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The Circle, October 11, 1979.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 23 No. 6 - October 11, 1979

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\
THE
CIRCLE
SG
·sets
club
allocations
..
,
'
..
, ,
..
.?_· .. · ,
; J
Volume 23, Num_ber 6
-
October· 11, 1979 -
Student Government Allocotlons for 79-80.
_
Circle • .._. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ; •••••• $7316.00
MCCTA •• ; ;
•••••••••• -••••••••• ;; •••••••• 7165.00
Outlook •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3760.00
WMCR •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3500.00
_ 1
_,,,-
:..._
lntramurals: ........ :. ••••• :. ........ : ......... 2275.00
-
d - tandin
tt
·
SG •••••••••••• ; :
••••••••••••••••• -••••••
2255.00
-
~1 .
's·mone
..
intotheBoardlate.~dthishel~JlSUp,"
-
_
ers
, • . -.
.• .·
-
Reynard ••••••••••••••
~
•••• :: •••••• ; •••• 1208.00
by
1
'
ansa _
l
·
-
·
.be.
exp1ained-.-·Ball
add~. "We couldn't . The Marist College Cbllc!ren's Theater .
Varsity
Club····························
1025.00
_ _ Sbilt Wri~r .
_-
stai,:_t_going through" the .~uests when we Association
(MGC'l'A)
rec:eived the biggest·
Psydt
Club •••••••• , •••• ·······:······.··.
810.00
Official
budget
allocatio~
for Marlst'ts ~~;:.~,
lla_d_to
~~t
~~r-~8: new ,cl¥~.-
~
: : i i ! u ~1~o~=i~:n:.r:~~~ ::~,~~·~
1~~;::::::::::::::::::::::::::: '.:: ;~~::
24sl'1d~tclubswe~madeMon~yJ!lgh,__
A'"ordin
··to·n ..
11·

'cl
b' hi b. largestallocation •. However contrarytoa
SponlshClub ••••••••• _
••••••••••••••••••••
550.00_
atameetingattended.~stud~tgoyem.._
cc,, .. _g· .. -~-e':ery_shau ..
Ylof
thc ..
la
"·inth ·onst·tuti. hichstatesthat
-·CommuterUn •••• -•••••••••••••••• · •••••••• 550.00
ment
·(SG).
president Joseph "Mongcitt IJia,de.a,f~~-~u~t for'a _ re·. . e c __ use .. ec
• . on
\V
. .
·s19maPh1.:; ••• .-.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 525.00 .
cann,
honald Ball; head
of_
the Ffnan_~l
SG'~ $27,600
budg~t received an ~ocation. . the,; stud~t govemmg body _
be _ given_
circle
IC.: •.•.•.••. :-..•....••... ;,.:: . .-•.•
soo.~o ·
Board, and representatives
of
ea$ club. However? this year., each .club receive<! whatever 1t needs, the. SG received}ess _ ·
Advert1sins
.;nc1
. -
. -
The
mficlal
deadline for allocations was Jess
than,
it
did.
last
year. "Last y~r, we
than
they
~sked
for. Ball explained,
.rg ~
0
;:~~i.~~ :'.~~·:}:::: :: : : :-::: :: : : : : : : : : ~::
!~}:
Wednesday,September26th.However,the had
a$,10,c;M)O
bu~etto lV?rk will!,
Ball ~-
request was for about $5,000,
w
~
_
SkiClub ·············•··••.•.•········; •••••
300
.oo
announcements came ,a1most _
two weeks
'sa14.:
.
''Jhere was le8$
~
go· around this mcluded $3,000 for the lecture series. But
sAc ••••••
~
••••••••••••••••••••• ; •••• -••••
2~s.oo
. late due to-what
Cann
"called "unforeseen y~r.::·~9 the yearbook . received.-· an .. _now the lectllre series
wills
not ~. con:
GaolicSoc. ••••••••••••••••••••••••• :: •••• 225.00
problems.": ' · .
--
. . .
- . _ ·
, _ allocatl9n:this year,.for the
first
time.'' - s11,er;ed as ~rt
of
the SG budget.,, · _
·•
!~~t_i.:.Ze.ci'_i:::·::::\:::::.~:~::::::::::::::~_:::
_ Among the reasons for the delay
Cann .-
<'Nobody ·was really satisfied with, their· .__ We had a difficult job this Yel!r, -
cann
.
cited a break~own in comm\Ull~tlons'
share,
but that!s understandab~/~ :c.~n- conclud~. ·;we tried to be fair,
aiJd
J
think .,_.·
K.;~
. .
ra~:.a_f,.;,'u-b._
•.
_. _.
;_
•• _
•• _. •
. .
• _
•. _._._
••
!!'I
••
_.·--._;._
•• _
•.• __
100
_ ·
0
_
0
. . .
-
. between the Financial Board and some
of
tinu84 Ball. "Some ,people-cameJn ~th:. the -Financial ,,Board
has
-done a com- ,..:.... _ _
...;.....;.._~---~----------,
the
clubs. !'Some clubs got their requests
really
bad a~itudes, but most were un-. mendable job.
,...-
- . ·_-.
.
-
~~
"\ . -: -- -·. --- , 1,· ·.-
-
~d·, ' .·. , .
.J
New
System
U.r.ban,fO,runJor .
an
icOppeq .. ·
·
.. , ·. · ·

