The Circle, September 7, 1978.pdf
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 21 No. 1 - September 7, 1978
content
•
THE.CIRCLE
Vol~me 21, Numbe~ 1
Marisi College, Poughkeepsie, New York 12601
.
.
'
.
.
September 7, 19_78
Marist
receives
$1
,
ll1illioo
gran
·
t
.
Byf
_
ane
Neighbors
During
this
period, Marist ~ay revise
.
_
.
-
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .
.
tht: program by ~bmitting changes
to
the
·
·
Manst College is receivmg a one milliorLoffice of. Education. The plan can be ex-
dollai: grant
-.
from the
-
Unit~~tates-tended for on
.
e additional year; but the
Department of Health;
.
Education, and
·
total grant would not exceed the one
Vlelfare,
•
according
,
to
;.
Edward Waters; million <lollar allocation.
·
·
...
·
dean of spec!al college
·_
programs_.
-
·.
.
.
.. Since the passage of the 1965 Higher
·
"
Under)\1anst's proposal
,
as approved by
<
Education Act, o_nly three other New York
tile
•·
O~fice of
·
Educa~ion,
..
the
.
'
college
_
wm
.
institutions
.•·.
have
.
received the Title
·
i
ill
~al>lish two ~ew
.
prog~ams
i
orie
·
to,.study grant, a~i:cted
.
to
:
developing institut!oris
~~
Hu~n River ;
~
and
·
~
"
~egree
-
program demoqstratmg
.
·
a "potential
<
to
_
.
make
·.·
a
~ pub~c ~al!age1:Jlent
>
·
~:
:
;:.
·
>
,
:_
..
\
,
.:.
·,
substai:itfal
.
.
contribution
.
to
-
~e high~r
.
:
Manst will
_
also ~prove and expand the education resources of
.
the 11abon
;
'' said
valu_e-ba~d
-
C()l'e
~ ~ u i n ,
,
colirui~ling Waters.
:
.
~>
~
'
-
:
' _
.
.
.
.-
. ·
·_
..
·
.
an~
c~reer EiQucation, mec;Ua inst!'.llct1onal
•
The grant is the third largest in
'
Marist
skills
..
of.:
•
th~
;
facl;llty
;
--
a11d
..
programs
iri
history; exceeded
-
only by the
.•
·
founding°
.
c~~Uh1~~t1~11 arts
;,
juy~~e
·
justice, ~nd
·.
g~ant_:__
~d
~
the
•
J.
:iS
·.
rni:llicin
•·
dollar gr1U1t
cnmmal Just1ce;
·
Waters said;
<· -
-
....
·
from the McCarm Foundation .
.
·
.
.
··.·
-
:-
..
·
.
Approximately-00
.
percent
·
of ihe
:
money. . .. Waters
·
,
0
said
,
the
·<
grant enables the
will
.
~e
received in
•
t~~
·,
first
yea"r,
,
5!)
per- college
~o
:
bnng
:-
iri distingajshed visiting
;
cept
:
~
-
~e.
second,-
.
and
.1
20 perce~t
lll
:
the professors
·
and
·
outside
.
consultants
·
•
en~
fin
~
Lt~F:During th~ three
·.
year
:
fy.n.ding
_
couraging
•
.·
~rist
.:
to
;J
,ecofue · one of 1h~
cycJe~iM~n~'s p l ~ g
-
aildni~a~~m~nt
·.
~utstanding collegei
•
ontheeast c<iast.
·
He
act1V1t1~
,
wiUbe refill~
an~
all s~~ents a~~ed
·
;
-'.
~e
:
>
expects
·
Jedera!
•
,
support
;
·
(6
of tl;le
,
coll
_
ege cClrnmunity
mll
be mvolved stimulate
.
pr1 vate
·
.
donations
to
the
in
_
:
developJng and ¢~~fdinating
-
~he
~
programs involved.
- .-
.
. •.
--
-
'
.
_
"
progra19,.
·
·
·
·
·
-
·
·
·
Widespread cutbacks
cau~ed by deficit
due to food
.
service cost overruns.
'
_
Marist
·
is attempting to cut back its
Marist College's projected $100,000 expenditures bytwo
'.
percent,
·
according to
.
budget deficit for the last fiscal year Foy,
·
because "since we've had
·
two
.
resulted
iri
staff
cuts and service changes straight years of
this (
deficit) we've come
!lY David Potter
.
for
-
the
1978 fall semester; according to
to.:
the conclusion we're living a little
--
President Linus Foy; However, Foy
·
ter- · beyond our means." He said all depart-
.
.
med the defitjt as«nofa particularly bad
.
men~ on campus
will
be evaluated each
·
sit!,lation" for ihe college
_.
-
·
·
:
·
·.
··
.
.
year tci detenhine
_
their financial stability.
·
; .
Foy said
-
the job of
_
assjstant dean of The college may have
to
:
reduce the art
students,
,
fonherly
,
occupied by Fred
.
department, acc9rding
.
to F'oy,
.
.if
\
a
-
:
·
_
Lambert,
•'
was eliminated,
_
along
.
with
two proposal for an art major does n
_
ot get
:
faculty positions
:
:
Dr
.
Robert Van Meter
.
approved.
-
.
Jr.; assistant professor
'
of
History
and Dr.
·
·
··
··
·
K~tpleenI)esilets;
i,tsslstaht
professor of
Foy said food
.
service ~xpenses were
:
c_
Physics;
••-
were
·
phased
.
.
out
..
·
of
-
·
their more than· an~icipated;
·
and
•
cited rising
-d
·
·
rt
·
t
·
d•
·
·
.
,
.
•
·
F
···
food prices
.
as
.
'.
one rea~n for cosf
.;
epa
~Em
s,
.
accor mg
-.v
oy .
.
·
.
·
•
H
··
'd
L
-
··
·
· ·
kill
.
d
;
-
·
Fornier Dining
-_
Service
·
·directcir Joe ·-overruns
,
e
.
sa~
..
urenz "°"8:s nots
e
J
,urenz and -dinirig service
:
manager
Al
8:t_ cost proje~ions. Foy_'did not ~ave
Abramovich •
.
-were
.
released
·
·
when
.
.
the
·.
figures
for
.
cost
.
overruns m each
·
depart-
~-
board of
.
tru~ees decided not to
·
reriew the
.
ment.
/
.·
.
/
~
_
arist
:
F09~
-
-
Sel"Vice
·
c(!ntr:a<;t
,
·
accor~g
•
Also contributing
:
to
_
~e deficit,
•
ac-
tof.Of
.:
He said the ~ard of 'f.ru~ees µ_ired cording to Foy
,
wa.s the college's decision
.
. :
Marriot Foo~ Services becau_se 1t decided to
·
spend
·
more
·
money for dormitory
·
the
.
college could not affo
r
d more losses repairs
~
Foy aiso
·
said he believes Marist's
$50,000 contingency fund is too low for a
.,...
.
-
...,
_
_
_
_
_
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
_
budget as larg~ as Marist's. He said
·
the
_
_
·
...
·.
)
·
.·
.
. .
·
.
·
.
·.
_
.
·
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_
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.
.
. . ·
--
_
.·
.
.
.
'
·
..
·
._
_
.
.
collegewould'
.
'probablyhaveto
,
buildiria
~----~
'~":
49e-tm•t
r
,
fe,ee&
Jt,
Statf
<~
0
f&flu
-
etions
,,;
,:.,
J;Cd
,,f~-a~~?~~i:
?
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
·
.
•. .
.
.
•
. -
. .
_
. .
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.. ·
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..
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,
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·
_
.. .
..
. ..
.
.
...
.. .
...
·
_
.
.
.
.
.. •·
.
.
·
to Foy; which also added to the def1C1t
,.
He
.
\
-
··
·-
_
,:
, ·.
:
·
··
·
·
·
·
said_ the student
.
PQpulation
·
decreased
'.,
,
ByGerryMcNulty
people.later
.'
'
-
-
-
'
Foy
·
explained som~ positions
_
were
.
from the previous fall,
::..
which cost the
.
.
.
·
..
/
.
.
.
.
·
·
.
.
·,
·
.
-
.
·.
·
Foy
·
sai·d
·
some staff
-·
h
d
F
.
coll~e needed
·
revenue
.'
F6y added many
.
were given con-
-
p
_
ase out
.
onner
-
Assistant Dean of
departm
·
ts
h d
11
A st
.
aff
.
re
.
du
.
ct_
.
1on
_.
of two
_
·
percen
.
t w_a_s tracts of less than one year. Those wi
·
th
s
d
en
·
on c~mpus a
sma cost
tu ents, Fred Lambert,
•
supervised overrW1S
caused by ~a.nst's seco~d budget ~~f1c1t
.
more seniority at Marist were giyen long¢r
·
housing and dining
:
services
.
Marist
_
then
·
year
m
a row,
-_
at'Cordmg
.
to
·
President
·
-
contracts he said.
<
- ·
·
·
.
. ·
·
.:
h
.
ir
.
e
_
.
d Marriott Corpor
.
ation to manag
·
e
·
·
i•ts
.
·
·
·
-
·
L
"'
F
·
· ·.
·
·
·
·
·
-
-
·
·
·
·
,
A new areoWiting system, installed this
-
mu
,
s
~
oy.
·
,
·
;
_
. .
·
·
.
:
'l)le
·
staff members chosen, Foy said, foocl serviceand Gerry Kelly became
year,
will
enable
.
the college to receive
.
.
·
The college~
-
d~1cit
1S
.
~pproxunat~ly
.
were drawn _from two categories,
.
those
··.
dire¢t~r of housing.
·
Lambert has since
weekly reports on spending, said Foy. He
"150,000 foy said.
·
~at
-
we ve
~~n
dol!lg who ha~ received good but not out~anding become Dean of
·
Students
af
Wheeling
added
"
Marist will share the responsibility
1s spendmg next year
.
s money;
·
be s~id. · evaluations
·
and those who could not ad-
College, Wheeling,. West
.·
Virginia
·
-
._
a
of cost control with Marriot Food Services
·
The CQllege is trimming back to
·
a_level it va1!ce bec!l~se _they reached the limit of position
:
F'oy said.he helped
_
Lambert get.
an option the college did not nave last
'
cari support he added. Foy said the
-
staff their qua~
_
cations
'.
.
.
·
·
.
:
.
;,.
.
.
. Tu.e. redu~ion - sho?1d
✓
·
not
· mak~ a
y~r;
Also,
Maniot may exercise more
.· .
clit was aimed at recovering
$200,000.
'The dec1~0~ to cut st
_
~ff was m!3de
,
lll S1gruficant d~erence m student seryices-
~
-
portion control;
.
which would help keep
. .
Ofthe32staff.memberswho could be cut May Foy
_
said. He would .not d1Sc}~se andanY.negative~fectcould
_
be cushion~d
·
down costs he said.
_
· ·
Foy said itwas unlikely
all
of:th~ would names for what he termed legal reasons.
.
by the influx of Title
m
money, Foy said.
.
.
'
·
.
be. He said
·
some employees may transfer
·
One administrator, Dolly Bo dick,
•
There
-
were
:
no major reductions in
,
A!though the
board of t!"Ustees
,
decid~d
from
,-
Marist's payroll
~
to
.
the
"
federal coordinator of college activities, said she
.
faculty because most teacher changes are
.
ag~inst any new capital projects besides
.
payroll
.
under the
.
Title
III
.·
grant,
.
a
$1
·
rece~ved verbal notification from her
-
ba~d
-
on
1
long term
.
student need .
..
Also,
.
repairs, said Fof
,
;
Mari~
'
s
.
line
:
of credit
-
·
.
million
·
:federal gtant for
j
1ew programs superviSQr; Dean of
-
.
St
.
udents Arit9ni
_
o
·.
faculty members must be given one year's
.
-
~s ext_ended
ti$
-
~ummer: Foy sai~ the
:
.
Mari st /eceiv
_
ed this sumin~r
>
·
&''!'
e Perez
_
, that
this
_
will
,
be her la~ yea
·
r
:
She notice; Foy said
;
· -
.
.
·
·
·
financ1~l co~untty considers Manst a
thougQt 1t;would
.
be-totally unfair
-
to hire said
·
she was told the decision was
'
not
:'
··
·
· ,_
·
strong risk with a solid future
;
J>
_
.
new
_
pe9ple for _'..l'itle III-and then tell our . b11sed on her
.
job performance .
