The Circle, September 20, 1979.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 23 No. 3 - September 20, 1979
content
THE
CIRCLE
Volume 23, Number 3
.
September 20, 1979
Students reps .intereSts conf
I
ict
by
Mary Ryan
respective clu~ petitions for funds, says
"I
'.
don't believe that the
.
Financial decisions," Davis added.
S,aHwrit
f'
r
Student Government president Joseph
.
Committee members will be dishonest
in
Joe Krzys, a Sigma Phi Fraternity
"Mong"
cann.
·
_.
·
making a decision about their particular member, says he plans on remaining silent
Three of the five members
·
of the
.
"l
picked Donald Ball
_
(Ski Club mein-
·
clubs,"
.
cann commente<t
.
_
.
and will not vote when the budget
Financial
·
Committee, the board that ber) because he's someone I'm close to,"
·
Inter-house Council president Brian Sch-
allocations decision for the fraternity
is
allocates student club funds,
·
belong
·
to says Cann.
-
"I
trust
him
todo a good job; he
_
midt says he chose Cindy Davis (Marist
discussed.
·
other clubs or·organizations
_
and
.
are not ·hasaheadforbooksandheisopen-minded College Council on Theatrical
Arts
"Personally, I don't feel it's right to
required
t? abstain from voting \.Vhen their to everything."
·
because ''she's got experience from being vote .•. ," he says.
"I
don't want people
·
on the board last year, and because I feel coming back to me saying that the
·
-
·
■
·
she can be unbiased."
·
·
,
fraternity got too much because of my
D
·
,·sa b I ed
g
·.
a
In .
ac
·
ce
·
·
ss
Schmidt commented that he would like influence."
.
.
.
. _
·
_
'
_
_
_ _
_
_
to
··
see
.
members
·
"step down" from
He also
.
says that
Cann
and Schmidt'
._
.
.
deciding how much
·
money their club should discuss the p~ibility of setting
.
hr
Pam
Miller
Siaff
w
rh
e
r
.
Marist
is
_
working to
make
acce/3Sible to its
90
han~cap
says
-
Director of Specia1
··
Se
Perriera.
·
· ··
·
. ·
:
"I just w:ant the more impo
t9 get done first," says Perrie
The first and
-
second floor
.
ha
Leo
·
Hall
_
were remodeled to ace
disabled
-
students. Tactile room
were
·
installed in
'
Donnelly
.
_.
ll
·
spring for the blind and vis
·
•
·
Four
.
sets of strobe
·
,
vibrators, serving as
f
and hearing impaired
"Donnelly's freight elevator, used by the
·-
handicapped,
·
needs to be
..
remodeled to
·
accommodate quadriplegics.
-
As
it is now,
re
,·
·
the elevator
_
controls require use of the
upper extremities/'
.
.
The Special Service improvements
m~de at Marist are in compliance with
s Section
··
504
·
of
the
·
Vocational
Rehabilitation
·
Act of 1973 which states,
''All
facilities, organizations, and
in-
, stitutions receiving federal funds must be
·
mmaUcally and physically
.
ac-
Je to the disabled by June 2,
_
1980."
should receive. The
.
.
screening for
.
guidelines for board members remaining
.
allocations will begin
this
week.
silent during the discussion
·
of the
Cindy Davis says that she is not going to
·
allocations for their particular clubs
.
refrain from
.
voting
.
when she
·
bids for
"It
could or could not" affect the overall
MCCT A allocations.
· ·
·
credibility of the board, Krzys added.
"I
·
am
-
impartial when
·.
making
·
.
_
-
-
··
·
·
.
Library gets grants
by
Marisa Simoqc
staff, said Toscano.
·
e
have very little to do to attain
.
c
•
accessibility," Perreira
.
With an approximate
$120,000
from the
Programmatic accessibiUty
college's budget and three grants,
·
Dr
;
·
criinination
in
admissions,
·
:
Vincent Toscano; assistant
·
dean for
.
He said the emphasis
this
year will beto
'-'involve the
staff
with the faculty and
stu.dents."
. ·
· __
·
on the sixth
·
and sev
pagnat in August.
prerequisit
es
Jfo
r degree
·
requirements.
learning resources, said
.
he expects to
.
·
·
•
·
·
•
.
.
_
·
.
.
"Most'
'
•
"'-"
~
'"
people,"
she
noted,
upgrade the library services .
.
·
'
. ·
A
·
new computer has been purchased
to
help keep records of borrowed and-or
'
overdue books plus pro~ide instructors
with lists of available materials in the
.
,
"The major point
addressed
·
yet
is ·
Perreira
:
:
comment
provements.
"An,Y
cla
essibility to be "realize the
limitations.,,
-
_
Toscano said the library received
$40,000
mpus center/!
.
.. O
Marist
·
f
most _.other
,
. from the school's general budget,
$20,000
n
.
future
·'
im- '
·
private
;
'
.
plying with from two
,
separate · grants donated by
eeting there Sectio
·
nci the Mccann Internatjonal Busin~s Machines
(IBM);
that have
·
disabled
s
should,
-
in essence
,
be m
way
of
getting a
'
whee c
.
classroom
~
area unless the s
·
ts
'
enrolled Cenf
essible
.
to the hari~
and
$60,000
from the federal governmenf
re is no
di
,
,
,.
.
'Renova
·
g Marist," Perreira Title ID
-
grant.
· _
_
. '
.
·
,
-
-
in through the theatre and
this
pres
security risk," she said and added,
.
"The
estimated cost for an elevator for all three
floors in the call!plis center
is
$100,000."
'"
'
n
ted,'
'.
isn't difficult because it's a
"We're trying to make
this
facility a
,,
·
more
'
.
active part of the
.
educational
'
But ;:::~~ that the success of the process
'
here at Marist,:' said Toscano.
improvements really depends on the at-
-
The ~o!ley from the Title
m
grant, part
titudes of the
'
faculty, staff and students
.
_
of
.
$1 million donated by the government,
-
library.
.
,
_
_
·
.
.
.
.
. _
·
.
Toscano said he believes . student
complaints that the library
·
does not
_
..
always have the sufficient material for a
research proje~t may be _Justified. "In
some cases, an mstructor
will
recommend
the use of a
book
which
is
not here. Often,
the students don't know how to .find what
they need."
.
·
will be spent on more audio-visual
-
Frosh
-
like· dorm
equipment and the IBM grants will be used
.
to buy new books, said Toscano
.
.
·
·
A course instructing students h"w to use
library reference materials and
·
a "term
paper-- clinic" are being offered
this
semester to help faculty, students, and.
To help students find materials
available in the library, which opened four
years ago, the ~taff has been attending
conferences and taking courses in library
-
training; said Toscano.
"We're making an effort to fill the
gaps,,,.said Toscano," "and one step at a
time is the only way to do it."
Approximately 82 percent of 131 fresh-
that forbids liquor in the freshman ·aorm
men residents say-that
·
they
·
are pleased
_
froni Sunday thr~ugh Thursday.
with the beginning stages of the all-
.
"They expect us to be saints," says
··
freshmen dormitory, according to a Circle
·
Dawn Sturtevant.
.
.
s~e?;;~e
·
11
because everybody
is
in the
--
<IWe're here to work, not party," says
Cafe lacks feedback
sam
_
·
e boat," Leo re
·
s1·
_
dent Sheryl Bassford, Harry Mendez, who says
·
he is highly in
Th F
od
.
c
·
_
favor of the freshmen rules.
·
·
e
·
o
·
ommittee
.
will
.
meet today, because- the college has a new dining
service and a new cafeteria manager, Don
saJd
:
-
"It's nice to know everyone else has
a
_
ccording to
.
Brian Schmidt, Inter-House
th
·
bl
"
"They bombed out,"
·
Conru·e R-otter
e
.
same
·
pro ems.
·
·
·
.
,
,
president, after s_chool opened three weeks
"I think it's. good," says Mary
.
~om~ents on last years,, frosh class.
ago. The committee
is
having "com-
Gihnartin.- "We get to know everyone and
We re 18 and on our own.
.
munication" problems in organizing itself
_
Card.
..
.
.
it keeps
.
~.e class of
,
.'81 to~ether.!t
:
'
.
·
:
"In_o~
_
e
_
y;ay it
Illa.k~
me feel alienated,
for this semester, says Diane Digit, last
.
.
'
-
'I feel
,
1ike my mother
:
1S
·
here,'
1
·
says
'
and in another way it makes me feel close year's committee· pr~ident
Card and Brian
·
Schmidt, Inter-House
House Co°1!cil !Il~etings or provide Seller's
tbe <;allege
s
dining service with feedback
-
Laurie .Washburn about the alcohoi'policy
.
to my fellow freshmen
,
" says Donna Cody.
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
. .
.
-
.
.
. ,
.
Digit says things have
·
been confusing
about the food and cafeteria service.
.
College drinker:
-
Hal's unsolved problem
/
other things that take
,
priority
to
his tention toward trying-to stay sober for 24
·
realize it," he says.t'There's plenty more
drinking.
.
.
,
hours at a
0
time. -
with definite drinking problems."
"It's definitely a
·
problein," Hal says
Hal says that he woulo go to help at the
AA. will work for almost everyone,
with his eyes
-
focused toward the ground. nearby Dutchess Co~ty Mental Health according to
"This
Is A.A." A.A. is
"It's a
-
matter of getting around to getting Center, but he thinks the atmosphere
is
-
available free of
.
charge without
the help a lot of people see I need."·
.
·
"too
-
wide
·
open."
_
_
obligation.
.
·
·
·
Al~oholics A;nonymous
~
(A.A.) is a
,,
i'There are too many people that know
·
''I've been going here onto three years,"
.
serv1~
.
consisting.:.
·
of people
_
who have
·
w~t•s
:
going on," he says
.
"I am afraid
·
Hal adds at the end of the interview. "I've
.
discove,;ed and admitted that they cannot thlitthey're ( counselors) are getting a look seen a lot of a~ration complain
contro1
_
·
.
a1cohol. There
·
are branches in at you the way you really are
.
"
.
.
.
about drinking ..
.
The focus around here is
·
:
·
~
..
_
hy Chri~
_
tQJ>hcr
flog~n
more
.
~n 90 co~µies
•
which
·
emphasize
·
A.A. members
·
~yt!13t the most
im-
all wrong ... No
.
one has taken a look at the
·.
.
-
.c;,~,
1
;,
.
,
<
~
:
'.
:
:,:<:_:,
<
· •
-
the ann
·
to
.
stay
:
sotier and help one another
.
.
portantfact to confront 1s that "nQ
_
matter problem: The bottom line is that tney
.
..
. . .
.
·.
. .
.
:
~:
'
·
'
with
.
th~ir problems
:·
.
.
.
_
howlon_gwemaybedry,_:wewillalwaysbe (Administration) have not taken a good
.
.
~dltor's Note:.
