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The Circle, December 11, 1975.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 16 [15] No. 11 - December 11, 1975

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THE CIRCLE
,
·
.
VOLUME16, NUMBER 11
MARIST
COLi.EG_E; POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
12601
DECE~BER
11, 1975
For
Fieldhouse
The Mccann Foundatiort has
ampl~ spectator s~ating in a
awarded $1,250,000
~
to Marist
balcony
·
separate from the
College tor
>
construction
.
of a
com~titors' area. The pool is
major athletic
...
faciHty to be
designed in conjunction with an
·
name<L the James
-
J
..
McCannr outdoor patio for· use in the
Recreation Center. The an-
summer. Sliding glass __ doors will
nouncement was ll)ad~.yesterday
be installed to connect the patio
at
a press
·
coriference
:
by John J.
arid pool areas:
·
Gartland, Jr., president of the
The fieldhouse area, which will
foi.liidation.
·
have a urethane floor, will be
Apart from the originaf gift of
able to handle simultaneouslv
land and buildings
.
from
_
the

three
·
basketball courts and an
Mar
i
st

Brothers. the McCann
indoor track.
It will be able to
award is
-
the largest gift ever
·
accomIJ1odate 1
;
800 spectators
received by Marist arid it is one of
for a major basketball game or
the
·
· largest granted
·
by
·
the
for a professional tennis match.
·
foundation.
.
:. .
·
·
Alternately
,
the fieldhouse will
The_ granL will be
.
used to - provide
·
three
·
_
indoor tennis
partially
_
finance
_
the $2,100,000
courts which can be used for
. physical
·
-
educa
_
tion
.
and
physical
.
. education
and
recreation center to be located at . recreation
.
purposes.
the
:
south, end o
_
f the mo acre
_
In addition
,
the facility will
campus.
.
Of
the ~otal award,
incl tide
·
four handball courts
·
,
$750,000 is an outright granC The
" >
which can also be used for squash
remaining $500;ooo
_
-
must be
~
or paddle ball;
a
rowing tank for
Marist College President Linus R. Foy, left, and Joh~ J. Gartland, president of the Mccann Fouu-
matched
'
from other sources.
crew;
.
rooms
for
.
'
,
dance
,
datJon, review plans for the James
J.
Mccann Recreation Center,. under construction
-
in
-
tht•
The
~
ollege
'.'
Will
seek

thes
_
e
wrestling; exerc
_
ises and weight
background.
_
·
:
._(Circle photo
by
David LivshinJ
.
:~
funds
_
t~rough
:
_
_
a
volunteer Hfting;
,
a
_
nd

classrooms and
·.
-
_. Mi
.
.
1
·
- I J J
·
-
.
l
..
-
.
~
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-
·
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·,
'
'-
-·-
·
·
·
·
·
--
··

orgamzatior chaired by trustee
·
faculty
·
offrces.
.
.
9 ~
-
.
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:
-
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-
ea
··
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· ._
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·
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·
Gary ~:
·
Smith
·
a11d
·
co~prised of
..
Df. Linus
R: Foy, pr~sident of
:
"
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0,~ ~-
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~
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otes
·
.-
·
tr_us
.
~ees,
;,
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:
a~~
:
.
friends

of
-
-M~rist;
-:·
?u~~~~ed
;-e
the
,.
mo_de.
,
of
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,
.
_.-.
tne·-:r:ollege
;,;:
Marist
;
1s
·
.
presently construction.
·
·
.
'!Contracts· have
.
,
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-engaged
!
iii
>t
tlie'
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i?
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f
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phast?-•<>f
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a -
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bCef{
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They
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h~~e
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beeri investig
_
a~~i~i
•.
.
;_l~
,
~
-
~eclsiorif
3:~
:
(!~
~
1
i}°i(t?.
°r>bily
'-$15,000,00~
~ap~tal ca
_
mpaigrj
_
with
preparati~
; .:.
!!J
·
e
·:
~xterior
w~lls,
_
.
·.
,
.

·
_
.
>.
,
·
·
.
.
.
poss1
_
b1ht~es ~f- foo
_
d
:.
s~
_
rv1ce
:
flusseIL
1,
Th~ifmr.opC>~al.w_1!lt~e~t:$'1,200?0
.
00
,
des!~n
_
ated
,
_
.
.
for con-
.
fhe roof, pool and
_
plwnbmg.
_
As
_
~ result ofa survey tak
_
en m
.
.
·
changes smce the begmmng of
·
be
:
·
subniitted to
":
the
•~
:c;-
'
ad
~
,.
struct1on of
_
th~r~
.
~t:eation center,
These
_,
were awarded to take
early November, next semester's
·
·
tl)e
:_
semester
.
wh
·
en
·
students
_
.
ministration
.-
,·_
·
.
.
'
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
renovation
·
of.an existing-building.
_
advantag~
_
of the
-
imusual lull in
food service
.
·
program
·
will b~
.
expres
.
sed dissatisfactio11.
~~
We
_,
''We hired the
:
consultant nof for
,
a new library
·
and other
_
construction and to providejobs
_
different.
~:
Th~ ma~ority of realized it was time to do
_
some
·
just to help us out of our
.
probiems
.
aspects o~ <:am pus dev_elopment.
now,"
.
Foy
.
said.
·
.
_
·
students at Manst are m_favor
-
of homework
.
and look at
_
·
food
but to
·
develop
an
.
expertise in
.
The rem~mmg funds will be _used
He indicated that ~th~r con-
a full board progra!fl .. Tins means s~rvices.
'1
They are trymg to f.ood service,'
'.
says Dolly Russell.
for a vanetr of
_
programs aun~d
·
tr~cts are ready for btd~g but
that all students will ha\Te access come up with the best package. A
.
·
As far as student involvement
_
at
_
the cult1vatton
·
of
••
academic will not be awarded un
_
hl the
to all ~ea~s by showing an ID or ~09d c~nsultaitt has been hired to
·
.ty1.s
.
·
Russell says t~at they tried
·
exc~!lE:nce
·
and improved student c_ollege has the 1!1oney on ~and or
some similar type card.
.
.
mvestigate the current
_
,food
.
to involve students:
··
in
the services.
.
.
. .
·
'
.
firmly pl~dged. 'There wlllbe no
Othe~ food service develop-
.:
:
service and research the typ~
~f
beginning
of
the
-
semester
.
two
· ,
Acc~rdµig
:
to Gartlan_d, the loi:ig-ter~ bo;,rowing
__
t_o fin,an<:e
men
ts mclude a number
.
of new service

··
that, would ·
··
best
_
smt chairwomen· volunteered for
.
the awardmg

of
.
the grant is con-
this
·
pro1ect,
he
sa,1 .. '
This
concepts prol?~se~
.
.
by
·
pony
,
-•
Marist.
·
On . December 12, the fo
'
od committee:
·.
it looked good
sist~nt with t_he McCaim ~o~n-
unusual method
_
was deemed by
Ru5:5~ll, C
_
oordmator
.
of College consult~ntwdlpre~ent
.
~
.
propos~l
for
a while and then
·
peQple
dahon•~ policy
.
of providing ·the
·
tru~tee~ to
.
.
be the most
A~tiv1tJes; and Fred ~mbert, that will deal
._
w1th ~wo mam stopped
:
attending meetings.
"It
rec_r_e~tional
.
and
.
·
cuUur~l ec~nomical ii:i the long run. .
_
Direc~or
,
of _camp~s
:
Life. New
_
area~
.
TheY. are:_ tl1e ideal food
.
ended
µp
_
wit~
:
a
·
few
.
:>tudents
:
facihties f~r t
_
he Pou~hkeeps1e
For ~ar~st, . the
.
recreatt~n
·
c~mcepts
.
bemg considered are
-
service
,
for Manst
:
what the doing aU-of the work;" says
_
Ms.
·
area, especially at a t~e when
~enter
.
wll~
_
provide a_ dramatic
. -
. food
:
packagE!s for commuters
·
students
_
want and the bt1dget -
Russell
.
.
·
_
·
.
governmental agencies must ·mcrease
m recreational and
·
ancl
weekend
meal
packages for
what Marist cari
_
afford.
·
Fr9m
.
She thinks that it is most
im-
.
afford low priority to
~
such ac-
athletic facilities for women
students
:
havirig guests for
·
a
this
_
Marist willdra"Y ~he opti9
_
ns
-
portant that students vocalize
tivity:
·
_
_
student~ and for ,!ntramural
.
_,
weekend.
_
These packages are
.
·
.
to e1tl}er
,
put a
.
specific contr~ct
.
their
.
ideas
~
now since a new
_.
_
Umque
features
of
the spo
_
r!s
m
general,
says the
.
·
designed
to
reduce costs
·
and out
_
f~~ bids
·
or
.
Mari~t co~d system i_s being
·
developed
:
,
'.
'This
recrea~ion!il center include an pres~dent.
It will. also enable
allow
students
alternate
•.
,
create its own.food service. Tlus semester'
:
the food committee
,
Olympic-size pool
-
capable of Manst to play varsity basketball
programs.
·
_
.
_
.
w9~ld mean hiring a

dir~ctcif, · hasn't been active, itis
.
iniportant
simult<:1!1eoi.lsly handling _25-y_~rd
g~~es a~
:
honie f~r the"first_time.
D9lly Ru~eU, says that she and assistants, and staff. From tlus
.
that we hear from students
/
'
·
she
or.25-I!l~ter races and swumru!lg
~t. will
.
prov1~e us -~1th a
Lambert are "generally involved
.
point Russell and Lambert must
.
adds.
-
---:-
·, .
,

. .
·
and_ divmg events.
-
Tw
_
o
,
special facility
for
mdoor . com-
in
'
food
·
service. We want to make
· _
work up the
<
adv_antages and
·
·
,
stainless ~t~el bulkheads, or men~ement and for mdoor
.
sure that Saga keeps im
·
proying."
·
disadvantages o[ each
-
and come
moveable dividers, a~o-w the pool - practice of teams such as football
-
.
·
·
·
-
·

-
··
·
·
to be separated

mto three
w
,
al~Jt,
.
·
.•
Wilg~t
•'
Elected
.
·
.
·
c;;;;;;;~;;rs
CEl'i;tbte
.
To
·
Eill~~.~~~l
Board
:
~
,
,:_
.For
·
Winter Lodging
,.
.
Kathy Walsh
.
·,
Elected to the Financial Board
·
of Marist College were Kathy
_
·
·
Walsh
;
and Tony Wilger.
_
.
This
·
.
boal'9
is not a dire~t part

of
:
student government but
•:
does
'
work with itThe main purpose
·
of
-
this board is
to
allocate all
of.
the
.
,
student gov
"
ernment
·
funds
"<
to
·:,.
differ~
.
nt
:<
:
: .
.
groups
· .
"
.
arid
- .
:-::.
organizations on.c.ampus.
..
.
..

