The Circle, November 13, 1975.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 15 No. 8 - November 13, 1975
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THE CIRCLE
'MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
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NOV_EMBER 13, _1975_
Wade Appointed
-· Developm~nt. Dii-ector
Thomas W. Wade has been
named the new Director of
-:l)eveloprnent at Marist CoUege,
it . was announced today by
· President Linus
R.
Foy:
· At Marist since 1962, Wade is
leaving the position · of Dean of
Students to assume:duties in the
areas , of fundraising, - alumni
programming and long-range
planning for capital solicitat~on.
He succeeds John J. Dougherty
who has.been-named an assistant
to the President.
. .
Selected from
a
field of 80
candidates, 'W_ade, · was ·. in-
terviewed arid nominated by a
search committee of the Board of
. Trustees. He
will• assume duties
November 10. · ·
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· A · graduate of Manhattan
College, he completed a master's
degree aFHofstra Univers(ty in
1962~ He holds a certificate of teenagers. He initiated the office
educational management earned
of Safety and Security.
.
-in 1973 from Harvard Business
•
.. As an executive officer of the
School. ·
college,. he· served- on numerous
He has held seve!"al positions at committees,. including those _
Marist, including thatofDir_ector concerned
with
academic
of Admissions. He was appointed restructuring and long-range
· Dean of Students in 1966 and since physical planning. He was also
developed a comprehensive involved with Marist's transition
progi,-am of _student·. personnel from a church - related in-
-services. ·
_
stjtution to private . status and
This
programm_ing
, en~· . from an all-male college to a co-
compasses ten· .administrative educational one.
areas-
including · athletics,
Wade is a native of Port
counseHDg, residence halls, Washington, Long :Island: After
financial aid, health services ~nd graduation from college he
a supportive program for . taught three years at
St:
Mary's
educationally and economically High School, Manhasset, where
disadvantaged students. .
he also servea~ as Director of
He
assisted-
with
the Athletics.
· ·
development of several · in-
He and his wife Ann and four
ternship programs at Marist, as . children reside at 16 Gilbert
well
as
several
summer Drive, Hyde Park. •
··-
programs for area children and · ,
·
Thomas W.'Wade, Director of Development
BYFREDKOLTHAY
·
the commercial•is aired ori.
Schedule, and has a three line
C d
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-p ·.
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The coillmercials are shown on song seUo
~
guitar melody .
.,.. an
l
at·e
S
...
en
are
The admissions office of Marist channels 6, 8 and
rn.
These are
Although .. success of the
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isspen~ing$15,489}or~~levision•:n_aUonaHtaffiliated sta~ions_ cal)lpaignhasbeenlimited,in_a
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.::SlB_!~J:.d m_. Sch.~~~~tady;, ,. ~ew • recent ·college Night ·at.a. high·
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of
--"increasing. . student Haven~ and Albany, respectiyely. schoolrth~ M,arist,.College table
,.... BY CANDI DAVIS
: "I
was really surprised, I had a
lot more response, and interest -
than I · thought : I would," said
Debi Allione, Commissioner . of
Student
Government,
and
Financial Board elections. . .
Miss Allione· was chosen as
commissioner · by Chip Ermish,
acting president of Stude'nt
Government. She was selected
because she is a work-study
student and is not involved with
S.A:C., C.U.B. or Iriterhouse
Council. ·
Elections must be held three
weeks after the··commissioner-is
chosen. Petitions must be handed·
in
by .Thursday, November 13.
Candidates ·night
will
take plai::e
soon after, and campaigning will _
end· two days bef6fe elections.
Elections will be held on campus·
November 20 and 21.
· ~ss · Alli om( s responsibilities
as commissioner are to put up
posters notifying the,-. ~tudent.
body of tpe . elections; draw up
petitions, make sure the names
are valid on thepetitio!}s, .set; up
enrollmen1,'' said David M. These stations. were cho~en was surrounded by students
Flynn, Director of Admissions. because they broad~st in _areas . interested in Marist because ihey
The "medium mix" .campaign- other than the areas from which had seen the commercial.'
•
candidates
night,
oversee began on October 13, 1975 and as the bulk of the students now come
However Mr. Flynn isn't as
campaigning
procedures, yet,
Mi<.
Flynn conceeded, the from.
.
.
concerned with the
0
short range
tabulate votes, and inform the goal set _has not been achieved. · . The radio commercials are on . effect" as he is-with the "long
results to the rest of the campus.
Th.e. project came about· la~t three local stations, WHVW,
range_ effect" . of ;'influencing a
Miss Allione is receiving $60 for spring when Mr. Flynn selected W~OK, and WKIP, as well as on
fourteen year old" -and im-
her job 'as COI9ffiissioner.
,
one ofthree
film
companies to an Albany. radio station.
· planting · _at · least
sub-
People close. to · the election create· a thirty second com-
The cost of three different 60
consciously ,the thought of Marist
have informed · the '.Circle that mercial to attract prospective second radio commercials is $480
College.
. _
some of the · prospective can~ students. ·
for 48 "spots" in a three week·
There. is a possibility of up-
didates for the office-ofpresident
On May 1 and 2 of this year the package. The air time for the TV dating the current recruiting film
are. Rick Bott, John . Woodin, Kaylix Films Company shot 90 commercials is $10,000.
shown at high school, since
Moira Coffey, Don Fitzgerald, Ed minutes of 16. millimeter
film
President Linus Foy, along Marist owns the excess
film
not
Jennings, Andre Green. and Raul costing $5,000 for full production ... with others who ha:ve seen the used in the commercial.
Quintano:. Prospective can- From this, the company edited commercial,
is : extremely . The remaining . commercials
didates for vicepresident are the film into a · thirty second pleased .. with
~e quality• of /will be shown until November 23
Kevin Bliss, Brian Bennet · and commercial.
· craftsmanship along· · with · the on· such shows . as: Space 1999,
Joan D'Emie. Joan Stegenga is a
A World of Learning and Living content.
_ Wide World of Entertainment,
prospective . candidate
for• is the them_e of the cominerciaL
pie TVcommeicialhas scenes Soul Train, Cher, and others.
secretary, and John Davern is a "We tried to capture the spirit of depicted on · the 1976 Spring
prospective
candidate
for the students, and the faculty- , - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - , - , - - - - , - - - - - - ,
treasurer .. · Prospective can- student relationship being on a
didates for
.
Financial Board are one to one basis," said Shaileen
Kathy Walsh,
·
Tony Wilger, Kopec of-the-Development Office.
Victor Olivera, and Yvonne Rios. Ms.• Kopec pointed out the care
Miss '.Allione is glad to see that taken to "soft .sell education",
there is so much interest in the understanding that education
elections, and a genuine concern . cannot be "marketed as a
by the·prospective candidates for regular proquct such as Pepsi.
Student
Government
and We have to, be aware ofthe in-
Financial Board.
tegrity of the product." Care was
taken in · choosing · whi.ch shows
· Classes · Attend Polls·.
- ·. By J'I_NA
IRACA
. . .
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assigned district to wait .for the. ultimately won the election. The
results to be called so that he students then . returned to the
Voting
machines
ceased 'could record them and ,'return Poughkeepsie .Journal to observe
clicking; results· were -"called, them to the Journat Various the _ newspaper as reporters
pencils ·. t\Vit~hed . in _haste to groups w~re arrangea and began writing their stories.
·record figures; headquarters · assigned to accomP,any reporters
The event was plartned by Mrs.
were.filled with smoke, gin, and to wherever their stories would Mimi McAndrew, teacher of the
the tension of waiting.-
'·
take them. Most of the people Journalism class and also a
LastTuesday night members visited the headquarters set up JournaLreporter. The point of
of the Journalism class . and by County Executive William,_, such an experience was that it -
Radio .
cl~ss
at Marist. College · -Bartles at the Holiday Inn. There· : enabled ·the students
to
.observe
collected election results· for
.
the. they- got a
:chance·
to int~rview first hand how a reporter. covers:
·.Poughkeepsie Journal; The
_Mr.
Bartlesthemselves. Another
art
election:· The on·-. the .: job
Journalism :c1ass ·accompanied stop by the groups that night was insights gained by,the students
reporters'· to
various
her1dquar- the h~dquarters_otEd Schueler; -
will
hopefqUy . increase . the.ir
ters to observe election coverage. a.nother
County~
Exe_cutiye . apility. lo . deal _with'
a
-reporting
.
_
Tiie _
night· began fe>r the group . ,candidate, at the Hellenic. Center _situation.
·c~-"-
· '1'hen ea~h. person went
.~o.
his · in Poughkeepsie .
.
Mr ..
Sc~ueler
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The J~urn~lism.and.Radio classes'visited campaigrl·headquarter~ ·
.on Election mght and were present when Edward C. Schueler learned
of
his
vicµ>ry
n:i
the race for. County.Exe~utive. (Poughkeepsie.Journal
Photo by Davi~ Livshin)
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PAGE2
•·THE CIRCLE
The Marlst College CIRCLE Is the weekly
newspaper
of
the students
of
Marlst
College and Is publlshed throughout the schOOI year exclusive
of
v11t11llon
periods
by the Southern Dutchess News Agency, Wappingers, New York.
David Livshin
Mary Beth Pfeiffer
GigiBirdas
Gregory Conocchioli
FredAshley
ChipErmish
TomMcTeman
Patrice Connolly
Joan McDermott
Brian Morgan
Larry Striegel
Co-Editors
Associate Editor
Editorial Consultant
.
Photography Editor
Assistant Photography Editor
Sports Editor
Layout Editor
· Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Distribution Manager
staff:
Dave Kazdan, Gene Berkery, Rich Burke, John Reilly,
Ken Healy, Gene Heimers, Tom Hudak, Jack Mccutcheon, Mike
.
O'Shea, Larry Striegel, Ernest Arico,_
·
Gigi Birdas, Claudia
Butler, John.Bryne, Daniel Dromm, Karen Duverney, Fred
Kolthay, Barbara Magrath, Philip Palladino, Pat Perretta,
Dave Roberts, Ed Rubeo, Winnie
·
Saitta; Rich Sellers, Kamar
Swnrall, Tina Iraca, Julie Schott, Peter Van
.
Aken, Elizabeth
.
Godbout; Candi Davis.
.
THE CIRCLE
.
NOVEMBER 13, 1975-
Letters
To
The
Editors
.
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.
A Host To Violence?
IV
_
of Champagnatplayed host
to
notoilly allowir)g these action~ to
.
another event that may also be
-
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occur and
:
therefore smudgmg.
·
·
considered most successful with
the good name of our people; but
To the Editor:
one drawback: some person or
·
refusing to
,
.
take
':
~Y·
effective
I would like. to call attention to
.
persons broke in,
.
walked
-
in or action
,
to
.
P.rev~nt
-
thesl:
.
'
actions
.
a problem here at Mari$t that I . were
let in to
:
Ro
.
om
801
and
·
fro!ll
,
~ontm
:
~ur:ig.
:
I
·
sincerely
sincerely
.
believe involves each
·•
proceeded
·
·,
to htn:l' six desk
·
believe th1:1.t it is t1me for each
.
.
.
an<l ~very
:
member
.
of
·
this
·
drawers outthe window crashing
.
a~d ~ve!Y
,
~ne ~f us to
,
be _more ·
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_, community. To illustrate this
·
on the mall below. I
-
must also ~1S~r1mmating
·
~
/
our choic
_
e of
~
· ·
·
problem I would like
'
to supply · m
_
ention th~t there
·
'Yere
.
five
.
.
mv1ted gues~s
a.!14
to
·
_
b
_
e~ome
1
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6
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G
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R.
.
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o·
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,
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two recent events at the college
.
people
-
passmg through the mall
.
morerespons1ble~the.to~lityof
:_
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lp
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that
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compelled_metci
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write
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this d~ng at
_.
)east
_
_
three
/
of
•·
.
.
the
·
_
_
_
_
our_gues
1
ts'db~~thvMior ~hilt
Ce
.
llthey
letter. OneSaturdai;Nov .
.l
;
Leo
·
pr~Jections. It
~
was ~otde~e~
~
<
arf~"'.ove
'
'Y!
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~ns
o e~e
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House hosted an evenqpat may mmed
,
.
at
_
the
·
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~ediate t1me acbv1ti~'._If
_
we
:
c;o!1tlllue t() show
Although one could not term ,the
.
Manst ·_College Library gigantic,
•.
be considered most successful
..
whether or
~
not these
.
drawers .
•
the
•.