This
18
th~
·
last
of two
::'I
have a hamlle on my life .and I don't alcoholics - and
_.
alco~ollcsras far as ~e
.
look at why they (students) drink the way
articles
·
conce,;mng al~ohollSlll and the
~
a_s much asl did,"
.
says Hal after kn,ow, can never a_gam drink
-
socially or _they do."
· ·_ ·
-
.
t
.
.
_
college drinker. ''Hal"
_
18
a false name for
.
pausmg to
·
collect
=
his
,
thoughts.
:
''On thEl normally
;
"
.
accordmg to
·
a brochure
.
en-
·
Hal says that he
·
does
.
not know the an-
. _
a
;
Marist
,
student wh_o :Sslced
)
10~
to.
be
other
.
f!and,
,
that
:
h~ndl~
~ri
)lip
_
.
at any
,
titled
:.
"This Is
,
A.~. ''
·
.
<
:.<
·
·
..
..
.
.
·
swer to the problem
:
But he
_
attributes
it
to·
identified.
:C,><
·
, ·
•
•
·
·
·:
: ~
·
·
:·
-
.
_-
.
~e;"
:
·
· ..
.
,'.
,
·
:
i
·
·
·<\ .
··
.
·
.
_ ,.
)Ial
_
says
_
tha~ he luls to<>" many
.
oth~r eitl!er the
,
habits
:,
othis
·
generation, the
·
.
.
_
.
·
_
.
. .
_
.
_
.
.
,
..
_. .
:
~
;
A .. r:nembers try
_
.to ,i:~ain
•
sob~r by
:
problet:JlS
J.o
\VOJ:TY
,
about
·
besides
:
his
;
·
nation; or the college
itself.
_
.
.
·
.-,
The
_
·.
c;I
_
rinkmg
~
·
problem
that
confronts
-:
~bservm~ tile PI'.8\'ious
·
s~ccesses
<>f.
thos
_
e
'
..
drink
_
irig pr:oblem. He would
.
not
,
~laborate
·
·
·.
"If
y~u don't want
.
to
·
drink, don't,'! says
.
Hal, an
_
.
upperclassman
,
,;vho
,
say~
,
he
is
an
:
mvol~4!d
111
.
the
;
p~ogram.
:~
Members t_ry
•
to
-
on
.
,thos~ prob!ems.
..
·C
-
·
.
·
·
•
.
.
.
Ha}to any9ne who
.
has not started yet.
"If
_
:
-
~
_
lC()~
_
<>.li~
;
a~tll~ughh~~~
-
µk
,
et<>
.
'1:chni,t it;
:
:
folloW;
·
'
.
the
.
~
•
-
•
.
Tw~11ty
;:
Four
.,
.
~our
; .
.
g1an
~:'
·
-
'
·
·
'
~
There's
,
a
·
to
t
of alco~olics on
this
:
you haven
'
t started; d~'t start now."
-
-
~
-
·
'.
jvill
remairi
:
,
untouclieck Hal:says
:
he
.
has
,
which
0
directs
:
,
the
,
.
problem
:
m;nke
_
r
.
's at-
.
.
campus
-
_
and
_
:
most
;
of
.
them don't even
-
·
•
·
'
·
·
,
:
~
.
-
::·.
>
.
' '
:
..
·
--
·.·
_
-,
;:
-.
_
..
·
..
.
·
,
..
.--
.
• ,.:
_
_
,_.
·
.:
--
~:
,
.
,; ....
_,
.
.
·.
·
.
•
.
....
. ;_
:'
·
·
..
·
--
--:.
-~
.
··
·
·
.
·
-<
:
,·
.<
.
.
.,.
_
·:
,
.·
. .
•·
..
'·,
)
.
.
··
. .
.
.
.
'
.
.
..
.
.,
....
-
.
I
•
'
....
.....
-
Page
2--------------------
THE CIRCLE;.--------------•september 20, 1979
~
co-editors
associate editor
copy editor
feoture
'editor
sports editor
photography editor
THE
CIRCLE
· carloonis.t
advertising manager
business manager
Volume 23, Number 3_
September 20, 1979-
Christopher
Hogon
David Ng
Lina Cirigliano
Jane
Neighbors
Dionna
Jones
Jim Townsend
Kevin Kelly
Bob
Whitmore
·
Jon Urban
Frank Kozakewics
Stoff: Rciry Ferguson, Dee Acampora, Marisa Simone, Mary Ryan, Joe Emmells, ·
Steven Porath, Bill Taylor, Jim Williamson, Mike lonlosca, Pam Miller, Pat Marafoli, ·
Lorello Kennedy. John Mayer, 'Dennis While, Dave Metz, Mike McCarthy, Madeline
Whalen, Thomas Hasset, Karen Flaherty, Chris Egan; Mory Delucia, Eileen Doyle,
Rich So~mer, Maggie Schubert
Readers Wrife:
AU letters must
be
typed triple spoce with o 60
space
ma,gin, and submitted to the Circle
office no later than 6
p.m..
Monday. Short letters ore preferred. We reserve tho right to
ec!i•
all lett.:rs.
letters must
be
signed. but names may
be
withherd upon request. letters will
be
publi>hed depending upon ovoilobility o spoce.
· ·-
S
a- m
e
l
"CJ
c e s
-
To the Editors:
.
Auditions attracted many new
· Once again 'tis. the season for
faces to the theatre. However, it
one of.. MCCTA's dramatic.., would_seemajConCP. an MCCTA
rod ·
ti
·
"A Midsummer
actress-actor, aJr,dys an MCCTA
p
uc ons, 1.e ...
Night's· Dream." We ·gladly actress-actor;" For--those. who
announcethatMarist College will
weren't "e.mong the chosen"
have the pleasure of seeing the
NEVER FEAR!-· There are
-
same faces, . the s_aD1e . ex-
always . positions
(hovie~er
pressions,- the mannerisms • and
plebian) sutji
as
m~e-up artiSt,
gestures of the same actresses • set designer-director, ~or props
and· actors. Despite ~e obvious
·
manager. Throughout the theatre
~
gifts of several individuals, the ·world~ tllese . posi_ti12ns •.. are
overuse·oftheirtalents leaves the ·h,onorable; . _ creative,
and
prospecµ~e"JlU,dience
SO-~~W~t
.~:1'~~~E!C~~:: '. -..
>
.
,, , ,,
_
. _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..... _,;..;... _ _ _
;_
____
~
unenthused; · · ·.
. . · "-· · ·· .. · ·
.· .·
. Patrons
of
the
Arts .
Hot Stuff
.
To the Marist Administration:
Whatever the cost, please buy a ne.._;
fire. alarm system for the Champagnat
residents now.
•_;,,.._
•·
,.
'
.
Dear'Adrilinistration,
_
•-.c:::nights•(It
is
.uriderstoodth~t
ori
_We will ~_Illajte
this
-lette~ as·::-week 11i~~ts mg~ic sh~~ld ~e k~pt
sunple as p_o.ss1ble, so there-is no ~at a ~um,-b!,lt its time to
misinterpreting of what- we are . rel~ a, bit. on ~e w~ekends.) · .
try~gJo
say~
First of all,'it-bfis.
. 4)We want.things on the:floor _
cometo our attention'that Manst ·. futed so<mJlfterwe_ report t~e~ to
Public and Private interests
is
trying to change
its
image;· the,· llou~e · masters; (The sixth.
upgrade its-standards,. make· for
.
fl(!Or. su1~e
)ll!S ·
had
·
a· brok~n
-·· a better livirig space; and
run
this•···
.wmdow. since last selll~ter.
~
..
· school the,way a co~lege ought to · .whl_d~woverlooks the s1~e doo~
~
· be·
ruri.
Now. we. aren't~ out to ·. · Champagnet and any~ne walking
disprove~this-theory. ·we. aren't• .. o~t that dO?rto ~~ss
IS
under the
·
.,, .·· Communists!.. .. We,
-
aren't nsk9fgettingJhe!£ headchoppe_d
--------..,..:..--------'-----------------..:,_----'----------··""
.. -;;..· '-' ---------.
· . ·a1coholics! We ·are:simply"a few ,· ·off: any day now,;•,you care. so.
--- -
~
· -· upperclassmen .who have
takeri
.:
m!Jch about __ people,, tiu:owing
Th
1 ·
h..
· ·· d t · b ta·
f
- · · ·
h ·· · - ·.an int.ere. st. in: what is and isn't'
.
:things out t!le wm
.. qows, ~e would ...
ere are approximatey ~o-clu.s and
_re9u1re ··-:oa s .•n __ rom votmg
Oil
terr ..
'
·goirfgonnearby.Thatis.whatyo:u ;;
.
~j,n}t_;tou;d>get.;:r1gllt::on,·
organizations vyirig.
0
for a piece of Stude~t · , re~_pective.du~'(l,>ucl~et .
.
'[he ~tuderit Goyer~.
·
_
. wan~
is
it.not? 'fo
run
!lt
-
~-:~cl!gq,<;.~S.<>~~!hwg.H~~:.tha!_.
1
l~.~!,:~~ •
,-GovernQient's ,,$2~~000 · budget, a ·smaller:; .. .,iimcnt. ii(<?pe~ing
,its~U. to;_que~~io~s ;9ffair
.
correctlY,"you.naveto. care:aliout--'<,iiti&¥e-:J1191".~llI1P:()Pijlgl~s~'l-!o
.· sum . th~ii last 'yea.r's,
.
Yet, the dubs~ill be ·.
play and polifical bias. •.• ... ~.- -
:
. ;
i. -
,
; . -·
,
:_: __ : . , ... _
"
ihe
·'student::.
Rememb·er
'·t11e'
'?liltfputtmg:people
onjfroballon
asking for morenioney to meet itsoperating
Joe'Krsyz;·vice~presidenf of the college's. · - students;
·
tliose people· wh6.pay for havirig-:~eir ... ~ter~os-
-
,up_too ··
cost this year because of inflation, hopes of
fraternity, Sigma Phi Epsilon, is
a
member of
-
five
thousand
dollars per year to,- . loud. or,.smokmg D)ilnjuana., We
expansion, and ·intentions of ·re.fin.· ing. The
th
.. e board. He'sa. ys h_,e will r.efr.a.in from vo.ting
come here?
If
you're out to help - don!t lik.e.J,his type.of treatment.:
·
._
· ·
the students then askthem what We_: are a x:espectable group of ·
money to go arounff will he very tight; more
and discussing the fratciriitY.'s proposed
they, ·want. S!flce you haven't. 'people an~ we, d<!ll't:-want~o be
demands, smaller allocations.
budget when it appears on the .hoa·rd's agen-.
,done this yet we'
-
in.,Ho1,1se
m
pre~ured
m.to
being rebellious;)·.
