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Part of The Circle: Vol. 25 No. 4 - October 9, 1980

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town.
!"
"The
':"
on.l
f
problelri is"finding. the
·:
.
By
Alexandra Corcoran
·
,.
again since mQst ofthe people are stranger
s
zippers (to
)
he
,
tent entrance) because there
,-

,
·
·
'.
Staff Writer
-:
'
'
·
to ·each
.
other
,
.'.
'By
the end of the semester,
.
.
.
are
so
niany
·
·
qf
.
thenf
: ·
11
:
takes practice
;
~::.:/_:.
·
.
: .
_
.
_ ·
_
.
_
.
·
.
.
.
..
. ·
.
.
I think that people will be
.
tight because we
..
· :
c
pying with cats and s~unks and catching
practfce, practice/
'.
he added with a laugh.
--'.
_:
i
'
'.'I ha;ve a lot more roorii to breath,0,~ays are out here together," saytone _former
.
<
-.-:
-
·
'
horseh~
.
"cis
·
noc
:
exactly
_
what Briitn
,>
"You should
-
try
-
standing onone foot
.
Fitz Karch
,
asophomore Craig Hall resi-.
·
Marist
.
campi.lssenior.
·
_
;:r
/:
·
.
-
:
·
Lam,bec
_
lc
~xpected w~e~
Ile
-
~as
.
se:1rching
c.,
~nd
:_
get!iri~
'
i11~id
_
e
a
_
,
tent- afte~. y,isiting
:
the
~
>
d~nt
.
C::raig Han
.
is
:
the
::
:
of
_
fa~inpus
·
-
do
,r
-
~-;?
!he students have
:
~1~0
_
found ~umerous
·:t~
:
:.':
_
<
for
·-
off-camp
_
us
.
.
_
_
h
_

_
s
_
1s;i$~
.,
~ut
t~~t
s w
_
h~t
__ -
_
:
_
-
~
.l9Cal
.
~r1n~1~g
~ta~h~hm~n~
_
s
_
~
>>--;
-
,
.\
··:
_
·
.·. ··:·
~
·:
:
·
.: ..
:·_-
m~t~ry
-
at
-
-
Jhe
.
--
Oakwood
-
~·-
School
.
_
wh
_
ich
--
.
:
·
th1ngs
-
to
get used to
_
hv1ng
_
at Craig
.
Hall ..
Ir
>f
('°.:
.
_ • <
_
h~pp
_
e!}ed w~eri hf
decid~ to turn his
_.
~all}
;;
_
>
:
~~e~~•
--
~)_it
_
t!
(
h~µ
_
se undet
~
the
_
s
_
tars
,
>
:
;:
ho
_
uses
:
fift>'~~e~en MarisrCo)l
~
gc students
;';;
yoli
·
0
4o
_
not have
;
a
·
car to get to and from
·
·
:
.
:
.:
,
,
..
pmg.hobby
_
mto a wayoflife.
.

-
.

.
;.
,
~as not res1stentto CQl<i
,
weaiher either::
:
·
~;': -
The Oakwood
:
c
.
ampus 1s located
·
approx
:.
campus, then you must rely on the van ser
0
.
:
-
-~:?
·-
:
·
.
<"
:
Lambeck, a_senior political science ma-
. ·.·'·
.
'Jff
_
\va
F
thi~tY d,~gfees
/
a
:
c
_
ouple
:
:.
0
C
;
0
J
nfatelf fiverhiles'soiith ofMarisfCollea;e."
.
vice provided
.
by
Marist .
.
The majority
.
.
.
/~
'
:
~;
\
·
'
j~
f
>i'
~!vep i~
-
~ tent
:rr~~
Au~us~
'.
llritil last
·
ni~ht;s,''- ~
:
e

rerii~~b~~s-
-
~•It was c_o.ld when
::
:
/
:
',
Jh
.
e gen!!ral fee~iitg fre>ii
l,°'
tid~ing
·
wit_h
_
tpei:e fo~nd th~ $ervi~e
to
be adeqate but
· "
._.,
w:~c;k
on ~he west side of Oregory
,
.
House~
..
· I get
_
out
-.
of the tent m the mornmg
,
a_nd l
.
~m,n~pf the students about
-
C
_
r~g
~
Halhs have nohced some Iazmess on the weekend
:.
despite
_'
spraining his ankle white playing- would take my clothes into t~e. Gregory
·.·
,
,:Very
,
posi
_
tive .. They-.can
·
see
-
~ kit of poten:·
:
·service
:
·
-
·
.