. -
·
·
'
,
..
·
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..
"
,'
...
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,,
..,
·.
:-'
.··
,'.,
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"
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..
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·..
'
,
,
.
•,
'•
,
. • .
~
. .
· , •
.
DOrlflito
_
ries
'
~rowded;
.
MariSt
.
o
_
verboOks
·
·
--
·
.
dates requiring
·
resident students to
.
either
show up for th~ir room o_r notify the ~ollege
.
Anticipating that
a
number of students if they were-
·
not commg. Accor<Im.g
•
to
.
.
will drop out early or
·.
nof
'
show this Gainer, students
,
not showing up were
semester, Marist College: has
.
overoooked . called a:nd asked
-
if-they planned to
·
i:-eturii,
the
·
student donnatories,
,
··
according~to ~nabling the housing office to place
'
Fred
··
Gainer,
.
.
coordiriator
:
of
··
·
residences; students
.
in the empty
.
sp~ces .
.
,
.
..
··
.·
.·
:Th,e
·
overboo,king has
•
resulted)n
six
-
·
In
·
additio~, _the
·
c~llege Iocat~ of!
-
stu.dents ternpora
_
rily
·
ttving
·
in
_
Byrne campus housmg
.
and_ i~
·
encouragmg
~
~I►
.
'
·
Residence.;
'
Father LaMorte's home; and perclassmen not havmg
_
bee11able tofmd
the
te~por
_
arily
;
placing of students
in
the
:
the~ .o
.
wn
.
off-::cai:nt>us housing, t~ ~ove.
.
rooms of the Dutchess Community
-
College
··
Gamer
·
added
.
if
·
space
.
-
does
·:
become
.•
.
students, according to Gainer, who added,
•
av~~able
oo
:
campu~ the
-
stude~ts
'.
~ill
.
be
''the
:
college is trying
to
resolve the notifie<l_ and asked
if
they °'ould
'
like to
problem."-
.
.
.
·
·
·.
·
-
.
.
-return
;
.
.
.
..
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_
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··.•
·.
··•
'The coJlege overbooked the d9I'Illitories
.
·
Fathe,r LaM01te, ca.~pus ch_aplain,
:
s~~d .
.
_ .
··
..
•
bY a
.
'.'
.
bit
·
more than
.
the
·
n~ber
·
of Du,t- ._he
..
can
:
::,
~~just
.
. t.o
.
·.
•
l
.
i~lllg- · ~1th
.
~e
.
_
six.
·
clless
·
..
students,'!
.
said
:-
qamer
o
Jie
'_
said.: stu~ents,
·
:
;
alth~ugh
"
his..- J1ome
·
-
.
is
>
now
:· :
•· .
·
_
other colleges also
.
over.b~)c the number of • cr~
.
w~ed-
::
~e
:
~1d
th~
major.,probleDJ: with
'.
,
·
·
·
:
students;
<
·
~
·
·,;:/ ::
;
·
-
':
·
.
·,
•
·
· ..
...
n '
.
the Situation
lS
.
~at 1t has.an ~ffec~
.
~~ ~e
_.
.
' ·
m
,
the
:
past;
.
·
over.~rowding
;
has been
;
a stud~ntf
:
who
_
,
:
~ish
·
to V¥!i!
'.
him
.
m
_
µie
·
cause
:
of the
'
elimination
·
of'single rooms; evenmg;'He believes they- n.u:ght s~y
_
aw,ay
·
.
811~
,
the placing
:
of thr~
'
stu!}e_il!~
;
in
:
some
·
.
fr~~
-
·
·co~~~
.:
.
~Mort~ .~'*etthe stlldents
.·
·
-
~~;'. ;~;
/
~~~oli;~~~et s~~~
f
~
·
~
:{~~
t
'
:f~i!!;~~~
•
:
r
~:
f
-
·
.
only
;:_
as
,
..
·
!ong
.:
,
~
t
.
·
!
.
-
Beca~{ontarlat~•
o~erbookblg, stude~u are
temporarily u~ ~
·
n~
-
·
·
wtth
:'
resldenee
·-
Fr. LaMorte.
--
·
- -
'-
·
·
.
·
--
·
-
·
photo
Da
,
--
8
·
ba
·
'.
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·
-
--
-
·
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.--
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Ve
:
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W
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r
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r
r
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Page2
THE CIRCLE
1/THE
CIRCLE
The Circle is the weekly newspaper
Of
the students of Marist
College
and is published weekly during the school year exclusive
Of
vacation periO<IS by the southern Dutchess News Agency, Wappingers, N.Y.
·-.
·
·
,
Beth Weaver
·Lark Landon
Pat Larkin
DaveShaw
TomBurke·
George Connelly
Ro~~yan
editors
. Dave Potter
associate editor ·
sports editors
. .
Ken Healy .
photography editor -·
business manager
advertising manager
distribution manager
Staff_: Clare Amico, Mariarme Beyer, Melinda Bowen, Paul Ceonzo,
Chris
CuITan, Chris Egan, Joe Emmets, Chris Hogan, Maureen Jennings, Dianna
Jones, P~ Miller, Terry Moore, Patti Morrison, Jane·Neighbors, Valerie·
. Poleri, · Dave Powers, Don Purdy, Rich Sohancliyk, Gerard Spillane, Susan
Squicciarini, Roy Stuts, Jim Townsend.
·
·
·
The next few-years ..•
t
During_ the pa~t two years, Marist has
recorded budget- deficits now totaling ap-
, proximately
$350,000. Though President
- Linus Foy has repeatedly stated the college is ,
financially sound, a cut of two ~reent has
been made on most campus departments,
!n_.
eluding cutbacks of staff•
-
.
•. .
student services have been cut; Rather; ad-
ministrative positions have been phased· out·
and job responsibilities <redistributed>
Hopefully .. another budget. deficit.· .situation
cari,.he' avoided :without having
to ~itiate
any ·.
further staff or ser-vice reductions; This can
only be accomplished through . s~rind ad-
.
.
'
.
. .
,I
September 7, 1978
LETTERS
LETTER POUCY
All letter> musi
be
typed triple space with a 60 space margin, a;..d submitted to the Circle
office no later than 6 p.m. Monday. Short letters ore p_refi:rred. We reserve the right to ~it
all letter>. letter> must
be
signed. but name$ may
be_
withheld upon request. letters wall
be
published depending upon availability a space.
Government
charged?
I
think
I may escape
an
accusation of · chauvanism if I
admit that' I regard that·
as
unlikely. Did one of
tlf~
men on
To the Editors,
the
first·
floor
of
Leo
break -the
-
Toe only possible purpose of
elevator? Common sense· would
government is the resolution of ~uggest -that they had com-
conflict. _ At any given moment paratively few opportunities. Are ·
· the~ a~ sev~ral 5?Cial tensions
resident students responsible for
pulling
m
va~ous <;Urections, and acting as sentinels, or for the
those who believe m the value of vandalism-of- those. with . whom
·
politics must· take it upon - they may--· have notlling ._but.
themselves to hold the-center~ . . geography in co!JUI1on? ·
'
.. T.h~re are - ~t least three
·
3.
As~
always, tllere , is · the. -
d1YJ.S1ve -f?rces. lik~y. to.· operate problem, of _ budg~ing limi~ed
.upon this campus for the funds to a large numbefl>f dubs ·
academic year under;~~,; and and organizations, each of which .
these forces set the pnont1es for _ can, ·plausibly · argue· th·a,t:.Jt _•;,
student government.
-
. •.. .
. . deserves a large share of thetotal
.. . · 1. -The
war
tci
a _student's heart allocation because "right., now
.. 1s throu~hIS stomach. To.ere a~e ·.we're
·a
Chevy, but
with
better
sereral 1!11portant questio~ m funding . we could · become - a ·
regardlc!,the newJoodserv1ce; Buick.
0
(Bytlle'way, I_like that
why· has, "-3e food. gotten even quote:even better; than the.J:me·
~or~ than.we remem~? ~ t . about~e co~kt~il ·party.):, Th.e
1s bemg. dQne
to
prevent· a repeat reduction of.· tensions through·
of la_st year's· deficit?< And
why .
prope~ ,:.budgettng, is ,a .
:very;·
Though the
Circle
regrets the loss'
oi
revenue to the college's programs and ser~·
•1ices, along with the eventual absence of per·
5onnel, this m:ove _to cut back expenses can ·
.,nfy be interpreted as a positive one·.
were thtemployees wllo workect precanous procedure, .. but ,1ine
.
·
·
--H~ \ ~-/
"<.· ..
more_thanforty .bours
.
_during_ -whichit•isthe·•duty ofthose in'-
" l
v/;:
l
•J
,I [·
1-
.
SO~E:
we~s over the summer not . volved
t_o·attempt.
< .•. . . ' ;',
- v···
• - • - • -
. .
_ . . .
_._._
. .
_ . .
_._
••
rl.
- pa1d·oy~rt~e?
s: ··_ •·. • . . .
Itseeinsfromthisquicksurvey
Mai-ist has begun to_ develop a. pattern of-
poor financial .practices _during.the lasttwo
_
_
..
.·
.. _
.
. ..
2.
'f!le charges
O!}
our liability
-
_that: the, Coun<:il
:
of
Student
•
• • .
• _.
. • .
_. • .
· _
. < ••-·.
-~eposits}or comqion d,~ag~ Lead_ers;ihe Interhouse· Council,
. ,years, and ids time to· stopoveispending~:
hHore it is too late.
If
the college continues
to
·operate at deficit levels for, a few more years, ..
. mm1strative plannmg and review; The fate of
nnply_~ una~.e~ble·con_~ept of _ and ·the•
other:
student govern ..
the·college and the value of current and for-·· ,collective·,~t D!d on,eofc.the· -mentbodi~ have a:formidable ·
mer Marist studerits' educations
will be
· 'women oil the third f_l09r put the· task. , ,, . ·
,. . . . .
-
-
.
determined by what.'the 'c()il~ge's
·
ad_~:-
holein;aSheahanwaUfor)vhicn
_
. ,
.
·
.. ::,airist~pher~aille
its future will he in serious jeopardy.
·
ministrators cJo during thenextJew years..
all.
residents of-that dornt were.
·
;lilterhouse Ccmncil President
It also must be appreciated that no major
~~~~~~~~-
.
-·
:,::. ¥19¥,pOa.O·
7-
> ,. . _::
::·;f---V _ _ :~ _- ..
·>
~.!!~~~~~~~!¥~:::~~-
_
..
-.-1
Superstitions,';~;,.:;_part"I
College.Chorus (Choir)
will
be·· edition .since··it was first
· ..
-
·
·
.·
·
-
•
·
··Monday evenmg, Sept;'ll at
6:30
published in
1975.
Deadline is
Oct.
in
room
165
Champagnat. The
31~
For 'rules; check the Circle
chciurs, under the direction of office.
. By
Richard
A.
LaMorte
During the first five years of life, we have to
word from the object and give it a symbolic
·
John Sullivan, has· nofbeen ac-
take three big steps out of_~he magical world
in
function. .
"
.
.
.
. tive since 1977, but hopes to
The 'Mid-Hudson Art~ and -
which we are born.·
· Well; religion is
fyll
of words. Long litanies and -
present winter and . spring Science Center,has established a
· During the first eighteen months we come to
oft~-repeated f?i:mulas play a very-important
programs. -There are no auditions . rentallibrary
of
original art by
the frustrating discovery that, we are not the ,
role
m
many rebg1ons:-What concerns us -here is
and-no experience is necessary: Iocal. l!"rtists.: The purpose of
this.
center of the world.
thatthis use·of words often does not go beyond
All students, faculty, and staff rental will be to give local artists--'-
Most of you will agree that there are people
themagicalphrase, and instead of beingthe free
are welcome. Rehearsals are the exposure and recognj.ticinthat ·
and things outside of us which will continue-to
and creatire expression of'.deep realities com;;
Monday evenings
6:30-8!30;
and they watTant, and to Inake art
exisfeven when we don't. This is, however, not
mupica9Ie to o_ur felloll'. men, th1f words may
concerts-are planned for the end available
to· homes , and ·
so self-evident as it seems.
It
is· often only -
become a.s_ubshtute for reality,-.. subtle form of . of.the semesters;
·
businesses· of the Mid-Hudson
through
a.
long and frustrating eJ;perience that
pow_er over the capricious movements of our
· ·
.·
• . ·
•· · .·.