·
adinm1s
_
trat1on
·-
:that
_
·
we
extensive, or; by any means; complete, it does;
·
nonetheless, boastof
-
--
with one
'
drawback:
·
arf
un.:
were
-
+ossed ou
V:
by Marist-
,
cannot .be
:
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held
·
,r~sponsible Jor
.
many fine end?wmen~ in !he realm of boo!t5 ~nd is notto be
un-
fortunate circum~tance involving
;
stiidents, but f"belieye it was a
.
what take~t P1ace here
:at
~arist, ·
derr_ated. The library 1S, as 1s yte rest of Mar1St m general, small but an invited guestoutside ofMarist
:
:
strohger
:
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possibility that
-;-
this
.
. _
then I Ccln
s~~
_
no
~
a~term1t1v~ but
·
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not totally
:
unworthy of accla1m.
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College and
:
a
~
Maris
f·
Coilege
__
danger~us acti911.was committed for the a:~u11stra~1ont? prev~nt
·
Thanks to the 3M
_
Company an~ a check from Mar1St College m the
·
student which led to fisticuffs and
.
by
-_
an mvi~ed
-
guest
;
outside
·
of · any actmtr
:
from
:
Jaking p~llce
.
·
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sum of $16,000, the li~rary_s?on will ~e foolproof to those students "'.ho then to
.
confrontations involving
·
·
Marisq::qllege.
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<>
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~hat
·
can
-
,:lead
:
to
:c
_unfortun
.
~te,
: bon:Qw bo~ks
qn
an
:'
'mdefmite" baslS.
_
But yet anothe~ proble~ looms
:
more
·
people and attracting a
·
I
.
believe
w~
ca~ all :see • qµite
O
.
dangerous, a!}d
_
foolish ~ehav1or •
·onthe~?rizo~-.w?atab
_
outthosestudentswhoborrowPA~ESoµthat n1:1mber of. bystand
_
ers.
<
On
:
plamly ~ha(1s
_
h~pperung ~er~:
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Sincerely,
_
_
.
same
._
.
mdefm~te '
.
bas1S
,
? Even a system worth
.
16Gs 1S
.
not g90d
.
Saturday,
.
November
,
'
8th House
·
the Ma~stCollege
:
~ommun1ty1s
,
;
~aryTraube
enollgh to stop them.
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La~t
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weeldt
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was disc9vered that twenty pages of a
_
particulariy
.
.
V~lli~ble
·
vol~e
in
:
the
.
c
_
olle~ti~µ
·
of the
·
Publications
.
of
the
,
Mod~rn
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LangµageAssociationhadbeentomout:Letitbenoted
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thatthiswas
Thro
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ugh _Th.
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your
-:-
help;
We
neecFpeciple
·
in
~
,'.
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5;_Quips
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,
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•
ineans :a h1gtijy tinusual:discovery for the librarians, however
-
terested in· the
;
;
followiilg
:
areas:
·
··
,
•·-.
· 6.Comrrientary
,
Views
tragic itinay have been
;:
The $158 necessary"to rt;!placethe volume will
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News
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7.
Column Varieties
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come from f~nds to which all of us have "donated," as.will
the$16
;
ooo
Looking
Gfass
2 .
.
Social
Happenings
·
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WHATEVERi! !! ! ! ! !
.
for the new security system.
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3. Comirhmity &itu~tions and
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So
if you
.
feel you
·
have
··
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.
Tuition has a hundred other factors which
wm
affect)ts increase,
.
.
.
.
Circumstances
·
·
·
·
.
something
·
t9 ~Y,
a
.
poem yo
·
u
.
. y_et
,
se<:uri~y arid
,
·
vandalis~
a~e
.
takµ1g a larger and
)arger
con- To
.
whom
it
may conc~m.
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·.·
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,
4. ~orld View
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would like
.
to have printed, ideas
.
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sid~ration _mto thetotaL While it
1S
unfortunate that we must pay to
.
In order:J<> foeet
·
-the qeeds of
·
we also
.
need people inte·rested
·
.
·
you would
:
lik~
-
to express
·
-
,
j9in
. insure ou~elve~ against outsiders who seek _to profit{rom rippinif
,
9ffc
.
the community and
:
tci
<
giye
-
·m..:
·
in
•
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different
1
:
ind
des
·
of
.
com
:·
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THE -r.OOKmG~tJ\SS
.:
~nlff
:
,
Jf
.-
_
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the,Maris~ conuiiunity, itis
1
do':'mrightdisgustfug
-
that v_,e_musrpay
-
s,
{
diyiduals anothef
:
oppoij;lJ!l1ty
to
;
:
munication. Especially:
<'
:_
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· ·
•,
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you
·
are
;
fuler~
s
iecl°' plea
~
ejrj
;;'
to
::
_
d~r~Y
to
_
msure
_
?urselyes against
_
those amongus
who_are
doing
·
t~e express
·
thein~elves,
:
:
w:e
,
llave
: _·
·
,'h
Photog~aphy
·
:
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_
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_
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get iri
:
touch
:
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wi
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th Ja.cJcSchofie
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Id
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stealing.
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decided:to
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formTHE LOOKING:
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B. Graphic (Art
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and
-,
De~ign
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John
-:·
Reilly,
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Bai'bara
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J(elley
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The CIRCLE edit~rs are askmg students to make the 11ew
.
syste~ GLASS
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Techniqu~~)
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Gary Traube; GirinyDixor
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'Goo
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w.qrk. Don't make it necessary fo1= the 3M Company to develop a
-.
THE LOOKING GLASS
will
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C. Literary:
Man''.
Martin .before
.
the
system ofmarkingin
_
dividualpagesas.wellas books, because the only attempt to be informative~
..
_
l
>
Poetry
.
Thanksgivmg holiday.
.
.
.
one to profit
.
~ll be the 3M Company3:nd
'
we'll always come up·losers. amusing
;
and p
_
rovocaiive
.
m
:
Jts
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2.
·
Short story
Thank yo~ for:your time,
content .
.
However, for this
:..
ven::.
:
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3
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Essays
.
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The staff of
ture: to be successful we need
A;
Play Works
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THE LOOKING GLASS
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•
•
-
-
•
•
-
•
I
•
·
Pla,Ying·
The
Garn~
·
·
D
·
·
-
An error
·
1·n
.
"Publi"sher
-
's maintains ah open door policy to
Th
.
is
.
Sat
.
urd
_
ay marks
_
t
_
he fin_ al game of the.1975 s
.
eason for the Marist
_
e
·
SC
re
·
pa n
cy
.
ll
·t
d ts
'
ll b. ks
t
.
th
"
·
.
·
·
. Billing"to the
.
Bookstore caused
··
a s u en on a
oo
as o e
College Vikings Football Club.
.
· . ·.
.
·
.
·
.
.
··
_
·
.
_
the Desc
_
repancy
.
::
.
A
savings
,
of
:
retail
>
price set
.
forth by th
_
e
.
The players~ managerslmd coaches have labored many l(?ng hours
blish
·
f the bo
k
•
'
··
·
·
to
b
.
ring all the
.
ex
.
·
citment of
_
college fo
_
otball
.
here to Marist, as well as To the Editors of The CIRCLE
:
·
$310.50
"
was passfad
:
on to Mllfist pu
. .
.
~r
~
.
.
.
0
_
.
-
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
·
·
-
·
·
·
I
·
n
·
referen
·
ce
·
t
·
o
·.
the
·
arti
·
c
·
1e
·
.
·
o
·
n students;
.
_
The reord
.
er
:
"
_o
.
f:
_
:
the
··
.
···
·
·
-
.
·
:
··
·
· :·
A.N.
-
Dangelo
-:
to
our
local community residents.
·
.
·
,
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
B
·
k t
·
M
·
g
·
·
·
·
d
f th b t
'
the
·
Bo
·
okstor
_
e
·
.. en
·
t
.
i
·
tled
·
.
.
"B
.
o
.
ok scien
_
c
.
e b
.
o.o_k in
.
.
. .-
·
.
question,
:·
w
..
as
.
...-.
_
·
·:
·
00
sore
_
ana er
:
·
The players haye
.
p4,lyed
tJ:lis
season un er some o
e es con-
__
ditions, as well as some of the worst; even
iri
the midst of contreversy.
·
store Prices-soar''; November 6, billed at the
:
co!Teckbilling
,
-
.
of
.
. Despite some minor passeles we have seen some fine performances 1975.
·
·
·
$3.10 and not $.50
.
The Bookstole
_
on tlle field, ~specially from the freshman players
.
These fine per,-
formances couplfad with the special kind of dedication that Ron Levine
.
has broughtto
·
his position as head coach, has earned Marist College a _____
..;.. _ _ _ _
_
_
--~;,.._---------"""""--..................... _ _ _ _
_
_
..
.
-
..
-
,
-
.
-
.
-
.
- - -
.-
:
~
-
·
- - - - -
•
·-
place o, distinction in the Met-8 football conference.
·
.
·
·
. · The
editors of the Circle would like to extend our congratulations to
all those who together make up theMarist FootbaU Club
:
vie ttiank
you for providing everyone here at Marist with
•
many entertaining,
.'
exciting Saturday and Sunday afternoons
.
...
·
8
:
00
·
·
in
-
Sheahan
7
c:L~uµge.
·
,
Qoncentratiori C~~;
-
:
·
.
·
. ,·
.
Following
-
a slide and sound
• ·
·
_
Monday nite; Nov
.-
17 is
_
co_llege
·
presentation;
.
the floor
·
.
will be
.
.
nite .,.
:
admission 'at~the
~
box
:
office
·
·
.
It
has been said many; manytimes before that it is not whether you
·
win
.
orlose,buthowyouplaythegamfa
.
.
.
.
.
,
.
:
open
:
for
·
•
questions: Anyone
•
in.:.
'·
.'
:
js $1.00
_
wit°h'college
·
-
I'D. card
.'
.
..
terestedin
,
hearingthebeginning
_
:
'.
'
,
.
·
. '
:
·
'.
· · -:--:
·,. "·
·
.
·
··
·
·.
ofthe1976campai_gnisinvited
_
to
.
. '
:
GOFFEE
_
·
AND
:
..
__
CON-
·
• We feel. that
-
this thought and
-
feeling has .been exemplified this
season by the players
_
and coaches ~nd that means so much mor:e, tllan
just. winning or losing
/
· · ·
·
.
attend. Any questions, .see Jerry
·.
VERSATION: F.aculty members
Maryon;
.
President
·•.
of
,
the
·
=
are invited to
·
_join
·
commuting
.
Political
·
Science
·
_
Chlb,
-
'.
,
in
.
.
students
:
fcir
.
.
-
free coffee every
_
-
.
.
:-
'
·
.·
_
:
.-
:.-
~
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..
:
.
-·
.
/
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•
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z.z.;z
.
·
'
'
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'
.
.
Sheahan 217.
·
:
·
-
.
.
.
_.
.
.:
.
~
MO!lday moritµigjri 'tlte
,
Com::
.
.
.·
. . ·
.
•
.
• ·
·
·
'
·
:
mutei: Lounge
·
-..
from 9
c-.
11:
15.
.
There will be a
_
poetry reading
.
Organized
·
by
.
the
·
commuter<-
-
by
,
Elsa Colligan
,
on· Friday,
·
:
union;-Jhe
·
coffee.~ pfoyide an:.
November 14
:
.
at
.
2:30
in
the
.
:
opportunity fo~ commuters and·
·
Fire.side Lounge
.·
.
: _.: .
·.
-
':
. ;,
faculty
_
to-share
'
'ide~lf and time
·
·
.
.
·
·.
.
·
·
•
.
:
·
together.
·
.
·
.
The Italian ~ociety will sponsor
.
On Thursday, November 13;
\
·
.
;~
.
.
.
.
.
:
.'
. .
_
,
a beer and pizza mixer Friday,
,
Ingmar
:
Berginan's "Cries and
:
:
:
.
·
"
·
AN
AWARD, FOR
.
MARIST;
·
·
.
November l4;It wµI take place in
-
Whispers" will be shown in the
.
:
The
Dutchess County Association _
_
,_ ·
the cafe, /rom 9:·oo to 1:00. Live Theater; ILbegin~
·
_
a't
8:00,
ad-
·,
for :Retarded :children
:
_
recently
music
.
will
·
be provided
.
by the ~issio
.
n
_
is $.75 per person.
:
'
.
•
designated
.•
Marist
.·
College
IISnea~er
.
-B_rothers
..,
BanW
\
.
·
.
·
.
·
·
·
·
··
·
·
··
·
.
·
·
'-'Em.ployer of
.
the
·
·
.
Year''
.
. in
·
A<lmission
:
·
wilL
.
be
-
$3.00
:
::
per
•
·
.
•
·
·
·
.
.-·
·
recognition
·
of outstanding
:
ef_fort
.