.-
·
··
_
·

.
.
--
-

·
_ .•
·

.
·
tennis this fall.
.
:
·
.
..
- · ·
'
.
.
.
~
·
.
,
·
· '
.
·
.
.
_
_
,
·
·
·
·
·
-
Many studerits
·
feel thafthe security pr
_
o-
_':-t
"'¥y
:
_
f~~nds·
_
a_Iw~y~ asked
.
1!1-e ~hy
_
I ·
,
vided isn't enough. Peopl~ ~ave ~oticeihhe
,
·._
·
,
didn't find
,
sgmewher~
;
el~~
-
to Jive,
.
·
says
::
other entrances
-
open at )llght when they
.
.
the)l _ye~r
.
old acl,vent
_
urist who discov·ered
should have been closed and l~ked . .They
·
·
·
·.
he was
:
without an apartment
_
after oil~
_
of
-
.
.
feelthey should have more security person-
.
.
his
;
_
WO
_
i.!~d
~
I?~
TQOnirftat~
-
~~~~~
:
fo
·
mr~e
,-
riel in the building
:
:
.
.
. ::."'-'
~
"-
'.
.
..
.
·
else~ltere
5-!~
t

<:lid1ft
,~
wan~
:
t
_
o
:
.
b._~ome
·
.
a
·
A big complaint
·
J
rom a
_
num!>er
.
of
·
·._ .·
burden
:t
oanyom:else.'~
/
~;
;":,-'
,
:s.
:_
;:
\
;;,
.
.. _
,
students is that the resident:advisors are
:
·
~!lll>eck,
:,
who
_
(:J~ms he
:
,
~aye<
L
!l:~
.
o,~
t
almost never there. People
.
have bee
,
n lock
~
·
$300
:
tci $400 in rent
-
payments 1,y hvmg
,
m-
.
:,
ed out of their rooms for hours.
.-
·
.
his five
:
by ten Joot ca11vassc~f )louse, says
The students
.
of
.
Craig Hall have found
he
.
encountered _pr:obl
,
eiris
:
'Yith
:
the
-
_
Mid-
they had to c~11terid with a lack ofinforma-
.
Hudson Valley wilderness.
/-+•:?.<,
:
· ·
tion about campus activjties. They feel very
"
;
''
.
Cold,
'
~ freezing to~c~~•
'
:
~!ld orga~i~;
0
~ninformed andJhink thatthe acimin
_
istta-
.
uon were pro}?~bly my great~t prc;>~!~ms,
_
,
.Jtl~~!:il~~rrtJJ.:1ICII
h;i:rsl~~lil~~
t1on should make an extr~ eff9rt to get m-:
he remei"f!bers;
·.
''I
_
hacl a lot o_f prob.Jems
,
formation out t<>.these stui:ferits. -The
:
fifty-
.
paying
·
.
m
·
y b
_
ills
.
because !
,-
:
co~!d
_
n't
.J
ind
·
seven residents want alLofMarist to realize
. them/~
.
he chuckles.
,:-:
.
:,
,:
,
.
;: ,
:
,
'.
·
-
·<
~
<
.
: ·
··
that they too, are Mar
_
ist College students,
-
.
·
"There wcr
·
e
:
inimalsJha_t walke4 passed
~
and
·
noLOakwood students;
Says
Marsha
.
.
(the terit openi!)g)Jn the niorning
~
_:
There
_.
, .
: '
,
C '
.



.

;


. .
·
.
•·.•

.
.
;
.
.
Hunt, sophomore transfer, ·~People
.
on
was a skunk ailda cat tha!_ walke_d by
;
but
:
·
<
·.
:
·
·
.:
:
:
:_.
.,·
·•
:
.
·
.
·
-
·
~
. .
:
.
·.
.
. .
·
·
-
. .
_,.-;
.
·
·
·
.
·
.
cainpus have; to know
·
that we are part of
they didn't bother me
.
A hc:>rseshoe would ~ouse sh,ower w1tlt
_
me. }lut u started get-
u~l
m
the bmldmg for the year, if Manst campus. Weare Marist!"
.
fly in my
·
window""every once iri ~
.
while
.
-
!mg cold an
_
!f
-
~P
.
e c;ana~1an g~e
.
wer~ fly•
<:- -
~dl back them up and help,
_
,
.>-~
-
:-,-,
.
·
·
from
:
the
·
guys
oh
the
:..
side
.
of Be~oit
,
mg south so It~?ught1twas time to II1ove
·
.
·
_
There are
a;
numb~r of good pomts
House.,, Two horseshoe boxes ar~ set up somewhere e!se .
..
.
.
·
.
.
·
. . _
-
brought o~t by the res1denptudents. One __
alongside the strip
.
of
·
grass
.
separating · Lambeck,
:
a
·
·
par~-t1me Secur~t:,: gua_rd,
·.
of. them· 1s the overall atmosphere of
Gre
O
and Benoit Houses.
:
.: :·
. ·
.
. ..
says ·that
:
no ~ne m the Admm1~trat10~
quietness. A stu~ent stated he
-
mov~d there
.
H~~ver, Lambeck says campin8while knew about his nJont~•!ong- campmg en-
because he _hoped
_
that _the atmosphere
attendin
·
school
cari
result in
·
some ad van-
counter.
--
,
.
_
..
•..
.
· .
.
.
_
v.:ould help him 1"?prove his grad
_
es. Accor:
·
·
·
l
d" t

t
-
.
·
~
-
-
...
·
_
·
Lambeck says
-
he hopes to go backpack-
.
~hng to June Agmlla, a freshman transfer,
t~~~
6~
d~~.~sh:ve:
tt'
wor~ abo~t getting
-"
ing as soon as he gets some free time from
.
"It's
a very good place to study." .
.
:

-
--:..
-
-
-
-
·
·
bedspins," he remembers about when he settlins}nto his
_
new
.
abode, an old far-
·
·
_
The stu~ents have !ound_everythmg d1f-
,it'f
,.-
·
--
:
-
·:
:
·
:-.
eturned
-
from some nights out on the mhouse m Wappmgers Falls.
_
ferent. It 1s almost hke bemg a freshman
.
. .
.
{,--~:.,

~
'"!

.
-
.
.. _
,
---
.-
.
-.
.
..
~
:
~
-
>
..
:/
;:-,:
._._~
:
;
-
;~~.,~r~t4t,lii~
-
.
..
--

,
,
:..,.,.·
.
\
I
i
J
































































































































































Page
2 · THE CIRCLE· October 9, 1980
editor
associate editor
sports editor
photography editors
advertising manager
business manager
distribution manager
cartoonist
,
:-

.·:
··.
\.
.. Loretta Kenn~dy
.
.
-
-
,.,
Marybeth Kearney
.. ·
Michael McCarthy
Chris McVeeiy
_ _-Michael Chung
Suzette Emerson
·
Charlie Lamberta
'.
Thomas Rooney
·
.
Jim Hage
.
staff:
Matt
.
Cole, Judy DiSclplo, Peter Fredsall, Monica Flrinegail, Tom
:'
.
Hassett,
·
Usa Marchesano, Mary Al
.
ice Russo, Deborah Valentine; Chris
Hogan, Eddie Glltenan,
·
Dennis Martln, Barry Lewis, T~eresa Sullivan,
·
Dawn•
Marie Sturtevant, Veronica Shea, Chris Egan, Anne Marie Calonita, Chris
.
Campbell, Mike Wiese .
.
·.
·
.
Ali
ie11e.:.
must
be
typed triple spoc~ with
.
o 60
°
opoc• mo<9ln. ond
~ubinltted
io
th• Circle
.
olflc•
no later
_
thon 6 p:m. Monday. S/lo,t
.
letters ore
·
preferre,f We reserve the
_
rlght to
edit
·
,.
oll
htll•rs. Letters must
be
signed. but nomfl moy
be
wlthhald upon
_
raque11.
_
L•llers wlll
_
·
. _
be
published
~
!
nu
upon ovollobllity of space.
·
·
.
.
.
·

.
Sen
ior

Pictures·
:..-
-
·
.
.
Dear Editor:
.
·
.
.
:
Center," weprciceedecl
·
'
there with.
·
.-
:'
Lasf
·
Monday
.
promised
·to
be
~inimal harassment
.
from
..
either
.
·very
.
much like the
.Moriday
·
our : contemporaries or
O
the
:-;
before, and so I was
a
bit l)leased
:
.
weather. To our
..
amazement (not
to learn that there would
.
be
:
.
to mentjon aggravation);
~
there
:;
something to
_break
·
up the
.
was no photo equipment, no
.
·
,
:
.
:,
,
monotony::
:
of
;
my
; ,
daily
.
rituat
·
·
photographer, or students to be
..
·
.
Having
.
'..
one of
,
his··
·
better
•,
;
seen. After making a
few
routine
moments, my
·
roommate
.
had
·
inquiries, wefound out thanvhen "
cqmpletely panicked the previous
..
they said
,
"Campus ·center" they
week and signed .the both of us up
·
·
(God
·
knows who
.
'.they'
··
are)
·
for our senior portraits. Normally
·
m~nt "Boathouse." Seeing how
this
·
would
'
have been
.
·
done
-
,
easy itis to
.
get the two confused,
sometime after the last hour of
.
,
I.
planned on saving any con-.
the last day, and
..
so we both
structive criticism until
I
found
beamed with a confidence that
,
some one who knew what was go-
comes only wit~
·
powe_r, priding
ing on.
.:
.
,
.
.
.
.
ourselves that we were firmly on
·
As
land my roommate arrived
top of the situation.
·
atthe boathouse, we were greeted
·
Being informed that our times
by a smiling women who asked
_
us
...
were scheduled only five minutes
;
to fill out a few
_
mi~or things.
apart,
.
a sudden
·
tremor of. fear
·
Within two minutes
I.
determfned
.
·went
racing through my mind.
the cause of l)erjoy; she was col-
Remembering
·.
how
.
past
:
ex-
·
lecting
$6
fr
_
om anyone wishing to
perie
·
nces
witn
,
various
get their picture taken: Skipping
·
photographers had gone,
.
I
was
·
over the exciting part of me kick-
·
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.;;____,,,-------,---_;_ hard pressed to figure
·
out
-
this
ing rocks for the next two hours,
I
·
·
..
·particular individual's recipe for
.

.
was finally to get my tu~n in front
..
Sometimes we look back and wonder why
overlooked that may not be aware of?
success. Unfortunately, after hav-
of- the camera: B~ides having
3
we weren't warned . .Sometimes
.
we have a
·
A
few years ago several students at a New
.
·
ing been at Marist for three years,
out of 7 pictures taken as 1 was
·
·
::
warning but disregard it. Often, it's too
·
late - England college died in a dormitory fire
:
I
found myself somewhat con-
leaning against
_
a
~
phone pole (the
to matter. Last Tuesday, the brush
.
Jire on
·
Fireregulations
·
becamestricter at numerous
vinced
-
(who could
..
say why) that
.···
somewhat ~p&.ced
··
photographer
.
the north end of campus alerted the atten-
colleges shortly there
.
after. Time hasipassed
.
·
after countless trials and tribula-
assured me that it would look
·
like
·
.
tions, the yearbook staff.would
a tree when
I
saw the prints),
I._
tion of some concerned students, but how
but the
.
threat is always present. Students
have finally gotten things to run a
·
had ·to hike
.
through knee high
soon will it be forgotten, while hazards still
have the
·
responsibility of following ap~
bit smoother- than the first two

..
weeds, just so thatl could achieve
·
exist?
pliance
.
regulations,
·
responding tc;,
.
the
·
.
weeks in the book store.
·
Nothing
.
the
:
proper effect. Personally,
I
Alt)lough new fire alarm systems are being
·
.
alarms, and
·
stopping
.
vandalism coricen1ing

:
like
a
college institution to shatter
·
·
.
waµted
my
_
picture taken
by
the
installed, this does not prevent fires from oc-
,
the alarm
·
s
,
>
Trust has been
_
placed in the ad-
the hopes of
a
naive and tnisting
<
Greysto11e, not on the bulkhead in
·
·
curring.The alarms will add·to student safe-
.,,.
. ministration and
:security
.to provide
.
a safe .. ·
senior.
·
'.
·
'.
.
.
,
'
.
·
:
.··• .
.
·
front of the boat house,-but for
ty,
but stronger efforts to stop
,
the causes are
:.
':
:
:_
canipus
,
and .J:,.ousing.
·
It
a
.
known fire
hazard
·.•
·
;
My roommate and!,
:
ni>texact-
six
.
:dollars
i
L guess
>
I
·
·
really .·
·
..
.
.
.
-
·
·ii· .
,.
h
.
~
.
.
.
.
h
.
·
Iy
.'being
_
the
pi1Jars of..the
.
Marist.
,
.s
should~~t
,;..
;;.,,.
ha.v.e
"',-"
exp
.
ect
_
e_d;•
.
•.-
:::
·
.,
·
·
,
__
·-
--,
.-·-
·
·
·
n~~
-
~d. T~e-~rash
:
that
~
st1U
-
.
~xis~s
'
Js
"
an
·
ob~
·s-;--,:·
stt
·
ex1sts;·t :en tt
-
s tune_to
·
~uest1onJQst
_
ow,l
_.
..
. -
social
·
commJmity
._

(excej;,i:
~
iri
::
the:
:~•
):yetything
·
;
::,;:t'C~;:
:
~
j
·
~:
::.,?
r~:
;=
;~
-
·::
.
vious
,
warning; are there
.:
others being
.
·.
·
safe the Mar1st commumty 1s.
.
:
after~hours
,
du
_
