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Part of The Circle: Vol. 21 No. 6 - October 12, 1978

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THE CIRCLE
Volume 21, Number 6
Marist College, Poughkeepsie, New York 12601
October 12, 19~8
Foy to resign for
ffe
-
w
career
President Linus Foy
By
David Potter
President Linus Foy said last Thursday
he intends to resign his presidency within
three years to pursue other professional
opportunities. Foy said the next few years
would be a period of transition for Marist
and it would be "unfair to the college and
myself to remain much past this period."
Foy announced his
.
decision to
·
resign
after the results of his leadership
evaluation was presented to the Board of
Trustees. Johnson Associates of Chicago,
Illinois, conducted the evaluation last
semester. Gary Smith, secretary of the
board of trustees, said the evaluation
indicated Foy was an "outstanding
president," but it also suggested it "would
be unfair to
.
him and the college if Foy
stayed." However, Foy said he accepted a
three year contract from the trustees to
remain at
.
Marist until his successor was
chosen;
.
.
Foy said the period up to
1983
was ideal
for a change of leadership for Marist
because in "the next couple of years the
college
will be relatively stable." Foy
added after
1983
colleges are predicted to
have stability problems.
During the next few years, Marist will
undergo a transition to improve the quality
of its education and studerit life, according
to Foy. He said the college is coming out of
a
.
growth and construction phase, and
therefore the size of the school would
remain approximately the same.
However, Foy said the quality of the
faculty would be improved by "creating an
?tmosphere for faculty members to stay
intellectually alert." He said because
many teachers at the college already have
doctorates, and must develop new
·
in-
terests such as research. Foy cited the
planned environmental lab on the
waterfront, provided with funds from the
Title III Grant, and teacher sabbaticals as
Maintenance understaffing
.
causes delay
in dormitory C0-'1lmon damage repairS
examples of faculty research.
Also, Foy said student life at Marist
would be slated for improvement. Smith
agreed with Foy's assessment and said the
college "must do more for student life than
in the past
.
" However, he added as the
college improves student life, the students
must be more responsible for their actions.
He said if students continue to vandalize
the campus; the college
"will
be putting
money down a septic tank." ·
Foy cited career guidance and
placement as the major area of student life
needing improvement. He said the college
should create situations where
·
students
can "explore job situations."
The third
·
area Foy listed for im-
provement was Marist's external funding.
.
He said
.
more money from alumni,
governmental and corporation grants and
interested individuals must be obtained
.
Foy said during the next three years his
administration would be more responsible
for managing the college. He said he "will
spend more time on outsid activities now.''
A committee to select Foy's successor
would be formed after Jan.
1,
according to
Foy
.
He said the trustees must first
identify what type of person the
·
college
needs to lead
it
Foy said the trustees
would focus on "what should the president
of Marist College be doing in the next ten
years."
By Terry Moore
· Pavelko

said he needs a larger staff, he situations, preventative maintenance and
According to Smith, after
·
the trustees
.
.
.•
.
. .
.
_
_.
·
·

·
,
_
would not say
·

h~w many . additfonal yari~alism da.mage, ,iccording _to Pavel~o. decige on the
.
c~iteri~ for selecting a_ new
·
·
-
_ ....
.
.
.
.
.
_
__
Jhe
,
,
delax:.:1,1_,r.~pa,ir.mg .
.
Jast year
.
s, dor:- • workers
.e
wo"'ld
.
,
l).e
.
needed · to properly
,
.
,
:
.,
~Ig!"tt.Tepa1,tp1e,n_ 91'.; ~echalllcs
_
_
and hv~ , president, they
~l_lst
'.'arm the "Qres1dent
.· ·
"
""
"'
.
•·
·
·
· ·· ·•
· ·
'
··
·
·
m1tory
-
· damagesr ali'~ady
'
/
"p~ia·
t
rnf"
:
7>y~
0
rnainTaiii"'lhecampus
Y-
• '.
·
,
.
~ : ···'
="7•::-
.
--
·?
~
,,
·
·
gro'Uridsn1en '
0
ar~'.::respo11sible
-
fot.
:
t
main~ .
...,.·Wittr
'
if
~stiuiYd
~"
Workable
'
·admiiiistfatlon''
.
.
stµdents; h_as been ca1_1sedby ma~tenarice
Pavelko
.
said repafrs effecting the taining the
18 ·
buildings ~nd
10
_
0
acres· of _
which ~ould rw1 t~e college with or wi!ho
·
ut
u~derstaffmg, accordmg to Physical Plant greatest number of _people, having _long grounds on campus, s~1d Pavelko. He a president. Smith added the pres~d~nt
Director

And~ew Pavelko.
range effects or which could cause per- added the repaumen mclude an elec-
would have to take on more fund raISmg
Pavelko sa1d
0
he cannot
_
hire additional manent damage have priority.
.
trician, a plumber, a boiler repairman
.
a
responsibilities
in
the future and the board
manpower at this time because of
.
the
·
Maintenance makes repairs on campus boiler - air conditioning serviceman, a of trustees would have to
.
become more
college's budget restrictions. Though due to normal wear and te&r, emergency painter and two handymen for the dor-
involved with the college
.
·
mitories. He also said the two handymen
·
Foy said the trustees and himself must
Probe in question
By
Dave Powers
also work. in the other campus buildings. discuss what would happen if a new
The 55 landscaped campus acres are president is found early in Foy's new term
taken care of by five groundsmen ac-
or if no president is found and his term
cording to Pavelko. He said they are expires. However, Foy added "I will have
responsible for cutting, fertilizing and no ·hand in picking my successor," and
would investigate them. However in a seeding grass, trimming trees and shrubs, said he would not consider becoming a
latez:
.
interview, Waters refused to com-
digging for utility repairs, cleaning up trustee.
Security Director Josepµ Waters refused ment and said, '
.
'
I'm not answering any litter and snow removal. Also, the
He said after the first few years after
to disclose if aninvestigation of security questions regarding these matters."
groundsmen are responsible for all resigning the presidency he would not
violations reported by the Circle on
_
Sept.
The Circle has since learned of further moving on campus and receiving and have any decision making input.
?.8
had been initiated.
lapses in security which occurred Sunday making campus deliveries
.