. The Financial Board has the vested trust
da. He· admits, he wants no secorid ·guessing
Champagnet are go~g to tell you;
. 7)
~.e,.
want to wake up to hot
of . the Student Government, and of all
from .students a.bout his influence in iip-
-
1)
We want our. fire alarm to waterm our shQ.~ers. Uyou want
students ~vho belong to a duh, to allocate
propriating money for the fraternity. Krsyz
work properly during fire. drills .. · us to .be responsib~e so mu~
Y
0
f
money to all 30 organizations as fairly as it
will he able to say afterward: -T ha~ no in-
_
.
2) ,We want the· l~brary be equally responsible. Why cant __ _
_ available for the same hours on
you try to understan<i !l}e student
can. The board should always decide what is
fluence towards the fraternity getting its
Friday and Saturday nights as instead:of making up your, own -
the overall good of the campus, what will
allocation. ·
·
·
during the week nigtits. ·
.
,.definition ~f what a student.
benefit the college in the loqg run.
· Don Ball, a member ofthe Ski Club, and
:3)
,we Qnly want to be told by
should be lik_e?
.
.
And when all the money. is allocated, the
Cindy Davis, member of the 'fheatre . Arts
students·: that our, stereo.
is··
too
Signed by 50 members of House
arguments for allocating the·amount oltunds.
Council, are both members of'the Finan~ial
loud -on Ftjdays_ and Sat~rday
.PI_;,;
Champagnet Hall
to certain clubs should he structurally and
Board. They should follow Krsyz's example;,,
logically sound; There should be-little_ room
.No one is saying they wiH unethically use
for accusations and doubting
if . the hoard
their powers a·s hoard
'
members to ap-
perlorms its duties to the utmost. Public com-
propriate money for their clubs.
It
would be __ _
mittees are always· under the scrutiny ~of the
·
as criminal to accuse them of such an act as.it
students and the mere nature of such a hoard
would for them· to misuse their voting power~
will always receive some unjustified charges... B.ut being on-the board, they might be given
S11ch charges merely come from frustrated
the ad~antage of explaining their :club's
club officials who couldn't convince the
budget after all the other
:
organizations ha"-\•e
hoard it had legitimate grounds for. seeking
filed into the student goverrimenf office
arid
out student activity fees. This charges can _be
given their pre~entation.
It
is an advantage
disregarded as part of the job.
·
.
no club should have. . ·
.
· _
·
· ·
But the Financial Board, with its. present
- And the allocation discussions are closed.
members, leave _themselves open to serious
· There is no safeguard againsttheir own sub- ·
questions, · if.-i10t charges, unless Student
jective stands which might, or might not, af-' ·
Government and Inte.r
0
House Council re-
feet b1idget allocations. But to be sure~ they
organize ·the present format of the hoard.
should _step down when their respectiveclub ..
· Currently,· boa.rd: !"embers can h~Iong to
p'etitfons ·stud~nt. Government
:for
their -·
another club while they serve ,on the board.
allocations. It would eliiniru_ite any, doubt:
In
effect, they will'be discussing how much · that the Financial:· Board ;might· have let
their. own club may receive from the Student
private feeling interfere with.its ptiblic
job.:
.
.
Government budget: ·Board members are not·
.
--
.
-
•
'
r _
'
'
' ; • .
•
Plenty ()ftalk, noactiQn
Students have
hegu~
-~omplairiing about ·. given. the quality of f()O() .,that studen~ ·.p.ay
the quality and seh:iction of food• that is being .
for~
1'herEf is 'little _yariety:and ,m~als)l<?:n•ot · .
. served
at
meals;
, :
•.
:i , . : : -~.
.:provide enoµgh
to
fill:ma·ny"-ofJ~e· sttideni_f
. . . .... ··•· ·. . . . .
. . . .
. .. iippetit~s: :~
:
:·:~-::.
> \'
>r~
:>' ~-. :··:
,>'<'• .-·
Sei)er's manager-Don' Card says that the , . :Mthough Seiler's
,
seemi;4~ he:a
"
ttempting
food will
.improve 'and. the .Ritthskellal'. ser--
.
. t9·do .the bes(they(can; the
'
Cirde thiriks~that ....
vices
·.\Vm
jmprove~ :l~fot~ing_ can. -imp)'.ove.
'tpereis~a teat~e~lt_o~6 iiliproy[if:
·:<>
ir:: ,.
unles~Jeed_b~c~:is presen~d_t() ~':liler's: ,/ ·· _ .. · ... · .·
-
' ; Th~
,
pr<:le
_
do~s ij9t_~an'rthe -~a1neJhfog to',.
The .
Gfrcle
.
··
thinks;: thaf Seilefs:
·ha(:
not· .happenth·atocciirl'.e_d
.
last_yeJlr:~/c-'\.
··:?
if·
·
.'.-:
;,\,:~.:;'
'
,'.'
..
.
..
::
...
,..·:
~
-/..
,
:;
,
'
.
.
..
;
_.
.
.
.•
·,
.
.
:;.,:
:,:
'
,-~-~
:,.
._,_'
..
--..·
;,,.-
_
_
September 20, 1979
-
THE CIRCLE
Gridfflen
lose
·
15-14
' by Jim Townsend
from Hackett to freshman Mike Spawn,
.
S
po,-1.
,
,,l
i
1or
the point after was good and they led 14-7.
The lead held up until Stony Brook
-The Marist College football team lost scored with four minutes left in the game.
their first regular season game Saturday The two point conversion was good and
.
to
the State
_
University
of
New York at Stony Brook never relinquished the lead.
Stony
.
Brook
15-14.
·
Stony Brook's game winnin~,
43 yard
TheRedFiixestraveltoSaintJohn'sthis drive, was helped by two penalities to the
Saturday
to
play their
,
firs~ Metropolitan
.
Marlst team.
.
Conference game .
.
-
-
-.
_
__
.
Marist had a final chance to win the
Malet str~ed that he thought the
of-
game with
00:41 left with a 35-yard field
fensive backfield of Bob Kehoe, Jim Dowd, goal by Hackett but a bad snap from
_and:
~om
Eisele ran well-
and ·
is
''op- center prevented that.
timistic" about their future. Eisele
carried
Malet thought Hackett ran
the
offense
·-
the
ball
15
times
for
69
yards while Kehoe well even though he only five of
13
passes
averaged
5.5
yards a
calT)'.
_
_ _
_
·
_ ·
·
-
for
.
48
yards but
three
_
passes were
drop-
·
Stony Brook· ~red first in the second
.
ped.
·
.
.
·
-
.
.
_
q~rter and
took a
_
7--0 lead. The lead
stood
.
Malet was impressed
also
with the way
·
until
the
third
quarter when Marist scored the team didn't quit after they were dow 7-
twice.
.
•
.
·
·
,
·
.
-
.
-
-
·
O
at halftime.
_
The
_
_
R~
-
foxes
•
scored on
·
a run by
.
ThisweeksgameagainstSaintJohn'sis
_
_
_
.
.
qu~rterba_sk
.
J:eff ~~ett, the
extra
point important, says Malet,
because
they (St.
M~ist
qu~terback Jeff Hack
itlo ~
-
;
/
:.
· ,'
...
was.good ~dJhe
_
SCO!"e was tied 7-7.
~
John's) has ~ot won a game either. St.
0
_
, , . _
, ·
:
. ' . .
<
.
.
e
,
0
8
,
opass. --
.
Maristtook~eleadonatouchdownpass John's has a record of 0-1-1.
.
'
-:-
~
.
.
-
.
.
'
'
'
.
Page3-
Netters
open season
by
Lisa Arcuri
S
p
o
r
b.
\Hil
t"
r
~though he has
six
returning veterans
from
last
year's team, tennis coach Joe
Coogan says the
team
is weaker
this
year .
We lost our two top players from last
year,"says Coogan who admits they have
a "tough" schedule
this year which in-
cludes matches
against
Vassar and For-
dham.
Returning veterans include Chris
McGuigan, Nancy Wysong, Nancy
Colagrossl, Kathy Carmody,
I.Jsa Arcuri
and Bonnie Rinck with the only Fresbma~
on the squad being Jackey Butler.
·
The teams' first home match
is
Friday
Against Ramapo who the team
has never
faced but Coogan says it could be a tough
match
because
"one of our top players
Nancy Colagrossi, is
hurt."
'
- ,
whole team piayed well
as
they won
2-0.
,
Ha
·.
r
·
r ·, e rs
I
OS
e
··
two
Knut It,oald scored at
40:00 in the first
half
~
,
iive the varsity
a
1--0 lead.
.
,
Jrr1
Rf
PS
.s
i
ye
.
<
At
41'5
of
~
•
-
iiecond
half,
~
..
suboa
.
by
Chris Egan
.
,
.
..
'
.
. .
. .
. .
.
.
'
,
'
.
. .
sc
,
ored and that was
the
way the game
.
.
SporL, .. ,it
er
'
•
: ·
j
~yJim Townsend
. :
._-.
~~
;'
en
_
ded. The
_
~copd ha
_
If
_
was highll
_
. ghted by
·
.
sf)Ort
s
_
Nl
i
i
O
r
"'
;.
:•·
8 88
e b
lte d
.
And H
1
Th M •
t
try
t
-
·
suff
ed
,
: .
. ·
·
. .
,
-..
.
._
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
_
.
_-
:
_ v
·
~
.:
goa
.
n er
y
_
omoia on a
e
arlS
cross coun
eam
er
·
•
·
•
·
,
.
CCA
go.op experiJ!Ilce bo
_
th culturally and nenaltv
-
kick
·
~t the
35 :55 mark;
·
~
two
·
defeats Satur<!&y at Sunken Meadow
sport-WJSe''· was the way' that
•.
Howard
•
.
_
-
..
·
.
_
·
·
·
,
-·
Park, N.Y., droppmg its record to 1-4.
-,,
"D<>e"
.
,
Goldman .. described
•
the
:·
soccer -·on
_
Monch!y~
·
Sept. 17 the Red
_
Foxes
Marist lost to the winner of the race,
✓
--
··
,
t~qi•~
.
two
,
games against the
·
visiting faced
,
the JJniversity of Southhampton, Colwnbia University,
l5-50.
c.w.
Post,
?
.
,'
:
.
tea~~~:fJ;;'iii~
•
•
Red
~ox~
iaced
-
-
-
:!f~:;
-
-
:1:/f~~U:~Ofon,;
-
:~sg::;
_
:i
1~f~=h:t;~;;:;~:S!v:a~~~~~
,
.
the ~ristolC1cy Qlub and lost 2-1 .
.
The lone
,
lost to was Oneonta; says
,
Goldman who
·
scheduled
:
but did not compete .
.
>
Ma~t
-
goal was scored
,
by Joe
Bilboa.
'-
,
was
.
.
very
·
impressed with the
·
team's
.
-
Despite the poor record, coach Rich
,·
Against
the alwnni
~
-
.
ICDocJt
,
said
..
the
·
p~rf
ormance.-
:
~
•
.
:
·
'.
