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Part of The Circle: Vol. 23 No. 5 - October 4, 1979

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•.• •·.•.•.•.·
THE.
.CIRCLE
Volume 23, Number 5
October4, 1979
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Frre alarm system to
be
f i~alized ;
by
David
Ng
disclose ~e cost of the system until after. y~r but th~- college could_not afford the
Oredi,or
the meeting and after it
has
been ·'system until recently: However a fire
fu
president said, "I'm going to push for
whatever necessary action is needed to
A proposal to purchase a fire alarm prese~~ to. ~usiness. Officer Anthony ·
the
~hapel in April 1977. which gutted the
system for Benoit House, Gregory House, ~mp~, he sai<L_,th~ system under con-
·
sacristy brought the attention for the need
the library Fontaine Hall and the chapel
8
}!leration would a~toma~cally detect any
of a fire alarm system in the buildings.
will be
f~lized
this
wee'k, according to
~
and warn the fire departmE:Dt, Waters
They
~
also. discu~ possibili~ies of
Joseph Waters, director of safety arid ~id the cost of the system _mvolves · a
renova~mg Qr replacing ~hampagnat
security
. ~ t deal_ of money/'·
_ .
.-. Hall's fire alarm system which malfunc-
Wate~ said, himself, Brother Nilius
Following the results_ <>f yest,?rday's tioned twice last month durin~
drills,
he
. have the system repaired, _ whether.· it -
. n_eeds to be repaired__ or. completely
replaced.'' · . _
· . .
-. -
: "If
the alarms are not working it is
a
-critical situation," Schmidt added. "We
don't ·want \Yhat ha~ned at Providence
College last year to happen at Marist "
Donnelly, director of construction, Andrew m~ting, Wa~rs said · he _would talk . to -add~. ._
-
~
. ,
- · ·
Pavelko, director of maintenance; fire Gerald Cox:, _dean of students, and Gerald -
Bi:i~n Schmidt, mt~r-house council
Schmidt said.
'
chief William Sudka, and Dick White of• ~e~y, the _c.iirector of housing, . and Cam-
Security System Installations, were -to pilli.
. ..
: · ·
.
· __ .
review the final details of·a proposal
:
to ·
If,
C~piliL _approves - th~ proposal,
purchase
ah
alarm system yesterday.
· y.raters sa~d the system won!d pr<>bably be
SuperVisa.r reSigns_
· . The .five--buildings presently :have no ~ e d m _
the
}iv.-e
-
~.uil. ding.s ove. i: _.the
alarm system which would notify the fire·" Christmas vacation. · .
. ·
department during a fire,
·
.. ··
:--·
· .
Waters also &aid he has been_trying_to
by Dianna Jones
-,
Although Waters said
he
~ould not Pll:l'Chase the aystem for. approximately a /
. .
Featureeditor
and BryariKrong~l,.security guards~ went
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down to the boathouse to look for Purcell,
.. After-~dwa~ r:-lll'cell worked eight days _ ·accorqmg to McEvoy, and Hogan called
as·Secuntr Su~rvisor at Marist,,-Joseph Waters at his home·in 'Rhinebeck. ·
Pope _John· Paul I I greeting the crowd of
80,000
at Ya~kee Stadiu~
Tuesday-~ight before celebrating the first
1
pap"al mass in Nevi/York since 1965.
Pope
visits'NY-C:

/
1

byJ)avidNg
-· pope~ colors, were draped over the
· -· upper tier. --
_
. -
At exactly 8:50; · according to the
,NEW YORKCITY,-A New York City
Seiko clock. on .the blacked-out
· ·police officer-placed his hands on
his
scoreboard/the door. in rightfield near
:\\'.aist
and looked_ around Yankee
the 353-foot/markef:swung open and
•Stadiwn and the approximately 80,000
·Pope
·
John --Paul II, dressed· in
people who had gathered for Pope John , ceremonial gold and white vestments,
Paul II's papal mass Tuesday night. He
came ·out standing in. the rear of a
turned to~another officer a~d said, . ·specially modified pickup truck.
As
the
"You know; 1'.ve been in
this
ballpark a ..... truck counter-clockwise · circled the
· •.million times· ·and· I've never seen . · warning track·. around ·. the field,_ the
anything like this.''
·
·
· .. crowd. began to shout and clap
·
as
-- :peorle began to
fill
the stadium, the :- hundreds-rushed~to the edge of their ·
site o Pope Paul Vt's mass· 14 years · seating sections,to get a closer view of
Waters, ~ecto~ of !}8fety and secupty,
On. a previous night Purcell had a
._
accep¥ his resignation ·on Sunc~ay mght. secunty guard, Jim Mozikowski,. write-up ·
· - Accordmg to Ellen-McEvoy, switchboard tick~ts for, "absndoned cars when they
op~rator, Wllt.ers· accepted Pur_ce~l's : were only'parked in Donnelly parking lot
· .re8!-gnation because Prucellwas drinking for night classes," according to Benoit.
-while on ~uty. .
. _
· "He had also iold . Moiikowski to go
Accordmg ~o. _McEvoy, who was- ·through all the lnillding~ on campus an_d
operating the swit,ch~rd on • Sunday lock all the doors,"·says Benoit.
night,. Purcell was; "gc;,mg out, mto the . -Purcellisthe fourth supervisor to resign
parkl:!lgJot .. ; a11~ he was returning about - this year: Ac~ording. to Waters; a new
· every -·.fifteen • mmutes or so ..... he was Supervisor started last night. Waters said
. stumbling more and more and he :wa!"'also -
he
would not
·
c·ommerit -· on_.·· Purcell's
. in.
P, ..
?ll!~er _m(?Od.-~d
·his
m,e~c:h., _was resignation untlthe had ,a· chance Jo
in.:
···. ::~opung)ess-·~oherE?l)t~...:.:1J•'::-~::~--•.... ~--
-
· .
..
. h3ivi~w:
-
him/Untn·the11.it
is
·a ·personnel _-
. :McEvoy called:·q~nIBenoitand Chris matter,- he ,said; Frank Dilff, Michael
·· Hogan! · secutjty •• guards,: a~d .' in/th~ O'Hara ~d Joseph:Poluzzi resigned
this
"- meantime, PurceU called m and said
he
year due to low pay. Purcell was hired to
-
~
was going down
-
to the boathouse;:Ben9it replace Poltizzi, according to Benoit.
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. by David
Poucr
. cnarged with "vicarious. infringeme~t," -.
she _ added. Anyone found guilty of
copyrig~~ infringement could be sued, by
. ,
the artist, · and· the federal government
· Marist's Radio Station (WMCR). according to Basbas. .
1
.
. v!olated copyright laws Sept._14 and-15 by
Ric. Anguilla, WMCR's program
airing a. bootleg record album ov.er the
director, admitted to playing the. album
college's in-house radio system, according
but- said "we felt we were doing it as
~
- to Sara Basbas, information specialist for
service to the student body:" Anguilla also
.. the Library of Congress'. Copyright Office. - said he did not plan ·on using the material