.
per~on
:
·
-
.
·
·
··
·
;
.
·
J
;1L
hir!ng
:
the
·
handfoappe
.
d;
--
.
.
.·
.
.
.
,
,
HQ
.
J?SON
·
PLAZA THEATER,
•
~resident
.
Foy accepted
>
the
.
•
Anyone who ·has connections
·,
RT.
-
9
,
. .
·
. :.. · ..
award
Oct.
:
28
·on
·
behalf.
·
of the
. -
. -~ith
c
a
~
possible speaker
::
for ·
.
;
<
·?
THE
.
mDINGP.LACE~'
.
' .
College;
:,
The
/
preseritation
;
w~s
..
·
_'
·
gra_clti~tiO.f!
·
(riot
.
n~ce~~rilY a
.
..
:
Nov
•
.
18
_
th;6
/
45
:
&
:::
9
_
:30
.
p
;
m.
.
:
made,
·
·
•
by
·
<-
":
Carl
-\
Scag~ellH
.
·
·<
-.
p~litical f1gure)
;
pl~se
'
:
cont,a~t
.··
NIG~
_
LY>l:15~
_
4
_
:00 p.m
;
Sat
:
& _
•
presig~Iif
_
oL
_
th~
.
locar
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:
ch~pt~
·
r,
:
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'R~ch Dinneen
P.O
;
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C-99;
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._
of
.
·
.
physical
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for
;
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_
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··
Tuesday;
:
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,
..
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captur~
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and
·_
intei'nni!!I)t
'.
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:
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>-
education
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begin
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··
NOVEMBER 13, 1975
'
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
The
CIRCLE
Introduces
·
.. .
. The QUestioning Cameraman
BY RICH SELLERS
one of the best things the college
does.
This week's question: What do
.
Jim Kennedy
.
C-103: I think
you
think
is the
best
feature of Marist offers a wide range
.
of
Marist College?
.
opportunities for the students
.
Where
asked:
Around They can start things
·
they're
Champagnat Hall
.
interested in. There are a
·
1ot of
John Blue C-515: I think its things to get involved
·
in;·
-
n runs
location. Marist College
is
in an the whole gamut of activities
ideal spot. It's . pretty much people might get involved in. You
secluded. It's not near any big just have to know how to get
cities. It's ori the Hudson River, involved. It requires personal
which
I
think
is
nice. The area in
·
initiative and that's the basis of
which it's located is the best mariy of the things you can do
.
thing
,
_·
,
.
. .
.
·
.
))er_e at
. -
Marist, including
-
Mike D'Elia C.103: It's a small
.
academics. It
.
starts with the
school, it's easier to getto
.
know
.
individual.
_
.
people really
fast
and get to know
·
-
Carl Blondel
Leo-501:
Marist's
your
·
teachers well. You
·
have best feature - that's a good
·
·
more of
.
a. personal
-
education
.
quesJion .. U's hard Jo an,swer ·
.
·
·
tha11 youwohld at a state school
·
right here on the spot. To teU you
The CIRCLE is proud to introduce
its
new
column-The Questio,1ing Cameraman. The CIRCLE wm
.
pay $2 for any questions submitted and
used in
the colwnn.
.
or a bigger school. Ithink:that's"a
'
the truth,
l
can't.
think
of any one
really
_
i,mportant'aspect·_of school
·••·
thing in particular. The academic
and educatio1i"especially. because
..
,
'
sOmding is pretty good. Really,
I
of th
.
e technological background
'
can't say too much about ~hool
we
·
come
·
from- · and
.
the
·
-
spirit Marist lacks school
.
spirit. classes aren't so large that you
Artie Curran C-259: The people
,
technological
c
age we liveJn.
<·
>·
It
c_an take a lot of improvement. don't
·
get a chance
·
to meet that go here. Everybody's pretty
.
Sheila McKay
~313:
lthink the
.
.
·
J3rendon
.
Boyle
G~28:
..
Oooh,
everybody, Jt's a cozy size:
friendly.
·
social life. All the people around
here get along well, and we have
.
-a
good time
.
~
.
'
best
.
·
feature
is
the
.
coinriumity
:
· .
that•~ a tollgh
·
one.
l
guess
•
.it's
.
Donna Sharp C-616:
l
guess the
Tom Price C-219: The size of it.
seryice work tliatthe school does,
·
pretty much just hanging o
_
utside
.
people .
.
The
.
people are really
.
Marist
is
not a large college..- It's
•
.
Jike U.Y
,
k
·
(University
:
Year for
:
.
watching
·
the. show - watching fantastic.
"
I
never had any in° small
.
You get a better op-
-,
Action ~
-
edL
_
and the internships
·
them all
.
come back and forth in
.
tentions of coming here until
I
portwiity to meet people - to get
·:
people
.
do
·
in thfL coriununity:
I
:
the mall;
..
.
came
to
visit Marist. I -thought
.
to know them better. And to get a
.
think the bestmearis of learning
.
,
..
:
Ed Ringwood
··
(Town): My the people were
~o
nice
.
and feeling of the Marist community.
Deborah
.
Page C-511: I can't
stand it. The classes are a pain
.
Oh, you want the best. Some of
the teachers are really fantastic,
like Dr. Ryan and Dr. Belanger .
:is actualwork and !think that's rnind
-
.
just went blanL.The friendly that
l
decided to
.
come.
Danny Gerruty C-217: The
..
:
;
',
·
..
.
'·
.
·
.
'
··
,·
,
'-
.
...
;.._
.
J!frt,Qkljri
Dodger
Speaks
·
·
·
·
.
. ·
·
.
. ~n Alcoholislll
.
flyin1;. l took pills to lose weight -
.
alcoholism. Alcoholiciimust have
· they tnade .me jumpy so !drank the_ guts t.o admit they have a
\
to ~alxn
·
down. Iused todrinkju~t
.
problem. I didn't
,
·
actmit
T ever
·
·
•
to
.
pass
··
the, t_ime?
,
.
In
·•
·
l960Ahe
-
had
-
a .problem
•
until
.
five years
.
Clevel~nd: Indians let ~e go
;"
1
-
·
a:go. "__
.
. .
.
.
.
.
c0Wdnt
,
p1tch anymore.
Newcombe stated that he
·
~e~COIJ?-be;
.
~ho
.
began
·
wished there
.
was a federally
··
dnnkmg his father s home brew, backed warning on every bottle
"to
__
grow big'and strong" at the ofliquor stating that alcohol can
age of nine, stopped drinking in be dangerous to
.
one's health.
1966. "I stopped
-
because my wif~
.,
His visit was sponsored by the
·
threatened to leave me. She was
·
Dutchess County Committee on
·
.
an
I had left. I'd lost my career,
·
Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse
my business, and my home
.
She and the Marist Counseling
.
was going to take my three kids Center.
.
.
:
and leave ·me. She said, 'I've
''I was on
4ie top of the ladder given
you three children and I
of professional baseball; But I Jove you
~
now you're destroying
cametunibling down because
of
me and the children. Your own
my drulking problem;'.' said Don $on
·
is
afr~id of
_
you. ):'ou're an
_
Newcombe, star pitcher for
the
·
animal
.
when you're
drunk.'
I quit
:
·
arooklynDodgersinthe
_
l950's, to cold turkey that day. I haven't
an aucµence of 40 people in the ha~ a drink since the~."
Fireside Lounge~ November 10.
S1~ce he
_
began_workmg for the
.
Alcoholism
,
was the:
.
direct
.
National Clearmg. House on
HYDE
PARK
.
.
ARMY
.
·
·-j
•NAVY
10%
Dl
_
~COUNT
,
cause of the shortening of
_
..
his
:
Alcoholism five years ago,
pitching
- ·
c~reer. "Although
_I
Newcombe ~as traveled the
never drank right before I had
to
country, <'talkmgto people about
pitc~, I usedJo dn,nk 8 or 9 cans of
iny
?Id proble1;U and
.
trying to
beer a
_
fte~ (g~~~d- ~ed to get allev1a~e the st~gma attached to
drunk
·
to
:
:._cope with
-
my fear of
.·
alcoh!)hsm.
If
1t can pappen to
.
·.
'
·
..
·
.
·
.
.
·
me, 1t can happen to you. To
-
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stu-dent
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CACC Soccer
FINAL
-
W L
SALE ENDS NOV. 20
MARIST
+
Ramapo
W.ConnSt.
Nyack
Kings
Dowling
Bloomfield
5 1
Ult;========::9
4
··
2
..
!IMPORTED
!
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SANGRIA
3 3
~: 99tll
.
Met8 Football
BTL
Brooklyn
+
Pace
'
W L T
6 1 0
4 1 2
St. John's
Iona
MARIST
Manhattan
F.D.U.
Con·cordia
+clinched title
4 2 1
3 2 1
3 3 0
1 3 2
1 5 0
1 6 0 '
HYDF. PARK; N. Y.
·
.
AIR
CONDITIONED
·
XQUISIT
ROOMS
·
1.99 VALUE
"LARGEST SELECTION
OF WINE
&
LIQUOR
IN DUTCHESS COUNTY"
LIQUORAMA
HYDE PARK
MALL,
RT.9
NEXT TO SHOPRITE·
229-7720
NEAR
'
GOOD FOOD
♦
POINTS OF
INTEREST
•
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At
Reasonable
Prices
U. S.
ROUTE
9, HALI,' MILE
NOHTH OF
F. D. R. SHRINE
.
.
.
s334JSOO~OOO
UnclaiJUed
Scholarships
Over $3~,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, gran
.
ts, 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
,
CA90025
O
I
arri
enclosing $9.95 plus $1.00 for postage and handling
.
------------------------
I PLEASE RUSH
·
YOUR CURRENT LIST OF
I
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UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS SOURCES TO:
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PAGE4
THE CIRCLE
Vikings T-counced
21-8
byTHOMASMCTERNAN
second a 12 -yarder to Tony Bopp since Oct. 11, fwnbled after
for the TD. Warren Hersh then apparently finding daylight down
Fullback Charlie Vito scored · bootedthe extra point and Marist the left sideline.
· ·
.
twice from a yard out and the
trailed 7 - 0 midway through the
st.
John~s took advantage to
- tough St. John's defenseforced period. ·
score an msurance touchdown
four key Marist turnovers;
After that first drive, the · when Vito carried in from· the
leading the Redmen to a 21-8 Met
Vikings were able to get just 12 one. Hersh booted his -third ·PAT
- 8 victory over
.
the Vikings in _ .more net yards rushing ,.the rest · for the final score. Marist had one
Jamaica Saturday.
.
of the half. They got another· ·last shot on their next series but
- With injured backfield partner opportunity late in the second BopQ stepped in front of Van
Sa~~ seeing limite~ action, Vito
quarter when linebacker >Ron Voorhis to grab ·his second in-
carried the __ ba!l 32 times
~~F
206 . Clarke picked off his siXth in- terception after- the Vikings had
yards on a variety of draw plays terception ,of, the· year and driven to _the Redmen 7.
·
· and· sidelines
ruri.s.
_
returnedit to the Redmen 37. But
Levine blamed the team's
NOVEMBER 13, 1975
HARRIERS CONCLUDE BEST REGULAR SEASON
A double dual yictory at Van Cortlandt Saturday enabled the Marist
cross-country team to conclude· the 1975 regular season with a 21-1
record. The Red Foxes will finish their most successful season ever
this
weekend with the NCAA Division III championships in Boston and
the IC4A's at Van Cortlandt.
Marist topped ·a strong StonyBrook squad 21-35 and defeated
Manhattan's "B" team 1548 to close out with 21 straight wins overall
and 19 straight at Van Cortlandt. The Red Foxes have now won 33 of
their last 34 9pponents going back to 1974, the only loss at the hands of
LeMoyne in this season's opener.
Fred Kolthay set a new record as he won
his
eighth race of the year
in 27:08. Freshman Bob Coufal was just two seconds behind in second
place. Brian Costine (fourth), Tom Luke (fifth) and Will Morrison
(ninth) rounded out the scoring for Marist. All together, ten Marist
runners went under the 30 minute mark despite the hot and hwnid
conditions.
High
.·On
Sports
"He is a good football player,"
after tw6 incomplete passes.and spotty offense. on backfield in-
praised head coach Ron Levine. _an 11 - yard-completion to Van juries and. inexperience. He
"We just couldn't tackle him and Voorhis at the 26, Colangelo was pointed out 'that Mancuso had
their offensive line blocked very_
intercepted by · Bopp __ -and the injured his hand and that Brisson
BY THOMAS MC TERNAN
- . well."
·
Johnnies ran out-the clock.
.
·
· had missed the last three games.