,
·
,
Stevens is not, concerned
·
about the team
-
·
·
·
·
· ·
,
·
-·
·
·
--
-
·
·
-
· ·
· ·
·
which he calls "without a doubt the best
•
we've ever had here.'' Stevens
,
says the
·
team will probably
be
at or around
.500 for
-
-
·
·
-
the regul~r season because of the ex-
.
.
.
.
sund_~,rwa ·
_
.
.
.
tremely tough schedule. However, he
~dds,
!he
seasoµ
will
meari
nothing
·
until
•
. _
....
11111111
. . . . . . . . . . . .
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ .
;
the NCftA
,
Division
ll regional qualifying
,
meet on October 21.
---
·
·
·
~tr~urals
that ~ere
:
Jiot popular
=
the
_
ultinulte frisb~ football
·
will
be
played
For the second straight week Jim
.
pa~
_
gew years are bemg can~elled and the
·-
next sem~ster
;
.
_
----
__
.
·
-
--
_
.
·
DeLuanay was
·
the top runner for Marist,
c
seaso~
.-
of
;
·
t11~e
.
tha~
·
sllo\Ved a
,
lot
·
of
_
Deer, who works with student super-
completing the five mile course
in
2.6:35 to
_
__
student
·
particip~t1on
· .
are
_
behlg
.
visors, Kevin Sneeden and
,
Paul Pless;
.
finish tenth
,
overall. Ron Gadziala was
lengthened, according
_
__
to
_
Susa1,1
·
Deer,
_
says that freshman input is important in
-
twelfth in
2.6:40, and Paul Welsh seven-
~
:
director
of
intr~urals.
--
·
:
:
·
the development of the intramurals.
Only
teenth in 'n:07. Colwnbia's Wally Collins
.
Spor_ts like
han~ball
and
•
badminton are
,
orie freshman team
is
participating in the won the race officially with 25:57; although
_
being cm:icelled and the seasons of five-
..
.
football intrainurals. Many commuter
·
his teammate Paul Loomie was credited
plB:_yer basketball and soccer are
,
going to
·
teams
·
are also needed. In the pa~
·
years with the same time.
be prolonged, says Deer .. In the past, five-
the input of commuters has been very
Stevens says the top three men for
player basketball. started after the
poor. -
·
_
·
·
·
Marist, DeLaW1ay, Gadziala, and Welsh,
-
.
Chris~s break _ but Jt
·
w
_
ill
.
start in
-
-
· The awards that are given for _each in-
did notrun well~ but he expects them to
, Nov:ember
.
811d
continue after the break,
tramural champion
will
be, as they have improve. Jerry Scholder, coming back
_
says Deer .
.
-
-
.
··
•
..
,
_
,
·-
-
-
- .
_
_
been the past years, T-shirts.
-
·
from a cold which sidelined
him last week,
,
-
<!
l'welve intramural spQrts
,
are
_
being
,~
/
Last year- over
.
1,000
students par-
ran "a very decent race under the cir-
.
·
offered
this
year with tile only new sport
.
ticipated in the intramural program and cumstances" and
will
give Marist "a very
.•
.
add4'<1,
-
~eing
·
ultimate frisbee
'
football
,
in
-.-,
this
·
_
year Deer
_
hopes
to
_
-
have more strong top four runners."
·
_
the
.
spnng
!
~
Football and volleyball are
students partake in the program
~
·
_
The
·
next race for the Running Red
-
~derway
:
,
and
,
archery,
tennis,
·
soccer,
•
AJJ
in all sports, Deer stressed
·
the need Foxes is Saturday at Marist, and is the
:
·
raqu
_
~tball;
-
and five-player basket~ for officials for the intramural program. onlyhonie meet
this
year. It-starts at 1:00
seasons an!
.
going=to
oo.
played jhis They cazµiot be run unless the officials sign p.m. Saturday, with the five mile course
·
semester.
·
Co~ed voll~yball,
·
.
co-ed
up.
-
·
·,
·
starting and finishing at the south field
Stevens says the team will be without the
services
of
Dave Haupt, the fifth ranked
runner, and possibly Tom Abrams and
Mike McGuire. Co-captain
Dennis
Goff
will be available to
run
after missing the
first two races, and Stevens says "we need
his experience."
raaiuetball; fioor hock~y. softball and
..
~ext to the McCann Recreation Center .
..-----...;._ _____ ==========:::
,,,
..
.
WICKER
.
BAMBOO
-
..
RA TT AN
.
.
.
MATCHSTICK
SHADES
.
:
,
GIFTS &
~
THINGS
.
-.
.
.
~
'
~
.
.
.
.,
/
.
.
.
'
.
'
.
.
.
'
.
-
74-76CANNON
STREET
,
'
·
.
,
,
POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y
.
'12°6'0f
:
·
.,
.
.
.' .
'
.
&
·
..
~
'
.
.
.
.
"
pok
P
,
LAZAMAL
(.
RT. 9
..
-;' .
·
'.
.
·
.
~
::/
,.;
;
:.-:},:}·;~;f_.jf
<~
--
·:
.
.
:.
·
.
~
.
-
-
~
-
~
-
Roosevelt Theater
Rt.
_
9 Hyde
Park
CA<>-2000
.
"ONE
·
OF THE YEAR'S .BEST."
-J
er.
r
ey
l 1
·
<,,1
5
.
ViCn.'>
R~Cl<0-6
VIPIX TV
,·
·
·
~
-.
.
~
:
~-
-
:
'~
A,~so
·
lti
:
t~
~
ir&e best
fil~
:
'
.
.
jm §poi1s
t
SPECIAL: ·
-
<
Preseritthis ad and
::e '
, . - .
.
..
re
·
ceive
:
.
s"itoo
-
oFF
,'
,
~
·
·
•
.
.
•
.
,
,
=
-
.
-
~
-
.
·;
>
-
.-:--.
.
.
Records
Etc.
_
22 Academy
St.,
Poughkeepsie
1
Largest selection
_in the area
' at L,!w
Everyday
Price~.,
_
list 7
98
-4
99
,
list
·
8
98
-5
99
.
·
custom
Pri
_
nted
.
-: .
T-ShJrts
:
~e
·
ad Shop
:
SEV'S PIZZA
Round
&
Sicilian
Hero's
Subs-
Spaghetti
&
Meatballs
Delivers-Always
Hot
OPEN 7 DAYS 4
'til
1
£AT IN OR Till
OUI'
f
471-3020
I
·
52 N.
~
St. Pou,hlrffpele
.....
•c.•~•.-•--••·
---h•_
-
, • · -
~ • 0 . , . . •
-.)
. ~..
- .
.
~
i•c,n¼¼,e'il,-...~1~r:,~.v,.,..i
...
•,:,<:-
w,
TH~BJD
- . L\l\ij
·. 4,68~6~0
· WAYS
mot·'
A·~ . .
ENJOY
A
~--·
America's Best Fast
Food
Alternative ·
803 MAIN ST.
~
POUGHKEEPSIE
OPEN LATE
. 2 AM WEEKDAYS ·
4 AM WEEKENDS
It's
Worth
-
Th_e Trip! ·
'
I
:~•·
(
/ / l
THE
CIR.CLE
Alarm system.
ma
If
unctions
hyDavidNg-
co-roitor,
The fire alarm sys~em in-Champagnat_
may not work again,
as
it did Monday -
night during a
fire drill,
if
dirt
becomes
trapped in the system's circuitry, ac-
cording
to
Dick White, part-owner of
Security -Systems Installers which ser-
vices all fire· alarm systems in the dor-
mitories.
--
White inspected. and coi'rectEld· ··the
malfunction with the system Tuesday, and
-the system
is
now in its -proper working
condition, said J~eph Waters, director of
safety and security,
Dirt in the electrical
·
· relay contacts
. prevented bells on
13
wings of the
nine-
'
story building from ringing, and warning
students _
to ,
evacuate the building.
, The Qwlding's systernalso failed to work
Sept. 12 during a
fire
drill;
only one bell on
the-fourth floor rang leaving the rema.ining
sections of the · nine-story building un-
warned, according to reports from Marist
Security.
has been left.with ·Joseph Waters, director
of the security office, said White.
.
Although the bells may fail to ring, the
present system automatically notifies -- the
fire department when ·someone- pulls the
handle of the emergency box.
The system only activated the bells on
four floors,
all
on the east side of the
building, -during Monday night's drill.
Strobe lights and bed vibrators, installed
in the rooms of deaf students, also failed to
work during both drills.
"It's a serious matter and· we•u · do
1
White describes the system as everything we
can,"
said Waters.
: "adequate" and said he ~loes not want to
"I
tl1ink
it's something that n~eds
to
be
· tell the college to buy a new system. t~tally revamp~," said Gerald Kelly,
However, a price quote for a new system director of housing.
"God
forbid
if
there
White says there
is
no guarantee that it
could not happen again, but quickly added,
a new system does not necessarily'
safeguard all types of malfunctions.
·
_ was a fire and it (the system) didn't
work,,' he said before the system was
repaired Tuesday.
.
·
According to Kelly and Waters, in the.
event of a fire and the system malfunc-
tioned, Champaganat's approximately
450
residents would have to be warned ver-
bally by either the housing staff or Marist
Security personnel on duty.
_
From
12
midnight
until
8
a.m., there
would be two security guards on campus
. and three desk guards
to
warn occupants
· ·of the college's largest dormitory.
"I
certainly. would like to have more
forces available to cover the dormitory but
I
have
to
do the best with the available
forces
I
have," said Waters.
· He added he would expect other students
to help with an emergency
if
one hap-
p~ned.
The present system
is
described by
Waters as "fair, on the minus side" or
"poor, on the plus side," on a scale of poor
,
to outstanding.
Waters said the college will_ take a hard
look and a keep a close check on the
present system.
"I
think it (Champagnat)
is a safe place
to
live but
I
would feel much
better
if
he had a fire alarm system that
would never malfunction.''
Kelly recommended that the system be
tested periodically, perhaps even daily,
"until we get a certain level of con-
sistency,, that we know it
is
reliable.
Cbampagnat Hall's l~year 9ld fire alarm system malfunctioned twice
during • th~ past-· week. Approximately 450 students, including · some
handicapped students, live
in
the nine-story dormJtocy.
Waters would not disclose the cost of
installing a new system in Champagnat
because he said it would be unfair to
· contractors bidding
to
the college.
.,
).;;,
'
'
'.
.
illb . .
c_c.,.c.1
....
ci.r-•"'·z1c ..
◄
-....z1-«
...
1-
◄
... •-•--""--._' •••••·-•-•--· ••--•-• ..
•-•-•••-•-•-=-•~•--•-•-◄-•~•-◄--
◄
......
◄--◄-•'--o◄
o◄.-•
.......
__,.___,,...........___,,,,.,__,,,,.,,,,,,,__..__ ___ :_·~----- ...,,.· -- --
23.3.1
23.3.2
23.3.3
23.3.4
23.3.5
CIRCLE
Volume 23, Number 3
.