·
Prop9sed
SopJ:l!)IIIOie
.Jon Urban_
- .,,, . - -_. _ .
_ --
.
' and
is
li'oping'.for,-$1,0QO before he leaves.
-by_Christopher Hogim-.:....
--
He-says he has also ~eceived two
pairs
of
_
_ _ _ _
<:o-roi,
0
,_ _
_
-
··"" - - ..
ruruililg
.
shoes valued at about · $35J)O a
- . -- _
,..
Travelling. with two g!rls for~5.
miles __
pi_ ece_:Iroµi Sundan?~ ·Sports_: l~ted_ in
·
· ._ :
by
Dayid_Ng
~
dliring .
.
the . upcoming mid-term . break
.
. Poughkee~ie'. ' .. · - .
. . - ._
. . . •
. .
Co-Editor
_,_
~d
be·
an exhausting experi~nce for
,.
''t
think -
eyeryon~•s _cooperating,,!ll1<!,
_
'<,
_ _
/
·
,
Cbarppagnat ResidentAd\1isor Jonyrban. -- evecyone sees: ~tit s
~
good c:ause,
·
ll~,
The
pmsibility of purchasing a l)ew·fire
:i.·~.•-
-
--~ytr:_.i~~&
__
-.;~_-;un_~_~~-·~-,~~~_:.ro_J:, __
CL_.-.Ji.Ji~.~-r.;t_•-~-i ....
_·~=.--
,.;~_rm_
!i_t°_~rs-
:it_t_-_r!_:_rpa_r.:_
-t
__
t::_--.-_
-~ie_:_.
·::1,e-:.~;~~iea-6
~Eileen':'"
eddef'anl':".
7
'•urfuul';i;is
he
pliinifu'i>e_~ori
th~"t"oad''-~
,"CJqicµtI; a
nd
!1~alann
installa~on
firni
last
'T···
·•--:R--~~tcf
r,
id -·
·
-
g"' ·· ·-·
+
riiii
to11hoiirsandcover50'milesperiiay-~ -WednelJday,a~crding.toJosephWaters,
... erry . ogers, _
~rov e encoura em.en..,
.
e_ , , - .,. _,/
. :
.
. .
, .
· director
of
safety and:security. - -- ,
. •r.•
Ui:~. ·· ..
- _ .
,,
-; -.. '
,i
·. -
-. - . ,
·
:,._::- ·, --
- _--
• ·
-:
However, a prop:osal to
buy
·11larm
·
.
They.re_
frien~
of
mine,
Urbm_t
·said
.

The first. time I ll,fUD.
50
mµes"
in one ·systems for.Gregory
and
Benoit Houses,
with
a
chuckle. >They decided ,to. come_ day will }:>e that day, UrJ>an says about Fontaine
Hall,
the chapel/and-the library,
· alon_g __
because they th°'!_ ,~t .it :wow_ d_
be
a ~•- s ~ .
_ _- g-. target of. Oct. 18__.. - __ - · -- ; - . - - has not y.e· t been
finalized
or p~sented to
.. worthwhile
experience. . - . . - .
·.·
-
ns basically
knowing
your:. body; and_ Business 'Officer )\nth_ony Campilii who
- B~th coeds
will
~e
turns
riding beside when to change your running styl~ for all · has the
final
approval or disapproval said
~~
on a bicycle every.Jive-miles.for theabuse.yQu~vetotake,"hesaysabout Waters::
·
: .
.
- - - _
-
'
conve~tion, moral support, and having
~~
way-.~ which to with._stand. the
pain.
waters. would not elaborate on_ the
a l'8dio, · says Urban.
_ _
. _-
_I_ll defmately
.
make it.
l
~
I cao details
of
the meeting but said it was
. Currently,
-Urban
says he hall .~ceived _ ~thstand fi~e days
of
running. •
· ' · "explQratory." Waters, Dr. Nilius Don-
-' _about $500 in pledges
fro~
Marist stude~ts
. nelly,, JU.rector
of -
construction, Andrew
.·.
·
Low
turnout at con,iocation .. day
Pavelko, director of _ maintenance, Bill
Sutka~,a firemali fro~ the Fairview Fire
·company, 'and Dick White
of
Security
System Installers, attend~ the meeting.
Waters said:it would not be fair t~fdisclose
any of their comments
on:
the
fire
··a1ann
.,.;·-
·· ·
,
,
.
. , ·:
. ,
_ system · in Champ'1gnat which
houses
; by
Thoina~Hass~!t . ,_._ -
but
this
is
~e
first
conviication of.~ kind .. with
2>
freshmen attending. !J'he second _approximately 450 students. :
,
. _ .· _
_ "-
__
_ s1arrwn1er ._
,.
_, ·-.
,
at Marist,- says Zuccarello.
_ _
largest inajor,_ communication arts,
has .
Con~m overthe14-year old
system
was
·_

_ ·:
-.

0
,~, ,

_ ·- ··
•·-
. )
:
Zuccarello ,and Core: Curriculum nine out of 72 freshmen attend its meeting. raisea when ihnalfunctioned twice within