·
-
·
The ~me c~~ldn't be·said}or
~ar~Hinally g~tittogether_on Asked to explain the team'.s up. MURPHY .AND HOLMES NAMED
AS
HOOP CAPTAINS
the outsized Viking bJockers. _
St.
their ~1rst possession of
t}ll:!
third and- dclwn performance in recent
John's; like our o~er re~ent quarter after Vito had completed weeks, he answered, '.'Maybe it is
Senior frontcourt aces-EarlHolmes and Ray Murphy have been
opponents, .was so big .they Just a 60 - .yard drive- for·St. -·John's a coincidence but I think it can be selected as co-captains of the varsity basketball team for the 1975-76
shut the middle off;'' Levine --with a one - yard plunge. Hersh's attributed to our lack of ex- season.
. _
. , _•- ·..
·
commented .. ''.There is very little PAT made_ it 14 -
o
just two perience. You cannot have that
"I am happy tpey were selected,tJsaid head coach Ron Petro. "They
a 180..,p_ouild gl!ard can do toa240' · minutes·to the half.
..
_
cohesion to be
()n
top, week in and both played wen last year and deserve to be captains.;rhey will help
po~nd . 11?,eman.
except · __ F!)llowJng the _ kickof
_
f. t_!le-- week out __ without. playing create the atmosphere needed to have a good team."
.
.
neutralize him.
_
_ _-
Vikings n'Iarched 74 yards
m
15 together more and _our injuries
Holmes, a 6-5 center - forward from Buffalo, N.Y., was the.leading
The line did block well enough plays lor their' score in a series - have. hurt us."
point - g~tter. last season and was named to the. All-CACC team. A
, to· enable quarterback Phil dominated by short, but clutch
The Vikings hope to close out communication major, lie averaged 18.3 points a game and led the
Qol~gelo to, lead _Marist from
yardagf andJwo penalties. Mike the season on",a winnmg _
n·ote squad with 11.0 rebounds per ,outing.
.
· .
the~·own· -29 deep
_
mto Redm~n Altomare ran the final six for his -Saturday againstlona (4-3 - l)at
''Earl can be very devastating.,.and dominate any game," notes
t~~ritory. Colangelo had the big eighth TD . of the. ·year
.
and.- Leonidoff Field in a game which Petro. "I think many teams will key on
him
so we'll-have .him.facing
gai_n,_ a 33 _
- yard _romp to the Colangelo ran around left end for
-
will _decide .fourth place
in
the the basket.more this season so he'll .be a}?le to do .differnrit things."
·
;
~edmen,21.a~~ helater:thre_wJ7 two points
to
make'it 14 - 8. _
Met - 8. The Gaels; coming off a f>etro concluded,
"If
Earl plays well, the team w_illplaywell.''
•
·
ya.rdsto end Jim Van Voorhis on
The tide ·seemed to have tur-
21.- 6 loss to Brooklyn last week
'.Murphy, an economics major~from Flushing,
-
N.Y. had a strong
thiffive. But two plays later, Nick ned, especially_- after Marist are led by quarterback • Pat - second half last season an_d fin~shed witp an·average of 11.3 points a
_ Mancuso l9st control of the ball recovered a St. John's fumble at Grevey.and halfback Jim Har- game. He was also second in both rebounding and field goal per-
and the home:·team recovered .. midfield and moved·down to_ the ding ·on offense and a .defense centage. ·: ·
· ·
. _ . ·
·
· -
-
_After ~n e:icchange of punts,. Redm~n 25 as the quarter ended. which has allowed the frwest
A three-year varsity performer, the 6'4" forward was described by
\Tito went to work.- He ran three But on the first play of the final points in the conference. K1ckoff Petro as~•a hard worker and reliable player who is always around the
times for 42 yards B:hd signal
~
quarter Bill Bris~on, who rushed is slated for 1:30 p.m.
basket and moves well without the ball." Petro added that he has
· caller compl~ted.t~_o pas~es,_ the,_ for 52 yards
in
his first outing
much condidence in Murphy's shooting.ability from 15-20 feet range.
Runners Rank
High
The M~rist cross c~untry team_; Marist's first e~try ever in the wiH be apparent from our good
has achieved a national cross IC4A Champs. 66 teams are IC4A h · - ·
l · hi h ill h 1
The Red Foxes will open the 1975-76 season at Dutchess C.C: with
Iona Saturday, Nov. 29 at 8 p.m.
·
- COUFAL NAMIW ATHLETEOF THE WEEK
Bob Coufal_, afr~~hman from fyl~rrick,
_µ_.;
6a!i:Qe~; napi"ecf M~rist
College Athlete otthe Week for the week ending~ov.ember 8, : -- • · • : ··
Coufal third-ranked .member
of
the . NCAA~bound. Marist cross-
country team, finished second
to
teammate Fred Kolthay _to spark
. Marist to double victories over Stony Brook and Manhattan "B" at
.Van Cortlandt Saturday.
country_ r_ a
__ nkin_
g
for th_e first time_ eligible in_ the ·college division of
-
s owmg a sow c w - e P
our ranking. In the Nationals, a
ever m -its history.
-
In the latest that meet
anq
Marist's entrants lot ·will . depend on how -well NOT~ FROM T-HE SPORTS DESK:
poll_ of the National Coaches include: Steve VanKeuren· Ric ·George Mccutcheon· is able to
Association,_the teani'was in t~e Bon~, Bill KremJ>E:l, Charley run." Mccutcheon recently hurt
top.
~o
across. the country m Gysm, Steve ~eier, D~~e his ankle. after showing strong · ~rooklrn clin_ched the _f~st Met~ 9onference football championship
Div~10n II~ '!1th a 19th _place Schools,andTom Gibbon,s. This is. improvements to Aiecome the F~iday mght with a decisive 21-6 victory over Iona in Brooklyn, The
__ ran~ng. ThlS
1S
the only t~e a_ a strong team, one that placed: team's fifth runner. "We are ,Kmgsmen closed out their regular·season with a 6-1 record and will
Marist ._ cross country te~m has · 12th
m
the Collegiate Tra_ck hopeful that Will Morrison runs play· in the Met Bowl Saturday, November 22 ... Pace could only
be,~n ~a~keg. .
_ Conference among 23 varsity as strong as he has of late which manage a 13-13 tie with surprising Manhattan Sunday ... Concordia
. This 1s the highest_ honor ever teams ente_red· there and als_o could really- give us a strong broke iri!o th_e win column with a 16-6vi~tory over slumpingF.D.U ....
given to our athletes m t_he cross placed 2nd m the JV• race at the - seven _ man team ,, added the St. John s will play the NCSA's new nµmber
1
team -Stony Brook at
country program, and it sh~ws _ SMU invitational and 2nd iri the/- Marist coach; _
'
home Saturday. Stony Brook is the last unbeaten ~lub team in the
how much they_ are bemg JY !ace at __ ~he _Alb~ny In- . Last year Brian Costine led the nati~n .,. Mike Altomare is clingiing to second spot among national
respected and notice~. by ?ther _ v1tational, m1Ssmg fir~t m those Running Red Foxes' as he ran the rushing lec1ders. Freshnlan: is averaging 107.4 yards per game and 5.9
~ea~s and runne!"5, . said· a meets ,by close ma~gms:
strcmgest race of' the Marist yards per- carry...
·
·
/pbilant _
Coach Rich , Stevens.
In the NCAA, Marist will run: harriers in placing 121st of over _
. ·
_ _ Whe~er we go up or down fr?m Fred. Kolthay, Tom Luke, Brian 350 runners. Costine, Coufal, - INT~MURAL ROUNDUP
~ere will dep~nd on our s~ow~g Costme, Bob .Coufal, George Mccutcheon, and Morrison are
-
·
·
m the t~o fmal champ~onship M~Cutche~n,.Jeff Blanchard, and especially noted for being big-
Intra~~ra~ acti~n resumed last wee~-,In coedvolleyball, first-round
meets this w~ekend. I thmk the. Will_ Morrison. The Red. Foxes meet runners which is to Marist's champs Third Time .A.round" remams. the team to. beat with wins
guys sen_se this and _are prepared - placed 29th of 62 teams entered . advantage. . ·
over ''Odds and ~nds" and ''QB
&
G's" ... "Odds and Ends" defeated
for me1r best -performances last year and this year•~ entries:,,
"We've been working all year '.'PreparationH", who also lost to "DB
&
G's" ... "Rehrrn to Forever"
ever. .
; .
are supposed to nwnber over 500 peaking in the big ones at the end _
is the top men's team with decisions over "Goober's Tool" and
- Coach ~tevens 'Yas
,
referrlng ~o runners and over 70 ;teams, in -a and everything _
points for us to :?onrs Pizz~tja" ··· Women's net action saw, ·•.'7th- Heaven" beat
the teams two fmal meets this ve,ry crowded fr~nt lme. . · __
run very well in these two last
Leos Volleyers" and the "Big Bird" win a forfeit over the Leo
Saturday when th_e top ~even · _
A lot
o~ our fm~l ranking for ones. we have shown constant team...
·
·
· ·
· ·
·
runners
~~ _to-Bo,ston
-
tor; the the~earw1lldep~ndon?ilrNCAA improvement.-and
.
we are all
There were two rlose games in soccer as "Peter
&
Co" edged
_
NCAA _D1v1~ion TI.)ree National Natlo~al sho~mg smce . t~e psyched up and really ready for _ "Muff Divers" 1-0 and "Zambin_i,,nipped "Red Hook Free Library"·
Champ10nships while the:B _team . corun1ttee realizes that . this 1s these final two tests,"· concluded
runs at Vanqortla!}dt Pa!k
~
the our best team appearing there. Stevens.
·
BOOTE~ WIN CACC, REJEC_T ECAC BID
~- IC4A Champ1onship1>. pt1s will be. However, our strengtE and pepth· ·
·
·
PRESENT~
Te~qulla
TU.ESDAV'NOVEMBER 18th_
AT
9:00 PM.UNTIL~
Live Music
_
le.a.-tu:'r-ing- .-
f.e-q u·JI a
·
-·s--a
u·
z
a·
-5-·o-c
-: (THE NO. !TEQUILA IN ',
-•fo\EXIC:O AND
THE
~WORLD)
.
.
.
.
~'.
. 1'.he-!'rfarist soc~er team won its first CACC cham~io~ship"'ever by
trouncmg Bloomfield 10-0 T~esday but it was announced · rior to the
game that the 11-3 Red Foxes have rejected a bid to the EdAC t
tlley_entered last year.
,
_ .
:
.
. ourney
1
Coa~h «Doc" _Goldman: explained the rejection by- pointing to the
teams_ two str~ught losses last,.week. "We have 'not played a solid
· ::::;_em
so~e t1me an~ ar~ not ready physi~ally tQ plaY:
a~y
more," he
. The booters-suffored ro~d losses to Kings Point (3~1) last we~nesda
. rird
~~
~lt
t~?
Sa~urday. That eliminated theni'for consideratio~
~~-Tr~tta ·scored tlie le>_ne goal against Kings Point, while zenone
an . ,1i:mmo accounted ~or both goals-against R.P.I.
F1rm~o scored four tu!J,esland Trotta three
in
th - h
i -
t
?o~°:!~f~f
~none, Al ·Robinson and Lucious Bonries~ns aYs~usc~~!~
· ~ncl, suddenly, the season is
.
over,_,:
_THIS WEEK IN MARI~T SPOll!S (Nov. 13•19)
C
Saturday, Nov. 15 -.. Football: Iona'~ at Leonidoff Field - 2 . . -
- ros~ Country: NCAA--Div. III· Cham ._ t
.-
p.m. ·
Ch~mps_-: at.Van Cortiandt
--n . ·
ps_.
,a Boston • Noon IC4A
_
. Stinday,,-Nov. 16.; Sailing: Ma;t;fFrostbit~
•
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15.8.1
15.8.2
15.8.3
15.8.4
-----------------------------------------------------------------
THE CIRCLE
'MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
• '
•
t.
NOV_EMBER 13, _1975_
Wade Appointed
-· Developm~nt. Dii-ector
Thomas W. Wade has been
named the new Director of
-:l)eveloprnent at Marist CoUege,
it . was announced today by
· President Linus
R.
Foy:
· At Marist since 1962, Wade is
leaving the position · of Dean of
Students to assume:duties in the
areas , of fundraising, - alumni
programming and long-range
planning for capital solicitat~on.
He succeeds John J. Dougherty
who has.been-named an assistant
to the President.
. .
Selected from
a
field of 80
candidates, 'W_ade, · was ·. in-
terviewed arid nominated by a
search committee of the Board of
. Trustees. He
will• assume duties
November 10. · ·
--- ...