September 20, 1979
Students reps .intereSts conf
I
ict
by
Mary Ryan
respective clu~ petitions for funds, says
"I
'.
don't believe that the
.
Financial decisions," Davis added.
S,aHwrit
f'
r
Student Government president Joseph
.
Committee members will be dishonest
in
Joe Krzys, a Sigma Phi Fraternity
"Mong"
cann.
·
_.
·
making a decision about their particular member, says he plans on remaining silent
Three of the five members
·
of the
.
"l
picked Donald Ball
_
(Ski Club mein-
·
clubs,"
.
cann commente<t
.
_
.
and will not vote when the budget
Financial
·
Committee, the board that ber) because he's someone I'm close to,"
·
Inter-house Council president Brian Sch-
allocations decision for the fraternity
is
allocates student club funds,
·
belong
·
to says Cann.
-
"I
trust
him
todo a good job; he
_
midt says he chose Cindy Davis (Marist
discussed.
·
other clubs or·organizations
_
and
.
are not ·hasaheadforbooksandheisopen-minded College Council on Theatrical
Arts
"Personally, I don't feel it's right to
required
t? abstain from voting \.Vhen their to everything."
·
because ''she's got experience from being vote .•. ," he says.
"I
don't want people
·
on the board last year, and because I feel coming back to me saying that the
·
-
·
■
·
she can be unbiased."
·
·
,
fraternity got too much because of my
D
·
,·sa b I ed
g
·.
a
In .
ac
·
ce
·
·
ss
Schmidt commented that he would like influence."
.
.
.
. _
·
_
'
_
_
_ _
_
_
to
··
see
.
members
·
"step down" from
He also
.
says that
Cann
and Schmidt'
._
.
.
deciding how much
·
money their club should discuss the p~ibility of setting
.
hr
Pam
Miller
Siaff
w
rh
e
r
.
Marist
is
_
working to
make
acce/3Sible to its
90
han~cap
says
-
Director of Specia1
··
Se
Perriera.
·
· ··
·
. ·
:
"I just w:ant the more impo
t9 get done first," says Perrie
The first and
-
second floor
.
ha
Leo
·
Hall
_
were remodeled to ace
disabled
-
students. Tactile room
were
·
installed in
'
Donnelly
.
_.
ll
·
spring for the blind and vis
·
•
·
Four
.
sets of strobe
·
,
vibrators, serving as
f
and hearing impaired
"Donnelly's freight elevator, used by the
·-
handicapped,
·
needs to be
..
remodeled to
·
accommodate quadriplegics.
-
As
it is now,
re
,·
·
the elevator
_
controls require use of the
upper extremities/'
.
.
The Special Service improvements
m~de at Marist are in compliance with
s Section
··
504
·
of
the
·
Vocational
Rehabilitation
·
Act of 1973 which states,
''All
facilities, organizations, and
in-
, stitutions receiving federal funds must be
·
mmaUcally and physically
.
ac-
Je to the disabled by June 2,
_
1980."
should receive. The
.
.
screening for
.
guidelines for board members remaining
.
allocations will begin
this
week.
silent during the discussion
·
of the
Cindy Davis says that she is not going to
·
allocations for their particular clubs
.
refrain from
.
voting
.
when she
·
bids for
"It
could or could not" affect the overall
MCCT A allocations.
· ·
·
credibility of the board, Krzys added.
"I
·
am
-
impartial when
·.
making
·
.
_
-
-
··
·
·
.
Library gets grants
by
Marisa Simoqc
staff, said Toscano.
·
e
have very little to do to attain
.
c
•
accessibility," Perreira
.
With an approximate
$120,000
from the
Programmatic accessibiUty
college's budget and three grants,
·
Dr
;
·
criinination
in
admissions,
·
:
Vincent Toscano; assistant
·
dean for
.
He said the emphasis
this
year will beto
'-'involve the
staff
with the faculty and
stu.dents."
. ·
· __
·
on the sixth
·
and sev
pagnat in August.
prerequisit
es
Jfo
r degree
·
requirements.
learning resources, said
.
he expects to
.
·
·
•
·
·
•
.
.
_
·
.
.
"Most'
'
•
"'-"
~
'"
people,"
she
noted,
upgrade the library services .
.
·
'
. ·
A
·
new computer has been purchased
to
help keep records of borrowed and-or
'
overdue books plus pro~ide instructors
with lists of available materials in the
.
,
"The major point
addressed
·
yet
is ·
Perreira
:
:
comment
provements.
"An,Y
cla
essibility to be "realize the
limitations.,,
-
_
Toscano said the library received
$40,000
mpus center/!
.
.. O
Marist
·
f
most _.other
,
. from the school's general budget,
$20,000
n
.
future
·'
im- '
·
private
;
'
.
plying with from two
,
separate · grants donated by
eeting there Sectio
·
nci the Mccann Internatjonal Busin~s Machines
(IBM);
that have
·
disabled
s
should,
-
in essence
,
be m
way
of
getting a
'
whee c
.
classroom
~
area unless the s
·
ts
'
enrolled Cenf
essible
.
to the hari~
and
$60,000
from the federal governmenf
re is no
di
,
,
,.
.
'Renova
·
g Marist," Perreira Title ID
-
grant.
· _
_
. '
.
·
,
-
-
in through the theatre and
this
pres
security risk," she said and added,
.
"The
estimated cost for an elevator for all three
floors in the call!plis center
is
$100,000."
'"
'
n
ted,'
'.
isn't difficult because it's a
"We're trying to make
this
facility a
,,
·
more
'
.
active part of the
.
educational
'
But ;:::~~ that the success of the process
'
here at Marist,:' said Toscano.
improvements really depends on the at-
-
The ~o!ley from the Title
m
grant, part
titudes of the
'
faculty, staff and students
.
_
of
.
$1 million donated by the government,
-
library.
.
,
_
_
·
.
.
.
.
. _
·
.
Toscano said he believes . student
complaints that the library
·
does not
_
..
always have the sufficient material for a
research proje~t may be _Justified. "In
some cases, an mstructor
will
recommend
the use of a
book
which
is
not here. Often,
the students don't know how to .find what
they need."
.
·
will be spent on more audio-visual
-
Frosh
-
like· dorm
equipment and the IBM grants will be used
.
to buy new books, said Toscano
.
.
·
·
A course instructing students h"w to use
library reference materials and
·
a "term
paper-- clinic" are being offered
this
semester to help faculty, students, and.
To help students find materials
available in the library, which opened four
years ago, the ~taff has been attending
conferences and taking courses in library
-
training; said Toscano.
"We're making an effort to fill the
gaps,,,.said Toscano," "and one step at a
time is the only way to do it."
Approximately 82 percent of 131 fresh-
that forbids liquor in the freshman ·aorm
men residents say-that
·
they
·
are pleased
_
froni Sunday thr~ugh Thursday.
with the beginning stages of the all-
.
"They expect us to be saints," says
··
freshmen dormitory, according to a Circle
·
Dawn Sturtevant.
.
.
s~e?;;~e
·
11
because everybody
is
in the
--
<IWe're here to work, not party," says
Cafe lacks feedback
sam
_
·
e boat," Leo re
·
s1·
_
dent Sheryl Bassford, Harry Mendez, who says
·
he is highly in
Th F
od
.
c
·
_
favor of the freshmen rules.
·
·
e
·
o
·
ommittee
.
will
.
meet today, because- the college has a new dining
service and a new cafeteria manager, Don
saJd
:
-
"It's nice to know everyone else has
a
_
ccording to
.
Brian Schmidt, Inter-House
th
·
bl
"
"They bombed out,"
·
Conru·e R-otter
e
.
same
·
pro ems.
·
·
·
.
,
,
president, after s_chool opened three weeks
"I think it's. good," says Mary
.
~om~ents on last years,, frosh class.
ago. The committee
is
having "com-
Gihnartin.- "We get to know everyone and
We re 18 and on our own.
.
munication" problems in organizing itself
_
Card.
..
.
.
it keeps
.
~.e class of
,
.'81 to~ether.!t
:
'
.
·
:
"In_o~
_
e
_
y;ay it
Illa.k~
me feel alienated,
for this semester, says Diane Digit, last
.
.
'
-
'I feel
,
1ike my mother
:
1S
·
here,'
1
·
says
'
and in another way it makes me feel close year's committee· pr~ident
Card and Brian
·
Schmidt, Inter-House
House Co°1!cil !Il~etings or provide Seller's
tbe <;allege
s
dining service with feedback
-
Laurie .Washburn about the alcohoi'policy
.
to my fellow freshmen
,
" says Donna Cody.
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
. .
.
-
.
.
. ,
.
Digit says things have
·
been confusing
about the food and cafeteria service.
.
College drinker:
-
Hal's unsolved problem
/
other things that take
,
priority
to
his tention toward trying-to stay sober for 24
·
realize it," he says.t'There's plenty more
drinking.
.
.
,
hours at a
0
time. -
with definite drinking problems."
"It's definitely a
·
problein," Hal says
Hal says that he woulo go to help at the
AA. will work for almost everyone,
with his eyes
-
focused toward the ground. nearby Dutchess Co~ty Mental Health according to
"This
Is A.A." A.A. is
"It's a
-
matter of getting around to getting Center, but he thinks the atmosphere
is
-
available free of
.
charge without
the help a lot of people see I need."·
.
·
"too
-
wide
·
open."
_
_
obligation.
.
·
·
·
Al~oholics A;nonymous
~
(A.A.) is a
,,
i'There are too many people that know
·
''I've been going here onto three years,"
.
serv1~
.
consisting.:.
·
of people
_
who have
·
w~t•s
:
going on," he says
.
"I am afraid
·
Hal adds at the end of the interview. "I've
.
discove,;ed and admitted that they cannot thlitthey're ( counselors) are getting a look seen a lot of a~ration complain
contro1
_
·
.
a1cohol. There
·
are branches in at you the way you really are
.
"
.
.
.
about drinking ..
.
The focus around here is
·
:
·
~
..
_
hy Chri~
_
tQJ>hcr
flog~n
more
.
~n 90 co~µies
•
which
·
emphasize
·
A.A. members
·
~yt!13t the most
im-
all wrong ... No
.
one has taken a look at the
·.
.
-
.c;,~,
1
;,
.
,
<
~
:
'.
:
:,:<:_:,
<
· •
-
the ann
·
to
.
stay
:
sotier and help one another
.
.
portantfact to confront 1s that "nQ
_
matter problem: The bottom line is that tney
.
..
. . .
.
·.
. .
.
:
~:
'
·
'
with
.
th~ir problems
:·
.
.
.
_
howlon_gwemaybedry,_:wewillalwaysbe (Administration) have not taken a good
.
.
~dltor's Note:.