Basbas said -whoever illegally recorded -again for radio purposes;
· .
the .album would be l<primarily respon-
Copyright violations, according to.
- ajble" for violating the Ia:w, though anyone
Basbas, are·policed by the Federal Bureau
w~o purchased or
used
the record could
be of Investigation.
Beer contest canned
ago, at 1:30 in the afternoon. Nearly
the religious leader. Camera flashes
60,000 jammed into the-three tiers a~d
began popping throughout the stadium.
·•
by
Jim Townsend
J _ -
• - •


bleacher seat sections
O!
the stadiiµn
1
s
-The Pope, seemingly unfired-by
his
sports
Edito,
each pound of Miller bottles or cans
tha~
seats as another app_roximate 20,000 sat · · visits to Boston and Ireland earlier
this -
were collected. Each ieam was to g~t five--.
or stood around the altar set ·ontop an -· ,week,
smiled••
arid waved to the·
so;ooo ·
points per one pound of. bottles. and 100,
elevated.sta~. _ .
.
-_ .. · _ people. ·seven Marist stud~nts;-: a
, · The <!Great Miller Pick-em Up," ·
11,
points for one pound of cans. The school
~any wofe appl~•shaped_ lapel· faculty member, and an adininlstrator
. contest sponsored by the Miller Brewing _ was to get ten
1
cents for each pound of
. .. stickers prmted _ witlJ, the words, . sat in the- bleachers. to witness -the
Company. in conjunction with the College
bottles and the United States Olympic
"Welco~~.Popj3 John Paul
n t?
~ey;,. historicvisitoftheorilyPolishpo~tiffin -
Activities·. office, has been cancelled .team was to get ten cents also.
·
-V:o~~ City .to~honor the pontiffs first -history, elected in o,ctober 1978.
.
,
1
because Miller did. not · follow. the _ . The t~!lm
iri _
the contest;: that ac-
· VlSlt
¥>
the!]ruted S~tes asthe leader
:··Sections.of the.crowd in:the •upper
.. g\P,de~essetupforthecontestsay~~~tty ·-cumulated 10,000'.points could have .won
of the :aom~n C'a~~~~c Church. Some of< stands :began to •sit
again
and remain
Yeaglin, coordmator of college activ1fies.
$125 while the tea_ms that got 20,000 and .
_
the ~tickers were
in
S~nish_ and on~ -silenf as - pope: John - Paul passed
' · ·, Y eaglin says that . she t~ld_ ,the· Mille_r
·ao,ooo
P!)ints could have won $250 an_d $500 .
· ·_man _s had the wor~ pn~ted m Polish.
beneath; them .. -The
·
truck,. sUITouitded
campus·. representative, John Clfarelli, _ respectively. There were two $500-pnzes to·
1 •
Vendors, ~sed
~
their. Ulllforms of
PY .
bodyguards walking: alongside,.
that the contest would be cancelled
if
any /'.be awarded. · ·
~
_
.
·
· • bla_ck and white stnpe, ~ ;
walked ...: cn:cled :the· field in 1o,minutes, giving
of
the guidelines devised were abused. On
.There were seven
teams
from ·Marist .
through tJ:ie crowd selling peanuts,
most people a clear view. - /
_ . __ .
th~ night of-the preview
~f
~e' contest, · entered in<the contest whl'ch _included
orange drink, and · spcta. J>i:ograms,
F,ollowing .
8
procession:
of
-clergy
~er .
.
5!1les represent.aUv:e dlst~buted . -teams'. from Leo Hall, Sheahan Hall,
_, buttons, : a!l_d medalµon~ were also
members to the ·red-carpeted stage - -_ free l~paclc~ of beer to the contest team
commuters;-and Champagnat Hall.
.
·- ·-:: peddled ~1_1S1de_ the ;
sta'¥!1111
as. com-
surrounded by yello.w and white
car- . , :
ca~t.allls whil~ _at !he sa~e ~lme, ~ud-
· The contest was_ also going on in 150
•_'_~emorativ~ so~
.
V:~!1.irs~-. -· · ,_ ·
.>;<
'"nations, PoP-e JolufPaulslowlfwalked - _ --we~r was,gi~mg outfree tieer in: the
schools·in the riation,·says Clfarelli.
·
·.:.,The ~t.adium
~
giant-size teleVlS!~O. -behind the altar and stood in.front of
his:- -
~thsJc~llar. "'· .
: :'_: . _ . ,
'.CifareD:i~ythe is going to
try
to set up
-.. screen, used dunn,g ~El ba~ball season· . _seat. whicp Jaced hom!3. plate.: It. :was
_ • T~e _ . Great _Miller
P1ck-:eih.
Up' . w~s · _ ~ore _activities on. campus-sucli as sports
_ .. for.-
.
repla~s _, an,d .- cl~-up . pi~tures~ of · , prec~ly • 9: oo;:-,w~eho'he :_ spoke'-slowly: _ . design~
t~
•h.~lp the· school, _.the, students, - .. films m the ~thske~r, plus also trying to.
plare_rs, displayed th~•pon~lff s c_oat of . mto
.r
the,_. _microphone;·· with : a
.
-
SJ!d
the ~mted States Olymp1c_:Tean:i,, says _
hol~ a~othe~ re~ycllng program during the
·" anns,-tw~ keys ~rosse~ ~ d
a shiel~.. g~tiµ~~~~e-- ~tmlJ>e.an · accent With_ _
gtarem:
It ,,s ~-~~tion pr9gram.In . : ~~i[S~lll~~~r. - , . , .-·..
_
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GoJd.~nd_w~te_fia~tsym~oli,zing.the
Continuedonpage:2'