bs; ,rou
·
know the
;
:
·
:
-Just
as
a:
little h.elpful hirit te>
.o
.,

,
.
. /.
.
.
.
--·
-
_.
_
._.
;
'.
:
one'S
·
.
I'm
:
:
--
.
talking
-
<
about~
'.':
-.
the
··
_
_
:.
this
year~s
:
::
yeal'b<>Ok
..
<'
staff:
:_
try
>-"'_-- .
·
....;;.._...;_ ________________
-'--_________
..;,.;,;,,...;..;.,;.;__,;....-------'-------
.
Caboose
·
·club,
··
,
the
·
.
Rockwell
···.
scheduling the appoiiltmerit times
,,
Association'and the Cinema
~
55
>
a little
·'
mor¢
.
rationally.
'
You
Theatre. Critics Guild),decided
;
;
would
:
eliminate-
.
a lot of
·
that this would
be
as good a'time
,
headaches
/
missed ,c;Iasses,
.
and
·
./
as any to ~how our enthusiasm. for
·
·,,
postponed
·
meetings. Besides, if
·
,
·
.
the
••.
school's yearbook .
.
Money
'-•
you waritto be thought of as pro-
,
w.as
·
·
. ·
no
_.
oJ)ject,
:,
although
.
a
fesJ;ionals, iork like" them since
wrihkle'-free
·
shirt
:
proved otir
·
I'm sure this would benefit
·
.
-,------=----------~
;
toughest adversary
~
.
So, with our
·
C
e'veryone through incrcased
·'.
sales

·
.
goals set and our

hearts comm.it-
·
.
·
and a better y~book.
·_
Just one
The fans. Yes you, the students of MarisL
·
first loss
bf
the season~ Having to pay their
·
~
.
_
ted
~
:
..
we_ ~h~d tile ~mour of t
_
he
'.
last
.
note, try to
.
·
fef
/
.
a
College. This week The Circle congratulates
.
own way
'
to the college and into the game
-
'
:
"
-
aca~~~iculn an~
·
done !Ile
~~!SC
'
photographer
·
who wa~n
t
JU
_
S
t
· .
.
..
·· · ·,
h
fi

b
.
h
.
·
al
.
·
1
h
d

~

·
··
1

··
.
.
·
·

·
·
'

·
of
..
,
nuddle
'.,
c
.
lass
..
res
.
~tab1hty,
_-
released from detox.I Just wa
_
nt
'.
:
you ont e me JO t at you
ave
.
one m
the 1al!s neve
_
r et up encouragmg the players
_
nanicly
.,
it·sport coaJ and
'a tie.
to
say
,
tha
_
nks to:the siu
.
d~nt
·
·
supportingtheRedFoxesthisseasononthe
··
-'
on.
. ..
,
.
.
.
..·
·
Aridsowewereoff
;
.i
.
·
..
volunteers :who collected
/
the
.
·
gridiron. With wins over Brooklyn College
'
.
.
· It is
.this
typical fashion that has lt)ade the
·
:
Everything
~ega1'
fo
run poorly
:_
money and
_
donated theif'time as.
~
and St.
,
Johns Uruversity,the students ofthi~
1
football team;
·
and the rest
·or
the sports
.
.
from
-
the start;
.
btit undaunted, we
.
part of the yearbook staff:'
"
· -
..
·
·
-
school should be applauded forthe fine ef-
.
..,
.
teams in the school take notice. Players and
were:°"aetermincd
.
to
stick it out to
.
.
.
;
cheers,
.
.
fort.they have sho~n
.
iri
making Marist Cot.:
coaches both agree~ that the mo~tjni°portant
'
the
.
.
J>i
.
tter ~rid
'.:
iJaving signed up
.
Greg Sydor
:
·
lege a
·
football giant in Division
Ill.
.
.
thing
_
the
.
s~h
.
ool has going
·
for itself~ is the
,
.
uiid~r
(
the
:-
-
he.tdi_rig
:
<'Campus
·
/
.
·
·
·
'.
,-
We,
at The Circle -had
·
thought that
-stl1dentbc.:>dy:A.strongbodyniakes
.
astrong
.
:
.
·
s
·
·
.
.
w
··
h
?
·.
·oothingmorecouldbedonebyyou,
the fans
•·
team, and
-
win or lose; this body has been·
·
.
.

.
>
.
lriCe •
·
en .
·•
and student~,
.
but we were wrong. Last Fri-
getting
·
stronger
.
and strongei with
.
eac11
··'.·
·>
'
:.
,
: ·

~
.
·.
..
.
.
.
.
.
·
day evening, iri the pouring rain at Iona Col-
week. \Ve at
_
TheCircle once again say thapf
:
<
J;)
_
ear ~ 1t9r:
.
.
'
.
.
:
.
.
.
.
. ··
Here we
..
are, well into
:
our
.
sixth
>
lege
·

in
·
New
Rochelle,
a
fine
·
amount
of
·
you to you

the students of Marist College.
:, .
.
·
·
:•:,
'
,
,
In:r
.
eact101! to the
:
1mpe>s1tion of
·-
week Qf the
:
-
1980 Fall Semester~
·/,
students turned out to witness
.
the
.
Red Foxes
'
·
·
·
·
·
-
·
·
a lengthy and stnngcnt set of
and
-monies
<
have
:
just
·
J:ieen
·:
Financial board Guidelines, I ask
.
aUocated, if
·
.
at all.
-
I'm

told
~-=----,."."""'.'--~--..;,,...-_;,___,. ___ ,--___;___; ____
-'-_,:__,___.:__,--__
,:_....:,:,;_....,:_..:__
.you
·
prinnhis Jetter:
.

·
almost all of'the applications
~
(35) -
·
·
·
'. ;
It
s
·
eems safe
fo
as
·
sume that in
· : .
have been fille~ out 'improperly/
.
__
.':
the
'
midst' of t~e various changes
,
What have all the club presidents
·
The success
of
.
·
any
·
institution depends
·•
·
largely
.
on the
_
accomplishments
·
of its
pred~cessors. This college would never be
where it is today if other students· did no.t
pave the way for the future classes to come.
This weekend, many of our
·
"ancestors"
will
be on campus; Yes, this weekend is alumni
weekend. So, those familiar faces of people
-
-
.
that you think you know btit really aren't
quite sure you know, you probably do know,
in a sense. They are the faces that you may
·
have passed on your way to Donnelly a few
·
,
semesters ago. They are our representation
·
in the "real world."
·
While being at M~ist, sometimes it is
·
on campus, from ~~ministration
forg<>tten to do or have done in-
·
-
to ~onstructiori, there ex!st~ tur~
.
• correctly~ Obviously something
·_
moll of some degree. This.is the
someone didn't like,. or
.
a new
first of such;
.
'revised'

set of
..
guidelines
-
As a club officer, I see 1t as my
wouldn't have been written.
respon_sibility to look out for the
Secondly
;'°'
let me give
,
you
·
a
·
h~d to imagine that there is another world
better mterest of the students who
bureaucratic for instance;
'.
ff
I
functioning outside
.
of the "bubble"
·
of.
~erve i':1
_
.my organi~tion and !he
.
need~d
'to
purchase a roll
.
of
Marist.
Yet,
there is, and upon graduation, .
immediate commumty to . which
masking tape,
I
would have to fill
all of us
will
be thrust into 'this new world.
we
-
focus . our . en?ea~ors.
~ut a purchase order (in, triplicate)
1!-_owev
_
er, this pre!111se .is tamted
_
get it signed not by one, but by
So, why not talk to some alumni and find
with discrepancy m as much as
two members of the RB.
If
ap-
out what that world is really like?
.
.
o~r relationship
_with
the Fi.nan-
proved, I must still wait twenty
When you see that familiar face
.
that you
c1al
_
Board
.
1s
concerned.
four hours (one business day) for
recognize as the person that
-
·
~lways put ·,
~
·1
-
find that my activities are, in~
.
·
a check to clear from the business
potato chips in his sandwich, ask him if he ·
.
·
.
advertaritly heavily affected by
office to satiate my need. How
still does and strike up a conversation. Find
the decisi_ons and- policies of the
about that for expedience?

-
·
F;B.
and· the C.S.L. Point in
I get the
-
feeling that I'm under
out where all these Marist graduates have
reference,
'
monies allocated
.
to my
·
the gun, for if
Hail
to adhere to a
risen to, becaµse you'll
be
right behind them
·
organizafion
are
.
strictly

·.
guideline such as this, they have
'
.
in the years to come. And, togetherness
monitored by these branches of the authority to remove me
,
from
counts in the real world just as much
as
it is
student government to a degree of
office. Safe to say, an Outlandish
.
.
imperative in the "bubble" at Marist.
int<>lerance.
·
Absurdity!
..
·
·
·
First, the lack of expedience.
.
Contin~ed on
page
5,
<
.









































































,,._,._
Fi_re-
h
·
azards
....,_
--·
"•
.
.
stil I eX-ist
.
' ,
By
Christopher
Hogan
Staff writer
when or where Maintenance wili"tnstall the
blocks. Pavelko was not-_available for com-
ment.
·
_
.
· The fire hazards that caused a fire last
A brush fire broke out last Tuesday ap-
Tuesday · afternoon
north, of the proximately
150 . yards
from
the
maintenance building at the northern end maintenance building and a half mile north
of campus still exist. ~ore tree trimmings of Gregory and Benoit Houses. Three Fair-
have. been piled on top of the original pile view Fire Department trucks and six Marist
and leaflets, old desk chairs, doors, and old Security personnel cooperated in putting
mainten;mce machinery are still in the area. out the fire. There were .no damages or in~
New fire hazards were found inside the juries reported.
·
·
Old Gym, ·
a
storage place for the
Pavelko called the site of the fire a "fire
Maintenance Department, in. which desks, hazard." He added that' most of the trash
doors, and other dormitory items are kept.
in the area was frotri the Maintenance
---- Director of Safety and Security Joseph Department and he had considered enclos- ·
Waters says he has contacted Maintenance · ing the area with a fence to prevent out-
Director Andrew Pavelko about both situa-
siders from dumping: But he also said the
tions -and Maintenance is expected to fence might interfere with cross country
_ "polic~ the northern area as soon as possi-
runners who use the area to practice and
ble." He added that Maintenance "cannot
.
compete.
_
do everything atonce."
_
Waters said another fire in the same area
-However, Waters says Maintenance is could burn southward and reach Gregory
planning t_o instalLconcrete blocks at the and Benoit Houses, but that was not pro-
- northern end of campus in order to prevent bable due to the "fast service of the Fair-
. -
~
outsiders from dumping trash onto Marist view Fire Department.
property. He added that he does riot know
Wheelchair lnvitatiollal
By Matt
Cole
. Staff writer
In two weeks, seventy-five unique.
athletes will compete at the McCann center
in· track and swimming events,. basketball,
weight-lifting, table-tennis, and· seve~al
- other sports. What makes these athletes
unique is they are all confined to
wheelchairs.
·
.
The Office of Special Services is sponsor-
competition includes a local basketball
team, the
EPVA
Warriors · (Eastern
Paraplegic Veterans of America.)
According to Special Services director,
Diane Perreira, the Invitational has been
successful in past years, and has been used
by . somer,t~thletes in preparation . for the
NWAA
'Olympics' (National Wheelchair
Athletic Association.) However, the meet
usually lacks a sizeable audience, and she
. invites all Marist students to come lend
their support.
·
.
The Wheelchair Sports Invitational, will
be held Saturday, October 25th; 9 a.m. un-
October 9, 1980- THE CIRCLE - Page 3
Wu Shu comes to Marist
Chinese martial arts, (Wu-shu), more
