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Part of The Circle: Vol. 15 No. 9 - November 20, 1975

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_.
,._
THE.CIRCLE
VOLUME
1&,
NUMBER 9
·
MARIST C9LLE~E;POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
NOVEMBE_R 20,
1975.
.
Women Against Rape
.
.
.
Hold
Conference
·
'- By Claudia Butler
·
.
cabs
·
instead of public tran- hurts one half the
,
population of
..
sportation; Fear of rape infringes
.
this coun
_
try. We are going to get-
'
Women
·
and
.
rape
.
.
w~s the
.
on our space ".' many women a
.
re angry and fight iil
a
rational way
subject matter
"
of the
·
Dutchess
.
afraid to wait on street corners
.
-with logic and statistics. We are.
Cotinty Women Against. Rape for someone or,jog aione
.
in going to get- angry arid fight. Ana
(DC~WAR) First Annual
·
Coil-
·
Central-Park."
- .
.
.
.
..
.
we are going to win!"
.
ference on Rape, held November
.
Luba. Zimm~rnian, Rape T~sk
. A demonstration in self-defense
12
-
~rorri 6:30 to10:3o
·
p.m.iiflhe Forc;e Coordinator;
:
.··
N.O.~., was given by Sara YoungofBard
campus center.
.
. __ .
.
.

RY.C.;
s~ted
,
in
:
·
her speech College:
.. •
Gary
.
Zwerdling/
.
a ..
:
·
The confeJence; whi~h was ~ape, Fantasy and Fact
_
, •~~pe , Marist junior, assisted her. While
coordinated by Linda
·
Bucove,
·
a
·
)Sll?t':lsexual_~
_
rim~;Itisa c_r!91e
·
derii"onstrating tiasic
.
.
techriiques
-

.
Maiist psych major, consisted o( ofviolenc~.
U
is d9
_
neto hlJ:lllihate oUkido,
·
Ms
:
\'oung gave pra
.
c-
·
.
a
filIIl,
two
:
_
speakers,
-
a self-
·
and de~r
.
a
,
d~ woIJ1en!'
.
_
·.
·


.
tica.l
·
advice.
·
\'If
:
you-
:
punch
defense
· .
demonstration and
!'v1s. Zimmennan
_
expr~ssed her

someone; put. you're
.
whole body
several workshops.
.
... .
.
·
disbeliefofthe existing_ myths
_
behind
.it
Elbows
at~
:
great;
.
YolandaBako,amemberofthe about men's

_•
s~xtiality

·•
which they'redeadly! Aim forthe solar
.
Mayor's Task Force on
.
Rape, justify rape; ~·Men
_
aren't. sexual plexus,
it's
a tender spot. Don't
N.Y.c.; spoke on how the fear of perverts; Men's sexual. l>ehayior
be
mesmerized by the assailant's
rap~ affects .a woman;s life, "Our is
.
contro!_!able ! Jw.pe
.
.
is
.
ri~t. weapon, Think of his knife as an
Uyes are constricted by otirfear
·
natural male behaviof!J'

.
.
extensii:mO<>fhis
·
arm", Don't be
.
a
·
..
ofr~pe; Fear ofrape J.units our
_
_
.;-
To
~pplause,
'
Ms;
,
2ilJ.1:lllerm,an; sittingduck-gel_ou~ofthe:way!",
.
YOLANDA BAKO
speaks:at Rape Conference held last
.
mobmty -
w~
_
are afraid
.
to
.
hit~
.
concluded
;
her speech
.
suggestm.g
·
. Following
_
the
::-
demonstration
· ·
nesday. ( Poughkeepsie Joumill Photos by Jim Deckner)
Wed·

:
~
c;~ke,
-
afr?igto go
:
out alorie
i
at th~t
;
wom~n
_
m
_
ake
.
sure their
·
.
the~udiimce
,
brokeupintogroups
·
·
· ·

·
··
·
.
mght
,:
afraid
.
of_ ass, crotch
-
and angcy feebpgs about rape
.
are

for
>
workshops
.•
on
·.
rape
..
and
bf~astgratibers as w,e
wa.Jk
along
·
heard.
,
_
''v,/_e
-
._
.
h~ve
._
to
.
:..
s
.
ee
.
that
.
racis!Jl;c:ohsciou
_
sriess raising
.
for
'
.
the street. Fear of rape costs us rapists are
·
purushed. '.('hey have men or women
:
and self-defense
..
,
inoQey-
<
we move
fo
more ex
~

!oknowthey cari't
·
g~t a,ay vvith
'
for

wonien:
•·
.
.
··

.
pensive
·
neighborhoods
·
and take
·
it!
·
Rape

·
damages,
:
rums, and
·
·
.

KARENDUVERNEY
.
and
Aft~r.
~arlc
magazfoes,
.
. therewill b1(nokeynote speaker:
JACKMAN·
.
P~ughkeepsie Jouma1;·
·
Hudson StudentsofMarist will be able to
·
You may have a
'
chance to 1?lk Register
Star,
and Daily ~ews talk to
<
the fepresentatives pn a.
·
with Jennifer O'.Neill's manager,
.
Record. Associated Press
.
will be one to one- basis/'
.
·---
Ken
·
·
Bemian or
·
:well
·
known
·
represented and several ad~
·
Snyder suggests that stµdents
publisher and author, Berkshire vertising agencies,
,
such as come .to
<
the Career
·
Day with
Travelers;
iL
you attend the
_
Benton and Bowles:
.
·
.
.
questions preyiously
·
prepared.
Communications Career
.
Day
.
on
·
Mr. Snyder
·
is
.
waiting
.
for Communications Career Day.is
·
Tuesday, December
9:
.
.
· '
.
.
.
r1:spon.ses(romA.B
_
.C,, Colum~ia strictly informatio~~L There will.
.
Larry
._
Snyder, Career Coun-
f>ictures!
'.
and l_l.C.A. r:,ec:ord
_
mg be no recruiting
:
·
. ·
.
selor has recruited guests from corporation.
·
Among
.
his many
All
activities
.
will be in the
all the areas ofComrimnication .
.
requests he finds it difficultto get campus center from io a.m.
~
12
W.G.B.S;
.
and W:H.V.W. will
.
responses frorifpersons in Public
·
p,m.- and J:30 - ~:30 p.
_
m.
·
.
·
j·epresen~ theradio}ield; l'-tB
,
C: Relations.
~-
·
_
. .
;,
·
.
_
·
·
For ftirther'infomiation Larry
will represent televisiol). Some
·
of
·
l\k
Snyder says,
_:
.
Becat_Ise Snyder can
be
'
located
_
in ilis
the
.
newspapers ang magazines ther,e
.
are so
:.:
rn_any ii:iterestmg Champagnat Hall office,
.
Room
repr'eserited are CosmopoUtan people atten
.
ding career ~ay 125.
·
Sarah
Young
·
of Bard
.
College
.
and Marist College student
.
Gary
Zwerdling participated
·
in
a
sell-defense
demonstratioD:
during the
conferen
_
ce on rape hel~ here last week.
__
Hll.man
S~Xuality Symposium
Held
Pane>lDisc
·
usse_s
~
Sex
·
A
panel discussion bega_n t_h~: Shaw; posed the idea that there
Symposium on
.Human
Sexuality really isn't a revolution, just a
on Nov.
1.1
in Fireside
Lounge.
It
greater awareness of sex. He said
was well
.
attended
_
by Marist
,
our problems with sex are mostly
students as well as others from due to
a
lack o_f fee.ling and
,
love
..
._the community. Dr. Italo Benin of
-and
_
'"not knowmg who y~u are:"
.
the Phiiosophy Department
·
acted
·
·
Sara Balogh,
.
a psycholo1pst, said
·
as moderator.
·
·
·
·
·
sh
_
e too felt this
.
way smce ~he
Tiie
.
discussion
"The
Sexual
.
sees the problem often workmg
Revolution -
->
Ha~
.
J.'here Beer. with y~ung pe_ople at
.
Vassar
· one?''
.
focused on the·
;
social

counseling sery!~~s'.
.
·
·
changes
..
in
the sev~~Ues. The
.
Jane Bloom, an
·
attorney;
,
.
;-
.
-
. panelists
-
·
.
consisting of ·an at- .looked at
,
the .}egal aspect of.the
· ·torney,
'
..
a
.
:
·chaplain,·
·
a
·
''Revolu_tionn, a~dhowthe role of
.
.
, psychiatrist,
.
and a
_
.
psychologist, women 1s
.
changmg.
.
.
-· from the
.
"mid-Hudson
are~; gave
_
·
.Vass~r
<::oUege; Cathol~c
·
a
teri
"
rriinuteJalk
_
on th~ changes
.
Chaplam! Ji're~ probm, s~ed
·
arid
:
problems they"
_
sa:w
iri
.
their
·
up_
tll~
disc~ion: by
.
saying
J!1
.
.
.
'
.
,
.
.
...
··
.
·· .
.
· .
·
,.
,
c
,
.
':,'
.
..
:

·,.
owrt'profe~ions:
:<
.',
/'<

;
allp\ll'.SOp}ili.;_t!Cati,on,l_\VO~der_~
_
Panei ~scusses sexuality at symposium.
'
From
'
left
_
fo rig~fil~e:
-•-
Father Fred Drol,iti;
·
A~orney
:
;
:
:~.
;
The
_
,
psychiatrist;"
.
Dr .
.
_
Erme
:
··
Vfe got to love
.
one ~~othe~n,io
_
re'.
·
.
_.
t;n;!~\~~;-)~u.-10
~~,
-
Psychiatrist Ernie
Shaw,
J>sycb~l?gfs~Sa~~
-
~alogh. (C~CL~
.
P~
0
'~:'
·
..
,
•.
\
.-
\;-_:
:
\-
--=-:
:
;~
KE~o-rEs,i>~ioN
:
Pase}
::·
:
:::
.
·
/
_
..
·.,
..