·
7
::>
The
·
F
.
inancial Board
is
made

:.
i
upoftwo students elected
-•
bythe
,
-~
Marist
:
co~munity;
;
two
:
students
.
,
.
se~ected by
~
the student

goy
:
ern~
·
.
,
m.ent
-
president; and
~
the student
·
·
goyern,;riel)flreasilrer
·
s~rves
,:
as
·
_
.
·
-
the chairJi:lan:
-
..
:'"
--__
::
<
,
,
.
·:
·
_-
:
.:
:
con'd
·
on
j>g.
5
·
"ts.
,:
::·?/
Commuters will have the recess.
"'
'
.
;;'!
;;t;;:J;I
chance to live on campus next
·
There is a deductable $25
';)
:.
''
\'
?::":
._,,
.
semester
for
.
seven .weeks for
.
deposit required. Students
will
Tony
.
_
Wllger
·

}
,
$
'.:i"
.
·
.
$340. The commute~ package _is
have
·
'
the best opportunity of
c>
Y:',
,_
designed to giv.e
,
these students choosing
.
where they want to live
an
.
oppo~unity
-
<
t1f
·
experience
.
if they
_
apply
.
early.
.
Should
dornf life
;
During
:
this

time
·
of . students
·
decide that thef wotild
·
·
year weather conditions
·
are poor
·
lil~e
.
to st~y on after_ the seven
..
· ·
for-commuting so it is
_
c;fesigned to
·
week p
_
enod,
t~~Y
will hav~. to
_.
aid the
·
commuting
.
student.
\
_
0
.
:
pay
,
~he re
_
mammg balance of
· .. The program
-
begins in the
·
room_and ~oard_for a semester.
.spring se~est~r
>
According, .to .
SIJ,Zl
Petito, se9retary to F'.~ed
SuzLPetit.o,
,
students are
·
chosen
-
Lcimberti
.
· sugge~ts
_
~hat
,
m-
_
oq
.
a:
_
first come;

first
'
served
.
.
·
t~re~ted ~tu~ents con_ie as soon as
.
-
-
basis;.
It
is
·
,
reconimended .
.
that
_.
possible. '.l'fiey
.
,
can
-
contact
:
Mr;
·
. any.
-
student
.J
nterestecr
.
contact
:
·
Lamoo,rt
's
office_ by callin~
471-
.1..,
_
_
,
Fred
.
'
Lairiberf
i
as
·
-
soon
>
as
·
__
3240,
.
e~t
_
.
269.
ltISlQSated m
,
the
J
''
--
possible
.
Students
will
be able to
·
·
Gamp
_
us
.
Center ~n room
264.
·
·:
: .
,-
apply dur~ng the
.
semester
:
·
.
----




































































fAGE2
.
THE CIRCLE
Library
To Open
ByLarry Striegel
reference
materials,
the periodicals room where all
modernistic library will contain periodical materials will be kept.
As of next semester, Marist several new features designed to A room will be
·
dedicated to
College will be opening a new help the Marist commwiity. "We storage of
information
about the
,
library located in Fontaine Hall. will be able to provide more history of Marist and the Mid -
The project has been Wlder services to faculty and students," Hudson area. Also planned
-
is a
construction for almost a year, added Dr. Toscano.
·
specially lighted room for
and has cost nearly half - a
~
One of the new features
is
a microfilm use. Two other
million dollars
.
Media Room which will contain features include
a
lounge where
·
Funds for the new library
.
were audio
·
- visual equipment for students can take
a
break, talk,
·
received through a fund raising
.
.
individual learning
.
It
is a room or grab a bite to
·
eat; and "the
drive last year, The construction
·
where students
·
can utilize video - addition of forty individually
is being supervised by Marist and
·
tape, films, and slide projectors; lighted study booths !}evised to
being undertaken by several or monitor
recordings in
seperate minimize distractions.
·
.
building firms.
listening booths. "We decided to
The library should be com-
The library is built on four have this room because we pleted and all materials moved
levels and has wall - to - wall realiz~d that society isn't as print from the Spellman Library
carpeting, large tinted windows, oriented as it used to be.
It
will ~e during the Christmas vacation.
and a special stucco ceiling a great help to teachers," said
All of the Marist commwiity
designed for quietness.
"It
is Dr. Toscano.
has been eagerly
.
awaiting
much larger and much more
Some of the other features the opening of
the
new library .
.
comfortable," said Dr. .Vincent included are a Reading Room for Dr. Toscano summed - up that
·
Toscano, Assistant Professor of
·
casual,
more
comfortable attitude by saying, "We're really
History
,
and
·
the Director of studyJng, and a small seminar
·
excited about
·
it,
-
it's really a
Learning Resources.
"
It
will
add room which may
..
be used for beautiful library.''
·
·
new flexibility to the campus." classes, meetings, and group
Aside
from
books
and studying. Also there will be a
Moody Hamster B0ws
At Psychology Day
DECEMBER 11, 1975
Se~ger Attel1.ds
Sl.Oop
·
Meeting:
·
Claudia Butler
·
imprinted with ,a
·
picture of
Clearwater
/
for sale
:
There were
By CANDI DA VIS
Pete Seeger came to sing
.
Bob
environmentalists h~
_
nding out
Boyle, sports writer, came to
brochures on
·
pollu!_ion and
talk.
Ogden
Reed,
En-
nuclear power plan.ts, eager to
vironmental
Conservation
'
_
discuss
.
the problems of oi.lr
.
reviewing committee
·
of students
,
Brusoe as moderator• The Commissioner, came to answer
planet.
·
headed by
Dr.
Royce White
.
discussion was about personal questions.
·
·
·
The main concern of the day,
A little brown
·
hamster huddled
The students and papers were: experiences iri the field, where
The occasion
·
was the annual
.
b
.
esides
·
electing new officers of
·
in the corner of his cage. He was ''Embarrassment, Em -
psychology
is going,
ano meeting of
_
the
.
Hudson mver
.
HRSR, 'Yas the PCB problem.
··
an
·
experiment on negative and barassability, and Reaction to psychology today.
.
Sloop Restor~tion
(HRSR),
an
PCB
.
.
_
J
po lychlorinated
,
positive .reinforcement. His Embarrassment'' by William
A film ori the
-
approaches to ecologically
::
.
concerned, · non • biphenyls)
·
is a toxic chemical
public debut
occurred
·
at Garret; "Brain Laterality and learning was shown,
profit organization begun teQ
.
discharged into the Hudson by
psychology dav. December
5
,
in Performance EfficieQcy" by
Ending the day was a years
·
ago
by
composer . singer,
two General Electric plants north
the Campus Center. One hundred Karen Robbins;
"
Differential demonstration of experimental Pete Seeger. Today its 5,000
of Albany
.
PCB is a
,
pollutant
students from the Hudson Valley Effects of Success and Failure on
and lab equipm
·
ent in
,
the members
··
own
·
a sloop, Clear-
which is contaminating Hudson
area high schools and members
·
Memory" by Chris Eblen and
Browsing Library, co-ordinated
'
water. Clearwater is not a cruise
River fish and drinking water.
of
the Marist community, at- John Malzek; "New Approaches
.
·
by Peter Ulasewicz.
·. ·
·
boat but ari educational one. A HRSR is tryingto get the state or
tended.
·
to Psychiatric Classification" by
Psychology Day was organized member of the HRSR, Marsha
'
federal government to ban the
A welcoming speech was given Charles Tackey and "Per-
by Marist students with Dr. Rich, explained that the purpose
:
dumping of this pollutant into the
by
Dr. Louis Zuccarello. Dr. ceptions of Marist
·
Dormitory
William R
:
Eidle as their advisor. of the sloop is "to help people
Hudson.
Edward O'Keefe, introduced a Life"
·
by Judy Johnson
.
and Mike The committee included Dan learn to love their river again. we
.
·
Also disucssed · was the
group of Marist students and Mastrianni.
·
Clow,.Carol,Shehan, Chris Ebleri, want peopl_e
-
w~o Hve along the
.
-fitjan~ial 1,tate .. of
.
. ~RSE.
their
psychology
.
.
.
resea
_
rch
Psychology Day was preceded
Peter Ulas
_
ewicz
;
;
Beth
.
Serafine, Hµdson
\
to
know the