He said the "new president deserves a
The Circle article cited a
.
number of night. Security guards in Champa gnat and
According to Pavelko, yearly saiaries period of (Foy's) inactivity for a couple of
violations reported by sources who wished Leo Halls did not report for the 6 to 9 p.m. including fringe benefits range from close years" to make his own policy changes.
to remain
-
anonymous. These violations shift of desk duty. The security guard on to
$12,000
for custodians and grounds Foy added he would assist the college after
included security persorinel arinking and desk duty in Sheahan Hall was then
.
keepers to
$14,000
for mechanics and this period if he was asked. Smith said he
lea_ving campus while on
·
duty. In the ar- transferred
·
to Champagnat.
handymen. The. salaries are allocated "would encourage
.
Linus Foy to keep
ticle, waters was reported as saying he
An unsigned statement from the Office
from the college's general budget, he said. assisting the college" in the future.
was unaware of these accusations and
Continucdon page 3
Students prefer living off-campus
,
to dorm life
By
Lark Landon
It's _relaxing, cheaper, the food is
better, there is more privacy and it is
often· an adventure.
It

is off-campus
living and :'it's great, I love it!" said
one senior who moved to
a, house this
y~~
,
Many of the
83
students who lived on
campus last year and moved this year
.
to
.
houses and apartments, agree off
campus living is better. "I am student
teaching and I needed a quieter place to
work," says senior Maureen Tighe.
Tighe, who resides
-
at Riverview
Terrace A.partments with three
roommates, says she enjoys "sharing
the responsibilities" such as "cooking
and meeting the bills on time. Before,
the biggest decision was what
.
to eat
when you herded down .to the cafeteria
between five and seven with friends,
11
_
she says;
.
.
,
.
·
·
·
Tighe's • roommate,
·
senior Fran
Hurley, says she enjoys
~
"peace and
quiet" and
·
"family atmosphere" of off-
.
.
.
·
.
.
·.
.
.
.
.
.
campus living. "I need my freedom and
the dorm was just too confining."
·
Hurley,
.
who commutes to school on
bicycle, saysthe biggest disadvantages
of off-campus living is getting to the
library at night, and an occasional pest
problem of "having to catch mystery
bugs in a jar to show the ex-
terminator."
"I lived on campus for three years
and did everything I had to do
,
" says
senior Mike Ragusa of why he moved
off campus. Ragusa, who lives in Dutch
Garden Apartments, in Hyde Park,
with seniors Bob
-
McAndrew and Bill
LoSardi, says ''It's a new experience -
for me, having your own bathroom and
eating what and whenever you want."
McAndrew said his decision to leave
the dorm was part of a "chain reac-
tion
.>' "You
.
hear
·
of other up-
perclassmen
·
deciding
_
.
to move off
during the summer and you don't want
to b_e the only upperdassman left on
campus, so you move off too."
·
.
Other than "missing out on spur of
. ·
the moment parties," Ragusa, a
member of the football team, also
misses the convenience of talking to
other members of the team as easily as
when he lived-on campus with many of
them.
.
Another disadvantage,
.
he says is
"having to cook your own food," but, he
added, :'when we cook, I do
·
the
cooking." Ragusa says his speciality is
"spaghetti and meatballs, which we
have about four times a
·
week.
11
Senior Anne Lynch, who resides in
a
-
two-family house on Thompson St.,
Poughkeepsie, says one
.
of the hardest
adjustments was "keeping off the
phone when I didn't have to pay for the
·
call right away" and mentions the
shock of receiving her first phone bill
_
of
$70. Lynch says she and her tw.o romm-
mates
.
try to conserve
.
on the heating
~ill
by keeping the thermostat at "very
chilly degrees" and
·
adds ''we're
·
wrapped up
·
in blankets all the time."
·
·
Senior Wanda Glenn, who
.
"acts
·
as
the accountant''
iri
the house she shares
with three other students, says "for the
price
·
that you're paying on campus,
you're getting more to look at than four
walls" off-campus. Glenn, who doesn't
see "any disadvantages at all" to off-
campus living has found it "easier to
organize time because you don't have
.
any scheduled time for eating to disr~pt
school work."
Living at Rip Van Winkle Apart-
ments, senior Regina Clarkin says she
·
was "ready for a change'-' and enjoys
the "feeling of independence." She says
"there is more room for friends to visit
in" and "more responsibilities" one of
which is taking care of her roommate's
cat named Anonymous, who "prefers
eating popcorn to anything else."
Assistant Dean of Students Gerry
Kelly, says
.
students move off in junior
and senior years "to have a
.
different
lifestyle from residence living." "They
grow in their independence a lot faster
off-campus" and mentioned
having
to
Continued on page
5


















































































































Page2
Announcing
The residence Halls will be officially
closed for
the
long holiday weekend Friday
Oct.
:?J>
at_ p.m. The dorms will reopen
Tuesday, Oct.
24.
Friday's dinner will be the last meal
until Wednesday's breakfast
.
The Rat will
be open from 5 p.m. on Tuesday
.
If you for any reason have to remain
during the long weekend, please leave
your name and room number with Mrs.
Burke in the Housing
Office,
NO LATER
THAN WEDNESDAY
.
As
always, the college will not be
responsible for any valuables left in the
residence halls. You are encouraged to
make
sure
your room is locked when you
leave.
The
Community Action Student
Organization (C.;-A-S-0) would like to
aMounce its first aMual community
service activity. A Halloween Party at the
Mother Cabrini Home has been arranged
by the members of the club for the benefit
of the displaced children of this home.
It
will
be
held on October
31, 1978 from 6:00 to
9:30
p
.
m. The Mother Cabrini Home
is
located in Esopus, N.
Y.
The ages of
.
children who live there range from
12 to 19.
'l'he purpose of
this
activity
is
to provide
role models to enhance the possibility of
their achieving a successful life in the
future.
If
anyone is interested in volun-
teering to participate in
this
event, please
contact Nydia Flores, Leo
rm
.
412
,
tel:
452-
9701 or Josephine Torres, Leo rm. 223 tel:
454-9357
.