which pomt~ .-w.ere;, •wardElr.l for
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-Page2
THECIRCL-E
.October 4, 1919----

co-editors
copy editor._
feature editor -
sports editor
photography editor
cartoonist
advertising manager
business manager
Christopher Hogon
_ David Ng·
Jori~ Neighbors·
Dianna
Jones .
. Jim Townsencr
· Kevin Kelly
BobWhitmore . ·
Jon Urban
_ Fronk Kgzak_ewics
Stoff: Mory ~yon, ~oriso Simone, John Moyer.-Chris Egon, B_ob Sent~ch~i~,-'.~ohn
A°i-
nold, Pam_M,ller, B'.H Taylor'. Tho~os Hassett, Lisa Arcuri;Karen Flaherty, David Potter
Readers Write
.
·
-- All_ letters m~st be typed triple sp0ce with o 60 space mo~in: Ond $ubmiited to the Circle"
oll,ce no later lhan 6 p.m. Monday. Short le1ters are preferred. V:{e reserve the ,;ght to ed;1
all lettt:,rs. letters must
be
signed. but ~names
mar
be
withheld upon requ&$t. letters
will
00,
published depend;ng upon ava;labHity o space. --
·
· Progressiye ·ar:,d Innovative
To the·Editors: ·.
-.
speaking for the class.
-
- -
According to
h!,st
week's Circle,
The purpose .
of- .
any
college --
regarding the separation
of
the
professor
is
to liberate the mind
editors from the instructor and
·th
- ti
· ·class, the editors claim tliat
W1
ques ons·andinsights an<l to
·«accuracy·, •faim.ess, .and
-sim- -
encourage style~ rather than
becoming uncreative'
manikins
pllcity
of
style"
are
the .ideas
we !eel ~t
Ms •.
Culpls aC:
which the Circle
is
founded .on.
compllshing this and Js both
· In
f;~iality,
hypocrisy·
seems
-progressive ·and. um· ovative·.
.. lo
~~
with
th.e- excepti. · on of
· u
·h. ·
·
.
··:In-
all _-"faim
..
ess,
>t
we warmly
. sunp c1.~.,. · · . ---
el
Ms
Cul
.
... Hogan and Ng·~se· e· m· -to·beli·ev· e ,_w _come:
·
P
as' our in• ..
·
-. stnictor. · · . '. -
-<
'
•that Ms. Culp as a teacher}'is a•
·
··• . -
· ·. .
disservice to
:
the students;''
As ._
.
· . -
• . ·. . •
~
DeLu~ia
members
of
·Ms. Culp's:Jour-
:ltoryre~o~ Jos~ohEmmets ·
nalisin c~ss we_feelthey_have no_- ·
·
PatM.arafi
... ot1_:-
_
Mµce
Ian.··
tosca
valid basis for
this
clairiumd · Deirdre Powell · Eileen .
.
. Doyle _
furtherin{?re
'
they- are -not · · pavidMetz .DeeAcampora .
---~~---:-~~_..:_~____.;.;~_;_;_~~_;_j
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Keep
YOur
Distal'lce
'I'.omorrow,
a.
group of people
,will . -
!Jut o;; ha~ to _wonder whether the ·eveni
congregate outside_ Marist _ College and ·
will_
run as s~oo~hly .a? :hot~- the r,r?tester.s
demonstrate· . against . the Black Watch
and
_
the Marist Adm1mstrat10n ant1c1pate 1t
performance held at the McCaµn Center. -. '.
·
. to run( Map,r:Jimes; peacef-µl demonstrations
· The event has been planned ·to be a ·-become: v1olt;nt, ~ot beca~se pf ·those ·.-·--·
""pe_!lcefuldemonstration" by Committ~e For
involved, out thos~ who are. n~t inv·olved and _·
Human Rights _member Ethel Brogan. · come to the event out of cur1os~~v.
.
•'
Directo~ of. Safety anq S~curity Joseph·
Ho;pefully, •those w~ do not)>_e~ieve
1~
Waters seems to be taking.-the necessary - w~~t the _dem_onstrators!re proc!~1m111_g an?_
precautions to make the event
safe
£cir all ...... ··
_ th_ose who. h~ve. nq
_
real mterest · m-the eyent
· ·
· --will
~eep therr distance~
Copy
Cats
'
.
The United States government set up laws
to protect individuals from _"copying" the
work of .other people.· _Nowhere. is the
copyright. law more
:
prevalent tha~ in the
· recording industry. This protects the artist
from people· making money off 'his per-
. forl_llance
witho0;t him having ariy
knowledge. The Marist College radio station
(WMCR) _used boot!eg tapes during their
- broadcasts, of which none of the albums were .
recorded]or public usage over the airways.
If
any _individual or group "copies" from
another group or person they shoul~ be
punished.
If
a newspaper qefames anyone
fh~y can be threatened with a libel suit, while
!f .a common criminal "copies" he is put in
Jail.
,
.
~
-
·
.· A
radio station i!> for the-public, ~hether it
·
· is_ hroadcas! .to jusnhe Marist College com-
-::. munity or to the outer limits ·of Poughkeep-
sie. The public also includes those artists who
recorded the song.
. If
WMCR is attempting to become a
professional radio station they should work
!.n a pr<>_fessional way. Using bo~tieg tapes is
irresponsible as is "padding" a story in a ·
newspaper.
If
recording artists __ wa11_ted these tapes to
be used over the airwaves they would have of~
f ered them · for sale to the public, who the
radio station is supposed to service.
- .
The ra~io station said they ditl it as
a.
se;-
vice to the Marist community but what akut
the disservice to the_ recording artist? _
Pope
'-s
visit .:~-
froin-_pg.
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To the-Editors:
Last week
in
your ·editorial. the two.positions which you seem-
entitled . CCSevering
Ties" .
you. . to !iare ~larized. In your zeal
to
wrote . tha.t :•confijc~g . ideas
gnnt " e truth,,t perhaps you
about jour~m,-i~ intenti!)ns . . ave lost sight
of
the-value. of
and values,
·
have· now. separated
·tolerance · and flexibility;- Your -
the editors from . the
.
.( Jour-
day is ~ot the only
~ay. Neith€r
niillsm) class.,,
It
should
be
clear
O
~!!
_ye a _way that _'~e view as
that you and_,not ideas instituted : - th
lil
way. - 1
<!
0
not _m~ to in-
. the unfortunate· separation. .·
. . crease th
i
ap~~nt polariza~o~
· · Communication·' Arts jour-
-~~reinf?r~ing a· .~ev~rsus yo1;1
nalism illstruc_tor Marguerite · onentati~n.
In
factd hope: that ·
Culp,: and you, -the editors,· do
common~~~ can be £011;11d and
-_· indeed "have a
:
genuine conce.ni - _that
th
e
.. prio~ re!atio.
nahi
...
P ... be· t- ·
1
·
foi:_~the ()las!(and;the practice of . ween __ tl_!e.._.j
_
ournallsm class and.
. jotirnallsmon this
campus."
But •--The Cll'de can
be
r~,~ta~lished.
_· _ when you say ''they could only_
· -· You ass~rted
~t
,,all ~ogue
see the·. differences-and failed to
.
has ~n ~xhausted .. Ir~ru,~ally,,
f~d ._the. similarities,tJ-·
I'.
must?-~ ~,:.-t}iat ·s,ta~mert
:lS
.m.ac- ·. ·
disagree
· ·
-

