editor
Sports Editor
.
Layout Editor
Business Manager
Advertising Manager
•.· Distribution Manager
Staff: Dave Kazdan, Gene Berkery, Rich Burke, Johri Reilly,
·
Ken Healy, Gene Heimers, Tom Hudak, Jack McCutcheori;Mike
O'.Shea, ~rry .Striegel, Patri_ce Connolly,
·
Er~est- Arico, Gigi
Brrdas, Bill Bozzone,
.Claudia
Butler, John Byrne, Daniel
Dromm, Karen Duverney, Mary Foster, Fred Kolthay, Barbara
·
Magrath, Philip Palladino, Pat Perretto, Dave Roberts, Ed
Rubeo, Wi?nie Saitta, R
_
ich Sellers, Kamai::
-
Sumrall, Dorothy
Teevan, Tina Ira~a, Julle Schott, Peter Van Aken .
.
Eliza-
•
beth
·
Godl;out.
.
.
·
The
Right Thing
·
-
-
·-
To
.
Do?
;
THE CIRCLE
OCTOBER 30. 1975
Commentary
For Wo
:
tnen:
:
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,
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,
• .
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The Need, FOt,Self-Defense
..
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.
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•
f
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·
•
. ·.
By
s.
Lenaei:ts
·
.
make women dependent on
'
theni.
·
.,
positively
· __
thrnl!gh
,'
the
- •
deter-
.
.
·
·
·
.
and C.
Murphy
.
·
Men ~ave
·
thtfpowe~ to
_
assurhe
'
.m~atioiJ.
.
to
::
do
'
somethi11g
:
more
.:
~
>
.
Much to the chagrin of the really
_involved
with cornmllllity
:
·
control
·
over their verbal
-
and conc'fete
; .
'
i
:
e;;
'
self'
.
',,
defense
.:-
-
.
CIRCLE editors, a threatened activities, instead of
·
motivate WASHINGTON, D.C: RAPE
-
physical aGtions, whereasworrieIJ
.
-c
Qeveloping
,
~aggressive
:
physical
financial "freeze" inhibited· the those it sought to touch. -We feel CRISIS
.
CENTER
..
·
·
do riot;
_
..
:
~
:
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...
·
..
·
_
.
·
and
•
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ri)ental
~
capal:>ilities through
·
publication of last week
1
s paper. thatit was a rash decision
-
which
.
·
-
· ·
.. :.
·
...
. Whatu. a woman Jo do? First,
.
self
'
~
t
defehse:can ad<!JQ
.
the
·
op-
.
The CIRCLE would like to extend did. not take .. into
..
co·nsideration
Rape
·.
constantly
'.
reminds. all : she
_ ,
.
n~eds
·
to
actualize, thi'.s
>
W>ns ~
:·
wonia!l
:h~s
in a,n attack
,
an apology· to the Marist Com-
the possible consequences.
.
... .
women
of
·:
their
physu;:al
0
.
repressed
.
'anger
,
and. turn
.
Jt
,,
situation,
,
This
.
1s the
:.
hardest
.
.
·
munity
.
for having been unable
.
to
The
.
CIRCLE is
:
making
,
an powerlessness
<
vis,a-yis
·
meri.
·.
olit"'.ar.d
',
· :\
Women·
.
..
. must,
)
_deci_:;ion .J~r
_.:
m.arif
:
_women
:
,,.
to
.
'.
fulfill our weekly responsibility. appearto that silent unflinching Because
•
wohieh
..
have
·
;
been
.·.
therefore;
:
resist rn:en'.s methods
:
·
·
mak,e,
,
l:>ut.: once it is made,
·
.
she
· ·
The Inter-House
·
council
·
who
.
blob
·
.
which makes
-
up
.
the socialized to
.
be passive; and· Orie
:
way
:
Jo
.
~t~rt)sto vetbally
.
.
nas
·
a
·.
:
resp
_
orisJbility to
,
herself;
.
,
_
attempted to initiate
_
the freeze, majority
_
of
the st~dent b9dy to
·
because
,
~
they
.>
·
have
.
been·
.
Jash
,
back afa hassler
._~
IgnoI"ing
,:·
·
aridJoother:Womentoen
·
courage
~ .·
·
.
were
·
doing it
in an attempt, to
_:
_become mvolv:
.
ed
m
'
·
our
_
com-
discoura~ed; or
:
prevent~d froiTl
.
th:em
;
u~11a
_
llydCles f!<>_flVOt:~
f
il.1¢~
>,
.
t
_
~e le
.
a~in~ of ~~lfo
:-
:
p.efe~se
:
;•
·
:
·
motivate
·
those people in our
·
munity _a'!d e~pr~ss your
.
c~nc
·
~rn
·
.
.
de-..;elopmg
::
their
:
_
·
bodies
:
for fe
.
e.I th~f •
.
~o~e11
c:
ar~:
;,
e~
~
<~
\.
AHq~n_ng phYS!<::c1t
·
~o!1fidence
.
.
·
coriuriunity
·.
_who really
"don't
by part1~1patmg
1h
the upcommg themselves they
.
have been barrassed, hke it or
:
dm).'t·
.
k.J1ow
:'._
1s
,
es~el)tlah
:
111
°
re!!ogmzmg that
•..
·
give a damn;''
.
They were
:
at~
..
'
(though
,
.outrageously
)_ate>
·
,
.
bfainwashedto
:
bel1eve that they;
.
·how
·
to
;
~deal
:
;
lfi:thJ!Je
:·
:co.rffeerts
:
·
./
wo~e
.ff
h~vmg
;
cq~(rotoverJheir
· -
·
·
..
tempting to show
·
us
.
how
.
im-
Btudent. Gove~nm
,
ent ele~tions. carin
.
ot be
::
str:onger
-.
than
?
rile!).
'
: .
Ignoring
:
.•
ver~al
:
.
a.bus
.
~
·.
~nly
i
:
d'"7n
.:.
bpdie
_
~,
:·
cari
:·
a
·
rid s~2,.W<!_!)e
Ji
.
.
.
portan~ a
.
Student
.
Govemment
...
Run.
for an ~ffl~e,
:
campa1g11 on
More
~c
i:mpo11antlr
\
theY
·
_
gelieve·
···
•·
reif!!o_r,ces th
:
e
,
\\1_9~an•~
:
,reelirig~
;-. :-
r~ali~Y.
:
-
:
l3Y takingAourses i~ self
·
~
•
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
:
,
r~all! 1s all_(l 9ow:
,
b,~_dl':,:.
,
'V'le
:s
ne~~
,
,
.
t
.
he
.:
_C::9.~m-~~tEle
_h:
·
.
:
_yo~~J:
·;:
D_o
~
;
th~y, can~Pt
:.
P,r:ot~<!r
,
,
t~emselv~s,
.
, of
_.
po,werl~ssness:
:;
Yelliilg · back
:
··
defense, a
.
WO!Jlan co~~c1_o1,1.~1~
.>
~_.,..,,:.:;.;;
,,.
:
j_:.,,.:,
.:-
,
,
•.
one
+
here, ~t .. Man
.
st::
>
I~
-::
.
.tnese
·
.,,
a,pyth1ps--.-soc
:
_as•-•to
t•
.
av01
.
o.
---,
~t.ie
:::··agaipllt'.E'.)1
.
~most
·.:/
any
:
. ·.:
male
.·l~ts
_
.
;
out
+
r~pi:e,ssed .•
.
... ang~_r,
_
.: ..
,
i:nak
_
esa c:omm
_
1
.
tll}ent J~
.
~cqmre
.
...
r
'
.
behefs,
.
we support rnem·
:
100
.
s1tuat10n' whic
,
h
~
.
occur~d
-
l~st
:
aggr.~ssor.
··
Thus;
•
fe~lings
.
of·
.
· drrectmg
:
•
tk
t~\\'.~I"<!
·
_the·: p~rs<>Il
_;;
a,
:
~~!ll
,
for
~
h,e,,r~elf, .'fy~~itl
_
ol)a,!ly,
_
percent. ~owever, the CIRCLE week. :We w:~r-e
.
v1~ually
:
:
d~me
_
d
_
anger against men are
:
all ·toQ
;>
who deseryes)t;
'-'
furth
_
er~~r~;Jt
~.
a
·
-w~I"Qa_!1_}1al?1keptJ1er
.j
b~dy
:
in
·
'
·
-
-.
;
·
-..
cannot abide by the mean~
:
they our v01ce <>n
-
~arn~11s beca~se_J(!r
.
.
often. .r~pr:~
_
sse~
;'
.
e
.
spec.ially on the
>
sho~ks
.
the
·
man'.
·
Su~h
~
sunple
Y
shape
_
for
m~
_
n;
~Y
-
!eai;ni!1g self
·
-
.
..
soughtto employ
.
.
.
.
.
: ·
i
__
the longest t~~.
·
no one cared
i
streets.
,
_
·
· ,
:; ·
.
'
· ,
:; -..
·
.
.
action marks
·
a begummg of a
.,
--
de
.
fense she is keeping it
m
shape
. · ..
.
The primary effect
.
of
a
freez
_
e
·
e!1oug!1 to
~
_
_st~p J~i~
.
.
in
_
evitable
..
:
Perhap
f:
:
n
·
otliing
>
'
.
can
..
woman defying her passive role, f<lr
-.
h~rself .
.
Doiri~
_
son.:iething
:
for
:
-
.',
_
would have been to bring to a s1tuahon}r?m ansmg.
-
,
. ·
_-
demoralize and frighten a woman making shaky
·
the
-
f9undatioris
'
oneself;rather then ~or
,
men
/
1s a
grinding
halt
those lVho were
-> ·
.
·.
'
·
'
·
quick~r,
.
th~it'
'
t_he nu~erous in~
.
which allow men easily to
-
assert
:
Jc1rg~
step in redefining oneself as
__
sults and potential
_
assaults
..
cin
--
their
..
violent
.·
and·. ~exual
'.
a
wonian. Self - def~
__
nse cannot
-
Kicked For A
L
.
.
:
-,
her body
'-
that she musttolerate· aggressions.
:
'
>
c;:omplet_t!lyendsexualassault,
_
or
.--
oss
·
as· she
·
walks in public.
·
The
,
Obviously, yelling isn't
_
always
,
the fear
,
of it, but-it does begin Jo
_..
streets ai-e a microcosm of how good enough - besi~es
'-
a woman
,
end
'
s~rict limitatio_ns
>
ori ~hat
.men feel toward
.
women. Sex and can loose her
:
voice• in . a few women
,
can and cannot
.do,
.
or
·
.
.
.
violence are the tactics men use hours. But the yelling is a first' whete they go, and \Vith w~oin.
TwoweeksagoduringP~rents' Vikings took the field for their
~·
tokeeppowero_y~rwo!l}enandto. steptow~'udchanneling"t_heanger
. . .
·
·
_·
.
.
_
.·· ..
.
·
..
:
.
· :
•·
·
Weekend, the Mar:ist Club 'home opener against Manhattan,
··
.·
·
·
.. ·
.· ·
: ·
,~
.
·
·
.
. ·
..
:
.
.
.
.
.
football team was scheduled to it was the firsttimethey even set
· ..
·
·
·
·
•■■
.
.
·
__
. ..
·
e
·
.
·
·
play Concordia on Saturday a foot o.n the game field.
· ·
.
•
·
.
,a•.Jllfj.........,..,,,,,,.,,,
-
t~:\t~TJB~:~~Yrotf%!~i
~£e~!~!~~::~!;~~~~~g~
-
·<
,
~~~
--
P'
__
?
0
1iU
• .
_.
~~;--~
·
\
_
~\~
.
-
--
-
day. Finally they were allowed to the campus
iri
1968: There is
·
no
·
· ·
·
.
·
\
:
·
-
·
·
•
play on· Monday afternoon, but doubt that football is a big event'.
Bulletins ari
'
d
.
·
registration
A
-new group entitled, '_'Ma11
.
_
Congratulations
·i~
u:1
_
orde
_
r.
only after the parents had gone here at Marist as evident by the forms
·
are available
.
in the Office: Alive
p•
is being fo~ed to discuss
·
D~n
-
Edgec<?mb, Director
?~
the
and confusion
··_reach_ed
;
_a
pea~.
·
-
·
goodcrowdstheydrawwhen they
of Career
n
....
ev
.
e
.
Ioi>m
..
.
·
en
.
t
.
:'.
fo.r the and'
-
study
··
the meaning·
.
of
.
M~nst
_College
_Theatre
_Gwld's
La t
k
t
d
11
d t
l
Th
h
..
·
·
roduchon
'
.•"E.
rn.peror Jon
.
es
..
,"
. s
wee .· i
~ame
agam are a 0'_Ve . o pay.
en. w y
1.975. Professional
,•.
Qilalificl,lbon- Christian
.
life t
_
oday. The-group
P
durmg Homecommg Weekend must
_
t~eir ma~y supporters sit in . Test given
:
by
/
the: N~tional ..
will
.
begin w.ith a study <c>f=Mark's
.
\Vas
_
_
.
aw~rded
.
_for : outs\and~g
:
and once again the footpall ga~e the ~am watchmg a soccer game
.
Secur:ity Agency
~
Tpe
'.
a,ppli<:atiori
··.
gospeL
.
Meeti_µgs
:
will
:be held
' ~;
a~h1e_v~ment
•
f
0
t ,
the
•
..
!]lost
-
:
with J:>ace was postponed. Th~s
.
·
a~amst a team whicll; shows
.
up
deadline for the test; which-is.to
,
Tuesday
:
.
evenings at
:
Byfoe
:
prormsmg new di~ector at
_uw
:
.
.
was different; they h~d to 'Ya1t
.
with_ only players?
:
.
.
be given on
-
Nov'embe~ 22,J975/is Residence
at
9;
-
alLstudents
·
are
:
~ew
-
Y_or~
.
st~te The~tre F
_
estival
only two hours past kickoff ~une
~t 1s a fact that the college h~s
November
8.
-Apply early!
c
·
.
c.
;
invited.
·
;
:
. :--,.
•
... ,
: ·
.
.
. .
-·
.
··
.,
~s~~ciahon s
.
·_
r~gtonal
·
.
com-
before they could take th
.
e field;
·
bailed the football ~rogram ~ut of
.
A
reminder frotn
Larr
..
Sn
der
· .. _
·
. :
,
_
,
·
.·
.
.
·.
,
.
·
.
.
,
.•·
•
_.
,
petition ~t
:
the R:ebe.cc_a ~cKenna
__
Appare~tly
_
the soccer team's debt and enabled
it
~o contmue.
that his
.
Office
·
of Y
·
Ca~eer
·
On Thursday; October' 23,Rev .
.
~
Theatr,~
:
11\
-
~e~
_
Pa}tz
:
"
~n Oct~~e
.
r
.
gamew1thYorkwasalsod~layed They saw the beneflts
·
and ad-
··
nevefopmenthasmovedfoRoom E.e
·
ggy
:
Muncie
:
~m
·
}~ad
:
~
:·.
2
.
~th;
:..'.-
~
•
·
..
•
·
·
·
· •
·
.
··.
·
.. ·
:
.
.