·
·
en-
Clearwater is presenUy,do.ck
.
ed in
·
papers .
.
These papers were
by
a pariel
.
discussio!) )ed
:
bY:
Xenia
·
Ross,~ndElaine
·
Brusoe.a~ vironmental
.
needs· Clf. ,their
.
1
~aipefo,::_rep
_
airs.cos_tirlg$4Q,0Q0
:
· .
chose_n forPsy_chology
_
.
Day
,
by
.
a
,
M;irist Psychology
major
Elaine
Chaitpf!rso9
:
;:"/
..
fiver.':
:
'
Cleaiwater,
'
fravels '.from
'.
.
The 250 memoers present,
..
made
.
the
·
Hudson to
·
Long' Island Soi.Ind
plans and suggestions
.
for fund
.
._
Hollo
,
r Codes Falter
In
Face Of Cheating
By
Anthony Schmitz
frequently excellent students allegations of pretty consistent
rather than "survival cases" who cheating. People were saying the
.
(CPS( - The stakes are high. need to chea_!;
_
to get by.
honor system was
a
farce ... "
The outcome of a test may decide
Stanford's Ombudsman John
At the University of Florida,
whether students will find Goheen said in a report to the the "honor code has been on the
themselves safe
in
a medical or school's president that ''law and decline for a long time because
law school or out pounding the medicine, particularly
~
·
are at-
·
students aren't" willing to testify
pavement for a job.
tracting very large numbers of against other students,'' ac-
That pressure
·
-
causing
.
students, many more than these cording to Rob Denson
;
director
students both to cheat for high professional ~chools can ac- of student judicial affairs.
grades
.
and to keep quiet about commodate.
The
resulting
Although the Florida honor
·
informing people about pollution
raising.
.
.
.
·
.
i
..
.and involving therri incleaning up
·
The meeting was sponsored by
the river.
·
.
the Marist'honorary
·
science
It
was more
.
than just
·
a
society
,
Sigma Zeta.
It
was ~eld
·
meeting.There ~ere folk singers
froml0:
_
30 to 6:00 on Dec. 4, in the
.
balladeering
.
There were art Marist campus center.
prints, t-shirts, and patches, all
··
·
. the cheating
.
of others - is competition for admission to a code stipulates that tests not be
jeopardizing the future of honor professional -school is intense."
·
proctored, instructors recently
codes at several colleges arOWld
O~e of the results
~
of pressure have begun proctoring tests since
~
"_,,,,,,.
-
the country.
and competition has
_
been more "mariy don't feel the honor code
.
A Very" Merry
'
Christmas
At. Stanford, a "breakdown of cheating
-
and less student is a deterrent,» Denson said.
ordinary standards of honesty" cooperation in enfqrcing the
In· spite of
.
a case of test-
sparked a re-evaluation of the code, Goheen asserted.
stealing involving "hundreds
.
of
school's honor code
.
Last spring, 12 cases of honor students" last spring, Denson
Johns Hopkins University. code violations werereported at said he believes the honor code
ended its 62-year-old h9nor code
'
Stanford. Ten of the
.
12 students
.
should be "revitalized" rather
when a poll revealed 70 percent of were found to have "consistently
·
than abandoned
.
"If
we leave it in
its students had witnessed in-
.
high grades and were c9mpulsive
·
writing it's good PR,"
.
Denson
.
cidences of cheating and done about high grades/' Five <if the said, "and after Watergate
nothing
.
to stop them.
students were suspended fer people are more in t~e with a
.
After 50 students were put on violation of the
_
code, which ·code of honor."
·
··
probation . at the
.
University of requires students "both within
· Meanwhile at the University of
Florida at Gainesville for bribing arid without the
·
University (to) Virginia
.
discussion
·
.
centers on
janitors to
.
help them
·
secure ~aintain' such respect for
·
order, whether students stiU:supportthe
advance copies of tests;

ad-
·
morality, personal honor
.
and the code.
·
ministrators
..
.
claimed
·
a rights of others as de~anded.of
Ken Humphries; a student
"revitalization" of the code was good citizens.''
·
. .
.
.
member of the honor committee,
necessary.
.
While Stanford is questioning said
that
most
of
the
-

And at the University of the value of
·
its code, Johns dissatisfaction with the code has
.
Virginia; where the only pen~lty Hopkins
_
scrapp~~
.
its honor been over its "single sanction
"
.
.
.
,
~nd
Happy New Year
.
From The
CIRCLE Staff..-..,,...,
for conviction
·
of an honor code system this
.
fall m
'
the
_
face of provision, which mandates
·
that
.
.
offense is permanent expulsion; a charges
,
that it had become a there be no punishment other •~-•-
.
.
_ . ; . - - - - - - - ' - - - - : - - - - - - _ . ; . ; . - - - - - - -
poll is scheduled for November to "farce" and a
·
'-'disgrace
:
"
.
·.
than permanent expulsion
~
.
·
.
determine the future of
.
their
\Vhere formerly tests. were not
While a poll is scheduled for
.... ·
code.
· .
. .
proctored,
tt
1
::y
.
will
·
be
,
now.. November todetermine student'
.

·
Administrators atthese schools
.
Alternate seating will
be
required support,
thf
student-run com-
.
blame pres~ure.for-high grades
.
duri,:ig ~xam~ and a defini~ion of mittee continues to decide
and
:
a reluctance
.
to "rat!'
.
on plagiansm will
be
set
·
cheating cases. Already this fall
other students for the.crwnbling
.
.
·
Johns
.
Hopkins _Preside!}t one stud~nt_has bee,:i disrn~
_
ed
.
.
....... ....__.
honor codes that ask students to Steven Muller said he regretted for
.
plagiansm, while another
.
police
.
themselves
.
against ending the
.
honor system, but
.
·
case is on the docket for early
··
cheating and plagiarism
:
And the
.
claimed it was necessary since
.
October.
offenders,
. >
they claim,
·
are
.
"for
'
some time there ha
_
ve been
·
r
















































.
i
DECEMBER 11, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
Communications Pros Visit
M~naging Editor of After Dark Magazine, Patrick Pachelo, explains how difficult
it
is to make
it
in
the magazine profession.
·
··
·
Ken Berman, actor-producer, who is also Jennifer O'Neil's manager,
stresses a point during Tuesday's career day.
.
.
By PHIL PALLADINO
.
aspects of entertainment. He
repqrter for the Poughkeepsie
Magazine Editor Helen Gurley
is
very
interested
in the corn-
reviews and criticizes Broadway Journal,
_
and also teaches at Brown. Her job is to evaluate rnunication realm. "Besides the
.
Stude~ts, teachers,
_
and
18
,
plays, night club acts, and does Marist College. She covers news
manuscripts. Miss Miner reviews fields in radio and T.V., there are
commumcations. professionals
··
feature stories on famous per-
in the northern part of Dutchess stories
submitted
to
the so many other fields. In my job,
discussed their fields of em-
sonalities. Pacheco stressed the County. Mrs. McAndrew attends magazine. "When people want to the important thing is how to
ployment in the Campus Center importance
.
of
having school board meetings, town
write
something
for
any approach your client.
It
will
at Communications Career Day, background information in this boards, and does
·
feature stories. magazine, they should read it result in whether or not you get
December 9.
·
field of communications.
Mrs:
McAndrew expressed her first so they can realize what
-
the ad," saJ
s
Mrs. Joyce. She
The many personalities in-
''Tbe
most important thing to opinion on the results of career audience they're trying to thought that career day was
"a
eluded people from radio, me, bemg 26
is to do my day.
''It's
a good opportunity for
reach,"
.
Miss Miner says. She very gocid idea."
television, newspapers, and homework. I~
·
reviewing a students
to
talk to working was graduated from Marist
·
in
Larry Snyder thought that
magazines.
.
Larry
·
Snyder, nightclub
~
act, be looks for professionals. It
'
s difficult to
1973,
and realizes how the career day was a success. He was
coordinator
·
or-
_
the
.
event, ex-
originaliiy; How well do people advise student!;
-
on what to do.
communications department pleased to see
th.!
number of
plained the purpose of career know their music?"
·
says Because of today's job market,
·
expanded the way it has. "The students
wlfo
got involved.
day,
"too
many people
_
don't Pacheco.
"After
Dark" is
-
·
the most
·
of the people here are communications field is a
"MaristCollegereallyhasn'thad
realize what the many diff~rent only overall New York en-
probably telling about the least fascinating one;" Miss Miner something like this for the
·
areas of communications are, tertainment magazine. "I had to number of jobs," Mrs
.
McAn-
explained. Cosmopolitan is the students interested in com-
.
Thes:~ people are·hete Ji):talk and learn about New York City and drew says. She mentioned the magaz
_
ine for
_
the single working munications. They were able to
discuss the 'many different
·
fields its
'
publications," says Pacheco~ necessity
'
of obtainini,t~xperience woman.
..
discu!;S the many different areas
.
of
_
comniunications,'
1
Sny~er Realizing

ttje
··
strength of
.
the
,
.
in the many fields
·
of com-
.
Mary Joyce, another Marjst
.
.
that interested them.
Hopefully,
:
· :
says. He hoped
_
that the students
·
··
·
magazine
·
and
his
•.
job
;-.
:
Pacheco
'
·
munications
,
Mrs.
'
Mc
.
Andrew
· ·
College alurrina,
is
an advertising some students were sparked
·
in
w~uld
·
·
1?«:come more
.
familiar concluaed, saying,
"The
media is added, "The best
·
thing
·
to
·
have representative for tlie
_
New
_
York
.
thinking
about
what
goal
they
with the d1fferentgoals they may very powerful. We can influence today is experience.
·-
It
will
_
Times. She has accounts with would like to obtain,'' Snyde1
want tg
·
obtain.
.
.
-
other
people
and
other always help in getting a job.
many
New
York
hotels, says.
.
·
Patrick Pacheco, managmg magazines."
.
Margaret Miner, an alumna of restaurants,
colleges,
and
editor
·
·
for
"After
Dark"
Mimi McAndrew, another Marist Coll~ge, is the executive universities. Her national in-
magazine;is involved with many personality at career day, is a
assistant
to
Cosmopolitan terests are colleges. Mrs. Joyce
.
.
.
Mary
Monsaert
:
Joyce, Advertising Representative for The New York
·
Times !lDd a Marlst graduate, explains the various aspects of her job
to ~ttentlve students.
·
·
.
CIRCLE phc:,tos by
Fred
Ashley
.
.
Margie Miner,
a
Marlst graduate, who is now an executive assistant to the editor of Cosmopolitan
magazine, chats with interested female students.
Robert
Jlatey,
Personnel Administrator for RCA records, discµsslng employment opportunities:

















































































































PAGE4

THE CIRCLE
The Mllrlst College CIRCLE Is the weekly newspaper
of
the students
of
Mllrlst
College and Is published thrOUQhOut the school year exclusive
Of
vacation perlOdS
by the Southern Dutehess News Agency, Wappingers, New York.
David Livshin
Mary
Beth
P£eiffer
GigiBirdas
Gregory Conocchioli
FredAshley
ChipEnnish
TomMcTeman
Patrice Connolly
Joan McDermott
Brian Morgan
Larry
striegel
Co-Editors
Associate Editor
Editorial Consultant
Photography Editor
Assistant Photography Editor
Sports Editor
La1out 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
Palladin~, Pat Perretto,
Dave Roberts, Ed Ru~o, Winnie
·
Saitta, Rich ·sellers, Kamar
Sumrall, Tiria Iraca, Julie Schott,
·
Peter Van Aken, Elizabeth
·
Godbout, Candi Davis.
:
_
'
.
·
·
.
.
·
·
·
.
·
-.