· :
.
. area. During the month of
Sep-
we are able to discover the objective_world.
· gods,~our devils and our own impulses.
· -
The .Natfonal· College-- Poetry --·tember, the Rental.Library~may
· Everytime we experience that w~ are not ruling
_
Is_ there not_ somethin~ of this magical world' · Contest is offering·
$200 in.
~sh,
be seen·in th~windows o!Lu~ey ·
,the world be our feelings, thoughts, and· actions,
1~m us.
It
seems very difficult to overcome
this. . :·and
boo~
prizes and free pnntmg .. Platt .and• Sigalow · Optomotnsts
· we ·are forced to realize that there are other
· word-magic. We ·feel pretty good
if we have - for a~ ·accepted~poems 'in the
0
00
the Main Mall, Poughkeepsie.~
persons,
thin@
and events which have their own
fulfilled our obligation, said our prayers, gone to
: A~er1can .. · (?oH~giate .. PoE:ts
Then.
in October tl!e library:
will
independence and their own existenc,e,
.
•. mass._ Vie seem to be saying: "God cannot do
~thology,:This
Wil.l
~e ~f special travel to th~ Henta~e: Savings _
Therefore the first step out of the magical
anytl:ungto usnow!'.' We did what he asked usto : !fiter~_tq_aRcollegiate
poets
as
Bank on Mam Street,Beacon;
If
world is the discovery of an objective reality. IN
do~and now it is his tum to pay us back; Our ·. !t
PX:OV•~es
for t~em a sou~e of· youareanartistandviouldliketo ·
THE RELIGIOUS -FI~LD TmS:
MAY .
NOT
praye~s give
}IS
some p~wer over 9<>d, instead of : mspll'ation .
~
;e?couragell!ent · take. part
in
the. project,, please
.
. ~PEN SO
EASILY.•
Many mature~ su~essful
engagmg us m a real dialoque
in
which we try to : · and
i
a
~que! : ,u~tercolleglll~~. · contact Helen Joluis-Rich11_rdson
. men ii1thislife often might still treatGod·as a
listen to what God says to-us in the·
:
prayers: o~_let. for· the!r'.:.U!~~ry_ am-.·.
at:471-1155;·
·
. -•
~:,>,
•
•-'.
_ "part
of themselves. GOD
lS
THE DOER
OF ALL
themselves ... in
His
:word.
. .
.
· . -_ . -
_-
'
. . . bitio!1s:/lbe }orthcomlllg:· ACI> ·
•. TlUNGs· which·. comes .in handy
in
times .of
. The
third step out of the magical world is the
- - ··
--
·
,..
·
· . , illness,' shock;:fmal exams. in every situation·
iri
formation ·of our- conscience. This is the·.• great
which
.we
feelinsecJ1re; And if-God doe5!1't come-
event betwe~m our!hird and fifth
years~
Wh~riwe ·
:. rwurlng
io--oUl' aid, our only reaction may
be
to
'learned al>Qu( obJects that
.
. existed outside of
: ·cry
Jouder ., far
from·
becoming a real. "Other". .
· ourselves even when we. did not, . and :when we.
·: • · ·whose existence does.Qot _depend on mine, God
had experienced ,n.at words were· not~.-an-'"
might only remain the easy frame which fits best:,. ·. powerful tools to shape the world around us, .we ·-
.... -fR6NKLYSPfAi(ING
around. the ,edges of my· security.
• .
- were still faced with a_ much -more· important -
. Great anxiety, caused by internal a~ external ·,. -
step: the step fi::om the external -agent' to 'me.'
--.;.
storms, can sometimes force:us ~o·regress· or'·gcV . The _external _agent-ofl<l~ipllne:is:slowly con~ ...
-down ,to .tlµs ')o-.y'er·.: Je\:el .of. rellgio~/ This . _ verte<! into
an
internal guidance:system.
This
is
. ©~IFW~ll~ ---
·,m>~eo~l: · :
regres5;ion may even sav.e oµr 11!~!,
It
gives us,·• ~hat
IS
ID~nt by. the f~rmat!o~. of• coruicience,"
something to .hol~:on to: . something. to k~p us : . SlllCe conscience
IS
an mt_ernal convi~ion, root
together. It may even•be a very helpfulfonnof
. external. · · ' --
> . . ·
· .
rel!~on, but it ~rtai!ilr·
~
not-a
mature
fonn of _
.
Co~s.ci~ce
becomes possible by the l?rocess of
religion. ·
.
·
- · · _ . ,
. ·.
. _
·1d~t~icabon.
Y,~
develope the .capaCity to, in•
The second step out of our magical wor:ld is the
tenor12e certam asp~t~ of the personality of
formation of language. Somewhere·.be~wee_p our · . ~other. person.;and to .make . them~ a·• part· .of
.
18th _ month . and.• our: . 3rd :ibirthday;'; we
-
start '
ourselves; In the case of moral'development; we
mumbling our
first
sounds which slowly deyelop • take .over judgements; standards, and values of ,
. !f1to words;- s~ritenc~ ·an<i'a language_<AI,thotigf:>
.
beloved per~ns
~ii~
~e
.them _( ~rt :_of our ·
.
. 1tmayb_.ea·<li.58pp_omtment_tha_t.~er~a~ things.:• .. ,o:wn.1?8rsonality •.
.
· .:,:(
_
• .. ··· .•··;-:;, ,.:
.
_,
·
:-
9
'.
ar:ound. us w}µch do not.belopg to~• bY:\!'.ords.~e ·· • · .: :,
0~-:1~ ..
there
.
. ~m.etm.~g-; ~lse ~appelrl;n.g\at the ... ·
._ . ·
·
: ~n ~e
_
rev~nge, !>eca~ our. fll'st ·,.wor<!s give
~Ill:~ t~e.? D
,
unng those fµ-st (01;1i:y~rs. we'felt . ·
-
.. µs,. a. mystenous power: over things. __ Like·
an.. •·
tliat_0\11:'Jathe.r
.
~uld do everythirig;that he:was
.
_-• •:American_~ho is~gte<i.to disc~ver that
hi!'
first/ .
all-po_w_er,fi:d;Jhat: he:c~:nil9_)9lv,e.,~n ~r<>bleµis;• •
...
. ·.:
:
. .French word, garcon; really bnng11 the W!ltter to· . , JYell, • w:eJ~came •~PP9mted :sooner' or.later:_,
.
. · •
.·. ' · •':his,table;.th~~Q!l~per:Iences ~.otso:much·_the:::' . Andiwe C9uld·~ot:,t:~llt.deperiq·.oi(
hirii•'ariy, ·
.
: -·
f,sll~{~~~Bi~
.·.
/,
.
.,,,-,
._·
.
'
mastery
of words ·but the .
.
mastery
_
of
1
objects.Jtc.
·
:: l<>_nger; llow were we going to solve.this problem;-·:··
: --~ --./-. ::,~•~•-~tt_ ..
_,•x,,~r,e,
~~; ~~
~'.---
I\/:'i>
.;r;b\::•,J(;;)? --'· -_
-
'<i { ·,
'
.
·"
.
-~•.-~
•
.
•,•.--
.·
·.·.·,.
·.•
..
·.•.•.•
.-.
•
-
·
......
,
,,•
September
7,
1978
THE CIRCLE
Page3
Cliapel renovations
repair firt
damage·
·
·
By
Dave Powers
liturgical elements such as a lectum;
-
_
.
.
candles, tabernacle and vestments.
Renovations we~e
finished
in the Ma~ Despite the cb
_
anges, the seating capacity
Colleg1t_Chapel
this
~st week, according .
.
remains the same~
.
·
-
to Campus
·
G}la~lam
,
F::~ther
_
__ Richard
·
~
Bids have been accepted to enclose the
~orte. Renovat10ns w~re reqmred after front of the chapel; according to LaMorte.
-
-
fire gutted the rear portion of the chapel _Financial figures
-
·
on the cost of- the
June 14, 1977.
-·
·
_
-
-
\
·
_
renovations were riot available until the
Major
.
:
renovations
include
.
the end of September
.
LaMorte said all costs
r~pl~ceme!1t o~ ~orrugated. fiberglass
will
be covered by a fire insurance policy.
_
\Yllldo:w,s with sliding glass windows and _ The
.
chapel is
·.
now complete, and
.
_
the removal of the tabernacle wan- arid LaMorte said he is "satisfied with the
c~nfessi
_
onal. The: taberpacle i~ now renovation. It is
~
probably the most ap-
S1tuated on
_
the rear. wall of the chapel. The
,
propdately arranged church in the area
CC?nfessionaLhas been replaced, with a·
·
for worship services."
·
-
-
-
room of
-
reconciliation, finished-in green,
-
·_
The
:
renovations were plam1ed by ar-
The renovatiom
in
the
Marist
College Chapel which repaired fire damage were
.
and
_
a meeting room was built,
_
both
in the chitect John
_
Clark of Hyde Park, ac-
completed last week.
photo
Gerry
Mcnulty
rear of the chapel Th
_
emeeting room
is for cording to
·
LaMorte. Clark has also
-
_
_ ........... .;.... ..... _ _ _
....., _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
-
-
tjlmpus ministry purposes
~
-:
_
, _
planned the renovations or construction-of
,'
Carpeting of
-
b~wn;-blue and gold
·
was churches such as
·
Regina
.
Coeli in Hyde
laid,throughoutthe_ chapel except the pew P~rk,
St. ~ry•s of Poughkeepsie and Mt.
areas,
'.::..·
_!.aMorte also
'
purchased new
_
canne1
·
a1so in Poughkeepsie.
.
...
' '
.
·•·
.
·.
.
.
.
.
·
.
"
MardOtt
fbod
.
.
·
ServiCe
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·•~
~·
fi.~s
:
neW cafe objectives
(
·
·
~
By
Vltlerie PolerL
.
the
·
food.
-
Marrio
f
-
has
:
also added a
.
. _
-
·
,o•
•
.
·
· ·
--
-
.
.
.
.
vegetarian meal
_
to
·
the
-
menu. This was
. _
-
Marriot Food Service has replaced last done . because
·
of
·
its success
·
at _
other
.
_
-
.
.
year'.s
.
Marist )food Service
·
. '.Jlie
.
new food, schools, said Cheatham
_
:
<
--
•
· ·
-
·
·
·
:
service l{as
hire<!; l!ecause
it was
·
see11
·
as
.
· Another
.
charige M.arri~ has brought,
·
is
.
-
~eing
:
:
'~ece~ry
.
.
to
_
the college
,
"
·
ac- .having a different
'
steak Ilight, according
col'.ding
:
~
:
Barry Cheatham,
.
:
dir~ctor of
.
·
to
Cheatham. In previous years steak was
-
·
-
-
"
dining
,
services;
_
·
,
.
-
•
"
·-
•
_
·
·
_
serv,.ed Saturday;
-
This
.
_
was changed
-.-
·
.
Sollle
-
of
.
Marriot's objectives
·
are
.
to
because
'
it:was deemed unfair"to students
-
tighten internal
-
controls,
try to make food
who
~
-
go
;
home
·
for the
•
weekend,
-
·
said
-
_
:
lines move qliicltef, ~d
.
to
Itjake the at-· Cheatham. He
-
added
;
''the
.
quality of the
.
-
illospher:-e
in
the
.
cafeteria more
appealing,
.
food
is
the same as the specificationsJisted
·
sa.id
:
Cheatham. -
_
_
-
_.
_
-
_
_
in the Marriot Food Specification Book."
_
•
·
_
Controls are being tightened by having a
Changes
:.-
will occur in
_
the Rathskellar
,
non~student check identification
"
cards also: Submarine sandwiches sold by the
,
,
before
:
students enter the
_
cafeteria;
.
0
sald
: ·
inch; steak sandwiches and quarter pourid
-
,
Ch~tham .
.
In the past, students <!lle~ked hambm-gers
•
are
;:
new
,
ad@ions t9 -the
,
_
~------
--
Q~E!J:
:
st11i!E!Il~JP.~i;-d,s;
_
_
giea~~
said
it
·
i:nenu. •
-
~
, .
. :
<;)
'
·,
..•
· _
-
,
·
< .:
_
·-.
.
·
·
•
__
)
.
- ··
·
is not fair to expect a
·
stuuent'to
_
tell-his
The rat bar menu
is
·
also different.
.
friends they
·
cannot come
.
into the
.