-
.
~
.
.
.
-:·}r
'
,.








































































































---
--
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-··
-
--
~
--
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- - - - -
PAGE2
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER 20, 197S
Skydivers
Jump
Symposium Features
Keynote Speaker
By Winnie Saitta
landing techniques, and
_
also
when to pull the dummy rip cord
"Sky
diving has caught on very (which
is
a replacement for real
quickly at Marist," said Ed cord which opens the parachute).
Jennings, the president of the sky The costs of jumps after the
diving club. "147 students have initial one
is
$14.
pull the dummy rip cord." There
were no casualties
-
and most of
the jumpers felt it was the
greatest thing they ever did.
part of it. Dr. Sloan believes that
such an understanding comes
about only through an awareness
of the total sexual experience as
being for personal p,Ieasure as
well as procreation~
·
He em-
phasized that the sexual ex-
perience was
_
more than mere
physical contact; it is a deep and
sensitive experience in non-
verbal . communication
. -
Ac-
cording to Dr
.
Sloan it' is
·
only
_
_
when we realize this
,
have we
·
reached the
.
ultimate
-
in physical
communication.
By
Pat
Perretto
signed up and by Thursday 30 of
When the students learned that
them
will
have jumped
.
"
on the first five jumps there
is
a
Ed
·
says, "It's amazing when
you free fall."
_
On
·
a free fall the
jumper holds an arch and then
falls with their
-
belly towards the
ground and then goes into an
almost stand-up position
.
and
returns to the belly position.A
jumper will fall 700-800 feet on a
free fall jump before his chute
fully opens. Ed says, "The club
hopes to be able to compete
against other colleges such as
Albany, Genesco, and Dutchess
which already have sky diving
dubs, in
-
the ~uture.
As part of the Symposium on
Human Sexuality sponsored by
the Counseling Center and
Campus Ministry of Marist
College, Dr. Donald Sloan gave
the keynote address to an
audience of
·
approximately 75
people. Dr. Sloan is Co-Director
of the Sexual Therapy Center at
New York Medical College and
Director of Psychosomatics,

Department OBS-GYN
_
a~ the
New York Medical College. D
_
r.
Sloan received much of his
training in sex therapy by
working
-
in conjunction with the
Masters and Johnson team in St.
The major thftist of the club
is
specific static line which opens
to give more students the op- the chute automatically, they
portunity to jump. "In order to do
-
became more at ease
.
students
this," Ed says, "we'll need a lot are supposed to pull the dummy
of money and the schools support rip cord while attached to the
so we can earn it." The
'
club static line so that they can
would like to put $10 towards each practice pulling the rip cord when
students first jump. The first
·
they free fall
.
Ed said, "You
jump costs $45.
This
fee includes really must l;>e thinking, that's
the rental of equipment and a five the important. thing. Out of 14
hour instruction period
_
which people who went out on their first
covers emergency procedure, jump only four remembered to
Dr. Sloan began by giving a
slide
·
presentation; then he went
into the functions
-
and changes
that
_
occur before, during, and
after sexual experience; and he
concluded by showing a movie
exemplifying the effectiveness of
non-verbal communication
through the physical.
Room
S
_<
.
·
cholarships Available ~;
t~::t
f!w~~-/l~an~!tf:;
-
awareness and understanding of
By Gerald Kelly
mittee which will be comprised of respective
_
halls; 3t The Com-
Gerard Cox
,
Associate Dean for
_
mittee will
.
meet prior to the
the human body and the sexual
functions th
_
at are an intricate
In the firstissue of Circle this Academic Affairs, Frederick inter-session to consider the
year there appeared an article ~mbert, Director
-
of
,
Campus applicants; 4) all applicants will
about students who had been Life, Gerald Kelly, Director of be notified during the
·
inter-
Handicapped
.
Help
awarded a Room Scholarship for Financial Aid, and a student session as to whether
·
or
.
not they
-
-
-
-
·
·
tati
f
h f th
hav
·
e been aw
·
arded the
·
Roo
·
m
By
_
-
T
-
bomas McTe
'
rnan
·
Community College just
-
before
the 1975-76
-
academic
_
yea
_
r.
.
>
-represen
ve rom
_
__
eac
,
o
·
e
_
_
.
-
-
s
·
h l
h
-
·
the spring semester began, Hines
The
-
F1
·
n
·
an
,-
c1
·
a
·
l
.
.
Aid
·
Of
_
fice resi
_
dence
·
halls.
c
O
ars tp.
·
-
·
J
H.
··
h d fulf1·11ed h1
·
s t k
s· tant director
-
-
oe
mes
a
oo over as as 1s
.
Wl
·
s
·
hes to make
·
1·t known that a
_
Th
_
e procedures whic
_
h will be
The amount of the awardii;'$295
.
-
.
·
lifetime dream. He was a • Joe is very happy in his present
limited number

of
Room foHowed
in
the selection will be as for the semester
.
firema
_
n. But his bright future position. "I th
_
ink Marist is really
Scholarships will
be
made
·
follows
:
l)
the student fil
.
es with
The only provision i
s
that the
-
aval
.
lable
for
·
the
second the Financial Aid Office for the recipient continue his or her was clouded by a serious fantastic.
I
enjoy college - age
-
· d
-
M ·
t
c
11
motorcycle accident and now, students and the atmosphere they
semester.
.
.
Room
Scholarship
-
-
th e resi ence m a
aris
·
0
ege eight years later, he is the create. I also enjoy helping them
The awa rd will
_
·
_
be
based upon
-
necessary paper work is the residence facility for the 1975-76
f
f
.
h -
-
·
·
assistant director of the
Of
ice o
-
in planning and developing
_
t
_
e1r
the criteria of financial need
,
subm~ion of an Application for spring term
.
.
-
Special Services.
futures
.
"
-
-
academl·c standing of at least a Financial Aid and a Financial
Students who think
.
that they
__
.
d
-
f
-
He had graduated froµi
He feels his role is to
"
pr
_
ovide
2.5 cumiilative index; and Statement; 2) the Financial Aid are
·
eserving o
-
consideration
significant positive contributions Office
will
-
Contact . the should not hesitate.to place their Lourdes H
.
S. in Poughkeepsie, an opportunity for

disabled
to the residence halls.
Housemasters or the Resident request at the Financial Aid
-
where he lived all his life
.
He
·
students todevelop a functionto
Off
went south to become a
.
fireman their fuilest
:
capabilities, to
The recipients
_
will
be chosen Coordinators for
__
an evaluation of
ice.
·
.in New York City and remained achieve expertise and be
-
com-
by the Room Scholarship Com-. the applicants, from their
there until his transfer ~o petitive, and to take part
in
the
_
Marist Asks WaShin,kto.n,
.,
·
· ·
,
·· ··
.

·
-
For
-
"J4.Ia/
J,
~,,_m,:,'¼,x
,>
r,
By Tina Iraca
Arlington in 1964, wher,:l he was ''mainstream." He added, "As
promoted to
.
lieutenant in 1966
.
·
far as I'm concerned tl1ere is no
-
His staircase to succ,?SS sud-
,
.
difference between
a
,
han-
denly collapsed on the night of ;dicapped person
_
and the non -
,
.July 12, 1967.
,
. , ,
·
-
.
,
,
..•
- ;

s.
hail!:llc:apped,
,
1>_e{'.S
,
0!1,
~
exce1>
,
t
,,
,_J
_
he
,



The
·
mishap left
hun
totally

handicap.''
·
-
·
-
·
-
··
blind and while convalesc~ng at
· •'
Although no longer is he able to
.,
home for
.
a
.
year after his
_
four -
·
.
actively participate in sports (he
month hospital stay, Joe b_egan to played basketball, base~all and
retrieve the scattered bits and football in H.S
.
), Joe still reads
and Ernestine Chapman. The program, coaching certificate map out a new future.
.
·
and listens to sports, especially
title planning committee includes
.
program,
·
expans
i
on of the office
.
"
l
had always
-
wanted to be
.
a his favorites -the football Vikings
Approcimately $3.7 million was 16 faculty and staff members.
of career development, setting up
-.
fireman since I was a kid,"
·
Joe
.
and the baseball Giants. He also
requested by Marist College for
Originally this aid went mainly life experience for credit, and
.
said. "After I lo~t my sight I
.
maintains a gun collection from
federal aid
.
Title three
I
of' the to Southern Black colleges until s~tting up
·
a new system: of ads realized that! didn
'
t have enough earlier hunting days and is the
Higher Education Act of 1965 pressure from other small visThement:d
_ .
1
V
b
,
.
-
d .. - _
_
education to get a good job so I proud owner of a 1930 Model - A
formally known as Aid to colleges, on th~ office
_
of
.
~
ai :
~~
_
·
e .1;1se
.
m
,
_
went back to college.''
Ford.
__
_
Developing Institutions,
is education
expanded
the stltut!on wide_ accordmg
~<? Dr.
But first
.
he made the trip to
Riicently Joe has become in-
available to small colleges who
·
availability of the aid.
Olson,ai:id will be sp_ent over_ a
,
Morristown, N.J., in December, volved
in community
·
affairs
.
"I
do not have
·
enough resources to
Ultimately, the
· _
commi!tee fo~r to five year period.
·
Mar~st 1968, where he
.
was trained to
.
use
.
want to get
-_
-
_
involved in local
offer a high quality of education. submitted 20 separate activities will not know whether or not 1
t:5
his seeing .:
·
eye dog, Siri.
-
·
politics because
I care about the
Marist
-
College has applied again, they propose to do with th_e aid. proposal has_ been accepted until
.
He enr
_
olled in Marist
·
the
_
community
·
-
_
where it is,
.
where it
after being turned' down last Basically, the money . will be spring.
.
·
-
·
_
.
following September with no
is go
i
ng, and how it will develop.''
year
,
for this aid. According to sp
_
ent on
·
strengthe!lmg the
_
Acc~rdmg topr
.
rnson, !he aid definite
_
plans for a caree.r .
.
He
.
He
·
also p~foted out t~aLhe is
Dr. Margaret Olson, member of curric~lum
:
at Ma_r1st. Con-
will
~~t
Mari~t
·
on
, .
a
-
mor~ majored iriAmericanStudies but disturbed in the lack of planning
the coordinating group, last centratlon will be given ~o
_
the competitive ~~is .. wit~ 0ther developed an interest for coun-
in the growth of this area.
year's proposal was very sim-
.
psychology department, crumnal sma~ colleg~s.
It
.
will_ he!p seling while working summers as
Director of the town of
plistic and she bas since sp~nt just~ce, communicatio!1 a$, and
·
!\iaris~, survIVE: and
.
mamtam
-
a counselor for blind high school
Poughkeepsie Lions Club since
time in Washington, D.C. reading environmental studies
.
Other itself. 'f!le action was tak~n to students at Syracuse University
.
1973
.
Joe has just completed
successful proposals to gain an examples of these activities are help M.
,
arist better the quality of
-
'
'.
From then on, I wanted to be
a
mov'ing to
.
LaGrange where he
.
insight as to the type
.
of proposal
-
expansion of higher e~ucation education offered.
-
_