I
THE CIRCLE
DECEMBER 11, 1975
Letters
To The
Editors
A Christmas
_
Carol
performed in the men's room of
·
.
It's funny, l~sf Frida~ night
the 7th floor· the stall door was ttiere was a Semor coc~H party
ripped off i~ hinges. When this in the new :dining room. I went
To the Editors of the CIRCLE, vandalism was realized by the into the men's room located on
A
Christmas Carol is
a
novel by dormitory s4lff
:they
_
were in
.
the l9wer floor of th~ campu:
Charles Dickens. You kno_w the complete bewilderment. What center. ~hat do you think I saw_.
story, don't you? It's
.
about a should they do?
_
..:
·
Well the fii:st A broken stall door; I know it
_
gentleman named Ebenezer thing that should be done is find wasn't lik
_
e that before the party.
Scrooge. This story is being the person wlio was responsible, Well what do you think_ should
.
0
be
_
_
performed on the Marist College right? wen who did it? - ~ere don~? Maybe th~ _entire semor
.
campus for everyone to see. No,
_
were no witnesses. What should
·
classshould not be able t() ~ar-
not in the Marist Theatre as you
_
be done? We
.
can't tolerate ticipatein any Chris_µnas parties.
would expect, rather in
:
the something of this nature. After Nothatisn'tapygood;
,
therewere
Champagnat Hall.
·
deep thought, the
~
_
dorm
staff
.
not only semors present:
·
.
Well
About two weeks ago there was reached
-
a _decision •.. punish then may)?e w
.
~
.
should p~msh the
·
' - - - - - - - - - ~ - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - an incident on the seventh floor of everyone. Therefore there will be entire• Marilit

Com~umty

··
No,
Champagnat. For those who are no Christmas
·
party
✓unless
._
that isn't any good e1the~, there
not aware of this incident, I will someone owns up to this act of
_
_were people ,from _out
_
s1de the
.try to familiat:!ze· you with it
.
vandalism.
.
.
· .
_
.
·
_
-
- ·
__
·
Marist Comiminity present. Well
There was a party in the
.
"Barn"
,
·
·
Well, no one ever confessed. So then
.
I guess we should
·
Ptm.ish
on a Friday night to
:
celebrate the you know
·
what that means
.
don't anyone who could
:
ha\te possibly
_
·
victory of House Ill's intramural you? Everyone in House
III
can't doneit. Thatsoundsgood, doesn't
.
soccer team. Everyone in the have a Christmas party, it's only· it? Why not? Well S~nta,} guess
house was invited to attend this right.
_
Of
course you should Christmas isn't commg t~1s year.
Tis Better
To
Give
•••
ANDREW PAVELKO: Jumper
.
cables.
SECURITY DIRECTOR PHIL
MC
CREEDY:
.
Star
.
Trek
Communicators
and
an
unabridged edition of Dick
·
Tracy's CRIMESTOPPERS.
joyous event.
As
any other social punish a whole House. Now that!
.
_
Sm~erely,
·
-
event at Marist,
·
liquor was
_
think about it, maybe it isn't the
·
,
Richard ~.Q1~een
served; It was
·
your
.
typical
_
right thing to do. After
_all
half of Ed. note: House
III
was g~anted
Friday night party. Ho"".ever on
the
.
house_ is girls,
l
doubt they the right to hold a C_h~~stm,as
that_· night, when most· people .were in the men's room; Maybe 1t· Party this year, the dec1s1on
.
was
were either
:
_
out or down
.
in the
·
was someb!)(ly outside of t):le announced
-
on Sunday;,
''Barn." an act of vandalism was· house
.
No one can be sure.
Under Socialism all authority latter body-will plan ind cocir-
.
will come from the workers in-
dinate the
·
production

of an
Our CAMPUS SECRETARIES
-
tegrally united
-
in Socialist In-
.
abundance for the benefit'of the
.
all deserve a special gift, but
·
A good

deal
.
or"
'
confusion
·
dustrial Unions. In each plant the entire country
:
.
.
.
-_
-
·
_
·
·
·
_
.
their number is too large, so we prevails

about Socialis
'
m as rank
.
and file 'wili elect a
.
The
·
socialist
_
Industrial
.
have selected SYDE WATOFF, advocated
_
by
·
.
the
_
SOCIALIST
·
management comniittee
··
to Republic of Latior will
_
be a true
_
Business Department secretary, LABOR PARTY, hence
I will , supe_rvise tqE!ir plant operations.
--
democracy; solidly- based on that
to receive
·
15
..
weeks at
·
the clarify it briefly.
·
·
:
_
·
In eacl! shop division of a plant,
-
primary freedon.?- ~hich· i~;the
Poughkeepsie Charm School_.:
·
.
·
What does
_
Socialism mean?
U
_
every
.-
.worker .wiU
particip~~e in
.:-
,
fowidation
.
,
oL alL freedoms
"
._,_
.
_
_
..
-_
·
means
·.
production of things
_.
to
.:
.
inakfug
'.
the necessary
'.;
plaris
·
·for
··
ECONOMIC F.'l:lE.EDOM!
•:
;
_
/'
'
.
_
...
-.·
..
CORNELIUS RpSSEl.: Broke satisfy
.
h
_
wnan
;
n~eds,
a11g
NQT
:
as
:
·
~
'carrymg
outthe
;
decisions
,
of the:
·_,
..
:
Is
<,,,
Socialis1n
;
.
1
11
w~r:thwhile
:
t
:
:
,_
our budget. For
'
him, a chalk-
-•
·\
inder capitalism~
:
-
for
!
sale·
·
and management
.
committee and
'
for
"
working
c
for?
'
You
·
bet-it

is!
·-
.
:
'
·
·
"
resistan~ suit.
,
.
.
profit.
-
It
_
ITleans
.
control
and

:efficiently
~unning
-
the
shop.
,:
·
,
.
·'
.
-
_
;
~
Nathan Pressman
,
·
- - - -
managenient
·:
of the
·
illdustries
.
Besides
-
electing
·
their :-shop
·
12
Catherinest.
·
DOCTOR ITALO
.
BENIN: Six and social services by
-
the foremen the workers will also
EHenyille,N.Y:12428
As Holiday time rolls around,
-credits
good for two courses -
:
workers through an economic elect representative
·
s
-
to
'a
local
·
..
·
.
Member of the
there is but one chore that most Intro to Why? Intro to Why Not?
_
.
government
·
democratically and
a
national c
·
oi.mcil of their
Socialist Labor Party
_
exasperates the editors.
- - - -
·
constituted on the basis of. their industry
·_
and to
·
a
.
central
Phone: 914-647-6696
We hate to make up our
BROTHER. JOSEPH
-
nation°wide
ind1Jstrial congress representing all the
Christmas lists7 and so in keeping BE LANG EIS: We' re sending
.
organization.
industries and services. This
with the task of the season, the him ... a-broad .
.
editors
·
have made up a Christ-
mas list.
.
MRS. FISCHER:
An
honorary
G
_
allant's G
_
reeting
-
An
interesting aspect of this list degree in welding.
·
· ·
letter in- the CIRCLE.
·
Inner City in a specialapostola~e,
A Merry Christmas, Most al:!ls chaplain of a group of Man~t
Happy New Year to the fac~ty,
-
B
_
rothers. Pleas~ pray
-
for me
lil
is that some of our gifts might
easily be acceptable to our _own
relatives and friends.
.
OURLIST
PRESIDENT LINUS FOY:
A
life-time supply of Compoze.
DR. LOUIS ZUCCARELLO
Support-Hose, thigh-high socks
and a
·
gift certificate to - the
Cuttery.
·
BILL AUSTIN: The large
economy can of C,!IB~-X,
DOCTOR WILLlAMEIDLE: A
lifetime supply of positive
results. (On the recommendation
of his students.)
·
·
LESTER
·
cONE:
An
office in
Franks, space permitting.
·
Dear Editors,
.
Sirice it is impossible to send all
my friends at Marist College an
individual Christmas Card;
would you kindly publish
'
this
Support Retugees
staff; students;- secretanes, my new work.
. -.-
.
security, and maintenance,
_
Thanks
-.
to
all
for everythmg.
SAGA, etc. May 1976
·be
a most
Fr. Leo Gal\~nt
successful year.
·
_
22 W, 7oth Street
-
I
_
ain very mu
.
ch
.
involved
in
the
..
·
New York;
_
N
.
Y.10023
banks, industry, and churches as basis. The g~oup would. back up
well as educational institutions BOCES English courses now
and private individuals. Marist being
::
taught. The Vietnamese
To the Editors:
College was repres~nted by the people.are presently living quite
DEAN GERALD COX: A
Our listis
·
extensive, but these
on Tuesday, December
2,
the
_
new Tester-Researcher of the closetothe school.inJhe Rip Van
problem for us this year.
-
.
·
are the highlights. We hope that Dutchess County
_
chapter of the Counseling
·
·
Center, Roberla
·
Winkle Apartments:
·
·
•··
.
,.-
Vfe thought O,f several_
th
mgs - our gifts will
.
be
_
received in the American Red Cross organized Wollmacher and myself.
.
·
·
It·
is my hope that s~yerar of
office hours, a carton of MORE "'.
.
spirit in which they ~ere given. and hosted a meeting
'
of con-
·one· of the major drawbacks
iri

-
you reading this letteMvill show
·
TERS
.
.
.
.
.
.
._
cerned community represen-
.
helpjng
.
to place this group of your concern and willingne,ss to
VICE PRESIDENT
WA
:
·
.
While our gift-list _has b~en tatives for the purpose of aiding a people is their inability to speak help these refugees in a strange
·
Real easy this year. We'r~ get-
·
-
h~ht and good~hea~ed
~
~eepmg gr~up of Vietnamese
·
peop~e English. Having continuously
.
country by
:
contacting me in my
ting him a new pair of white with
.
the sea~on s spmt,. the
.
living in the city of Poughkeepsie made known their interest in office; room 'C-125. Your par-
sweat socks and a new pair of editors would lik~ all ofMar1st to
.
in
'"
locating immediate

em-
involvement in their community, ticipation
.
will
.
be much·
_
ap-
deck shoes.· ·
·
enjoy the gift of community ~pirit ployment. and then working with Marist students
·
have been asked I?reciated;
.-
-
and hope.
.
_
.
.
_
_
.
.
them
.
.
toward
•·
long-term em~ to forrri a group that would
·
be
.
·
..c·-