·
.,
as the York
.
pus experienq~d
·
vant~ges
.
that the program
c-
125. Feel free to dro b
sa
O:
discussiol)
:
on/'.Women and
:
Holy:
;
-
:
pie
.a~!1r_d
~as
.
pre_sented
_
by
trouble on tile way. Onc_e
.
agam_ contributes to
.
the ~ollege. But. hello and
·
fainiliariz/ yJiirseff
·
orders•~
-
itithe c~ndlelightRobrri
the associatioils adJ'-!dic.ator,
;
Dr_.
'-"'
·
.
the football t_eam an~ it~
_
sup-
_
how· c_an th.ID' suppo~t
.
the
Y{ith \he new location.
: . ·. ·..
atp:15
>
Everyone is-invited to
·
l~~~PP::P~J11so,-_andsigned·by~!1e
.·
·
.
porters were mc?nveruenced.
program when they
_
cant
.
even
On ·Friday, October
31, .sul)"'. b
_
ringtht!ir
;
diiui~rand join
ill
the
.
:_
re_g1ona,l· chairman:, :lVIr:
_Al
.
It
~at_ters bttle
-
that the
_gu~rantee-Jhe
team
~ place •on porters of the Equal Rights· talk
:
>
-:
_
·:
·
:
.
•
.
.
,~:::
· . ·
~i!?~erwa.1.d,
,
and .tne as.sociation,
athletic director also happens
,
to
.
which to play? There
.
is no doubt,
Amendmentand
··
~~presentatives
.
.
_- .
.-
..
..
.
.
.
:
pre~ig~~t!
¥r-
l?_etf.'!r ~_dman..
l:>e the coach of an undefeated
.
also, that ~e team lost hundreds
·
from Dutchess County Women of
·
The Office
.
qf the Ilegistrar has
i
·'
·
;·
•
.·•
·.
<
>
..
·
.
:
·
soccer team. But 'how
·
could the
;
of
.
dollars m revenue due
:
tg the
New
-
York
will coriducf
:
a debate aniiowicedtheweekofNovember
/,_·_· .
.-
>
:
:
'
.'
'
. _
fieldbe\unplayableldue to rain one( eve1tt~
.
_
of the~e
:
past
,
_
h!o
.
in FirE:side If>unge at 12:30 P:Ill:
10
_-as
--
~~
·
week
/
ill.
~
w~ch
· ~
-
:
(
· .
-::_
:
t,
--:J
':
week and
.
the next
week
.
ll
_
ave a
;
,
weekends~
·
.
.
·
•
...
.
.
.
.
.
1
•
··,
·
-
·
·•
registrahQns
:,
for the
·
Sprmg
·
•
....
.
~
<;
·
soccer ga!lle played in a
·
.
down-1
'Ille CIRCLE f~els thatthe tlffie
·
· In~er-semester
_
excursion to Semester wills
be
accepted~
,
•
·
.
·
·
pour? ThlS hardly se~ms con- has ~ometor _the footb~ll.team to
_
"!
Mexico:
.
.
•·'
.
.
.
.
S<!hedules
•
and registr
11
Uon
.
:··
·
.
sistent .
. ·
Maybe
.
the field was _rec~~~e
,
a
·_farr
allo~atio~
.
~f
·
the
.
A
10
day tripto
·
Mexico City. is (o
.
rms . .will
·
be
:
IJ}ailed to
·
•
all
.
·
being ''saved"
--
fQr
·
.
the_ Nyack
·.
facilities
.
(1f
_.
not money)
~n~
no
.
s
,
c9eduled foi::
,
.
J411n~~1!' 5.-~5. The
·
st.1:1derits
.
by
;:
Nov,
·
6. Course ad~
:
·
,
game the following
.
W.ednesday, lofl:ger _suffe~
_
from
_
the preJ\ldices.,
·
Pr11!1arY of?~us . wil~ be
·
on ~
.
e
-
.
visors can
.
°Qe
·
picked up
,
'.at.the
--·
but it got "chewed up" an~ay•in of
.
a hig~~r-supenpr.
A
method
I~difill:
.
civi~iza~i9n~. an?
.
Mex~co
;
switchbo~i:d in ponnelly; Friday;
Monday's game,
..
.
_
...
. ·:
·
.
•
•
for.handling such disputes.sho~d · _City: it~elf. Direct1;11g
-
-~e ex-
Novembe'r. 7. If a
·
schedule is riot
·
.
What doel? ·•matter
:
.
is that ·
.'.
th~
--
·
b~
.
formul~ted
-an~
'
~oth
:
parties· .. cursion is Br~; Maur.i
_
ce
_
Bibeau of
·
· received by
.,
Novem~(lO, please
.
football team. is being
.
i
sport
,
: sho~d; strfYE:
J?
'.
9wckly
',:
se_ttle . ·the.
,:
Dep~r;11_1ept
.
of
:-
_f\1od~rn.
:(!ome
·
to'lhe
·
Office
;'
ail<:i pick'up
;
a·
changed
·
.
time
•·
aQcl
·
agau:i:
:
Th~y
,
_:
their d1fferences
.
\Vl_thou~ frictio~ .
.-Languages,
~~ist
_
e.d
.
bY.
:·
s_en1ors
,
copy .
.'
':'.
:·::-
:
7:_
;
.
>;!
.'
' ·
c'':
/
<. .
practice
_
on a dug - up
.
f~elt;Lth~t
,
<
;
}\Te s~ould ~llkeep
m
11_1~cl
that_it.
·:
Ma~
;,::
l{ol_o.r
_;
:
.
and
· ·~
M
.
arie
--
.
,
qu~t~
:
...
;-
I,f
istotlie students advantage
..
:
~~:
lacks
:
gra~
,
;
but
_
riof
,
:
~o~ks
:
tha_t_
:
is
t~~ stucl
_
~nt;- tlje ~thle
.
te
-~!}~
~
tpe
:
.
,.
troc~9<:<!hl
: ·
•
F9_r
..
f~~
.
~her
_:.
111~
to
'
r~gi*tef
.
.
ear~y
'
{
t.6
\:
insur.f
;
.: :.-
.
have caused s~veral
__
mJuries
..
to
~
Jlln
;
wh~ will lose
_ot~~r,\VtS~'.
·'.,
·:
f~r
_
mabon
..
c~1_1t~
_
ct..
,
Brot~~r
-.
priority.
•
_
,
•·
·.: _>
·
·
· ..
•
,
.
;:_:
,c·
. :
·
i~
.
~ia~~ts'.
i.
~n
-,
!~~Y
(
~?~;
/
~
:
i~
::_-::
,
t_·
·
·
:
·:
. ' ) · ;
:.
· . ·
,
)~t~a~~~~O!)
:
~
:
_
·
,
:
-,
_.·
.
:·:i
..
::_.
·
> , __ :
:
"'
-
-
-
~
--
.
.
>
·
--
•
· ..
.
•,.
·
,.
·
·,
·
,
.
·
•
.
.
...
.
'
.
..
~.
.
.
-
--
.
,
...
OCTOBER 30, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
·
Present
Cox District Coordinator
Tense
the following conies from Fr
.
for this more natural product as I
Richard LaMorte:
·
try it again each year. My taste
·
·
· has certainly changed over
·
the
8
October 1975 years - meeting different people,
Dear Ralph,
-
·
seeing different situations -
I
The rain that you serit
.
two guess you pr?ctuct was outdate~
·
weeks ago re1,1lly made tllis place a
_
nd
_had
lost its- flavor. I guess 1f
a mess. Its not
,bad
enough
.
that
.
we listen to the customers we
c;an
they are digging all:over, bµt
riQ.
_
W
k,eepthe p_roduc~
~P -
to - date.
-
the campus
_
is a cross betwee11.
.
a
..
.
Im certainly gou~g to try to get
'
-
marsh and quicR ~sand.
,
By
:
the
_ .
people her~ t~ try 1t at least once.
way, you should ·see how
·
the
.
After.all, 1t_Is natural,
.
they ca~
chapel leaksjn those hea.vy rains. take 1t wherever they go and 1t
Si1:1ce its yolli:
.
pla~e, if you don't
:
certainly ~an give
-
one stren~
mmd, I guess I have
.
no beef.. The
.
when they re really down.
J
'YlSh
heating
.
·
you're
,
having
·
put
:
in is
.
though
.
that you would r
_
ec?ns1der
coining
.
aJong
:
wel.L
·-
..
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
giving
~r
.
away -
-
your ms1st~nce
You know, after going to school
·
that
·
there must be
.
a cost
.
is
_
not
in
. ,
the
•.
Bro:rix, working
.
in
.•·
always a help, especially with
_-'-
Poughkeepsie
·
~nd then
·
working
.
·
these people who ~.on't invest in
Bicentennial Youth Debate
(BYD), a national program of·
public speaking activities for
young people, announces the
appointment of Gerard Cox as a
District Coordinator, according
to lrene
·
R. Matlon,
·
Northeast
Regional Director. As a District
Coordinator, Mr.
·
Cox will be
responsible for contacting high
schools to encourage their par-
ticipation in the program,
stimulating COll!.IllUriity - based
activities using BYD topics and
formats
·and.
administering the
district level competitive events.
Professor Cox assumes these
responsibilities along with his
busy schedule at Marist College
where
.
he
.
is currently
.
an
Associate Dean. F<>rensic
:
ac-
tivities are certainly not new for
Cox
.
In the past he has served as
President for the Miami, Florida
Catholic Forensic League, the
New- York Catholic
·
Forensic
League and the National Catholic
Forensic League. P~ofessor Cox
holds memberships in the
American Association for Higher
Education, the Eastern Com-
munication Association and the
Speech Communication
Association,
which
·
is
the
organization that is sponsoring
the BYD. Cox has completed
graduate work at College of the
University of New York at
Hunter, FordhaniUniversity, the
University of Miami, Colwnbia
University
'
and the R.C.A. In-
stitute.
.
BYD is supported by a grant
from the National Endowment
for the Humanities and is a
project of the' Speech Com-
munication Association. The
program includes competitive
events with winners at the local
level
progressing
through
district,
.
sectional, and regional
events to a national conference
and community events, in which
BYD speakers present programs
before
civic
and
service
organizations. Events begin in
late September, 1975. Topics for
the three BYD events, Llncoln -
Douglas
Debate,
Ex-
temporaneous Speaking and
Persuasive Speaking, are drawn
from the American Issues
Forum. Conceived by Walter
Cronkite, the Forum's calendar
of monthly topics provides a
cohesive
framework
for
discussion of major national
issues in
the media, the
classroom and the community.
Any individual under 25 who has
not received a bachelor's degree
or its equivalent is eligible to
participate in Bicentennial Youth
Debates.
For further information con-
tact: Gerald Cox, Martst College,
Poughkeepsie, New York 12601,
tel. (914) 471-3240, ext. 296 or
Irene R. Matlon, BYD, Amherst
Regional High School, Triangle
Street, Amherst, Massachusetts
01002
,
tel (
113
l 549-2810.
in
·
RhineclifC -
pushing your
.
·
just
.
anything.
·
.. ·
'
product
~I havethe feeling
:
that
.
Well, I have to go now .
.
.
ljust
n
.
.
·
·.
T
-
.
..
M .
.
we're
.
going to have slow sales Wc!rited to let yciil know that I got
.. ·
·
.
.
.
a
.
.
zr
_·
_
y
l..,...
es
·
·
Hz·t
a
rz·s
t·
here
:
at Martst. You know why.
·
here safely and I've got a pl
.
ace to
• •
I,
·
Manypeople
_
niay-not.realiie ye(
·
stay.TH keep in.touch.
·
:,
.
;.
.
·
.
__
·
-· that
<
we've
<-
made it a
·
more
·
·
.
:
·
·
·
.·
.
.
·
·
·
··
·
·
.
Richard
·
.
By Phil J>alladino
Dolly Russell were the judges as.
.
i:iat.ural producL.I'm trying to
·
:
..:
-
p:s.
Keep the colors corning on
to who is clean shaven. The
telephone booth, and flag-pole
sitting."
·
•
·
.
show them .that- we've
_
removed -.those trees. A lot of people like
The
c.U.B.
Social Committee, contestants will have until
.
,
the
·
artificial color,
·
preser-
the ones you've chosen this
headect"
_
by
chairman Jim Friday, November 21, to grow the
The C.U.B.
-
SocialCommitlt!e is
allowed a certain amount of
money for social activities. They
have sponsored mixers and
dances. One idea in the making is
a weight guessing contest. The
idea is that students would guess
the weight of faculty members.
There is one drawback, as Bres
stated, "We're not sure that
faculty members would like to
have their weight exposed.·•
vatives,
.
and
.
_
·
additivel>
.
.
season: Also, if you remember
·
a
Bresnahan, is
,.-
sponsoring a longest, shortest and grubbiest
Sometimes
·
orice
''
a
.
person has lot of.people have
~
a~ked me to "Beard Growing Contest''.
It.
beards. A bottle of liquor will be
gotten
·
a bad taste in their mouth
.
:
,
recommend the football
.
team to
began·Thursda.y, October
.
23.-Jirn awarded to the winners of each
its hard to
·
get thetn
_
to
·
\try it you :.:.
,
if-you could make.the "Bres'1Bresnahanwhenasked category.
again.
'
I
must a'dmJt ihot1gh
;
I games, it would be al?preciated.
why _ this type of activity was
The contesLwas also open to
think if they try it; they might like As yo1;1 can ,see,whenit comes to
taking place, stated;
·
''.We're any faculty member who wi~hed
~
it
_
.
:
You
·
knowcthey're o!der
:
now' basics they. haven't.- forgotten
trying to add things to the college
.
to be involved. This was the
:
arid
can
make
-
more reasonable
·
your line.
.
•
. •
experience, just.for the hell of it." perfect opportunity for students
judgements
:
thart they
_
could
-
hi
·
·
_ ·:
~EI~ID TO: Ralph The committee wrote to other and faculty members of Marist
.
.
high
;
scl:leiol. ,
·
......
•
•
.
.
.
:
·
.
.
.
Parad1s_e Village Esb!tes
O
colleges for suggestions, but the
.
College to get involved
·
with a
·
.
I must say,I
~
fmd1~g new us
.
es
·
Heaven 00000
idea for a Beard Growing
_
Contest typical college prank
.
Bres stated
·
seeme~ to be the
.
bestone .
.
-
that it
"correlates
to other old
The C.U.B. Social Committee is
trying to add to our college ex-
perience through ideas and
suggestions for getting students
involved.
All contestants reported to the college pranks,
·
such
_
as eating ·
.
.
.
Campus Center at 2:00 Thursday, gold fish, trying to stuff as many
·
· :
:'"'
-~
,
:
~
,
-
•
..
.
·m
·
·.
·
.
.
:
a
·.
·. ·.
· ..
.
·
.
·
·
•
·
-
'·
-:
equipped withshaving cream, a
.
people as theY could into a
·
·
.':·
·
' ..
':-
..
.
·
-
·
e
·
.
w1·
:
s
·-
>
· ·· .
.
o
--
.-
·
.
·
·
e
·
v1
·
ve
· ·.
·
-
razor a towel and the name of
. :
:
< ::
·
. •·
..
·
•··: ,,
.
i
'
·:
·
.
·.
·
·
..
·
;
·.
·
. ·
·
,
.