_
-

counselor in
a
:
college,"
~e
lives with Terri, hiswife of three
that is accepted
.
"It
is a major college program
,
establishment
The proposal ~ppear~ as -~
,
_
remembers
_
.
_ ·
_
-
-
_
·
-
years.
·
_
.
-___
- _
-
--.
-
_
-.
-
-.
_
effort
"
says Dr. Olson.
a
"Marist of a bachelor of public ad- large vol~e ~nd is available
.
_m
-
After graduating cum laud
_
e
in
-
Even.though he has been here
has d~voted a lofof resources and ministration, integration
.
of
.
Dr. Olsoi:i s office
.
for the MarISt 1973; Joe
.
went on to Syracuse
less than a year, Joe is optimistic
people" in writing the proposal community service in the
.
commuruty.
.
where he received his master:s in
about his future at Marist. He
.
she adds. The coordinating group curriculum, establisb~ent
_
of
_
Counseling Psychology this past
would like to remain in
a
position
.
includes Dr. Olson, Judy Sarnoff, upper development
·
nursmg
.
January
.
_
He returned to Marist
-
that works with students but also
_.,.,,,,,
Parking L~t Planned
-
·
shortly thereafter and
·
was
in-
·
one that involves a decision
·
-
formed by Deans
·.
Wade and
making capacity. "Students have
··
· Waters of an open in
_
the coun
-
ideas and I have ideas to make
seling department. And when
·
this a better place and I want to
_
Eileen Best, whom he replaced,
be in a position to put these ideas
left. for a position at Dutc~ess
into practice.''
,
A
·
temporary
-
parking
.
lot is
planned for con~truction along
the hill behind the south side of
.
Sheahan House. The temporary
lot announced early this week,
· wiil try to alleviate the need of
more parking spaces on c~mpus.
About 100 spaces will
·
be
provided.
-
·
-
"We realize something had to
be done over the summer about
.
the parking•:·situation;" says
Anthony Cam
·
pilii,
.
Business
Manager at Marist, "however,
we fell behind schedule because
of the strike -by
-
the construction
company during the
.
summer.''
The strike delayed completion of
drainage and sewage pipes
_
irl the
Sheahan parking
·
tot.
.
·
'
Glenn Looney, presi
_
dent of Thanksgivi
_
ng recess
.
Looney
D
-
·,,
1'\T
-
p
b
.
1
·
,
'
o
·
c
·
Commuter Union, is circulating a feels that it
is
"a lack of forsight
-
·
rugs
1
_
~
0
rO
em
-
ll 8 mp US
petition demanding the
~
_
ad~ on
-
the college's J>art"
that
_
the
·
·
·
!
;'
_
~
.
'
ministration
_
to take
.
steps to problem has
_
lasted so long.
BanydFMARANRKKPKLIAMNGONDON
based on a
'
random sample of
provide adequate parking spaces "Everything depends upon the
over 200 · resident students was
by Dec. 1. Looney hopes for 1500 administration's action
.
If it's not
·
According to early results from
:
conducted over the pa
_
st
-
two
.
signatures.
·
to the' approval of the students we the community psychology
_
class
·
weeks.
·_
_
With the temporary parking will follow_ through with our survey, drugs are not a problem
The details of these findings
plan, Looney still plans on going demands.''
·
.
here at Marist. Although
- 6 0 -
-
will be presented at
-
an open
ahead with the petition.
.
-
.
.
_
·
Later
this
':
week, Looney
,
is percent":
of
students
·.
surveyed
.
meeting December ~
.
at 8
.
p
.
m. in
"
I still plan oil following
·
meeting with Edward
'
.
Waters, saicrarugs are easily accessable, Fireside Lounge.
·
Also future
through with the petit!on,'' says

_ Vice
~
President of the college to -
.
·
-
-
_-
-
84-
.
-
-
percent
-
stated there articles of the Circle
will break
Looney, "but if the temporary
_
discuss parking
.
_
_
_
_
_
. was no problems with drug use on
down the.interpretations into sex
parking lot is to tlie satisfa<!tion·
.
The
_
Mai!ttenance dep~rtmM,t campus.
- ·
.
-
·
·
.
differences, dorm
·
di(ferences,
of the students then
I.
will
-
not is in the process of filling the
~
This
·
is one area
-
of the survey
-
and
freshman
and
.
,
up-
-
.
submit the petitions a
_
nd
l
will
holes and leveling_the land for the where the results are in. Results
perclassmen differences ..
_
,
call off the strike:'7
--
._-
,
,
tempor-ary
:
parkmg
-
lot. Com- i~
..
o~her
.
are
,
as

such
as
.Weas a class would like to take
Looney concluded
·
that
-
the --pletion date
·
is
·
set
-
for later next d1S~1plinary
,
-
action, places
;
to
_
· this time to thank those students
situation
_
-
depends
.
upon
·
ad-
_
week
;
:
:
·
-
,
·:
study! and resollrce use are being
·
who participated
'
i11
:_
·
the survey
·
ministrative
'
_
·
action
.
by the
compiled at present .
.
Tl_le
-
survey,
for their cooperation
:
...:...
.....
_










/
NOVEMBER 20, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
"Leave It To Jane" Opening Tonight
BY RICH SELLERS ,;.
Leave
It to Jane
a Jerome Kern
Musical Comedy in three acts,
goes up tonight at
8
p.m. in the
theatre under the direction of
Marist graduate Glen Cassale
('72).
The play is about rivalry over a
traditional Thanksgiving Day
football game between Atwater
and Bingham colleges in
1917.
· ·-:The most sought after co.- ed at
Atwater uses her charms to steal
a star player
from
Bingham .. The
play
abounds
with love and
lovers, both satisfied and
unrequited, parents, faculty and
football, all woven together in
dance and song. Atwater wins the
game, ·but the trickery is
discovered before the happy
ending.
According to director Cassale,
the show is a good piece of
Americana. "I don't think it's
corny. People can come and
laughat what American colleges
used to be like. I think the hardest
thing with this show was to make
sure we didn't push it too far and_
make it a farce. We had to cap-
ture what 1917 was really like."
The music for the show is under
the direction of Barbara Wooley,
and the choreography was
· created by Linda Lane and
Claudia Post.
,
The costumes, rented from
Brooks VanHorn, are "stunning"
according to Cassale.
This production is the 20th
musical under
the
direction
of.
Cassale, who teaches English and
drama at Rhinecliff. Union
Free
School and is a member
of
the
board of governors of the Valley
Theatre Company.
"I've never worked with such a
fun group of people and I think it
will show," remarked Cassale,
who urges all those "who want to
have an enjoyable evening to just
come and relax and enjoy
themselves."
The show will gc;i up Thursday,
Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m.
and Sunday . at 2:30 p.m.
Reservations can be made
through Friday at the box office
in Champagnat Hall.
( CIRCLE photos by Dave Livshin)



































































PAGE4
A Tribute ..
Raymond Weiss influenced this campus
and its people more than anyone I know.
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER 20, 1975
Letters
To The
Editors
When he attended_Marist with me, he had
two specia
I
non - academic skills -~ carpentry
and flowers. He wa~ boss of the crew which
put the roof on the present gym building; and
worked with Brother Paul Ernest, one of our
teachers, on
a
II the doors and woodeh trim
for the building. He also supervised the flora
I
beds around the College, .which centered
around Greystone ( Fontaine was not then
Just For ·commuters·
Union has the potentialto be one
Also, on the ballot wiUbe space
. . .
·· of the most effective instruments
provided for interested com- ·
bu
i
It) .
To all commuters:
for progress available to· the . muters to volunteer . themselves
As a youngster, he loved ·ba· seball and was
Last Thursday, 11-13-75, a commuter. But this instrument
as area representatives. Area
..
planning committee of concerned must be used.
representatives will be from
a slick-fieldingflrstbaseman.·Asa teenager
commuters· met to "discuss
Presently nominations are
defined
geographic
areas
problems facing the student body being submitted· for. the position -· surrounding Marist;~. They will
in Astoria, he competed· against a blond kid
as a whole, and commuters in of President of the Commuter ~obtain feed - back from .their
·
·
particular.
.
Union, the only elected officer Qf ' respective ·areas on. issues. of
for the first base position and won it; The
Onemajorproblemthatseems the organization. Nominations .
.
concern to Marist students .
.
_
blond boy's name was Whitey Ford. He a !so
to face any organization is the will be accepted until FridaY; 11- .
Also, . persons who are in-
.
wide diversity of interests among 21-75. Nominations are to be . terested in working on· the
served -as an usher in an Astoria movie
its members. Some may calf this submitted to Glenn Looney,-in- · commuter Union Constitution
theater
I
where he had. to· contend·. with the
apathy, but in the case of a terim President of the Commuter . should contact Glenn Looney. or
. .
commuter- organization it must Union, or mailed in the campus · indicate their interest by mail
antics of unruly urch i~s
I
ike Laurence
be seen as a-productofmultiple post office -box C-860. The only
(P.O; Box C-860).
.
SU
II
i
van.
facets. ofr a commuter'_s life, in-
requirement for the office is that
. On a different note, relative to
· eluding not only school but also the nominee be a' full - time ·an.issue at stake this week, the
He played for th M
· t b
k.
tb II t
job-and home. This year,· at-
commuter;
·
.
.
planning committee endorses
·
. e
a ris - as e a
ear,,
tempts will be made to ~c-
The election will be held during
John Woodin for President of the
as a"gu_ard. Later, as a teacner, he helped
complish a.· more .comfortable t!}e first week
0
of·December.
Marist StudenL .. Govermrierit;
organize_.the Officia.1 M_aris
_
t··•·b·a·s" k. e· tb'a• ·1·
1
·tea··m·, ·
mixture of these.elements.
Ballots will·be mailed to corns
There has never been a com-
.
The fact remains, . however, · muters with the December issue
muter elected President of the
and se_ rved as the coach for the first game-~ a
that last year only 27-commuters. of the Commuter Newsletter, -11-
Student Government. Maybe now
bothered to vot.~ for the Com-
~'i5.
The completed ballots are
is
the✓time!
.
·
cont_es~ against the New Paltz
J.V. --
before
muter.Union President
. _ tobe·depqsited inthe ~allot box
Come o~, commuters - - get
asking Gary M. endez to ·t k'
H
In ·terms of the :nwnber of ,whidi wm be provided at the
involved!
,
.
. ·
· a
e
over· . - e con-
students that are represented by ·. mllin entrance ofQon~elly d1,1ring·
.
tinued hi~ interest in Marist athletics, and
an organization; the ·commuter the week; December 1-5.
·.
·
c:ou Id often be seen watching footba
11,
·
·
·
basketba
If,.
or. crew.
Theater S~pport
it deserves at least part· of the
process of necess~~ cihange·.
. '· recognition and stature awarded· _I strongly feel this support wiH .
. When the College began its ma ;or con-
To the Marist College Students ·to the. sciences, social sciences, . result in better than/average
t
t
.
.
,
and _Faculty,
or humanities.
, ·performances 'by . the par-
s
r~c ion
m
t,he
60
S,
Raymond became the
The theatre. departmeni' of .' TbeHeve it is time to break the ,ticipants;-and thatJhe aspect of
lan_ds~ap~ _,c.t_e5.i~n~r._::,wor!<!D~:~ft_-~.;:lj~~!~:~f!,
-~~~0:~~~:r~i-rss11ii~iW!1c'lli!~:-i;.t!;;jt~2~~a~~~:YJ:::e~~;;t\~~~it.~~~~We~~~~!K;,:;''0i·~.\f+t:~~i~~;.; ...
.
.,
,
_.
budget,.he planned,Jhe attractive entrances
strength~ndfinanciarsubstance;'<Throughincreasedsupportofthe_, . :,,_.,
. ·.
'-~ ;~mcerely,
t
Sh.
h
· L. ·.· · · ·. d :Ch·. · .,