. -, The first-Dean's Convocation at Mlllist Coordinator.- Jotiit' Ritschdorff developed
The Leo ·sotstein speech on~ "Liberal ·iwo weeks in September. Since then, only
....
was
held'-last ·wedrie.sday with a11 &J>". :the prognun_in the-hope• that by:se~g
Arts
Education
in
the-'80's" attracted 50 one test has been·conducted and another
proximate '· 150
-
students - at both the aside ·a day
in
the academic calendar; the - students. -
.
- - . was scheduled for last night, said Waters ..
. -e-"; _
-~epar~me~t; .me~t~ngs,·.an,d.: th~;,~,ln, ,..\~h:~ti9n.:~o~~ a~ct students_ to - "1
think
it-achieved its initial purpose
"As
.far. as I
know,
the system:
is
. I
, .... ,
speech.-.· .;•"''' :-,: .• , . ...,_-,; _·. · -,~- ~, ' p_artlcij>,llte.tn;the event., · · , ·_
·"..
·and I'iun vecy happy," said Zuccarello.- operating," said Waters. Waters, who has
-. ~•It·
:wafi'.
~ported;._thaf
m__,
g~_eral;
.~~ _- - .
El,~
:c#Jh~;.de1'.~~~ llllljom ineHn ' ~'lhose_ w_ho ~d participate·ha.ve come up been
ill,-
said he hopes ti, present Campllii
. attendance.was low,_but thaJ those who.did cla.~r()Oms,
to
discuss· 8llY academic -in-:-
-
with·suggestio~ with_~erent fo~ts for with
a
w-ritten proptmll for purchasing fire
attend· fourid -it._ most. informative,f'. ·said: _ terests of problems before the speeclt,was 'the -future. l was. disippointed in the fact: · alarm systems for the five other buildings
-Louis
Zuccarello;:academic dean.. ··
·
·
-· ·delivered
tµ.
the. campWI center •. ·
_
-· ·
that the Circle did
µot
choose
to
publicize_ before the end of. this week.' -
-
· 111n·thei960'ssomethingofthistypewas ,-:,ThelargesUumoutforameetiµgwa~in the eveQt by-writing a pre:event_story."
/:;···-
-
-i
..
tried and later teach-ins were.fashionable,' the Business•
5
Administi:ation department.
·, -
-J. • . ·-· .· ·
·
·-
· ·
-
.
·:.....' .:_-.
.
____ -.>
::·.;{<_
.-.-.. -,~ -.• ' . ~-
~
-.. -,:_ ..
--.-·<·: -~~· __ .,··--, ... : .
.-
. . . - .
P,Jblic':,
r~l-;Oti:ons.

lOciks•·
'
_,.
..
-
,
,'"·
,'
.,
~-~
,,:
;
...
~
"
/
.
I_ ••
by
~#mefa
Milfo/, '. _..
nationwide ori"th_e National Bro~<fcasting .drastic decline in
.
the number of ~ollege reach· ibrfull potential. She also cited the
· . siarrfriter
Company from Nov.- ~16;
.Jim
·Daly,·the -<fres~en enrolling, says.Dickerson,, who college's COJlE- and Science
'.
of
Man
college's director of admissions/has been ··graduated from Marist in 1976.
·'
programs_asfactors which justify Marist
Withpresident·Dr. Dennis-Murray·at- irivitedbyMurraytoap~r.-on··thethird -·-_, __
- .... ·_ ·_ - -
. __ - ,
-promotingastrongacademicbackground . ..__
, teinp~g to nia!te M~rist a_,widely kno'Yll : se~ent· 9f: th~. se~es ~o spealt"
?!1,
iicf _ -/~
part of the planto ~ublic\Z~ ~arist, _ · . · : .
- . _ _ _ . ,
" '
0

, name meducational circles,:Uie. college's :.,nussions a.nd financial aid.
_
. _ , ·
--r: • __
·Dickerson IS hoping to have--a ·senes~ of . : "College have. to become more like
·public i-ela~om~.offic~ ~.adapting.~o rea~
<·--
.,,.-M1;u::ray; .. :a(~e,r·· ... he ·'..was :.'!PPOinted .. _
·
~arti_~les. e>11:the· teleyisicm- shows :in -Case . busine~es,'' ·says. Diclce':"5C>n!·- "and ~ve·.
a IIlore ~tionwide
_
audienc~, a~_ord!Ilg to , prtlside~t
_Qf
M.arp3~;
~µnng
tl}e. _
SUilUJl~r,
,,Cur:rents, a·: ·natio!1al · magaz,ine· for · support sy.~tems_ like marketing."
r
·
-

. · Linda Dickerson,: cOQrdinator. 'of,-; public~ 'l!ontac.ted David Ochoa, a, friend· who_-IS. -. -- college's, public. relations_~epartments; :1n. . Although -the college
is-.
attempting to
-· inforin~tion.'·_ . :: _ ·
it
.
_-~,_ :,:;,· _
.. :_ : _·
·::t
also ar:i ex~~t!v:e produce,r a~ l'fflC,
1
te> ~elp · -
.
~'1di!itin;,~ J?ic~erson • says .sh~, hopes· to . · esta~lish am.ore public name for itse_lf, the
_ .. '.''Fhe _cpllege. president,
is;.,
in -.e~~t, ~e .. -· \Vor.:k. a.n '"~~ ,~u~ti9~1 se~~'.
< : -_
< :/: '. publish;art.icles about -Mar~t
in.
the. New ': pu!>lic .· relations , office's _-budget·
·
~.-- al)"., ·-,,.
-
-- -institution(~ chief I118rketing officer!
'f,~1<l · b ..
Dicke~on-.~ys.it.~11 b~:V1.~~f~t ~e -iYor~ T~es-llnd the. Chr<>!11cle -of. Higher : proxinlately $12,000 which:·. mus.t pay_. for
Dick~rsOli(Ml!ITa~.serv,~
~~:,~e
~ect?~ ·
/he -
c~J,l~gf s -~µJ>Jlc.irelati9.~s. office.
will
_
.:
E~uca~e>i:t; a newspa~r a_bou! ·.c,ollege
:µie
,thn:e .publications .im~;v~tjoµs _other
_ -of um:versity f~la~ions w_hµe :~t ~alif~rnia ·. _, :,mvolve, itse_lf with•the: ele~tro~c-m~dia :on:: -': trends_ m •• the count_ry. · '. •.· ,_, - · -· -· · ." -. . · _ , -
tte~
like • ~roclJu~e~.; programs, : and :.:._in- •
.
.