· commonly knowri in the West as Kung-Fu,
is now being offered to Marist students,
faculty, and staff and' their family
members as a non-credit course.
Kung-Fu is
a
mental . and physical
discipline that requires hard work and pa-
tience'. However, when one achieves some
proficiency in the art, the benefits are said
to be both many and rew:uding. Often peo-
ple practice Kung-Fu as a form of medical
gymnastics as it increases overall health
and well-being mentally and physically. In-
creased flexibility, strength, coordination,
and endurance are some physical benefits.
Mentally it develops concentration,
. awareness, and emotional stability. Social-
ly, it teaches us to respect other human be-
ings and by learning self-defense we
become more secure ·in an ever increasing ·
violent world.
,
The class will be taught by Bob Kaminski
who began studying the Fu-Jow Pai (Tiger
Claw) system of Kung-Fu in 1973.
Classes are to meet twice weekly and run
two hours each (Wed. 7-9 PM and Sat.,l-3
PM, Mccann Center dance room).
A
fee
1
of $30.00 will be charged, pro-rated after
October 15.
Especially encouraged to join are women
and children. Rape prevention, self-
defense, and street fighting techniques
will
be given special attention.
For further information contact Bob
Kaminski, room ·634 Champagnat, 471-
3240 ext. 266 or Ralph Zaccagnino, Benoit
room 206, 454-9466.
A- repo~t from Champagnat House Council
,.
By Judy
DiScipio
Staff Writer
All Champagnat House Council
members agree that there is more respon-
sibility placed on them this year. They are
"Basically what•we want to strive for in
considered authority figures and must con-
the whole building is unity," says Shelly
tribute to any decisions that may affect
Abdoo, a· House Council member for
Champagnat. As such, they will serve as an
Champagnat House I. There are ten House
arbitration board. Denise DeVincentis,
Council. members this year, representing
representing House III says, "We're going
Champagnat, who share the same goals for
to get involved with student affairs, not
the building's four houses. Their respon- . just social life." Morello, also representing
sibilities include supporting the needs and
House III, believes that this year
will
be
interests of the students, serving as an ar-
more successful than last year because the
bitration board, encouraging a clean, plea-
Council has more responsibilities enabling
sant atmosphere within the houses, and them to better · support the students.
coordinating activities for students.
Other major concerns of Champagnat
. ing the Wheelchair Invitational, which
features competitors ·· from five . Nor-
theastern States, each of whom may com~
pete in as many as six ev_ents. This year's
.
' '
-~
'.,
-
.......
.
.
·.
.
.
;
'
.
~
.
.
.,.
.
..
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:~j:j;,f.r'. . .':,
;~~
';i..:~...:~ .
..
...;~
~
,.,,; -
. til
9
p.m .
..
Tony Giannone, another Champgnat · House Council members are the house
House I member, says he got involved with
floors. Margarite Pennacchio House Coun-
the Council because he really enjoyed it last cil member for House IV, says the Council
year when he worked with Leo's House would like to keep up the quality of living
Council. "You 're involved with the at· Mari st, creating a "better atmosphere
students themselves," says Giannone.
for learning." Pennacchio, who shares this
Kevin Viana, also serving House
I,
says
position with Mary Wilczek, and Dave
that they will try to support the students'
Skrodanes, says that the House Council
interests. They hope to create unity among would like to improve campus living, keep-
residents by listening . to and supporting · ing more of a control over Champagnat af-
, ~-their
rieeli~ ..
.
: _:
.. fairs,
_
GREAT.
FORWAJCHING
.
YOUR
·
-FAVORITE
TEAM .. .INDOORS OR
OUT-DOORS-
·
UEonft
SIToa
It
·1 ,
·
'.
.
.
::
:
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';'-
.
-
.
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B
a·c:_
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.
✓,
It's a seat, a back rest, a beach chair-for
anything and anywhere your imagination
says you need a comfortable and convenient
place to sit. · The 20''x14" back rest is at-
tached to a 14''x12" foam cushion seat and
provides storage and the
duck
cover is re-
movable for cleaning. In assorted colors.
'.:.·
~
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:
·~':.:~'

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I


















































·
l,:tqu~ring
·
Photographer ,·
Realistically ...
• If
Marist were to.have a concert-what
group would you like to see perform?
.
/
more:
Marlene Volper, Freshman: I would
· like to see the Cars.
By
Keith Griffin
. Staff writer
college."
· ·
.
...
. which th~ entire ~omp~ny wU_i di~ss the
>.
. The presentation at Marist was a dress
play and its mearung, h1story,_and sub-plot.:
rehearsal for the group before-it starts its . with English classes. The group put~_out a ·
Last Tuesday· in the Campus .Center
40 show swing through high schools in
study guide that is sent to e~ch school
Theater the Community · Experimental
Connecticut and New York State.-This year · before the group arrives~ After the group . ·
Repertory Theater, Inc., performed the
will be the first ttme that the group
will
be
puts on the performance the students have ...
William Gibson Tony and . Oscar award
gbing in to New York City.
. a chance to discuss the play again with the ··•.
winning play,
The Miracle Worker. The
·
.,.
actors. Mrs. Dustin said, "The high school
group, known as CERT, played to a small
The funding for the· group comes from
audiences are very, very tough and having
crowd of 20 people, of which
15
were
many different· sources; "Money's · the
met the actors th_ey have a feeling that the .·
students at Marist. ·
·
.
name of the game," Mrs. Dµstin said.
actors are human beings and deserve a cer-
. The
·90 minute Rlay was well received by · They . are fui;ided by the Ne~ York State tain respect, and · the kids become· a very~
· the audience. After the play, Marist senior· Council of the
Ads,
IBM, CETA, the Dut-
fine audience.".
·
Dan Benoit had some comments about the
chess County Youth Bureau, and the Gan- .
play, "I thought it was enjoyable. Wfien I
nett Fund. The president of the Board of
The CERT group also sponsors· an in-
saw the first scene at the kitchen table I
Director's for the group is Dean of Student
ternship .. program with- Marist . College,
thought it was overdone.
I"
thought the_, Affairs, GerardA. Cox. He added,"
(I
just, where a Marist student· can: spend . a
fiQal scene was better.
I
don't like the stage·· wanted to say) how_grateful we are, this be- · semester touring with the group and earn
set." Benoit is a member of the Marist Col-
ing the third year they've brought it here
15
credits. "Our whole internship program
lege Children Theater Association and was
before going on the road.,,. The last two
with Marist is probably the strongest. (The
comparing this presentation of
The Miracle
plays the group performed at Marist were · group sponsors _internships with three other
Worker to the one that his group had put The Crucible and The Diary of Anne
colleges.) The Marist students have been
on last year. Directing Manager of
CERT,
Frank.
.
.
.

really wonderful." The director and one of
Virginia Dustin, was aware of the college
. CERTwill spend two days at each school
the original founders.· of the group is_
a
group's production: "The Marist college
in which it is performing. The first day that .. · Marist · Graduate of
·1972. He is Glenn •·
production was so beautiful that the com-. the group is there it
wil_l
hold
.a
pre-
Casale_ and graduated . Marist with a
pany was humble: about bringing it into the
production workshop: for the students in
.
Business Administration degree.··,
Higgins: Janitor_ Extraordinc1ire
·
-
.
\
By
Veronica Shea
maintains. that h/
is'
an "institution up
·. His concern for the physical and mental
there."
health of students is very sincere. He states
"After 20 years of marriage and no
With regard to Marist today in com-
that "kids should learn_ responsibility,",...
children,
I
now have a building-full of parison tei what it was when he started, he
and "how to accept the hard facts.oflife, ·
them,'' proclaims John Higgins, custodian
finas .thaf, '.'the kids are smarter, and the-·. - as well as the good facts of life.''Johnfeels
for the Housekeeping and · Maintenance relationships between students and teachers . that before anything, students must learn
Department. He began working at Marist has improved.>' Higgins, or John as heis · to cope with any situation that occurs
six years ago, after retiring from the . niost often r~(erred, is a firm believer in

since, "that's
what you're here for.''
wholesale poultry and meat business and .
.
solid education because, without it, "you'll
traveling to Europe and throughout the wind up on the street." John is vitally in-
United States.
·
terested in the athletic_s ·at Mapst; and he
Higgins' philosophy is that there are too
many unhappy people -around, and if he
can make them happy he has accomplished
something ... Among- his. many
0
quotable
quotes," the one that must echo through ..
. hundreds .. of residents' minds. is simply,
"I
fell in love with the kids and the at-
mosphere," says Higgins of his arrival on
carripus. His jurisdiction is . the 7th, · 8th, •
and 9th floors ofChampagnat Hall, and he
.
'
..
,."·
-
..
·
TR¥
~con·
l>RAYER:
•-MEETING::-

.
EveryTuesday.Night·
7:00 p;m.'.in Chapel ·
BIBLE STUDY:
·Every Wednesday Night ·
-
7:00 p.m.
·
· at Byrne Residence
Spo_nsored by Campus Ministry
Ext. 275 ..
·KNIGHTS
OF
-
COLUMBUS
··.Campus-Ministry is.seeking
out the possibility of star- ·
ting-a
Knights of Columbus
Council on campus.
Jf
you
are
cllready a knight_ or
would like more info about
·becoming
a
knight,
please
· contact: Mark. Wegg, Cam-
pus Ministry, Ext.· 275 by
the 15th of October. Thank
you.
tries to attend as many sporting events as .
possible.