t
·H .. ·
1
-- --
Granted this is-notanihstitlition ·students and.faculty; by their.
· ·
·l\1.01ra Coffey.
O
.ea a.n,
eo, an
.ampagna • _e
aso
createdforthedevelopmentof',_presenceata_showthisweekend,.
·
planted the flowering trees in front of the
theatrearts,butatthesametime we can. togerner_ begin this.
Chapel. There is hardly an area of our
Th'anks'..,
. . :, ne~rby at the time.
if
l
knew who ·
campus that has not been touched
by
his
.
,they wereTwould th"imk _them
thoughtfu I work. The trees and shrubs he
near Editor,.
. ... ·. '• personally, butsiriceld_c;>notl am
· Last Friday I fell - on a newly hoping· they will see this letter
planted will give pleasure-to Marist:people
uncastedleg-outsideofAdrian 'and .realize· how much their.
.
building and was helped by . ·· kindness meant to me.
·
long after those of us who .knew him per-
several students whQ
0
were·,
There.is much talk these days
sonally have left the scene.
.
Dr. Edward J, · O'Keefe~ cover lette_rs, and Civil Service
Associate
Professor . of jobs as well as establishing a
Psychology at Marist College, . · Reference folder and picking up a
will speak oh Sunday, November __ copy of the .College Placement
.
.
....
ab<>ut "student apathy,» but
when
·
people_ reach out so, spon-
. taneously to a stranger I know
that true caring is alive and well
and living at Marist ·
Sincerely,
Paulette Guay
VOTE, VOTE, VOTE! in tlie
Student Government Elections to
be held.today and tommorrow in
. Donnelly Hal~.
Raymond enjoyed · the respect of the
faculty. He was intell_igent, sensitive, fair,
and had common sense. Whenever faculty or
administration needed ·a representative for
an important committee, his name surfaced.
He was ~lected to the Committee o.n Faculty
Development. when he was'. in Argentina on
sabbatical -- _in clear defiance of the maxim
23rd. at
a
p.m. at the First Annual.
-
Presbyterian Church, .. 100 , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ , ; , _ . . ; _
____
...;..,;_ _ _
Cannon St., Poughkeepsie.
His·
"out of sight, out of mind." When· I asked for·
topic
will
be. "Behavior
·
Modification as a· Parent
suggestions for the_Sea rcti Committee for the
Technique."
,
The program is:
Academic
·
Dean, R.
_
ay's name appeared on
beingsponsm;edbyThrough-the.
Week Nursery SchooLAquestion
·The Mlirlst'College CIRCLE Is the ~kly newspaper
Of
the students of ~rlst
College and_ Is published throughout the school year exclusive
ot
vacation periods ,
· _by the Sou,th_ern Du~chess Ne~ Agen~y, ,Wappingers, New York.:.,-· .
'
more letters than
a~y
other faculty or st_aff
-.answer periodwill follow along.
with refreshments. All students
t--------~-----------------,_...;._...;._.J
person.
andfacultyinembers are invited:·
Most of us will think of his ma·1or con
Thereisfreeparkingavailablein•
·oavidllvshin
..
.
.
·
·
. .
-
the- Church.lot and the municipal
tribution as academic: . teaching, r~!>e.arch,
1
"t
bothon Cannon St.. '
.' Mary Be
th
Pfeiffer
Michaela · Wilks was_ the
· GigiBfrtlas , · ·,
Associate Editor
planning·, advisery,ent...
I · prefer to
recipient • of
this
year's. : · GregoryConocchioli
EditorlalConsi.tltant ..
remember his perso_ nal influ __ ence_ o. n so many
scholarship;:from the. Columbia
:·_FChr_el_pdEAsnruhl~syh.
.' .. . .
PhotogtaphyEfiltor.~
T t. p
t· ·· I t·t t
The
Assista_ nt P_ notogra_ phy Editor
0
.
th ers.
es . repara 10n. ns
I
u e.
.
.
Tom McTernan
.
. ,
S_ ports Edito
·
r
course, which Ms. Wilks will be
p
f ·
c ·
11 •·
He d'ed
h.
r
d
.
If
taking··
·
in New. York City, is·
a nee onno y
'Layout Editor
·
. 1 . as ~. 1ve
courageous, se · -
designed t<;>.'aid students
_
to pass _ .Joan McDermott ·
Business Manager
contained, sens1t1ve to the-needs of others,,a
_the
Grad_uate .•
'>
'
Record·
,
·'t~&:~:::i
AdvertisingManager
living· example .of devotion to. one's.
·
fellow
!i~~fi:ri~bn ~i~~;ri~tufe5:i
.
, ..
D~~but~9~M~~age~ -
man and of faith in God .
contactLarry Snyder lll:Rooin ~"'.
Staff: Dave Kazd~n; q~µe.Berkery; Rich Bur~g;'.ri>hn :~eilly; ,

·•125.?:.".: ..
tf· · _ ·· ·
.
_
_._, -• ·
KenHealy,GeneHeuner.s,TomHudak,JackMc_Cutchecin Mike
.
L_inus
Ri"chard
·Foy ,
<Stu.de_ nts\v_._-lio are_··gradua_t_ing in
O'Shea;
Larry_ ~triegel, ,~111~t. Ar!90,_Gigi·- B~das,:tjaud,ia
.
Butler,
,
John B.ryne,:parue} Dro_~~ Kare~ puyerney,-Fr~.
1------------------------1
December/J975 and have not ·
. KoltJ:lay, Barbara,.~agr~th, Philip Palladino; Pat·-Perretto
.
.
The CmCLE Editors and staff wish to extend our deepest sympathy · utilized:
"t
he. , ()ffi~e
~
of Career···
.
I>~y~
,Robe~;. E~ .•
~~beo!
Winnie Saitta; Rich. Selle.rs,
Kama; ,
.
. ,
to the family 1;1nd friends of Dr~ __ Raymond Weiss.
n
is to th~ regre(of
:;f()~~i1~Tl~
tJtyd:r~}~tt~
Stµnrall, Tina Ira<;a;,Julie Schott,- Peter Van Aken':Elizabeth
- ~Jt:re:lfarlst
Co~~~ ~
have lost a_ devoted -~cher':~~~o~ appointm~t.
_
Therff
is.
s,till tiine
,,
;
~:1~~.t, Candi
_)?~vis .
.
<:-
. .-
_· -. -
C.,: .: ·, · ..
?--;:,: ;·:: ..•.. · ,: \
.• · ·. :
.. ,
.
·
·
fo
~earn
the,
basics
oL
res~~•'--~-----~----------.;__.;_
__
_,
Co-Editors
·
...
·.·
.
-< .•
-
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.. ..
A¢tll
•-
_ , , , _


































































































NOVEMBER 20, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
The Questioning Cameraman Asks ...
Matt Houl
Eilee11
Carmody
By RICH SELLERS
up equipment that could be used
in saving someone else's life in
"If
you were the judge in the that hospital.
Karen Quinlan case, what would
Mike Maloney, C - 717: I would
have been your decision?" Where have taken it off. I would have let
asked: Va,rious spots on campus. her die
.
If
she could think,
if
she
Elaine
·
S.
Brusoe
C -
512:
If
could communicate, if she could
there were still a chance for her prove she is alive, fine. But what
to come back to life or to con- has happened, iil essence, is that
sciousness, I think
·
she
.
should her parents are being strung
have been given the chance
_
to along
by
technological
live - no matter what the
-
chance inadequacies. They can't cure
was - even
if
it were just a tiny her. In essence, she's dead. I'd
one.
have to let her parents pull the
Sue Weisberg S - 305
:
Quite plug because it's putting a lot of
honestly,
I
probably would have strain on their lives.
resigned the case because
I
Mary Foster. C - 726: !think the
couldn't come to a decision
:
I judge copped out, to tell you the
don't think anybody has the right truth. He had to say,
··
No, don't
to take someone else's life.
·
pull the plug," becau
s
e of the fact
Peggy Jeffries
C-
512:
I
think
_
he
'
d be acting like God deciding
that probably in her case if:there whether someone would live or
was
·
some hope she should have die
.
What
-
would
I
have done'?
I
been allowed to live, but
I
think would have told them to pull the
people should be allowed.to die if
·
plug. Definitely
.
That girl's not
they want to. She shouldn't be living. They say some people
allowed to die because
:
she can't
-
-
have lived for months, even
·
make the decision herself.
years, in a coma, but the fact is
Tom Cook.L-103:
I
would have she's going to be some kind of a
-
decided to let the parents pull the vegetable when she gets out of
plug on her, for the simple fact
.
that coma as -rar as I can see
..
that she's just surviving l>ecause
Eileen Carmody
,
Commuter:
I
of machines
,
Also, she is
··
takirig think the parents didn't want
Teacher Ed
.
Makes
·
Changes
DAVID ROBERTS
.
.
a junior
.
.
high school, and six the program has been limited.
weeks
in
a senior high
_
.
school.
.
Mrs. Nolan attributes this to the
Teache~ Education at Marist
.
Extended student. teacher ex- tight jcib market.
"
Students now
has made changes in its 1975
~
periE:
_
nce is also given in a 9 week are choosing riot to go into the
-
1976 program
.
The result
is
a
.
progra~
.
. .
.
.
.
preparation of teaching,"
·
she
broader program available to
.
the
The
-
index reqwrement has says
.
.
student Mrs. Elizabeth Nolan, been raised from 2
.
5
~
3.0 .
.
"
This
To obtain a job
,
students are
director of teacher education
·
requires much greater effort by helped to build a placement
says; "the changes
·
are making the studentto meet the program
·
folder which contains resumes,
for•
;
a much more relaxed at
-
requirement" says Mrs
~
Nolan. and.letters of recommendations,
mosphere· in teacher education. Thi~
.
change has
.
,been made to from people ~ho
_
hav~ s~~n them
There is now a greater emphasis
-.:·
eliminate_. marginal:
·•
~tudents
.c
.
perf,or_rn. dur,1n~ the1
_
r
_
field _ex-
·
.•
placed on
'
the
students
'

contact
:
·
from
-,

:
the-::•field-
-
exper
.
ience
,
~
perien1;e.;~tuq1mts
·
are
,
:;llso g1y.e.n .
.-.
with
·
adolescents," According to
·
program.
.
.

.
.
_
_
. .
:'
:'
information on
:
how
.
to apply for
Mrs.
·
.
·
Ni::iJari, in
_
pasL
·
years
.
The
_
job placement
·
of

the
.
.
teacbi,:ig jobs. '
'
While students
students
_
never gained field ex-
.
program
·
has


enjoyed moderate
,:
are
_
sery~g the
·
co~uriity,
they
perience

in
.
secondary
·
schools
.
su
.
ccess. Of the 45
.
students
.
are
_--
ga1mng

experience
_
for the
tintil
·
their

teaching
.··
semester .