· A · graduate of Manhattan
College, he completed a master's
degree aFHofstra Univers(ty in
1962~ He holds a certificate of teenagers. He initiated the office
educational management earned
of Safety and Security.
.
-in 1973 from Harvard Business
•
.. As an executive officer of the
School. ·
college,. he· served- on numerous
He has held seve!"al positions at committees,. including those _
Marist, including thatofDir_ector concerned
with
academic
of Admissions. He was appointed restructuring and long-range
· Dean of Students in 1966 and since physical planning. He was also
developed a comprehensive involved with Marist's transition
progi,-am of _student·. personnel from a church - related in-
-services. ·
_
stjtution to private . status and
This
programm_ing
, en~· . from an all-male college to a co-
compasses ten· .administrative educational one.
areas-
including · athletics,
Wade is a native of Port
counseHDg, residence halls, Washington, Long :Island: After
financial aid, health services ~nd graduation from college he
a supportive program for . taught three years at
St:
Mary's
educationally and economically High School, Manhasset, where
disadvantaged students. .
he also servea~ as Director of
He
assisted-
with
the Athletics.
· ·
development of several · in-
He and his wife Ann and four
ternship programs at Marist, as . children reside at 16 Gilbert
well
as
several
summer Drive, Hyde Park. •
··-
programs for area children and · ,
·
Thomas W.'Wade, Director of Development
BYFREDKOLTHAY
·
the commercial•is aired ori.
Schedule, and has a three line
C d
•
d
-
-p ·.
- -·
The coillmercials are shown on song seUo
~
guitar melody .
.,.. an
l
at·e
S
...
en
are
The admissions office of Marist channels 6, 8 and
rn.
These are
Although .. success of the
__ ,. ___
_
___ .,.-.. ~.·.-":-:;_._.,:
·
.:
.
; .. _ ..
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~
.
isspen~ing$15,489}or~~levision•:n_aUonaHtaffiliated sta~ions_ cal)lpaignhasbeenlimited,in_a
.. .
.
. ., ---
· •.- · , .- ....
.-
- --· ·-- ------and-rad!o.conupercials, m_hopes:
0
.::SlB_!~J:.d m_. Sch.~~~~tady;, ,. ~ew • recent ·college Night ·at.a. high·
.
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·-.·s· .. -
of
--"increasing. . student Haven~ and Albany, respectiyely. schoolrth~ M,arist,.College table
,.... BY CANDI DAVIS
: "I
was really surprised, I had a
lot more response, and interest -
than I · thought : I would," said
Debi Allione, Commissioner . of
Student
Government,
and
Financial Board elections. . .
Miss Allione· was chosen as
commissioner · by Chip Ermish,
acting president of Stude'nt
Government. She was selected
because she is a work-study
student and is not involved with
S.A:C., C.U.B. or Iriterhouse
Council. ·
Elections must be held three
weeks after the··commissioner-is
chosen. Petitions must be handed·
in
by .Thursday, November 13.
Candidates ·night
will
take plai::e
soon after, and campaigning will _
end· two days bef6fe elections.
Elections will be held on campus·
November 20 and 21.
· ~ss · Alli om( s responsibilities
as commissioner are to put up
posters notifying the,-. ~tudent.
body of tpe . elections; draw up
petitions, make sure the names
are valid on thepetitio!}s, .set; up
enrollmen1,'' said David M. These stations. were cho~en was surrounded by students
Flynn, Director of Admissions. because they broad~st in _areas . interested in Marist because ihey
The "medium mix" .campaign- other than the areas from which had seen the commercial.'
•
candidates
night,
oversee began on October 13, 1975 and as the bulk of the students now come
However Mr. Flynn isn't as
campaigning
procedures, yet,
Mi<.
Flynn conceeded, the from.
.
.
concerned with the
0
short range
tabulate votes, and inform the goal set _has not been achieved. · . The radio commercials are on . effect" as he is-with the "long
results to the rest of the campus.
Th.e. project came about· la~t three local stations, WHVW,
range_ effect" . of ;'influencing a
Miss Allione is receiving $60 for spring when Mr. Flynn selected W~OK, and WKIP, as well as on
fourteen year old" -and im-
her job 'as COI9ffiissioner.
,
one ofthree
film
companies to an Albany. radio station.
· planting · _at · least
sub-
People close. to · the election create· a thirty second com-
The cost of three different 60
consciously ,the thought of Marist
have informed · the '.Circle that mercial to attract prospective second radio commercials is $480
College.
. _
some of the · prospective can~ students. ·
for 48 "spots" in a three week·
There. is a possibility of up-
didates for the office-ofpresident
On May 1 and 2 of this year the package. The air time for the TV dating the current recruiting film
are. Rick Bott, John . Woodin, Kaylix Films Company shot 90 commercials is $10,000.
shown at high school, since
Moira Coffey, Don Fitzgerald, Ed minutes of 16. millimeter
film
President Linus Foy, along Marist owns the excess
film
not
Jennings, Andre Green. and Raul costing $5,000 for full production ... with others who ha:ve seen the used in the commercial.
Quintano:. Prospective can- From this, the company edited commercial,
is : extremely . The remaining . commercials
didates for vicepresident are the film into a · thirty second pleased .. with
~e quality• of /will be shown until November 23
Kevin Bliss, Brian Bennet · and commercial.
· craftsmanship along· · with · the on· such shows . as: Space 1999,
Joan D'Emie. Joan Stegenga is a
A World of Learning and Living content.
_ Wide World of Entertainment,
prospective . candidate
for• is the them_e of the cominerciaL
pie TVcommeicialhas scenes Soul Train, Cher, and others.
secretary, and John Davern is a "We tried to capture the spirit of depicted on · the 1976 Spring
prospective
candidate
for the students, and the faculty- , - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - , - , - - - - , - - - - - - ,
treasurer .. · Prospective can- student relationship being on a
didates for
.
Financial Board are one to one basis," said Shaileen
Kathy Walsh,
·
Tony Wilger, Kopec of-the-Development Office.
Victor Olivera, and Yvonne Rios. Ms.• Kopec pointed out the care
Miss '.Allione is glad to see that taken to "soft .sell education",
there is so much interest in the understanding that education
elections, and a genuine concern . cannot be "marketed as a
by the·prospective candidates for regular proquct such as Pepsi.
Student
Government
and We have to, be aware ofthe in-
Financial Board.
tegrity of the product." Care was
taken in · choosing · whi.ch shows
· Classes · Attend Polls·.
- ·. By J'I_NA
IRACA
. . .
-
.....
'
assigned district to wait .for the. ultimately won the election. The
results to be called so that he students then . returned to the
Voting
machines
ceased 'could record them and ,'return Poughkeepsie .Journal to observe
clicking; results· were -"called, them to the Journat Various the _ newspaper as reporters
pencils ·. t\Vit~hed . in _haste to groups w~re arrangea and began writing their stories.
·record figures; headquarters · assigned to accomP,any reporters
The event was plartned by Mrs.
were.filled with smoke, gin, and to wherever their stories would Mimi McAndrew, teacher of the
the tension of waiting.-
'·
take them. Most of the people Journalism class and also a
LastTuesday night members visited the headquarters set up JournaLreporter. The point of
of the Journalism class . and by County Executive William,_, such an experience was that it -
Radio .
cl~ss
at Marist. College · -Bartles at the Holiday Inn. There· : enabled ·the students
to
.observe
collected election results· for
.
the. they- got a
:chance·
to int~rview first hand how a reporter. covers:
·.Poughkeepsie Journal; The
_Mr.
Bartlesthemselves. Another
art
election:· The on·-. the .: job
Journalism :c1ass ·accompanied stop by the groups that night was insights gained by,the students
reporters'· to
various
her1dquar- the h~dquarters_otEd Schueler; -
will
hopefqUy . increase . the.ir
ters to observe election coverage. a.nother
County~
Exe_cutiye . apility. lo . deal _with'
a
-reporting
.
_
Tiie _
night· began fe>r the group . ,candidate, at the Hellenic. Center _situation.
·c~-"-
· '1'hen ea~h. person went
.~o.
his · in Poughkeepsie .
.
Mr ..
Sc~ueler
_
.
. , .
:
·>·
. ' ..
.
.
.. ·
.'
':.'..,
.-'.,.
,
_..,,.,.,.
,'
..
'
.
'
..
,·,·'
....
,·
....
,
....
..
,··,
;
..
. .
"'
.
.
.
' i-
'.•
,.
-
.. ·.·
·-
·•
_
_
.•.
'
,,•
'
..
A
.
The J~urn~lism.and.Radio classes'visited campaigrl·headquarter~ ·
.on Election mght and were present when Edward C. Schueler learned
of
his
vicµ>ry
n:i
the race for. County.Exe~utive. (Poughkeepsie.Journal
Photo by Davi~ Livshin)
. - , · .. ·
•
- ·-
. · ·
-
I
i
PAGE2
•·THE CIRCLE
The Marlst College CIRCLE Is the weekly
newspaper
of
the students
of
Marlst
College and Is publlshed throughout the schOOI year exclusive
of
v11t11llon
periods
by the Southern Dutchess News Agency, Wappingers, New York.
David Livshin
Mary Beth Pfeiffer
GigiBirdas
Gregory Conocchioli
FredAshley
ChipErmish
TomMcTeman
Patrice Connolly
Joan McDermott
Brian Morgan
Larry Striegel
Co-Editors
Associate Editor
Editorial Consultant
.
Photography Editor
Assistant Photography Editor
Sports Editor
Layout Editor
· Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Distribution Manager
staff:
Dave Kazdan, Gene Berkery, Rich Burke, John Reilly,
Ken Healy, Gene Heimers, Tom Hudak, Jack Mccutcheon, Mike
.
O'Shea, Larry Striegel, Ernest Arico,_
·
Gigi Birdas, Claudia
Butler, John.Bryne, Daniel Dromm, Karen Duverney, Fred
Kolthay, Barbara Magrath, Philip Palladino, Pat Perretta,
Dave Roberts, Ed Rubeo, Winnie
·
Saitta; Rich Sellers, Kamar
Swnrall, Tina Iraca, Julie Schott, Peter Van
.
Aken, Elizabeth
.
Godbout; Candi Davis.
.
THE CIRCLE
.
NOVEMBER 13, 1975-
Letters
To
The
Editors
.
'
.
.
A Host To Violence?
IV
_
of Champagnatplayed host
to
notoilly allowir)g these action~ to
.
another event that may also be
-
'
occur and
:
therefore smudgmg.
·
·
considered most successful with
the good name of our people; but
To the Editor:
one drawback: some person or
·
refusing to
,
.
take
':
~Y·
effective
I would like. to call attention to
.
persons broke in,
.
walked
-
in or action
,
to
.
P.rev~nt
-
thesl:
.
'
actions
.
a problem here at Mari$t that I . were
let in to
:
Ro
.
om
801
and
·
fro!ll
,
~ontm
:
~ur:ig.
:
I
·
sincerely
sincerely
.
believe involves each
·•
proceeded
·
·,
to htn:l' six desk
·
believe th1:1.t it is t1me for each
.
.
.
an<l ~very
:
member
.
of
·
this
·
drawers outthe window crashing
.
a~d ~ve!Y
,
~ne ~f us to
,
be _more ·
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_, community. To illustrate this
·
on the mall below. I
-
must also ~1S~r1mmating
·
~
/
our choic
_
e of
~
· ·
·
problem I would like
'
to supply · m
_
ention th~t there
·
'Yere
.
five
.
.
mv1ted gues~s
a.!14
to
·
_
b
_
e~ome
1
.
6
.
G
·
.
R.
.
.
o·
.
~
··
.
.
,
.
two recent events at the college
.
people
-
passmg through the mall
.
morerespons1ble~the.to~lityof
:_
·
__
.
·
_
.
•
.·
lp
·
_
·•
-
·
.
.
that
.
compelled_metci
..
write
·
this d~ng at
_.
)east
_
_
three
/
of
•·
.
.
the
·
_
_
_
_
our_gues
1
ts'db~~thvMior ~hilt
Ce
.
llthey
letter. OneSaturdai;Nov .
.l
;
Leo
·
pr~Jections. It
~
was ~otde~e~
~
<
arf~"'.ove
'
'Y!
.
.
:
~ns
o e~e
_
•
.
.
_
.
·
.
_
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
House hosted an evenqpat may mmed
,
.
at
_
the
·
·
~ediate t1me acbv1ti~'._If
_
we
:
c;o!1tlllue t() show
Although one could not term ,the
.
Manst ·_College Library gigantic,
•.
be considered most successful
..
whether or
~
not these
.
drawers .