,
Juniors interested in teaching English,
mathematics, languages, social studies, or
science at the secondary school level
should apply
·
now to the Office of Teacher
Education. Interviews will be conducted in
October. Candidates admitted to
.
the
program will become
.
participant -
?b-
.
. ..
servers ,
:
in
secondary
..
schools
.
,
dunng.
:...,·-
=
··
·--,•
-
--...:::,.;.
Sprlng
·"·
1919-and
·-,
wi\l
·~
estab\isb.
·

their-
eligibility for student teaching in their
senior year.
.
.
Further information and applications
are available at the Teacher Education
Office, Room
168,
Donnelly.
Community relations for non-profit
agencies will be the topic of "Com-
munications '76" to be held Friday, Oct.
13, 8:30
a.m. to
3
p.m. in the theatre. The
conference; co-sponsored by the Marist
Public Relations Office and the United
Way, is designed to be a one-day in-
troductory course in institutional public
relations. The theme for the conference is
small shop survival and workshops will
focus on goal-oriented public relations
plaMing for agencies or institutions with a
small public relations staff
.
James Bullock will speak Oct.
16 in
Fireside Lounge at
8 p.m
.
on the effects of
the Bakke case. The event is being
sponsored by the Black Student Union.
There will be a meeting of the Black
Student Union on Oct.
19
.
All members
must be there and bring their raffle ticket
money.
·
THE CIRCLE
Weekend Happenings
CUB
Parent's Weekend activities:
Friday
9 p.m. -
New
dining
room - cof-
feehouse - Join an evening of conversation
and quiet music by Rudy Roberson. Ad-
mission
$1.
Saturday
10
a.m. -
outside courts -
Tennis tournament.
12.p.m. -
Rathskellar - Buffet Luncheon.
1:30
p.m.
-
Leonidoff Field, Football
game Marist vs. Sienna.
8
p.m. -
Campus Center - Cocktail Hour -
Dinner Dance.
Dennis 0-Sario, Sat. - Singer Roy Atkin-
son, Sun. - Gary Vail
.
88 cents cover all
nights
.
LAST
CHANCE
Main
Mall,
Poughkeepsie,
452-1862
.
Fri. - 24th Street
Band from New York City; Sat
.
- Last
Chance Jazz Band.
$2
Cover both nights.
EASY STREET, Route
9,
Hyde Park,
2'49-7969.
Fri. and Sat. - Harvast
.
$1
cover
both nights.
MOVIES
Sunday 11:45 a.m. - I p.m:- Rathskellar -
The Big Fix -
Roosevelt Theatre
,
Hyde
Brunch
.
Park, Route
9, 229-2000. Evenings 7:20 and
9
:
30
p.m
.
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
OLD
COAT CABERET,
51
Market Street,
Poughkeepsie
,
452-9290.
Fri. -
Singer
Who's
K.llling
the Great Chefs of
Etirope?,
Dutchess
.
Cinema, Dutchess
Shopping Plaza, Route
9, 471-1440.
Evenings
7
and
9:30
p.m.
Students ma
.
de aware
of
·
parking violations
By Beth Weaver
In a memo distributed to day students,
Joseph Waters, director of security, in-
formed students of the various parking
rules, regulations and fines.
The memo is a reminder to students
_
they
must register their cars at no fee, with
security
.
It also states students must park
in the Champagnat, Leo-Sheahan or
McCaM parking lots
.
Two . exceptions to these rules are
handicapped students and female evening
division students
.
These students may
park in Donnelly parking lot after applying
to security, and obtaining the proper
parking decal.
Fines for violations
·
include:
.
.
A;
Failure to registe!' vehicles.~
$3.00 .
.
··B;
·
Failure
'
to
·
display
u ..
,:al - $3.00.
·
'
C.
Parking in a loading zone
~
$15.00.
D. Driving on walkway or grass -
$10.00.
E. Parking in a firelane, blocking doors
or fire exits - $25
.
00.
.
.
.
F. Blocking vehicles in parking areas -
$5
.
00.
G. Parking in Faculty - Staff or Visitors
areas - $5.00.
H. Abandoned motor vehicle -
$10.00 plus
tow.
I.
Passing Stop sign -
$10.00.
J. In "No parking area" other than fire
lanes
-
$5.00.
K.
Speeding - $20
.
00
.
L. Blocking snow removal - $25.00.
M. Making major repairs to motor
vehicles -
$25.00.
The memo concludes with a
.
warning
that chronic violators willbe ticketed, and
towed to a local garage at the student's ·
~pen
,
se
;
City to
·
begin
.
repairs
on Waterworks Road
By
Patti Monison
The city of Poughkeepsie will begin Waterworks Road.
repairing Waterworks Road later this
The process of repairing the road
is
week, weather permitting, according to known as "tack coating"
.
The old surface
Anthony Campilii, business officer. The will be bonded to the new surface and the
city will provide labor and equipment such major potholes will be dug up. Then, a
1
½
as
·
bulldozers and rollers.
·
·
A Mccann
·
inch of blacktop will be added.
foundation grant of
$12,500 will pay for the
The repairs
will
start at Route
9 and
materials needed, he said
.
continue west down to the Poughkeepsie
Campilii said the work onthe
"
road could Waterworks building. One side of.the road
not be done until" the town completed their will be done at
a
time to allow traffic to
sewer work
.
If
the repairs were started
·
continue using the road
.
The road will
earlier, said Campilii, the road would have become a "major thoroughfare", says
·
had to have been dug up again for the Campilii, and the town will enforce no
sewers to be installed.
.
park
_
ing on the
sides
of the road.
The repairs could not be performed by
According to Campilii, the road has
Marist, according to Campilii, because the
·
become progressively worse over the past
road is not Marist's, and the city had other three years. He said "students have made
priorities before they could repair us aware that there is a problem."
·
NOW PLAYING-
1st run,
This year
'
s most
entertaining film. Feature shows begin at
7:20 and 9:30 p.m, Sat, matinee 2 p.m,
Sunday matinees 3 & 5 _p.m. Bring this
ad
for special 50 cent discount
.
Assenzo's Deli
owned
&
operated
by
Sal Assenzo
·
class of
'72
Richard
It'··
·
Dreyfussu
MosesWine
Private Detective .