·
seeking jobs last year ap
-
future,,t she also :5ays,
"
_
that the
Now, however, junior year proximately 50 percent found student teacher m general has
students are able
.
to gain field
.
work in
:
their
.
related fields. wanted to perform well -to
.
experience by spending two However, even with this success provide _a contribution to the
mor.!1ings weekly for six weeks in at job placement,
-
the growth of community.''
Curtain Time
·
BY
JOHN DELLAMANNA
.
,
.
The choreography is exciting and should be
·
understood
,
however,
··
·
·
·
exhausing to watch, and Mr
,
·
:
that this is a dsk
.
especially the
For
·
most of the students here at Cullum is not at all shown up by weekends, and that all plays are
Marist, a trip to New York City to
his sons in the play who are each not
-
included
,
only those with
see a
_
play can be something of an easily five years his junior.
>
leftover seats for that
.
nights
ordeal. Once there
:
you may
For the ages of the two children performance~
realize that you ma(le a $7 .50
in the play Chip Ford, and Joseph
·
their daughter to suffer, so I think
it's up to them.
Matt Houl, S- 512: First of all, I
don't think the courts should have
been involved in
it.
Un-
fortunately, the courts did get
involved. I think the whole
decision should have been left up
to the parents and the priest.
Dan Edgecomb, Commuter: I
would have pulled the plug in the
artificial machines because the
body is not an artificial machine.
It
is a human creation arid it does
not deserve to be artificially kept
alive to an extraordinary degree
if it cannot sustain itself.
John Davern, C
-
613:
I
think
the judge doesn
'
t have the right
over life and death, but
I
feel that
jn view of the situation he could
_
have allowed the respirator to be
turned off.
·
Pedro Cuadra, Commuter: l
would have done exactly the
same thing the judge did. When
you're judging human life, you're
running into
·
many different
factors. Who has the say'? She
doesn't. The courts don't have the
say. And the parents definitely
don't have the say.
Peggy Jeffries
Pedro Cuadra
Present Tense
By Jim Kennedy
small farmers to grow more food
for the hungry in their developing
No doubt a good number of you settlements
.
Oxfam volunteers
may
-
recall that certain day or aid in land tenure, water supply,
week that was set aside for those prices and health facilities, which
who ate well to remember those
.
have a great deal to do with the
who hardly ever had enough to lives of these people.
eat. Perhaps you remember
I think it safe to assume that
those baskets in the rear of your many of us have not experienced
~hurch or synagogue that were hunger at any great length. Can
placed in front of some artist's you imagine what it would be like
con_ception of a tearful, starving to go without food for twenty-four
child. As
.
those same eyes melte
_
d hours'? There are a. number of
some emotions, the basket may
·
people
'
on
this very campus who
· _
have acquired a few more
·
.
coi~s are
.
":9illing to get a "taste" of
.
or perhaps a bill
.
From th~re on 1t
what
starvation might be
like
.
·
seemed like those starving un-
.
Today, Thursday, November
derdeveloped nations would be 2oth, has been designated by
fed until the next world hunger Oxfam-America as "FAST FOR
drive came along. Right'?
A WORLD HARVEST DAY"
.
Not really. When Third World Many of the people who have
regions experience famine it is chosen to fast on this day, will
due largely to droughts or floods. also be collecting donations by
Such catastrophies do not occur the cafeteria and Rathskellear.
on schedule. As a result, small The money collected will be sent
farm owners cannot provide food to Oxfam, who in turn will
for those who hunger nearby.
distribute these contributions
Oxfam-America is an in- among those whom they consider
ternational organization that to be in need of our help
: ·
helps some of the world's poorest
If
you choose to abstain from
people
-
to have more of the solid food today, there
·
will be
earth
'
s dwindling resources. This broth
.
and juice available in
organization continually fights Byrne Residence throughout the
against .world hunger by aiding fast. In fasting today, maybe
some of us will realize in a fuller
sense the pain and agony of those
who hunger, starve and die -
mistake. (and those are inex-
Shapiro, their parts were
pensive
.
seats!) I would hope
remarkably well acted as well as
therefore, in writing this column,
.
sung. Musically, the play
.
relies
to
.
give the Marist community an heavily on fast country, and Irish
idea
-
of.just what
is
playing, and ballad sounding turies which has
what each play is about, along . been orchestrated in a way that
with my. own brief critique. This closely
_
resembles the past
season one of the best
i
n years
,
-
musical successes of Broadway.
there
'
is something for
'
almost
,
Mr. Culluin's operatic voice is
everyone either on Broadway, at
·.
·
found lack~g
iri
some_ of the
the Met, in the Village; or
·
off-ofL softer so~dmg tunes as 1s Donna
Broadway.
.
Theadore, who is not
·
above
Understand Hunger
·everyday
.
Please, give what you can.
This
.
week's sel
_
ecti9n is hitting a few "sour ones''.
.

The
"Shenandoah" starringJohn play is interrupted and
,
an
im-
Cullwn; arid playing at the Alvin mediate reprise is in order when
Numerous cafeteria trays
overflowing with glasses of rich
white milk and plates piled high
with foo(l are testament to the
fact that Marist students are
entirely detached
.
from the
problem of world hunger today.
We cannot possibly understand
what it is like to starve in the
midst _of plenty;
if
we did we
·
Theater. "Shenandoah" is a solid the hit song of the play Freedom •

·
would probably feel more
compassion for those not as
fortunate as ourselves
.
Oxfam America is asking you
to give up some of your regular
intake of food - even
if
it is just
one meal. Understand what it is
like not to have food. Then give to
help those ihat don't.
·
The Editors
-
'.'Br9adw~Y M:usical" in the true is
'
sung. Upon seeing
.
"Shen-
and
'
traditional
·
sense of the
.
ex-
·
nandoah"- a second
,
time, I
pression
.
It
is the story
of
a
realized that it,is ,P9n Walker's
·
widower (Jolin Cullum) raising a
·
capable orchestrat
_
ion rather
CUB CONCERT COMMITTTEE
'
large family in Virginia during than
.
the singers
_
that
:
"make
it"
preSefff S
the Civil war. Believing that the not onlythroughout Freedom but
SALE ENDS NOV .29
Save On
Hyde Park
Brand Liquors
'
•Priced
Under
Gin 80
at.
3.99
Blend
at.
3.99
Vodka
.
at.
3.99
Scotch
at.
4.69
Bo
_
urbon
Ot..
4.89
war concerns neither he nor his quitebe
.
a
.
o
bit during the
.
othe,r
''Morn,·ng
·
song,,
.
.
family, he refuseflo let his four
.
·
nwn
.
rs:
.
·
·

·
.
.
_
-
.
··
able
:
bodied
'
sons
·
go ."To face
All mall, Shen~ndoa~ 1s
_
a w~ll
those Yankee guns, and
_
b~coµ,ie
.
put
~
togetller enJoyabl~ esc~~1st
-
~
.
:
.

AT
'
URDAY DECEMBER 6
targets
'
in a long grey line.J'
i\s
type_
'
of:_ a play.
If
r~u
·
11ke
s:
.
.
.
,
·the play progresses, we
.
see that musicals·- see
_
1t!
·
..
__
.
.
z
Aesi>it,e
_
his
_
sincere pa~ifist
i!1·
. :
P.~'.
'
~tely you ~an be ~ure
~!
-
~
9
p
M -
-
tentions, the war ta~es 1ts;toll
.
m
.
fm
,
dmgt1ckets_ fo:
.
.
Shenar1doah
i

.
.
.
.
• •
,
the
-
"
Aridersori'fainily
;
'
·
.
" ·
::
·
·
,
at
·
t~eJ:1alf
:
pnce 'P{T~
00:0~
at
f
{
C f
t •
:
:
·
· '
'Ille lead
"
parts
__
-
are
_
ex
_
cellently
<
·
·
·
Times

·
.:
~qu
_
a
___
re
__
-
~
;
_
The
_:·
·
tickets
·
1
8 e er1a
;
!
.

a~ed; both
:
b,v
-
John Cullum
-
and
·
purc
_
~sed
.
there
,:
are
.
tbe
'?est
.
PRICE $2.50
;
his daughters
.
played by Donna
.
.
seats
_
m
.
the
house,
at half pnce,

.
.
_ .
...
11
,
Theadore
·
a~d
.
Penelope M~ord.

•,
plus a dollar·service
.
~
ch~rge.
,
n
.
;;«ru;.
r
r.
,,,
- =
... ,.,,..__..-.-
....,, ...
-
-
-f-'.t'.

,
.,,..,,,
"Largest Selection
.Of
Wine
&
· Liquor In Dutchess County "
LIQUORAMA
HYDE PARK MALL,RT.
ff
NEXT TO SHOPRITE
























































































































































.:.,.
'
[
'
;
:
.
:..!_•.
~
~#
,.
r
r.
'
PAGE6
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER
20, 1975
Casey Elected Head
OfNYSASA
BYPATPERRETTO
bitious objectives" but "has Marist. He spent three years as
·
achieved only modest results." the New York
-
delegate to the
Thomas Casey, Director of the
Although Mr. Casey ap-
national American
Studies
American studies
.
Program at predates being elected president Association, then served as a
Marist and a member of the
of the organization he feels that member of
·
the NYS executive
Philosophy Department,
.
has such organizations can be
'
committee; then was elected vice
been elected president of the New
overbearing
·
and
:
intimidating, - presiden.t, and has now been
York State American studies
and many times become caught
·
elected the president.
.
Association
.
The NYSASA is a
up in petty interests, thus losing
As president of the NYSASA
professional organization of 150
sight of the original objectives.
Mr. Casey's job will include:
college
.
faculty members who
"Professional academic
1.
sending out- a periodic
teach
in
various
studies organizations should be- taken newsletter to the membership;
programs throughout the
.
state
:
with a grain of salt and some
2. selecting
a:
site for next
The organization began in 1959
healthy skepticism," says
Mr.
year's annual fall meeting.
·
_
8
33t)500tt000