·
- ·
-
·
· ·
. ·
·
;· :'I;
,se_e°' <con_siderably more ·
, . '
·sincere!Y,
, sin'illanties
:
than
differences
in
·
··: ·
Richard
Platt, Chairman ·
·-.-~ /
.
. ,f''.,.;/.:::•_:
.:
". ,· __
,:<---~~~!:~andCo~unicationArts
",·
__
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ThenRs'-
To the Edjtors: - , . _.
~ditor,J~T~~~ddidn'thelp
. Approximately
.
_
350 .
people me out. I d. also Uke
,to
mention
associated, in one .. ·way or .
that
there was an. ·outst_anding
another, with MRrisCcollege · sponsor who dona~d _$57 on his
1
donated-a total of more than S2200 own. Finally, l'd,like to extend
to the Leukemia_ Socie!Y of . my
~nks
to _ everyone who _
America through its seventh contnbuted to the cause. I hope
. annual softball marathon held in .you ·all
ffi!lize
y;hat you've done .
R<>ekland County~ . ·
-
· You didn'tjustgive some of.your
The game werit 190 innings
in
mo11ey · to peopl~ who are less ,_,_
the 16 hours allotted us. In,any• _
.. fortunate than . you. ·•You in-
case, t!3e scoremeansno~g on-_ directly-,-c.,-eated ·life_· where life
the C1rCle sports ·_page;· What wouldn't have existea Qefore.
counts is the money contjibuted,· ·--
: _ ·. __ ·
Alike Gulotta
an!},J wouldn't-have gotten ha.If
Siith~loorSuite, Champagnat
.
·
the . response if Circle Sports
-
· P .0. Box 184
fils
arms outstretched and the colors of
his
sittin"g in .the bleach~~ ~ection knelt on the dirty ..
~
vestments gleaming in the flood of the stadium's
and damp cement floor neaflheir seats; people · -.
brilliant ,lights, he started the papal mass,
"In.
·
around them remaineo standing. One of.:..the · ·
the Name of The Father, The Son,. and The Holy
·
women had a John Paul ll button pinned
to
her
.. • Ghost,,
.
. _
-
-- .. ·
lapel y;hile another woman gripped }lei' rosary .
--- . The
0
crowd . remained silent.
His
words
beads.
. ·
1 ·
• -
•.
• ...,
·
t -
reverberated through· the. speakers placed--
.
An
usher; whose job two
'Yeeks ago
was
to help . ; .
throughout the building. ·
_
- •
.
Yankee fans find ~heir
seats,,
bega~
gi:iiding
·1n
his ~minute homily, the-Pope addressed.
people to the n~rest priest or deacon:who was
the· ~rowd on "humari rights" as he did earlier -
administering the sa·crament_of .comrilimiori. ·
~ore the United Nations GenerarAssembly. He .:__ .
-.AfteJ.'.
mass• en_ded: arid Pope . John P~ul-11
said-rich countries should not maintain them-..
,<:!_rcled the field mthe truck for thE! lasUime,
·selves by draining the resources·of other natioris. ·
"touching ,hands of a_dmirers, people . ex~ted ·into
:
.
· _. "You must never be contenttoleave them with. ' . tll_e streets ru,td waitmg
,
peddlers, or ''hawkers,,, -·
thecrurnbsofthefeast.Youmusttreatthemllke ·, • :with banners, .tee-slµrts; :and ·other mass.:.:·;
guests at·the·dinrier,,table." ·;.:
.
.
,
-=
·•· . .
produced inemorabilia.
\
. · ; · .
-
= •.
< ::
.
~
the . pontiff spoke ·_to Jhe relatively quiet
, A'.priest; ~till ~sed .in
his
white gown- and ..
·audience, -four people trained in sigri
~nguage ._ • ,
carrying: a . chalice,
in;
his.·. ban~, .• bought
three
relayed his words to.the·deaf.__sitting n~r,the ·
"~o~JohnPaulll'1..fiagsat·$2.00each;Hesaid --
stage. Police officers ·and.security meri; some
he-~as·~uying __ thel_llforo,t.her,·people:·\ .. ·.
-.-:t~; · ..
.
·· .
_.. equipped _
lV!9t .
elect~nlc \ binoculars, walked
·
'
:Ayo~g bearded man was selling. ''.P,ope Joll.., _. ,
- _around the grounds;Earlier; The·NewYork Post> - ~~ul II. tee-shirts for.
'4.00
each; He-said,'. ''I'm
"ran the headllne
-
"HUNT GUNMAN STALKING···· :notunfanµUar'!ith!he Csth,olicChurch,.'l'hey'.re.
POPE" on page one. :,
·
• ·
:- .
r -, _
'. _'.
n?;:~llYJl:~airf:!t ~~11:6~; ~o,
:\V~!
ri~t?>
During the offertory, four middle-aged ,wompn . .