•
the
•.
·
adinm1s
_
trat1on
·-
:that
_
·
we
extensive, or; by any means; complete, it does;
·
nonetheless, boastof
-
--
with one
'
drawback:
·
arf
un.:
were
-
+ossed ou
V:
by Marist-
,
cannot .be
:
:
held
·
,r~sponsible Jor
.
many fine end?wmen~ in !he realm of boo!t5 ~nd is notto be
un-
fortunate circum~tance involving
;
stiidents, but f"belieye it was a
.
what take~t P1ace here
:at
~arist, ·
derr_ated. The library 1S, as 1s yte rest of Mar1St m general, small but an invited guestoutside ofMarist
:
:
strohger
:
_
possibility that
-;-
this
.
. _
then I Ccln
s~~
_
no
~
a~term1t1v~ but
·
·
not totally
:
unworthy of accla1m.
·
.
·
.
•
.
.
·
.
·
·
.
College and
:
a
~
Maris
f·
Coilege
__
danger~us acti911.was committed for the a:~u11stra~1ont? prev~nt
·
Thanks to the 3M
_
Company an~ a check from Mar1St College m the
·
student which led to fisticuffs and
.
by
-_
an mvi~ed
-
guest
;
outside
·
of · any actmtr
:
from
:
Jaking p~llce
.
·
..
sum of $16,000, the li~rary_s?on will ~e foolproof to those students "'.ho then to
.
confrontations involving
·
·
Marisq::qllege.
-
_:
:
· .
.
<>
·
·
'
.
~
: .
·
·
•
~hat
·
can
-
,:lead
:
to
:c
_unfortun
.
~te,
: bon:Qw bo~ks
qn
an
:'
'mdefmite" baslS.
_
But yet anothe~ proble~ looms
:
more
·
people and attracting a
·
I
.
believe
w~
ca~ all :see • qµite
O
.
dangerous, a!}d
_
foolish ~ehav1or •
·onthe~?rizo~-.w?atab
_
outthosestudentswhoborrowPA~ESoµthat n1:1mber of. bystand
_
ers.
<
On
:
plamly ~ha(1s
_
h~pperung ~er~:
-
-
; .
:
-· .
Sincerely,
_
_
.
same
._
.
mdefm~te '
.
bas1S
,
? Even a system worth
.
16Gs 1S
.
not g90d
.
Saturday,
.
November
,
'
8th House
·
the Ma~stCollege
:
~ommun1ty1s
,
;
~aryTraube
enollgh to stop them.
•
.
.
-
-
.
.
·
.
·
· ·
·
·
';
·
:
La~t
.
weeldt
'
was disc9vered that twenty pages of a
_
particulariy
.
.
V~lli~ble
·
vol~e
in
:
the
.
c
_
olle~ti~µ
·
of the
·
Publications
.
of
the
,
Mod~rn
·
·
·
·
·
·.
-
LangµageAssociationhadbeentomout:Letitbenoted
·
thatthiswas
Thro
_
ugh _Th.
'
e
:
.
your
-:-
help;
We
neecFpeciple
·
in
~
,'.
.
5;_Quips
','
:
'·.
,
'
•
·· iby no
•
ineans :a h1gtijy tinusual:discovery for the librarians, however
-
terested in· the
;
;
followiilg
:
areas:
·
··
,
•·-.
· 6.Comrrientary
,
Views
tragic itinay have been
;:
The $158 necessary"to rt;!placethe volume will
· ·
-
··
- -
,
.
1.
News
. .
·
·
·
·
.
.
.
7.
Column Varieties
.
_
come from f~nds to which all of us have "donated," as.will
the$16
;
ooo
Looking
Gfass
2 .
.
Social
Happenings
·
·
.
8
}
WHATEVERi! !! ! ! ! !
.
for the new security system.
.
.
.
.
·
.
· .
.
·
.
3. Comirhmity &itu~tions and
·
·
·
So
if you
.
feel you
·
have
··
-
.
Tuition has a hundred other factors which
wm
affect)ts increase,
.
.
.
.
Circumstances
·
·
·
·
.
something
·
t9 ~Y,
a
.
poem yo
·
u
.
. y_et
,
se<:uri~y arid
,
·
vandalis~
a~e
.
takµ1g a larger and
)arger
con- To
.
whom
it
may conc~m.
: ·
:
•·
·
•.
·.·
·
.
,
4. ~orld View
·
·
·
.. .
:
:
would like
.
to have printed, ideas
.
:
·
sid~ration _mto thetotaL While it
1S
unfortunate that we must pay to
.
In order:J<> foeet
·
-the qeeds of
·
we also
.
need people inte·rested
·
.
·
you would
:
lik~
-
to express
·
-
,
j9in
. insure ou~elve~ against outsiders who seek _to profit{rom rippinif
,
9ffc
.
the community and
:
tci
<
giye
-
·m..:
·
in
•
_
different
1
:
ind
des
·
of
.
com
:·
:
·
THE -r.OOKmG~tJ\SS
.:
~nlff
:
,
Jf
.-
_
_
the,Maris~ conuiiunity, itis
1
do':'mrightdisgustfug
-
that v_,e_musrpay
-
s,
{
diyiduals anothef
:
oppoij;lJ!l1ty
to
;
:
munication. Especially:
<'
:_
~
.
· ·
•,
-
·"'
you
·
are
;
fuler~
s
iecl°' plea
~
ejrj
;;'
to
::
_
d~r~Y
to
_
msure
_
?urselyes against
_
those amongus
who_are
doing
·
t~e express
·
thein~elves,
:
:
w:e
,
llave
: _·
·
,'h
Photog~aphy
·
:
__
:
·
-
·
· :
.
.
_
.
_
·
get iri
:
touch
:
_-
wi
_
th Ja.cJcSchofie
_
Id
;
c
-
;
stealing.
.
..
.
-
.
.
.
.
_ .
. . .
.
.
.
.
-
.
·
.
.
-_.
·
.
.
.
decided:to
.
formTHE LOOKING:
-
·-
>
B. Graphic (Art
·:
and
-,
De~ign
'
·
~
John
-:·
Reilly,
:
;
Bai'bara
·
:
J(elley
\
-
.
The CIRCLE edit~rs are askmg students to make the 11ew
.
syste~ GLASS
:-"
·
.
.
· .
,
_.
.
·
.:.
Techniqu~~)
·
·
·
Gary Traube; GirinyDixor
,
'.
'Goo
·
·
w.qrk. Don't make it necessary fo1= the 3M Company to develop a
-.
THE LOOKING GLASS
will
·
·
C. Literary:
Man''.
Martin .before
.
the
system ofmarkingin
_
dividualpagesas.wellas books, because the only attempt to be informative~
..
_
l
>
Poetry
.
Thanksgivmg holiday.
.
.
.
one to profit
.
~ll be the 3M Company3:nd
'
we'll always come up·losers. amusing
;
and p
_
rovocaiive
.
m
:
Jts
•
·
·
2.
·
Short story
Thank yo~ for:your time,
content .
.
However, for this
:..
ven::.
:
·
3
.
Essays
.
·
The staff of
ture: to be successful we need
A;
Play Works
·
THE LOOKING GLASS
. ·
• •
•
-
•
•
-
.
•
•
•
-
-
•
•
-
•
I
•
·
Pla,Ying·
The
Garn~
·
·
D
·
·
-
An error
·
1·n
.
"Publi"sher
-
's maintains ah open door policy to
Th
.
is
.
Sat
.
urd
_
ay marks
_
t
_
he fin_ al game of the.1975 s
.
eason for the Marist
_
e
·
SC
re
·
pa n
cy
.
ll
·t
d ts
'
ll b. ks
t
.
th
"
·
.
·
·
. Billing"to the
.
Bookstore caused
··
a s u en on a
oo
as o e
College Vikings Football Club.
.
· . ·.
.
·
.
·
.
.
··
_
·
.
_
the Desc
_
repancy
.
::
.
A
savings
,
of
:
retail
>
price set
.
forth by th
_
e
.
The players~ managerslmd coaches have labored many l(?ng hours
blish
·
f the bo
k
•
'
··
·
·
to
b
.
ring all the
.
ex
.
·
citment of
_
college fo
_
otball
.
here to Marist, as well as To the Editors of The CIRCLE
:
·
$310.50
"
was passfad
:
on to Mllfist pu
. .
.
~r
~
.
.
.
0
_
.
-
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
·
·
-
·
·
·
I
·
n
·
referen
·
ce
·
t
·
o
·.
the
·
arti
·
c
·
1e
·
.
·
o
·
n students;
.
_
The reord
.
er
:
"
_o
.
f:
_
:
the
··
.
···
·
·
-
.
·
:
··
·
· :·
A.N.
-
Dangelo
-:
to
our
local community residents.
·
.
·
,
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
B
·
k t
·
M
·
g
·
·
·
·
d
f th b t
'
the
·
Bo
·
okstor
_
e
·
.. en
·
t
.
i
·
tled
·
.
.
"B
.
o
.
ok scien
_
c
.
e b
.
o.o_k in
.
.
. .-
·
.
question,
:·
w
..
as
.
...-.
_
·
·:
·
00
sore
_
ana er
:
·
The players haye
.
p4,lyed
tJ:lis
season un er some o
e es con-
__
ditions, as well as some of the worst; even
iri
the midst of contreversy.
·
store Prices-soar''; November 6, billed at the
:
co!Teckbilling
,
-
.
of
.
. Despite some minor passeles we have seen some fine performances 1975.
·
·
·
$3.10 and not $.50
.
The Bookstole
_
on tlle field, ~specially from the freshman players
.
These fine per,-
formances couplfad with the special kind of dedication that Ron Levine
.
has broughtto
·
his position as head coach, has earned Marist College a _____
..;.. _ _ _ _
_
_
--~;,.._---------"""""--..................... _ _ _ _
_
_
..
.
-
..
-
,
-
.
-
.
-
.
- - -
.-
:
~
-
·
- - - - -
•
·-
place o, distinction in the Met-8 football conference.
·
.
·
·
. · The
editors of the Circle would like to extend our congratulations to
all those who together make up theMarist FootbaU Club
:
vie ttiank
you for providing everyone here at Marist with
•
many entertaining,
.'
exciting Saturday and Sunday afternoons
.
...
·
8
:
00
·
·
in
-
Sheahan
7
c:L~uµge.
·
,
Qoncentratiori C~~;
-
:
·
.
·
. ,·
.
Following
-
a slide and sound
• ·
·
_
Monday nite; Nov
.-
17 is
_
co_llege
·
presentation;
.
the floor
·
.
will be
.
.
nite .,.
:
admission 'at~the
~
box
:
office
·
·
.
It
has been said many; manytimes before that it is not whether you
·
win
.
orlose,buthowyouplaythegamfa
.
.
.
.
.
,
.
:
open
:
for
·
•
questions: Anyone
•
in.:.
'·
.'
:
js $1.00
_
wit°h'college
·
-
I'D. card
.'
.
..
terestedin
,
hearingthebeginning
_
:
'.
'
,
.
·
. '
:
·
'.
· · -:--:
·,. "·
·
.
·
··
·
·.
ofthe1976campai_gnisinvited
_
to
.
. '
:
GOFFEE
_
·
AND
:
..
__
CON-
·
• We feel. that
-
this thought and
-
feeling has .been exemplified this
season by the players
_
and coaches ~nd that means so much mor:e, tllan
just. winning or losing
/
· · ·
·
.
attend. Any questions, .see Jerry
·.
VERSATION: F.aculty members
Maryon;
.
President
·•.
of
,
the
·
=
are invited to
·
_join
·
commuting
.
Political
·
Science
·
_
Chlb,
-
'.
,
in
.
.
students
:
fcir
.
.
-
free coffee every
_
-
.
.
:-
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.·
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.
Sheahan 217.
·
:
·
-
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.
.
_.
.
.:
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~
MO!lday moritµigjri 'tlte
,
Com::
.
.
.·
. . ·
.
•
.
• ·
·
·
'
·
:
mutei: Lounge
·
-..
from 9
c-.
11:
15.
.
There will be a
_
poetry reading
.
Organized
·
by
.
the
·
commuter<-
-
by
,
Elsa Colligan
,
on· Friday,
·
:
union;-Jhe
·
coffee.~ pfoyide an:.
November 14
:
.
at
.
2:30
in
the
.
:
opportunity fo~ commuters and·
·
Fire.side Lounge
.·
.
: _.: .
·.
-
':
. ;,
faculty
_
to-share
'
'ide~lf and time
·
·
.
.
·
·.
.
·
·
•
.
:
·
together.
·
.
·
.