_
theif'favorite liquor. Bressaid,·
P"------------------------
·
:;:i~t
2,'~
j
:ri;~~;;
c;"~ifJ!
:y··<
1
·
·
~f1;i~~~rriii~~~~ii
.,·.B
,
~.,~i%bJ~!!
... ,
.
.
.
'
.
•:.
,
ByPafPerretto
approved and money allocated,
·
-
•
-·.
..
there will be
a
guarantee
.
of the
'
'.
.
There
ate
not enough extra
.
:
publicatic>n of a Ma:rist literary
· ·
ctir
.
ricular
.
activities
·
on
.
the
-
magazine, namely the Mosaic, in
c
·
ampus
_
·
·
that
deal
.
with
.,
. a professional
.and
-
consistent
aciidemics," says- Mr .
.
Robert
·
.
manner. ·~There are a number of
.
·
·
Lewis
·.
of
·
the·. English
.
Depart
• .
.
people around who
•
write
...
and
nient.-Mr.Lewis and.a number of there· should be some way to
interested students maioiing in
:
advertise it," says Mr. Le
.
wis.
-·
English or Comxnunication Arts
.
,B_y·
-
organizing _the Literary
have submitted a proposal and a Gmld, Mr .
.
Lewis hopes
·
:
to
budget: to the financial 6oard in
•
remedy
.
.the spotty
.
history
.
of
hopes
.
of reviving the Literary
:
publicc1tion
·
or
_
_
the
.
co.lleg~•s
·
Guild.
.
·
.
.
·
•"
.
.
.
.
literary magazine
·
by vestmg
The purpose iri organizing such responsibility for publication
•
iri
a.
•
guild for English and Com-
·
cine
·
clearly
,
designated
muriication Arts majors
-
is to: 1) organization,
.
This will consist Qf
serve as
a
forum for
:
~
writers, annually elect(;!d
_
and-or selected
·
artists
·
·
and
.
photographers
:
·
on officers and a moderator '!Vllo witr
_
campus; 2) to serve
.
as a
·
group participat_e in the guild's
·
ac:.
which
·
will
sponsor ta.lks and
·
tivjties. Mr. Lewis a).so believes
workshops
.
by. visiting
1
.
writers
.
that the revival of the guild will
and artists in the broad field of "bring faculty
·
and
·
students·
communications; a~d 3) most of togeiher in an informal way.'
.
'
.
. :
an,
.
·
to
·
serve as
.tile
"
group
.
·
SALE ENDS NOV. 8
ITALIAN
LAMBRUStO
-99c
.·
_
.
. ·•
:¥tL
1.99
VALUE
"LARGEST SELECTION
OF WINE
&
LIQUOR
. IN
DUTCHESS COUNTY"
LIQUORAMA
HYDE PARK MALL, RT.9
·
NEXT TO SHOPRITE
·
·
·
resp9nsible fQr the
·
publication of
.
.
a
:
magazin~ . of
creative
work
·
.
. .
- - - - - - - - - - -.... - - - - - - - - - - - - .
.
which will
:
eiljoy_ offici~l
-
~
_
tatus.
·
:
In the past, aJiterary magazine
was published at:the
_
conveni~nce
·
;
of
1
a.II- involved,. .tile last one b.eing
:
·
·
.
:
at the
:
erid of."tlie 73-74 academic
·
yearjf the revival or this guild is
.
Friday
&.
Saturday Nig.ht After
9 fM
-
.
F~ee Mixer For )'ou
·
·
.
·
.
An
_
d
Our Visiting
_"
Group
Of
Girls
_
C
-
all
'
691-2927
!~e're
On
•
Viney~rd
Ave •.
In Hig~land,
.
-~Jusi
Ac~oss
-
Tlie
·_
8
.
ri~ge
-
.
BEER
-
&
·
SODA
·
SPECIALS
Lowenbrau 12 Oz. Cans
3 For Less Than
$1.21
A Case Less
·Than
$9.S 1
.
-
-
~
--~~
·
.
d~
-
_
'
-
·-
~
.
.
-
BUD 12 Oz. Cans
6 For Less Than
$1.56
187 N. Hamilton St;
Poughkeepsie
·
454,1490
s33.,soo .. ooo
-
Unclaimed
S~holarships
Over $33,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, grants, aids, and
fellowships ranging
from
$50 to $10,000. Current list 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
:
oo
for postage and handling.
------------------------
I
PLEASE RUSH YOUR CURRENT LIST OF
I
1
.
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS souRcEs 10:
r
I
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Address
·
·
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·1
City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
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·
_
I
I
I
.
I
(California
residents
please add 6% sales tax.I
I
~---~~ .... ----.... ~-~-----------L~-~----~-----~--~-------J
...
,
OCTOBER 30, 1975
THE CIRCLE
·
Pace Stops Vikings
ByThomaaMcTenian
-
Marist's drives, however, and it the Viking 39. Again given good
wasn't until linebacker Bob field position, Pace could not take
.._
PAGE4
High
On
Sports
By
Thomas McTernan
CREW TEAM RETURNS Ji'.ROM
·
BOSTON
Pace quarterback stu Shepanl Cunningham recovered his advantage and were appa~ently
sco ed
·
-...a
1
th t
d f
t
ped
·th third
d 16
In one of the toughest meets of the fall rowing schedule, the varsity
hit L,/~!~n:~:te~J1"J:e f!r ~~~:361f:~
::i~ :~ :~:~:
fh:p Mari~~ .;_ But
ji;::
steve~~
-
heavyweights placed 19th out of 40 teams in the "Head of the
.
Charles"
two points late in the third Vikings able to reach the end was called for a personalfoul that regatta before 50,000 spectators in Boston Sunday•
quarter to give the Setters an 8-7 zone.
made itfourth _and_ one instead.
Vesper, with several members of the U.S. National team, won the
.
upset
.
win
over fifth -
-
ranked
Mike Altomare bulled in from The Setters got the first down and race and the Boston Globe trophy that goes with it. .Harva
_
rd, th_e host
Marist on rain - soaked Leonidoff the three on the third play for
his
scored four plays later.
team, won the Paul Revere trophy
-
for overall supremacy
.
m the
Field before a Homecoming sixth touchdown
.
of
.
the season.
Marist got the ball three times
regatta.
·
·
crowd Saturday.
Levine chose
to
go for the kick in the final quarter but could not
Strong
.
head winds slowed the times from previous years. "We
Only
.
f~ur days before, tlie
.
and
Tim
Trotta made it 7-0 with move the ball
_
on
.
the ground,
rowed at a much lower stroke than· most of our competition," ex-
Vikings had buried Concordia 40- 1 :20 remaining.
_
_
_
gaining just 8
_
yards
_
on 10
-
at-
hlained c~a;h Bill Austin. "We expected !o finish a little higher but the
6
:
with
,
:..
a rushing
.
attack
.
that
Two key mistakes in the third tempts against the Pace defense.
eavywe1g ts also rowed in the fours.'
·
.
th
totaled
.
385 yanls .
.
Aided
-
by the quarter turned the game around,
The loss drops
:
Marist to 4-2 and
-
The fours also placed 19th. The best finish for the Red Foxes was e
poor
.
field conditions the big
.
Pace enabling Pa_ceto control the
.
ball
/virtuallr
e~inates them from
13th place finish by George Schaefer and Willie Davison in the pairs
'
defense
limited
Marist
•
to 142 almost
_
the entire 15 minutes
·
contention m
•
.
the Met-8. Pace,
.
.
event.
.
.
.
_
.
.
.
_
_
_
.
yards rushing and picked off two
·
before they finally scored with 34-c_meanwhile kept their hopes alive
·
The wee~ before, the _ heavyweights
_
fm1shed fourth m the
-
Phil Colangelo passes.
seconds left in the period.
_
.
as they face first-place Brooklyn
Poughkeepsie_ ~ega~ which _was shortened_ to one ra~e due _to
"We knew they were over-
_
The first came on th~ first play tomo
_
rrow night: ·
_
. :
>
.
_
_
weather condi!1on~; Syracuse had two !>oats fir~; an~ seco~d ~bile
powering from our
·
scouting after Walt Hocalowsk1 returned
!Th
_
lS
Saturday;
.
the
,
Yikings will
.
Cornell took third.
_
.We
only los~ by seven seconds; said A~m. The
report,"
.
said head coach Ron thesecon_dhalfJcickoff2fyards to ente~tairi
:
Os'Yego
'.~
.'
St
_
at
_
e
·
:
on
.
four.teams were sepc:irated ~Ya ha!(-lengt}"l
~~
thet'Y~
-
_
mile mark
Levine. ''We planned to pass
-
the Manst 38, Nick Mancuso, Leomdoff Field at 2 p;m. Oswego
before Syracuse moved out m the fmal mile.
,
_
_
_
more and run wide but the· rain held to 7 yards after getting
.
169 is only
H
but have. been playing
ruined the
·passing:
game and against Concordia,
.
fumbled the varsity - level teams all season.
allowed their backs to
-
cover the
'
_
ball as he crossed the line, Pace Levine notes that they
ate
even
-
corners.'' He also pointed outthat used over seven minutes of
:
the bigger than Pace
:
but
addsi
"We
-
the. team only had four
·
days to <;lock on running plays and drove have some s~rprlses
·
for them.
_
prepare an offense for the g.µJ1e. down to the Marist 6.
_
But
·
the We _
_
intended
•
~9- utnize them
Marist dominated
-
the first Jmlf Viking defense held
_
them arid the
_
agamst Pace bu~ lost two days of
as
_
the defens
·
e
.
allowed
.
the
-
offense took over at the
:
3_
-
preparation due to
.
the events
·
or
visitors JUSt one first down and 26
·
.
Not wanting to .try anything the
_
·
last tw9 weeks.''
yards rushing .
.
The two
ill-
risky, the Vikingsfailed to move
terceptions off Colangelo killed the ball arid Mike Laffi
_
n punted to
Soccer Nears
·
Call Title
.
.
-
'
:
-
-
~
.
'
.
KOLTHAY; MCGRAW NAMED ATHLETE~ OF·THEWEEK
Juniors Fred Kolthay
.
of NewHamburg, N:Y. and Jolin McGraw
.
of
Island Trees, N.Y. have been named Marist College AUµetes of the
Weeks for the weeks ending October
_
18 and 25; respectively
:
Kolthay", co-captain and top-ranked member
.
of. the cross-country
team, set tworecordS while.winning two more meets.
On
Oct. 15 he set
-
a Nyack course
·
record-while winning the CACC
·.
in!}ividual cham-
pionship. Kolthay
-
then set a Schqol record for the Marist course in the
Oct 18 meet with Siena:
· ·
·
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
_
_
.
·
M,cGra
_
w;
·
midfieider
··
ori the
,
widefeated so~cer
~
team,
-
scored two
goa.ls and assisted
_·
on two others to lead Marist to a record-setting 5-1
win over York Saturday>He also
.
played a
-
strong gai:ne last Wed-
nesday as the R~d Foxes defeated CACG
:
chatnp Nyack 2--0,
:
·
:
.
.
.
.
..
•
.
,
__
.·
.
...
•
··
•
·
.
NQTES
-
FROM T,HE SPORTS
.
DESK:
By Thomas McTeriian
Although Nyack
,
outshot them dribbljng toward the goal before
-
-
26~19, most of those shots were centering. Zerione Naitza stopped
The Th
_
ird Annual Marist
.
College Cross-Country Alumni Banquet
C>
Continuing to
-
display a from outside the penalty area (30 the pass for
·
McGraw, who was held Saturday night at the Camelot:Irm on R.oute 9. Speakers in-
powerful
·
offense and a
·
stingy feet) .
.
Goldman credited the
'
blasted his ninth
.
goal to the upper eluded emcee Bob Norman; Eriglish
·
·
professor at Marfst; 1975 co~
defense, .-the Marist
.
booters backline de~ense for keepin°g the
·
r~ghtcorner for
•
a 3-0 foad;
·
captains
-
Jim Gillen arid Fred Kolthay;
·
Marist athlet.ic director
_
P,Osted
_
their ninth
.
straight 'win Parsons away from the goaL Jay
:
York scored its lone
:
goal· with Howard Goldman; past cross country coaches Robert· Lewis (1964-67)
and
'.
closed in on their first con- Metzger,
.
back
.
in
_
goal
-
after 5:29 .left when Richard Pierre
-
and Leonard Olson (1968-71); present coach Rich Steven·s; and Dan
ferencechampionship ever. In
,missing
three games due to a beat Biff Damo
ori
a
·
.
rebound. Kuffner
;
cross-country
-
alumni representative. Honor
roll
awards
successive home games, they dislocated
.
.
finger
;
. stopped 13 Robinson ·got that orie
-
back
·
by were presented to Kevin McGee, Mike Moran, Joe Walsh
,
Bob Nelson,
t()pJjed Ramapo 4-1, blanked shots while
;Nyack's
Larry Mc- conyertihg a pai.s from McGraw Jay Doyle, and Jim McCasla.nd. Doyle,
-
McCasland and Moran were
gefendingCACG titlist Nyack 2-0 Clements
,·
blocked
_
10,
.
.
.
'.
·
with
4:·u
to go iri the half.
also inducted into the team's Hall of Fame ...
.
and
•
trounced .York 5-1.
,
,
·
·
John McGraw aild.Al·Robinson
--
U,e
;
seci:md. half
·
wa$ con-
The Marist College Tennis
:
Tournament sponsored by the athletic
.
A
win
·
yesterday over West scored twice apiece in Saturday's siderably slc>wer due t(J the field depa11~ent and the E.U.B. closes Saturday morning with the mixed
Connecticut State,.-in Danb1,1ry
-
winover
:_
Yorkplayedinadriving conditJons, although Mcqraw
.
doubles championship_s:
·
Dolly Russell and Jack Schofield squeaked
.
.'. _
.
.
.
--c
•
.
\YOUl9 clincll tl1eJirst CA.,CG
;:
title
,
r
.
ain. The g1:tme was delayed over
.
. and _Tim Trotta
·
had several good
..
past ~ill Austin and Ann Cullinane 3"6, 6-4, 7-6 to earn-the right to·face
~
:.:.
_
'
i
.-
,
~~
c:;.!S:
~
,~~;
~
0
Jri!.h.!fI\e!l
:
:f.9~~'.J3"Year
,
history:
:;
.
two
)
hoiii-s
;
when
:
the
~
visitors
·-
•
ex-
·
c'
scormg
.
6ifportunities
·:
down
:
· the
·
-
-
.
·
Shelli-Ira ca and
-
Ron Petro in the finals. Jay Metzger won the nieri's
1
-
·
-
The nine wins a~e the
.
mosUhey° perienced bus trouble.
-
.
·
: .
stretch. Gustavo
·
Beltra
.
scored
-
singl~title over Ernie Arico in straight sets 6_-3
;
6-0.
,
.:
·;
"Third Time
havE: ever won
in
a single season,
··
"We play~d fairly
'
_well under the
<
~inaL goar. with
·
15:07
_
Around"
-
defeated "EM'sl' 15-0, 9-14, 15-13 for the Intramural Coed-
toppmg
.
!he
_
B_resord~d in_l974 .
.