uuc
~
laiuted
_
as a result of discussions held
Casey.
·
·.
3. working with the vice-
between teachers of American
The first involvement with ttie
·
president and secretary of the
history and American literature.
NYSASA for Mr. Casey came
.
in organization to make specific
They believe by crossing the two
1968 wheri
.
the then Academic plans for the meeting;
to form an American studies Vice-Pr
,
esident of Marist asked
·,
.
4 .
.
communicate with the New
program, both disciplines would
him to
·
set up an American
.
York state delegate to the
.
tie mutually enriched. Another studies program on campus. As a national
American Studies
goal of the organization is to
·
result he became a member of Association - David Marcell of
include as many other disciplines
the
ASA
and has since been in Skidmore College.
Sehol
,
arships
as possible in the study of charge of the program here at
.
·
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 $1.00 for postage and handling.
------------------------
I PLEASE RUSH YOUR CURRENT
·
LIST OF
I
I
.
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS SOURCES TO:
.
I
I
Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
- , - _ _ _
I
I
I
I
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
---,-___
I
I
City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
State
·
Zip_
I
I
-
(California res
i
dents please add 6% sales tax.)
I
L--------------~---------J
·
Winter
··
Sports
Carnival
Dec.S,6,7
American culture. Mr.
·
Casey
believes that the
NYSASA
is an
· ·
organization "with very am-
HYD
·
E
PARK
ARM~Y
__
:
·
·NAVY
·
10%
:
DISCOUNT
GOOD THRU NEXT WEEK
.
.
.
..
.
-
ON
·
RT. 9
or
12, 13, 14
~
j
.
at
rrif:.J
.
:i
>
·
"
i
1
·
·
·
Olympic
Mtn. Inn
(~(!
\
C
Directly
Opposite
Whiteface
l,~~~~~
­
Site of 1978
World Cup and
.
l980
·
01ympic Games
• Alpine and Cross Country Skiing
-
·
• Olympic Bobsled Run
.
-
• Skating in Olympic
·
Arena
.
• Tobogganing onto Mirror Lake
Tour Price of
s&s.
70
.
includes bus transportation,
lodging Fri. &
---
Sat
·
., 5 meals, hot wine party,
-
·
music each night.
.
-
.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
·
oR
.
BROCHURE
·
eALL
-
-
914-635-3449
or
452-1862. _
,
"
.
.
·
.
'.:
'.
.
We ar~ looking
for
an agressive, articulate
person,
-
somewhat knowledgable about Winter sports, to
work as campus representative for Whiteface:Lake
Placid Tours. Salaty
is excellent but based directly
•~~-:::;: on
initiative
·
and competence. Interested piities
~~-,"2
~~~i-=--
-
-
:.
.
_j:J •
'
caD
La~ence Plover 914-4S2-1862
(Last
Chance
·
~.....,...,..-, r:::
-=
·
·
.
.
.
Saloon; Poughkeepsie) or 518-946-7904 (Olympic
-:-~~~--~~~~C.".~--:
·
-~.,~~
"'i
-
~
Mountain Inn; Lake Placid)
.
.. ·
·
.
_
Community Invited
To Give Thanks
-
The entire Marist community -
There
~ill
be readings, music,
students, staff, faculty,
.
and a time
for
discussion, and a brief
administration -
is invited to address by Dr. Loius Zuccarello,
come together for an informal,
·
·
·
Academic Dean, on the theme of
·.
interfaith Thanksgiving service "thanksgiving". · As part of the
on Monday, November 24 at 4 :30 service, Campus Ministry: Byrne
in Fireside Lounge. The special Project has placed "thanksgiving
time of 4:30 has been arranged graffitti boards" at various
with Dean Waters; all classes locations
.
around
campus.
and offices at the college
will
Everyone is invited to help
close a half hour early
'
so that decorate .the service by placing
more may attend the S-'~rvice.
.
'
an opinion on these boar,ds!
,.._...., _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.....,_..,....-a, ____
·
·
:
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,
.
.
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,
·

















NOVEMBER 20, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE?
Women's Basketball Shaping Up
·t·
.
B11Sketbi1ll Season Prospects
By THOMAS MC TERNAN
year and are strong rebounders. 8 p.m. They
will
open their
Thomas
is
noted for his defensive conference
schedule
the
. Improved depth, scoring from skills, but suffered a possible following Tuesday, Dec. 2, at
the backcourt, and stronger broken hand in practice.recently. home versus Kings. They ·will
rebounding appear to be the keys
If
X-rays tomorrow are negative, also compete in the Brockport
to the 1975-76 varsity basketball he should be ready for the Holiday Classic. January 9-10.
season. ·
season's opener; .otherwise, he
Iona, along with Siena, is
Head coach Ron Petro, en-
won't be available· until next considered to be the lt'oxes'
tering his tenth season with a 131-
semester. othe_r-. forward can-•·. toughest opponents. Under new
.;100-,
career
won-lost record; ~is
didates ,. arc --,sophon::tores
.•
Walt ~.coach
.Jim,yalan9,, J.11~.G:~els.will
impressed with what he. has seen . . Brickowski
and
Damian Farley, ; center their offense around Kevin
in practice so far. "We have more and junior Walt Janeczek.
·· Bass - the nation's 19th top scorer
depth and could use eight.or nine
Starting at guards figure to be last year with a 23. 7 · average.
players in a game this ·year in-
letterman Eric DePercin and . Two other starters return - 6-6
stead of
.
five or six."
transfer Steve Pettus (Post center Kevin Manderville and 6-4
The team will be led up front by Junior Colleg~)_. De_Percin (5-10) forward Dave Budd. 'f!le Gaels
senior co-captains Earl Holmes led the team m assists last year also have four outstandmg fresh-
and .Ray Murphy. Holmes, a 6-5
(173) _
and is expected to run the man prospects. in
Charlie
center - forward was named to offense again. Pettus, a 6-1 Aliberti, Lester George, Cedrick
the All-CACC teai'n last year after junior, will team with returnee Cannon and Dave Brown.
leading the team in points scored Paul Kane to give the Foxes their
However, Petro retains his
(477) and ,rebounds (11.0 per ·best shooting backcourt in optimism. ~•we played close the
game). Murphy,
a
64
forward, several years. "'.fhey will g~ve us past few y~ars (91-90 loss in
has shown good improvement a constant scormg t~reat_ m t~e double overtime _last year) and
over last year when he averaged · backcourt. for the first time m they may be a little young and
11;3° points _a~d 6.9 rebounds a five years," notes Petro. Kane, a inexperi.enced. at this stage,
game.
6-2 sophomore, averaged 5.2 ppg. espe~ially with a new coach."
The other forward slot will be while seeing limited action on the
Petro is assisted by newcomer
filled according to the situation, varisty, may also be employed in Frank Davis and Ron Hildreth,
_ according to· Petro. Likely . the frontcourt against smaller who will also coach the J.V.
candidates are freshman Willie· opponents such as King's and St. squad that opens their season as
Thomas · ·and sophomores John Thomas.
· ·
·
a preliminary to the varsity
McKee 'and Neil Lajeunesse.
The_ team opens _their 26-game match with Kings Dec. 2.
McKee (64) and Lajeunesse (6~) slate ag~inst Iona_ at pu~chess
both starred on the J. V. team_ last Community College begmnmg at
Runners Compete
In. Championship
The Running Red Foxes, Bob Coufal was Marist's second second man, especially when he
missing their number two runner man placing 133rd of the 295 is such a big-meet runner as
Brian Costine, placed 23rd of 58 runners who finished the race Brian. Last year Brian was our
teams entered in the NCAA with a 26:29 clocking. Tom Luke top man in the Nationals being
Division III National Cross was 160th in 26:44, George Mc-
the only runner to top Fred all
country
Champion~hips. at Cutcheon 168th in 26:51;-·-Jeff season. It's especially hard to
Franklin Park in Boston this past Blanchard 193rd in 27: 10, Charley lose your 2nd man in such a big
· Saturday. Costine, who is an ,Gysin 257th in 28:33, and Will and important meet as this one
exceptional. runner in the big. Morrison268th in 28:47. Costine's where everyone around you is
ts · ·
d h.
nkle 1·ust two injury was not.the only thing that also good. We figured where
mee • m1ure
is a
d h
Lo
R d
Li
Bri·an's loss alone cost us over 100
days before the championships bothere t e
ng
e
ne as
and could not accompany the both · Coufal and Mccutcheon points and at least an 18th place
team on the trip. Charley Gysin, . were nursing '- injuries and • finish (the team had been ranked
who was brought up from the JVs Morrison and Luke had stomach
L
19th in the country going into the
to repla,::e Costine, could manage problems the night before the meet). The • other injuries and
only a displacement role in his meet which carried into the meet sicknesses ,hurt us too. There is
6th place finish for the team.
. itself. All ; in . an; the
.
team was no telling how high we could have
Fred Kolthay paced Marist . ~e_set by the_ largest number ~f placed had_ not·. the hard luck
. wtth a. 43rd place finish, missing . m1ury. and S}Ckness problems it b~et us as SMU pla_ced 5!h and
All-American. status by just 18 had h~d dunng the rear.
.
~e _onlf lostto them m _their own
seconds or
18
places. He ran the 5-
Marist. Coach Rich Stevens mvitat1onal
by
three pomts at ~e
mile_ slippery, wet, muddy course . sumffi:~ up the perf~rrnance an~ half-way mark of the season this
in 25:20, a Maristrecord for time ~e~t m ~e following manner.
and ra_nk
in
the
NGAA
Nationals.
It is very tough_to replace your ·.
CONTINUED ON
PAGE~
BY WINNIE SAITTA
The women's basketball team
at Marist College has some good
things going for them this year.
They've got some height, ex-
perience, good shooting, and
most important, they've got a
new coach, Ms. Susan Nye. Ms.
Nye, a graduate from Penn State
University who holds a masters
in phys-ed, not only has ex-
perience in basketball, but also
has her own philosophy regar-
ding the sport. Dena Kenny, a
junior at Marist and a member of
the
team
described
this
philosophy by saying, "Our coach
insists on getting the other team
tired before we are." Dene said,
"We are going to work together
as a teamthis year, including our
coach. She wants us too to make
decisions even those concerning
who starts and who plays. Every
decision on the team will. be made
by the team, not by one person."
Sue Baroni, a sophomore at
Marist says, "The team has a lot
of potential. There are more
players and we have more
height," Sue said, "Our coach is
good. She knows what she's