The Italian ~ociety will sponsor
.
On Thursday, November 13;
\
·
.
;~
.
.
.
.
.
:
.'
. .
_
,
a beer and pizza mixer Friday,
,
Ingmar
:
Berginan's "Cries and
:
:
:
.
·
"
·
AN
AWARD, FOR
.
MARIST;
·
·
.
November l4;It wµI take place in
-
Whispers" will be shown in the
.
:
The
Dutchess County Association _
_
,_ ·
the cafe, /rom 9:·oo to 1:00. Live Theater; ILbegin~
·
_
a't
8:00,
ad-
·,
for :Retarded :children
:
_
recently
music
.
will
·
be provided
.
by the ~issio
.
n
_
is $.75 per person.
:
'
.
•
designated
.•
Marist
.·
College
IISnea~er
.
-B_rothers
..,
BanW
\
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·
.
·
.
·
·
·
·
··
·
·
··
·
.
·
·
'-'Em.ployer of
.
the
·
·
.
Year''
.
. in
·
A<lmission
:
·
wilL
.
be
-
$3.00
:
::
per
•
·
.
•
·
·
·
.
.-·
·
recognition
·
of outstanding
:
ef_fort
.
.
per~on
:
·
-
.
·
·
··
·
;
.
·
J
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hir!ng
:
the
·
handfoappe
.
d;
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.
.
.·
.
.
.
,
,
HQ
.
J?SON
·
PLAZA THEATER,
•
~resident
.
Foy accepted
>
the
.
•
Anyone who ·has connections
·,
RT.
-
9
,
. .
·
. :.. · ..
award
Oct.
:
28
·on
·
behalf.
·
of the
. -
. -~ith
c
a
~
possible speaker
::
for ·
.
;
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THE
.
mDINGP.LACE~'
.
' .
College;
:,
The
/
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;
w~s
..
·
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·
gra_clti~tiO.f!
·
(riot
.
n~ce~~rilY a
.
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Nov
•
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18
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/
45
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_
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.
p
;
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.
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·
·
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·
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":
Carl
-\
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.
·
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;
pl~se
'
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NIG~
_
LY>l:15~
_
4
_
:00 p.m
;
Sat
:
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NOVEMBER 13, 1975
'
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
The
CIRCLE
Introduces
·
.. .
. The QUestioning Cameraman
BY RICH SELLERS
one of the best things the college
does.
This week's question: What do
.
Jim Kennedy
.
C-103: I think
you
think
is the
best
feature of Marist offers a wide range
.
of
Marist College?
.
opportunities for the students
.
Where
asked:
Around They can start things
·
they're
Champagnat Hall
.
interested in. There are a
·
1ot of
John Blue C-515: I think its things to get involved
·
in;·
-
n runs
location. Marist College
is
in an the whole gamut of activities
ideal spot. It's . pretty much people might get involved in. You
secluded. It's not near any big just have to know how to get
cities. It's ori the Hudson River, involved. It requires personal
which
I
think
is
nice. The area in
·
initiative and that's the basis of
which it's located is the best mariy of the things you can do
.
thing
,
_·
,
.
. .
.
·
.
))er_e at
. -
Marist, including
-
Mike D'Elia C.103: It's a small
.
academics. It
.
starts with the
school, it's easier to getto
.
know
.
individual.
_
.
people really
fast
and get to know
·
-
Carl Blondel
Leo-501:
Marist's
your
·
teachers well. You
·
have best feature - that's a good
·
·
more of
.
a. personal
-
education
.
quesJion .. U's hard Jo an,swer ·
.
·
·
tha11 youwohld at a state school
·
right here on the spot. To teU you
The CIRCLE is proud to introduce
its
new
column-The Questio,1ing Cameraman. The CIRCLE wm
.
pay $2 for any questions submitted and
used in
the colwnn.
.
or a bigger school. Ithink:that's"a
'
the truth,
l
can't.
think
of any one
really
_
i,mportant'aspect·_of school
·••·
thing in particular. The academic
and educatio1i"especially. because
..
,
'
sOmding is pretty good. Really,
I
of th
.
e technological background
'
can't say too much about ~hool
we
·
come
·
from- · and
.
the
·
-
spirit Marist lacks school
.
spirit. classes aren't so large that you
Artie Curran C-259: The people
,
technological
c
age we liveJn.
<·
>·
It
c_an take a lot of improvement. don't
·
get a chance
·
to meet that go here. Everybody's pretty
.
Sheila McKay
~313:
lthink the
.
.
·
J3rendon
.
Boyle
G~28:
..
Oooh,
everybody, Jt's a cozy size:
friendly.
·
social life. All the people around
here get along well, and we have
.
-a
good time
.
~
.
'
best
.
·
feature
is
the
.
coinriumity
:
· .
that•~ a tollgh
·
one.
l
guess
•
.it's
.
Donna Sharp C-616:
l
guess the
Tom Price C-219: The size of it.
seryice work tliatthe school does,
·
pretty much just hanging o
_
utside
.
people .
.
The
.
people are really
.
Marist
is
not a large college..- It's
•
.
Jike U.Y
,
k
·
(University
:
Year for
:
.
watching
·
the. show - watching fantastic.
"
I
never had any in° small
.
You get a better op-
-,
Action ~
-
edL
_
and the internships
·
them all
.
come back and forth in
.
tentions of coming here until
I
portwiity to meet people - to get
·:
people
.
do
·
in thfL coriununity:
I
:
the mall;
..
.
came
to
visit Marist. I -thought
.
to know them better. And to get a
.
think the bestmearis of learning
.
,
..
:
Ed Ringwood
··
(Town): My the people were
~o
nice
.
and feeling of the Marist community.
Deborah
.
Page C-511: I can't
stand it. The classes are a pain
.
Oh, you want the best. Some of
the teachers are really fantastic,
like Dr. Ryan and Dr. Belanger .
:is actualwork and !think that's rnind
-
.
just went blanL.The friendly that
l
decided to
.
come.
Danny Gerruty C-217: The
..
:
;
',
·
..
.
'·
.
·
.
'
··
,·
,
'-
.
...
;.._
.
J!frt,Qkljri
Dodger
Speaks
·
·
·
·
.
. ·
·
.
. ~n Alcoholislll
.
flyin1;. l took pills to lose weight -
.
alcoholism. Alcoholiciimust have
· they tnade .me jumpy so !drank the_ guts t.o admit they have a
\
to ~alxn
·
down. Iused todrinkju~t
.
problem. I didn't
,
·
actmit
T ever
·
·
•
to
.
pass
··
the, t_ime?
,
.
In
·•
·
l960Ahe
-
had
-
a .problem
•
until
.
five years
.
Clevel~nd: Indians let ~e go
;"
1
-
·
a:go. "__
.
. .
.
.
.
.
c0Wdnt
,
p1tch anymore.
Newcombe stated that he
·
~e~COIJ?-be;
.
~ho
.
began
·
wished there
.
was a federally
··
dnnkmg his father s home brew, backed warning on every bottle
"to
__
grow big'and strong" at the ofliquor stating that alcohol can
age of nine, stopped drinking in be dangerous to
.
one's health.
1966. "I stopped
-
because my wif~
.,
His visit was sponsored by the
·
threatened to leave me. She was
·
Dutchess County Committee on
·
.
an
I had left. I'd lost my career,
·
Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse
my business, and my home
.
She and the Marist Counseling
.
was going to take my three kids Center.
.
.
:
and leave ·me. She said, 'I've
''I was on
4ie top of the ladder given
you three children and I
of professional baseball; But I Jove you
~
now you're destroying
cametunibling down because
of
me and the children. Your own
my drulking problem;'.' said Don $on
·
is
afr~id of
_
you. ):'ou're an
_
Newcombe, star pitcher for
the
·
animal
.
when you're
drunk.'
I quit
:
·
arooklynDodgersinthe
_
l950's, to cold turkey that day. I haven't
an aucµence of 40 people in the ha~ a drink since the~."
Fireside Lounge~ November 10.
S1~ce he
_
began_workmg for the
.
Alcoholism
,
was the:
.
direct
.
National Clearmg. House on
HYDE
PARK
.
.
ARMY
.
·
·-j
•NAVY
10%
Dl
_
~COUNT
,
cause of the shortening of
_
..
his
:
Alcoholism five years ago,
pitching
- ·
c~reer. "Although
_I
Newcombe ~as traveled the
never drank right before I had
to
country, <'talkmgto people about
pitc~, I usedJo dn,nk 8 or 9 cans of
iny
?Id proble1;U and
.
trying to
beer a
_
fte~ (g~~~d- ~ed to get allev1a~e the st~gma attached to
drunk
·
to
:
:._cope with
-
my fear of
.·
alcoh!)hsm.
If
1t can pappen to
.
·.
'
·
..
·
.
·
.
.
·
me, 1t can happen to you. To
-
G()ODTHRUNEXTWEEK
<:
_
overcome otir natiQ~•s drinking
.
·
·
o
·
N
·
.
RT
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..
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problem, people must
•
be in-
.
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11-2
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Aniariy
Post
R<f.'.
·
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Hyde
.
~ark
·
•
.
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(_Grand
U~ionSh<>pping
Center)
. ·
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ierns_-
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♦♦.+♦♦♦♦♦++♦♦♦++♦♦
·
.
TIE CUTTIIJ.
UIISEI
·
HAIBCUTTIIG ·
stu-dent
.
.
.
.
Pit
.
count .
• •
•
•
·
1
.
Call 454-9239
•.
3 Liberty Street
--
Closed Monday
·
.
. ,
On the
·
Main Mall
·
~urs<!a.v
~
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.
1
-.9
·
P,oughkeepsie,
N
:
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·
12001
·
.
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CACC Soccer
FINAL
-
W L
SALE ENDS NOV. 20
MARIST
+
Ramapo
W.ConnSt.
Nyack
Kings
Dowling
Bloomfield
5 1
Ult;========::9
4
··
2
..
!IMPORTED
!
~
SANGRIA
3 3
~: 99tll
.
Met8 Football
BTL
Brooklyn
+
Pace
'
W L T
6 1 0
4 1 2
St. John's
Iona
MARIST
Manhattan
F.D.U.
Con·cordia
+clinched title
4 2 1
3 2 1
3 3 0
1 3 2
1 5 0
1 6 0 '
HYDF. PARK; N. Y.
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.
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CONDITIONED
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ROOMS
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1.99 VALUE
"LARGEST SELECTION
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Over $3~,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, gran
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.
from $50 to
·
$10,000: Current list of
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PAGE4
THE CIRCLE
Vikings T-counced
21-8
byTHOMASMCTERNAN
second a 12 -yarder to Tony Bopp since Oct. 11, fwnbled after
for the TD. Warren Hersh then apparently finding daylight down
Fullback Charlie Vito scored · bootedthe extra point and Marist the left sideline.
· ·
.
twice from a yard out and the
trailed 7 - 0 midway through the
st.
John~s took advantage to
- tough St. John's defenseforced period. ·
score an msurance touchdown
four key Marist turnovers;
After that first drive, the · when Vito carried in from· the
leading the Redmen to a 21-8 Met
Vikings were able to get just 12 one. Hersh booted his -third ·PAT
- 8 victory over
.
the Vikings in _ .more net yards rushing ,.the rest · for the final score. Marist had one
Jamaica Saturday.
.
of the half. They got another· ·last shot on their next series but
- With injured backfield partner opportunity late in the second BopQ stepped in front of Van
Sa~~ seeing limite~ action, Vito
quarter when linebacker >Ron Voorhis to grab ·his second in-
carried the __ ba!l 32 times
~~F
206 . Clarke picked off his siXth in- terception after- the Vikings had
yards on a variety of draw plays terception ,of, the· year and driven to _the Redmen 7.
·
· and· sidelines
ruri.s.
_
returnedit to the Redmen 37. But
Levine blamed the team's
NOVEMBER 13, 1975
HARRIERS CONCLUDE BEST REGULAR SEASON
A double dual yictory at Van Cortlandt Saturday enabled the Marist
cross-country team to conclude· the 1975 regular season with a 21-1
record. The Red Foxes will finish their most successful season ever
this
weekend with the NCAA Division III championships in Boston and
the IC4A's at Van Cortlandt.
Marist topped ·a strong StonyBrook squad 21-35 and defeated
Manhattan's "B" team 1548 to close out with 21 straight wins overall
and 19 straight at Van Cortlandt. The Red Foxes have now won 33 of
their last 34 9pponents going back to 1974, the only loss at the hands of
LeMoyne in this season's opener.