-
the
.
conditions,'_'
·
~id Goldman,
_
· i:em~ining
u,i
·
_the
contE:st. --
:
·
•
Vo!leyball title Oct. 22, Members of the victori?us squad
_include
Neil
The
,-
b1g
wm,
ofco-qrse, wa~
-
''It.was
very
.
difficult to
·
control
,
·
,
Dam<?_, playmg the first
-
half, TeJeda, Jay Metzger, John McGraw, Jol_in Vandervoort, Val
over Nyack, who came in Wed- the ball. and concentrate on the
·
made 3 saves while Jay Metzger Bellerosa, Robin Smallwood and John Covell .
.
.
-
_
-
,,1
,-
·
,
·
··
- -
·
.,
ne~day with
an
~1 record. Zenone
:
~~me with all the mud and ~ain; ,;
,
ca~E! in_ to
.
_
stop five. ~arist
"The Impact of1Amateur Athletics on American Life" was the topic
Na1t~ put Mar1ston t~e board at
-
•
_M~rawopened t~e scormg by , o~tshot york 32-9 overall.-' ·,
of the Free University's Dialogue in Champagnat House III Monday
the 30.0~ mark
:
of the frrst half
_
by sllppmg a
_
corner kick from the
On
·
Oct.
-
15 the
·
Red Foxes night. Participating in the discussion which quickly turned to the role
convertmg
:
_ a pass
-
from
:
Tim
_
lefLthr~ugh the startled York
_
do'Yned Ramapo 4-1 as Zenone
of professionalism in
-
the
:
sports world were: Dean Tom Wade,
.
Trotta for his ~leventh goal of the d~fens~ at the 13 :50 mark. Steve
_ .
Na1~za scored two goals. McG!aw
basketball and tennis coach Ron Petro, cross:'(!ountry and track coach
year. ~o mmut!s: later steve
_-
August~esetupthesecond~c?re a~ded _a go~l and _two assists.
Rich stevens and rowing coach Bill Austin . . .
.
Nick Mancuso, who
Augu~me-
.
scored
his
second to ten minutes
._
late~ by gammg Gm~ D1Martmo
_tallied
the other
rushed for 169yards
.
inthe40-6 win over Concordia Oct.
·
20, was named
m~ke 1t 2-0.
.
_
-
_
control !)f the ball m a scramble
::
Manst goa,l. Damo stopped 15 of
the Met-S's Player of the Week and was featured in Thursday's city
.
_
We played very
_
well
m
:
the
.
to the nght of the York goal. He the 21 Roadrunner shots.
edition
-
of the DAILY NEWS ..
.
.
·
. ·-
-
_
_ ·
·
first half,'' n~ted coach
'.'Doc"
-
deflected it in front t? Robins~n,
The hooters close (!Ut their 1~75
Met-8 scores last week: Manhattan
o,
St. J"ohn's
O;
Iona
o,
·
Pace
o,
•
_
Goldman'. He !>lamed !~e
_
sla~k who only
.
had to tap 1t
~
few m- h?me
-
sch~d~le Saturday with
Brooklyn 51, Concordia 15; St. John's 13, Iona
O;
F.D.U. 13,
·
Ramapo
o.
s~cond h~lf
~~ ~
slugg1Sh !Did-
.
ches f~r the score.
·
Sien~ begu~nmg at
11
_a.m.
on
. : Big game this weekend
--
is Saturday night's clash between top-
f1eld, ~d~g, I ~d not substitute
·
_Robmson
·
se~ up the next ~oal, LeOf!ldoff F'~eld. Thex will trayel
ranked Westchester
(6-0)
and Iona (3-1-:-1).
_
.
Met~ has prestige on the
-
prope~ly m ~he first half and they with 14:41 leftiAthe half, taking a_ to Kmgs Pomt for a tough game
line ... In NCSA stats; Mike Altomare is second in
-
rushing and fourth
were Just tired.''
.
·
-
pass.from Lucious Bo"!leson
-
and· next Wednesday,
·
Nov. 5.
in scoring, Mike Laffin is ninth in punting, and second in interceptions. _
-
rJ"
·
··
•
·
V
·
-
h
-
-
··
··
'
·
·
·
'Cross-country
team defeated alumni 21-37 in 3~mile race Saturday .
.n~rrzers
£
QUrt-
In
.
A_
·
l~an
_
y
·
.
. ·
J:~~s~~~:3nbyi~~l S!~~o,p:i~cA°;~~~w~:, ;~·sa~:!,
~~-
Mccasland and Bob Nelson
.
.. Several meet results of Red Foxes have
The Marist Running Red Foxes runners in a 17th place finish with Nyack Oct. 15. Marist
:
had the
_
placed fourth of nineteen teams a
.
time of
.
26:03,
.
one minute first six -runners across
,
the line,
--
-
and second of ten
·
junior varsity behind race winn~r Carlo led by Fred Kolthay's new course
. teams in the p~estigious ninth
.
Cherubino of Albany. Brian record.
:
.·
__
_
annual Albany
-
State
•
Cross
.
Costinewas21stin26:13followed
.
This Saturday, the top seven
-
Country Invitational held last
·
by Tom
·
Luke, 27th
in
·
26:20, Bob runners oil the team will be
~a~urday. This
:
was;the highe~t
·
Coufal, 36th in 26:32, George representing
·
Marist in ~he New
fm1sh ev
_
er for Manst teams_ m Mccutcheon; 53rd in 26:56, Jeff _York
-
State Upstate Cross
each race. Marist was the first Blanchard, 69th in 27: 19, and Ric Coun!ry Championships while the
New York ~ate team to cross the
-
Bond 96th in· 28: 01.
.
.
rest of Jhe team
will
be
_:
com-
~
-
-
'
line in each race, being riosed · out
· -
Iil the JV race, the Red Foxes peting in Vari Cortlandt Park in
in the varsity race by Keene state had the top
·
runner of the race in the Collegiate Track
..
c~n,f~r~QCE!
,
..
(5:l),
.
:
Springf~eld c:,'(65), and Charley Gysih who bfazeci
'
·to a Varsity and
·
JV
'l
Cliampionships
_'
--
.
Millersville of Pa. (84). Marist 22:22.6 clocking
on
the
-
4:25
.
mile The Upstate Championships are
topp~~ Albany state by
~
·
.
152-156
_
cour
_
se; Teammate Bill Krempel beirig he~d
,
at
:
the
:
campus of
margm. Other teams
·
mcluded als<> brought qome a trophy for Rochester
.
Institute.
.
of
Syracuse University, Platt, his seventh place finish of 22:52. Technology· on their 5
.
7 mile
sburgh, stony Brook,
.
Trenton Other Marist
_
JV runners in- course. Last,:Year Marist placed
State, Colgate, BinghamtQn and
·
eluded:
-
Dave Scho()ls, 17th
.
in 4th
in
the Upstates.and
_
the tea~n
C.W. Post, to mention a few.
·
23:28,
·
Quint Johnson, 2oth in has their sites on
.
a top three
Another happy result of the !Jleet- 23:36, Will Morrison, 21st in 23:~7, finish this year.
·
_
·
was Marist's thumping of,
_
steve Meier, 34th in 24:i4;.and
·
M-
8
·
F
-
·
··
b ll
-
LeMoyne College (15~281); the
_
_
_
Keith Millspaugh,
·
42nd in ~4:57.
. ,
et
·
-
oot a
-only team this year to topple the
·
_
66 ruimers competed
·
in the JV
_
_
.
.
_
W
L
·
·
:
T
Long
,
Red L4te.
'LeMoyne
beat race.
·
.
·· ·
·
Brooklyn
.
5
-
o
·
O
:
Marist by three poirits in the first
Springfield won the JV
-
race
Iona
--
.
3
1
'
1
meet of the.year. Since that time
·
with 24 points while
·
Maristwas
-
.
Pace
·
:
_
3
1
1
-Marist
'
has
_
shown constant im~ second with 56,
.
followed
·
.
·
by
>
MARIST
3
'
2
o"
p~ovement: while
·
LeMoyne has Colgate with~70 arid
'
Keene
·
state
st; John's 2
2
-
·
1
_'.beep
up.:. and- down a11d tumbled
.
with 83.
;:
'
· ·
,
·
·
F:D.U'.
.
·
1
:
3
o
·
:
to a 5-5 recor~:
_ _
·
·
·
The·
·
,
~ed Foxes captured ihe
_
Manhattan
_
0
--
3
1
·
Fred
_
Kolthay topped the ;Marist 1975
-
CACC
· ,
championships at
_,
Concordia O
.
5
O
:
.
,
.
.
.
·
,
.
'
·.
~.
'
'
.
..
...
..
-
.,
_,
.
.
.
.
.
'
:
.
'
,
":
•.
been listed in the HARRIER, a national long-distance magazine.
.
BULLETIN:
·
Lc:iurQes H
.
S. pulled a major upset in high school cross-
-
coun~ry
'
b)'_ defeating .i\rl~
_
~on
-'.
27-28,ton campus Tuesday .
.
The
Admirals :were the fifth-ranked_ team in the
·
state,,
HIGHLAND
_
DINER
.
-
Q
.
~
~.rt
.
~~
:,.
HQ
_
U
,
RS
-
_
-
-
just
·across
the
bridge
.
_
on
Rt. 9W
·
_
Serve
The
_·
Best
-
Food"
HYDF:
_
PARK. N., Y
.
AIR
··
CONDITIONED
XQUISJT
ROOMS
.:.:
L
-
229-,7720
-
<
_
NEAR
_
·_
.
GOOD
.
FOOD
-·
:
♦
·
_
-.. :.
_
POINTS
.
OF
·
.;-
·
,
INJEREST
·
:
-
♦
At
.
Reasonable
-
Prices
u.
·
s.
Rou:rE
.
9,
HALF ~1LE
NoRTH_oF
F.
_
D,:R.S~RINE
15.6.1
15.6.2
15.6.3
15.6.4
VOLUME l6,-NUMBER 6
· .MARIST COLLEGE, POUG~KEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
OCTOBER 30, 1975
/11,ter-House._Council:
-''Freeze
Student Funds''
Gampilii Terms Request
''lJestructive ,,
"More destructive than con-
the validity of Ermish's position. Council include: Dean Lambert,
structive." · is how business
Kevin Wolfe, president of. In-
co-ordinator, Dean --Cox, Don
manager/ Anthony.· Canipilii terhouse Council feels
-the
Honeman, Dr. Italo Benin, and
termed lastweek's request_by the allocation of funds was not students Kevin Wolfe, president,
:Inter~House Council to freeze performed "legally"_ according George
Gainbeski,
Denise
student activity funds. The In-. to the constitution. Wolfe also Gershki, Ellen Benoit, Ginny
terhouse Council is an elected stated, "We realize sonie people Albano, !<'ranees Sariabrie,
group of :resident_ students in will be hurt, but this effects the Reginae·
Green,
Michael
addition to faculty. -and ad-
general attitude held on student Labackas, and Joan McDermitt.
ministrative -representation· government"
· ..
·
The present-situation of the
formed to legislate campus ~wide
-· On Wednesday, October . 22, student government is a result of
residence policies.
.
· Kevin Wolfe, representing the last year's attempt
to
institute. a
On Monday,October 20, a final Iriterhouse Council·· apprQ'1ched ne\\'..• student government con-
draft was voted on bythe .Council Anthony CanipiHi-•. with the stitution. In April of last year-a
memoers to present to the req_uest
to
freeze all funds. group of· students felt the con-
: student body in
-
a le_tter ex-
Campilii, at this time stated he stitution was in need of revision.
pressing
.
their feelings on the believed they had legitimate
It
was presented to the student ·
:allocation .of stu~ent• funds_. concerns· ·but also felt their body and voted down. As a result
Presently studentfunds are be\ng request was channeled in the student government elections
allocated under- the direction of wrong direction. He did noUeel under the old constitution, were
past Vice President and acting the freezing--of funds. was· the not held, appointments to the
President Chip _Ermish.
·
The action· needed.
~
.
financial board and t.o the juclicial
· Interhouse' · C::oµncH questioned
· Members of. The Inter-House board,_were not made.
~
~~=-".-s'.-'-i-
1
t
__
;_,--tt".--\--·a':"':"';-'--
.-e-----h-.~-;";.;;,;;i--ts-~-f..,,._i-~1-!c.--,~~-~;.;..;·--,;-:r-.~-.~-~l-
3
l-,:~-~-:-b;__'i,~,e,:_----y-,,_j·.,;·:••>·•··,:::.:~~J;~~~::~r~!~!~!·~!:!·f
::.'·
·
~;g:,
be
. c··. ' . : . .
.
·L··.
·i·
men in the eyes oUhe law.·. It
jg
prohibit~d. Preferential treat~
,,..
. . a. ~p.u_
·S . •· .
··z e_·
_A lecture on .the Equal RighUi neec!E:<1 to cl~rify t~e la~ and e. n. d
mentof w'ome_n would be _ended.
.
•-• .,.
_ _ ... · ··
_
.
. AmendII)~nf was given on the mcons1stenc1es m court
Locally, the supporters 'of the
-
··
·
"
·
·
Tuesday evening, October 21st, in d e c i s.i on s
i n v o l v in g
amendment are organized into
Students · in th_e Community · large sample of 20-25 perc~nt in Sheehan Hall. About 25 students discrimination based . on sex.
the Mid-Hudson Coalition for the
P~ychology class, under the an effort ·to assess more ac- attended the·explanatory lecture Personal privacy .. and private
Equal Rights Amendment and
mentorship . of -Dr. Mclean·, -are curately dor:-m living. conditions. given · by· Mr .. Steve Lipton;· a relationships between individuals
the opponents of the· Amendment
planning a field survey that will .. Conseque_ntly, if through the graduate of Coli1mbia Law would not be affected in any way.
call- themselves "Operation
attempt. to·. assess · various. at- process of r;mdom· selection, you School.
·
·
-
Similar provisions in fifteen other
Wakeup" a coalition opposed to
_ tributes of dorm life ·at Marist'. are chosen to assistin this· sur-
l'h~Equal Rights Amendment, state constitutions · have not
the amendment.
This survey is the applied part of ·. vey, the students. 'would ap- whi~h :will be ~n. the ballot _this disrupted family life. Laws based
The meeting was organized by
the course which involves the predate your•. sincere effort in, November, states:. "Equality of on real.· physical· differences. Judy Strigaro and· Bob Galenz,
second hall of .the semester. The completing the· question: items .. rig~ts under ~he law shall not be between men and women would
and was sponsored by the
first
half
of the. course dealt with Data analysis and interpretation -
·
.•. demed or abndged by the S~a.t~ of still be valid,_
Political Science Club. Mr.
the theoretical groUJ1dwork out of - will be conducted by the students Ne~ York ., or . any subd1v1s!on
Opponents ·of· .the · proposed
Lipton is a member . of both the
which· this survey has gr_own. _
· and forwarded to. the campus tl)ereof on account of sex." Like amendment state .. that the . Speakers Bureau of the Mid-
. The. questionnaire .that will be community in' future'. Circle. ar- · t~e proposed federa_l .· Equal amendment. _
1s _not, needed
H!!dson · Coalition for· the Equal
used is a standardized test en- tides. A formal presentation will. R1gh~' Amendment, 1t wou!d because legislation ·already· Rights Amendment and the Mid-
titledthe University Residence · also be• given to all interested require_tga.t sex not be a factor m · · prohibits · sex discrimination in
Hudson Chapter of the American ·
Environment Scale: In addition _administrative personnel and all - determmmg,the legal rights
.
of· employment, extension of credit, -:--.Civil Liberties Union ..
to the
URES,
the students have intereste~ students With the men and ·women.