... so go figure
the
SANDWICHES
BEER
GROCERIES
Thanks
for
YourPatronag(!
October 12, 1978
Inquiring
Photographer
Do
you
agree with the "common
damages" assessment plan, under which
students pay for repairs before they are
completed?
Maureen
Kenney,

sophomore, "No,
because it is not
fair to those who don't do
any damage. ~d also,. yo~ ~ouldn
'
t ,,be
forced to pay
if
something
lSI1
t done.
·
.
Marianne Muoio, sophomore, "I do not
·
agree with the policy of billing damages to
one's room ahead of time. I feel that the
job should be done ahead of time and once
we see the repairs we pay an itemized
bill."
_
Eva Knudsen,
junior, "No I don't agree
with it at all. We get billed and then a lot of
things
·
don't
·
get fixed because main-
tenance doesn't think they are important.''
BJgHx
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
~
·
.
·
TECHNICOl:OR&ffl
e••r•
uN1vERSAi. c
1
Tv sTu0tos
.
1NC
.
131 Washington
.
St
_
.
.
Kathy Butts, junior,
"No it
'
s wrong
because they don't
fix
half
the stuff they
452 4 772
said they would .
.
And :we pay for damages
.
ALL RIGHTS
MSEllll(O
.
~~~~===
·
==
·
==•=====
··
==illlthat
other peoplehave
_
done."

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October 12, 1978
THE CIRCLE
Page3
Gloria serves breakfast, lunch and advice
By Valerie Poleri
If
you want to know what to have for
lunch, what to take for a cold, or need to
be cheered up, ask Gloria Engelhardt.
Gloria serves breakfast and lunch to
students at Marist.
"I
love working here and I like the
kids," says Gloria, who started working
in the cafeteria four years ago. She says
she has always enjoyed being here and
likes the rapport she has developed
with the students. "I realize the kids
are away from home and I feel like both
a friend and a mother to them," says
Gloria.
"I
care and worry about the kids.
Sometimes when they have a cold,
I'll
suggest medicines for them, or if
.
they're depressed
I
will try to make
them laugh, and ask them what is
wrong," she says.
Gloria says she knows the students on
the food lines as well as the students she
works with. She says, "I know a lot of
the kids on the line. I know their names
and they are friendly
:
" According to
Gloria, some of the new students are
leary of her at first. She said their at-
titude changes when she greets them
-
with a friepdly "good morning," or
"hi,
how are you?"
Gloria has five children, one of whom
attends school at Marist-. She has two
younger children at home and says she
would like them to
·
atso attend Marist.
"I like the atmosphere here, I like
coming to work and fussing over the
kids. I have always been a mother
hen," says Gloria.
The atmosphere here at Marist
" ... / realize the kids are away
from home and I feel like lioth
a
friend mul a mother to
them ... "
brings back memories of her high
school days.
"I
was
on bask;etball
in
high school and we used to have our
games at Madison Square Garden,"
says Gloria. ":fhere was always the
bustling atmosphere and
I
have
memories of things like the prom, and
parties."
Gloria says she has been thinking
about going back to school but added it
would not be possible until her children
are out of high school.
Gloria who works here during the
summer also says she "can't wait for
the semester to start. I miss the kids."
Gloria
Engelhardt
Calling her student co-workers
"great," Gloria says they are
"eager
to
help and please you, and I appreciate
that," and added
"the
kids keep you
young.';
Gloria, who plans to stay at Marist
for a while, says,
"It's
hard work, but it
is rewarding to be with the kids," and
added
"they
are all nice boys ant'
girls."
Familiar faces return for Homecoming Weekend
A I
U
m n
·1
Attend var
·10 US
even ts
The weekend was coordinated by the
Familiar faces returned to Marist's
Alumni Association and former director'
By
Marianne Beyer
campus last weekend commemorating
Bill Austin, in connection with the College
AlwnniWeekend 1978. Activities included in admissions, placement, and alumni with
a
dinner dance at 8 p.m. in the Union Board
and
the Dining Services,
a pap-rally- bonfire, crew race, picnic, activities. Small reunions were scheduled cafeteria. Approximately 200 graduates according to Wade.
dinner dance, and Sunday. brunch, ac- Friday evening in the Fireside Lounge, attended the
"Steamship
Round" buffet
Mark Rudolph, an alumnus, attending
cording to Tom Wade, director of with cocktails, wine and cheese served.
and dance.
-
·
·
his first homecoming said "It's strange to
development and
_
temporary alumni
The Alumni crew race began at 10:4~
Brunch was available
in the Rathskeller be back, really strange." Another first
director.
Saturday morning between alumni and from noon to 4 p.m. Sunday, with live year alumna, Allison Begany, "Aunt Em"
The
-
weekend began with Friday student rowers with the students winning. entertainment from a local group of of Children's Theatre's "Wizard of Oz"
meetings of the President's Alumni
The soccer game, picnic at McCann, and alumni performing Irish and con- said kind of weird, but all the same there's
Council, consisting of V?}ui:lteers_working football game followed, ending Saturday rt_e,_m_p_o_r_ary
__
m_u_s_ic_.~ _ _ _
,_
_ _ _ _ _
n_o_pl_a_c_e_l_ik_e_h_o_m_e. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__
P~P!,~!!\:~~~~frde~!~~~ik~ro:~:~~~r~~~!~tt:
FRYE
our
-
roots
"
·-
Marist's first pep rally and bonfire in players and the cheerleaders
led the
crowd
go
back
several years took place near the Mccann in cheers around the fire.
Center Friday night.
It
was organized by
Dean of Students Antonio Perez was also
the College Union Board Social Committee present, and told individuals with open
to raise "spirit and unity" for the athletic beers to get rid of
."
the beer because the
to
J
863
clubs. "We hoped to make Homecoming event was non-alcoholic, said Connelly.
HlNUl(RAf
rm
s
1N
u
1
s6J
.
.
Weekend a success at Marist as it is at
During the night, hot cider was served at
other colleges," said George Connelly, the Last Chance and the Last Chance Jazz
coordinator of the rally.
Band and sophomore Tom Masterson
When the bon fire finally ignited, soccer entertained the crowd.