This
18
th~
·
last
of two
::'I
have a hamlle on my life .and I don't alcoholics - and
_.
alco~ollcsras far as ~e
.
look at why they (students) drink the way
articles
·
conce,;mng al~ohollSlll and the
~
a_s much asl did,"
.
says Hal after kn,ow, can never a_gam drink
-
socially or _they do."
· ·_ ·
-
.
t
.
.
_
college drinker. ''Hal"
_
18
a false name for
.
pausmg to
·
collect
=
his
,
thoughts.
:
''On thEl normally
;
"
.
accordmg to
·
a brochure
.
en-
·
Hal says that he
·
does
.
not know the an-
. _
a
;
Marist
,
student wh_o :Sslced
)
10~
to.
be
other
.
f!and,
,
that
:
h~ndl~
~ri
)lip
_
.
at any
,
titled
:.
"This Is
,
A.~. ''
·
.
<
:.<
·
·
..
..
.
.
·
swer to the problem
:
But he
_
attributes
it
to·
identified.
:C,><
·
, ·
•
•
·
·
·:
: ~
·
·
:·
-
.
_-
.
~e;"
:
·
· ..
.
,'.
,
·
:
i
·
·
·<\ .
··
.
·
.
_ ,.
)Ial
_
says
_
tha~ he luls to<>" many
.
oth~r eitl!er the
,
habits
:,
othis
·
generation, the
·
.
.
_
.
·
_
.
. .
_
.
_
.
.
,
..
_. .
:
~
;
A .. r:nembers try
_
.to ,i:~ain
•
sob~r by
:
problet:JlS
J.o
\VOJ:TY
,
about
·
besides
:
his
;
·
nation; or the college
itself.
_
.
.
·
.-,
The
_
·.
c;I
_
rinkmg
~
·
problem
that
confronts
-:
~bservm~ tile PI'.8\'ious
·
s~ccesses
<>f.
thos
_
e
'
..
drink
_
irig pr:oblem. He would
.
not
,
~laborate
·
·
·.
"If
y~u don't want
.
to
·
drink, don't,'! says
.
Hal, an
_
.
upperclassman
,
,;vho
,
say~
,
he
is
an
:
mvol~4!d
111
.
the
;
p~ogram.
:~
Members t_ry
•
to
-
on
.
,thos~ prob!ems.
..
·C
-
·
.
·
·
•
.
.
.
Ha}to any9ne who
.
has not started yet.
"If
_
:
-
~
_
lC()~
_
<>.li~
;
a~tll~ughh~~~
-
µk
,
et<>
.
'1:chni,t it;
:
:
folloW;
·
'
.
the
.
~
•
-
•
.
Tw~11ty
;:
Four
.,
.
~our
; .
.
g1an
~:'
·
-
'
·
·
'
~
There's
,
a
·
to
t
of alco~olics on
this
:
you haven
'
t started; d~'t start now."
-
-
~
-
·
'.
jvill
remairi
:
,
untouclieck Hal:says
:
he
.
has
,
which
0
directs
:
,
the
,
.
problem
:
m;nke
_
r
.
's at-
.
.
campus
-
_
and
_
:
most
;
of
.
them don't even
-
·
•
·
'
·
·
,
:
~
.
-
::·.
>
.
' '
:
..
·
--
·.·
_
-,
;:
-.
_
..
·
..
.
·
,
..
.--
.
• ,.:
_
_
,_.
·
.:
--
~:
,
.
,; ....
_,
.
.
·.
·
.
•
.
....
. ;_
:'
·
·
..
·
--
--:.
-~
.
··
·
·
.
·
-<
:
,·
.<
.
.
.,.
_
·:
,
.·
. .
•·
..
'·,
)
.
.
··
. .
.
.
.
'
.
.
..
.
.,
....
-
.
I
•
'
....
.....
-
Page
2--------------------
THE CIRCLE;.--------------•september 20, 1979
~
co-editors
associate editor
copy editor
feoture
'editor
sports editor
photography editor
THE
CIRCLE
· carloonis.t
advertising manager
business manager
Volume 23, Number 3_
September 20, 1979-
Christopher
Hogon
David Ng
Lina Cirigliano
Jane
Neighbors
Dionna
Jones
Jim Townsend
Kevin Kelly
Bob
Whitmore
·
Jon Urban
Frank Kozakewics
Stoff: Rciry Ferguson, Dee Acampora, Marisa Simone, Mary Ryan, Joe Emmells, ·
Steven Porath, Bill Taylor, Jim Williamson, Mike lonlosca, Pam Miller, Pat Marafoli, ·
Lorello Kennedy. John Mayer, 'Dennis While, Dave Metz, Mike McCarthy, Madeline
Whalen, Thomas Hasset, Karen Flaherty, Chris Egan; Mory Delucia, Eileen Doyle,
Rich So~mer, Maggie Schubert
Readers Wrife:
AU letters must
be
typed triple spoce with o 60
space
ma,gin, and submitted to the Circle
office no later than 6
p.m..
Monday. Short letters ore preferred. We reserve tho right to
ec!i•
all lett.:rs.
letters must
be
signed. but names may
be
withherd upon request. letters will
be
publi>hed depending upon ovoilobility o spoce.
· ·-
S
a- m
e
l
"CJ
c e s
-
To the Editors:
.
Auditions attracted many new
· Once again 'tis. the season for
faces to the theatre. However, it
one of.. MCCTA's dramatic.., would_seemajConCP. an MCCTA
rod ·
ti
·
"A Midsummer
actress-actor, aJr,dys an MCCTA
p
uc ons, 1.e ...
Night's· Dream." We ·gladly actress-actor;" For--those. who
announcethatMarist College will
weren't "e.mong the chosen"
have the pleasure of seeing the
NEVER FEAR!-· There are
-
same faces, . the s_aD1e . ex-
always . positions
(hovie~er
pressions,- the mannerisms • and
plebian) sutji
as
m~e-up artiSt,
gestures of the same actresses • set designer-director, ~or props
and· actors. Despite ~e obvious
·
manager. Throughout the theatre
~
gifts of several individuals, the ·world~ tllese . posi_ti12ns •.. are
overuse·oftheirtalents leaves the ·h,onorable; . _ creative,
and
prospecµ~e"JlU,dience
SO-~~W~t
.~:1'~~~E!C~~:: '. -..
>
.
,, , ,,
_
. _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..... _,;..;... _ _ _
;_
____
~
unenthused; · · ·.
. . · "-· · ·· .. · ·
.· .·
. Patrons
of
the
Arts .
Hot Stuff
.
To the Marist Administration:
Whatever the cost, please buy a ne.._;
fire. alarm system for the Champagnat
residents now.
•_;,,.._
•·
,.
'
.
Dear'Adrilinistration,
_
•-.c:::nights•(It
is
.uriderstoodth~t
ori
_We will ~_Illajte
this
-lette~ as·::-week 11i~~ts mg~ic sh~~ld ~e k~pt
sunple as p_o.ss1ble, so there-is no ~at a ~um,-b!,lt its time to
misinterpreting of what- we are . rel~ a, bit. on ~e w~ekends.) · .
try~gJo
say~
First of all,'it-bfis.
. 4)We want.things on the:floor _
cometo our attention'that Manst ·. futed so<mJlfterwe_ report t~e~ to
Public and Private interests
is
trying to change
its
image;· the,· llou~e · masters; (The sixth.
upgrade its-standards,. make· for
.
fl(!Or. su1~e
)ll!S ·
had
·
a· brok~n
-·· a better livirig space; and
run
this•···
.wmdow. since last selll~ter.
~
..
· school the,way a co~lege ought to · .whl_d~woverlooks the s1~e doo~
~
· be·
ruri.
Now. we. aren't~ out to ·. · Champagnet and any~ne walking
disprove~this-theory. ·we. aren't• .. o~t that dO?rto ~~ss
IS
under the
·
.,, .·· Communists!.. .. We,
-
aren't nsk9fgettingJhe!£ headchoppe_d
--------..,..:..--------'-----------------..:,_----'----------··""
.. -;;..· '-' ---------.
· . ·a1coholics! We ·are:simply"a few ,· ·off: any day now,;•,you care. so.
--- -
~
· -· upperclassmen .who have
takeri
.:
m!Jch about __ people,, tiu:owing
Th
1 ·
h..
· ·· d t · b ta·
f
- · · ·
h ·· · - ·.an int.ere. st. in: what is and isn't'
.
:things out t!le wm
.. qows, ~e would ...
ere are approximatey ~o-clu.s and
_re9u1re ··-:oa s .•n __ rom votmg
Oil
terr ..
'
·goirfgonnearby.Thatis.whatyo:u ;;
.
~j,n}t_;tou;d>get.;:r1gllt::on,·
organizations vyirig.
0
for a piece of Stude~t · , re~_pective.du~'(l,>ucl~et .
.
'[he ~tuderit Goyer~.
·
_
. wan~
is
it.not? 'fo
run
!lt
-
~-:~cl!gq,<;.~S.<>~~!hwg.H~~:.tha!_.
1
l~.~!,:~~ •
,-GovernQient's ,,$2~~000 · budget, a ·smaller:; .. .,iimcnt. ii(<?pe~ing
,its~U. to;_que~~io~s ;9ffair
.
correctlY,"you.naveto. care:aliout--'<,iiti&¥e-:J1191".~llI1P:()Pijlgl~s~'l-!o
.· sum . th~ii last 'yea.r's,
.
Yet, the dubs~ill be ·.
play and polifical bias. •.• ... ~.- -
:
. ;
i. -
,
; . -·
,
:_: __ : . , ... _
"
ihe
·'student::.
Rememb·er
'·t11e'
'?liltfputtmg:people
onjfroballon
asking for morenioney to meet itsoperating
Joe'Krsyz;·vice~presidenf of the college's. · - students;
·
tliose people· wh6.pay for havirig-:~eir ... ~ter~os-
-
,up_too ··
cost this year because of inflation, hopes of
fraternity, Sigma Phi Epsilon, is
a
member of
-
five
thousand
dollars per year to,- . loud. or,.smokmg D)ilnjuana., We
expansion, and ·intentions of ·re.fin.· ing. The
th
.. e board. He'sa. ys h_,e will r.efr.a.in from vo.ting
come here?
If
you're out to help - don!t lik.e.J,his type.of treatment.:
·
._
· ·
the students then askthem what We_: are a x:espectable group of ·
money to go arounff will he very tight; more
and discussing the fratciriitY.'s proposed
they, ·want. S!flce you haven't. 'people an~ we, d<!ll't:-want~o be
demands, smaller allocations.
budget when it appears on the .hoa·rd's agen-.
,done this yet we'
-
in.,Ho1,1se
m
pre~ured
m.to
being rebellious;)·.