talking about. She can teach well,
she's very organized and she's
got a lot of spunk."
The team practices twice every
day of the week, usually once in
the afternoon and once in the
evening. The girls feel that they
are in the best shape they have
ever been in.
The team has entered the
Hudson Valley Women's Athletic
Conference and will play an
eleven-game regular season
schedule.
·
Their season opener will be
next Saturday, Nov. 29, at 6 p.m.
against Iona at Dutchess Com-
munity College. Their only other
home game is scheduled for Dec.
11 against Mercy College.
Try-outs were held on Oct. 20
and the team was announced on
Oct.
'J:l.
There are 13 girls on the
team. There is one senior and five
freshmen. Dena Kenny said, "We
lost our best shot from last year,
but we've got some pretty good
freshmen.. They are all e::-
perienc·ed. I think it is good we
have a young team because we'll
know how to work with each .
other."
Other members of the team
include Eileen Gregg, juniors
Robin Smallwood, Ann Cullinane,
. keggnay Green; sophomore Ann
Goger; and freshman Wanda
Glenn, Andrea Holubowitch and
Kathy Lauckner.
Foxes
End
Best Season
ByTHOMASMCTERNAN
there." Gaining experience to
help meet that reguirement next
Back in September, coach season were freshmen Russ
"Doc" Goldman could see that Beckley (1-().;l), Steve Obyrne
this_was
\\O
~r.diil~J"Y.SQS!S:~rJ:.~am ... and Matt Torrey. Roger Courtois
But the final results \Vere
still also
-play'ed·-we1f·'but~=vli1r
·be·
more than even he
could
foresee.
graduating.in the spring.
Closing
out with a 10--0 win over
.
If
there was any surprise,
it
Bloomfield last Tuesday, the Red had to be in the defensive unit,
Foxes concluded their best which although inexperienced,
season in their 13-year existence played strong for most of the
with an 11-3 record, their first season and permitted an average
CACC ·championship and their of 1.6 goals per game, including
second straight ECAC tour-
four shutouts. "We got away with
nament bid. They declined to some very inexperienced people
participate in the ECAC tourney on defense," said Goldman. "But
due to physical ills and late-
toward the end of the season
season losses to RPI and Kiogs some of them got hurt and others
Point.
didn't play as well."
The team;s strength was their
All the regulars in the backfield
ability to score goals, something will be back. Jim Titone,
a
junior,
they did _better than any other was the only fullback with ex-
team in the school's history. They . perience. Goldman was im-
finished with 67 goals in their 14
pressed with the play of freshmen
games for. an average of 4.8 per Lucius Bonneson and Scott
contest, almost two more goals Roecklein. "Bonneson played
per game than last year's record.
very well and will be a good
The most important additions player at Marist at either
to the soccer program this year fullback or midfield," Goldman
were freshmen called Firmino commented. The final starting
and Zenone Naitza •. The twins · spot was split between freshman
from Italy, by way of the Bronx, Charlie Blum and junior John
N.Y., combined for 30 goals this Covell. Junior Kevin McGhee
fall, or 45 percent of the team's showed continued improvement
·total and were both named to the and should be even stronger next
conference
all-star
squad. year. Freshman Gustavo Beltra
Zenone set school records for
also saw action in the backfield.
most goals (16), assists (17) and · For the third straight year, the
points (33) while Firrnino; the top
goaltending was handled by
scorer in conference play, ended juniors Biff Daino and Jay
with 14 goals and 5 assists for 19
Metzger. Metzger, an all-CACC
points.
selection, allowed an average of
Senior Al Robinson closed out a
1.65 goals in eight and one-half
fine career with 4 goals and three games. Daino was a shade better
assists for 7 points from the left with 1.64 in five and one-half
wing. other linemen who com-
games.
prised the powerful offensive unit
Next year's prospects look very
were sophomore John Metzger bright as· only three seniors
(0-4-4),
freshman
Steve (Trotta, Robinson, and Courtois)
Augustine (2-1-3) and sophs Gino will be lost to graduation and
DiMartino (2-0-2) and Herman several good high school players
Rodriguez.
have shown interest in coming
Midfielders
junior
John here next fall.
McGraw (10-7-17), senior Tim
·
If
the "Italian Connectioru"
Trotta (4-5-9) and sophomore
performs up to its potential and
Dan Wakely (6-3-9) all made the goaltending continues to
outstanding contributions this sparkle, the Red Foxes should
season but a lack of depth in the
have little trouble winning their
midfield proved costly against second CACC title and moving
· the str~mger teams. "We needed even closer to an· undefeated
a little more depth, as only
season.
McGraw and Trotta (all-CACC ·
midfielder). were ~xperienced
...
<r ..
































































































































































































...-:-~-~~------~------------------
-
- -
--
i
I
i
i
,
I
.
..
.
,
!
'
PAGES
.
NOVEMBER 20, 1975
High
On
Sports
·
By THOMAS MC TERN AN
.
.
schedule this . Saturday at the
Philadelphia Frostbite. Marist
MARIST PLACES · FOUR ON
wili
have entries
in
the women's
CACC SOCCER TEAM
fours, lightweight and f~eshrnan
Tne
Marist hooters received fours,
·
and varsity pairs and
recognition
tot
their
besf
season eights . . .
·
.
.
ever
.
when they landed four
.
·
Brooklyn
.
football coach Vince
players on
.
the CACC
.
A--
·
Gargano announced last week
Conference soccer team
-
last that his
.
Met-8
Conference
week.
champions have declined to
The Red Foxes are represented compete in the Met Bowl
on the team by goalie Jay Met-
scheduled for Saturday at Mount
zger, midfielder Tim Trotta, and Vernon
·
stadiwn. The Kingsmen,
the Naitza twins, Firmino and who finished at 6-1, had trouble
Zenone
;
.
·
finding
.
a suitable opponent and
The Naitzas, the most skilled refused to play either
.
West-
and
'
exciting freshmen ever to chester or Mattatuck Community
p~rform at
.
Marist, were
·
the Jop
.
·
colleges. The
,
.
conference an-
point getters this season despite nounced in New· York Monday
·
missing parts or all of several
.
tqat the game
has
been can~elled
games due
:
to injtiri~s;
but the All-Conference team
.
will
· :
Zenone led the teatnin scoring still be announced this weekend
with new school records of i6 ..
;
For
the
second lime
.
in
.
three
goals;
.
17 assists and 33 points.
weeks, the top
.
team in
.
the
Firmino was tops in the CACC National Club Sports Association
.
.
.
.
,
·
·
_
· · -with 9 goals and 13 points, while rankings
.
·
. has . been upset
:
by

a
Mike
Altomare
(22)
turning for yardage in Saturday's final with
Iona.
(Circle photo Chip Ermish).
·
_ finishing second overall (14-5-19)
·
,'
Met--8 team: St. John's earned
·
..
·
-
to

his

b~o
.
ther. "They were very
.
)hat
:
di~Jinction Saturday
.
by
'
. k .
.
'E
.
a
1
·
GI . .
-
effective when they got the ban
·
,
blastwg Stony Brook
,
17--0. The
-
·
z zn·
~s n
·
. -
·
n
.
.
ory
.
and niade
·
a
·
realcontributionto Long Islanders were
.
the
-
only
.
.
·
.
.
,
_
~
,-
.
·
. .
.
__
.
.
the team's performance;" said
.:
UI1defe~ted team
·
left in club
.
-
coach
:
''
Doc" Goldinan.
·:
·
<
·
footb~Uand were the nation's top
·
·
Trotta, a senior from
.
Park
• .
defensive
.
unit

..
.
Manhattan
ByTHOMAS
MC
TERN
AN
-
--
·
·
session;
.
The offense av:eragecf 306.9 Ridge,
_.
N
.
J,, did riot have his
.
cl?sed outwith its second straight
·
' 1
We had them well-scouted and y~rds
·
per
:
outing
·.
despite
.
the
-
strongest offE?
_
nsive season ( 4-5-9)
·
wm, 34
~
15, over F .D.
U.
·
Saturday
.
.
Freshman running backs Dave knew they could
·
pursue well/' inexperienced line and backfieid but Goldman said, "I wouldn't
·
-
.
. .
·
Pilon and
.
Mike Altomare each said Levine. "In the second half and the poor
·
weather
-
conditions. care
if
he never scored: He
.
was.
. Indications are that the Vikings
gained over · 100 yards

.
and . we threw misdirection plays that The freshman backfield·
·
of outstanding
in
controlling". the turned down a bowl bid to play
quarterback • Phil Colangelo had two backs running
·
one way Altomare
.
(156 carries for 950 middle of the field and I could
_
Catholic · University (8-1),
.
the
_
tossed
.
two TD ·passes
.
ai
-
the and Pilon going the
.
other."
~
yards), Pilon
..
.
(98 for· 508) and · count on him
_
to
control' any third-ranked team in the NCSA .
.
.
Vikings closed out
·
a
.
6-3
. '
season
· Pilonf'espond~d with gains of quai:-terback Colangelo (36--80 517 situation
_
for us."
-
·
Catholic
.
ended its regular season
with ,(
,
2!H)
.
upset' over Iona at
.
29and 16yards_late in the quarter rards
;
7 TD
~
~)
_
showed good
;-
S~ar:t~g in
~
goa! wit~ fe,lfow
.
·
with
a
74-0 p
_
asteing of Rutgers-
Leonid_()ff Field Saturday.
·
·
before he plunged from the one unprovemen~ and could be'strong Junior Biff Damo smce his fresh-
,
Newark Saturday
·
... The Iona
.
."
''!'hey
.
were shocked,"
_
noted for the Vikings' third TD with 13
·
for
.
the
·
next few
-
seasons.

.
>
.
·
man year, Metzger
,
has been
.
game was also finale in the
coach
.
Ron Levine. "Their
.
coach seconds left in the period:
·
.
for
·
tpe
,
next
'
few
:
seasons .
.
describedbyGoldinariasa'
-'
very career
::
of "Broadway

Rich"
(Tony
/
DeMeo) fold
.
:
me af-
. Earlier, Marist<!rove
64
yards Colan~elo.'s fav<irite_~rg~ts,Van
.
intense _Player w~o
:
~as
.
9een Schne~der
.'
.
Rich,
a
vict_im
·
of
terwarcis Jhey couldn't believe in_ 13 plays covering
.
over
_
five
.
Voorh1s

(20 recept~ons for 277 outstandmg ever smce
:
~e
~
ca~e
..
cerebral palsy, ~ompetedm four
thatwi.tcotild dominate them like mmutes
.
of the clock.
·
The drive yds)
.
and
_
Ron Glacklin (8 for 133) here
:
'
'.
Goldman also
·
c
.
ited
,
his of t
.
he team's nme games as a
that."·
.
. ·
.
·
·
·
·
was_ ~~Illporarily halted \\'hen both expected to
.-
be running
·
strong team
.
play and leacierstiip wide receiver. His appearances
Qominate hardly explains what Altomare tore ligaments
·
u
1
his pattert1s {or
·
another s~ason.
.
on defense.
A
Qative of Orchard
·
on the field · were invariably
happ_e~ed. While the
_
offense anlde.as
.
he :carried down to the
Levine