. . , .. , ,,
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\
.;..,_O~tober4, 1 9 7 9 · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - T H E
CIRCLE .....
------------------Page
3
.
-
G-ridmen lose· Homecoming Game
10-0
. '
:....-
.
.
.
·
:~:-
weJsh
.
-
·
M
.
drlsts
·
·
.. ':
.
4~-:
,
.
.
.
Jir~-ti'ini~Her
,
,._
.~.,:.
-
'.
..
.
Dave
·
Whelly
.
brillgs
.
down
·
Iona
ball
~ r
.
by Jim Town
s_
cnd
.
plays later, Iona scored arid the extra-
. point was good and they
·
led 7-0.
.
.
Sport.
<
f.d
i
t
or
A
pass interference call against Marist
Jim
Corbett started at quarterback
in
helped
Iona
score again
,
on their next
place of-
Jeff
Hackett but the Marist possession with a 35-yard field goal and
.College football team dropped its third that was the last score of the game.
game by a score of 10-0 to Iona Saturday.
Maristdidnotgetafirst down until 13:40
·
Hackett, who had startedthe team's of
.
the second quarter. Their closest
first
two regular season games plus the scoring threat came towards the end
of
the
exhibition game
against
New Haven was second
half
but Iona intercepted a pass on
sick and did not even suit upfm:: the game. the Marist 15-yard line.
.
Head coach Mike Malet says he
is
un~
The only scoring drive in the second half
sure as
to the condition of Corbett's
knee,
came to Iona but they missed a 25-yard
which was injured
in
Saturday!s game but field goal.
·
it appears
as
if
Corbett will
be the
@rting
.
"Iona had a superb punting game which
quarterback .
.
against Brooklyn College put
us
in
a hole and we didn't have the
Friday night.
<
Both Brooklyn College and ground attack, ~ys Malet. Marist only
Marist have
o:-3 records.
.
·
gained one yard rushing on
28
attempts
"Defensively
.
we played well, Iona had :w,hile the quarterbacks Corbett and
averaged over 400
'
total yards a game but Lo~rg
.
olo w~re
8-00
in the passing
we oruy
·
gave up about
200
total yards," department.
.
says Malet.
·
_
-
·
Malet says he thinks the
_
team
is
going to
Iona's
first
score came after
Marist
improve throughout the next few games .
fumbled
·
·
three · times
'
durJng their Malet was quick to point out that on of-
possession. Iona
recQVered
.
one of
·
those !ense there are only two seniors and there
fumbles on the Marist
six
yard line. Two
is
only one on the defensive squad.
BO
-
ote.,-sdrop to
-
2-3
-
-~
hyChasEgan
~
-
_
.
-_
_
.
-
.
·
·
.·-
.
·
·
_..
,
Sporuwri1e,
:
:. _
•:
_
.
_
pomts whi~ ~s g<>:<>d for second place
·
by
Jim Townsend
Fox~ controlled game for the
first 34
- -
-
-

,.:,-
-
behind SMU
s
30
.-
The University
of
New
minutesuntUDavisandElkinsscored with
-
The Marist cross country team
;--
rated
_
Haven scored
-
70, Bridgewater
·
state 188;
.
spo':'ed
i
i
o
r
11:53 left in the half. They scored
twiee
in
;
·
ten~
ir1
.
~e
latest national pivisio_!l
µ
poll, Salem State
139,
Bryant147, and Plymouth
·
Not converting the scoring chan~es they the next eight minutes and then added one
·
finis~ed
:
second out
·
.
oJ
·
seven
_
teams
State 169, rounding out the field.
·
·
.
·
_
·
have had
is
one
,
of
the reasons the Marist more goal with less than a minute to go
in
·
Saturday
in
.
the
~
SMU Invitational at
.
Paul Welsh was the top Marist finisher
~
College soccer
team
lost.two games this the
half
.
against goalkeeper Rich Hef-
<
.
t
:
Southea~eryi
_
!dassachlisetts
University
.
for
.
the seco,nd stra)B~t week as lie
-
com-
._
~.
past
,
week, says coach Howard
"Poe"
feman.
.
.
.
-
.
-
:
The next meet fQr the
.
~unning
~
.:
Pletecl:the
0
flat five mile course in
24:23,
G9ldman.
·
..
--
.
.
··