Canned beer and hard liquor will no longer
cafeteria.
_
·
·
'
be sold. Three brands of draft beer and six
'
~
·
:Lines are
·
now moving
_
qliicker since the brands of wine
will
be sold
.
Cheatham said
glass~s
-
have been placed outside of the all this ha~
_
been don~ to tighten internal
-
food
·
line, according
to
Cheatham
~
The
·
controls.
.
.
·
-
_
_
-
·
-
-
· .
·
,
.
glasses
are
now
.
on
~
table
·
_
by
~
the
-
milk,
--
Cheatham said the food service
will
also
where they
0
.
c~ be reached
·
by everyone. offer theme meals. When there
is a theme
Cheatham
,
said Marriot has tried
_
to
~
meal,
_
the cafeteria
will
be decorated, and
make the ~tmQsphere more appealing
•
by foods based on specific nationalities tied to
-
adding_ l
_
ine decorations, and garnishes
·
on the theme
will
•
.
be
offered.
·
.
_.
.
.
'
.
·'·
•
-
.
~tUderits raise. money
·
fp-f
Muscul~r 'Dystrophy
....,_
· ·
_<.:
·-
,
:
.
-
-
'
~Beth Weaver
and Jim Raimo, both :t{oul!e
-
lV
.
~idents,
·
·
·
·
·
·
--
·
·
.
asked permissiori
·
to !\old a
-
raffle.
_
Mem~
---
.
Champagnat Hall's House IV donated befs of the house sold chances to ·students
-
no
:
dollars
.
•
to-the
.
annual Jerry Lewis outside the dining
.
hall
;
..
-
-
_
-
·
_
Labor Day
-
Muscular Dystrophy Telethon, .
_
The students raised 180 dollars from the
Mostofthemoneywas coUected from a
50-
raffle. Fred Gainer, coordinator of
50
"
raffle held by the, students, accordinjfto residences,
.
drew.:
.
the winning. chance,
Jack
Oehm~
-:
resident advisor.
-·.
-·_
.
_
--·
·
which
belonged
to
eighth floor residenfJoe
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·According
to
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Oehf!l~
,Cvonhe
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, Delpilar Waters.
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.FRANKS
-. ~Across from-Marist
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,i
Thur~d.a.y:~tADIE$.
.
NITE
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25e
drinks;
-
rio cover
:
triday~C~EA
p
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DRINK NIT£
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~~·
''Anythi.ng
:
Goes
_
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I
HOURS
l\lON-SAT
,9:30 A_M-5:30 PM
:
The
Hair
Shack
LATEST
CUTS
FROM NEW YORK
CITY
•UNI-SEX
CUTTING AT ITS
BEST
--
•FOR
GUY~
AND GALS FROM
$5
•HIS AND HER
BODY PERM
CURLYO~-SOFTCUT
FROM
$15
THURSDA\
'
.f,ATE NIGHT
471-4383
17 SOlffH HAMIi.TON ST.
-
•HENNA
•CRIMPING
.
.
roUGHKEt.:rsm
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•NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
.
,
I
V
i
R
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l
,
OCK SOUTII OF ~lAIN MAI.I.I
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if
:~
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Discover
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Racquetball!'
· ffocquetball is 'the fostest~growing sport in
·
the country and ALLSPORT is the biggest
addition
.
·
to the-sport and recreation scene
in Dutchess County. Come
·
se
_
e Racquetball
·
_
in action ... it's
·
easy to learn
, -
it's great
-
recreation, it
'
s superb exercise
.
And it can
be ployed by
everyone.
ALLSPORTisa
~
-
CompJete
_
Health and
Recreation Cl~ Offering:
• 9 Racquetball/Handball Courts
ALL
-
SPORT
• Nautilus F
i
tness and Health
Conditioning Club
Now
Offeri
.
.
ng
•Lux~~
1
~:~:~~~~
GRAND
• Complete Men's
-
· _
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··
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·
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andWomen'slockers
OPE. N
.
·
•
1NG
: ~:~::~ Beverage Bar
.
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M e
_
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m b e r s h f l a
_
tea
·
_
ip
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• Air Conditioning
··
·
year-round
.
• Child Care
•
· Sp~:::::::~;:
t
fi
N
O
r
.
-
.
· ~1,,~
ow pen.
.
...
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ALLSP0RT
.,...,,.-....,,
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''.tness and racquetball club
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f
240A ~ashington Street, Poughkeepsie, NY
12601
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F,URTHER INF.ORMATION
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Marlst defender prepares to tackle offensive
running
back
durin~
scrimmage
which
,· took. place o~ Monday afternoon on Leo~doff
Field.·
ph~to Gerry McNulty
foxes=prepare for
if
i
rst ~varsity
•
season'
.
Importance
~f
lntramurals
By
Pat
Larkin
·
High school athletes who go to college
may find a somewhat different relation-
ship with other students than what they
had encountered in high school. Athletics
does no! mean as much in college ~s it .
Jnight have meant in high school. All of
a
sudden school work, meeting new people,
or.
just
relaxing seems more important
than it ever did before.
·
. '
.
· For these 'freshmen, even though the
time for athletics decreases, their desire to
participate does not. Many freshmen want
to play varsity sports but cannot find the
IJnda -
Rogers
time~
-
-
-·
.-
However at Marist, and just about every volved. Last year a conscientious. effort
ByKenHealy
championship team, ·and Les McMillian, college, there is an organized intramural was made by the· commuters
-m
the
--
the defensive line coach. •
program which allows ·for competition , volleyball and S<>ftball activities. -More of
When the Marist Red Foxes take the
· Malet sa.id the pro.gram
is
rebuilding and among whomever wishes to participate. In
·
this . support is needed to make the in-
field in Plattsburg fortheir first game-as a he believes there
is
a strong base with the· the' :-_past,. the intramur~l P.r_o~ram at tramm;al progr~ at Mari~ as gOC>d as or
-Varsity -team, only·
15
players _
from ,last recruiting·that was done last ;winter._ He Manst has b~n
use4
by_ a ma3or1ty of the even better than 1thas been
m
the past . .,..
·· year's 2-6-1 squad will be in uniform. Of the .said('Almost alrof.the freshmen that are ,students. This year should not be an ex-
_ Rogers- has set up a
·
fall
program ·of
q0°man team, the largest
'in
years, there here are a direct result of our recruiting . . ception. There_ are app~x~ately
_
1600 actiyities beginning on Septe~ber 18_ and
will be
2.5
freshmen an~ eight transfers. We.knew most of the freshmen that were : ~udents !it~endin&
_
Manst; 1tls 11othard to e!1~~ December 8. .The first two ac-
. .:,The Red Foxes have a new name,
a
new .:coming._ La~•_year•severaf players didn't find 15 guys and girls to form a soccer or a bv,iti~-
-
-are flag -football an~ volle}'.~all
coa_ch, new players,:and ·a new ~ttit~c!,e'..
,
eyen _ get_· into schOC>l -until just before. football team..
.
. · .. •-- . .
startlflg ?n the 18th. The·dea~e forfiling
'.{We're not
a
club anymore,,. sai_d ftrst practice
began/'
Twofreshmerithat have.-
There are rune sp?rts actlVlti~ bemg r?sters
1S
September
!2.
which can be
_ year HeadCoach Mike Malet. <'I
think
all .l~ked-especially good_iri the early season -offered through the mtramural program picked up and returned
m
room 201 of_the
o,four retµming players realize· this and I._· are fullback TimMancuso"and linebacker. directed by Linda_ Rogers who replaces McCann Center. .
·-know the· new cine's -do." Malet, ·an, Joe Baldwin. Malet said both are solid Eileen· Witt, former dir.ector ·of - in-,
Other ~sports activities- in the fall
assistant 'at Marist for eight
years,
sue-
·
ballplayers, typical
of
the kind of athlete tram11rals; Eight o( these nine sports have semester include tennis, soccer, archery, -
, ceeds _Ron Levine who resigne~ at the. end Marist has recruited.
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· _
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separate. divisions
·
for· men · and women.
basketball, . racquetball, and track.
oHast· season after tliirt.~n years as head
Although the coaching staff said Marist . The
ninth
sport, t\¥0 _on two basketball, is
_ Each week the Circle will have full
c:oach.- - - ·
_ ·
would be improved Malet declined from coaj. . _ _
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coverage of the intramural program which
·-The _new head· coach said as
in.
the_. past _ making any predictions.He said the team
·
A major weakness of tlie program in the · -will include results of activities and filing
. · !ew ye~rs freshmen l;VOuld ~lay
a
big part could be·better, but with the imp_rovement . past was not enough comm~ters iot in· periods for upcom_ing. activities.
·
m the. Red Fo]!:es immediate fortunes.- throughout the league another poor record
.
.
/'.W.e're deep iri all our positions personnel wouldn't be µnpossible;
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~J/~;\i~a~:·;h:::1g:cib~
... ; ...... ·Notesf~omth;GridJron., ...
L.·
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R.
un_· n_--.
in_ · ___
·g--
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R_
·-e-_d,·F_-0
__ -_ X_.
·
e· s
yearour new people ·will have to play for
_ _ _
_
:-tjs
in a hurry,''-'said'Malett
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Ofthe 22freshmen,on the1975 M~rist
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•c~-~-~AQpgh••.ss~
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eff·_·-·aandsMoa•t·tnC
1
0.•l·e-~,~an-·--d·-·b_y_r_e_t-·u-~---_---g·---~----~~·1
1
,i
-a~·set at._defensive-end spots; ~alet said . -.,li'rid~y' night the'. .. Red
-
'Foxes. will·'
-~ike Laffm/the other co-<!aptam,
_
will.be scrimmageNewHaven atQ~igleyFieldin
By Chris
Hogan
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_c.._~. :.:-::_,_.,; .. '.' ,--
{
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m th~ backfield, but he wasn't sure where. , West Haven, Connecticut New Haven is
lettermen Paul Welsh, Ron Gadziala, and
,
::1'he offen~iye picture is also clouded . hoping to rebound from tneir 70-7 loss to
The Marist Running .
Rei
Foxes·
will
Jerry Scholder from 'last year's squad.
with no positions sewn up, according to Fordham in last season's finale. ;
, begin their first season as a Division II
Stevens said he believes this com-
Malet.·"there's been a!ot of_competition
Maristwillgoontwoovernighttripsthis , team on Saturday in the Glassboro In-
bination
of
youth and experience has
for all the spots,- Mond~y s
_
sc~immage t.old s~ason, the opener at Plattsburg. and the vitational at GlassJ:>oro Stat~ College in · created a positive· attitude between team
· us a lot a!1~ after<Friday ru~ht's scrrm- fmal game _against Niagara. .
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New Jersey.
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-· . members that~is essential for a successful
mage agamst New ,Haven we U_prpbably
The ,home opener will be Sunday,. Sep-
Coach Rich_Stevens said he expects the year..
_.
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kn~w who.we're gomg to go with,,. Malet t,ember 24, against St. John's. St. John's 1978 schedule to be the toughest lineup of
said.
-.
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•
was one of Marist's two victories last competition Marist has ever faced.
.
Assisting Malet are returning coaches· season. Phil Camera a reserve center for · -This year's team consists of thirteen
Tony· Celenza, offensive· co-ordinatof and the Viking's last year· is now· playing for · upperclassmen and eighteen . freshmen.
Steve Helman, offensive line. There are the Redmen.'.
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Stevens sa1d two. of the top··. freshmen
also thfee ~ew c6acll~s, George, Frick, a
, Seasontickets for all home games ,will recruited are Dennis' Martin, from
former_semi-pro:c9ach who will work
.
with soon be available from players and at the Chaminade High _School in Mineola and
· the ;wide receivers,
Bill
Paccione a athletic office at.the Mccann Center;:
John Urban from Connecticut. He added
member of Marist's· 1970 undefeated
·
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they will b~ aided by co-captains Dennis
'
.,
,
....
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-He added
"If
we can avoid injuries we
have the makings of a "good team."
Stevens said the Foxes will aim to peak
at the IC4A~Championshi~ and the_ NCAA
_Division Ir championships .. · .
The Running Red Foxes are coming .off
their worst record in six years with a 10-5
record.
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21.1.1
21.1.2
21.1.3
21.1.4
THE.CIRCLE
Vol~me 21, Numbe~ 1
Marisi College, Poughkeepsie, New York 12601
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September 7, 19_78
Marist
receives
$1
,
ll1illioo
gran
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.