J-{e
wishes . more• students would
.
be active in sports; both as supporters and,
rarticipants, because "a sound b9dy has a
.. '.'Put your s~oes on.,..
sound mind;••
Attentiti:ri"'Siht~ts1~c: -
,Final Se.nior-
Portraits
. -Will be
t8k8ri:
.
.
'
Thursday; October 23
Friday, Oc~ober 24
"
Sunday,
09tober26
.
.
.
>
Campu~ 10-1
P:m.
. Boat·Hou·se2-5
pJti.
·
· Formals
7-9
p.m.
Campus 10~1
p~m. '.~
:_ Boat House 2-5
p~m.>· :
.
.
.

Formals 7-'4 p.m ..
9ampus
11~1
p.m.
. • Boat House 2.;.5 p.m.
Sign up • Monday October 13-_t~, at the __
Donnelly Switchboard.
$6.00 Sitting Fee
(Includes Informal and Formal
if
desired)
· · $4.00 Retake Fee
Checks payable to: Thornton's Classic Studios~
Any questions contact:
--
~-----
..
---~---
- - -
-
-
Patti• 454-9909 Rm. 904
Katie;
471-7145










October 9, 1910 • THE CIRCLE·· Page 5
~~....;.._______,;_.Time ..
Out
FoT
th'e
Lord-_--~-
By
Mark
R. Wegg
an ecumenical view. Never_theless, [ would
_,,.
from my Christian viewpoint like to note
Unity BetweenJews:and Christians
some attitudes which I believe best behoove ,
the Christian to have toward the Jewish
On September
25,
Thursday afternoon; - community.
. ,
the Jewish feast of Succoth was celebrated
On a campus of a predominantly
by a small group or"students on the lawn in
Catholic population, the Jewish communi-
, the center of t}1e college campus, In the
ty, practicing its-faith. in the tradition of
spirit of ThanksgivitJg, those celebrating · American religious liberty, can indeed
\ the feast recalled the offering to Yahweh of
enhance christian spirituality. From a
the first harvest' of the year. ThJs celebra-
Catholic viewpoint, Christians are spiritual
tion is coupled with the remembrance of Jews, -for.the God of the Covenant is also
the wandering in the·• wilderness of the
the Christian God. The very heritage of the
"Jewish people before they entered the Pro-
Jewish people is c9nsidered by christians to
mised Land. To note this gathering of the
be Christian heritage--at least spiritually
.
Jewish community:is especially important _ speaking. Unfortunately, througho"ut the ·
for members of- the Christian faith, since-
centuries Christendom in ignorance very
. Christians, ih my _opinion, must have a
often neither cherished nor sought out
· sincere respect for_ the Jewish community;
linkage with this-heritage, but actually in-
- Unapologetically; I· share my "Christian-
·
itiated severe persecutions against the Jews.
·_ ness
0
.and Catholicity and admit the dif-
Most modern day Christians appear to be
ficulty of being completely objective_ within
repenting from this narrow-minded ungod-
Si.nee when -cont. from
2
I would like to know who has
· been vested this authority? · I am
also curio.us as to why monies
raised last. year are frozen and
subject to the same harsh policy.
Who drafted these 'revised' '80
Guidelines?
The bottom line i~ evident; let's
get Big Brother out of the picture.
I would gratuitously appreciate
financial assistance, but if being
subject to the technocratic fervor
of the F.B. and the C.S.L. dictate.
how I am to run my organization,
I feel that I could· do without.
Since when has the student
government become such a spend-
thrift?
To- reiterate, I express no
animosity, but feel that the Finan-
cial Board has overstepped it's
jurisdiction with the . imposition
of such restrictive guidelines. I
hope that others will speak out
and express their opinions and of-
fer constructive criticism to their
socio-economic environment.
After all-it's your money!
·
Jesse Paynter
ly attitude. In being open to learning from
the Jewish community, the Christian might
readily enter the alive pages of Scripture
depicting -the history of the Chosen People
as could have been done in celebrating Suc-
coth and thus find appreciation of their
own religious traditions. enhanced.
If
neither Christians nor Jews attempt to pro-
selytize each other, but rather support one
another and share with one another their
· lived faith, such feasts can , become a
niutaully enriching event.
. On the other hand, I do believe that in
sharing one's faith with another it is impor-
tant" not to water down what one believes--
for that would be-false unity. Unfortunate-
ly unity among religious groups is too often
seen as conformity and uniformity. Unity
must revolve around a respect and perhaps
an honoring of the uniqueness of the other
person's faith without compromising one's
own faith. (I have often noted in inter-faith
settings the sharing of one's faith was more
like taking a fine glass of wine, putting it in
a quart of water, and _then gulping it down.
That type of watered-down sharing doc~
more harm than good since it is based on
repression, not expression.)
Yes, I have my Catholic faith, and I am
grateful to God for it, as grateful as I
would hope that they who possess. the
Jewish faith are. By the Spirit of God I
believe that one can even be evangelistic in
· one's Christian faith and at the same time
be deeply respectful of another faith--
especially the faith of the Jewish communi-
ty. Certainly Campus Ministry has pledged
itself to assist the Jewish community any
way it· possibly can. I sincerely hope
that
every Marist student cherishes the Jewish
faith community on campus. Most candid-
ly, don't you think that is what God would
want us all to do in our relationships with
one another?
Rabbi Ragins to Lecture
"Coping with Anti-Semitism -- Lessons
from German Jewry" will be the title of a
lecture to be given at Vassar Temple, 140
Hooker Avenue, Poughkeepsie, on
Thursday, October 23rd, at 8:00 p.m. The
speaker will be Rabbi Sanford Ragins, cur-
rently a Rabbi at Leo Baeck Temple in Los
Angeles and lecturer in Jewish History and
Thought at the California School of
Hebrew Union College.
Rabbit Ragins is a graduate of Hebrew
Union College and earned his Ph.D. in the
· History of Ideas at Brandeis University. He
has studied in Israel, published several ar-
ticles, and served congregations in Illinois,
Alabama, Massachusetts, Nebra,-ka; and
New York.
His recently-published book, _ Jewish
Responses to Anti-Semitism in Germany,
1870-1914,
is a study of the beginnings of
anti-Semitism as a racial and political
phenomenon and the responses to it by
various groups among the German Jews,
including the orthodox, the assimilated, the
Reform, and the emergingZionists.
The lecture is sponsored by the Adult
Education and Social Action Committee of
Vassar Temple and the public is welcome to
attend a~no charge.











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October 9, 1980 · THE CIRCLE· Page
1
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
SocCerteaffl
·
fiiseS reCOl"d
.
tO
1~0
.
'
.
'.
-
~.
.
.
again Bob Sentoch~ik put Marist on .the
scoreboard first
.
The goal came with 32:02
left
in
the first half, as
-
Bob Cooper receiv-
'c
\
Vith impressive victori~s over Siena and
ed the assist. The second goal came with
·.·
Kings Point this \Veek, Marist's
·
soccer team
:
14:28 left in the first half, as leading goal
.
has
.
raised their
,
record to
.
7-0.
,
Marist
.
scorer, Raul Verne
·
scored. The assist went
.
.
defeated Siena on Wednesday
,
by ihe
.
score
.-•
to leading assistman
,
Julio Rostran
.
The
·--
.
.

·

of
3-0, and then proceeded to defeat Kings
·
goal was Verne's fourth
·
of the year
,
and
·
·
Point on Saturday, by the score of 2-1.
the assist was Rostran's fifth of
.
the year .
·
With these two victories Marist continues
The two players are now tied for the team
·
.
fo
'
strive toward an undifeated season and
lead in total
·
points with 9
·
apiece. Kings
.
'

·
an N,C.A;A. bid.
· ·
.
.
.
.
.
. · ·
_
.
.
.

foint scored thc.:i
r
·
orily
·
goal of the game, as
,
·
·
:
_
IrfW~dnesday's gat11e
.
against
·
Siena, Bob
t~ey.scored withjust 4_:09'left in the h~lf. In
.
· :·
Sentochnik led the way by scoring
:
two
the second ha!f, Mar1st totally ~ommated

goals.The first
·
score came
·
on what Coach

the gam~. While
_
Manst was gettl!lg off 12
-
Goldman called
·
a
.
·
perfect goal,
_
as Sen-
shots, Kmgs P~:unt was only
_
gettmg off 6
tochilik converted a Joe
-
Biltioa
·
pass into
shots at goahe Andy Homola. Coach
- .
,
:
the Siena net
.
The goal came at
.
the 44:27
.
Goldman said "with any luck at all, the
·
·
mark
of the
-
first half. Sentochnik
'
s second
score should have been 5-0."
-

.
goal
-
came with 29:30 left:-in the game, as
=··
-
.-
Marist continues to get great perfor-
.
Bob
-
Cooper assisted on
_
the
-
goaL The thircI
·
ma~ces from different people
·
each wee~
.
and final goalofthe game
.
carne

with 8:15
.
Besides great games by Bob Sentochmk
left in
'
the game, as
.
Bob Cooper
-
scored his
·
·
·
and Bob Cooper, Coach Goldman said that
'
·
··
third of the
-
year. Ed Isaacson assisted on
Jose Blanco, M
.
a~t Lovecchio, and Oyvind
·
the goa!. Coach-
'.
Goldman was impressed
la!sse,n also
.
played well. In M_arist's last 4
·
with his team's victory, calling the
·
game "a · games they have outscored their opponents
total
t
eam effort, thus
·
auowing
:
ine to clear
·
9-2. With conti11ued super performances by
-'
the bench.••
..
.
. . · ·
.
.
..
·
.
.
a variety
_
of people, Marist can look for
-
After the victpry pver Siena
'
,
.
Mjrist ~ar~ to _improving on their 5th place rank-
defeated King's Point on Saturday
,
:
All the
.
.
mg of Div. II teams.
scoring took place in the first half
;
as once
••MovinUf)"
Rlrt
-.
si:hcioi•:
~IICQl'II
.
l'olra
·
Rlrt
Scllool
· •
Record
Division I
:
- •
·
_
1
.
San Francisco
(10)
.
5-0
:
338
.
6
· FIU
2-1
·
-
2

·
Alabama A&M
(121
.
7-0
·
336
7
So.
Connectirut
·
3-2
-
1
3
>
Indiana (2)
_
·
&-M
.
296
.
8
UMSL
4-1
4
·
Connecticut
·
7
-
1
·
253
g .
Oakland
·
6-2
-
1
5
.
·
.
Phlla.
Textlle
.
4-0
-~
229
10
Seattle
Pacific
-
5-1-3
Points
t7
.
66
45
40
24
.
~
~~~
-
.
~
·
·
·.
m
.
Division
Ill
·
8
UClA
8-0
.
170
1
Glassboro
(17)
7-1
·
_
333191
.
9
.
SIUE
.
5-2
-
2
136
.
2
wash
.
(SI
.
Louis)
(41
5-1
278
10
·
Appalachian Stale
~
-
,
135
~ ~~
-
·
~~
268
.
.
11
.
.
'Mlliam &
Ma,y
.
·
7-1
·
110
.
, 5
Ohio We....,.,n
8-1
·
2f,6
.
12
Rhode ISiand
c