-- - hous_i~g etc. It might affectthe
At the close of the meeting, six
.. devised a brief open -~·- ended class~s• suggestions of initiati?g
.
As a propone~t of th~ amend-
trad1honal role of women as students signed permission slips
questionnaire asking stu_dents to poss1b!e cb~nges. Future. m- ment, Mr .. Lipton explained the ho~emakers and threaten for their names to be used by
comment on either.
·
areas of· formation -will also be pr.ov1ded legal ramifications of · the pr~sent'
family . support supporters of the amendment in
campus life.
.· . , _ · ,-
'through periodi~ announceme~ts amendment and ·spoke against obligations. It is uncertain how
advetisements ·
in
local
•. The survey conducted',by the • on WMCR, Mar1st.College Radio. the argumen_µ;. raised. by )hose· far the. courts. would go in in-
newspapers urging the passage
studen~ will. uti~ize _an unus:ually
·,
·
who
do"
not support it. ·
_
terpret~ng this amendment.
of .the amendment. . ·
Suppo_rters.oUhis amendment _Singl_e-s~x scpool~, colleg;es,
• say· that
it_.
would establ.ish clubs,
dormitories,
toilet
-· Sexy.a.lity -·
l)ay -
Set
.,,..
.
.
•·•
,.,·
·,,_
'
_A :Symposium. on Human OBSs64N at the· New York •·
Sexuality will be held Tuesday, Medi!'.!al College::' .. ,.·;_·
tibrary
to
Feature
.-
,
.,
...
--
...
--
'
.. November
U,
1975. §ponsored by · Dr. 3loan's talk will·be followed .
.. the Couns~li!1g Center . and . : by workshops in the dormitories
Ca~pus • _M~ms~ry, _the.:. Sym- designe_d. to . gi~e students a
pos1wn w1U begm
WI
th .. a . panel .. chance . to .. discuss· issues raised
discuss!on: :. ''.The · .. Sex-µal during the ,day, to ask questions· ·
~'Tattle Tllpe"
Revo!?t10n_ :- Has There .. : Been and to probe further into the issue
By Claudia Butler
~
such a way that if a person leaves
One?,
Ch~ired
_
by '-Dr ... Italo of sexuality; -
.
the Hbrc1ry without having
Be~m, • .with paneli~ts. f_rom
Topics_ of discussion. wm · be,
The new Library in Fontaine che_cked out ··-their books, an
y~nous_ prof~ss1onal d1sc1plines, "Love and Sex,"·."Our Bodies, will be. equipped with .the· 3M alarm,will go off,,. explained the
d1scu~10~ · w1_H be held at. 3:00- Ou_r .. Selves,'' '' Anatomy · and 'Tattle . Tape' secu_rity "system. ·rnrector of Leaming Resources.
P:m. m Fireside Lounge.
• .· Identity "
and "Styles of
l'his. systein, the most widely
Altl1Qugh the · system will
-At 7:30. Dr. Donald Sloan- will Sexualit~."
· · ·
, u~ed :in. the country, will cost . reduce the casualtheft of books it
speak in the· theater. His topic: ,.. ..
.
Fihns will be shown
iri"
the ~pproximately $16,000 to install. may present another problem.
"Let'.t _Talk: About Sex;'' Dr. Campus, Center from noon on "The·system will pay for.itself "In the past,
if
a person .took a
. Sloap is Co-,D1rector of th,e Sexual ,through the afternoon. A special within -four
)•,~rs:
,The Marist book without having it checked
,Therapy Center at· New . York .dinner
wm
be--served · from 5:.00 library has an estimated $2,000t<> ; out,.. it. was .,.
_
sometimes
M~~icaL College,· as. · _w~ll as . 1Hn.,with speciaHnvitations and.
,$3;000
worth of book~ stolen ~very anono,mouslf: ·retµmed _to . the
Assistant Pr<>fe~~or,and·D1rector · rates for ,faculty, staff. and year;'' :said Vin.cent Tosca·no;
library'. But now, due to fear of
of_
P~yc:~ps,:Ill~tizs, _?epartme~t.
,corrimut~rs:,
"The books ·will be ,treated in' being caug~t by .the ,system,
a.
student may cut out the parts of a
book which he needs," said Mr.
Toscano.
.
This · practice is especially
prevalent when te_achers .assign
readings to be done· by their
· classes in a book which is in the
1
library. Mr. Toscano feels, "that
w:ith the cooperation·· of the
faculty this·
0
practice can be
eliminated.
··If·
tear'lers · · assign
readings, they should ·make sure
they provide enough' copies of the
readings for their classes.';
\ ,
•
1
..
PAGE2
•
THE CIRCLE
The Mllrlst College CIRCLE IS the weekly newspaper
.of
the students
Of
Marls!
College and Is published thr01111hout the school year l!xcluslve
ot
vocollon periods
by the southern Dutchess
News
Agency, Wappingers,
New.
York.
·
David Livshin
Mary Beth Pfeiffer
GigiBirdas
Gregory Conocchioli
FredAshley
ChipErmish
Tom McTernan
Patrice Connolly
. Joan McDermott '
Brian Morgan
Larry Striegel
Co-Editors
Associate Editor
Editorial Consultant
PhotographyEditor
.
Ass~tant Photography Editor
Sports Editor
.
Layout Editor
Business Manager
Advertising Manager
•.· Distribution Manager
Staff: Dave Kazdan, Gene Berkery, Rich Burke, Johri Reilly,
·
Ken Healy, Gene Heimers, Tom Hudak, Jack McCutcheori;Mike
O'.Shea, ~rry .Striegel, Patri_ce Connolly,
·
Er~est- Arico, Gigi
Brrdas, Bill Bozzone,
.Claudia
Butler, John Byrne, Daniel
Dromm, Karen Duverney, Mary Foster, Fred Kolthay, Barbara
·
Magrath, Philip Palladino, Pat Perretto, Dave Roberts, Ed
Rubeo, Wi?nie Saitta, R
_
ich Sellers, Kamai::
-
Sumrall, Dorothy
Teevan, Tina Ira~a, Julle Schott, Peter Van Aken .
.
Eliza-
•
beth
·
Godl;out.
.
.
·
The
Right Thing
·
-
-
·-
To
.
Do?
;
THE CIRCLE
OCTOBER 30. 1975
Commentary
For Wo
:
tnen:
:
.
.
.
.
•
,
·
..
·
·
,
• .
.-
...
-
..
The Need, FOt,Self-Defense
..
-
.
-
•
f
-
·
..
·
•
. ·.
By
s.
Lenaei:ts
·
.
make women dependent on
'
theni.
·
.,
positively
· __
thrnl!gh
,'
the
- •
deter-
.
.
·
·
·
.
and C.
Murphy
.
·
Men ~ave
·
thtfpowe~ to
_
assurhe
'
.m~atioiJ.
.
to
::
do
'
somethi11g
:
more
.:
~
>
.
Much to the chagrin of the really
_involved
with cornmllllity
:
·
control
·
over their verbal
-
and conc'fete
; .
'
i
:
e;;
'
self'
.
',,
defense
.:-
-
.
CIRCLE editors, a threatened activities, instead of
·
motivate WASHINGTON, D.C: RAPE
-
physical aGtions, whereasworrieIJ
.
-c
Qeveloping
,
~aggressive
:
physical
financial "freeze" inhibited· the those it sought to touch. -We feel CRISIS
.
CENTER
..
·
·
do riot;
_
..
:
~
:
-
...
·
..
·
_
.
·
and
•
-
ri)ental
~
capal:>ilities through
·
publication of last week
1
s paper. thatit was a rash decision
-
which
.
·
-
· ·
.. :.
·
...
. Whatu. a woman Jo do? First,
.
self
'
~
t
defehse:can ad<!JQ
.
the
·
op-
.
The CIRCLE would like to extend did. not take .. into
..
co·nsideration
Rape
·.
constantly
'.
reminds. all : she
_ ,
.
n~eds
·
to
actualize, thi'.s
>
W>ns ~
:·
wonia!l
:h~s
in a,n attack
,
an apology· to the Marist Com-
the possible consequences.
.
... .
women
of
·:
their
physu;:al
0
.
repressed
.
'anger
,
and. turn
.
Jt
,,
situation,
,
This
.
1s the
:.
hardest
.
.
·
munity
.
for having been unable
.
to
The
.
CIRCLE is
:
making
,
an powerlessness
<
vis,a-yis
·
meri.
·.
olit"'.ar.d
',
· :\
Women·
.
..
. must,
)
_deci_:;ion .J~r
_.:
m.arif
:
_women
:
,,.
to
.
'.
fulfill our weekly responsibility. appearto that silent unflinching Because
•
wohieh
..
have
·
;
been
.·.
therefore;
:
resist rn:en'.s methods
:
·
·
mak,e,
,
l:>ut.: once it is made,
·
.
she
· ·
The Inter-House
·
council
·
who
.
blob
·
.
which makes
-
up
.
the socialized to
.
be passive; and· Orie
:
way
:
Jo
.
~t~rt)sto vetbally
.
.
nas
·
a
·.
:
resp
_
orisJbility to
,
herself;
.
,
_
attempted to initiate
_
the freeze, majority
_
of
the st~dent b9dy to
·
because
,
~
they
.>
·
have
.
been·
.
Jash
,
back afa hassler
._~
IgnoI"ing
,:·
·
aridJoother:Womentoen
·
courage
~ .·
·
.
were
·
doing it
in an attempt, to
_:
_become mvolv:
.
ed
m
'
·
our
_
com-
discoura~ed; or
:
prevent~d froiTl
.
th:em
;
u~11a
_
llydCles f!<>_flVOt:~
f
il.1¢~
>,
.
t
_
~e le
.
a~in~ of ~~lfo
:-
:
p.efe~se
:
;•
·
:
·
motivate
·
those people in our
·
munity _a'!d e~pr~ss your
.
c~nc
·
~rn
·
.
.
de-..;elopmg
::
their
:
_
·
bodies
:
for fe
.
e.I th~f •
.
~o~e11
c:
ar~:
;,
e~
~
<~
\.
AHq~n_ng phYS!<::c1t
·
~o!1fidence
.
.
·
coriuriunity
·.
_who really
"don't
by part1~1patmg
1h
the upcommg themselves they
.
have been barrassed, hke it or
:
dm).'t·
.
k.J1ow
:'._
1s
,
es~el)tlah
:
111
°
re!!ogmzmg that
•..
·
give a damn;''
.
They were
:
at~
..
'
(though
,
.outrageously
)_ate>
·
,
.
bfainwashedto
:
bel1eve that they;
.
·how
·
to
;
~deal
:
;
lfi:thJ!Je
:·
:co.rffeerts
:
·
./
wo~e
.ff
h~vmg
;
cq~(rotoverJheir
· -
·
·
..
tempting to show
·
us
.
how
.
im-
Btudent. Gove~nm
,
ent ele~tions. carin
.
ot be
::
str:onger
-.
than
?
rile!).
'
: .
Ignoring
:
.•
ver~al
:
.
a.bus
.
~
·.
~nly
i
:
d'"7n
.:.
bpdie
_
~,
:·
cari
:·
a
·
rid s~2,.W<!_!)e
Ji
.
.
.
portan~ a
.
Student
.
Govemment
...
Run.
for an ~ffl~e,
:
campa1g11 on
More
~c
i:mpo11antlr
\
theY
·
_
gelieve·
···
•·
reif!!o_r,ces th
:
e
,
\\1_9~an•~
:
,reelirig~
;-. :-
r~ali~Y.
:
-
:
l3Y takingAourses i~ self
·
~
•
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
:
,
r~all! 1s all_(l 9ow:
,
b,~_dl':,:.
,
'V'le
:s
ne~~
,
,
.
t
.
he
.:
_C::9.~m-~~tEle
_h:
·
.
:
_yo~~J:
·;:
D_o
~
;
th~y, can~Pt
:.
P,r:ot~<!r
,
,
t~emselv~s,
.
, of
_.
po,werl~ssness:
:;
Yelliilg · back
:
··
defense, a
.
WO!Jlan co~~c1_o1,1.~1~
.>
~_.,..,,:.:;.;;
,,.
:
j_:.,,.:,
.:-
,
,
•.
one
+
here, ~t .. Man
.
st::
>
I~
-::
.
.tnese
·
.,,
a,pyth1ps--.-soc
:
_as•-•to
t•
.
av01
.
o.
---,
~t.ie
:::··agaipllt'.E'.)1
.
~most
·.:/
any
:
. ·.:
male
.·l~ts
_
.
;
out
+
r~pi:e,ssed .•
.
... ang~_r,
_
.: ..
,
i:nak
_
esa c:omm
_
1
.
tll}ent J~
.
~cqmre
.
...
r
'
.
behefs,
.
we support rnem·
:
100
.
s1tuat10n' whic
,
h
~
.
occur~d
-
l~st
:
aggr.~ssor.
··
Thus;
•
fe~lings
.
of·
.
· drrectmg
:
•
tk
t~\\'.~I"<!
·
_the·: p~rs<>Il
_;;
a,
:
~~!ll
,
for
~
h,e,,r~elf, .'fy~~itl
_
ol)a,!ly,
_
percent. ~owever, the CIRCLE week. :We w:~r-e
.
v1~ually
:
:
d~me
_
d
_
anger against men are
:
all ·toQ
;>
who deseryes)t;
'-'
furth
_
er~~r~;Jt
~.
a
·
-w~I"Qa_!1_}1al?1keptJ1er
.j
b~dy
:
in
·
'
·
-
-.
;
·
-..
cannot abide by the mean~
:
they our v01ce <>n
-
~arn~11s beca~se_J(!r
.
.
often. .r~pr:~
_
sse~
;'
.
e
.
spec.ially on the
>
sho~ks
.
the
·
man'.
·
Su~h
~
sunple
Y
shape
_
for
m~
_
n;
~Y
-
!eai;ni!1g self
·
-
.
..
soughtto employ
.
.
.
.
.
: ·
i
__
the longest t~~.
·
no one cared
i
streets.
,
_
·
· ,
:; ·
.
'
· ,
:; -..
·
.
.
action marks
·
a begummg of a
.,
--
de
.
fense she is keeping it
m
shape
. · ..
.
The primary effect
.
of
a
freez
_
e
·
e!1oug!1 to
~
_
_st~p J~i~
.
.
in
_
evitable
..
:
Perhap
f:
:
n
·
otliing
>
'
.
can
..
woman defying her passive role, f<lr
-.
h~rself .
.
Doiri~
_
son.:iething
:
for
:
-
.',
_
would have been to bring to a s1tuahon}r?m ansmg.
-
,
. ·
_-
demoralize and frighten a woman making shaky
·
the
-
f9undatioris
'
oneself;rather then ~or
,
men
/
1s a
grinding
halt
those lVho were
-> ·
.
·.
'
·
'
·
quick~r,
.
th~it'
'
t_he nu~erous in~
.
which allow men easily to
-
assert
:
Jc1rg~
step in redefining oneself as
__
sults and potential
_
assaults
..
cin
--
their
..
violent
.·
and·. ~exual
'.
a
wonian. Self - def~
__
nse cannot
-
Kicked For A
L
.