Byf
_
ane
Neighbors
During
this
period, Marist ~ay revise
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tht: program by ~bmitting changes
to
the
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Manst College is receivmg a one milliorLoffice of. Education. The plan can be ex-
dollai: grant
-.
from the
-
Unit~~tates-tended for on
.
e additional year; but the
Department of Health;
.
Education, and
·
total grant would not exceed the one
Vlelfare,
•
according
,
to
;.
Edward Waters; million <lollar allocation.
·
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...
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dean of spec!al college
·_
programs_.
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.. Since the passage of the 1965 Higher
·
"
Under)\1anst's proposal
,
as approved by
<
Education Act, o_nly three other New York
tile
•·
O~fice of
·
Educa~ion,
..
the
.
'
college
_
wm
.
institutions
.•·.
have
.
received the Title
·
i
ill
~al>lish two ~ew
.
prog~ams
i
orie
·
to,.study grant, a~i:cted
.
to
:
developing institut!oris
~~
Hu~n River ;
~
and
·
~
"
~egree
-
program demoqstratmg
.
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a "potential
<
to
_
.
make
·.·
a
~ pub~c ~al!age1:Jlent
>
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substai:itfal
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.
contribution
.
to
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~e high~r
.
:
Manst will
_
also ~prove and expand the education resources of
.
the 11abon
;
'' said
valu_e-ba~d
-
C()l'e
~ ~ u i n ,
,
colirui~ling Waters.
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an~
c~reer EiQucation, mec;Ua inst!'.llct1onal
•
The grant is the third largest in
'
Marist
skills
..
of.:
•
th~
;
facl;llty
;
--
a11d
..
programs
iri
history; exceeded
-
only by the
.•
·
founding°
.
c~~Uh1~~t1~11 arts
;,
juy~~e
·
justice, ~nd
·.
g~ant_:__
~d
~
the
•
J.
:iS
·.
rni:llicin
•·
dollar gr1U1t
cnmmal Just1ce;
·
Waters said;
<· -
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from the McCarm Foundation .
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Approximately-00
.
percent
·
of ihe
:
money. . .. Waters
·
,
0
said
,
the
·<
grant enables the
will
.
~e
received in
•
t~~
·,
first
yea"r,
,
5!)
per- college
~o
:
bnng
:-
iri distingajshed visiting
;
cept
:
~
-
~e.
second,-
.
and
.1
20 perce~t
lll
:
the professors
·
and
·
outside
.
consultants
·
•
en~
fin
~
Lt~F:During th~ three
·.
year
:
fy.n.ding
_
couraging
•
.·
~rist
.:
to
;J
,ecofue · one of 1h~
cycJe~iM~n~'s p l ~ g
-
aildni~a~~m~nt
·.
~utstanding collegei
•
ontheeast c<iast.
·
He
act1V1t1~
,
wiUbe refill~
an~
all s~~ents a~~ed
·
;
-'.
~e
:
>
expects
·
Jedera!
•
,
support
;
·
(6
of tl;le
,
coll
_
ege cClrnmunity
mll
be mvolved stimulate
.
pr1 vate
·
.
donations
to
the
in
_
:
developJng and ¢~~fdinating
-
~he
~
programs involved.
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progra19,.
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Widespread cutbacks
cau~ed by deficit
due to food
.
service cost overruns.
'
_
Marist
·
is attempting to cut back its
Marist College's projected $100,000 expenditures bytwo
'.
percent,
·
according to
.
budget deficit for the last fiscal year Foy,
·
because "since we've had
·
two
.
resulted
iri
staff
cuts and service changes straight years of
this (
deficit) we've come
!lY David Potter
.
for
-
the
1978 fall semester; according to
to.:
the conclusion we're living a little
--
President Linus Foy; However, Foy
·
ter- · beyond our means." He said all depart-
.
.
med the defitjt as«nofa particularly bad
.
men~ on campus
will
be evaluated each
·
sit!,lation" for ihe college
_.
-
·
·
:
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·.
··
.
.
year tci detenhine
_
their financial stability.
·
; .
Foy said
-
the job of
_
assjstant dean of The college may have
to
:
reduce the art
students,
,
fonherly
,
occupied by Fred
.
department, acc9rding
.
to F'oy,
.
.if
\
a
-
:
·
_
Lambert,
•'
was eliminated,
_
along
.
with
two proposal for an art major does n
_
ot get
:
faculty positions
:
:
Dr
.
Robert Van Meter
.
approved.
-
.
Jr.; assistant professor
'
of
History
and Dr.
·
·
··
··
·
K~tpleenI)esilets;
i,tsslstaht
professor of
Foy said food
.
service ~xpenses were
:
c_
Physics;
••-
were
·
phased
.
.
out
..
·
of
-
·
their more than· an~icipated;
·
and
•
cited rising
-d
·
·
rt
·
t
·
d•
·
·
.
,
.
•
·
F
···
food prices
.
as
.
'.
one rea~n for cosf
.;
epa
~Em
s,
.
accor mg
-.v
oy .
.
·
.
·
•
H
··
'd
L
-
··
·
· ·
kill
.
d
;
-
·
Fornier Dining
-_
Service
·
·directcir Joe ·-overruns
,
e
.
sa~
..
urenz "°"8:s nots
e
J
,urenz and -dinirig service
:
manager
Al
8:t_ cost proje~ions. Foy_'did not ~ave
Abramovich •
.
-were
.
released
·
·
when
.
.
the
·.
figures
for
.
cost
.
overruns m each
·
depart-
~-
board of
.
tru~ees decided not to
·
reriew the
.
ment.
/
.·
.
/
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_
arist
:
F09~
-
-
Sel"Vice
·
c(!ntr:a<;t
,
·
accor~g
•
Also contributing
:
to
_
~e deficit,
•
ac-
tof.Of
.:
He said the ~ard of 'f.ru~ees µ_ired cording to Foy
,
wa.s the college's decision
.
. :
Marriot Foo~ Services becau_se 1t decided to
·
spend
·
more
·
money for dormitory
·
the
.
college could not affo
r
d more losses repairs
~
Foy aiso
·
said he believes Marist's
$50,000 contingency fund is too low for a
.,...
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_
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budget as larg~ as Marist's. He said
·
the
_
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)
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._
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.
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collegewould'
.
'probablyhaveto
,
buildiria
~----~
'~":
49e-tm•t
r
,
fe,ee&
Jt,
Statf
<~
0
f&flu
-
etions
,,;
,:.,
J;Cd
,,f~-a~~?~~i:
?
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
·
.
•. .
.
.
•
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_
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,
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...
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...
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.
.
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.. •·
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·
to Foy; which also added to the def1C1t
,.
He
.
\
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··
·-
_
,:
, ·.
:
·
··
·
·
·
·
said_ the student
.
PQpulation
·
decreased
'.,
,
ByGerryMcNulty
people.later
.'
'
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-
'
Foy
·
explained som~ positions
_
were
.
from the previous fall,
::..
which cost the
.
.
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.
.
·,
·
.
-
.
·.
·
Foy
·
sai·d
·
some staff
-·
h
d
F
.
coll~e needed
·
revenue
.'
F6y added many
.
were given con-
-
p
_
ase out
.
onner
-
Assistant Dean of
departm
·
ts
h d
11
A st
.
aff
.
re
.
du
.
ct_
.
1on
_.
of two
_
·
percen
.
t w_a_s tracts of less than one year. Those wi
·
th
s
d
en
·
on c~mpus a
sma cost
tu ents, Fred Lambert,
•
supervised overrW1S
caused by ~a.nst's seco~d budget ~~f1c1t
.
more seniority at Marist were giyen long¢r
·
housing and dining
:
services
.
Marist
_
then
·
year
m
a row,
-_
at'Cordmg
.
to
·
President
·
-
contracts he said.
<
- ·
·
·
.
. ·
·
.:
h
.
ir
.
e
_
.
d Marriott Corpor
.
ation to manag
·
e
·
·
i•ts
.
·
·
·
-
·
L
"'
F
·
· ·.
·
·
·
·
·
-
-
·
·
·
·
,
A new areoWiting system, installed this
-
mu
,
s
~
oy.
·
,
·
;
_
. .
·
·
.
:
'l)le
·
staff members chosen, Foy said, foocl serviceand Gerry Kelly became
year,
will
enable
.
the college to receive
.
.
·
The college~
-
d~1cit
1S
.
~pproxunat~ly
.
were drawn _from two categories,
.
those
··.
dire¢t~r of housing.
·
Lambert has since
weekly reports on spending, said Foy. He
"150,000 foy said.
·
~at
-
we ve
~~n
dol!lg who ha~ received good but not out~anding become Dean of
·
Students
af
Wheeling
added
"
Marist will share the responsibility
1s spendmg next year
.
s money;
·
be s~id. · evaluations
·
and those who could not ad-
College, Wheeling,. West
.·
Virginia
·
-
._
a
of cost control with Marriot Food Services
·
The CQllege is trimming back to
·
a_level it va1!ce bec!l~se _they reached the limit of position
:
F'oy said.he helped
_
Lambert get.
an option the college did not nave last
'
cari support he added. Foy said the
-
staff their qua~
_
cations
'.
.
.
·
·
.
:
.
;,.
.
.
. Tu.e. redu~ion - sho?1d
✓
·
not
· mak~ a
y~r;
Also,
Maniot may exercise more
.· .
clit was aimed at recovering
$200,000.
'The dec1~0~ to cut st
_
~ff was m!3de
,
lll S1gruficant d~erence m student seryices-
~
-
portion control;
.
which would help keep
. .
Ofthe32staff.memberswho could be cut May Foy
_
said. He would .not d1Sc}~se andanY.negative~fectcould
_
be cushion~d
·
down costs he said.
_
· ·
Foy said itwas unlikely
all
of:th~ would names for what he termed legal reasons.
.
by the influx of Title
m
money, Foy said.
.
.
'
·
.
be. He said
·
some employees may transfer
·
One administrator, Dolly Bo dick,
•
There
-
were
:
no major reductions in
,
A!though the
board of t!"Ustees
,
decid~d
from
,-
Marist's payroll
~
to
.
the
"
federal coordinator of college activities, said she
.
faculty because most teacher changes are
.
ag~inst any new capital projects besides
.
payroll
.
under the
.
Title
III
.·
grant,
.
a
$1
·
rece~ved verbal notification from her
-
ba~d
-
on
1
long term
.
student need .
..
Also,
.
repairs, said Fof
,
;
Mari~
'
s
.
line
:
of credit
-
·
.
million
·
:federal gtant for
j
1ew programs superviSQr; Dean of
-
.
St
.
udents Arit9ni
_
o
·.
faculty members must be given one year's
.
-
~s ext_ended
ti$
-
~ummer: Foy sai~ the
:
.
Mari st /eceiv
_
ed this sumin~r
>
·
&''!'
e Perez
_
, that
this
_
will
,
be her la~ yea
·
r
:
She notice; Foy said
;
· -
.
.
·
·
·
financ1~l co~untty considers Manst a
thougQt 1t;would
.
be-totally unfair
-
to hire said
·
she was told the decision was
'
not
:'
··
·
· ,_
·
strong risk with a solid future
;
J>
_
.
new
_
pe9ple for _'..l'itle III-and then tell our . b11sed on her
.
job performance .
. -
·
·
'
,
..
·
.
..
"
,'
...
'
.
,,
..,
·.
:-'
.··
,'.,
.
.
.
.
'
"
.
..
.
·..
'
,
,
.
•,
'•
,
. • .
~
. .
· , •
.
DOrlflito
_
ries
'
~rowded;
.
MariSt
.
o
_
verboOks
·
·
--
·
.
dates requiring
·
resident students to
.
either
show up for th~ir room o_r notify the ~ollege
.
Anticipating that
a
number of students if they were-
·
not commg. Accor<Im.g
•
to
.
.
will drop out early or
·.
nof
'
show this Gainer, students
,
not showing up were
semester, Marist College: has
.
overoooked . called a:nd asked
-
if-they planned to
·
i:-eturii,
the
·
student donnatories,
,
··
according~to ~nabling the housing office to place
'
Fred
··
Gainer,
.
.
coordiriator
:
of
··
·
residences; students
.
in the empty
.
sp~ces .
.
,
.
..