· ·
5-0
·
96
6
Ithaca ~,•
3-0
255
·
13
·
Dulce
7-0.
70
7
_Scranton
6-0
217
14
Penn
State
.
·
·
5-1
·
55
a
Wheatoo
&-1
165
J
L
~1!c/Milwaukee
-~
·'
_··
~3
·-
Jr
?
1g
~~
<
.
·
~

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:
,.: ..
.
,
_
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i
,:..
,
eti:
,i~
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r
?l.-
l
::(
:
i
-
'
'
·!t~,
~
~
-
:.:
-
-
:
~
11
._.
-•
i
,

,."'
_,
~
-

-
.
•·
·
Division
II
'
15
-flizabelhlQWri
5-1
34
.
·
:
·
1
·
lock
Hawn
(22)
·
5-0

.
183
16
Bates
.
·
2.0-1
30
· ,
. ·.
2
..
Eastern lfflnols (1)
4-1
;_
117
-
17
.
MacMumty
-

:J-3
23
~
'
.
3
...
..
,
w.
V.i.
w..i..~n
_
·
7-0
·
108
18
West
u.n......
.
.
4-1
16
_ ;
.
_
_
: ~sate
(1) ~3
.
1gr
.
-
:
rre::-,~..
.
tt~
1g
-111111)1aoevotoslnpalfflhese$
.
i
--
--
Honor Roll
-.
PAUL 'WELSH - 2nd placein
·
;
Mansfield Invitational
:,
,
:
BOU:S~NTQCHNICK
.
- 3 goals
.
.
.
.
.
t-
~
la~f2
games ·
_
.
·
.
,
}.-.
First
--
1\.nllllal
·
.
·
Rac(lll~(Jj~)l
TOumament
\
7