_ Sta~J!ru,ve~~ty;
~~d;
S.SY.S
'f?i.c;\terso~, ~s /
~ch
,-~':{lle-alUi~ug_h'_t:he cost
~tPI~
~-e~~
-

_
-.~~a~f pol!~ge
_
fairlr._matc~es the ~age - yita~C>11s .. Di~·e_r,son··!8. ~e college'toi:ily · __
. a -go<>{l .understar:i~g,of
:
p11bli.(?,-!'~lati?~•:: ._..
~
_bem~ 111et ~Rl~)!,':bY: N!3C.: .
?::,-~",· , ..
;)t
~
ti;,,1,11g:to pr~ot.e, says D.i~keri;~n. -~he _
.. ·full_-_time public r~latlons: staff. person
-
SIL" -
:. cMurray.
is
hos.ting ii:fi'-;~,pa~-J~ler1:5ton ·, ';:: Pu~l!~:re_lati(?I¥J_:is ~ow-: for_ essentialfor
7
-t~da~ _
..
U!e
·
.fa~tilty_ reflects . _the:}.strong -: -
she·:
is;
a~isted,.: by-:a·,·sepretary • and·
two, _
rsetjes
2
.e11ti_t1ed·:·yi,1v~te ";~du,cati~n: .~. ;--:cqµeg~ to,'h,ay~f: ·especially_·as~the. 1980s '::~ca~einl.c· _image. b.ut add~ .,that st~d~11t_, _1itudent :interns.~ '. :· ·. :_, · .- · - , . \· ·: .-. ·;·- ;_.
,. Endangefed Sp~~~?'./,:vv~c~_will
.
~;aµ-e~,. p~l'S \a1_1d;:~pu~t~~11al-
~:x:petu!
o'ex~~t: a . _life
·
IS_ ~_till.a"dev~lopin~!are~ thatha~:not
.
- ,.:
' ·
-- -·
<- __ .
' . .. ,:>::_·, ' __
:,'.·->}?'?.'.'{-..:_.\
-
: .
."!'.'. :-,:
·
:'i)···<~i{){:)\(?{"?~; ·~~-/- ., ·
.
. '.,
·<;_·•:::~?/fr~'.(; '.. . . .,
.
,,.
. .. .
.··"'
>.
i"
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.
THE
(_, .RCLE
co-editors
copy editor
feoture editor
.
sports editor
photogrophy editor
cartoonist
advertising manager
~usiness monager
Christopher Hogon
DovidNg
Jane Neighbors
Dionna Jones
Jim Townsend
Kevin Kelly
Bob Whitmore
Jon Urban
Fronk Kozokewics
Stoff: Mory Ryan. Marisa Simone
:
John
'
M~y~r. Chris Egon. Bob Sentochnik:Joh~ Ar_-
,
nold. J>~m Miller. Bill Taylor, Thomas ijoss~tt. Lisa Arcuri, Koren Floherty,
:
.
.
.
'
..
...
Readers Write
All letters must
be
ty~d triple space with
a
60
space margin, and submitted to
_
th<t C
,rc
r;
office no later than 6 11.m. Monday. Short lellers ore preferred. We reserve the right foe<!••
all letters
.
Letters must be signed.
but n9mff" may
be
withheld upon request. letters will
be
publi,hed depending u_pon asailability o space
.

.
.
To the Editors:
In their indictment
of.
WMCR, "subsequent" editorial such as
the Circle overstepped commonly the irrelevant mention
of
pe~le
accepted journalistic bowularies. making money
off
an artist
Although the headlines
of
the without their knowledge. WMCR
article state "WMCR violates
.
is
first, a non-profit organization
law," I
am
sure
if
you were to go
_
and second we
ran
no advertislr!g
to any criminal court you-would' during ·the. entire weekend
m
find no record
of
either a con~ question. The editorja\ also say~
viction or even a mention
_
of\
.
we should act professionally
~
we
WMCR. However
-
the
·
.
Circle
·
want
to
be
a professional station.
Court (Judges Ng
=_
and Hogan WMCR simply
·
desires _to
be
/
a
presiding) has taken it iilto their
_
'.
good college r_adio
·
stat1on
t~~
,
OlVll
iu.nds
.
to
prosecute~
·
ttr, and
·
··-
wiµ.
_
not do such. "prof~ional
find
us
guilty Qf playing an illegal
_
Qtings
,
as
assume.
a
person
s
guilt
·
album
t :
;
:
..

.
.
.
·
.
. · ·
.

·
~tl!outc:aJa.ir'trtaL
.
<
<.
·
.
~-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_:_-:_-:_:_-:_-:_:_-:_-:_:_-::-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_~-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:-:-:-:_:_:_:_:_~:_-:_-:_-:_-::_~
.
co};!~~~t~
;~vJiX:\:O~\~d
.
.
: ·
:

~~111Dit~:~;
~
Identity problen,s
·
"
·
themselves doesn't reflect
·,
what is really
there, personal or im,iitutionalcrisis sirikes.
It's like looking into a mirror and fi~ding
someone you didn
'.
t know looking back.
--
·.
·
Self
beferi~e
-
A ~ollege
.
is so~eti~es
.
very much like a
person.
It
has a personality. or:ego, bas!cally
something
"
it te'Ils other people about itself.
Students do it all the time and it comes as no
surprise that colleges do it as ,y
_
ell. It's a little
.
.
like a front, a structured identity, that we em-
.
ploy to help make us distinguishable amongst
the crowds. And then beneath all that, there
is what we really ·are
. {
It's a ~uch
.
deeper
definition of who we are
·
. Some call it the
soul. Others call it the essence. Regardless, it
·
is not the things we tell people we are; it's the
As MaristCollege races
to
promote itself to
.
the country, and
-
perhaps
.
beyond, tl;iere
should be confidence
.
on the part
of
students,
teadiers, and a~ministrators
,
that what we
publicize )s,. in all reality
~
what we are·:
To
the
Editors=
·
.
·
·
·.
.
..
·
;...thr?~g, falling, breaking
holds,
A
new course will be offered
.
.
striking
·
ai;eas
and pressure
·
this
Spring Semester
·
in physical
·
points .
.
In addition the physical
_
·
Education. The course
will
be
·
techniques, rape
.
prevention,
Personal Defense for Women
·
personal defense, and related
_
taught by Ms. Susan Deer in ~ime community services will
.
be
.
slot'8 the first seven weeks. The discu5!1ed.
·
things we really are
.
Sometimes it matches our self-appraisals
·
and, more often than not; it doesn't.
-
.
·
In
instances where people,
or colleges
;
·
.
discover w}Jat they have, proclaiming about
However, if the
.
essence of
·
Mai:istpears little
.
resemblance to its growing public image, or
·
personality, everyone sh~uld stop and find,
th
e
n
·
correct
,
the inconsi
s
tencies.
If
such in-
consistencies exist and Marist plindly
_
runs to
.
-
m
·
eet the
·
l 980's tight
·
student market, the
~
schoohvill face an institutional crisis and will
def ea tingly fade into the crowds .
..
I
-
-
Personal Defense course involves
. .
Dr. ;Howard Goldman
,
the
·
physical techniques
-
of
··
chairmano
_
f PhysjcalEducation
·
Call
·
Red
·
Cross Dow
-
·
for
a
blood donor
·.
{':
:
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·1
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
---,----~-___;,_...:,______:__:_ _ ____:--'--.;___,;.____: __ ~..:,-.~--=----------
·
We ran a very simple
.
one-line editorial' in
taken.
':'
How long
will
it tak~ for the s~hool ,to
.
the Sept. 20 issue of The Circle. Simply,
-
~e
'inove
-and buy a new system for the largest
asked the administration 'to, whatever the
dormitory on campus?
,
cost, buy a n
e
w fire alarm system for the
·
.
It Would
-
.
be childish
·
·
.
to
.
tell the ad:
·
Champagnat resid
e
nts
.
. The uniqueness of
ministra~ion
·
here on why the building needs
such an approach was supposed to
.,.
be
a new sys~em.
·
.
·
enough.
·
Two colleges last year, State University of
There was no need to
·
tell the
..
ad-
New York at Binghamtqn and Providence·
ministration about the value or need of
College had fires in their dormitories that
protecting ·the studenis in
th':.
nine story
cost lives. Whether the fire alarm system in
building with
'
a new
_
or updated warning
each of those schools was working is not at
·
system'. 'fh
_
ey, supposedly
,'
understood that.
.,.stake here but losing lives is
;
IfChampagnat>
I~ was a simple plea
:
that
~
apparently, they
_
HaJl ever had a fire in the middle of,..the
did not understand
.
·
night,
.
many lives
·
could possibly
·
be· lost
·
·
The school is
.
still in the stage
s
of
.
because of a faulty fire
·
alarm system
:
·
.
proposals, projections, and possibilities.
It wou)d be tragic.if Marist College got to
.'
·
.
··
Nothing
,
.
'
really concrete has been ac
:
·
·
be known because
·
of
-
the lives that were.lost
compJished since
.
that editorial nearly a mon-
.
because the.administration took so long toin-
th ago. And the initial fear when the
stall a needed fire alarm system.
·
building's sys~em malfunctioned twiceinside
.
E
,
ach of the students in Champagnat Hall
two weeks, seems to have faded
·
quickly. The
.
are entitled to.safety norms
.
as well as the nor-
.
fear aroused by fire in the chapel which
ms of noise now beirig-e
_
n(orced by the ad-
.
..
destroyed
.
its ~ctisty in 1977 seems aJso to
ministration.
If.
the studeo
·
t,s are being ask~d.