··
.·
.·
:Th,e
·
overboo,king has
•
resulted)n
six
-
·
In
·
additio~, _the
·
c~llege Iocat~ of!
-
stu.dents ternpora
_
rily
·
ttving
·
in
_
Byrne campus housmg
.
and_ i~
·
encouragmg
~
~I►
.
'
·
Residence.;
'
Father LaMorte's home; and perclassmen not havmg
_
bee11able tofmd
the
te~por
_
arily
;
placing of students
in
the
:
the~ .o
.
wn
.
off-::cai:nt>us housing, t~ ~ove.
.
rooms of the Dutchess Community
-
College
··
Gamer
·
added
.
if
·
space
.
-
does
·:
become
.•
.
students, according to Gainer, who added,
•
av~~able
oo
:
campu~ the
-
stude~ts
'.
~ill
.
be
''the
:
college is trying
to
resolve the notifie<l_ and asked
if
they °'ould
'
like to
problem."-
.
.
.
·
·
·.
·
-
.
.
-return
;
.
.
.
..
.
.
-
.
_
.
.
··.•
·.
··•
'The coJlege overbooked the d9I'Illitories
.
·
Fathe,r LaM01te, ca.~pus ch_aplain,
:
s~~d .
.
_ .
··
..
•
bY a
.
'.'
.
bit
·
more than
.
the
·
n~ber
·
of Du,t- ._he
..
can
:
::,
~~just
.
. t.o
.
·.
•
l
.
i~lllg- · ~1th
.
~e
.
_
six.
·
clless
·
..
students,'!
.
said
:-
qamer
o
Jie
'_
said.: stu~ents,
·
:
;
alth~ugh
"
his..- J1ome
·
-
.
is
>
now
:· :
•· .
·
_
other colleges also
.
over.b~)c the number of • cr~
.
w~ed-
::
~e
:
~1d
th~
major.,probleDJ: with
'.
,
·
·
·
:
students;
<
·
~
·
·,;:/ ::
;
·
-
':
·
.
·,
•
·
· ..
...
n '
.
the Situation
lS
.
~at 1t has.an ~ffec~
.
~~ ~e
_.
.
' ·
m
,
the
:
past;
.
·
over.~rowding
;
has been
;
a stud~ntf
:
who
_
,
:
~ish
·
to V¥!i!
'.
him
.
m
_
µie
·
cause
:
of the
'
elimination
·
of'single rooms; evenmg;'He believes they- n.u:ght s~y
_
aw,ay
·
.
811~
,
the placing
:
of thr~
'
stu!}e_il!~
;
in
:
some
·
.
fr~~
-
·
·co~~~
.:
.
~Mort~ .~'*etthe stlldents
.·
·
-
~~;'. ;~;
/
~~~oli;~~~et s~~~
f
~
·
~
:{~~
t
'
:f~i!!;~~~
•
:
r
~:
f
-
·
.
only
;:_
as
,
..
·
!ong
.:
,
~
t
.
·
!
.
-
Beca~{ontarlat~•
o~erbookblg, stude~u are
temporarily u~ ~
·
n~
-
·
·
wtth
:'
resldenee
·-
Fr. LaMorte.
--
·
- -
'-
·
·
.
·
--
·
-
·
photo
Da
,
--
8
·
ba
·
'.
.
.
·
·
-
--
-
·
:
·
.--
. .
. _
Ve
:
.
W
.
.
r
.
.
•
/
/
r
r
,,._
Page2
THE CIRCLE
1/THE
CIRCLE
The Circle is the weekly newspaper
Of
the students of Marist
College
and is published weekly during the school year exclusive
Of
vacation periO<IS by the southern Dutchess News Agency, Wappingers, N.Y.
·-.
·
·
,
Beth Weaver
·Lark Landon
Pat Larkin
DaveShaw
TomBurke·
George Connelly
Ro~~yan
editors
. Dave Potter
associate editor ·
sports editors
. .
Ken Healy .
photography editor -·
business manager
advertising manager
distribution manager
Staff_: Clare Amico, Mariarme Beyer, Melinda Bowen, Paul Ceonzo,
Chris
CuITan, Chris Egan, Joe Emmets, Chris Hogan, Maureen Jennings, Dianna
Jones, P~ Miller, Terry Moore, Patti Morrison, Jane·Neighbors, Valerie·
. Poleri, · Dave Powers, Don Purdy, Rich Sohancliyk, Gerard Spillane, Susan
Squicciarini, Roy Stuts, Jim Townsend.
·
·
·
The next few-years ..•
t
During_ the pa~t two years, Marist has
recorded budget- deficits now totaling ap-
, proximately
$350,000. Though President
- Linus Foy has repeatedly stated the college is ,
financially sound, a cut of two ~reent has
been made on most campus departments,
!n_.
eluding cutbacks of staff•
-
.
•. .
student services have been cut; Rather; ad-
ministrative positions have been phased· out·
and job responsibilities <redistributed>
Hopefully .. another budget. deficit.· .situation
cari,.he' avoided :without having
to ~itiate
any ·.
further staff or ser-vice reductions; This can
only be accomplished through . s~rind ad-
.
.
'
.
. .
,I
September 7, 1978
LETTERS
LETTER POUCY
All letter> musi
be
typed triple space with a 60 space margin, a;..d submitted to the Circle
office no later than 6 p.m. Monday. Short letters ore p_refi:rred. We reserve the right to ~it
all letter>. letter> must
be
signed. but name$ may
be_
withheld upon request. letters wall
be
published depending upon availability a space.
Government
charged?
I
think
I may escape
an
accusation of · chauvanism if I
admit that' I regard that·
as
unlikely. Did one of
tlf~
men on
To the Editors,
the
first·
floor
of
Leo
break -the
-
Toe only possible purpose of
elevator? Common sense· would
government is the resolution of ~uggest -that they had com-
conflict. _ At any given moment paratively few opportunities. Are ·
· the~ a~ sev~ral 5?Cial tensions
resident students responsible for
pulling
m
va~ous <;Urections, and acting as sentinels, or for the
those who believe m the value of vandalism-of- those. with . whom
·
politics must· take it upon - they may--· have notlling ._but.
themselves to hold the-center~ . . geography in co!JUI1on? ·
'
.. T.h~re are - ~t least three
·
3.
As~
always, tllere , is · the. -
d1YJ.S1ve -f?rces. lik~y. to.· operate problem, of _ budg~ing limi~ed
.upon this campus for the funds to a large numbefl>f dubs ·
academic year under;~~,; and and organizations, each of which .
these forces set the pnont1es for _ can, ·plausibly · argue· th·a,t:.Jt _•;,
student government.
-
. •.. .
. . deserves a large share of thetotal
.. . · 1. -The
war
tci
a _student's heart allocation because "right., now
.. 1s throu~hIS stomach. To.ere a~e ·.we're
·a
Chevy, but
with
better
sereral 1!11portant questio~ m funding . we could · become - a ·
regardlc!,the newJoodserv1ce; Buick.
0
(Bytlle'way, I_like that
why· has, "-3e food. gotten even quote:even better; than the.J:me·
~or~ than.we remem~? ~ t . about~e co~kt~il ·party.):, Th.e
1s bemg. dQne
to
prevent· a repeat reduction of.· tensions through·
of la_st year's· deficit?< And
why .
prope~ ,:.budgettng, is ,a .
:very;·
Though the
Circle
regrets the loss'
oi
revenue to the college's programs and ser~·
•1ices, along with the eventual absence of per·
5onnel, this m:ove _to cut back expenses can ·
.,nfy be interpreted as a positive one·.
were thtemployees wllo workect precanous procedure, .. but ,1ine
.
·
·
--H~ \ ~-/
"<.· ..
more_thanforty .bours
.
_during_ -whichit•isthe·•duty ofthose in'-
" l
v/;:
l
•J
,I [·
1-
.
SO~E:
we~s over the summer not . volved
t_o·attempt.
< .•. . . ' ;',
- v···
• - • - • -
. .
_ . . .
_._._
. .
_ . .
_._
••
rl.
- pa1d·oy~rt~e?
s: ··_ •·. • . . .
Itseeinsfromthisquicksurvey
Mai-ist has begun to_ develop a. pattern of-
poor financial .practices _during.the lasttwo
_
_
..
.·
.. _
.
. ..
2.
'f!le charges
O!}
our liability
-
_that: the, Coun<:il
:
of
Student
•
• • .
• _.
. • .
_. • .
· _
. < ••-·.
-~eposits}or comqion d,~ag~ Lead_ers;ihe Interhouse· Council,
. ,years, and ids time to· stopoveispending~:
hHore it is too late.
If
the college continues
to
·operate at deficit levels for, a few more years, ..
. mm1strative plannmg and review; The fate of
nnply_~ una~.e~ble·con_~ept of _ and ·the•
other:
student govern ..
the·college and the value of current and for-·· ,collective·,~t D!d on,eofc.the· -mentbodi~ have a:formidable ·
mer Marist studerits' educations
will be
· 'women oil the third f_l09r put the· task. , ,, . ·
,. . . . .
-
-
.
determined by what.'the 'c()il~ge's
·
ad_~:-
holein;aSheahanwaUfor)vhicn
_
. ,
.
·
.. ::,airist~pher~aille
its future will he in serious jeopardy.
·
ministrators cJo during thenextJew years..
all.
residents of-that dornt were.
·
;lilterhouse Ccmncil President
It also must be appreciated that no major
~~~~~~~~-
.
-·
:,::. ¥19¥,pOa.O·
7-
> ,. . _::
::·;f---V _ _ :~ _- ..
·>
~.!!~~~~~~~!¥~:::~~-
_
..
-.-1
Superstitions,';~;,.:;_part"I
College.Chorus (Choir)
will
be·· edition .since··it was first
· ..
-
·
·
.·
·
-
•
·
··Monday evenmg, Sept;'ll at
6:30
published in
1975.
Deadline is
Oct.
in
room
165
Champagnat. The
31~
For 'rules; check the Circle
chciurs, under the direction of office.
. By
Richard
A.
LaMorte
During the first five years of life, we have to
word from the object and give it a symbolic
·
John Sullivan, has· nofbeen ac-
take three big steps out of_~he magical world
in
function. .
"
.
.
.
. tive since 1977, but hopes to
The 'Mid-Hudson Art~ and -
which we are born.·
· Well; religion is
fyll
of words. Long litanies and -
present winter and . spring Science Center,has established a
· During the first eighteen months we come to
oft~-repeated f?i:mulas play a very-important
programs. -There are no auditions . rentallibrary
of
original art by
the frustrating discovery that, we are not the ,
role
m
many rebg1ons:-What concerns us -here is
and-no experience is necessary: Iocal. l!"rtists.: The purpose of
this.
center of the world.
thatthis use·of words often does not go beyond
All students, faculty, and staff rental will be to give local artists--'-
Most of you will agree that there are people
themagicalphrase, and instead of beingthe free
are welcome. Rehearsals are the exposure and recognj.ticinthat ·
and things outside of us which will continue-to
and creatire expression of'.deep realities com;;
Monday evenings
6:30-8!30;
and they watTant, and to Inake art
exisfeven when we don't. This is, however, not
mupica9Ie to o_ur felloll'. men, th1f words may
concerts-are planned for the end available
to· homes , and ·
so self-evident as it seems.
It
is· often only -
become a.s_ubshtute for reality,-.. subtle form of . of.the semesters;
·
businesses· of the Mid-Hudson
through
a.
long and frustrating eJ;perience that
pow_er over the capricious movements of our
· ·
.·
• . ·
•· · .·.
· :
.
. area. During the month of
Sep-
we are able to discover the objective_world.
· gods,~our devils and our own impulses.
· -
The .Natfonal· College-- Poetry --·tember, the Rental.Library~may
· Everytime we experience that w~ are not ruling
_
Is_ there not_ somethin~ of this magical world' · Contest is offering·
$200 in.
~sh,
be seen·in th~windows o!Lu~ey ·
,the world be our feelings, thoughts, and· actions,
1~m us.
It
seems very difficult to overcome
this. . :·and
boo~
prizes and free pnntmg .. Platt .and• Sigalow · Optomotnsts
· we ·are forced to realize that there are other
· word-magic. We ·feel pretty good
if we have - for a~ ·accepted~poems 'in the
0
00
the Main Mall, Poughkeepsie.~
persons,
thin@
and events which have their own
fulfilled our obligation, said our prayers, gone to
: A~er1can .. · (?oH~giate .. PoE:ts
Then.
in October tl!e library:
will
independence and their own existenc,e,
.