.
:
-,
her body
'-
that she musttolerate· aggressions.
:
'
>
c;:omplet_t!lyendsexualassault,
_
or
.--
oss
·
as· she
·
walks in public.
·
The
,
Obviously, yelling isn't
_
always
,
the fear
,
of it, but-it does begin Jo
_..
streets ai-e a microcosm of how good enough - besi~es
'-
a woman
,
end
'
s~rict limitatio_ns
>
ori ~hat
.men feel toward
.
women. Sex and can loose her
:
voice• in . a few women
,
can and cannot
.do,
.
or
·
.
.
.
violence are the tactics men use hours. But the yelling is a first' whete they go, and \Vith w~oin.
TwoweeksagoduringP~rents' Vikings took the field for their
~·
tokeeppowero_y~rwo!l}enandto. steptow~'udchanneling"t_heanger
. . .
·
·
_·
.
.
_
.·· ..
.
·
..
:
.
· :
•·
·
Weekend, the Mar:ist Club 'home opener against Manhattan,
··
.·
·
·
.. ·
.· ·
: ·
,~
.
·
·
.
. ·
..
:
.
.
.
.
.
football team was scheduled to it was the firsttimethey even set
· ..
·
·
·
·
•■■
.
.
·
__
. ..
·
e
·
.
·
·
play Concordia on Saturday a foot o.n the game field.
· ·
.
•
·
.
,a•.Jllfj.........,..,,,,,,.,,,
-
t~:\t~TJB~:~~Yrotf%!~i
~£e~!~!~~::~!;~~~~~g~
-
·<
,
~~~
--
P'
__
?
0
1iU
• .
_.
~~;--~
·
\
_
~\~
.
-
--
-
day. Finally they were allowed to the campus
iri
1968: There is
·
no
·
· ·
·
.
·
\
:
·
-
·
·
•
play on· Monday afternoon, but doubt that football is a big event'.
Bulletins ari
'
d
.
·
registration
A
-new group entitled, '_'Ma11
.
_
Congratulations
·i~
u:1
_
orde
_
r.
only after the parents had gone here at Marist as evident by the forms
·
are available
.
in the Office: Alive
p•
is being fo~ed to discuss
·
D~n
-
Edgec<?mb, Director
?~
the
and confusion
··_reach_ed
;
_a
pea~.
·
-
·
goodcrowdstheydrawwhen they
of Career
n
....
ev
.
e
.
Ioi>m
..
.
·
en
.
t
.
:'.
fo.r the and'
-
study
··
the meaning·
.
of
.
M~nst
_College
_Theatre
_Gwld's
La t
k
t
d
11
d t
l
Th
h
..
·
·
roduchon
'
.•"E.
rn.peror Jon
.
es
..
,"
. s
wee .· i
~ame
agam are a 0'_Ve . o pay.
en. w y
1.975. Professional
,•.
Qilalificl,lbon- Christian
.
life t
_
oday. The-group
P
durmg Homecommg Weekend must
_
t~eir ma~y supporters sit in . Test given
:
by
/
the: N~tional ..
will
.
begin w.ith a study <c>f=Mark's
.
\Vas
_
_
.
aw~rded
.
_for : outs\and~g
:
and once again the footpall ga~e the ~am watchmg a soccer game
.
Secur:ity Agency
~
Tpe
'.
a,ppli<:atiori
··.
gospeL
.
Meeti_µgs
:
will
:be held
' ~;
a~h1e_v~ment
•
f
0
t ,
the
•
..
!]lost
-
:
with J:>ace was postponed. Th~s
.
·
a~amst a team whicll; shows
.
up
deadline for the test; which-is.to
,
Tuesday
:
.
evenings at
:
Byfoe
:
prormsmg new di~ector at
_uw
:
.
.
was different; they h~d to 'Ya1t
.
with_ only players?
:
.
.
be given on
-
Nov'embe~ 22,J975/is Residence
at
9;
-
alLstudents
·
are
:
~ew
-
Y_or~
.
st~te The~tre F
_
estival
only two hours past kickoff ~une
~t 1s a fact that the college h~s
November
8.
-Apply early!
c
·
.
c.
;
invited.
·
;
:
. :--,.
•
... ,
: ·
.
.
. .
-·
.
··
.,
~s~~ciahon s
.
·_
r~gtonal
·
.
com-
before they could take th
.
e field;
·
bailed the football ~rogram ~ut of
.
A
reminder frotn
Larr
..
Sn
der
· .. _
·
. :
,
_
,
·
.·
.
.
·.
,
.
·
.
.
,
.•·
•
_.
,
petition ~t
:
the R:ebe.cc_a ~cKenna
__
Appare~tly
_
the soccer team's debt and enabled
it
~o contmue.
that his
.
Office
·
of Y
·
Ca~eer
·
On Thursday; October' 23,Rev .
.
~
Theatr,~
:
11\
-
~e~
_
Pa}tz
:
"
~n Oct~~e
.
r
.
gamew1thYorkwasalsod~layed They saw the beneflts
·
and ad-
··
nevefopmenthasmovedfoRoom E.e
·
ggy
:
Muncie
:
~m
·
}~ad
:
~
:·.
2
.
~th;
:..'.-
~
•
·
..
•
·
·
·
· •
·
.
··.
·
.. ·
:
.
.
·
.,
as the York
.
pus experienq~d
·
vant~ges
.
that the program
c-
125. Feel free to dro b
sa
O:
discussiol)
:
on/'.Women and
:
Holy:
;
-
:
pie
.a~!1r_d
~as
.
pre_sented
_
by
trouble on tile way. Onc_e
.
agam_ contributes to
.
the ~ollege. But. hello and
·
fainiliariz/ yJiirseff
·
orders•~
-
itithe c~ndlelightRobrri
the associatioils adJ'-!dic.ator,
;
Dr_.
'-"'
·
.
the football t_eam an~ it~
_
sup-
_
how· c_an th.ID' suppo~t
.
the
Y{ith \he new location.
: . ·. ·..
atp:15
>
Everyone is-invited to
·
l~~~PP::P~J11so,-_andsigned·by~!1e
.·
·
.
porters were mc?nveruenced.
program when they
_
cant
.
even
On ·Friday, October
31, .sul)"'. b
_
ringtht!ir
;
diiui~rand join
ill
the
.
:_
re_g1ona,l· chairman:, :lVIr:
_Al
.
It
~at_ters bttle
-
that the
_gu~rantee-Jhe
team
~ place •on porters of the Equal Rights· talk
:
>
-:
_
·:
·
:
.
•
.
.
,~:::
· . ·
~i!?~erwa.1.d,
,
and .tne as.sociation,
athletic director also happens
,
to
.
which to play? There
.
is no doubt,
Amendmentand
··
~~presentatives
.
.
_- .
.-
..
..
.
.
.
:
pre~ig~~t!
¥r-
l?_etf.'!r ~_dman..
l:>e the coach of an undefeated
.
also, that ~e team lost hundreds
·
from Dutchess County Women of
·
The Office
.
qf the Ilegistrar has
i
·'
·
;·
•
.·•
·.
<
>
..
·
.
:
·
soccer team. But 'how
·
could the
;
of
.
dollars m revenue due
:
tg the
New
-
York
will coriducf
:
a debate aniiowicedtheweekofNovember
/,_·_· .
.-
>
:
:
'
.'
'
. _
fieldbe\unplayableldue to rain one( eve1tt~
.
_
of the~e
:
past
,
_
h!o
.
in FirE:side If>unge at 12:30 P:Ill:
10
_-as
--
~~
·
week
/
ill.
~
w~ch
· ~
-
:
(
· .
-::_
:
t,
--:J
':
week and
.
the next
week
.
ll
_
ave a
;
,
weekends~
·
.
.
·
•
...
.
.
.
.
.
1
•
··,
·
-
·
·•
registrahQns
:,
for the
·
Sprmg
·
•
....
.
~
<;
·
soccer ga!lle played in a
·
.
down-1
'Ille CIRCLE f~els thatthe tlffie
·
· In~er-semester
_
excursion to Semester wills
be
accepted~
,
•
·
.
·
·
pour? ThlS hardly se~ms con- has ~ometor _the footb~ll.team to
_
"!
Mexico:
.
.
•·'
.
.
.
.
S<!hedules
•
and registr
11
Uon
.
:··
·
.
sistent .
. ·
Maybe
.
the field was _rec~~~e
,
a
·_farr
allo~atio~
.
~f
·
the
.
A
10
day tripto
·
Mexico City. is (o
.
rms . .will
·
be
:
IJ}ailed to
·
•
all
.
·
being ''saved"
--
fQr
·
.
the_ Nyack
·.
facilities
.
(1f
_.
not money)
~n~
no
.
s
,
c9eduled foi::
,
.
J411n~~1!' 5.-~5. The
·
st.1:1derits
.
by
;:
Nov,
·
6. Course ad~
:
·
,
game the following
.
W.ednesday, lofl:ger _suffe~
_
from
_
the preJ\ldices.,
·
Pr11!1arY of?~us . wil~ be
·
on ~
.
e
-
.
visors can
.
°Qe
·
picked up
,
'.at.the
--·
but it got "chewed up" an~ay•in of
.
a hig~~r-supenpr.
A
method
I~difill:
.
civi~iza~i9n~. an?
.
Mex~co
;
switchbo~i:d in ponnelly; Friday;
Monday's game,
..
.
_
...
. ·:
·
.
•
•
for.handling such disputes.sho~d · _City: it~elf. Direct1;11g
-
-~e ex-
Novembe'r. 7. If a
·
schedule is riot
·
.
What doel? ·•matter
:
.
is that ·
.'.
th~
--
·
b~
.
formul~ted
-an~
'
~oth
:
parties· .. cursion is Br~; Maur.i
_
ce
_
Bibeau of
·
· received by
.,
Novem~(lO, please
.
football team. is being
.
i
sport
,
: sho~d; strfYE:
J?
'.
9wckly
',:
se_ttle . ·the.
,:
Dep~r;11_1ept
.
of
:-
_f\1od~rn.
:(!ome
·
to'lhe
·
Office
;'
ail<:i pick'up
;
a·
changed
·
.
time
•·
aQcl
·
agau:i:
:
Th~y
,
_:
their d1fferences
.
\Vl_thou~ frictio~ .
.-Languages,
~~ist
_
e.d
.
bY.
:·
s_en1ors
,
copy .
.'
':'.
:·::-
:
7:_
;
.
>;!
.'
' ·
c'':
/
<. .
practice
_
on a dug - up
.
f~elt;Lth~t
,
<
;
}\Te s~ould ~llkeep
m
11_1~cl
that_it.
·:
Ma~
;,::
l{ol_o.r
_;
:
.
and
· ·~
M
.
arie
--
.
,
qu~t~
:
...
;-
I,f
istotlie students advantage
..
:
~~:
lacks
:
gra~
,
;
but
_
riof
,
:
~o~ks
:
tha_t_
:
is
t~~ stucl
_
~nt;- tlje ~thle
.
te
-~!}~
~
tpe
:
.
,.
troc~9<:<!hl
: ·
•
F9_r
..
f~~
.
~her
_:.
111~
to
'
r~gi*tef
.
.
ear~y
'
{
t.6
\:
insur.f
;
.: :.-
.
have caused s~veral
__
mJuries
..
to
~
Jlln
;
wh~ will lose
_ot~~r,\VtS~'.
·'.,
·:
f~r
_
mabon
..
c~1_1t~
_
ct..
,
Brot~~r
-.
priority.
•
_
,
•·
·.: _>
·
·
· ..
•
,
.
;:_:
,c·
. :
·
i~
.
~ia~~ts'.
i.
~n
-,
!~~Y
(
~?~;
/
~
:
i~
::_-::
,
t_·
·
·
:
·:
. ' ) · ;
:.
· . ·
,
)~t~a~~~~O!)
:
~
:
_
·
,
:
-,
_.·
.
:·:i
..
::_.
·
> , __ :
:
"'
-
-
-
~
--
.
.
>
·
--
•
· ..
.
•,.
·
,.
·
·,
·
,
.
·
•
.
.
...
.
'
.
..
~.
.
.
-
--
.
,
...
OCTOBER 30, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
·
Present
Cox District Coordinator
Tense
the following conies from Fr
.
for this more natural product as I
Richard LaMorte:
·
try it again each year. My taste
·
·
· has certainly changed over
·
the
8
October 1975 years - meeting different people,
Dear Ralph,
-
·
seeing different situations -
I
The rain that you serit
.
two guess you pr?ctuct was outdate~
·
weeks ago re1,1lly made tllis place a
_
nd
_had
lost its- flavor. I guess 1f
a mess. Its not
,bad
enough
.
that
.
we listen to the customers we
c;an
they are digging all:over, bµt
riQ.
_
W
k,eepthe p_roduc~
~P -
to - date.
-
the campus
_
is a cross betwee11.
.
a
..
.
Im certainly gou~g to try to get
'
-
marsh and quicR ~sand.
,
By
:
the
_ .
people her~ t~ try 1t at least once.
way, you should ·see how
·
the
.
After.all, 1t_Is natural,
.
they ca~
chapel leaksjn those hea.vy rains. take 1t wherever they go and 1t
Si1:1ce its yolli:
.
pla~e, if you don't
:
certainly ~an give
-
one stren~
mmd, I guess I have
.
no beef.. The
.
when they re really down.
J
'YlSh
heating
.
·
you're
,
having
·
put
:
in is
.
though
.
that you would r
_
ec?ns1der
coining
.
aJong
:
wel.L
·-
..
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
giving
~r
.
away -
-
your ms1st~nce
You know, after going to school
·
that
·
there must be
.
a cost
.
is
_
not
in
. ,
the
•.
Bro:rix, working
.
in
.•·
always a help, especially with
_-'-
Poughkeepsie
·
~nd then
·
working
.
·
these people who ~.on't invest in
Bicentennial Youth Debate
(BYD), a national program of·
public speaking activities for
young people, announces the
appointment of Gerard Cox as a
District Coordinator, according
to lrene
·
R. Matlon,
·
Northeast
Regional Director. As a District
Coordinator, Mr.
·
Cox will be
responsible for contacting high
schools to encourage their par-
ticipation in the program,
stimulating COll!.IllUriity - based
activities using BYD topics and
formats
·and.
administering the
district level competitive events.
Professor Cox assumes these
responsibilities along with his
busy schedule at Marist College
where
.
he
.
is currently
.
an
Associate Dean. F<>rensic
:
ac-
tivities are certainly not new for
Cox
.
In the past he has served as
President for the Miami, Florida
Catholic Forensic League, the
New- York Catholic
·
Forensic
League and the National Catholic
Forensic League. P~ofessor Cox
holds memberships in the
American Association for Higher
Education, the Eastern Com-
munication Association and the
Speech Communication
Association,
which
·
is
the
organization that is sponsoring
the BYD. Cox has completed
graduate work at College of the
University of New York at
Hunter, FordhaniUniversity, the
University of Miami, Colwnbia
University
'
and the R.C.A. In-
stitute.
.