-
.....
_
_.
_
,:
.
·

-..
€la
_
ssic
<
·
-
.
:
'
Spon_sored
by
Marist College/Schlitz
_
Co.
_
·.
·
-
.
..
Friday,' October 1
O'
thru Sunday
;
October 12
M~µ-Women (two categories each A-B). Also mixed doubles.
Register at McCann
·
.
Cen
_
ter Trophies awarded
-
t<> 1st
&_ 2nd per
category. Tee
,
shirts wiU be distributed (until supply lasts). Entry
fee $1.00 proceeds to Varsity Cluli. This tournament courtesy of
Nation Beer Distributing Company.
'
,
Andy "Cricket" Homola makes a stop.
Cross Country wins
Mansfield Invitational
by
Eddie Giltenan
couraging is the fact that first man Wel
s
h
(24:28) and fifth man Cole (25:08) fini
s
hed
The Running Red Foxes put together within 40 seconds of each other. This i
s
the
·
their finest team performance of the season kind of running the team has been waiting
inwinning the Mansfield Invitational this for.
,
past Saturday. Marist edged second-place
Mayerhofer
·
was surprised with the
·
ursimis College by four points, 39-43. The results but knew the team was bound to
steady men/seniors Paul Welsh
.
and Ron have a race like
.
this. ~'.T~e key to the vic-
Gadziafa; came through once again
·
with tory was the ability to run a real race pace
2nd
.
and 4th place finishefrespectively. But and sustain it
.
The key miles in the race
the
_
real surprise for Coach Bob were 2, 3, and 4 and this is where the pace
Mayerhofer was the performance of the

·
had to be held," says Mayerhofer. Taking
next three men
.
Mark Wickham, Brian into account the hilly, 4.9 mile cour
s
e,
·
Hanley
.
_
and
_
Matt
,
Cole ran virtually which
s
ome runners believe is the toughest
shoulder to shoulder for
·
much of the race
-
one they
'
ll face this season, Mayerhofer
·
and
.
.
completed Marist's winning effort. had even more reason to be pleased. "They
"W
i
ckham caught Cole on a hill, and
·
the (the team) not only sustained the pace but
two were soon joined by Hanley," said did it on a course that they really shouldn't
Mayer ho fer. The three combined were able have."
to "shake" a crucial Ursinas runner,
The team
.
will continue hard workouts
thereby ensuring the Marist victory.
.
this week in preparation for Friday's meet
.
Wickham (10th), Hanley (11th), and against Manhattan, Princeton, and For-
.
Cole (12th) all came in to finish within 5 dham at Van Cortlandt Park.
seconds of each oth~r. Even more en
-
·
EQUAL
-
TIME!
The women's crew team, which was the
.
Drop, Diane Digit, Rosa Aglesias, Srs.,
"other" half of Marist's double victory
_
and Tricia Mitchell, Jeannie Ball, Diane
·
over Ithaca last weekend, is owed both con-
·
· Trabilsi and May Frunsy, sophomores, all
gratulations and an apology. Ellen Gilfed-
played a role in the victory and all were ig-..
-
der, a
Jr.,
Nancy Colligrasso, a Jr
.
, Debbie
nored by the Circle. Never again girls!
,
has had to move from Wednesday
•evenings to Tuesday evenings.
· 7:30
P.M
·
.
If you are interested please contact:
Fr. LaMorte - ext. 269
The first meeting
will
be Tuesday, 14th October.
·
You need
not
register
if
you have done so already.
..
..
.

..,.
.










































































.
·
._~ ·
.. · P11ii•-~·.rHEc1itci.E~·octobirt,1NO·
··
.
, , ··· ...
. ' . . : 10118,
raill,
h81t
Marisf ~trea~,
36~9:
?
. Bykiy
Lewb·: .
~
.
.
16 )'.~d run and.a sect?~d i:na touchdo.w~,
~~j~g~o~t
th~.'~r~/~~f .. ·Iona was.never.
rio/~6i:
~h~
~Illy·Jne · i'}~i:iofryJor i~
.
. . . · . ,
.- . , · _
·: . less then two minutes since the first. . · .-- .
forced to punt, while Marist had to give up · Buffalo State next:
week,
because we _have
. . . When it rains, it pours. It's an oid cliche, · .. ••we tried to get· back into the game too-:. the ball thr_ee times. Back Bob Pestrak took io play two games next .week. One to make
·
but one_ that best exemplifi~s. the drowning ·: fast, _
_with no momentum,,, commented o(-, . control of the I~na .of~ense; ~mass~ng 111
up fop_his one~ and t~t: _~_tlle~ t<>
~~t
Buf-
th~- Maristfootball team took'Friday night • 'fensive :
.
backfield·· coach - Bill· Dillion. ·. yards on 14 carnes, while· scoring twice ..

..
falo.' . · •.· ' ·
-c- • ,- · -·. .
• •• • : .··
in
New R~helle,'
as·
Iona band~ the Red ·. "\\'nen your · base .plays. don't go, then . ·"Neither. 'school
.
scored :·in , the third · ·· Defensive line coach Bob Stevenson ex- -
Foxes their firstloss inthree outings,-36-0.:<:: neither·wm the fancy stuff/'... .
·- . •
. quarter,
_as .
constant •raiJLhurt _Mar,ist's . plaincdthe ic:>ss _th!s way.
0
We .werebeat by
•· Playing aw,y' for ·the ·firs~ 'time- this - ::
·
.With the score. 14-0. Marist agaj_rlt<>._0k ~·chances even more. No.team_ reallywant•s- ·. a good tearn,-but 1f .we·played them a-week
_ season, Marist found themselves playing the punt, and after a personal foul violaton
to
have to pass,-ru.id the.Red Foxes- were : . !iiter ~e: couldhave,.beat th;ern.-The. lo~s
-
catch-up ball'throughout the:entire game. -· on· tlie,Gacls, the.Red Foxes had a.:first · forccd:to have-.the1r:rece1vers try to catch 1sn't.1mportant, next week. 1s. We d1dn t
Kicking off. to Iona, the .Gaels. simply ran · down on their 38. yard line. After two plays.-
~ses
_with !he rai_n coming iii_ t~eir eyes. . t~ckl~ and ~heir full backs beat us. Wh~t we
all over the·Red F~xes defense and_ m_oved
i(n,d two yards gained, Marist again·
kicked,
This did;liot stop Iona.from buddmg _upon .
<M
.was.,sound, ~nd
!10.
excµ_ses are given.
the ball quickly up. the•fieJd. ~oila senioF ;-and the baUwas downed by Iona aUheir. _ their· lead
~oµ~~
_as two i;>aul Attmello . The onlr good thmtis t_hat we came out of
_ Bob Pestrak took most of
-
the calls, and-· ~: _In ·a typical _ball control offense; Iona · runs .and
:a·
fielci goal str-etcllecf.~!he final
there fairly.healthy.
~- · . -.
.
· ..
• wi_th runs of)2and·.17 yards; the Gaels had~
-
passetl.once and ran six times, carrying the - . score margin to 3_6~0. ·•·.·.
-
,
0- •.
~
:,:._ ... •
.
·
;>· ,. : •.
As Marist .. head coach_ ;Mike· Malet ex-
the ball on.-the Marist ?'with third downdt · . ball all the·way to the Marist
f
yard line. It· -•
0
We tackled like sissy's·; No actually we : plained after the game, :•two years ago we
· was then· ihat qt1arterback Rich ·taprio
pit~:.
was Bob Pestrak ~arrying up the middle for-
didn't ev,en, do. that" expl~ned linebac~er ···1ost. our first seven,•-• so no need to caU it
che~ :out, to back Sal. Caporale 'for. the·-, his second -consecutive touchdown,:' and. Brian Katz.\'We \\'.9Uld hit them, and they
quits yet.As for the·Red Foxes, they get to
score:
A
Jim
McAuly field goal then put Iom~•s third, straight successful scoring ; .. would bounce off_ us and take·S~6 yardsa
make up (or the loss this Sunday, ~t home
Iona in front7:-(i.