Thanks,
1:HOM~ W_ADE: The newly-
.
Atthis'time we
.
extend,our best ployrrient. Those in attendance
·
willing to work as volunteer
-
.-
-
-
..,
.
Larry Snyder
n~med Director
_
of Develo~ment

·
.
wishes for
·•
a
~
happy;
,
,and
~fe
-
included repres
·
entatives
!)f
.
English tut.ors ori a one-t~n~
·
·
Offic
_
e of Career Development
will
.
~e pleased to
·
receive_ a
.
Holiday
.
to
--
the
.
entu::f
·
Mar1st
.
·
··
··
coordinated wardrobe from Dial- community'and we wish
all
of you
A.Jacket. . , . . - - -
a Happy an_d aealthy New Year;
DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS
DAVID FLYNN: Free television
·
advertising
·_
during women's
wrestling;
·
.
.
..
FRED
.
LAMBERT:
A
.real
·
toughy
.
this
·
time.
So we're not
.
getting
·
him
anything;
.
he
gets
·
what
-
he
.
wants anyway!
_,

. .
• '

.
'

.
_:
.
.
.
.
.
BUSINESS MANAGER TONY
CAMPILII:
·.(gift-that
keeps on
giving
~
a
'year'.s
su~_ripti~11
_
.
to
.
MONEYSWORTH, or,
·"'How
:
to
Splita Nickel
Eighty
Ways.II_
.·C_o
_
n
_
__
t·1~
.
ue·d,. Support_
you park in the "D" parking lot :visitors.as our guests .
.
You
_
cari
on campus arid not directly in
.
help enhance the
·
calibre
,
of play
_
,
_
__
.
.
__
front
.
of the gym. Food and by
·
your
·
support and en-
Men
.artd
Women

of Marist:
.
beverages are
:
to be
·
consumed couragement. Conversely, we
-

-
th
··
h
--- -.
f
·
th
.
Athl
r
only in
:
the lobby
.
and none
_
be
.
need
-
not
--
denigrate· teams
-
--
or
_,.
It

IS
·
..
e ope o
e
,
.
e
1
:
.
_
br~ugtjt into
.
th~
_
gym_ and th~t
.
officials
.
thr~ugh .excessive or
pepa~e11t that you
.
will
_,
C!>l'},
·
.
smoking be confmedto th_e lobby
.
,
em.barrassing
·.
reacti~ns
-:
_to
,
"
tlllµ~_
to
.
!iUp~orte~t~:apaIIl~
th
.At
area
:
.
only. They have· been situations that arise in any
-
ganie._ :
. ye_ar!1~
-:
Y~u av
.
.
·
.
gr~ciousenoughtoallowusto
:
use
--.
:
:vourcooperation8Ildsuppoftare
-
_
thISJi,Jne
,
we referspeciflcally to
-
·
their
:
facility;
.
please reciprocate
, ,
vital
_
to
·
the
_
teamsand the
.
eµtire
.
<
bas~etball. There
-
are
.
~
,
,fe~
'
by
·
observing their
.
requests.
0
'_
·
prograrp. Thank you
:
.
.
,
·
..;
·
:
c-:-,
.
requ~
.
we 1'~ve of
Y.
0O
-.
-ID-
·
th18
,
_,.
we also
:.
expect yo
:
,t
,
will
c,m~
·";
.
_
.
.
.
..
.
.
Sincerely,
matter;,al'}d some rules Dutch~_ tinue to observe the rules
•of
good
.
;
-
:
_
Dr. H<;>ward ~oldnian
__
Community ,C!)llege has
.
lai_d _
_
.
"sportsmanship
,
and treat our
.
·
Director of Athletics
.

.
downforouruse.They
.
ask
_
that
.
.
-
,
.

\
·.
·
-

...


~
,;


,.! •.
.•
·
··,
_
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__
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...
DECEMBER 11, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
New Face.s On Campus
dition
to
·
the
Psychology Florida where he continued his
Department at Marist.
_
studies at the University of
White
·
is originally from Florida.
It
was there, while
Present Tense-
Dr. Royce White
·
Ka mar Sumrall
·
Odessa, Texas. Having lived in earning his Ph.D., in Psychology,
the mid west, southeast, and that lfe met his wife who was also
s~uthwest,
_
he decided to try a majoring in Psychology.
·
different chmate. This is his first
When asked why he chose a
time
_in
the northeast, and White career in Psychology, White
says that he really appreciates explained that he .. enjoys ob-
the beauty of autwnn. ..It's a serving human
-
behavior and,
.
fantastic experience walking in trying to explain it."
the woods with the leaves falling
· .
Of Marist, White says his
·
all around."
"general impressions are very
_
-
On most weekends, White and favorable."
his wife leave their Pciughkeeosie
"I
really enjoy working with
apartment to go exploring in the the other Psychology professors.
Catskill mountains or
the I'in very busy but, that's to be
·
Hudson Valley. area. He also expected.
_
The first time teaching
enjoys playing
·
chess
.
and anywhere, it's
·
difficult getting
.
scrabble, two

of his favorite organized. Eventually as
I
get set
games.
.
up, I'm going to try to find out
White received his Masters more about the college. I'm sure
degree from the University of that there are a lot of aspects
Florida. Afterward, he
·
enrolled about Marist that I'm going to
in the air force for a period of four enjoy getting acquainted with.·'
years where he worked as
a
drug
White seems to feel
·
quite op-
abuse counsellor.
tomistic about Marist and, has a
·
" 'Tis the Season"
Christmas is a time for
celebrating. This Saturday, Dec.
13th, there will be a special
midnight mass in the college
chapel.
It
will be a gala occasion
with festive decorations and
special music.
It
will give
everyone on campus a chance to
experience again some of the
wonder and the mystery of this
important e\'ent.
·
Christmas is indeed a time for
celebrating. After the Midnight
Mass there will be a reception in
Byrne Residence for those who
would like to share in some of the
joy of this holiday. There will be
singing and sociability plus, of
course, refreshments.
Christmas is also a time for
giving. At the Midnight Mass
there wiU be an opportunity for
each of us to give the most im-
portant gift of all, something of
ourselves and our time.
The Campus Ministry office
receives many requests for
volunteer service and we sponsor
several activities which depend
on volunteer help.
A
booklet
Hsting these opportunities for
service will
be
distributed at the
Mass Saturday night. A pledge
card will be included so that each
of us will be able to promise to
give some time to any of these
programs during the spring
semester. We will make these
pledges part of our offertory at
the Mass.
The story of Christmas is the
story of God's love for us and the
gift of new life he gives us. There
is no better way for us to
celebrate this holiday than by
giving help and hope to others
through the Volunteer Service
Program.
Come
.
to
the
celebration. Christmas is a time
for giving.
·
If
while hiking in the Catskill
mountains, one comes across a
mus~ached man of about thirty,
wearing cowboy boots, it may be
Dr. Royce
_
White; the latest ad-
--
After leaving the air force, lot of praise for it. His wife is
White returned to
·
Gainesville, taking a few Math. courses here.
F'fllancial
-
Reps
·
Elected
·
Tony
·
Wilger, the newly elected
,
,
is
an
eXample of such a minority
financial board representative at. club. Tony says,
..
This club iri-
Marist College, feels he has the
volves a great deal of cost, but it
goals, the time, and the ambition,
could play a vital role in
·in-
'Looking Glass'
·
Open To
All
Con'd frofnpg. 1
According to Kathy Waish the to ,fulfill his position tothe best of
forming
;:ind
unifying th~ com-
board . will
·
be
.
attempting hi_s ability. Tonysays,_ ''I feell
munity:"
somethmg
.
.
that
,
the
.
board
-
has
·
can have a grear effect on the
.
.
Tony does not believe in being a
never been done before
~
it will input of the st4dent government:
one-man show. Tony feels that an
evaluate every group
·
that
·
has I wanted to make
a
.contribution
interaction between students is
applied for money this year to to the Marist community arid
necessary for the best input in the
·
find out just
.
wha.Lthe ~enefits. being the
..

.•
financial
.
board student government Tony says,
were, and whether the mon~:Y represel)tative is the way that
I
"Cathy Walsh, another.financial
was auo
·
cated properly.
·
The hope feel
i-
£.Quld best make this con-
board member, is an experienced
in c_loing this will be
.
to give the

tribution."
.
business major who has alot of
bulk o_f"the moneytci
.the
groups
As a member of the financial ideas to add to the board.
I
feel
that benefit
·
the entire Marist
board, Tony· will meet with club we should work together and get
· comriuiiuty
:
the
·:
.
!llo:St and
.
to
:
representatives; look over the good results." Tony has
.
also
eliminate. waste- in the_
:
future.
student
_
chiJ1 budgets, and
·
.
worked closely with _his cam-
Accor~~g _to
_
KathY,
·
.
•:~his
is
_
_
our
_
_.
determine
.
,
allocations to these paign managers, David <;lifferri
most ~mp~~fl~!.~~~!-·
·
: ,
.
:
.
..
-::
.·.

c)ubs.
,
Tony.says,-
"J
hop_e to give and
·
Rodney Lemon. Tony says,
With the publication of the
"Looking Glass" almost anyone
with a penchant for writing will
have a chance to do just that,
with the only requisites being
imagination and an average
amount of journalistic talent. The
basic idea behind
"The
Looking
Glass," a kind of alternative
newspaper, is to give all students
a chance to publish anything they
feel is worth contributing. This
broad area includes short stories,
Letters Con 't
WAR?·
The a~tmg-fmanc1al board had
,
. certairy
_
con·sicleratiori-to
'µiinority
'"The time· and hard,
wor-k
.
they
$27,000
'
'
in
.
student
.
government"
·_
,
cfu:t?swtli~h may not have a large p~t into this campaigri
.-
made it