BYD is supported by a grant
from the National Endowment
for the Humanities and is a
project of the' Speech Com-
munication Association. The
program includes competitive
events with winners at the local
level
progressing
through
district,
.
sectional, and regional
events to a national conference
and community events, in which
BYD speakers present programs
before
civic
and
service
organizations. Events begin in
late September, 1975. Topics for
the three BYD events, Llncoln -
Douglas
Debate,
Ex-
temporaneous Speaking and
Persuasive Speaking, are drawn
from the American Issues
Forum. Conceived by Walter
Cronkite, the Forum's calendar
of monthly topics provides a
cohesive
framework
for
discussion of major national
issues in
the media, the
classroom and the community.
Any individual under 25 who has
not received a bachelor's degree
or its equivalent is eligible to
participate in Bicentennial Youth
Debates.
For further information con-
tact: Gerald Cox, Martst College,
Poughkeepsie, New York 12601,
tel. (914) 471-3240, ext. 296 or
Irene R. Matlon, BYD, Amherst
Regional High School, Triangle
Street, Amherst, Massachusetts
01002
,
tel (
113
l 549-2810.
in
·
RhineclifC -
pushing your
.
·
just
.
anything.
·
.. ·
'
product
~I havethe feeling
:
that
.
Well, I have to go now .
.
.
ljust
n
.
.
·
·.
T
-
.
..
M .
.
we're
.
going to have slow sales Wc!rited to let yciil know that I got
.. ·
·
.
.
.
a
.
.
zr
_·
_
y
l..,...
es
·
·
Hz·t
a
rz·s
t·
here
:
at Martst. You know why.
·
here safely and I've got a pl
.
ace to
• •
I,
·
Manypeople
_
niay-not.realiie ye(
·
stay.TH keep in.touch.
·
:,
.
;.
.
·
.
__
·
-· that
<
we've
<-
made it a
·
more
·
·
.
:
·
·
·
.·
.
.
·
·
·
··
·
·
.
Richard
·
.
By Phil J>alladino
Dolly Russell were the judges as.
.
i:iat.ural producL.I'm trying to
·
:
..:
-
p:s.
Keep the colors corning on
to who is clean shaven. The
telephone booth, and flag-pole
sitting."
·
•
·
.
show them .that- we've
_
removed -.those trees. A lot of people like
The
c.U.B.
Social Committee, contestants will have until
.
,
the
·
artificial color,
·
preser-
the ones you've chosen this
headect"
_
by
chairman Jim Friday, November 21, to grow the
The C.U.B.
-
SocialCommitlt!e is
allowed a certain amount of
money for social activities. They
have sponsored mixers and
dances. One idea in the making is
a weight guessing contest. The
idea is that students would guess
the weight of faculty members.
There is one drawback, as Bres
stated, "We're not sure that
faculty members would like to
have their weight exposed.·•
vatives,
.
and
.
_
·
additivel>
.
.
season: Also, if you remember
·
a
Bresnahan, is
,.-
sponsoring a longest, shortest and grubbiest
Sometimes
·
orice
''
a
.
person has lot of.people have
~
a~ked me to "Beard Growing Contest''.
It.
beards. A bottle of liquor will be
gotten
·
a bad taste in their mouth
.
:
,
recommend the football
.
team to
began·Thursda.y, October
.
23.-Jirn awarded to the winners of each
its hard to
·
get thetn
_
to
·
\try it you :.:.
,
if-you could make.the "Bres'1Bresnahanwhenasked category.
again.
'
I
must a'dmJt ihot1gh
;
I games, it would be al?preciated.
why _ this type of activity was
The contesLwas also open to
think if they try it; they might like As yo1;1 can ,see,whenit comes to
taking place, stated;
·
''.We're any faculty member who wi~hed
~
it
_
.
:
You
·
knowcthey're o!der
:
now' basics they. haven't.- forgotten
trying to add things to the college
.
to be involved. This was the
:
arid
can
make
-
more reasonable
·
your line.
.
•
. •
experience, just.for the hell of it." perfect opportunity for students
judgements
:
thart they
_
could
-
hi
·
·
_ ·:
~EI~ID TO: Ralph The committee wrote to other and faculty members of Marist
.
.
high
;
scl:leiol. ,
·
......
•
•
.
.
.
:
·
.
.
.
Parad1s_e Village Esb!tes
O
colleges for suggestions, but the
.
College to get involved
·
with a
·
.
I must say,I
~
fmd1~g new us
.
es
·
Heaven 00000
idea for a Beard Growing
_
Contest typical college prank
.
Bres stated
·
seeme~ to be the
.
bestone .
.
-
that it
"correlates
to other old
The C.U.B. Social Committee is
trying to add to our college ex-
perience through ideas and
suggestions for getting students
involved.
All contestants reported to the college pranks,
·
such
_
as eating ·
.
.
.
Campus Center at 2:00 Thursday, gold fish, trying to stuff as many
·
· :
:'"'
-~
,
:
~
,
-
•
..
.
·m
·
·.
·
.
.
:
a
·.
·. ·.
· ..
.
·
.
·
·
•
·
-
'·
-:
equipped withshaving cream, a
.
people as theY could into a
·
·
.':·
·
' ..
':-
..
.
·
-
·
e
·
.
w1·
:
s
·-
>
· ·· .
.
o
--
.-
·
.
·
·
e
·
v1
·
ve
· ·.
·
-
razor a towel and the name of
. :
:
< ::
·
. •·
..
·
•··: ,,
.
i
'
·:
·
.
·.
·
·
..
·
;
·.
·
. ·
·
,
.
_
theif'favorite liquor. Bressaid,·
P"------------------------
·
:;:i~t
2,'~
j
:ri;~~;;
c;"~ifJ!
:y··<
1
·
·
~f1;i~~~rriii~~~~ii
.,·.B
,
~.,~i%bJ~!!
... ,
.
.
.
'
.
•:.
,
ByPafPerretto
approved and money allocated,
·
-
•
-·.
..
there will be
a
guarantee
.
of the
'
'.
.
There
ate
not enough extra
.
:
publicatic>n of a Ma:rist literary
· ·
ctir
.
ricular
.
activities
·
on
.
the
-
magazine, namely the Mosaic, in
c
·
ampus
_
·
·
that
deal
.
with
.,
. a professional
.and
-
consistent
aciidemics," says- Mr .
.
Robert
·
.
manner. ·~There are a number of
.
·
·
Lewis
·.
of
·
the·. English
.
Depart
• .
.
people around who
•
write
...
and
nient.-Mr.Lewis and.a number of there· should be some way to
interested students maioiing in
:
advertise it," says Mr. Le
.
wis.
-·
English or Comxnunication Arts
.
,B_y·
-
organizing _the Literary
have submitted a proposal and a Gmld, Mr .
.
Lewis hopes
·
:
to
budget: to the financial 6oard in
•
remedy
.
.the spotty
.
history
.
of
hopes
.
of reviving the Literary
:
publicc1tion
·
or
_
_
the
.
co.lleg~•s
·
Guild.
.
·
.
.
·
•"
.
.
.
.
literary magazine
·
by vestmg
The purpose iri organizing such responsibility for publication
•
iri
a.
•
guild for English and Com-
·
cine
·
clearly
,
designated
muriication Arts majors
-
is to: 1) organization,
.
This will consist Qf
serve as
a
forum for
:
~
writers, annually elect(;!d
_
and-or selected
·
artists
·
·
and
.
photographers
:
·
on officers and a moderator '!Vllo witr
_
campus; 2) to serve
.
as a
·
group participat_e in the guild's
·
ac:.
which
·
will
sponsor ta.lks and
·
tivjties. Mr. Lewis a).so believes
workshops
.
by. visiting
1
.
writers
.
that the revival of the guild will
and artists in the broad field of "bring faculty
·
and
·
students·
communications; a~d 3) most of togeiher in an informal way.'
.
'
.
. :
an,
.
·
to
·
serve as
.tile
"
group
.
·
SALE ENDS NOV. 8
ITALIAN
LAMBRUStO
-99c
.·
_
.
. ·•
:¥tL
1.99
VALUE
"LARGEST SELECTION
OF WINE
&
LIQUOR
. IN
DUTCHESS COUNTY"
LIQUORAMA
HYDE PARK MALL, RT.9
·
NEXT TO SHOPRITE
·
·
·
resp9nsible fQr the
·
publication of
.
.
a
:
magazin~ . of
creative
work
·
.
. .
- - - - - - - - - - -.... - - - - - - - - - - - - .
.
which will
:
eiljoy_ offici~l
-
~
_
tatus.
·
:
In the past, aJiterary magazine
was published at:the
_
conveni~nce
·
;
of
1
a.II- involved,. .tile last one b.eing
:
·
·
.
:
at the
:
erid of."tlie 73-74 academic
·
yearjf the revival or this guild is
.
Friday
&.
Saturday Nig.ht After
9 fM
-
.
F~ee Mixer For )'ou
·
·
.
·
.
An
_
d
Our Visiting
_"
Group
Of
Girls
_
C
-
all
'
691-2927
!~e're
On
•
Viney~rd
Ave •.
In Hig~land,
.
-~Jusi
Ac~oss
-
Tlie
·_
8
.
ri~ge
-
.
BEER
-
&
·
SODA
·
SPECIALS
Lowenbrau 12 Oz. Cans
3 For Less Than
$1.21
A Case Less
·Than
$9.S 1
.
-
-
~
--~~
·
.
d~
-
_
'
-
·-
~
.
.
-
BUD 12 Oz. Cans
6 For Less Than
$1.56
187 N. Hamilton St;
Poughkeepsie
·
454,1490
s33.,soo .. ooo
-
Unclaimed
S~holarships
Over $33,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, grants, aids, and
fellowships ranging
from
$50 to $10,000. Current list 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
:
oo
for postage and handling.
------------------------
I
PLEASE RUSH YOUR CURRENT LIST OF
I
1
.
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS souRcEs 10:
r
I
Name _ _
' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
I
I
I
I
Address
·
·
I
·1
City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
State _ _ _ _
Zip_
·
_
I
I
I
.
I
(California
residents
please add 6% sales tax.I
I
~---~~ .... ----.... ~-~-----------L~-~----~-----~--~-------J
...
,
OCTOBER 30, 1975
THE CIRCLE
·
Pace Stops Vikings
ByThomaaMcTenian
-
Marist's drives, however, and it the Viking 39. Again given good
wasn't until linebacker Bob field position, Pace could not take
.._
PAGE4
High
On
Sports
By
Thomas McTernan
CREW TEAM RETURNS Ji'.ROM
·
BOSTON
Pace quarterback stu Shepanl Cunningham recovered his advantage and were appa~ently
sco ed
·
-...a
1
th t
d f
t
ped
·th third
d 16
In one of the toughest meets of the fall rowing schedule, the varsity
hit L,/~!~n:~:te~J1"J:e f!r ~~~:361f:~
::i~ :~ :~:~:
fh:p Mari~~ .;_ But
ji;::
steve~~
-
heavyweights placed 19th out of 40 teams in the "Head of the
.
Charles"
two points late in the third Vikings able to reach the end was called for a personalfoul that regatta before 50,000 spectators in Boston Sunday•
quarter to give the Setters an 8-7 zone.
made itfourth _and_ one instead.
Vesper, with several members of the U.S. National team, won the
.
upset
.
win
over fifth -
-
ranked
Mike Altomare bulled in from The Setters got the first down and race and the Boston Globe trophy that goes with it. .Harva
_
rd, th_e host
Marist on rain - soaked Leonidoff the three on the third play for
his
scored four plays later.
team, won the Paul Revere trophy
-
for overall supremacy
.
m the
Field before a Homecoming sixth touchdown
.
of
.
the season.
Marist got the ball three times
regatta.
·
·
crowd Saturday.
Levine chose
to
go for the kick in the final quarter but could not
Strong
.
head winds slowed the times from previous years. "We
Only
.
f~ur days before, tlie
.
and
Tim
Trotta made it 7-0 with move the ball
_
on
.
the ground,
rowed at a much lower stroke than· most of our competition," ex-
Vikings had buried Concordia 40- 1 :20 remaining.
_
_
_
gaining just 8
_
yards
_
on 10
-
at-
hlained c~a;h Bill Austin. "We expected !o finish a little higher but the
6
:
with
,
:..
a rushing
.
attack
.
that
Two key mistakes in the third tempts against the Pace defense.
eavywe1g ts also rowed in the fours.'
·
.
th
totaled
.
385 yanls .
.
Aided
-
by the quarter turned the game around,
The loss drops
:
Marist to 4-2 and
-
The fours also placed 19th. The best finish for the Red Foxes was e
poor
.
field conditions the big
.
Pace enabling Pa_ceto control the
.
ball
/virtuallr
e~inates them from
13th place finish by George Schaefer and Willie Davison in the pairs
'
defense
limited
Marist
•
to 142 almost
_
the entire 15 minutes
·
contention m
•
.
the Met-8. Pace,
.
.
event.
.
.
.
_
.
.
.
_
_
_
.
yards rushing and picked off two
·
before they finally scored with 34-c_meanwhile kept their hopes alive
·
The wee~ before, the _ heavyweights
_
fm1shed fourth m the
-
Phil Colangelo passes.
seconds left in the period.
_
.
as they face first-place Brooklyn
Poughkeepsie_ ~ega~ which _was shortened_ to one ra~e due _to
"We knew they were over-
_
The first came on th~ first play tomo
_
rrow night: ·
_
. :
>
.
_
_
weather condi!1on~; Syracuse had two !>oats fir~; an~ seco~d ~bile
powering from our
·
scouting after Walt Hocalowsk1 returned
!Th
_
lS
Saturday;
.
the
,
Yikings will
.
Cornell took third.
_
.We
only los~ by seven seconds; said A~m. The
report,"
.
said head coach Ron thesecon_dhalfJcickoff2fyards to ente~tairi
:
Os'Yego
'.~
.'
St
_
at
_
e
·
:
on
.
four.teams were sepc:irated ~Ya ha!(-lengt}"l
~~
thet'Y~
-
_
mile mark
Levine. ''We planned to pass
-
the Manst 38, Nick Mancuso, Leomdoff Field at 2 p;m. Oswego
before Syracuse moved out m the fmal mile.
,
_
_
_
more and run wide but the· rain held to 7 yards after getting
.
169 is only
H
but have. been playing
ruined the
·passing:
game and against Concordia,
.
fumbled the varsity - level teams all season.
allowed their backs to
-
cover the
'
_
ball as he crossed the line, Pace Levine notes that they
ate
even
-
corners.'' He also pointed outthat used over seven minutes of
:
the bigger than Pace
:
but
addsi
"We
-
the. team only had four
·
days to <;lock on running plays and drove have some s~rprlses
·
for them.
_
prepare an offense for the g.µJ1e. down to the Marist 6.
_
But
·
the We _
_
intended
•
~9- utnize them
Marist dominated
-
the first Jmlf Viking defense held
_
them arid the
_
agamst Pace bu~ lost two days of
as
_
the defens
·
e
.
allowed
.
the
-
offense took over at the
:
3_
-
preparation due to
.
the events
·
or
visitors JUSt one first down and 26
·
.
Not wanting to .try anything the
_
·
last tw9 weeks.''
yards rushing .
.