c
have faded;
.
.
.
-
.
.
.
.
·
to

fakidnt~> consideratioh the
.
rights
·
ototh~rs
'
.
,
·_
It
has taken two years for the college to
'
.
to h~ve
"
the p~ivacy they ~ant, shouldn't the
·
.
reach-a point where
.
they
_
are
·
almost, but not
.
administration take
-
into consideration the
quite
:
there, of buY.ing fire alarm systems for
.
rights of the stud~nts to ha~e the
-
safety
·
they
Benoit, and Greg~ry Ho_uses, Fontaine
H~ll,
·
should have?
.
the library, arid the chapel. Two years it has
·
';I'he Hudson Valley is slowly being glazed
sweaters
·
are
.
taken out
·
of st~r~ge· while the
.
with touches of bright yellow and oi;ange.
shorts
-
and shor
.
t-sleeved
..
shi.r~~ ~re
now·p_ut
·
.
_
There-· is some of that deep dark summer
.
.
·
away
.
_
_
,
.
_
.
_
green left but it is surre.ndeying to a~tumn's
,
·
.
It's
·
the time for football games, basebaU
'
s
colors. There is someth1?g very m~ture and
·
World Series, arid for
,
~alkirig through piles
subtle about the !all
.•
It
1~
·
almost hke a man
of falleri leaves; We try to
:
spend as-much
in his forties whose hair
.
_
is greying slightly.
time outdoors as possible
'
becatise soon it,vill
:
Something dignified happens; The air is crisp
-
.
be
too cold outside.
<
::;·,~
·
· .
. .
·
.
-
·
·
,
...
but not razor-sharp like winter; or stifling
·
"
Inside
.
'the
,
·classrooms and clormitories;
·
_
=
like summer. The days arc shorter. but the
.
ther~
·
is the h\istle
;
and b
'
usde
·
ot
mid-terms
·
The Circle~ not be published
for two weeks due
to
midterms
and the
;
lo~g
midterm
b~k.
I
SPEAKING 0FMAR1sr .. :.
LLIOT N~SS-!
.
ANDO'/€.R
.
'"''/b~)Q
:
·.
I
.
nights ~uie.ter .
. ·
.
_
.
.
.
.
_
.
.
.
,-
last jninti
_
te·
·
pap~rs,
.
ari~
:'
prc;>crastination:
··.·
.
'
. ,
Drivmg
·
tqrough the
.
back roads m
th
e
Fo
'
r
·
now forget abol
i
t :grade
>
·
a
'
.
.
vall~y is Hke dri".iµg
:
~y
:
,
v
~lls l_ined,
_
,vith
_
g<>!d.
.
l
wh
_
at o~he/people
:
thiri~
.:
.
J,ist
.
~~o;~::r°:
.
;
It
.
walincorrectly
0
repcirted in
.
last weekis Circle that the
•'
~
Maris,b.College · Radio
.
Sta!ion
'.
.
·
(WMC
.
R).
had,
.
violated
·,
..
-
cqpyrig}:lt
·
la'!sby
:
~.irihg a
,
bqo~~g ~lb)Priov~r the college's
.
·
.
; in-house
·
_
radio station
;
.
Ttie
·
·
article
'
stioul<t'have
-
read that
·
.
..
..
.
-:
w1.1CR
nuiy have violated ~<>pyright laws
:
-
The headline
.
was
·
.
.
fl
a
kes
.
The sky 1s strea}c~~
-
:
;with
_
,
band
_
s of a
.,
~
while,
~
take
a
_l011g walk
:
outside
>
relax, and
res~u~
:
red a_nd_purple ~s
pepple
walk back to
-se~se
·
the serenity ihat the fall season
,
brings.
-
.
thqir
.
dorm1tori
.
~s
after
:\
din,n~r.
-,
-
The
·
~oo)
.
'
-.:-
·
·
.
.
:
·
.
:;.·
. ·
._
,
,.
.:.
:
.:
-:
;
-.:
,
..
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i
Gr-idmen win first-game
18-6
by
J~m
Townsend
'
·-
,
The
·extra
point was missed-and Marist winning the game." Tom Eisele took the
Sroi:ts F.ditor
took a
6-0
lead.
/
kickoff back to the Brooklyn 25-yard line.
Excellent kickoff and punt return teams return teams bloeked two punts,
·
one
·
oy
Marist extended its lead to 12-0 on a two-
"Although they did not score it put
along with a defense that did not allow one Pa
_
t DeRico which set up the
·
last touch-
yard pass from Jeff Hackett to Mike Brooklyn in a hole," says Malet.
yard rushing helped the Marlst College down. Tom Eisele also had a 70-yard Spawn with :02 left
.
in the first half. This
.
Marist's final score came on a one-yard
football team win their
first
game Friday kickoff return after Brooklyn scored· its touchdown was set up by an 18-yard pass run by Hackett after DeRico blocked the
night against Brooklyn College lU.
touchdown in the third quarter.
from Hackett to Spawn.
.
.
1

Brooklyn punt and Marlst had possession
The Red. Foxes, with a
.
record of l-3
"Everybody did their job, we played
"That score gave us breathing room, on the Brooklyn nine-yard line. The con-
traveUo Siena Saturday for a game atl :30 close to errorless football" says head instead of going into the locker room versionfailedandthefinalscorewaslB-6.
p.m.
.
coach Mike Malet, "now that -we have a winning
6-0
we were leading
12~."
says
Malet also gave credit to the offensive
,
win
behind us we will begin
lo
start
win-
Malet.
line, who he said controlled the line of
.
• The defense sacked the quarterback ten ning."

Brooklyn scored their lone touchdown in scrimmage from the second quarter till
· times, four of those times with less than
Marl.st
opened the
.
scoring in the,
first
the third quarter on
a
68-yard screen pass
.
the end of the game on the astro turf field
.
8:00leftinthegame,recovered2fumbles
.
quarter with 8:00 remaining when quar-
with 6:02 left in the quarter.
at Brooklyn College which was slippery
and ha~ one f!l~P.tl_on while the punt
·
terback Manny Lopergolo
.
ran
14
yards
'J;he ensuing kickoff brought about what due to the rain.
·
·
·
·

·
·
after
Marlst blocked a p~t
l>Y
Brooklyn. coach Malet calls "one of tlie
key
plays
in
Intramural volleyball
·
playoffs Und~rway
.
Bni
Ciraulo scores touchdown in ·intramural football game.
by Jim Townsend
. •
Sports Editor
The Ace Heads, Leo 1, Krumville
Tubers; Spikers, and Bennett's Devil Dogs
started the men's intramural volleyball
playoffs last night.
.
·
.
The
·
Ace
·
Heads and Krumville Tubers
tied in the red division with identical
.
records of 3-1 while Leo l led the white
division
with
a
3-0 record and Bennett's
Devil Dogs in second with a record of 2-1.
·
The playQffs for women's volleyball
starts Monday. Leading the red division
~l~'h~e~Sm•
.
•---h•o"!'!"'·vis~i -
-
""'·
-•oss1
....
b•ly--- are the Krumville Tuberettes with a 3-0
weakest div~ion
fu
th:n
~~
·
th
e
record and the Barbalutes are in second
.
Chicag9orice
again
ha~ TQny Esposito
iii
·
wit!t a ~1 _r_ecord.
·
a ~-
Enough lea_ds the
closely
by
6-Packs with
a
record of ~1.
The only undefeated
team
in the men's
intramural flag footoall league
.
are the
D.A.M.S. Phi Tappa Kegga beat Brocs
Beans
to
knock them from the unbeaten
ranks but Phi Tappa Kegga was knocked
from tht\9e ranks by- Sheahan Smoothies
18-7.
.
D.A.M.S. leads the league
_
with a 2-0
record with Phi Tappa Kegga second with
a ~1 record. Brocs Beans, 4-1, are in third
with the Ace Heads, 4-2, and
·
the Grand
'Imperial Poob_as, 4-2, close behind .
.
Many
teams have not played most of their games
because of rain.
.
• The top four
teams
make the playoffs .
.
goal and :when
·
he is hot; he is unbeatable
white div1S1on but are
·
being .followed
·
along with a t~ugh defense ahd orice again
,
should repeat as champs
of
the division.
H •
• M
f •
I
d
I •
t t •
I
·
Th~ National Hockey League
has
a new-
The Colorado Rockies have
.
a new coach
arr,ers
WI
n
ans le
nv1 a 1ona
look this year with the
·
addition of, the
,and
P~ibly th_e best defenseman in the
_
~ ~
-
from
·
the defunct
~
World Hockey league ~
-
B~rry
~eck
_,
and a excellent
by
Chris Egan
·
.
good Job on the course" which he
Association
(WHA) ••
Many teams from the forwai;d
!11.
Wilf Paiemen~.
"
.
.
.
s,,",."
Writ«
descnbed as "very
tough." Stevens says
·
·
·
National H9Ckey League have lost players sc~g
rs
18
niY?~
1urtm
~~
got a
_
~ of
Marist won the third annual Mansfield
th
f:
cogrse.
is
very
similar
to
the
one in
!<>
these teams from_ ~he
;
WHA
but ~~t:

rom
,
eµ- -1
.
e
year..
_ey
State Invitational Saturday· in Mansfield,
Phi1!1delphia, .
0
n. which
..
the_ Northeast
..
"'"•·
· -
~.
,should
,
not
.
mak~-~uchlof
.
a,difference:
,
.w,
i:e8JJJ~Ji
have ~uch of
_
a bench which
PA by placing the top three runners of the Regional Qualifying meet
will
be held
.
.
The Patrick Division is the only division
co
,
-
em,"'··-
~-:--,·~

---·-__,._,_"
"""
·
;--
"
·
fii'cif and
nve
·
i1ftfie·to
·
ten.
·
=

·
.
.
·
·
·
Octobe!' 21.
.
.
·
··
without
·
any
·
teams from the
WHA
but
1
they
.
The Whinepeg Jets won last seasons
·
-
.P
·
.
·'>:
.. ,
'
Gadziala says he was pleased with the

,,,.
do have
,
a
_
new team. the W.ashington
WHA
trophr but lost a lot of player!3 in the
Ron Gadziala covered the 6 .. 2 mile
nwy
way he ran ~he long course, but he still
.
capitals
:
The,New York
-
Islanders should
_
draft:
.
Lo~k for fo~e~ New Yorkers Jude
~orey Creek Golf Course in ~-23 to finish
_
wants "to unprove .for the Northeast
finish first ,in that division even. though Drouin an
_
cl Wa~e O,illon to help_ t~~-
·
first, ahead
?f
teammates Jun DeLaunay Regi~nals." He says he ran a good race
they lost two·defensemeii Pat Price and
•·
.. The Adams Division has
.
three tough
who ran a 33 ·37 for s~cond pla~, and Paul battling his teammates and Mansfield'~
Gerry
Hart
in
the
draft
and Bert Marshall teams in
_
Toronto, Buffalo, and Boston but
Welsh who .ran. a 33 ·40 for th
ird
pI_ace.
~rry
Printz, until he went into first place
.
.
retired. B
_
ut they still have the division's
_
Buff_alo should '!in
this
divisio11. They lost
'
T~e
.
Mar~t team total~d 17
·
po~ts to ~th
."less
than a mile to go in the race."
best defenseman iii Denis Potvin
'.
.
Bryan Rene
·
Robert
·
in
·
the trade for John Van
ea~ily outd1Stance
·
h~t M~sfield
8
68 His time was only 21 seconds off the course
Trottier is the best player
in
the league and
.
.
_
Boxmeer but he
-
~ill make up for it in the
potts, :nRi~
-
~Sred Uruvers~ty s 77 .. points. record, and Stevens said "it was a super
....
.
/
Mike Bossy compliments him very well. end as ht\ will so}tdify the defense and
oac
c
·
tevens said it was a ".ery . effort.,,
·
Without any key injuries
·
Jhey
·
should _make Buffalo very to~gh.
.
repeat as ~vision_ champs but the playoffs
,
Toronto, with
.
the
.
addition of
.
a
are a different story.
.
·
goaltender from Checkoslovakia and the
,
The New York Rangers are going to
·
be strength of it's forwards Sitler and Mc-·
on the Islanders
backs
.
the whole
season.'
Donald will be tough.
They are a young
-
team with possibly
_
the
·
Boston will be toug9 but, like the Flyer~,
best coach in the league in Fred Shero.
If
they are -~ett~g old.
. .
_.
Ulf Nilsson
..
and Anders Hedberg stay
· The Norris Division
is
the only 01v1S1on
healthy; watch them.
··
.
..
.
.
.
that_ is
;
ea!IY to pick
.
the winner.

The
~
.
~tlanta has a new.coach
-
and a new right M~ntreal Ca
_
nadians are so tough
·
and no
~g, Kent Nilsson, wJ;to ~ored 107
-
points
_
one ~
:
beat them'. Pittsburgh
and
.
Los
m two:,,,_eonsecutive years
:
with
,
the Win-
.
Angeles
·
will
Jight-it out for second and
nipeg Jets
·
and should make it to
.
the
·
third
while Detroit and Hartford will battle
p~y9ffs,

,
.
._
·
>
·
·
.
·
,
.
it otiUor the last place.
,
·
.