•. mass._ Vie seem to be saying: "God cannot do
~thology,:This
Wil.l
~e ~f special travel to th~ Henta~e: Savings _
Therefore the first step out of the magical
anytl:ungto usnow!'.' We did what he asked usto : !fiter~_tq_aRcollegiate
poets
as
Bank on Mam Street,Beacon;
If
world is the discovery of an objective reality. IN
do~and now it is his tum to pay us back; Our ·. !t
PX:OV•~es
for t~em a sou~e of· youareanartistandviouldliketo ·
THE RELIGIOUS -FI~LD TmS:
MAY .
NOT
praye~s give
}IS
some p~wer over 9<>d, instead of : mspll'ation .
~
;e?couragell!ent · take. part
in
the. project,, please
.
. ~PEN SO
EASILY.•
Many mature~ su~essful
engagmg us m a real dialoque
in
which we try to : · and
i
a
~que! : ,u~tercolleglll~~. · contact Helen Joluis-Rich11_rdson
. men ii1thislife often might still treatGod·as a
listen to what God says to-us in the·
:
prayers: o~_let. for· the!r'.:.U!~~ry_ am-.·.
at:471-1155;·
·
. -•
~:,>,
•
•-'.
_ "part
of themselves. GOD
lS
THE DOER
OF ALL
themselves ... in
His
:word.
. .
.
· . -_ . -
_-
'
. . . bitio!1s:/lbe }orthcomlllg:· ACI> ·
•. TlUNGs· which·. comes .in handy
in
times .of
. The
third step out of the magical world is the
- - ··
--
·
,..
·
· . , illness,' shock;:fmal exams. in every situation·
iri
formation ·of our- conscience. This is the·.• great
which
.we
feelinsecJ1re; And if-God doe5!1't come-
event betwe~m our!hird and fifth
years~
Wh~riwe ·
:. rwurlng
io--oUl' aid, our only reaction may
be
to
'learned al>Qu( obJects that
.
. existed outside of
: ·cry
Jouder ., far
from·
becoming a real. "Other". .
· ourselves even when we. did not, . and :when we.
·: • · ·whose existence does.Qot _depend on mine, God
had experienced ,n.at words were· not~.-an-'"
might only remain the easy frame which fits best:,. ·. powerful tools to shape the world around us, .we ·-
.... -fR6NKLYSPfAi(ING
around. the ,edges of my· security.
• .
- were still faced with a_ much -more· important -
. Great anxiety, caused by internal a~ external ·,. -
step: the step fi::om the external -agent' to 'me.'
--.;.
storms, can sometimes force:us ~o·regress· or'·gcV . The _external _agent-ofl<l~ipllne:is:slowly con~ ...
-down ,to .tlµs ')o-.y'er·.: Je\:el .of. rellgio~/ This . _ verte<! into
an
internal guidance:system.
This
is
. ©~IFW~ll~ ---
·,m>~eo~l: · :
regres5;ion may even sav.e oµr 11!~!,
It
gives us,·• ~hat
IS
ID~nt by. the f~rmat!o~. of• coruicience,"
something to .hol~:on to: . something. to k~p us : . SlllCe conscience
IS
an mt_ernal convi~ion, root
together. It may even•be a very helpfulfonnof
. external. · · ' --
> . . ·
· .
rel!~on, but it ~rtai!ilr·
~
not-a
mature
fonn of _
.
Co~s.ci~ce
becomes possible by the l?rocess of
religion. ·
.
·
- · · _ . ,
. ·.
. _
·1d~t~icabon.
Y,~
develope the .capaCity to, in•
The second step out of our magical wor:ld is the
tenor12e certam asp~t~ of the personality of
formation of language. Somewhere·.be~wee_p our · . ~other. person.;and to .make . them~ a·• part· .of
.
18th _ month . and.• our: . 3rd :ibirthday;'; we
-
start '
ourselves; In the case of moral'development; we
mumbling our
first
sounds which slowly deyelop • take .over judgements; standards, and values of ,
. !f1to words;- s~ritenc~ ·an<i'a language_<AI,thotigf:>
.
beloved per~ns
~ii~
~e
.them _( ~rt :_of our ·
.
. 1tmayb_.ea·<li.58pp_omtment_tha_t.~er~a~ things.:• .. ,o:wn.1?8rsonality •.
.
· .:,:(
_
• .. ··· .•··;-:;, ,.:
.
_,
·
:-
9
'.
ar:ound. us w}µch do not.belopg to~• bY:\!'.ords.~e ·· • · .: :,
0~-:1~ ..
there
.
. ~m.etm.~g-; ~lse ~appelrl;n.g\at the ... ·
._ . ·
·
: ~n ~e
_
rev~nge, !>eca~ our. fll'st ·,.wor<!s give
~Ill:~ t~e.? D
,
unng those fµ-st (01;1i:y~rs. we'felt . ·
-
.. µs,. a. mystenous power: over things. __ Like·
an.. •·
tliat_0\11:'Jathe.r
.
~uld do everythirig;that he:was
.
_-• •:American_~ho is~gte<i.to disc~ver that
hi!'
first/ .
all-po_w_er,fi:d;Jhat: he:c~:nil9_)9lv,e.,~n ~r<>bleµis;• •
...
. ·.:
:
. .French word, garcon; really bnng11 the W!ltter to· . , JYell, • w:eJ~came •~PP9mted :sooner' or.later:_,
.
. · •
.·. ' · •':his,table;.th~~Q!l~per:Iences ~.otso:much·_the:::' . Andiwe C9uld·~ot:,t:~llt.deperiq·.oi(
hirii•'ariy, ·
.
: -·
f,sll~{~~~Bi~
.·.
/,
.
.,,,-,
._·
.
'
mastery
of words ·but the .
.
mastery
_
of
1
objects.Jtc.
·
:: l<>_nger; llow were we going to solve.this problem;-·:··
: --~ --./-. ::,~•~•-~tt_ ..
_,•x,,~r,e,
~~; ~~
~'.---
I\/:'i>
.;r;b\::•,J(;;)? --'· -_
-
'<i { ·,
'
.
·"
.
-~•.-~
•
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•,•.--
.·
·.·.·,.
·.•
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,,•
September
7,
1978
THE CIRCLE
Page3
Cliapel renovations
repair firt
damage·
·
·
By
Dave Powers
liturgical elements such as a lectum;
-
_
.
.
candles, tabernacle and vestments.
Renovations we~e
finished
in the Ma~ Despite the cb
_
anges, the seating capacity
Colleg1t_Chapel
this
~st week, according .
.
remains the same~
.
·
-
to Campus
·
G}la~lam
,
F::~ther
_
__ Richard
·
~
Bids have been accepted to enclose the
~orte. Renovat10ns w~re reqmred after front of the chapel; according to LaMorte.
-
-
fire gutted the rear portion of the chapel _Financial figures
-
·
on the cost of- the
June 14, 1977.
-·
·
_
-
-
\
·
_
renovations were riot available until the
Major
.
:
renovations
include
.
the end of September
.
LaMorte said all costs
r~pl~ceme!1t o~ ~orrugated. fiberglass
will
be covered by a fire insurance policy.
_
\Yllldo:w,s with sliding glass windows and _ The
.
chapel is
·.
now complete, and
.
_
the removal of the tabernacle wan- arid LaMorte said he is "satisfied with the
c~nfessi
_
onal. The: taberpacle i~ now renovation. It is
~
probably the most ap-
S1tuated on
_
the rear. wall of the chapel. The
,
propdately arranged church in the area
CC?nfessionaLhas been replaced, with a·
·
for worship services."
·
-
-
-
room of
-
reconciliation, finished-in green,
-
·_
The
:
renovations were plam1ed by ar-
The renovatiom
in
the
Marist
College Chapel which repaired fire damage were
.
and
_
a meeting room was built,
_
both
in the chitect John
_
Clark of Hyde Park, ac-
completed last week.
photo
Gerry
Mcnulty
rear of the chapel Th
_
emeeting room
is for cording to
·
LaMorte. Clark has also
-
_
_ ........... .;.... ..... _ _ _
....., _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
-
-
tjlmpus ministry purposes
~
-:
_
, _
planned the renovations or construction-of
,'
Carpeting of
-
b~wn;-blue and gold
·
was churches such as
·
Regina
.
Coeli in Hyde
laid,throughoutthe_ chapel except the pew P~rk,
St. ~ry•s of Poughkeepsie and Mt.
areas,
'.::..·
_!.aMorte also
'
purchased new
_
canne1
·
a1so in Poughkeepsie.
.
...
' '
.
·•·
.
·.
.
.
.
.
·
.
"
MardOtt
fbod
.
.
·
ServiCe
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·•~
~·
fi.~s
:
neW cafe objectives
(
·
·
~
By
Vltlerie PolerL
.
the
·
food.
-
Marrio
f
-
has
:
also added a
.
. _
-
·
,o•
•
.
·
· ·
--
-
.
.
.
.
vegetarian meal
_
to
·
the
-
menu. This was
. _
-
Marriot Food Service has replaced last done . because
·
of
·
its success
·
at _
other
.
_
-
.
.
year'.s
.
Marist )food Service
·
. '.Jlie
.
new food, schools, said Cheatham
_
:
<
--
•
· ·
-
·
·
·
:
service l{as
hire<!; l!ecause
it was
·
see11
·
as
.
· Another
.
charige M.arri~ has brought,
·
is
.
-
~eing
:
:
'~ece~ry
.
.
to
_
the college
,
"
·
ac- .having a different
'
steak Ilight, according
col'.ding
:
~
:
Barry Cheatham,
.
:
dir~ctor of
.
·
to
Cheatham. In previous years steak was
-
·
-
-
"
dining
,
services;
_
·
,
.
-
•
"
·-
•
_
·
·
_
serv,.ed Saturday;
-
This
.
_
was changed
-.-
·
.
Sollle
-
of
.
Marriot's objectives
·
are
.
to
because
'
it:was deemed unfair"to students
-
tighten internal
-
controls,
try to make food
who
~
-
go
;
home
·
for the
•
weekend,
-
·
said
-
_
:
lines move qliicltef, ~d
.
to
Itjake the at-· Cheatham. He
-
added
;
''the
.
quality of the
.
-
illospher:-e
in
the
.
cafeteria more
appealing,
.
food
is
the same as the specificationsJisted
·
sa.id
:
Cheatham. -
_
_
-
_.
_
-
_
_
in the Marriot Food Specification Book."
_
•
·
_
Controls are being tightened by having a
Changes
:.-
will occur in
_
the Rathskellar
,
non~student check identification
"
cards also: Submarine sandwiches sold by the
,
,
before
:
students enter the
_
cafeteria;
.
0
sald
: ·
inch; steak sandwiches and quarter pourid
-
,
Ch~tham .
.
In the past, students <!lle~ked hambm-gers
•
are
;:
new
,
ad@ions t9 -the
,
_
~------
--
Q~E!J:
:
st11i!E!Il~JP.~i;-d,s;
_
_
giea~~
said
it
·
i:nenu. •
-
~
, .
. :
<;)
'
·,
..•
· _
-
,
·
< .:
_
·-.
.
·
·
•
__
)
.
- ··
·
is not fair to expect a
·
stuuent'to
_
tell-his
The rat bar menu
is
·
also different.
.
friends they
·
cannot come
.
into the
.
Canned beer and hard liquor will no longer
cafeteria.
_
·
·
'
be sold. Three brands of draft beer and six
'
~
·
:Lines are
·
now moving
_
qliicker since the brands of wine
will
be sold
.
Cheatham said
glass~s
-
have been placed outside of the all this ha~
_
been don~ to tighten internal
-
food
·
line, according
to
Cheatham
~
The
·
controls.
.
.
·
-
_
_
-
·
-
-
· .
·
,
.
glasses
are
now
.
on
~
table
·
_
by
~
the
-
milk,
--
Cheatham said the food service
will
also
where they
0
.
c~ be reached
·
by everyone. offer theme meals. When there
is a theme
Cheatham
,
said Marriot has tried
_
to
~
meal,
_
the cafeteria
will
be decorated, and
make the ~tmQsphere more appealing
•
by foods based on specific nationalities tied to
-
adding_ l
_
ine decorations, and garnishes
·
on the theme
will
•
.
be
offered.