I
of Diredor
~ ~9~
~~!~ecPn~,O
l>! · ;:.,
t~.?~t
P~
:2
that security
Oct. 2 regarding the article was received guards would not be denied the right to
by the
_
Circle this week.
It
stated: face their accusers; that security guards
"Security stands ready to have its short who violated regulations would be
comings and failures brought to its at- disciplined, but "to penalize a person
tention
through
constructive based on gossip would be totally unfair .. "
criticism ... and will act to remedy those and that
·
students willing to "provide
shortcomings, Realizing that sen- direct (versus hearsay or circumstantial)
sationalism is one way to make evidence
.
.!
hold myself available to meet
headlines ... one wonders
if
it warrants with them.''
·
hearsay accusations .. on
'easy
targets' .. "
·
.
·
nlue
HAIR·SALON
Forthe bestlooking heads in town
Come See Us
Great cuts for guys and gals
Men's hairstyles-special this week
Cut, wash and blow dried
·
..,
only
$5
with Marist
I.D.
32 Catherine St. Poughkeepsie
·
'l
Block down horn Main M~li
Phone:
:
471~225
(R)
Frye wa
s
mak1nq
boots
back in th
e
day
s
of
the
cover eel
waqon
.
Boot
s
that had
to
b1!
long-
-
T I
'
F
®
wear,nq
.
oc
a
y
s
rye
boots
an!
e
very hit as
good

with
a
lot more
stylt:.
For
\
Juys
and ~1als.
Conw in
and
s
1:1•
the
®
whole Fry
e
round
-
up
.
MON. - FRI. 10
to
9
.
S"-TUROAY
10
to
6
Hyde Park Trading Co ..
CUSTOM STERLING ~ILVER
AND LEATHER APPAREL
(914.)
22S-'7soo
COLONIAL PLAZA -
ROUTE 9
HYDE
PARK,
N.Y. l2SJ8











































f'
Page4
THE
CIRCLE
THE CIRCLE
~ '
.,$'i-·~:.ftt"-
I~)~
(;'~/.,_"'
........
,
.....
The Circle is the weekly newsl)llper
ot
the students of Marist College and is published weekly during the school year exclusive
Of
vacation period$ by the southern Dutchess News Agency, Wappingers, N. Y.
Beth Weaver
LarkLandon
Patl'.arkin
DaveShaw
Bob Whitmore
TomBurke
George Connelly
Rob Ryan
editors
sports editors
Photographers: Gerry McNulty, Tom Ball, Tom Burke.
Dave Potter
associate editor
KenHealy
photography editor
cartoonist
business manager
advertising manager
distribution manager
October 12, 1978
LETTERS
All letters must
be
typed triple space with a 60 space margin. end submitted to_ the Circf~
office no later than 6 p.m. Monday.
Short
letters ore preferred. We reserve the right to
~,t
all letter$. Letters must
be
signed. ~ut names may be withheld upon request. Le1ters
will
be
published depending upon ovoilobility o space.
Misinterpreted
To the Editors:
I would like an opportunity to
respond to the Circle's article
regarding the newly formed
Social - Alcohol Committee and
my newly acquired label of
"drinking ban advocate."
Staff: Clare Amico, Marianne Beyer, Paul Ceonzo,
Lina
Cirigliano, Chris Curren, Chris Egan, Joe
After being contacted daily by
Emmets, Chris Hogan, Maureen Jennings, Dianna Jones, Terry Moore, Patti Morrison, Jane Neigh-
• reporter Jim Townsend for in-
purpose of the committee. Once
again, neither the Dean nor ~e
committee is advocating banning
alcohol. But the Dean's goalis the
de-emphasis
of
continuous
alcohol programming based in
part on a very real concern of
alcoholism on college campuses
today.
.
bors, Valerie Poleri, Dave Powers, Don Purdy, Brian Rogers, Rich Sohanchyk, Leslie Sharp, Susan
formation about this committee
.,. Squicciarini, Roy Stuts, Jim Townsend, John Mayer, Loretta Kennedy.
(which was not even fully
An
additional point I would ~e
to clarify is that of my role ~n this
committee. I am the coordinator,
not the chairman. I
am
organizing the members ~nd
meeting times. I am a non-vot~g
member who is not there to m-
fluence the direction of the
committee.
' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ ~ established), we were finally able
Students deserve explanation
Security Director Joseph Waters has
refused to disclose if his department is in-
·vestigating reported security violations and
lapses. These lapses include security per-
sonnel drinking while on duty, leaving cam-
pus grounds, and not showing up for
assigned duty. The Circle has continued to
receive reports of recurring lapses and
violations.
. ·
·An
unsigned memo received by the Circle
from the security department implies these
reports are gossip and hearsay. However, the
Circle has been responsible in its reporting,
and unless Waters can prove otherwise, he is
obligated to the student body to either con-
firm or deny the reports.
The Circle has approached Waters with
specific violations, dates and times, not with
hearsay information. Waters said he would
Editorials
conduct an investigation, hut now he refuses
to say
if
he has or wiIJ conduct one. Unless
Waters is hiding something, why is he
refusing to speak on the issues?
The students deserve, and should demand,
an explanation.
Double standards- unacceptable
Dean of Students Antonio Perez has en-
forced Marist College's alcohol policy to a
greater extent this semester. For the first time
in memory, the serving of liquor at the dor-
mitory Halloween house parties for resident
.-st.udent.snas.beenbanned'..
..
·_
-:
weekend including open beers on campus
and drinking liquor and beer at the football
game.
Apparently, the alcohol policy which ap-
plies to students does not apply io the alum-
ni>
Considering >the ,. large,
·m,imner ·: of
violations which occurred du'riii'g the
weekend, plus the • extended - number of
alcoholic events which were approved for the
alumni, a double standard clearly exists.
If
students are expected to live by certain rules,
they should apply to everyone. Double stan-
dards are unfair and unacceptable.
~
However, while students are not allowed to
schedule one dormitory alcoholic event
giving more than a month's notice, Perez ap-
proved over seven events with alcohol for
alumni scheduled in the course of three and
one half days last weekend. These were the
same alumni who committed numerous
violations of the alcohol policy d1iring the
Viewpoint
).>
College Without a Parent
By
Richard
A.