swnmeq
:,'
up his of-
f>ark
(
"Metzge~ finished with a welc
_
omed with a thunderous
-
ama~ed 413 t(ltal
·
yarc;ls, the Iona 3, He
·
,wasJor:c¢d to miss the feI).~~ve
,
philosophy
.
.
as\follows: l.65 g~ls
-
agamst average and . ~ation from spectators .. ; Soccer
.
.
.
.
:-
~efen~~·
··
led_ h¥
.
Jin,:i
,
·,
P,agano's
_ ·
r
,
~It:lilfu.<l¢r
,.
i:>t
.
tiJ~
.-
gai:i)e
:
-
,
~ri(U9st . ''.W~)i~v:f .i(
,
,
vecy~
,
sophi~ticated
: ]
<?Corded 8
_
6

saves
:
this
fa~ .
.
..
.
·.
,
,
(!()a<;~ '
1
Doc~• GolciIJla~
wa
_
s~•t
t_oo
t~ree
_;
mtercept1ons
;
.
Jmuted
:
tbe
.
,
his cba11ce
::
at tbe
:
109()-'yard 1!1~rk
: ·
of~ense
--
":~cb
::
~ssumes
',
tbat·';wE(
.
.
-
The Red
.
Fo~,;,,vw_on
their

first
:
,
~omed
'
WheJ?.
,
?e, saw
_-
his
.
,
mid-
,
C.-aels
,t()
-:
J_ust
.
121,
.
allcf
.
c;>nly
.
22
for
.
tJle
;
season
_
aJ1d the
:
ni!tlonal cann()t pound o~t
_
witll
..
our
,
bigger
·
C:A_CC
,
ch~mpionship
-
~ver and
..
field~r - P!acekicker
Tim
Trotta
yards rushing m
the second
half
.
rushmg crowij.
~
•.
.
.
.
. ·
·
·
opponents
;
·
We m
·
ustcutilize our fmished
,
w1th a
.
record oLll-3,
.
runmng wit~ ball-after bad
.
snap
.
."The whol~, def~n~e re~l~y
.
Shortly after.
.
AltQJ?are
,
was
.
ta!ent'very effec~av,elyfoeqtialize
~
·
'
"
. ,:
:. ·
'
·
· ··
_
·
.
. ,
•.
.

-
.
.
on ext~~-
.
.
pomt
:
attempL~ut
,
he
plared
·
well,
said Levine. remc;>ved from
-
the
,
field on
:
a thi~ .
.
Whenwedid
.
this,we
.
were COLANGELO

NAM
_
ED added, Ifourseasonwasntover
Besi~es the usual ~trong game by stretcher; Cplangelo
-
hit Vin
·
successful
;
otherwise, we got AT~ETE OF THE W~F;J{
·
.
I
would'ye run out there _myself
~
the linebackers, Jim ~tevens and Leddy
.
breaking to
.
the middle
fo
beaten."
·
.

·
.
··
·
·
..
·
.
.
·
, ·
Phil Colangelo,
.
·
a
.
freshman and run mt_erference for
him." ...
non~r~gul~rs Joe Shea and Rich make
it
13--0: Trotta
.
then made a
The coach
.
~lso praised the
.
from

Fishlt}ll, N
;
Y.;
·
;
has been
.
Th~ Marist College Intramural
-
I:Jaubenreich played very
.
well.". good
.
recov
_
ery
.
of a poor snap def
_
ensive
llf.lit,
which
he
.
named M~nst College Athlete_ of Tenms To1;1rnament sponsored by
·
Shear~c?veredanl?nafumbl~at from :center and found Van·descri~ed as '.'well-disciplined th~ Week for
:
the
·
week endmg th~AthleticDepartmentandthe
th~ Viking four
m
the fma1
·
Voorhis at the goal line for the and
_
111
control . of
most November 15.
.
.
.
C
,
U.B. was concluded las~ week
mmutes to preserve th
_
e team's . two-point conversion with 5:30 to situations." Most of the defensive
Colangelo, quarterback on the :when Ron Petro and Shelli Iraca
·
fir~t
..
shutout since the 21-0 go.in_the quarter.
. .

.
·
·
.
-
.unit
'
is
.
also
.
young and should be Marist
·
clu~
:
football Vi!cings, ~on the IUixe? doubles title with
whitewash over Manhattan in the
Pagano'sJinal pickoff midway
.
.
back ~ext
.
·
year, Senior Bob completed eight of eleven passes a 6-1, 6-3 triumph_ over
_
Dolly
seaso~
,
Qpener.
.
.
..
.
.
·
through the final quarter set
-
up Cunningham will be
.
missed but for 102 yards and two touchdowns Russell and Jack Schofield ...
Ma~ist scored the first time it the finalJ'D. With the
_
aid of a his
:
}inebacker
·
partners
:
Ron and ran 31 ya~d~ for another TD John V~ndervoort, an expected
?ad t~e ball
~
Colangel~ scored the facemaskmg penalty against the Clarke· (6 interceptions)
·
and Jim to spark the Vikm
_
gs to a season-
entrant
m Monday's .Turkey ri:ot,
rD with a
_
31~yard spnqt down the Gaels,
·
Colangelo guided
.
the Piagano ( 4) as
·
.well as the entire endmg
.
29--0
·
upset
_
over Iona had a comment after watching
right
.
sideline
.
·
and Tim Trotta Vikjngs 81 yards concluding
.
the front four could return as the Saturday.
·
'
.
several students
.
working out.
followed
_
with the extra pointfor a- drive with two straight passes
.
to
·
nucleus of,a solid defense.
. ..
.
·
'
~
They better stop wasting their
7:-(J
!ead after
.
just 5:05 of playing Kevin
.
Gallagher totaling
.
36
With the experience gained by
·
·
INTRAMURAL
'
ROUNDUP
.
,
t1me . an~
·
go back· to their
time.
.
: .

.
.
·
.
_
_yard:;;: Trotta,then ~ooted his 14th thl: young piayers
.
~nd a strong
The annual'Intramural Turkey studymg.
.
.
_
The V1kmgs continued to move
PAT
m 16 tries this season.
fimsh to the
.
current season the
.
Trot
will
b~
_
_
held Monday, Nov.
There may be
a
httle extra
the ball well through thehalf but
Although, th_e Vikings finished Vikings should be contender; for 24, at 3 p
.
m
;
All contestants.must incer:itive (or pressure) for the
were unable to get th~ needed
.
fourth·'in the Met-8,Levine fe~ls · the Met-8 tiUe _for many seasons · register
'
at 2:45 p.m. in front of varsity bas~etball team to w
i
n
yardag~ on several fourth down they came very close and has "no to come.
·
the <;am pus center.
·
A
'
large the CACC title .after the soccer
I
sit~ations. The Gaelsm,ade
.
three
.
regrets.''
_
especially since
:
the
.
The remainder of the coaching
.
number of entries is expected to and. cross-country won their
dnves deep into Marist territory team was comprised of 16 fresh- · staff also deserves credit for
.
the
run
Jor
:
th~
·
top
·
prize
.
( a turkey, version:
·
.
The
·
Red Fox~s open
in the half,
·
but.the Viking defense men and 14 sophomores;
·
.
successful season. They are:
·
what
.
else?)
iii
both the
.
men and
·
.
their
.
conference schedule at
forced turnov:ers
:
each tiµie
;
:
rt
Even then,
:
Marist
.
was in a Michael
Malet,
:
defensive women's
.
races. Tee-shirts will be
·
-
home
_
_
against Kings (N.Y.) on
was still 7--0
-
whenjhe
.
Ma}"lboro
:
position ~o win each
;
ofthe ga~es lineba~~er
·
coach;
.
Art
Sillith, awarded to second and
:
third De«:. 2 but
.
\\'.on't fa~e defending
Schoo}bandtook, over the field at iUost,wit~ the possible exception offensive backfield coach; James
_
place finishers in each race.
·.
.
.
ch~mp Dowling until Jan. 24.
halftime.
.
..
·
..
.
.
.

orthe Brooklyn game, in which Van Allen,
.
defensive line
coach;
..
Last WE?ek,
:
••Pr~paratiori H"
·
Marist brokethe gaine open
iri
Levine
:
described
·
them
.
as Toriy
.
Celenza,· defensive back-
µpset "Third Time Around" 11-3, THIS WEEK IN MA RIST
the
'.
third quarter, ·scoring twice ·
..
«physically
·
.collapsed from the field co
.
ach a
.
.
n
.
d Paul Valli, of-
10-9
·
and

"DB &
·
G's" topped SPO~TS (Nov. 20 - Dec. 3)
and rushing for 139 yards in the four-hour bus ride
.
"
fensiveline
·
coach,
·
·
· .
·
·
-
~
-
'Odds
,
and Ends" 11-6, 10-6 in
Saturday, Nov. 22 -- Sailing -
coed
-
volleyball
.
... ''Tony's · Pii-
Sou
_
thampton Frostbite
·
---.----------------------------------------..;,_...,;..
_ _
....; ___
;
zeria'
:
,
was awarded a forfeit over
Sunday, ·Nov.. 23 - Crew:
RUN.NE RS Fron
1
t
·.
--
·
·
"~~o~er's
·
Tool"
·
in the men's
·
•Philadelphia Frostbite; Sailing:
.
Cleveland
and
we
:
are anxiously SteveVanKeµren, 161st at 28:55, d1v1sio1
:
t ...
«7th. Heaven"
,_
So
.
uthampton Frostbite
year and we've improved a lot
.
awaiting
·
our chance to show
.
our
.
Dave Schools, 176th
,
at29:28 and remained unbeatenin

women's
.
Saturday,Nov.29-Basketball:
since
·
then:
I
guess the
:
team real stuff
'
there
·
...
.
:
·.
:
: ,
~
Tom Gibbons,
·
.J85th
-
,
at
31):03 a~tion
~
~it~
·
a
.
win
:
<>~~f,'
the "Big Iona
.
~. arpu~ch~ss
:
:
Co
.
tnmimity
.
certainly )earned a l
_
essoii
·
the
Marist's
''B"
team ran against finished Marist's scoring.
,
. :
Bird·"
·
·
. -
·
:
.
·
:
_
--:>··
·
·
"
·
·
College
.
Falcon Hall"- Varsity -
8
hardwayasto~owtotakecareof the other
_
team's
'
varsity
·
sqµads
-.
'
.!
These
:
guys also
~
i-an
,
well
.
in
·
,
·
•·
.:
_:
·
:
' ·
,
,
·
·
p.m
.
;
,
Women
.
-
6
p.m.
:c.
yo11rse
..
lf
.
duringthe c
.
harnpio
_
hsnip
..
c
in
·,
tht
L
i
IC4
.
A
.
.
C
_
ollege
..
D
_
ivisiori po
_
stin
_
g
.
·
_
tliefr
.
best .times
..
o
.
f
.
the NOTES FROM THE SPORTS
.
.
.
Tuesday
'
Dec
/
2 • Basketball
:
·
ts
d
t · k
tt
·
..
h'
·
·
·
Ch·
· ··
'
bi
·
V
C
·
DESK
:
.
.
·
.
Kings - at Dutchess Community
.
meE:
,
,a.~.
np
-
r~s
_
ge
__
1rig
:
:
urt:
·Y
amp1ons
_
ps
m
.
an
.
ortl~ndt
<
year at
.
V~imf
.:
in
.
'
.
many
.
cases:"
,.
Men and Women crew
.
teams College Falcon
'
Hall - varsity_
8
The guys
m the race
g:~re us
JOO
Par~ and. was:able
t?
beat some · Coa~h
·
Stev:ens asdded. "The
'
top will conclude their fall-
-
rowing p.m
,
_; J.V.
7
6 p.m.
·
p~rC~Il:tan~ ~ll ratl
,
we.U
"
con-
.
varsitr.t~~msmpla~mg26th,of39
.
four
-
ran
:
very strong
.
and again
. •
.
·
·
·
.
.
·
.
·
,
·
side~ng the circu.msta
.
nces. We .tei!msc present
·.
:-
13111.. Krempel :the Joss
.
of. Gysin because of
·
,
:
-
.··
.•
,:
.
:
·
·
·
,
h
,
ad~~r,grea~est sea,spri eyer a!,ld
,

paced'·M~rist;\Vith
_
~
.
121th fini_sh_J_.Costine,'s injury
:
hu
_
rt ttienL-Wi\h .
·
.:
,
:M··;·
'e'
·t.
·
B
·
'
Vo
·
o
·
·:
t
·
b
··
a•
·'·
·
1
· ·

.
;
:
o
_
nlY
,:
ran ,b~d pe.rforoa~ce-w~se
·
ofth,e ,2~~
-
r!lnners in the_yars1~y our
:
A
tealll
:
:
we probably
·
would
.
.
.,.
,
:
'
·
·
·
.L'
-
.
'

·
.
~h~n
.;
w~
..
suff~red
·
so~~
_
J
ey
_
;
in~
·
race:
~th
._-
a
_
28
_
:~
o
cloclnng, -his
.
~ have
;'
placed i~ the :top .
.
five,
.
if
JUfl
1
8$
_
tµiJpeWfirst
.
two
:,
me,ets and
_
b~s,~June
0
~ver in Va~y,
:
_
Steve ·
,
every~ile
:
w~s
·
.
;
healthy.'!
;
Coach
.'.
,
:
:
·
;
-';
.
;
WL
_
T
.
·
FINAL
. t~e
.
}l~
,
·
?n~,
:
e have
,
_
a;l<>ttolook
.
M_~i~r.
:
Pl!lced
-
!29th
-
with
·
.
28: 14, , Stevens
·
fears
;
;
that

the , team's
·
.
·
forwa~
:.
tO next year
,:::
~thJ!le Ric
f
:)3
_
on~; 1
_
36th in 28:23,
"
:
'
811
.
na.ti~nalan_d
·
staterankings
:
wer
_
e
. _
· Brooklyn

,
'
,
,
610
,
Iona
whole~,teain)~~c~
~
a~d a
.
m~
·
of: ..
pe~o1_1albes~
~or
t1lem
at
Vai:my
,
.
lost
i
due
:
.to
the
'
injuries
:•
in
,'
these
,.
:
Pa~~
,i

·
·.
·
· ·
·
:
.
_
.
_:
_
·
4
~
_
2
1
_
2
1
_
_
:
_
.
:

_
: ·
:
.
.
.
·

Manhattan
good
_
,
·
run_ners
coming
_
1,11.
Next
.
:
Clltjs
·.
<J:>accione was
'
Marist's
-
important meets.
·
L'
,
:
.
·.·

. · :.
~
.·.·
·
:sMARt:
·
Jo
1
hn
5
.
T's
'
F.Q.U.
.•
.
.
year
).
the natior:ials
:
:
are
in
>
totirtlr
:
inan
'
fu
·
I60th
)
at
'
1.8:53,
:
<-
.-:
\· ·
·
.
.
•.
·
·_-
~30
/
:
:'
Concordia

.
.
.
.

·
~
.
.
·
.
~
-
.
-
_.
·
·.
--
-
~
·-.
.
.
.
,
·
·
...
,
..
;
..
_
...


·
..
·

:
:
~
:
-

·~
~
-
.
,
\
•.
:
:
:_.
WLT
·
·
,
,
3
'
:s.1
23
.
2
::
160
.
,
,
160
1



15.9.1
15.9.2
15.9.3
15.9.4
15.9.5
15.9.6
15.9.7
15.9.8