.
·
.
. The Philadelphia ·Flyers have a new - Although 16 teams make the playoffs,
goaltender iri
:
Phil.Myre but Bobby Clarke.
:
·look
for Montreal to fight it out with either
c4eall•llly
\VINE··
&
LIQUOR
26 ACADEMY ST.
PO'KEEPSIE, N.Y .
.
12601
Tel. 452-4110
:-
;
.
~d the rest)Jf__the P~\Yerhouse
:
flyers ar~ the· Islanders, Rangers, Buff~lo, ~r
·
·
.
.
•getting old:
· .
.
_
·
.
. ·_,
:
.:
:
·
.
.
.
.
.
_
_
.
:
_
To~~to
1
:
!~r
th~ champ~onship
.. .
~11111111111111111111~111111------~--------------•-'--'
,
B06
,
ters-
·
drop
,
to
;
3~4
·
·
.
/
.
by
Jim
Townsend
.

·
Sports Editor
·••

Putting
.
Julio Rostran up front to
.
try and
get more scoring
is
soccer coach Howard
''Doc''
.
Goldman's
next
-
lllove,
says
· Goldman after the Red Foxes were
.
shut
·
. out Saturday against Kings Point
1--0.
·
The loss drops the teams record to 3-4.
.
The. Red
.
i;:ox~. next
,
gallle
·
is ·
Saturday
·
agamst Qumrupiac.
-
· . ·
··
..
.
The
-
Red Ii'oxes Jiad 18 shots on goal but
·
failed to score and Kings Pointhad 7 shots
on goal. '.'We are ,getting the opportunities
·
.
but not scoring/' says Goldman.
-
~
·
,,,,
·
Against Sie~ two weeks ago'the Red
,
Foxes woil
.
3-1. On a in~ddy field they won
.
the game
,
in overtime ori goals by Kriut
~
Roald and
.
Oyvind Larssen scoring
·
the
..
overtime goals. JuliQ Rostran ,scored the
·
Red Foxes
,
lone'. goal-
:
4uring ,regulation
·p~y.
Coa~ Goldman explam.ed that all
,
tllree g~ls
,
we~ scored
.
by
-
mi~ielders.
..

·_
..

:
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.
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.


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ow~ed
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·
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---:-:---
- - , - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - -
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·:
by Christopher Hogan
.
.
.
,
.
,
·
C<H!ditor
.
..
Approximate]y 50 out
of
an
,
¢xi>ected -
~
.
:.·
:
'.
local residents protested
-
Scotland's
Black
-
·
'Watch P!!rform.ance at
the McCann Center·
.
·
.
last
Fnday night:
No
arrests
w~re
made;
· .
The protest, organized by
.
·
Fishkill
·
·
.
-
resident Ethel Brogan, was conducted
.
to
...
-
op~e the · Black Watch's military
in-
·
volvement
in
northern Ireland on
behalf
.
of
, ,
,
.
..
the British government.
.
....
,;,,
.;
;.
-
;
''Butchen"
·
,I.
•,••
-
.
.
.
:_ >i
:
J:
.
.
·
"We're here to protest the way that the
:
. .
Black Watch have been murders
in
nor-
· ·.
·
:
·
-
.
·
them Ireland,"
said
Saugerties resident
·
.
.
.
-
Barbara
Allen. Alle11t
L
23, was
dressed in
· · .
:
,
:-
·
black pants and
a
shirt.
'
.
'This
ls
a
Catholic
·
-
./:
·
college
.
and
I can't
see
why
.
they ~ondone
/
.
t
this kind
of
thing,"
Allen added.
.
·
The
r.rotesters waJked
in
front
of
the
.
college s
.
sooth entrance carrying
-
sips
-

reading
,
"Freedom For
·
Ireland" and
"Black ' Watch
.
Butchers" at the
I
a~
proximate
3,000
peq,le 'iho passed their
:
·
,
way
:
in
cars.
·
Brogan,
·
who said she organized and
sought the
Town
of
·
Poughkeepsie
.
permit
.
for the event, did not attend the protest
,
because
she was teaching Gaelic
in
New
>
Jersey, according
to
her husband Willlam
.
.
, .·
Brogan'.
.
Security
.
,
Approximately
35 la
_
w enforcement
·
·
officers patrolled the .
area
and directed
traffic on
'
Route
9.·
Traffic was slow
but
coostantly
:
·
moving. 'One
.
·
state
·.
trooper
·
~
,
'.
searched
the
McCann
Center
·
before
and
·
after the event with a dog
·
for
·
e:q,losivea.
.'
One
Town of
Poughkeepsfe patrol
car
was stationed at the college's
_
three en-
.

:
·
trances and
16
shel\ffs
were present, says
·
Director
of
Safety and Security Jo.,eph
.
J
/
·
Waters. Another
14 Town
of
Poughkeepsie
·
Forward
March!'
The
Black Watch, a marching regiment, from
Scotland, dJsplaying precJslon drilling inside
,
the
James
J.
McCann Center Friday. Qutside,
50
of
.
an expected 200 protesters demonstrated against
the
troop's appearance at the college .
.
·
.
.
,
.
.
pollceme11t
three
state
troopers; two
fire
officers, Waters, and Security Supervisor
·
Paul Burke
-
were present.
·
....
.
.
,
,
"low
turnout"
turnout to a prolonged rainstorm. Also, formance aft.er standing
up
anci "starting
Ethel Brogan said that there would
be
to sav something;'' says Waters
.
.
·
·
loudspeakers and a possibility
of
a bagpipe
Gaelic Society president Tom Shine

!
.
'
Ethel Brogan said there were
,
supposed
to be about 200 protesters at the event but
William Brogan attributed
·
the "low'.'
band ap~ring at the protest site. Neither
.
appeared during the middle
of
·
the protest
-
were there.
to see "what was going on" but few Marist
·
·
Three, "gentlemen'
'.
were
~sked
to
leave students attenc,ied the
,
protest
to
·
either
the
McCanri_
Center during the per-
participate or spectate.
·
f
.
\
···
,
--
~
.'
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.
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.


23.6.1
23.6.2
23.6.3
23.6.4
23.6.5