LaMorte
"To destroy the connection of, to remove from
another; to
be or become disconnected; to be
removed apart; to withdraw from association."
It
is so cold ... cut. .. and dry the word and its
definition: SEPARATION; however the impact
of the reality is quite another matter.
Once we have established a relationship with
someone - any separation - even for a few hours
becomes a cause for concern. From the parent
who lies awake waiting the return of a son or a
daughter ... to the young person anxious about the
return of one they care for. So much so that the
first
question stated or implied is: What did you
do? How did it go? Certainly, there is some value
in separation, especially of a temporary nature;
it that it encourages and can foster a sense of
independence. Included in · these kinds of
separations would be going to college, going out
with people other than those · to whom we are
attached by some special bond of relationship
etc. These separations can strengthen the initial
relationship as well as give it greater balance
and objectivity.
.
Permanent separations, however, present one
with quite another situation, especially
if
they
are involuntary and beyond one's control. There
are three specific separations of
this
kind which I
see regularly impacting on the lives of the
students of the college: the break-up of a long-
standing relationship, the divorce of parents and
the death of a parent. All three follow the same
basic developmental pattern though the effects
of the
last
two are. much more long-lasting and
far-reaching.
In
all three cases mentioned above a persons
initial reaction
tends
to
be denail ... and · a
tremendous sense of isolation. This is followed
by some sense of guilt and putting oneself down.
It
is
not long, however, before
this
gives
way
to
sheer anger ... toward a parent, . God, life
in
sene~al ...
'I1tis
--~_sometimes. exp~
directly,
but more often than not it is expressed in a more
defused and disguised manner. This is almost
· always followed by a time of bargaining or
rationalization; however, this can last
just so
long, before one
is
thrust into fits of
depression ... and self-pity. Here one arrives at a
key stage in the process of dealing
with
per-
manent separation.
It is at this stage that either one moves toward
the acceptance of the reality he-she is faced with
or remains continually subject to the effects of
any or all of the above mentioned stages ..
If
the
person moves toward acceptance then there can
be hope which can lead to a reintegration of the
individual's world into that of the larger world
around him-her.
Generally, each of us has what might be called
a 'life picture' which when it is in tact supports
us ~d ~ts the paramaters for our personal
relationships. When a permanent separation
takes place a part of that picture is removed and
a gap is present. A gap which remains.until the
remaining picture can
be drawn in and knit
together. How many are the people on this
campus who have had a parent die ... before they
came or since their attival? How many are the
people whose parents are divorced or getting
divorced? How isolated, different resentful or
depressed such people may feel throughout the
events of the school year. To be
in
the
midst of
the peer pressure and uncertainty of the
age ... lacking an integral part of one's 'life pic-
ture' can present a great undercurrent of termoil
in one's life at college and a fair amount of
emptiness.
College without a parent can· at times
be
embarassing and painful. This
is
becoming an
increasingly heavy burden for a greater number
of our students; creating neegs by-in-large
um.net arid· unchallenged. Is it
too
sensitive an
issue to be discussed?
Is it
too impossible an
issue to prepare to help ourselves and others
with?
to sit down and discuss it last
week. Having gone to a con-
ference the next day and not ·
returning until this morning, I did
not have the opportunity to read
the article until now, when I could
have almost been.amused by·the
article, if the demonstration of
lack of responsible reporting was
not so sad.
How Mr. Townsend could have
left our meeting with the im-
pression of my advocating a
drinking ban to me is amazing
and I would appreciate the op-
portunity to set the record
straight.
The decision for the Halloween
Party to be non-alcoholic was an
agreement between the Dean and
"unsuspecting student housing
employees" made before any
committee . was formed. As a
committee (that has not even met
yet) we are being asked by the
Dean to help the housing em-
ployees program . for this party
and also help dealwith other non-
alcoholic programming. through
out the year. This is
not
the sole
Personally, I do advocate
some
non-alcoholic programming as a
viable option that should be made
available to students. I do not
advocate banning alcohol.
Furthermore, for the second
time in the month and a half that
I have been at Marist College, I
feel I have been the victim of the
same
reporter's
misin-
terpretations ( or irresponsible
reporting) regarding the same
issue. I will therefore no longer
discuss this or any. other issue
with Mr. Townsend.
A student newspaper should be
credible.
If
not, it becomes
ineffective, or a joke. Credibility
. requires responsibility. We all
owe it to fellow students, staff
and faculty to report information
responsibly.
·
·
.
Respectfully submitted,
· Kathy Gentile
Albany Intern
Your decision
To all Marist Students:
It
has come to the attention of
many that fruit has been used,
not as food, but as objects to
throw against the walls of such
places as the post office, and
surrounding areas.
In the beginning of the
semester, we were only served
fruit halves. We are now being
served whole fruit which is to be
eaten, not thrown.
ff
this condition persists, whole
fruit will be food of the past at
Marist College. .
. We really do not believe that it
is unfair to ask that the fruit riot
be thrown around.
It
is up
to
all of you to make the
final decision.
The Food Committee
Because of mid-terms and the extended holidu,·
vacation, the Circle will not be publi ... hed ;1/iai;,
until November 2.
"'I
EXPECT EVE:R'{ONE.
TO COOP!:
RATt::"
- DI< ANTotJ:o f'ERE2

















































October 12, 1978
THE CIRCLE
Page5
No arrests in
By
Lina
Cirigliano
No atTests have been made in the recent
student dormitory mailbox thefts, ac-
cording to Joseph Waters, director of
security at Marist.
!!1:.
!~ro
~~?
!!:~
bave
loWW
1■
0
ff
their boxes open.
·· Waters said he has been working with
the Postal Inspector to devise a secure
mail box system, and should have a
campus
Lit::~· ..
~~~
~~=·tlrei~
.J
housekeeping. Marist students are not
unusual in this."
Waters said the theft investigation is
being conducted by Town of Poughkeepsie
Police, and the Federal Postal Inspector,
Scott Kenerson. Waters refused to com-
ment about the suspects. He said he did not
want to say anything which might
jeopardize the investigation. No other
thefts have been reported, but Waters
said
finalized proposal by this week.
Kenerson said he has exchanged
opinions and discussed security mailbox
methods with those involved in the in-
vestigation.