..
Andy Homola replaced Heffernan to
.
~-
_
foxes'
is
the Mailsf
.
ield
_
Stateln~~tional, good
;
~or fo,urth place.
Jim
DeLaunaywas
- •
"Against Fairfield we had 15 shots and
·
start the second half and allowed two
.
.
:
··
m
Mansfiel~.
,
Penn. There
,
will
tie
varaltv sixth
m
24:30
;
Je~ Scholder was seventh didn't score and they had one and scored,"
,
.goals. Davis and Elkins played most of the
-
and juilio~
-
v
_
atsity
pt~,
:_
with Marist
·
in
24:33,
.
and Ron Gadziala was tenth
iii-
says Goldman.
. .
.
·~cond
·
half minus one player who was
'
::
.
·
· -
_
-
.
h,iving
·
e1even

me11

entered.
,
The
..
team
24:40.
Rich Shultz
of
the University of New
On
Saturday against
.
Fairfield given a red penalty card and thrown out
.
of.
·. ·
Jinishec;l ~~cond in
tllEf con~tlast year and Haven won the
·
race and tied the course
.
Unheraity, the
Red
Foxes lost
1-0.
ICThey
·
.
the game.
.
_
·
.
.
,.c
Steverissay~i~isthe~~jn~t50~.they
·
·
record
-
of 24:13.6
.
:
_
.
'
,
.
·
. -
w~rehittingusanditthrewoffourgame,"
Marist'stwogoalscamelateinthegame
/
.
;-
will
-
run
qn
this
year .
.
.
·.
-
-

·
:-
.
7
·
·
·.
·
CoachRicJtStevenswaspleasedwiththe says Gold}nan.
.
.
·
.
after Bill Cooper scored with 7:02 left in
·
·
:


··
Marist;
'
the
_
delending c11m?pion
·
of
.
the team's effort against an SMU squad which
Davis and Elkins College of Virginia the game and Matt Lovecchio added
'
. •
·
1!1eet,_pla£edfour~~n
-
bl
_,
~t,.top
,
ten
an~
is
Wldefeated thisyear..

.,
!
!
We
gave them
a
beattheRedFoxes6-2onSunday. The
Red
another score with
:39
left int~ Rame.
.
;
,i.lost
OJW,
-
to
.
host
~MU-
:
The teamt~taled
.
,
45
,
very
gQOd
:
l>iam~"
~ys
_:_
Stevens.
.
. ·
badly
as
:
Nancy Wysong and Nancy
Colagrossi lost
6-0, 6-4
in the first doubles
match wlille
.
the
0
doubles team
.
of Bo~e
Rinck and Jackie Butler lost 6--0, 6--0.
,
Two matches last week against
Ramapo
··
by
Lisa
Arcuri
_
-
·
and Mount Saint Vincent were cancelled
.
Spo;
ii
_;riter
.
-
.
,~use
-
of rain;
-.
'
.
TheMarlstCollegewonien'stennlsteam
.
---
.
d

1osttheirsecondinatcht>ftheyear, losing
B
-
r
·
_

o
.
.
·
cs.
·
1
.
e
·
a
.
.
.
to
v
assar
College
5-0;
·
their
first
loss
was to
-
_
Fordham University by the
.
s_ame score.
·
.
.
The team travels to
,
New Paltz looking
_
By
J~
Townsend ·
for their first
win
on
Tuesday.
:
.
·
.
·
-
-;.
Marist;s number one singles player;
Brocs Beans has taken over the lead in
.
-
Chris
·
M~uigan,
Jost
6-1, 6-
_
l and
the
the
flag
football intramurals with a
4-0
-::
number two player,
Kathy
Carmody
lost 6-
record
.
I>.hi
Tappa
.
Kegga and DAMS are
.
.
·
4,
6-1.
Lisa
Arcuri,
_
playµig third singles, also undefeated with records of
3-0
and
2-0
also
dropped
her
match
,
6-4,_ 6-3..
.
.
.
·
respectively;~
-- ·
·
·
· - ·
·
·
-
Marist's
·
doubles teams were a~ beaten
·
The Krumville Tuberettes .are leading
.
.
.
.
··
.
-
•-:--
:~
.
.
.
.
:---
h
y
·
Brih
Sen!
~
chriik-
0
..
;
_
each other's hair_~fter
m~g
the decision
..
S1)0fuw;i,er
~
.

.~
~
.
at
2:30
in
the moming.
·
Lwsi, Corsetti, and
-
:
-
·.
--
.
·
-
-
_
·.
Dureko all agreed that it would be helpful
·-
.
.
-
· If
you ar~
-
walking around campus
·
and
.:..
·
to the
~~:
·
-
·
.
7
.
-
"'
see people walkil)g around
.
with
,
Mohican
,
··
·
Bo~ :Alf~en, Bob Keller,
Joe
Brenner and
·
·
haircuts, don't worry, the Indians
.
are not
.
Denrus Diesel were the
!)8~
people to get
_ • attacking;
,
it
"-
is
'
·Just a
:
,
way_
for
,
some
.,
.
the Iilohic~n style ha1rcut while Tom
·

·
members
of
the Marist
:
footbalUeams
to
.
Cooney, Keith
Ahw!)d,
_
and John Levy got
..
get psyched to
_
; play.,
·
f
:,-
>:
·
..
>
.
~
crew
::'
cutJmircuts.-
.
-
.
. .
. .
.
.
_
_
_
:.
tit
is
,
an emotional psych. ~t h_elpsJis get
: ·
· Durek._o
,
~yst"I hl;lve
-
~o regrets about
into the
game.
'
When
-
the otner
:
team
sees my haircut, ha1.r
.
or no ha1.r we are here
.
to
·
us
.
the~
_
~
.
ink
'.
w~•re
:
~razy
·
a#~
}
hey
:
·
get
·
,
Play
'
foo~ball
;:

De~l Seid~
,
_'.'It
was to
scared or
.
us: That•s
~
why ~ey call,us_
.
the
:
':
sllow--team
:
spirit."•
.
·-
·
_
.
,
.
-
the red division of the women's volleyball
-
Bronx, N
..
Y.
,
1~, 15-12, and 15-10.
intramurals with
·
a
·
record of
2-0
while
.
They won their second league game
·
Eight is Enough is leading the white
_
against Nyack College N.
Y.
Monday night,
·
division with an
·
identical record.
15-4, 15'-ll,
·
5-15 and 15-11. They
·
aiso beat
In
the men's volleyball intramurals the
Saint Thomas Acquinas College Monw.iy
Ace Heads and Leo 1 lead their divisions
15-1 and 15-2 in a non-league game.
.
with
2-0
records.
_
The woma
_
n's volleyball team has a
2:-0
Soccer rosters are due on October 10 and record in league play and
·
a t-1 record
m
the
rosters
for
tennis
and archery are due
-
non-league
_
games, their only toss coming
;
tofuorrow, October 5.
·
.
·
·
-
·
.
to -Vassar College.
.
-
·
-
_
"Our
serving has been our high point
V
11 -
·
b
·
11

·
3 .
·
1
-
and Laura
Cross
(sophomore) has had
Q
ey
.
Q · · • •
some excellent hitting, says Bonnie May,
•··
·
.

woman's volleyball coach, "We're
.
by Dianna Jones
·
becoming much
,
more aggressive and
A
s.•oc
i
a
t
e
Ed
ito
r
finally beginning
to
jell as a team."
.
The women's volleyball team won their
-.
Their first home game
.
will
be' played
first league game Wednesday· ~pt.
'l:l,
Tuesday, October9thagainstlona College.
against
.
Mount Saint Vincent College,
,
.
,
p~ych"
-:
fJ~yard Dogs'
·
s:ayS:'Oennis
·
Deisel, one
: ·
The haircuts hav~ had
_
no effect on the
_
·
·
member
:
of the Miirisf
-
footoall'defensive :othermeinbers
·
oftheteam but the general
.
,
.
-
:
squad
?
.wtjo
shaved
:
their
:c:
hearui
"
iri
\
:
a'
~
J~eliiig
-
:
of
:
the
·
.'!Jtinkyard
Dogs"

is
'.
th~y
-
-
..
.
.
-
mohi_can style
;
·
··;t
,
.
.
.,·i
:
_
:'
.
-
.,:
_
.
;.