Dear Editor,
_funds
at the
l>egil!ning
of
-
this
·amount
of student
.
participation,
-
.
.. •
valuable,'',;
,
_
.
. ..
,
I am
.
writing in response to the
s
_
emester
·
~
aird
.
.
has
·
allocated
but which promote both cultural · Tony
·
is'
a
__
s.enior
political
article you featured on
Andre
almost all of it There, are
'
three events and add
.
to Marist's science major, now involved in Green last week. This letter
groups requesting more money
reputation inside and outside of law and para-legal studies. concerns the part of the article
t
_
han they were
·
originally
the
-Marist
community." Tony
Rodney Lemon said, "I think dealingwithCUBandtheStudent
allocated and four groups that also plans to give special con-
Tony, with his political insights Government.
have not been allo
_
cated any sideration to those clubs which
into the community, is a good
I was a little bewildered that I
money
SQ
far this semester. This
add to the learning experience a
_
t asset to the student government. was a member of a group
will be the board's first order of
Marist. Tony feels the radio club
.
He is a good man for_ the job."
engaged in a ''war''. and didn't
business.
·
even know it. ( "There is a war on
A
-
nnouncements
The
.
CIRCLE
'
win publish next
··
on January 29, 1976.
· ·
You can still buy both th~ 1975
·
--and
the 1976 Reynard together for
only $20.00. There is
·a
·
limited
supply left. Anyone interested.
.
.
Thanks
Spe
_
cial Thank~ to Jerome
Nachman, WCBS News Radio,
who served as 'guest editor' for
this
·
week's CIRCLE.
.
please contact Joe in C-6
.
05, or
through campus mail Box C-843.
There are also a few peqple who
have not yet pick!!
_
d up their '75
Reynard. A list has been posted
near the cafeteria with
·
a list of
names.
'
.
SALE ENDS
_
DEC. 19
ITALIAN
LAM
BRUSCO
. .
FULL
Anyone who will be in the
Poughkeepsie area over the
Christmas holidays and is in-
terested in makirig some money;
contact Mike Maloney iri C-717 or
Box C-277.
·
campus between cub and the
- Student Government.") I was
even more bewildered that the
President of CUB didn't know
about "the war." Rather than
argue whether or not the quote on
war should have been printed, I
would like to clarify the issue.
As point of
fact,
there was and
is no "war" between the two
organizations. This can be
supported by my Merrium-
Webster dictionary, a very
reliable source (don't laugh, the
argwnent it raises makes a lot of
poetry, community information
and advisory columns. You get
the idea; anything. The only one
problem delaying the first issue
is a lack of articles.
Originated by senior Gary
Traube and a handful of other
students,
"The
Looking Glass"
hopes to become a monthly
feature at Marist, running eitht to
ten pages an issue. The only
Con'd on pg. 7
sense).
The dictionary gives four
definitions of the term. The first
two deal with out and out military
_
war. I hope
you
agree that these
do
not
pertain to
the
case
at hand.
The third description given is, "a
state of hostility, conflict or
antagonism." The last reads, "a
struggle between opposing forces
for a particular end."
If
either of
these conditions had been
pre
_
sent, the president of CUB
should have bP.en 2.war;:; vf them.
Kathy Manning was not ex-
periencing any conflicts with our
government nor was she op-
posing us while trying to achieve
her set ends for CUB. Therefore
there could not have been a
"war" between "them" an<'
''us."
In view of this argument, my
dictionary can't explain what
Andre meant by the word. This is
something he will have to clarify
for
·
those who are interested.
Thank you
Joan Stegenga
99
c.
.
BTL,
.
·1.99VALUE
5% Off
With This
Ad From
The Marist Circle.
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_
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·
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i
·
"
..
PAGE6
-
..:
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--
- - - - -
·
-
·
-
-
-
--
-
-
.
THE CIRCLE
DECEMBER 11, 1975
_
AH
too often, when the party
ends, the trouble begins.
·
People who shouldn't be
doing anything more active than
going to sleep are driving a car.
Speeding and weaving their way
to death.
Before any of your friends
If someone gets too drunk to
drive, drive him yourself.
·
or call a
cab. Or offer to let him sleep over.
·
-
Maybe your friend won
'
t be
feeling so good on
'
thernorning after
~
-
-
but you're going to feel t~rrific.
·
· drive home from your party, make
.
_
sure they aren't drunk.
_
r -
·
-
'
- - - - -
-
·
- -
·
- - ,
Don't be fooled because they
·-
1
~~~f
4
~RIVER, DEPT.Y
:
·
B
-
1
·
,
drank only beer or wine. Beer and
.
:
ROCK_YILLE,
-
MAR):LAND 20852
:
wine can be just as i'ntoxicatingas
·
·
I
I
warit to
keep
my
friends alive
I
mixed drinks.
-
'
I
for the
next party:
_
_
·
_
I
_
_
-
And don't kid yourself
_
·
:
Tell me what elseI
can do.
,
:
because they may have had some
I
My
name is
.
--
-
-
--
-
·
-
·
·
··•
-

·
·;
I
.
.
black coffee. Black coffee ~an't
:
A~drcss
_
. .
..
~
.
.
.
·
-
-
~
- -
-
-
,
-~-
-~-
-~
.
:
-
b rth
·
11
-
h t d ·
City
St?tc
-
_
Z,p __
so e
_
emupwe enoug o rive.
L - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - -
-
- - - - J
_
FRIENDS DON'T LET FRIENl)S DRIVE D,RUNK.
0
.




.,

-,,!'
.


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'.
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·
,
U
.
S
.
D~J'AIUMl'~'ff
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l:,:
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!
I
i
51
I .
DECEMBER 11, I 975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE7
Track Ready For Indoor Opener
The Marist 'indoor track team man team for Marist will be.Phil two hurdler of all time at Marist,
will open up its 197:;.76 winter Cotennec, letterman who has Schools, Will Morrison, and John
campaign this Sunday in the 2nd jumped over 20 feet, and Dave VanDervoort. Marist has a
Annual CCNY Relay Carnival in Schools, who has bettered 19 feet. strong squad in the sprint medley
New York City. Last year Marist Marist will have a very strong relay also with sprinters Dan
entered only a few runners and · triple jump team in newcomer Wakeley and Phil Cotennec
field men. This year the team has Mike Dombroski who could set a running the 220 legs, Chris
its sights on a first or- second new Marist record this year and Paccione the 440 leg and either
place trophy and has. been has consistently cleared 40 feet, Mike Mahoney or Keith Hollman
working hard for two weeks and Phil Cotennec who can clear the half-mile leg. In the mile
towards meeting that goal.
40 feet also. Dombroski and relay the team will call back one
. The team has a good relay Cotennec will· also be Marist's of the more rested runners along ·
team, in an events this year. In team in the high jump relay · with Ric Bond, Keith Hollman or
the field events,.Marist will have where each can clear 5'10 inches Mike Mahoney, and Chris Pac-
school shot put record-holder and and possibly reach 6 feet.
cione ..
high point team scorer for his
For the first time ever Marist
In the open events Tony Wilger,
first two years,. P~te VanAken, will have a team· in the shuttle school indoor and outdoor record
along with newcomer Ray Leger. high hurdle relay. The team' is holder in the walking events, will
This represents a strong two-man strong with school indoor record be in the mile walk while ~leve
team. In each field . event the ~older, Dave Schools, anchoring Meier and George Mccutcheon
team score
.
will be determined bv and outdoor'record holder Phil will run in the two-mile race.
the'sum of ea.ch man's best effort Cotennecleading
qff.
The middle
The team figures to break a lot
on two t_rials. ·The long jump two-
_legs are supported by the number of existing Marist school iridoor
· Marijuana···Laws
Decri1ninalzation
In
Doubt
.
.
.
By Allan Rabinowitz',
. "If
the canibis. epidemic
continues to spread :,. we may
find ourselves saddled with a
large population·of semi-zombies
.. .'-' - Senator James.Eastland
(CPS) - At first glance, it would
seem that the country is not far
from reaching
a
national policy
of decriminalizing marijuana:
·. But it may take longer than
expect1,1d.
, . There are several obstacles to
·federal
legislation
to
decriminalize
marijuana,
although six ·states have already
. passed• such; legislaUon on their.
·• own, and a pre-sidential task force
-fecertn'~fc'r•e~mencted that
:enfprcemenfo(pot laws be given
.Jow priority;
.
One .
of
the major obstacles, ·
said Keith Stroup, chairman . of
the National Organization to
Reform . Marijuana · Laws
(NORML) is Senator James
Eastland (D-MS). Eastland is a
staunch opponent of marijuana
decriminalization a.nd chairman
of the Judiciary Committee,
through which any marijuana bill
must pass before it reaches the
Senate floor.
In. addition,
Eastland is. chairman of the
Senate Subcommittee on Internal
Security, which issued a report
last year spelling out the details
of a marijuana "epidemic."
.
There are good reasons to
· oppose the decriminalization of
marijuana, according to Dave
Martin, chief analyst for the
Eastland subcommittee and
GLASS
Cont.·
permanent staff of the paper
would be an editorial board and· a
business manager. All other-
contributors are under no·
obligation to remain on the staff. ·
The former
will
vary from month
to month according to the
number of topics submitted. This
means that subject matter will_
vary, ranging from surveys of
local watering holes to poetry
contests. As ,,.you may have
gathered from . this article,
. censorship will be almost
nonexistent. In keeping with the
very loose policy set forth by
Traube,the paper wiHbe a truly
open forum for questions,
complaints; a sounding board·in
print.
.
.
coordinatorforthe h~arings from through Eastland's Judiciary