Detective McDowell, investigating the
theft for the Poughkeepsie Town Police,
could not be reached for comment.
Security stops sofa theft
By
Jane Neighbors
Two people who allegedly tried to carry
off a sofa from a second floor Champagnat
Lounge were surprised by security guards
on Saturday morning and fled without the
~ofa, according to Joseph Waters, director
of safety and security services for Marist
College.
Waters said his office is "working
closely with the housing office to deter-
mine who was in the area at the time." He
valued the couch at
$320.
Waters said he would like to find out who
was involved because if it was students,
''they are depriving other students of the
use of the couch," and identifying them
can act as a deterrent to future thefts.
If
the •action was a prank, it would be
handled through inter-house disciplinary
proceedings, according to Waters. But
"out and · out theft" would result in
criminal action, he said.
If
the suspects are found and are not
related to the college, the case would go to
Marist seniors George Connelly and Vinny
Barone share the Reynard
with
"room-
mate" Yohan
in
their house located across
from the campus.
travel to campus as an example of
responsibility. "Here," says Kelly, "you
just roll out of bed practically and the
convenience of living on campus is "one of
its major attractions," he said. "It's a
natural process," says Antonio Perez,
dean of students. "People reach about a~e
twenty and start thinking about their
George Connelly resides at 85 North Rd.
with
four
other students and says he enjoys
the close unity "among a small group of
people. It gives you a feeling of in-
dependence. I felt it would be a better
experience in gaining responsibility by
living on my own because its a real jungle
out there."
Connelly says his fifth roommate is a
German short-haired pointer named
Yohan, who "enjoys a good sock every now
and then and Dubonnet on the rocks."
Connelly says his off-campus respon-
sibilities include "paying the bill on time"
and going shopping when, opening the
refrigerator, he finds "an empty jar of
mustard and a half-bitten peach."
The location of Connelly's house next to
Frank's Bar and Grill is a "temptation,"
he says, but added "It's an excellent time.
It's very convenient having at one's
disposal a nice, cold, frosty and a slim jim
while listening to Frank Sinatra's song,
'High Hopes.'
One student living in an apartment who
wished to remain anonymous, said his
favorite aspect of off-campus privacy was
romantic. "Now when you pick up a girl.
the whole campus doesn't have to know
about it," he said.
Waters said his office received a call
from a student explaining a couch was
being carried around the south side of
Champagnat Hall and guards responded at
2:45
a.m., stopping the apparent theft. The
suspects, described by· Waters as two
white males, were not apprehended and
the investigation is continuing. At this time
the suspects' identities are unknown.
the Town of Poughkeepsie police, Waters
A
I
h 1
·
f
6 -------,
said.
- - - .
CQ Q ISm... fQm
pg.
Nine arrested th is year
By
Don Purdy
There has been
a
"significant increase
in the number of aITests" at Marist, ac-
cording to Joe Waters, security director.
Nine people, none of wh.om are Marist
students, have been arrested since the
beginning of the semester on charges of
criminal trespassing and disorderly
conduct, said Waters.
banned from Marist because of "previous
violations on campus, and were told they
would be arrested upon their return. "We
didn't hesitate in arresting them," said
Waters.
The security department also had to deal
with several fire extinguishers being set
off, one being tossed out an eighth floor
Champagnat window, and a student en-
tering four other students' rooms, ac-
cording to Waters, who added "the student
has since withdrawn from school."
health went out the window. I grew a
beard, long hair, and had no shoes, I was a
derelict. I didn't take a bath for a year," he
said. He also had halucinations. "When
you hear Bing Crosby on the radio in the
middle of the summer, and the radio isn't
even on, you know something is wrong."
Allen P., who has been sober for the past
sixteen months through the help of
A.A.
explained, "what has gotten me through is
the love and concern of the other mem-
bers."
"Nobody can tell you, you are an
alcoholic. You have to admit
it
to your-
self," said Chelune. He said "Alcoholism is
an insidious disease because it sneaks up
on you, but because you can't face a
problem, and if your drinking is harming
others, you have a problem with alcohol."
Ninety-three percent of alcoholics are
ordinary people like businessmen,
housewifes, and teens. "One doctor who
belongs to
A.A.
told us of how he had
delivered a baby in a black out." said
Chelune. "Though alcoholism is an un-
curable disease there is help and hope
from groups such as Alcoholics
Anonymous."
Two of the criminal trespassing cases
are in court, and Marist
is
petitioning the
courts
for
an arrest warrant for another
sugpect. said Waters.
Waters said vandalism on cars h~s . - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . _
...
.
. ~--~·-~-~-.. -.-..
~.-.-.-,,:::,,~i,m~ii,:'!".'. .. ~:
...
;~,i;i:"'
111
,·~
. ." ....
decreased this year. Security guards
anµ
; ....
,,111i1;,:,: ..... ,11llli11....
MID. HuosoN
Many of the people arrest~ had been town police patrol the lots he said.
.
~l~c'lI~i~i~
f,!~1\fi ..
S:.~.~,µr'.'
... ,,,,11111•"···• .... ,,,1111"'··
"""""'"""~ ••
Dormitory garbage
may attract rats
By
Lark
Landon
Litter and refuse thrown out the south
side windows of Champagnat Hall will
cause a rat problem according to Andrew
Pavelko physical plant director.
If
that occurs, Pavelko said it would be
dealt with by the new exterminating
service AAAA Pest Control which was
contracted by maintenance on
Oct.
1. The
new service is on a trial basis and will have
its contract renewed monthly if it does
satisfactory work, said Pavelko.
The service was first used "at the
beginning of the month" said Pavelko,
when two students in Champagnat
reported seeing roaches in their rooms.
Both Leo and Champagnat dormitories
were sprayed at this time in bathrooms,
storage and custodial closets. The service
will make two monthly inspections of-food
storage areas on campus and will respond
to any pest problem reported by studen~s
to the maintenance department, said
Pavelko.
·
Pavelko said AAAA Pest control was
hired due to "dissatisfaction" with the
former exterminating company_ employed
by Marist, Mid Hudson Pest Control,
which neglected to spray in the cafeteria
during the summer, said Pavelko. He
added "because of the food, we cannot
tolerate pest or vermin problems in the
cafeteria. It has to be spotless."