. . . . · ·• ·_
·
:: ·· .:.· :,/drive. Jhe kick by. McAuly was.no good,
carry'against'us.
'.They
may -be better, but -~gll\D;~t~uffalo State'.
.
That was all . the Gaels really needed, : as . but . the first quarter ended with Marist ' · -
· ·· .. · · · ·
·
. ·
·
. Marist
~as
unable to block when they'had · down·20-0. ,
'
·

· . . . ,, ·
· ..• _to and .couldn~t move the ball in the air or_ . This kind _of play continued throughout
.. on ·the ground. As the Red Foxes controlled . the second quarter, with Marist unable -to .
. their fir~t offensive series, signs were snow~
ido
anything on qfferise .. Iona scored on ·the ,
• · irig as to just what kind of night this was to Red Foxes, but only in field- goal form; as
.be. Starting the ball ontheir own 35, a pass McAuly hit a 32 yarder with2:38 left
in
the
by rookie quarterback Jim Cleary to. Mike half. -The half ended that way, with Iona oil .
·-"- Spawn was incomplete. Cleary then peddl-·. top 23_-0 . ...:
. ,.
·
. · · .. .
·•
.
ed back and was sacked at the Marist 27 by
The first half stats seemed· to tell the ·
Defensive End Bill Cirrincione. With 3rd whole story, as··Iona had 14 first downs
and
l7,
a
pitchout to Preston Felton was no compared to the Red Foxes 2. On total of-
good as Iona's Larry Capasso recovered fensive yardage, Marist totaled 12, while
the ball at the Red Foxes 16 yar~ line. Bob the Gaels moved the ball for 217 -yards.
Pestrak then bounced off tacklers for the Another factor was the control Iona had
dwrber
be,r.
Wr
A11ow
whi~h~C'..!).Sts
so much
A
tti
uc:-esa
Paul Welsh, wbo finished 2nd in M~nsfield Invitational with a time of 24:18,
averaged better than S minutes a ~ile for the first time a Marist runner has cione
-U
ever. Paul led his team to a victory, over Ursinus College, a top Division
III
school.
·,
-
·. ·
'-c:.
, · -
--

. .
.
, :
.
_ ~roli1id. endJor a.TDand'an 8-6 victory.
: : In other games; Guido's Army marched
The Intramural seaso~ is begi~ning to
over: Homegrown 27~Q. Hugh Taylor,
pick up as two· more sports - soccer and
Frank Koz·and Kevin Babcock each caught
volleyball - will soon begin play.As men-; .touchdo\Vn··passes for the ~inners.· Phi
tioned previously,.all intramural sport& are · TappaKegga defeated Disco Stranglers 14-
open to faculty and staff, male and female, ,.o
·
on'a_safety, a Chris "Soup'' Campbell
0•
graduate and undergraduate. Soccer and
run and
~
TD grab by Paul Burrows. The
· volleyball rosters are available in the lobby
Number handed 5th Floor Rookies a loss,
· of the Mc~ann Center. ·Both ·sports will ... winning,14-6. Tom'Reed scored on runs to
have a male and female league; so ladies; if· · 1ead the winners on to victory. - ,
·
.
· you're . interesfed,· come on down!.· · In a rough game~ Maryin Sims scored
· Volleyball-will J?egin toward the middle of three times as the Skull Riders trounced on
: October, while,soccer w~II start later in the · the Bastards.- Also in that game, Todd
month.
. . _
:
.
·
_ Hasler threw two touchdown passes.
In intramural football;
·
the Rl,lzorbacks
The week ended with the Gators shutting --
opened up against the Kruinville Tubers. · the· door on the Penguin Club 6-0. Tom Ei-
The Razorbacks· after trailing 6-2 · scored.. sle scored for the winners.
·
. with' 1 :30 re111ai!:1ing as Frank DeQuino ran ·,,_
·
· ' ortly
169_0.
get
fa;:
The·lvy League
~~~•- ~
ballplayer~ ~and they . identify pe~~~nally ·
"financial-aid. rule, where there :are rio
with,
·
them. The_ ballplayer,

· doesn't
athletic scholarships; so you have to.
ex~
recognize this to a large aegree and con-
.. plain financial-aid; What we have to find
ducts himself as a business and doesn't
are guys and families geated to academic ·· understand the love affair> Ultimately I
excellence. If we.find a boy who wants to think there is going to be this big divorce_,
be
adoctor, lawyer, or in business, and is
and it's.going to hit the divorce courts and
. concerned academically, then were going to eventually the fans are going to pick up and
. have a great shot." With an these. restric-
leave.,, .
. -,·. . :_
.. ·
lions, can· Harvard or_ any Ivy.League
One of the-main reasons'for the Roast
school prosper• ih competitive basketball'?
was for the prominence and financial a1d of
"If
Harvard gave scholarships, we· would
·
· Marist College to succeed in Division. I
be"'·in the Top Ten;
If
you can find a Bill
basketbaU. No one be_tter exemplifies this
· Bradley, who is alse> dedicated to learning, ·progress.tlten ;Marist College President,
then you have it. It only takes two or three
Dennis Murray: "I'm· confident we can
guys-~"
.
C
. •
..
;
.
become
a
competitive Division I team.
_
One man who. no longer needs the ulcers '
·
·Academically, ·we're Division I in all our.
. and headaches of coaching ~nd recruiting is '
.
· programs, and I think it's a natural compli-
. former
Boston . Celtic star . player ~tid :_ meQUo our academic program to have. an
_ coa~h,
Tom,my Heinsohn •. Now . a fisher:: " ·athletic
·
program that also participates at
. man, business executive, and teleyision star
·
the,:highest .level
_
in this "country. I.• em-
from his Lite Beer com~erdals-, Heinsohn
phasize the concep(~houghcif-the.scholar-
_stiJJ has many thoughts of what is going on
athlete, in· that order: .•
~
w~nt
a
basketball
in
·.the game today; One e>bvious questiO'n .. teajn at Marist'where·we.can_ 'take pride,
:··was-the.
recent retirement
of
•one of his•
but I
_
also wantthe_basketball team.to take
·- former players,sDave Cowens. "He's kind .. pride in: the college., ~veryone is going to
. ofa strange guy, ·and marches to his own . have·to be patient in this·move, and all
.. beat.
It's very unusual for a guy to give up :, inusfsupport thi§iteam ·on a long: term
:-; at least a couple of additional years at that
basis. J'll tell you, iii a fiye or ten year.span· •.
f
S:il}ary;
but he is unique in that regard, and .· when we are winning andit's hard to get a
,. ther~
is no teUing what he will d<>.-.J:l.e diet i_t -

.. seat in the McCann Center, we'll remember
· Afl~e y_ears back- (laEghing); · taking
<>ff
two . -;:-: tliose that started 'on the ground. floor/':-.•
>.months of . the ·season before coming .
·
"This is a clfarice for Marist to/grow "
_
'
·b_ack.:'_, . . ,
.
. :..· ., ... ~-,
_.:,,·-·,r
c~rpm~,ntedl&Digger''~h~lps,andheadd-
: ''.·ff~
,
1~s<l~n ~ls9
_f
~~s,
_
t_ltat the. ~ge of t_he_
ed, .''It could be a quality mstitution w}Jere
·
: free-agent>
will eventually• be
~
sports
you could have everything · going in , one .
do~nf~ll. "'I think it will virtually destroy
direction; athletics and academics is the
all
sports, a~d d~troy the fans interest in _ w_hole commitment. Y'?u're not going to be
sports. You re m Boston and a £whole
a ·Notre Dame over mght, but the fact is .
_ generation of people grow up and they
you're ready to become something."
generally· have a ·1ove and fondness_ for .
·
"We're· All
Playin!P'
·
.-
·
:_
.Well, the football, soccer and
x~c
teams
are all on their way to successful seasons.
The crew gang and the girls <>f ·tennis and
: volleyball are also off on the right track. ·':
But another. season has opened up with a
· bang, a season that Circle sports plans to
cover with intensity, That season, is none -
other than intramurals.
Flag· football was the first sport of the
semester,, and rightfully so. It is easily the.
.
----
· most popular for the men on campus, and _ Most teams for .flag football are set ~P
ball carder by pulling a plastic flag off of' a
seems to l,e played with the most vigor .
.
well before the season by vigorous captains .portable belt. Blocking and passing is
Although . many a heart and/ or limb is
who may go to any length to secure a wino- -allowed • but tackling and · fumbles are
brokeri out on'the mean field each year,
ing squad. Some captains have_an advan-
against the rules._ Otherwise the game is
close to 150 students line up
OQ
the gridiron tage in "signing'_!- the biggest stars due to
much like the ones you hear Pat Summeral
every afterno.on for_ 4 weeks to determine
their popular bartending job~ .. Others are talk about, only you know the players per-
i_ts supreme rule of the flags. There_are·refs,. , forced t_o rely on friendship alone for at- . sonally, and the game doesn't take quite as
sweeps, long bombs, rubber .cleats and
taining teammates, but a good time is· long to play. So come on down, bring your
fights just like the pros so .that all the fun
always had by all.
· -
own refreshments and scorecards and cheer
· doesn't bdong to the p3:rticipants.
The game involves the tackling of the your buddies on.


25.4.1
25.4.2
25.4.3
25.4.4
25.4.5
25.4.6
25.4.7
25.4.8