which Eastland's. report stem- · Committee. Stroup of NORML is
med.' Marijuana, said Martin, pessimistic abbut whether that
can make a person ''anti-
bill.can '"be forced through" the
'motivationaP' or "'dysfunc- committee. A bill in the House is
tional."
caught in "the same kind of
: "If
·you have a drug," said bottleneck," Stroup said.
Martin, "that causes people to
The House bill must go through
drop out of school and society; if the Subcommittee on Health and
you have · something that Environment. The chairman of
enhances · ariy. psychological that committee, Paul Rogers.(D-
.weakness
a person may have to FL), is "sitting on the bill until
begin with; if you .have a drug after the '76 elections," Stroup
that
. makes
a
person said. Rogers could not be reached
amotivational, then you must for comment.
consider a-person who uses this
Another marijuana reform
drug· as the bearer of a· con- measure is proposed to amend
tagious germ. And society has a the controversial · Criminal
vested interestin protecting itself Justice Reform Act, which c~lls
• against. it." · ·,
for a massive overhaul .Qf the.US_.
., Martin claimed. that neither he
Criminal
Code.
If·
that
bill·
fa
nor Eastland recommended passed without . a . decriminal-
putting "youthful first offenders'.' ization amendment, possession of
behind bars,. but insisted that pot could be punished with a 30-
possession of pot should remain a day jail sentence and-or a fine of
misdemeanor, since a "criminal up to $10,000. ·
record and probation provide a
But the controversial bill is
mighty powerful deterrent." moving very slowly. Stroup does
Marijuana decriminalization not see any hope of a federal·
generally implies that no decriminalization measure in the
criminal records. will
be
kept on near future.
minor marijuana arrests.
Although more states are
Eastland's subcommittee has moving ·toward
marijuana
scheduled a · second set : of decriminalization - the District of
marijuana
hearings
for Columbia is on the verge of ap-
November in which the latest proving such a measure and
scientific · research will be Minnesota is not far behind -
examined, Martin said. "I'm not overall Federal · marijuana
totally against decriminalization. reform is currently bottled up.
I just want to take a gosslow "We feel a little weak," said
attitude."
Stroup, "we. can't demand
Several marijuana reform bills. anything."
are in_ Congress now. There is a
senate · bill which must pass
likely cost
10
cents a copy.
the air at the moment. Based on
A point worth mentioning about interest shown in intramurals,
"The Looking Glass" is that it volleyball appears to. be much
has not .been set up to act as. a more popular than basketball
critical alternative to other among women on campus.
SO,
publications on campus. It -is according to Nye, the possibility
merely an alternative for exists that volleyball may be
students who feel they might be initiated next fall. "We'll have to
better heard in a less controlled see what they want."
publication, as opposed to say,~
The team will play their final
the CIRCLE or the Academic game of the·semester and their
Quarter.ly, where emphasis is on final home game of the year
defined su,bject matter and a tonight against a strong Mercy
· certain amount of journalistic squad as a preliminary to . the .
flair.
men's game. Tipoff is at 6 p.m. at
· Gary Traube had this to say . Dutchess Community College.
~bout "The Looking Glass." This
Anwers to·last
is an .opportunity for ·everyope to
weeks puzzle
.publish anything they feel should
be published by the Marist
· College community. Anyone is
welcome.
SPORTS
Cont.
S C
TR
R E
AM
TA
H I s M s
I
R A R E B I T
AV
A I L
E D A C I T Y
VE RSE
MATURER
A ■
TEENAGE ■ DRA
NG
o ■
p
0 R E
GM AN
Aside .. from the problem of
finaing enQugh contributors, most of the other conference ·
there is the·: equally . pressing · schools engage in recruiting and
problem of finding•enough funds. have better-developed programs.
. Tentative·'editor-in-chief Traube · "A girl who is interested in
UT AH

p
M E S 0 D E
- s
E
N
G R AT E D
E R K
P LA TT
RM

C
RAN E S
SA T I O N -

L AN D C RAB
hopes that the Student. Govern-
basketball after high school won't
. ment will allocate money and in come here. We can't offer the
order to. defray initial ex- money, only the opportunity. to
· penditur~s the first few issues of play."
·
.
."The Looking Glass" will most · Toe future ofthe sport is·up
in
.
', ; .
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-
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records in the process while also
Dan Wakeley, and newcomer
Charlie Lopez of Wallkill fame.
Marist has stacked two of its
four pure running relays with
standouts from this year's cross
country record-breaking team. In
the distance medley relay, Ric
Bond will run the half, John
VanDervoort, school outdoor
record holder in the quarter, will
run the 440, Will Morrison will
run the
3
-.i
mile. leg, and George
Mccutcheon, • school indoor
record holder in the mile and two-
mile
will
run:the anchor mile leg.
The squad boasts a strong two-
mile relay team also with legs
run
by
newcomer
Keith
Millspaugh, who ran 1:56 in the
NYS · Intersectional
cham-
pionships last June, Dave
trying to score well in the relays.
The top five places in each relay
score points for the team on a 6-4-
3-2-1 basis while the members of
the top three teams of each relay
receive medallions. School
records are expected to be
broken in every relay of this meet
and possibly in the two open
events as well.
After the semester break, the
team will have an indoor meeting.
in Campus Center Room 248 .-0n
Monday, January 19 at 5 p.m. for
all interested candidates of the
indoor program followed by
practice the next day. The team
will participate in the Collegiate
Track Conference Relay Car-
nival on Saturday, January_ 31 at
Queens College as well as four
other indoor meets.
Faculty Evalu~tions
To Be· Made Public
Barbara Magrath
The Student Academic Com-
mittee has proposed new faculty
evaluation sheets which are to be
composed by the committee and
tabulated by students. The
results will then be published .
Previous faculty evaluations
came from the academic'_dean's,
office and the results were never ·
made public.
Jim Valarelli. head
of
the
Stuoent Academic Committee,
said that the new evaluations
/
are not completed, but that thev
will be objective and not a ··gripe
sheet. .. He said the evaluations
will be more valid if they are
made
public.
Also,
when
published, the evaluations may
serve as a guide for students as to
wliich
instructor to
take.
Valarelli saul that Dean Zuc-
carello and the faculty are "all
for
1t. ..
The :-;tudcnt academic com-
mittee ts hoping to distribute the
evaluations next semester.
However. Valarelli said there is
·still much work to be completed.
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PAGES
-Marist's William.Thomas (34) goes for
a
t~ugli sh~t,
.
.
-.·.
.
.
in
last week's ·game against Kings College.
Indians ··
Scalp
THE CIRCLE
a
completely different team,
however, as Marist was still
plagued
by excessive fouls, poor
rebounding and nwrierous · tur-
novers.
_ "There
·is
just too many tur-
novers, too rriany mistakes out
. there," said Petro, adding "We
are
getting no easy shots un-
derneath because of a · lack of
aggressiveness." He also noted
that the Indian frontcourt ac-
counted for 54 points. .
- Despite all this the Red Foxes
, still- had several chances to ·win
the
game · in _ the final two
minutes.·
Trailing by as mµch as 13 in the
first half (44-35 at halftime),
Marist - started
connecting
midway through the :second
session and _had cut the margin to
62-59 · when Earl Holmes fouled
·-i;
out with 8:
11 to _go. The Indiaiis
rebuilt the lead to nine before
· Petro went. to his :bench and a
·tigbt-pressing defense. ..
. .
Eric• .DePercin; enjoying·• his
best game of the season, hit four
foul shots and Pettus connected
on a jumper from the corner and
a pair of free throws to pull
Marist .within 74-72 with 1 :35 to
go.
-
With 1:02 on the clock, Berry
missed a chance to tie it when his
first foul shot of the one~and-one
bounced off the rim. Marist
V
regained possession with
.43
seconds left but DePerciii missed
a driving shotand _committeifhis~
-
fifth foul on the rebound.
Jeff Auerbacher, top Indian
_ scorer with ~18, calmly hit both
, free tosses for a 76-72 advantage.
The Red ·Foxes reamined alive
when Berry made one of two foul .
-. By THOMAS MC T~RNAN
Wl
·n_;_,
- shots a_nd Pettus sank a twenty~
. footer and .it was 76-75 with 14.
Thee first half was a seesaw seconds left..·
· ·
Mayb~ it was a· different scene · battle -until re~erve center. Neil
Montclair took a tinieoutbefore
and ailifferent _method Saturday Lajeunesse came.off the bencnto getting the baU to the front court.
_ night at Montclair state but
-
the score 12 o_f his16 P?i1;1ts_ in the last The Marist_deferisethen forced a
result was the· same. And after seven mmutes; g1vmg the- Red bad pa,ss that, got by. the point
the:
Red Fo~ef 76-75 loss,_ they !:_oxes_ a-_4~.-40 haU:time lead. _ -. . guard into the backcourt; bufthe
had an ~3 re<!ord by.a totalofjust•
,
. . · Jbe
·
Pu_rple K.:mghts, -now_-
-
4-3 · IndiansJet ilroll down court and
six·points.
-
.
and . }eading the.
-
CACC,; came ·_ihe clocjc"expired b~fore
a
Marisf
;Mai-.ist
als(l
lost to Jona
77-74
in
back!" the sec9nd hc1lf behind the · player-ccpuld. retreive·
it.-.•'. ,,... •
their s~ason~opeger_Nov.,29-atid ,shootmg of.B<!_bEelman.(23 pts.}_/Tonight the Red;•Foxes face
83-78 in their
GACC
opener with ~ob Merena (19) and. Lloyd Mercy~for the' first time- evehit
Kings last Tuesday;both at horrie _Syvertson (17). The ·/tr10 w~s Dufchess Community College at-8