Fred Kolthay set a new record as he won
his
eighth race of the year
in 27:08. Freshman Bob Coufal was just two seconds behind in second
place. Brian Costine (fourth), Tom Luke (fifth) and Will Morrison
(ninth) rounded out the scoring for Marist. All together, ten Marist
runners went under the 30 minute mark despite the hot and hwnid
conditions.
High
.·On
Sports
"He is a good football player,"
after tw6 incomplete passes.and spotty offense. on backfield in-
praised head coach Ron Levine. _an 11 - yard-completion to Van juries and. inexperience. He
"We just couldn't tackle him and Voorhis at the 26, Colangelo was pointed out 'that Mancuso had
their offensive line blocked very_
intercepted by · Bopp __ -and the injured his hand and that Brisson
BY THOMAS MC TERNAN
- . well."
·
Johnnies ran out-the clock.
.
·
· had missed the last three games.
·
-
·
The ~me c~~ldn't be·said}or
~ar~Hinally g~tittogether_on Asked to explain the team'.s up. MURPHY .AND HOLMES NAMED
AS
HOOP CAPTAINS
the outsized Viking bJockers. _
St.
their ~1rst possession of
t}ll:!
third and- dclwn performance in recent
John's; like our o~er re~ent quarter after Vito had completed weeks, he answered, '.'Maybe it is
Senior frontcourt aces-EarlHolmes and Ray Murphy have been
opponents, .was so big .they Just a 60 - .yard drive- for·St. -·John's a coincidence but I think it can be selected as co-captains of the varsity basketball team for the 1975-76
shut the middle off;'' Levine --with a one - yard plunge. Hersh's attributed to our lack of ex- season.
. _
. , _•- ·..
·
commented .. ''.There is very little PAT made_ it 14 -
o
just two perience. You cannot have that
"I am happy tpey were selected,tJsaid head coach Ron Petro. "They
a 180..,p_ouild gl!ard can do toa240' · minutes·to the half.
..
_
cohesion to be
()n
top, week in and both played wen last year and deserve to be captains.;rhey will help
po~nd . 11?,eman.
except · __ F!)llowJng the _ kickof
_
f. t_!le-- week out __ without. playing create the atmosphere needed to have a good team."
.
.
neutralize him.
_
_ _-
Vikings n'Iarched 74 yards
m
15 together more and _our injuries
Holmes, a 6-5 center - forward from Buffalo, N.Y., was the.leading
The line did block well enough plays lor their' score in a series - have. hurt us."
point - g~tter. last season and was named to the. All-CACC team. A
, to· enable quarterback Phil dominated by short, but clutch
The Vikings hope to close out communication major, lie averaged 18.3 points a game and led the
Qol~gelo to, lead _Marist from
yardagf andJwo penalties. Mike the season on",a winnmg _
n·ote squad with 11.0 rebounds per ,outing.
.
· .
the~·own· -29 deep
_
mto Redm~n Altomare ran the final six for his -Saturday againstlona (4-3 - l)at
''Earl can be very devastating.,.and dominate any game," notes
t~~ritory. Colangelo had the big eighth TD . of the. ·year
.
and.- Leonidoff Field in a game which Petro. "I think many teams will key on
him
so we'll-have .him.facing
gai_n,_ a 33 _
- yard _romp to the Colangelo ran around left end for
-
will _decide .fourth place
in
the the basket.more this season so he'll .be a}?le to do .differnrit things."
·
;
~edmen,21.a~~ helater:thre_wJ7 two points
to
make'it 14 - 8. _
Met - 8. The Gaels; coming off a f>etro concluded,
"If
Earl plays well, the team w_illplaywell.''
•
·
ya.rdsto end Jim Van Voorhis on
The tide ·seemed to have tur-
21.- 6 loss to Brooklyn last week
'.Murphy, an economics major~from Flushing,
-
N.Y. had a strong
thiffive. But two plays later, Nick ned, especially_- after Marist are led by quarterback • Pat - second half last season an_d fin~shed witp an·average of 11.3 points a
_ Mancuso l9st control of the ball recovered a St. John's fumble at Grevey.and halfback Jim Har- game. He was also second in both rebounding and field goal per-
and the home:·team recovered .. midfield and moved·down to_ the ding ·on offense and a .defense centage. ·: ·
· ·
. _ . ·
·
· -
-
_After ~n e:icchange of punts,. Redm~n 25 as the quarter ended. which has allowed the frwest
A three-year varsity performer, the 6'4" forward was described by
\Tito went to work.- He ran three But on the first play of the final points in the conference. K1ckoff Petro as~•a hard worker and reliable player who is always around the
times for 42 yards B:hd signal
~
quarter Bill Bris~on, who rushed is slated for 1:30 p.m.
basket and moves well without the ball." Petro added that he has
· caller compl~ted.t~_o pas~es,_ the,_ for 52 yards
in
his first outing
much condidence in Murphy's shooting.ability from 15-20 feet range.
Runners Rank
High
The M~rist cross c~untry team_; Marist's first e~try ever in the wiH be apparent from our good
has achieved a national cross IC4A Champs. 66 teams are IC4A h · - ·
l · hi h ill h 1
The Red Foxes will open the 1975-76 season at Dutchess C.C: with
Iona Saturday, Nov. 29 at 8 p.m.
·
- COUFAL NAMIW ATHLETEOF THE WEEK
Bob Coufal_, afr~~hman from fyl~rrick,
_µ_.;
6a!i:Qe~; napi"ecf M~rist
College Athlete otthe Week for the week ending~ov.ember 8, : -- • · • : ··
Coufal third-ranked .member
of
the . NCAA~bound. Marist cross-
country team, finished second
to
teammate Fred Kolthay _to spark
. Marist to double victories over Stony Brook and Manhattan "B" at
.Van Cortlandt Saturday.
country_ r_ a
__ nkin_
g
for th_e first time_ eligible in_ the ·college division of
-
s owmg a sow c w - e P
our ranking. In the Nationals, a
ever m -its history.
-
In the latest that meet
anq
Marist's entrants lot ·will . depend on how -well NOT~ FROM T-HE SPORTS DESK:
poll_ of the National Coaches include: Steve VanKeuren· Ric ·George Mccutcheon· is able to
Association,_the teani'was in t~e Bon~, Bill KremJ>E:l, Charley run." Mccutcheon recently hurt
top.
~o
across. the country m Gysm, Steve ~eier, D~~e his ankle. after showing strong · ~rooklrn clin_ched the _f~st Met~ 9onference football championship
Div~10n II~ '!1th a 19th _place Schools,andTom Gibbon,s. This is. improvements to Aiecome the F~iday mght with a decisive 21-6 victory over Iona in Brooklyn, The
__ ran~ng. ThlS
1S
the only t~e a_ a strong team, one that placed: team's fifth runner. "We are ,Kmgsmen closed out their regular·season with a 6-1 record and will
Marist ._ cross country te~m has · 12th
m
the Collegiate Tra_ck hopeful that Will Morrison runs play· in the Met Bowl Saturday, November 22 ... Pace could only
be,~n ~a~keg. .
_ Conference among 23 varsity as strong as he has of late which manage a 13-13 tie with surprising Manhattan Sunday ... Concordia
. This 1s the highest_ honor ever teams ente_red· there and als_o could really- give us a strong broke iri!o th_e win column with a 16-6vi~tory over slumpingF.D.U ....
given to our athletes m t_he cross placed 2nd m the JV• race at the - seven _ man team ,, added the St. John s will play the NCSA's new nµmber
1
team -Stony Brook at
country program, and it sh~ws _ SMU invitational and 2nd iri the/- Marist coach; _
'
home Saturday. Stony Brook is the last unbeaten ~lub team in the
how much they_ are bemg JY !ace at __ ~he _Alb~ny In- . Last year Brian Costine led the nati~n .,. Mike Altomare is clingiing to second spot among national
respected and notice~. by ?ther _ v1tational, m1Ssmg fir~t m those Running Red Foxes' as he ran the rushing lec1ders. Freshnlan: is averaging 107.4 yards per game and 5.9
~ea~s and runne!"5, . said· a meets ,by close ma~gms:
strcmgest race of' the Marist yards per- carry...
·
·
/pbilant _
Coach Rich , Stevens.
In the NCAA, Marist will run: harriers in placing 121st of over _
. ·
_ _ Whe~er we go up or down fr?m Fred. Kolthay, Tom Luke, Brian 350 runners. Costine, Coufal, - INT~MURAL ROUNDUP
~ere will dep~nd on our s~ow~g Costme, Bob .Coufal, George Mccutcheon, and Morrison are
-
·
·
m the t~o fmal champ~onship M~Cutche~n,.Jeff Blanchard, and especially noted for being big-
Intra~~ra~ acti~n resumed last wee~-,In coedvolleyball, first-round
meets this w~ekend. I thmk the. Will_ Morrison. The Red. Foxes meet runners which is to Marist's champs Third Time .A.round" remams. the team to. beat with wins
guys sen_se this and _are prepared - placed 29th of 62 teams entered . advantage. . ·
over ''Odds and ~nds" and ''QB
&
G's" ... "Odds and Ends" defeated
for me1r best -performances last year and this year•~ entries:,,
"We've been working all year '.'PreparationH", who also lost to "DB
&
G's" ... "Rehrrn to Forever"
ever. .
; .
are supposed to nwnber over 500 peaking in the big ones at the end _
is the top men's team with decisions over "Goober's Tool" and
- Coach ~tevens 'Yas
,
referrlng ~o runners and over 70 ;teams, in -a and everything _
points for us to :?onrs Pizz~tja" ··· Women's net action saw, ·•.'7th- Heaven" beat
the teams two fmal meets this ve,ry crowded fr~nt lme. . · __
run very well in these two last
Leos Volleyers" and the "Big Bird" win a forfeit over the Leo
Saturday when th_e top ~even · _
A lot
o~ our fm~l ranking for ones. we have shown constant team...
·
·
· ·
· ·
·
runners
~~ _to-Bo,ston
-
tor; the the~earw1lldep~ndon?ilrNCAA improvement.-and
.
we are all
There were two rlose games in soccer as "Peter
&
Co" edged
_
NCAA _D1v1~ion TI.)ree National Natlo~al sho~mg smce . t~e psyched up and really ready for _ "Muff Divers" 1-0 and "Zambin_i,,nipped "Red Hook Free Library"·
Champ10nships while the:B _team . corun1ttee realizes that . this 1s these final two tests,"· concluded
runs at Vanqortla!}dt Pa!k
~
the our best team appearing there. Stevens.
·
BOOTE~ WIN CACC, REJEC_T ECAC BID
~- IC4A Champ1onship1>. pt1s will be. However, our strengtE and pepth· ·
·
·
PRESENT~
Te~qulla
TU.ESDAV'NOVEMBER 18th_
AT
9:00 PM.UNTIL~
Live Music
_
le.a.-tu:'r-ing- .-
f.e-q u·JI a
·
-·s--a
u·
z
a·
-5-·o-c
-: (THE NO. !TEQUILA IN ',
-•fo\EXIC:O AND
THE
~WORLD)
.
.
.
.
~'.
. 1'.he-!'rfarist soc~er team won its first CACC cham~io~ship"'ever by
trouncmg Bloomfield 10-0 T~esday but it was announced · rior to the
game that the 11-3 Red Foxes have rejected a bid to the EdAC t
tlley_entered last year.
,
_ .
:
.
. ourney
1
Coa~h «Doc" _Goldman: explained the rejection by- pointing to the
teams_ two str~ught losses last,.week. "We have 'not played a solid
· ::::;_em
so~e t1me an~ ar~ not ready physi~ally tQ plaY:
a~y
more," he
. The booters-suffored ro~d losses to Kings Point (3~1) last we~nesda
. rird
~~
~lt
t~?
Sa~urday. That eliminated theni'for consideratio~
~~-Tr~tta ·scored tlie le>_ne goal against Kings Point, while zenone
an . ,1i:mmo accounted ~or both goals-against R.P.I.
F1rm~o scored four tu!J,esland Trotta three
in
th - h
i -
t
?o~°:!~f~f
~none, Al ·Robinson and Lucious Bonries~ns aYs~usc~~!~
· ~ncl, suddenly, the season is
.
over,_,:
_THIS WEEK IN MARI~T SPOll!S (Nov. 13•19)
C
Saturday, Nov. 15 -.. Football: Iona'~ at Leonidoff Field - 2 . . -
- ros~ Country: NCAA--Div. III· Cham ._ t
.-
p.m. ·
Ch~mps_-: at.Van Cortiandt
--n . ·
ps_.
,a Boston • Noon IC4A
_
. Stinday,,-Nov. 16.; Sailing: Ma;t;fFrostbit~
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15.8.1
15.8.2
15.8.3
15.8.4