. The Financial Board has the vested trust
da. He· admits, he wants no secorid ·guessing
Champagnet are go~g to tell you;
. 7)
~.e,.
want to wake up to hot
of . the Student Government, and of all
from .students a.bout his influence in iip-
-
1)
We want our. fire alarm to waterm our shQ.~ers. Uyou want
students ~vho belong to a duh, to allocate
propriating money for the fraternity. Krsyz
work properly during fire. drills .. · us to .be responsib~e so mu~
Y
0
f
money to all 30 organizations as fairly as it
will he able to say afterward: -T ha~ no in-
_
.
2) ,We want the· l~brary be equally responsible. Why cant __ _
_ available for the same hours on
you try to understan<i !l}e student
can. The board should always decide what is
fluence towards the fraternity getting its
Friday and Saturday nights as instead:of making up your, own -
the overall good of the campus, what will
allocation. ·
·
·
during the week nigtits. ·
.
,.definition ~f what a student.
benefit the college in the loqg run.
· Don Ball, a member ofthe Ski Club, and
:3)
,we Qnly want to be told by
should be lik_e?
.
.
And when all the money. is allocated, the
Cindy Davis, member of the 'fheatre . Arts
students·: that our, stereo.
is··
too
Signed by 50 members of House
arguments for allocating the·amount oltunds.
Council, are both members of'the Finan~ial
loud -on Ftjdays_ and Sat~rday
.PI_;,;
Champagnet Hall
to certain clubs should he structurally and
Board. They should follow Krsyz's example;,,
logically sound; There should be-little_ room
.No one is saying they wiH unethically use
for accusations and doubting
if . the hoard
their powers a·s hoard
'
members to ap-
perlorms its duties to the utmost. Public com-
propriate money for their clubs.
It
would be __ _
mittees are always· under the scrutiny ~of the
·
as criminal to accuse them of such an act as.it
students and the mere nature of such a hoard
would for them· to misuse their voting power~
will always receive some unjustified charges... B.ut being on-the board, they might be given
S11ch charges merely come from frustrated
the ad~antage of explaining their :club's
club officials who couldn't convince the
budget after all the other
:
organizations ha"-\•e
hoard it had legitimate grounds for. seeking
filed into the student goverrimenf office
arid
out student activity fees. This charges can _be
given their pre~entation.
It
is an advantage
disregarded as part of the job.
·
.
no club should have. . ·
.
· _
·
· ·
But the Financial Board, with its. present
- And the allocation discussions are closed.
members, leave _themselves open to serious
· There is no safeguard againsttheir own sub- ·
questions, · if.-i10t charges, unless Student
jective stands which might, or might not, af-' ·
Government and Inte.r
0
House Council re-
feet b1idget allocations. But to be sure~ they
organize ·the present format of the hoard.
should _step down when their respectiveclub ..
· Currently,· boa.rd: !"embers can h~Iong to
p'etitfons ·stud~nt. Government
:for
their -·
another club while they serve ,on the board.
allocations. It would eliiniru_ite any, doubt:
In
effect, they will'be discussing how much · that the Financial:· Board ;might· have let
their. own club may receive from the Student
private feeling interfere with.its ptiblic
job.:
.
.
Government budget: ·Board members are not·
.
--
.
-
•
'
r _
'
'
' ; • .
•
Plenty ()ftalk, noactiQn
Students have
hegu~
-~omplairiing about ·. given. the quality of f()O() .,that studen~ ·.p.ay
the quality and seh:iction of food• that is being .
for~
1'herEf is 'little _yariety:and ,m~als)l<?:n•ot · .
. served
at
meals;
, :
•.
:i , . : : -~.
.:provide enoµgh
to
fill:ma·ny"-ofJ~e· sttideni_f
. . . .... ··•· ·. . . . .
. . . .
. .. iippetit~s: :~
:
:·:~-::.
> \'
>r~
:>' ~-. :··:
,>'<'• .-·
Sei)er's manager-Don' Card says that the , . :Mthough Seiler's
,
seemi;4~ he:a
"
ttempting
food will
.improve 'and. the .Ritthskellal'. ser--
.
. t9·do .the bes(they(can; the
'
Cirde thiriks~that ....
vices
·.\Vm
jmprove~ :l~fot~ing_ can. -imp)'.ove.
'tpereis~a teat~e~lt_o~6 iiliproy[if:
·:<>
ir:: ,.
unles~Jeed_b~c~:is presen~d_t() ~':liler's: ,/ ·· _ .. · ... · .·
-
' ; Th~
,
pr<:le
_
do~s ij9t_~an'rthe -~a1neJhfog to',.
The .
Gfrcle
.
··
thinks;: thaf Seilefs:
·ha(:
not· .happenth·atocciirl'.e_d
.
last_yeJlr:~/c-'\.
··:?
if·
·
.'.-:
;,\,:~.:;'
'
,'.'
..
.
..
::
...
,..·:
~
-/..
,
:;
,
'
.
.
..
;
_.
.
.
.•
·,
.
.
:;.,:
:,:
'
,-~-~
:,.
._,_'
..
--..·
;,,.-
_
_
September 20, 1979
-
THE CIRCLE
Gridfflen
lose
·
15-14
' by Jim Townsend
from Hackett to freshman Mike Spawn,
.
S
po,-1.
,
,,l
i
1or
the point after was good and they led 14-7.
The lead held up until Stony Brook
-The Marist College football team lost scored with four minutes left in the game.
their first regular season game Saturday The two point conversion was good and
.
to
the State
_
University
of
New York at Stony Brook never relinquished the lead.
Stony
.
Brook
15-14.
·
Stony Brook's game winnin~,
43 yard
TheRedFiixestraveltoSaintJohn'sthis drive, was helped by two penalities to the
Saturday
to
play their
,
firs~ Metropolitan
.
Marlst team.
.
Conference game .
.
-
-
-.
_
__
.
Marist had a final chance to win the
Malet str~ed that he thought the
of-
game with
00:41 left with a 35-yard field
fensive backfield of Bob Kehoe, Jim Dowd, goal by Hackett but a bad snap from
_and:
~om
Eisele ran well-
and ·
is
''op- center prevented that.
timistic" about their future. Eisele
carried
Malet thought Hackett ran
the
offense
·-
the
ball
15
times
for
69
yards while Kehoe well even though he only five of
13
passes
averaged
5.5
yards a
calT)'.
_
_ _
_
·
_ ·
·
-
for
.
48
yards but
three
_
passes were
drop-
·
Stony Brook· ~red first in the second
.
ped.
·
.
.
·
-
.
.
_
q~rter and
took a
_
7--0 lead. The lead
stood
.
Malet was impressed
also
with the way
·
until
the
third
quarter when Marist scored the team didn't quit after they were dow 7-
twice.
.
•
.
·
·
,
·
.
-
.
-
-
·
O
at halftime.
_
The
_
_
R~
-
foxes
•
scored on
·
a run by
.
ThisweeksgameagainstSaintJohn'sis
_
_
_
.
.
qu~rterba_sk
.
J:eff ~~ett, the
extra
point important, says Malet,
because
they (St.
M~ist
qu~terback Jeff Hack
itlo ~
-
;
/
:.
· ,'
...
was.good ~dJhe
_
SCO!"e was tied 7-7.
~
John's) has ~ot won a game either. St.
0
_
, , . _
, ·
:
. ' . .
<
.
.
e
,
0
8
,
opass. --
.
Maristtook~eleadonatouchdownpass John's has a record of 0-1-1.
.
'
-:-
~
.
.
-
.
.
'
'
'
.
Page3-
Netters
open season
by
Lisa Arcuri
S
p
o
r
b.
\Hil
t"
r
~though he has
six
returning veterans
from
last
year's team, tennis coach Joe
Coogan says the
team
is weaker
this
year .
We lost our two top players from last
year,"says Coogan who admits they have
a "tough" schedule
this year which in-
cludes matches
against
Vassar and For-
dham.
Returning veterans include Chris
McGuigan, Nancy Wysong, Nancy
Colagrossl, Kathy Carmody,
I.Jsa Arcuri
and Bonnie Rinck with the only Fresbma~
on the squad being Jackey Butler.
·
The teams' first home match
is
Friday
Against Ramapo who the team
has never
faced but Coogan says it could be a tough
match
because
"one of our top players
Nancy Colagrossi, is
hurt."
'
- ,
whole team piayed well
as
they won
2-0.
,
Ha
·.
r
·
r ·, e rs
I
OS
e
··
two
Knut It,oald scored at
40:00 in the first
half
~
,
iive the varsity
a
1--0 lead.
.
,
Jrr1
Rf
PS
.s
i
ye
.
<
At
41'5
of
~
•
-
iiecond
half,
~
..
suboa
.
by
Chris Egan
.
,
.
..
'
.
. .
. .
. .
.
.
'
,
'
.
. .
sc
,
ored and that was
the
way the game
.
.
SporL, .. ,it
er
'
•
: ·
j
~yJim Townsend
. :
._-.
~~
;'
en
_
ded. The
_
~copd ha
_
If
_
was highll
_
. ghted by
·
.
sf)Ort
s
_
Nl
i
i
O
r
"'
;.
:•·
8 88
e b
lte d
.
And H
1
Th M •
t
try
t
-
·
suff
ed
,
: .
. ·
·
. .
,
-..
.
._
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
_
.
_-
:
_ v
·
~
.:
goa
.
n er
y
_
omoia on a
e
arlS
cross coun
eam
er
·
•
·
•
·
,
.
CCA
go.op experiJ!Ilce bo
_
th culturally and nenaltv
-
kick
·
~t the
35 :55 mark;
·
~
two
·
defeats Satur<!&y at Sunken Meadow
sport-WJSe''· was the way' that
•.
Howard
•
.
_
-
..
·
.
_
·
·
·
,
-·
Park, N.Y., droppmg its record to 1-4.
-,,
"D<>e"
.
,
Goldman .. described
•
the
:·
soccer -·on
_
Monch!y~
·
Sept. 17 the Red
_
Foxes
Marist lost to the winner of the race,
✓
--
··
,
t~qi•~
.
two
,
games against the
·
visiting faced
,
the JJniversity of Southhampton, Colwnbia University,
l5-50.
c.w.
Post,
?
.
,'
:
.
tea~~~:fJ;;'iii~
•
•
Red
~ox~
iaced
-
-
-
:!f~:;
-
-
:1:/f~~U:~Ofon,;
-
:~sg::;
_
:i
1~f~=h:t;~;;:;~:S!v:a~~~~~
,
.
the ~ristolC1cy Qlub and lost 2-1 .
.
The lone
,
lost to was Oneonta; says
,
Goldman who
·
scheduled
:
but did not compete .
.
>
Ma~t
-
goal was scored
,
by Joe
Bilboa.
'-
,
was
.
.
very
·
impressed with the
·
team's
.
-
Despite the poor record, coach Rich
,·
Against
the alwnni
~
-
.
ICDocJt
,
said
..
the
·
p~rf
ormance.-
:
~
•
.
:
·
'.