The two
ill-
risky, the Vikingsfailed to move
terceptions off Colangelo killed the ball arid Mike Laffi
_
n punted to
Soccer Nears
·
Call Title
.
.
-
'
:
-
-
~
.
'
.
KOLTHAY; MCGRAW NAMED ATHLETE~ OF·THEWEEK
Juniors Fred Kolthay
.
of NewHamburg, N:Y. and Jolin McGraw
.
of
Island Trees, N.Y. have been named Marist College AUµetes of the
Weeks for the weeks ending October
_
18 and 25; respectively
:
Kolthay", co-captain and top-ranked member
.
of. the cross-country
team, set tworecordS while.winning two more meets.
On
Oct. 15 he set
-
a Nyack course
·
record-while winning the CACC
·.
in!}ividual cham-
pionship. Kolthay
-
then set a Schqol record for the Marist course in the
Oct 18 meet with Siena:
· ·
·
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
_
_
.
·
M,cGra
_
w;
·
midfieider
··
ori the
,
widefeated so~cer
~
team,
-
scored two
goa.ls and assisted
_·
on two others to lead Marist to a record-setting 5-1
win over York Saturday>He also
.
played a
-
strong gai:ne last Wed-
nesday as the R~d Foxes defeated CACG
:
chatnp Nyack 2--0,
:
·
:
.
.
.
.
..
•
.
,
__
.·
.
...
•
··
•
·
.
NQTES
-
FROM T,HE SPORTS
.
DESK:
By Thomas McTeriian
Although Nyack
,
outshot them dribbljng toward the goal before
-
-
26~19, most of those shots were centering. Zerione Naitza stopped
The Th
_
ird Annual Marist
.
College Cross-Country Alumni Banquet
C>
Continuing to
-
display a from outside the penalty area (30 the pass for
·
McGraw, who was held Saturday night at the Camelot:Irm on R.oute 9. Speakers in-
powerful
·
offense and a
·
stingy feet) .
.
Goldman credited the
'
blasted his ninth
.
goal to the upper eluded emcee Bob Norman; Eriglish
·
·
professor at Marfst; 1975 co~
defense, .-the Marist
.
booters backline de~ense for keepin°g the
·
r~ghtcorner for
•
a 3-0 foad;
·
captains
-
Jim Gillen arid Fred Kolthay;
·
Marist athlet.ic director
_
P,Osted
_
their ninth
.
straight 'win Parsons away from the goaL Jay
:
York scored its lone
:
goal· with Howard Goldman; past cross country coaches Robert· Lewis (1964-67)
and
'.
closed in on their first con- Metzger,
.
back
.
in
_
goal
-
after 5:29 .left when Richard Pierre
-
and Leonard Olson (1968-71); present coach Rich Steven·s; and Dan
ferencechampionship ever. In
,missing
three games due to a beat Biff Damo
ori
a
·
.
rebound. Kuffner
;
cross-country
-
alumni representative. Honor
roll
awards
successive home games, they dislocated
.
.
finger
;
. stopped 13 Robinson ·got that orie
-
back
·
by were presented to Kevin McGee, Mike Moran, Joe Walsh
,
Bob Nelson,
t()pJjed Ramapo 4-1, blanked shots while
;Nyack's
Larry Mc- conyertihg a pai.s from McGraw Jay Doyle, and Jim McCasla.nd. Doyle,
-
McCasland and Moran were
gefendingCACG titlist Nyack 2-0 Clements
,·
blocked
_
10,
.
.
.
'.
·
with
4:·u
to go iri the half.
also inducted into the team's Hall of Fame ...
.
and
•
trounced .York 5-1.
,
,
·
·
John McGraw aild.Al·Robinson
--
U,e
;
seci:md. half
·
wa$ con-
The Marist College Tennis
:
Tournament sponsored by the athletic
.
A
win
·
yesterday over West scored twice apiece in Saturday's siderably slc>wer due t(J the field depa11~ent and the E.U.B. closes Saturday morning with the mixed
Connecticut State,.-in Danb1,1ry
-
winover
:_
Yorkplayedinadriving conditJons, although Mcqraw
.
doubles championship_s:
·
Dolly Russell and Jack Schofield squeaked
.
.'. _
.
.
.
--c
•
.
\YOUl9 clincll tl1eJirst CA.,CG
;:
title
,
r
.
ain. The g1:tme was delayed over
.
. and _Tim Trotta
·
had several good
..
past ~ill Austin and Ann Cullinane 3"6, 6-4, 7-6 to earn-the right to·face
~
:.:.
_
'
i
.-
,
~~
c:;.!S:
~
,~~;
~
0
Jri!.h.!fI\e!l
:
:f.9~~'.J3"Year
,
history:
:;
.
two
)
hoiii-s
;
when
:
the
~
visitors
·-
•
ex-
·
c'
scormg
.
6ifportunities
·:
down
:
· the
·
-
-
.
·
Shelli-Ira ca and
-
Ron Petro in the finals. Jay Metzger won the nieri's
1
-
·
-
The nine wins a~e the
.
mosUhey° perienced bus trouble.
-
.
·
: .
stretch. Gustavo
·
Beltra
.
scored
-
singl~title over Ernie Arico in straight sets 6_-3
;
6-0.
,
.:
·;
"Third Time
havE: ever won
in
a single season,
··
"We play~d fairly
'
_well under the
<
~inaL goar. with
·
15:07
_
Around"
-
defeated "EM'sl' 15-0, 9-14, 15-13 for the Intramural Coed-
toppmg
.
!he
_
B_resord~d in_l974 .
.
-
the
.
conditions,'_'
·
~id Goldman,
_
· i:em~ining
u,i
·
_the
contE:st. --
:
·
•
Vo!leyball title Oct. 22, Members of the victori?us squad
_include
Neil
The
,-
b1g
wm,
ofco-qrse, wa~
-
''It.was
very
.
difficult to
·
control
,
·
,
Dam<?_, playmg the first
-
half, TeJeda, Jay Metzger, John McGraw, Jol_in Vandervoort, Val
over Nyack, who came in Wed- the ball. and concentrate on the
·
made 3 saves while Jay Metzger Bellerosa, Robin Smallwood and John Covell .
.
.
-
_
-
,,1
,-
·
,
·
··
- -
·
.,
ne~day with
an
~1 record. Zenone
:
~~me with all the mud and ~ain; ,;
,
ca~E! in_ to
.
_
stop five. ~arist
"The Impact of1Amateur Athletics on American Life" was the topic
Na1t~ put Mar1ston t~e board at
-
•
_M~rawopened t~e scormg by , o~tshot york 32-9 overall.-' ·,
of the Free University's Dialogue in Champagnat House III Monday
the 30.0~ mark
:
of the frrst half
_
by sllppmg a
_
corner kick from the
On
·
Oct.
-
15 the
·
Red Foxes night. Participating in the discussion which quickly turned to the role
convertmg
:
_ a pass
-
from
:
Tim
_
lefLthr~ugh the startled York
_
do'Yned Ramapo 4-1 as Zenone
of professionalism in
-
the
:
sports world were: Dean Tom Wade,
.
Trotta for his ~leventh goal of the d~fens~ at the 13 :50 mark. Steve
_ .
Na1~za scored two goals. McG!aw
basketball and tennis coach Ron Petro, cross:'(!ountry and track coach
year. ~o mmut!s: later steve
_-
August~esetupthesecond~c?re a~ded _a go~l and _two assists.
Rich stevens and rowing coach Bill Austin . . .
.
Nick Mancuso, who
Augu~me-
.
scored
his
second to ten minutes
._
late~ by gammg Gm~ D1Martmo
_tallied
the other
rushed for 169yards
.
inthe40-6 win over Concordia Oct.
·
20, was named
m~ke 1t 2-0.
.
_
-
_
control !)f the ball m a scramble
::
Manst goa,l. Damo stopped 15 of
the Met-S's Player of the Week and was featured in Thursday's city
.
_
We played very
_
well
m
:
the
.
to the nght of the York goal. He the 21 Roadrunner shots.
edition
-
of the DAILY NEWS ..
.
.
·
. ·-
-
_
_ ·
·
first half,'' n~ted coach
'.'Doc"
-
deflected it in front t? Robins~n,
The hooters close (!Ut their 1~75
Met-8 scores last week: Manhattan
o,
St. J"ohn's
O;
Iona
o,
·
Pace
o,
•
_
Goldman'. He !>lamed !~e
_
sla~k who only
.
had to tap 1t
~
few m- h?me
-
sch~d~le Saturday with
Brooklyn 51, Concordia 15; St. John's 13, Iona
O;
F.D.U. 13,
·
Ramapo
o.
s~cond h~lf
~~ ~
slugg1Sh !Did-
.
ches f~r the score.
·
Sien~ begu~nmg at
11
_a.m.
on
. : Big game this weekend
--
is Saturday night's clash between top-
f1eld, ~d~g, I ~d not substitute
·
_Robmson
·
se~ up the next ~oal, LeOf!ldoff F'~eld. Thex will trayel
ranked Westchester
(6-0)
and Iona (3-1-:-1).
_
.
Met~ has prestige on the
-
prope~ly m ~he first half and they with 14:41 leftiAthe half, taking a_ to Kmgs Pomt for a tough game
line ... In NCSA stats; Mike Altomare is second in
-
rushing and fourth
were Just tired.''
.
·
-
pass.from Lucious Bo"!leson
-
and· next Wednesday,
·
Nov. 5.
in scoring, Mike Laffin is ninth in punting, and second in interceptions. _
-
rJ"
·
··
•
·
V
·
-
h
-
-
··
··
'
·
·
·
'Cross-country
team defeated alumni 21-37 in 3~mile race Saturday .
.n~rrzers
£
QUrt-
In
.
A_
·
l~an
_
y
·
.
. ·
J:~~s~~~:3nbyi~~l S!~~o,p:i~cA°;~~~w~:, ;~·sa~:!,
~~-
Mccasland and Bob Nelson
.
.. Several meet results of Red Foxes have
The Marist Running Red Foxes runners in a 17th place finish with Nyack Oct. 15. Marist
:
had the
_
placed fourth of nineteen teams a
.
time of
.
26:03,
.
one minute first six -runners across
,
the line,
--
-
and second of ten
·
junior varsity behind race winn~r Carlo led by Fred Kolthay's new course
. teams in the p~estigious ninth
.
Cherubino of Albany. Brian record.
:
.·
__
_
annual Albany
-
State
•
Cross
.
Costinewas21stin26:13followed
.
This Saturday, the top seven
-
Country Invitational held last
·
by Tom
·
Luke, 27th
in
·
26:20, Bob runners oil the team will be
~a~urday. This
:
was;the highe~t
·
Coufal, 36th in 26:32, George representing
·
Marist in ~he New
fm1sh ev
_
er for Manst teams_ m Mccutcheon; 53rd in 26:56, Jeff _York
-
State Upstate Cross
each race. Marist was the first Blanchard, 69th in 27: 19, and Ric Coun!ry Championships while the
New York ~ate team to cross the
-
Bond 96th in· 28: 01.
.
.
rest of Jhe team
will
be
_:
com-
~
-
-
'
line in each race, being riosed · out
· -
Iil the JV race, the Red Foxes peting in Vari Cortlandt Park in
in the varsity race by Keene state had the top
·
runner of the race in the Collegiate Track
..
c~n,f~r~QCE!
,
..
(5:l),
.
:
Springf~eld c:,'(65), and Charley Gysih who bfazeci
'
·to a Varsity and
·
JV
'l
Cliampionships
_'
--
.
Millersville of Pa. (84). Marist 22:22.6 clocking
on
the
-
4:25
.
mile The Upstate Championships are
topp~~ Albany state by
~
·
.
152-156
_
cour
_
se; Teammate Bill Krempel beirig he~d
,
at
:
the
:
campus of
margm. Other teams
·
mcluded als<> brought qome a trophy for Rochester
.
Institute.
.
of
Syracuse University, Platt, his seventh place finish of 22:52. Technology· on their 5
.
7 mile
sburgh, stony Brook,
.
Trenton Other Marist
_
JV runners in- course. Last,:Year Marist placed
State, Colgate, BinghamtQn and
·
eluded:
-
Dave Scho()ls, 17th
.
in 4th
in
the Upstates.and
_
the tea~n
C.W. Post, to mention a few.
·
23:28,
·
Quint Johnson, 2oth in has their sites on
.
a top three
Another happy result of the !Jleet- 23:36, Will Morrison, 21st in 23:~7, finish this year.
·
_
·
was Marist's thumping of,
_
steve Meier, 34th in 24:i4;.and
·
M-
8
·
F
-
·
··
b ll
-
LeMoyne College (15~281); the
_
_
_
Keith Millspaugh,
·
42nd in ~4:57.
. ,
et
·
-
oot a
-only team this year to topple the
·
_
66 ruimers competed
·
in the JV
_
_
.
.
_
W
L
·
·
:
T
Long
,
Red L4te.
'LeMoyne
beat race.
·
.
·· ·
·
Brooklyn
.
5
-
o
·
O
:
Marist by three poirits in the first
Springfield won the JV
-
race
Iona
--
.
3
1
'
1
meet of the.year. Since that time
·
with 24 points while
·
Maristwas
-
.
Pace
·
:
_
3
1
1
-Marist
'
has
_
shown constant im~ second with 56,
.
followed
·
.
·
by
>
MARIST
3
'
2
o"
p~ovement: while
·
LeMoyne has Colgate with~70 arid
'
Keene
·
state
st; John's 2
2
-
·
1
_'.beep
up.:. and- down a11d tumbled
.
with 83.
;:
'
· ·
,
·
·
F:D.U'.
.
·
1
:
3
o
·
:
to a 5-5 recor~:
_ _
·
·
·
The·
·
,
~ed Foxes captured ihe
_
Manhattan
_
0
--
3
1
·
Fred
_
Kolthay topped the ;Marist 1975
-
CACC
· ,
championships at
_,
Concordia O
.
5
O
:
.
,
.
.
.
·
,
.
'
·.
~.
'
'
.
..
...
..
-
.,
_,
.
.
.
.
.
'
:
.
'
,
":
•.
been listed in the HARRIER, a national long-distance magazine.
.
BULLETIN:
·
Lc:iurQes H
.
S. pulled a major upset in high school cross-
-
coun~ry
'
b)'_ defeating .i\rl~
_
~on
-'.
27-28,ton campus Tuesday .
.
The
Admirals :were the fifth-ranked_ team in the
·
state,,
HIGHLAND
_
DINER
.
-
Q
.
~
~.rt
.
~~
:,.
HQ
_
U
,
RS
-
_
-
-
just
·across
the
bridge
.
_
on
Rt. 9W
·
_
Serve
The
_·
Best
-
Food"
HYDF:
_
PARK. N., Y
.
AIR
··
CONDITIONED
XQUISJT
ROOMS
.:.:
L
-
229-,7720
-
<
_
NEAR
_
·_
.
GOOD
.
FOOD
-·
:
♦
·
_
-.. :.
_
POINTS
.
OF
·
.;-
·
,
INJEREST
·
:
-
♦
At
.
Reasonable
-
Prices
u.
·
s.
Rou:rE
.
9,
HALF ~1LE
NoRTH_oF
F.
_
D,:R.S~RINE
15.6.1
15.6.2
15.6.3
15.6.4