in the closing minutes. · _ _
e~ou~h to offset the tornd p.m. They will -visit Bloomfield
"Jt!s·really"'frustrating," said shootm~ of Glynn B~rry, _whowas for a_ CACC enco·unter Saturday,
coach Ron Petro. "All of the ga~e-high for Marist wit~
!7.
then close out their 1975 segment
games have
_
been close but we
Syvertson ~ut th_e VlSlto~s · of the schedule with their first:
. haven't been playing as a team." ah_ead 52_-50 with. a Jumper six ever meeting _With st. Thomas
There was- certainly a lack of mmutes mto the half but Bez:ry Aquinas. This CACC game
will
be
unity in the closing minutes of the and ~'teve Pettus, who ended ~1th played at Our Lady of Lourdes
game with Kings. Marist was up 12, led a H-6 spurt that rega~ed H.S. in Poughkeepsie beginning
75-73 with 3 :35 to go before the !he. lead .. Syvertson lat~r hit a at- 8 p.m.
-
Purple. Knights outscored them Jumper with 2:20 left which gave
·
·
·
· ·
10-3 down the stretch. .
Kings the lead for ·good and also
"We weren't working for a added two--free throws shortly
-decent shot," explained Petro, • after to clinch it.
·
·
_.,,
Bulletin
....
·'
ByTHOMASMCTERNAN
MARIST
FOOTBALL
ITALIAN STYLE
DECEMBER 11, 197S
Iona "better than BrooklYJ! did,"
referring to the season:-endmg 29-
0 whitewash. over the Gaels.
Levine said that it was
im-
portant for the team to help in
The -Marist Vikings Awards recruiting new players-for next
Dinner was held Tuesday night at year. ·
"I
have never been in a
the Italian Center in downtown situation where I was down to the
Poughkeepsie.
last man
in
so many positions in
After club director John Secone so many games in .one season." ·
thanked foe volunteer ·managers - He explained, that _-the co_aches_
for the dedication and support, were·- able to recruit only m the
awards were presented to• Mike , local area. ·
-
Schlitte (Spirit award), Bob · Noting that the team has been
Cunningham (defensive MVP) operating in the
.
. r~d th~.Pa_st two
and Jim Van Voorhis (offensive seasons, he_ CO!)cluded,- We must
MVP). .
'no~ look back. _We ~ust put our
· Head coach Ron Levine told the -foot forward and fight for our
audience that he was proud-of the place. We_. need more people so
team's 6-3 record, noting that this - that we wll hav~ ~?re votes and
was their strongest schedule support-at ~anst
0
· _
eyer .. "We usually play 2 or 3
_The eve~?1g c~~e to a close
strong teams each year but every with . the , mock .a~arps an-
team this -year was capable of nounced. by Ron Glac~lm and
beating -us," he said.
. · . .
Betty Bnx a!1d ~he drawmg of the
He also pointed outthat \Ye beat fund - r_ a 1s 1 n g .. r a
f.f
1
e.
::.;._.-._.·
.
.
.··
..
-_
.
,,
:
..
lligh On
SnQrts
PETTUS NAMED ATHLETE OF
-THE WEEK
Phil Colangelo, Viking quar-
terback, on what it was like
Steve PE!ttus, a junior from tryingto fill the role-.'.vacated by
Jamaica, -
N.Y.,
has been named··· All~American passer.Ed Bonnett:
Marfat, College Athlete .Of -the "There was a lot of pressure from
Week for theweek ending Dec. 6. the coaches"alwaystalking aqout
Pettus, a guard on tne varsity Bonnett. I didn't measure up to
basketball team,.shot 8-for-14 and his standards this year but with a_
scored
18
poirits in the team's 71;.:·· Htt1e·more hard work hopefully I
75 loss aL
-
Montclair State can coine close
to
it."Colangelo
Saturday. He - also scared~ 12 was the - second-ranked signal-
points and led tlie. team with 8 caller _in the Met-8 this past fall ...
rebounds.in last Tuesday's 83-78. Bob -Beatrice, a former Viking,
loss -to· Kings. A tiansfer from . coached_ the Elm wood Park
Post Jr. College, the 6-l Pettus · _fN.J.) Bombers to second pl~ce
leads the team
1n
scoring (14.3
m the Bergen County Jumor
ppg.) through .the first three Football Conference . .. .
games.
·

·-
Club Baseb~ll -t~am will ho!d
·
another meetmg m January m
NOTES FROM -THE·' SPORTS hopes of finalizing plans for their
DESK:
first season .. ; Kenny Grimes
o
Despite- thefr•
1
disappo1nting
finish;.• the, . ~arist .. cros~-coimtry
team·was
ranked tenth·m· New
York in the final poll of the state's
cross-"country. coaches. · Syracuse·
was· ranked first,- followed ·by
Army, Fordham, Manhattari•and
· Columbia ... Rumors say that
Marist field coach Len Olson is
heading for West Point. ..
scored 21 Saturday night but. J. V.
· basketoallteaiii was defeated by
Montclair' state·
83~77.-
Grimes
earlier scored
~
in the one-paint
loss to Kings.
·
·
NOTICE
-
All men and women interested
in playing on the Miirist College
Tennis teams and practicing
indoors at the beginning of next
semester, please come to a
meeting Tuesday, Dec.·
rn,
at 2: 15
p.m; in the gym.
In basketball Kings CoUege is
off to a good start in th~ CACC
.with wins over Marist,.concordia
and Western Connecticut (99-91)
... Bloomfield has
wjns
over
Ramapo and Nyack (81-61) ... THIS WEEK
IN MARIST
West Conn beat st. Thomas 86-74 SPORTS (Dec. 11-17)
in first -CACC game· for both·
Thursday, Dec.11 - Basketbair:
teams. Along with Ramapo, they · Mercy - at Dutchess Community
are new members ·of CACC this College Falcon Hall; Varsity - 8
year : ..
-The
Marist women are, · p.m., Women - 6_ p.m.
new members of .the Hudson
Saturday, Dec. 13 - Basketball:
·referring to· the several forced
The difference Saturday was
shots taken _ in those crucial that the Red Foxes never once
minutes. "Everyone wanted to had the lead ·and were actually
win by themselves but we l}~ve to trailing 74-65 with 3:20 remaining
start playing together if we are to before their' comeback.
It
wasn't·
The Marist Basketball team Valley Conference, which also-- _at Bloomfield; Varsity only - 8
won its first game of the season · includes · Concordia,
Iona; p.m.
with a 77-71-victory over Western Dominican,
Manhattanville,
Monday; Dec. 15 - Basketball:
$
1.2 Million Fieldhouse Cont.
or soccer during inclement
weather,'' says Foy.
''It
also
p_rovides · a facility -to draw
spectator- events to the l.irea for
the general public."
· According. to Gartland, a.
condition of the Mccann grant
is
thaf the :Marist p·ool be made
available to organized com-
munity- groups in
a
manner -
consistent with the needs . of the ·
college.·
~
-- :·
Commenting on this aspect, ·
Foy indicated, "We ·project that
college: ._usage ·and __ community
usage will be fairly compatible.
The pool will ·also be made ·
availablEL
to
alutruii. · We an-
ticipate no conflict with ot_her
Goldman, Director of Athletics;
Ronald Petro, Assistant Athletic
Director and· varsity . basketball
coach; and physical -education
instructor William Austin, - who
will direct pool activities. ·
· local pool facilities. Our surveys
indicate that there· is sufficient
demand~ . - for
'
recreational
facilities in the county
fo
avoid __
c.ompetition.'_:_
·, : -. :
< __ '.
-
__ - -
Poughkeepsie . architect Paul .
Connecticut State Tuesday night Mercy; Mt. st. Vincent, . Nyack at Our Lady of Lourdes. H.S. -
at Dutchess CC.
,
·
-· and White Plains. Top eight Varsity vs. st. Thomas Aquinas -
Earl Holmes led the way·with teams qualify for· post-season 8 p.m., J.V. vs.
Albany Jr.
21 points -arid
10
rebounds, and tourney in early-March ... ,
CoJlege - 6 p.m.
scored the decisive -bucket with
1 :25 remaining in the contest. ·
J"F'
/
l
R~;~;::fi1-f/Je;::r:;al~i~. "'.---
~---~ome_-,i _:·.
mp· rove_
_and were down 59-55 with 8:00 to
.
go when coach Ron Petro sent out .
four substitutes. Walt Janeczek
and . Neil Lajeunesse . responded
By
THOMAS MC TERN AN
-with
·10
points ·apiece; Janeczek
had s~veral key baskets down the
"Each· person cari-do something
well; shoot, dribble or play
"Teams that base their whole defense - but no one person can do
.- success on wins and losses will be them_ all.'•
frus~rated many times,'.' said Sue
Co-captain Eileen Gregg is the
Nye, women's basketball coach
team's top scorer, averaging
9
following her team's 58-40 loss t~ · ppg. Sue · Baroni, another
stretch.
·
· ·
-·cACC
Basketball
,_·as of
Dec.
8
Kings
-Bloomfield
w.conri'st:
-oow1mg •
..
Dominican · last
Thursday, . returning player, scored 10 points
making them 0-2 this season: -
against Dominican after missing
''O~r.success·is measured by the opener. · .
..
our improvement," she con-
Other · starters include co-
tinued. "We hav:e improved ._captain Robin Smallwood (5 pts.
-
greatly·since the Iona game (an· vs. _ , Dominican)
Andrea
80-16
loss): The defense :·was Holubowitch. (7 pts.) Wanda
much }~ett~r but _more important, G}enn and Anne Cullinane, who
,.W
I.
we_ were able to see what was sat outthelast gam~ with a bad
3-
·o
happenipg on the court."
- ;neck. Nyepraisedthe strong play

o
_.:Nye.added;_ •~'rhe:players are. oLReggnayGreen
1
Holubowitch
1-
i -
disappointed but not depressed - and Glenn ·against-Dominican.
Cariin .· has · .. desigri_ed __ the . 11ew
facility. ,Also present'. at
·
·_the
;
conference announcing the grant .
£
was Louis' Greenspan_, : ·con-
. · MARIST .::
·-· Nyack-' . • .- , -
· o _ o
over losing. While no one likes to . ''They·
_
'
are · really coming
·o ·
1 go.ou~~ndfose,th~y"-keepcon,iing around.''. ,,.:.
.
0 1 back and -they ·still enJoy ;_prac- _ ;,Notfrig he~ team's ine~perience
. 0 1 tice.''. ·
-
· ·
- ·
· ,,
(_ We re· still· working
·
on · fun-
.0 __ 1
-
.
There are n·o outstanding · damentals")'Nye pointed out that
t .
structio~-C
manager.. Repr.E!se1F -
,
tatives : from· - Maris{:: included
. r'·
Thomas~W.~Wade,•rnre~tor:
0
.of
I•
.
Dev¢loi>menf;:: .. Dr.· . Howard ·
-·-4.
,
•,,
'
--~,,
~
·
--:•--;
.
'
-
f.
f>-
;_.·
:,
_..
r·--·~
.. st.Thomas
Concordia- ' ·.
Ramapo_:.
,._
·:
:_
-
-
----,--
. o,
1.
players; like Joan Small was last
-· ·
··
·• · · -
,
· ,
· year, according to'· the -coach. _
. CONTINUED ON PAGE
7


15.11.1
15.11.2
15.11.3
15.11.4
15.11.5
15.11.6
15.11.7
15.11.8