,
·
,
Stevens is not, concerned
·
about the team
-
·
·
·
·
· ·
,
·
-·
·
·
--
-
·
·
-
· ·
· ·
·
which he calls "without a doubt the best
•
we've ever had here.'' Stevens
,
says the
·
team will probably
be
at or around
.500 for
-
-
·
·
-
the regul~r season because of the ex-
.
.
.
.
sund_~,rwa ·
_
.
.
.
tremely tough schedule. However, he
~dds,
!he
seasoµ
will
meari
nothing
·
until
•
. _
....
11111111
. . . . . . . . . . . .
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ .
;
the NCftA
,
Division
ll regional qualifying
,
meet on October 21.
---
·
·
·
~tr~urals
that ~ere
:
Jiot popular
=
the
_
ultinulte frisb~ football
·
will
be
played
For the second straight week Jim
.
pa~
_
gew years are bemg can~elled and the
·-
next sem~ster
;
.
_
----
__
.
·
-
--
_
.
·
DeLuanay was
·
the top runner for Marist,
c
seaso~
.-
of
;
·
t11~e
.
tha~
·
sllo\Ved a
,
lot
·
of
_
Deer, who works with student super-
completing the five mile course
in
2.6:35 to
_
__
student
·
particip~t1on
· .
are
_
behlg
.
visors, Kevin Sneeden and
,
Paul Pless;
.
finish tenth
,
overall. Ron Gadziala was
lengthened, according
_
__
to
_
Susa1,1
·
Deer,
_
says that freshman input is important in
-
twelfth in
2.6:40, and Paul Welsh seven-
~
:
director
of
intr~urals.
--
·
:
:
·
the development of the intramurals.
Only
teenth in 'n:07. Colwnbia's Wally Collins
.
Spor_ts like
han~ball
and
•
badminton are
,
orie freshman team
is
participating in the won the race officially with 25:57; although
_
being cm:icelled and the seasons of five-
..
.
football intrainurals. Many commuter
·
his teammate Paul Loomie was credited
plB:_yer basketball and soccer are
,
going to
·
teams
·
are also needed. In the pa~
·
years with the same time.
be prolonged, says Deer .. In the past, five-
the input of commuters has been very
Stevens says the top three men for
player basketball. started after the
poor. -
·
_
·
·
·
Marist, DeLaW1ay, Gadziala, and Welsh,
-
.
Chris~s break _ but Jt
·
w
_
ill
.
start in
-
-
· The awards that are given for _each in-
did notrun well~ but he expects them to
, Nov:ember
.
811d
continue after the break,
tramural champion
will
be, as they have improve. Jerry Scholder, coming back
_
says Deer .
.
-
-
.
··
•
..
,
_
,
·-
-
-
- .
_
_
been the past years, T-shirts.
-
·
from a cold which sidelined
him last week,
,
-
<!
l'welve intramural spQrts
,
are
_
being
,~
/
Last year- over
.
1,000
students par-
ran "a very decent race under the cir-
.
·
offered
this
year with tile only new sport
.
ticipated in the intramural program and cumstances" and
will
give Marist "a very
.•
.
add4'<1,
-
~eing
·
ultimate frisbee
'
football
,
in
-.-,
this
·
_
year Deer
_
hopes
to
_
-
have more strong top four runners."
·
_
the
.
spnng
!
~
Football and volleyball are
students partake in the program
~
·
_
The
·
next race for the Running Red
-
~derway
:
,
and
,
archery,
tennis,
·
soccer,
•
AJJ
in all sports, Deer stressed
·
the need Foxes is Saturday at Marist, and is the
:
·
raqu
_
~tball;
-
and five-player basket~ for officials for the intramural program. onlyhonie meet
this
year. It-starts at 1:00
seasons an!
.
going=to
oo.
played jhis They cazµiot be run unless the officials sign p.m. Saturday, with the five mile course
·
semester.
·
Co~ed voll~yball,
·
.
co-ed
up.
-
·
·,
·
starting and finishing at the south field
Stevens says the team will be without the
services
of
Dave Haupt, the fifth ranked
runner, and possibly Tom Abrams and
Mike McGuire. Co-captain
Dennis
Goff
will be available to
run
after missing the
first two races, and Stevens says "we need
his experience."
raaiuetball; fioor hock~y. softball and
..
~ext to the McCann Recreation Center .
..-----...;._ _____ ==========:::
,,,
..
.
WICKER
.
BAMBOO
-
..
RA TT AN
.
.
.
MATCHSTICK
SHADES
.
:
,
GIFTS &
~
THINGS
.
-.
.
.
~
'
~
.
.
.
.,
/
.
.
.
'
.
'
.
.
.
'
.
-
74-76CANNON
STREET
,
'
·
.
,
,
POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y
.
'12°6'0f
:
·
.,
.
.
.' .
'
.
&
·
..
~
'
.
.
.
.
"
pok
P
,
LAZAMAL
(.
RT. 9
..
-;' .
·
'.
.
·
.
~
::/
,.;
;
:.-:},:}·;~;f_.jf
<~
--
·:
.
.
:.
·
.
~
.
-
-
~
-
~
-
Roosevelt Theater
Rt.
_
9 Hyde
Park
CA<>-2000
.
"ONE
·
OF THE YEAR'S .BEST."
-J
er.
r
ey
l 1
·
<,,1
5
.
ViCn.'>
R~Cl<0-6
VIPIX TV
,·
·
·
~
-.
.
~
:
~-
-
:
'~
A,~so
·
lti
:
t~
~
ir&e best
fil~
:
'
.
.
jm §poi1s
t
SPECIAL: ·
-
<
Preseritthis ad and
::e '
, . - .
.
..
re
·
ceive
:
.
s"itoo
-
oFF
,'
,
~
·
·
•
.
.
•
.
,
,
=
-
.
-
~
-
.
·;
>
-
.-:--.
.
.
Records
Etc.
_
22 Academy
St.,
Poughkeepsie
1
Largest selection
_in the area
' at L,!w
Everyday
Price~.,
_
list 7
98
-4
99
,
list
·
8
98
-5
99
.
·
custom
Pri
_
nted
.
-: .
T-ShJrts
:
~e
·
ad Shop
:
SEV'S PIZZA
Round
&
Sicilian
Hero's
Subs-
Spaghetti
&
Meatballs
Delivers-Always
Hot
OPEN 7 DAYS 4
'til
1
£AT IN OR Till
OUI'
f
471-3020
I
·
52 N.
~
St. Pou,hlrffpele
.....
•c.•~•.-•--••·
---h•_
-
, • · -
~ • 0 . , . . •
-.)
. ~..
- .
.
~
i•c,n¼¼,e'il,-...~1~r:,~.v,.,..i
...
•,:,<:-
w,
TH~BJD
- . L\l\ij
·. 4,68~6~0
· WAYS
mot·'
A·~ . .
ENJOY
A
~--·
America's Best Fast
Food
Alternative ·
803 MAIN ST.
~
POUGHKEEPSIE
OPEN LATE
. 2 AM WEEKDAYS ·
4 AM WEEKENDS
It's
Worth
-
Th_e Trip! ·
'
I
:~•·
(
/ / l
THE
CIR.CLE
Alarm system.
ma
If
unctions
hyDavidNg-
co-roitor,
The fire alarm sys~em in-Champagnat_
may not work again,
as
it did Monday -
night during a
fire drill,
if
dirt
becomes
trapped in the system's circuitry, ac-
cording
to
Dick White, part-owner of
Security -Systems Installers which ser-
vices all fire· alarm systems in the dor-
mitories.
--
White inspected. and coi'rectEld· ··the
malfunction with the system Tuesday, and
-the system
is
now in its -proper working
condition, said J~eph Waters, director of
safety and security,
Dirt in the electrical
·
· relay contacts
. prevented bells on
13
wings of the
nine-
'
story building from ringing, and warning
students _
to ,
evacuate the building.
, The Qwlding's systernalso failed to work
Sept. 12 during a
fire
drill;
only one bell on
the-fourth floor rang leaving the rema.ining
sections of the · nine-story building un-
warned, according to reports from Marist
Security.
has been left.with ·Joseph Waters, director
of the security office, said White.
.
Although the bells may fail to ring, the
present system automatically notifies -- the
fire department when ·someone- pulls the
handle of the emergency box.
The system only activated the bells on
four floors,
all
on the east side of the
building, -during Monday night's drill.
Strobe lights and bed vibrators, installed
in the rooms of deaf students, also failed to
work during both drills.
"It's a serious matter and· we•u · do
1
White describes the system as everything we
can,"
said Waters.
: "adequate" and said he ~loes not want to
"I
tl1ink
it's something that n~eds
to
be
· tell the college to buy a new system. t~tally revamp~," said Gerald Kelly,
However, a price quote for a new system director of housing.
"God
forbid
if
there
White says there
is
no guarantee that it
could not happen again, but quickly added,
a new system does not necessarily'
safeguard all types of malfunctions.
·
_ was a fire and it (the system) didn't
work,,' he said before the system was
repaired Tuesday.
.
·
According to Kelly and Waters, in the.
event of a fire and the system malfunc-
tioned, Champaganat's approximately
450
residents would have to be warned ver-
bally by either the housing staff or Marist
Security personnel on duty.
_
From
12
midnight
until
8
a.m., there
would be two security guards on campus
. and three desk guards
to
warn occupants
· ·of the college's largest dormitory.
"I
certainly. would like to have more
forces available to cover the dormitory but
I
have
to
do the best with the available
forces
I
have," said Waters.
· He added he would expect other students
to help with an emergency
if
one hap-
p~ned.
The present system
is
described by
Waters as "fair, on the minus side" or
"poor, on the plus side," on a scale of poor
,
to outstanding.
Waters said the college will_ take a hard
look and a keep a close check on the
present system.
"I
think it (Champagnat)
is a safe place
to
live but
I
would feel much
better
if
he had a fire alarm system that
would never malfunction.''
Kelly recommended that the system be
tested periodically, perhaps even daily,
"until we get a certain level of con-
sistency,, that we know it
is
reliable.
Cbampagnat Hall's l~year 9ld fire alarm system malfunctioned twice
during • th~ past-· week. Approximately 450 students, including · some
handicapped students, live
in
the nine-story dormJtocy.
Waters would not disclose the cost of
installing a new system in Champagnat
because he said it would be unfair to
· contractors bidding
to
the college.
.,
).;;,
'
'
'.
.
illb . .
c_c.,.c.1
....
ci.r-•"'·z1c ..
◄
-....z1-«
...
1-
◄
... •-•--""--._' •••••·-•-•--· ••--•-• ..
•-•-•••-•-•-=-•~•--•-•-◄-•~•-◄--
◄
......
◄--◄-•'--o◄
o◄.-•
.......
__,.___,,...........___,,,,.,__,,,,.,,,,,,,__..__ ___ :_·~----- ...,,.· -- --
23.3.1
23.3.2
23.3.3
23.3.4
23.3.5