·
.
_.
.
.
'
.
·'·
•
-
.
~tUderits raise. money
·
fp-f
Muscul~r 'Dystrophy
....,_
· ·
_<.:
·-
,
:
.
-
-
'
~Beth Weaver
and Jim Raimo, both :t{oul!e
-
lV
.
~idents,
·
·
·
·
·
·
--
·
·
.
asked permissiori
·
to !\old a
-
raffle.
_
Mem~
---
.
Champagnat Hall's House IV donated befs of the house sold chances to ·students
-
no
:
dollars
.
•
to-the
.
annual Jerry Lewis outside the dining
.
hall
;
..
-
-
_
-
·
_
Labor Day
-
Muscular Dystrophy Telethon, .
_
The students raised 180 dollars from the
Mostofthemoneywas coUected from a
50-
raffle. Fred Gainer, coordinator of
50
"
raffle held by the, students, accordinjfto residences,
.
drew.:
.
the winning. chance,
Jack
Oehm~
-:
resident advisor.
-·.
-·_
.
_
--·
·
which
belonged
to
eighth floor residenfJoe
-
.
;·
·According
to
-
Oehf!l~
,Cvonhe
·
, Delpilar Waters.
:
~ -
·
~
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.
.
. ·
,
,
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~
--
.
·.
·
,
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•
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:·
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-·
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··
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:
:,-
·
.
.FRANKS
-. ~Across from-Marist
~
-
,:
_
:
·
·,
'.:
,i
Thur~d.a.y:~tADIE$.
.
NITE
·
_
_
_
•
_
25e
drinks;
-
rio cover
:
triday~C~EA
p
-
DRINK NIT£
.
.
~~·
''Anythi.ng
:
Goes
_
''
· ,
.
•
·
·
•
•
.
"'
'.
I
HOURS
l\lON-SAT
,9:30 A_M-5:30 PM
:
The
Hair
Shack
LATEST
CUTS
FROM NEW YORK
CITY
•UNI-SEX
CUTTING AT ITS
BEST
--
•FOR
GUY~
AND GALS FROM
$5
•HIS AND HER
BODY PERM
CURLYO~-SOFTCUT
FROM
$15
THURSDA\
'
.f,ATE NIGHT
471-4383
17 SOlffH HAMIi.TON ST.
-
•HENNA
•CRIMPING
.
.
roUGHKEt.:rsm
-
·
•NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
.
,
I
V
i
R
_
l
,
OCK SOUTII OF ~lAIN MAI.I.I
~
~
if
:~
•.
•:
·:.:.
-
.
.
..
..
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';-
.
:
-
·
.
. ...
. -
·
·-·
•
.
.
;
_
·
~
...
:
-:,
.
Discover
.
.
·
Racquetball!'
· ffocquetball is 'the fostest~growing sport in
·
the country and ALLSPORT is the biggest
addition
.
·
to the-sport and recreation scene
in Dutchess County. Come
·
se
_
e Racquetball
·
_
in action ... it's
·
easy to learn
, -
it's great
-
recreation, it
'
s superb exercise
.
And it can
be ployed by
everyone.
ALLSPORTisa
~
-
CompJete
_
Health and
Recreation Cl~ Offering:
• 9 Racquetball/Handball Courts
ALL
-
SPORT
• Nautilus F
i
tness and Health
Conditioning Club
Now
Offeri
.
.
ng
•Lux~~
1
~:~:~~~~
GRAND
• Complete Men's
-
· _
.
··
.
·
· .
. _
andWomen'slockers
OPE. N
.
·
•
1NG
: ~:~::~ Beverage Bar
.
~
-
-
_
·
-
_
..
M e
_
-
__
m b e r s h f l a
_
tea
·
_
ip
·
_
• Air Conditioning
··
·
year-round
.
• Child Care
•
· Sp~:::::::~;:
t
fi
N
O
r
.
-
.
· ~1,,~
ow pen.
.
...
·
~\J
.
•
ALLSP0RT
.,...,,.-....,,
.
.
''.tness and racquetball club
-
_
-
' ~ J
l
11
1
~
.-
_
f
240A ~ashington Street, Poughkeepsie, NY
12601
-
.
,
~
.
.
'
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..-
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:
F,URTHER INF.ORMATION
·
: 452:-5951_
'
'"
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,
...
,
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-;.
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•
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/
Marlst defender prepares to tackle offensive
running
back
durin~
scrimmage
which
,· took. place o~ Monday afternoon on Leo~doff
Field.·
ph~to Gerry McNulty
foxes=prepare for
if
i
rst ~varsity
•
season'
.
Importance
~f
lntramurals
By
Pat
Larkin
·
High school athletes who go to college
may find a somewhat different relation-
ship with other students than what they
had encountered in high school. Athletics
does no! mean as much in college ~s it .
Jnight have meant in high school. All of
a
sudden school work, meeting new people,
or.
just
relaxing seems more important
than it ever did before.
·
. '
.
· For these 'freshmen, even though the
time for athletics decreases, their desire to
participate does not. Many freshmen want
to play varsity sports but cannot find the
IJnda -
Rogers
time~
-
-
-·
.-
However at Marist, and just about every volved. Last year a conscientious. effort
ByKenHealy
championship team, ·and Les McMillian, college, there is an organized intramural was made by the· commuters
-m
the
--
the defensive line coach. •
program which allows ·for competition , volleyball and S<>ftball activities. -More of
When the Marist Red Foxes take the
· Malet sa.id the pro.gram
is
rebuilding and among whomever wishes to participate. In
·
this . support is needed to make the in-
field in Plattsburg fortheir first game-as a he believes there
is
a strong base with the· the' :-_past,. the intramur~l P.r_o~ram at tramm;al progr~ at Mari~ as gOC>d as or
-Varsity -team, only·
15
players _
from ,last recruiting·that was done last ;winter._ He Manst has b~n
use4
by_ a ma3or1ty of the even better than 1thas been
m
the past . .,..
·· year's 2-6-1 squad will be in uniform. Of the .said('Almost alrof.the freshmen that are ,students. This year should not be an ex-
_ Rogers- has set up a
·
fall
program ·of
q0°man team, the largest
'in
years, there here are a direct result of our recruiting . . ception. There_ are app~x~ately
_
1600 actiyities beginning on Septe~ber 18_ and
will be
2.5
freshmen an~ eight transfers. We.knew most of the freshmen that were : ~udents !it~endin&
_
Manst; 1tls 11othard to e!1~~ December 8. .The first two ac-
. .:,The Red Foxes have a new name,
a
new .:coming._ La~•_year•severaf players didn't find 15 guys and girls to form a soccer or a bv,iti~-
-
-are flag -football an~ volle}'.~all
coa_ch, new players,:and ·a new ~ttit~c!,e'..
,
eyen _ get_· into schOC>l -until just before. football team..
.
. · .. •-- . .
startlflg ?n the 18th. The·dea~e forfiling
'.{We're not
a
club anymore,,. sai_d ftrst practice
began/'
Twofreshmerithat have.-
There are rune sp?rts actlVlti~ bemg r?sters
1S
September
!2.
which can be
_ year HeadCoach Mike Malet. <'I
think
all .l~ked-especially good_iri the early season -offered through the mtramural program picked up and returned
m
room 201 of_the
o,four retµming players realize· this and I._· are fullback TimMancuso"and linebacker. directed by Linda_ Rogers who replaces McCann Center. .
·-know the· new cine's -do." Malet, ·an, Joe Baldwin. Malet said both are solid Eileen· Witt, former dir.ector ·of - in-,
Other ~sports activities- in the fall
assistant 'at Marist for eight
years,
sue-
·
ballplayers, typical
of
the kind of athlete tram11rals; Eight o( these nine sports have semester include tennis, soccer, archery, -
, ceeds _Ron Levine who resigne~ at the. end Marist has recruited.
·
•
- -· _
· _
-
separate. divisions
·
for· men · and women.
basketball, . racquetball, and track.
oHast· season after tliirt.~n years as head
Although the coaching staff said Marist . The
ninth
sport, t\¥0 _on two basketball, is
_ Each week the Circle will have full
c:oach.- - - ·
_ ·
would be improved Malet declined from coaj. . _ _
..
.
__ ..
_
coverage of the intramural program which
·-The _new head· coach said as
in.
the_. past _ making any predictions.He said the team
·
A major weakness of tlie program in the · -will include results of activities and filing
. · !ew ye~rs freshmen l;VOuld ~lay
a
big part could be·better, but with the imp_rovement . past was not enough comm~ters iot in· periods for upcom_ing. activities.
·
m the. Red Fo]!:es immediate fortunes.- throughout the league another poor record
.
.
/'.W.e're deep iri all our positions personnel wouldn't be µnpossible;
-
:~:~~~~e
1
.
0
~J/~;\i~a~:·;h:::1g:cib~
... ; ...... ·Notesf~omth;GridJron., ...
L.·
.
R.
un_· n_--.
in_ · ___
·g--
-
R_
·-e-_d,·F_-0
__ -_ X_.
·
e· s
yearour new people ·will have to play for
_ _ _
_
:-tjs
in a hurry,''-'said'Malett
-
/ .· _
< __ _
Ofthe 22freshmen,on the1975 M~rist
·
·
·
·, ·
·
-
·
- ·
;
·
•c~-~-~AQpgh••.ss~
-
eff·_·-·aandsMoa•t·tnC
1
0.•l·e-~,~an-·--d·-·b_y_r_e_t-·u-~---_---g·---~----~~·1
1
,i
-a~·set at._defensive-end spots; ~alet said . -.,li'rid~y' night the'. .. Red
-
'Foxes. will·'
-~ike Laffm/the other co-<!aptam,
_
will.be scrimmageNewHaven atQ~igleyFieldin
By Chris
Hogan
.
.
. .
.
.
_c.._~. :.:-::_,_.,; .. '.' ,--
{
.
m th~ backfield, but he wasn't sure where. , West Haven, Connecticut New Haven is
lettermen Paul Welsh, Ron Gadziala, and
,
::1'he offen~iye picture is also clouded . hoping to rebound from tneir 70-7 loss to
The Marist Running .
Rei
Foxes·
will
Jerry Scholder from 'last year's squad.
with no positions sewn up, according to Fordham in last season's finale. ;
, begin their first season as a Division II
Stevens said he believes this com-
Malet.·"there's been a!ot of_competition
Maristwillgoontwoovernighttripsthis , team on Saturday in the Glassboro In-
bination
of
youth and experience has
for all the spots,- Mond~y s
_
sc~immage t.old s~ason, the opener at Plattsburg. and the vitational at GlassJ:>oro Stat~ College in · created a positive· attitude between team
· us a lot a!1~ after<Friday ru~ht's scrrm- fmal game _against Niagara. .
-
New Jersey.
.
·
-· . members that~is essential for a successful
mage agamst New ,Haven we U_prpbably
The ,home opener will be Sunday,. Sep-
Coach Rich_Stevens said he expects the year..
_.
-
kn~w who.we're gomg to go with,,. Malet t,ember 24, against St. John's. St. John's 1978 schedule to be the toughest lineup of
said.
-.
. _
__ ._.
•
was one of Marist's two victories last competition Marist has ever faced.
.
Assisting Malet are returning coaches· season. Phil Camera a reserve center for · -This year's team consists of thirteen
Tony· Celenza, offensive· co-ordinatof and the Viking's last year· is now· playing for · upperclassmen and eighteen . freshmen.
Steve Helman, offensive line. There are the Redmen.'.
' .
.
-•"'
Stevens sa1d two. of the top··. freshmen
also thfee ~ew c6acll~s, George, Frick, a
, Seasontickets for all home games ,will recruited are Dennis' Martin, from
former_semi-pro:c9ach who will work
.
with soon be available from players and at the Chaminade High _School in Mineola and
· the ;wide receivers,
Bill
Paccione a athletic office at.the Mccann Center;:
John Urban from Connecticut. He added
member of Marist's· 1970 undefeated
·
·
they will b~ aided by co-captains Dennis
'
.,
,
....
.
.
.
'•
-He added
"If
we can avoid injuries we
have the makings of a "good team."
Stevens said the Foxes will aim to peak
at the IC4A~Championshi~ and the_ NCAA
_Division Ir championships .. · .
The Running Red Foxes are coming .off
their worst record in six years with a 10-5
record.
.
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21.1.1
21.1.2
21.1.3
21.1.4