·

<
-:-
wufu.
:
more
.
pee>ple
~
on
:
th~ team·
.
had
tJ:lem •
.
·
·
-
.
. .
·
:
,
Themolilcan style haircut
is
one
tru.ithas
:
·.;
;.!
Last
,
year,
wi
guys
'.
got really
close
and
-
·
·
----,
. ·
the
·
entire
]
head snaved except for
·
a
-
thin
·.•
we
figured that if there
.
was some way
that
,.
-
strip
-
~
Juilr
·
dowjl
·
the
·
µilcldie
of tqe
h~d:
'
-
.
.
.
)ve. could show
·
_
the_
team
~tit helps a lot
if
·.
·: ·
'The 1dea
·
.was originated
_
by·Tony
.
Luis1
.
you- could
:
play•as•a
:
teamjt,would only
--.
I
.
'
.
:
who
,
had
it
done o,nce
bef
o~~
in
high sc:tiool.
'\
help:•
.
\Ve ~ec;id~
to
g~t-}1ak.cuts' an~
hope
.
·
,
-
Luisi
·
then
~
:
told
\
Lou
:
Corsetti--:and
:
.-
Pat
·
;
some of our togetherness
rubs
:
off
.
on the
.
..
.
-
.
-\
,
..
.
-
~J~~~
;
~~~!
·
:
~tn
~
they
L
p~eedl!.<l
.
:
~
J ) t
;
~m
O
.
,
.
r
~
..
~
:
~t
_
.
.
:
-
~:
-\
-:
.
·
.
.
.
-
-
.
.
1
.
·
-•
~
.~ .
.
.
.
·
..
'


,
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, • • •

• • •
·
.
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·
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:,-
.
.
_
RecordsEtc.
·
-
-
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St.,P~ghkeepsie
-
Larg~st
-
selectio11
ill
tl~e
area
-
!
~
-
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·
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· -
With this
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-.
-
-
Ends
'
Ti.les. Oct. 9
- ·
-
·
'
.
~
.
,
.
.
.
.
·
Roosevelt Theater
-
Rt. 9 Hyde Park CA9-2000-
:
"ONE
.
OF THE YEAR'S BEST."
-Jt!"rf:',,.
ti✓ '>
~

•C
H..">
144()1(1
,1
'o't1-'l).
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:
·
/
,,..._

.
, i.. ...
-
.... : •·

.
:
• :
.
b
'.
STARTS
WED.
OCT. 10
-
ACADEMY AWARD
FILMS
( .
I
"Get
out your hankerchiefs"
,,
.
&
.
"Madame Rosa"
'
-
-
-
Senior
-
-
-
'
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Safurday, 9
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11
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New Dinihg Room
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't
.
·
,
THE
'
CIR
'
CLE
,
·
.
-
~
'
.
R
.
esidents
~
to
'
pro~est Black Watch performance
.
.
.
.

, .
.
.
,
.
-...
'
by
Christopher
Hogan
.
·
Co-<>ditor
criticized
.
by three local residenis who
,
Shortly
·
afterward, ~e Committee For
mailed letters to
.
McCann
.
Center Dii:ector Human Rights contacted her and he.lped
Ron Petro stating that the gr9up
is
a
..
her coordinate the demonstration, Brogan
.
Approximately 200 people from four
-

militaryforceinvt>Jvedinnorthernlreland' says.
!
.
.
·
neighboring counties and the Albany and
.
op behalf of ~e British government.
-
~ of Tuesday; Waters ssys that all
New York
·
City
.
·
areas
.
will
conduct
a
Residents from Putnam Orange
,.
secilrity measures have not been finalized,
"peaceful
.
demonstration" when the Black
'
Rockland, Ulster! Dutchess County,
and
but
will
b
_
e completed Wednesday
.
He
.
Watch marcfiing company performs at the
Albany and
.
the New

York City areas are added that he could not conune~t on
.
the
McCann
·
Center· tomorrow, says Com-
·
supposed to "keep moving" as they exact number
.
of state troopers that ~ould
.
.
mittee For
·
H4IDan
·
Rights member Ethel
display with signs and loudspeakers what
)
be
P!8Sent or _any other
.
matters relating to
.
Brogan.
.
:
·
:
·
.

· ·
.
·
.
"
·
they are demonstrating
·
against/
·
says the ISSue until aUplans ~ere complet~
.
.
·
Marist
t)u-ect.or
of
Safety and Security Brogan. Brogan
.
added
·
that she has
.
Dutche~ County Sheriff Fred Scorla1c}(
..
Joseph Waters
·
says that the Town of
·
received 8 Town of Poughkeepsie permit has met with Waters and some plans have
-
,
Poughkeepsie Police may conduct a bOmb
·
for the protest.
.
·
been made for

the event, but Waters
check before and after the event and there
Brogan says she
.
telephoned Petro about refused
to
comment ~n any plai:15 made .
.
will be
.
an unannounced· nwnoer of New
the issue in
·
Iate June but was unable to
Waters and Security superv1Sor • Paul
.
York
,
State
.
Troopers.
·
.
talk with
him
because he was vacationing. Burke
will be
at
.
the McC~ C~nter during
· .
The pi:otest,
which
was coordinated by
.
!>resident Murray had also discussed the the event b~t any other
Manst Security
.
Fishkill
residei;i~ Brogan, is schequled
,
to
.
issue with Brogan by telephone and he said person~el will be used to patrol the rest of
,
·.
occur
·
at the beginning of
_
the performarice
that he would contact her after talking to
.
the campus, says Waters
;
.
. •
at the south entrance of the college, says the Board of Trustees about the issue, she
·
Brogan.
said. Murray did not
,.,
contact her, ac-
.
T!te Black Watch ijas previ9usly
.
been
cording to Brogan.
'
MAIIIST COLLEGE
'
'
.
.
'
l
WORLD
,
SERES
:
:
Soviets cance.1 M
.
cC
·
ann Act
by John May
e
r
S
t
a
U
w
rit
e
r
·
Basketball Team
in
an ex,rlbition game agreement
is
made, says Petro. He
added
but the match was cancelled
·
when the that he expects to have a definite answer in
European team could not schedule enough two to three weeks.
games
·
against other teams,.says Petro
.
Petro says despite the
·
problems that
The·
.
possibiiity of Russian artis
_
ts who
is
also the head coach of the basket-
have come up
,
with
,
,
the "World Series"
·
defecting to the United States may have ball squad
.
He also added that the team di:d
·
program
.
he still considers it to be a worth-
prompted the Soviet authorities to cancel'
··
not. obtain the require clearance from the while venture.
·
the Moscow
)
State Symphony's tour
.
of Amateur Basketball '.Association of the
"
One of the primary goals of the
·
Mc-
America, including a concert at the James United States.
Cann Center
is
to
1tet
r.ommunitv in-
J.
·
McCann Center scheduled for Nov.
2;
Petro said there will be no money loss by volvement," says Petro. "Having
according to Rori Petro.
,
·
the cancellations
if
attendance for the something like
this will
bring people to
·
"It
was a unique situation," says Petro. remaining
-
section of the program is ~ood Marist that would probably not come here
"The
·
Soviets are
·
really concerned with the
·
enough to cover the
·
cost
of
publicizing the any other way."
;
possibility
_
of defection."
·
.,
·•
,
.
"World Seri~" program
.
.
·
The remaining two events of the "World
Five leading Russian
.
artists,
including
·
.
A team
·
from
Bulgaria was planned to
,:
Series" are still scheduled, says Petro
.
threeperfonnersfroriltheSQviet
.
'sBolshoi replace the Swedes, but the date was too Scotland's Black Watch will appear
Ballet company;
·
have recently defected early in the
Marist
basketballseason whe~
F~day ri,ight and the Chinese Acrobats of
:while on tour.
·
.
·
crowd interest
was
not expected to
be
Taiwan
will
be at the McCann
Center
on
..
·
The concert,
part
of a program
·
whi~
·
large, and Bulgaria warited double profit Nov. 30..
·-
.
scheduled four
·
shows with
'.
performers from the admission gate in comparison to
Petro says that those people
·
who '!lad
from
·
·
different
parts
'
of the world and what the Swedes
·
were asking for, said purchased tickets for either the Moscow
dubbed the "World Series,''
is
the sec
_
ond Petro.
.
Symphony or the Swedish
.
Basketball
.
event to be cancelled.
·
·
· ·
'
·
·
A
third
team, another Swedish team,
is
game can be reftmded
·
at tbe Ticketron
.
The Marist College men's
.
basketball
'.
now being considered, and the game
will
Box Office.
....
·
·
-
team was
.
to
.
meet
·
the Swedish
_
;National be ~heduled for either Nov.
'l7
or 28
if
an
.
,
/J
,
I.
,' .
.....
2,.


23.5.1
23.5.2
23.5.3
23.5.4
23.5.5