FRANKS
Across from Marist
Thursday-LADIES NITE
25c drinks, no cover
Friday-CHEAP DRINK NITE
''Anything Goes''
Tuesday-K,AMIKAZE & BEER NITE
$3.00
. Luncheon.daily
SIX PACKS TOGO
POuG~II.UPSl.f.
J u
Kof
C
PRESENTS
Rli~Plj
A ROCK ORCHESTRA
IN CONCERT
WITH
AUGUST AND THE PLAYERS
SAT., OCTOBER 21st
8:00 P.M. to 12 Midnight(?)
ALL SEATS - $5.00
ON SALE NOW AT
.. ,1111lll11, ......... ,11llh11111,
MID-HUDSON
CIVIC CENTER
'"'11111111''""""'1111111'""
POUGHKEEPSIE. HY
ALL TICKETRON OUTLETS
AND
..
...










































. .
·
,
.
,1,
1

.
:
.
Page6
THE CIRCLE
October 12, 1978
Publisher gears newspaper for black community
By Rich Sohanchyk
Victor
.
Morris, editor and publisher of
the Mid Hudson Herald, said he saw so
much
"racial
strife"
in
the
Poughkeepsie area, he decided to
publish a newspaper geared to the
black community in 1967.
In
his speech, sponsored by the Black
Student Union last Monday night,
Morris said, "when I came to
this
area
in 1956, I saw so many social problems
that I felt motivated to implement some
kind of program;''
Morris, born and raised in Louisiana,
was educated in the South at Tuskegee
Institute of Technology where he
acquired a degree in electrical
engineering, Atlanta University where
he did graduate work in math, and the
University of Pennsylvania.
Morris said his civil rights beliefs
motivated him to start his newspaper.
"I worked for the governrpent for
eleven years, both with the Army and
the Navy. I came out an angry man and
determined that my children would
have it easier than I did. Also, I've
always had a deep interest in people
and have been concerned all my life
about the deep prejudices in this
country."
Even though Morris has been in-
volved in civil rights since his arrival in
Poughkeepsie in the spring of 1956, it
wasn't until the first week in January of
1968 that the firsf issue of the Herald
was printed.
The paper, due to a lack of ad-
vertising revenue, has been a non-profit
'llenture but not by intention. "Ad-
vertisers
just
will not put ads in a black
paper." He cited Marist as an example.
"Marist is supposed to be a place where
equality of education is stressed. Yet
they take out pages and pages of ads in
the Journal and none in our paper."
Morris said his paper isn't a failure
though because it has made "the white
papers aware that there is a black
community."
Morris sees the 1960's as a pivitol
time in black history. The marches on
Washington and the sit-in's conducted
throughout the south convinced him of
the advantages of non-violence in
achieving racial equality. "Martin
Luther King, who I think is God's Son,
convinced me totally that non-violence
is the way to achieve racial equality. To
me, that is Martin Luther ~ing's
greatest contribution to America
during the 1960's."
Morris also said that educational
opportunities have increased im-
mensely
on
all levels for blacks -
grammar school, secondary, and
college. But even though blacks are
becoming better educated, said Morris,
they are not getting more jobs because
"whites are making progress twice as
fast." However Morris sees the ad-
vancement of blacks in the field of
employment as something that will
happen very soon because "black
improvement is a national trend."
Morris also had some comments
about the federal government and their
involvement in the civil rights
movement. "The federal government
has seriously neglected the blacks,"
said Morris, because "we can send men
to the moon but we can't solve the
problems of prejudice. There is suf-
ficient money in the federal govern-
ment
to
improve conditions in the
ghetto, but it's just not being done."
Morris also cited successful exam-
ples's of black improvement such as
Jesse Jackson's PUSH program in
Chicago. "There were all these
_
A&P's
(supermarkets) in all black neigh-
borhoods that were run by white people
with
.white
sales clerks stocking the
shelves and working
.
the register's.
Jackson helped to get black people into
these stores."
Morris said that even though the
black press isn't as powerful as it
should be, blacks have been able to
make progress through other medium's
- especially television .
.
"For years
prejudice was just accepted. Then
people were all of a sudden able to see
the unbelievable conditions that blacks
were living in on television."
Television, said Morris, lets you see
how it is now whereas papers can only
show how it was. Morris also cited
Roots as another example of T.V.'s
influence even though "it only scrat-
Victor Morris
ched the surface in showing how blacks
really lived." The show also showed
that blacks too, are talented in the field
of drama and other arts as well, said
Morris.
In conclusion, Morris said "prejudice
- whether it's black against white or
white against black -
is equally
damaging
in
the advancement of civil
rights," and that we should strive to
eliminate the term "black" and just see
each other as people, "I strongly feel
that every individual, black or white,
has the right to a decent home and a
decent livlihood.''
·
Alcoholics seek help for problem drinkers
.
By
Dianna Jones
.
nothing_ to. b~ ashamed of_ becau~ said about campus drinking.
"It
is socially out of booze," he said. He lived for eight
~lcohoh~m 1s hke any other dISease. I acceptable, if they can handle it" He said years as an alc~holic with frequent "black
For eight years George Chelune lived in Just don t want to see anyone go through when he was seventeen he passed out from
·
outs" from
.
which he could not remember
a nightmare. Now, five years later, he said what I
.
went through.''
having one drink. His body was telling him where he was the day before, or how he
he has given up his anonymity as an
In Leo
_
Hall on Oct. 4, about twenty then that alcohol wasn.·t for him. Some had gotten to where he was. Through
alcoholic to help others with the same student~hstened
.
to Chelune and A.llen P. people can't drink because their system rehabilitation and Alcoholics Anonymous
problem. Chelune, maintenance super-
tell their . expene!lces ~s ~lco?,ohcs. "I won't allow them to, said Ch el tine. There
(A.A.)
Chelune said he overcame his
.
t:1v:=iso=r =o=f =th=e=M=c=C=ann==C=e=nt=e=r,=sa=i=d=h=e=h=a=s=h=a=v=e=n=o=thi==n=g=a=g=a=ms==t =d=rink===m=g=, =
·
=C=h=el=u=ilne are ten million alcoholics
in
the U.S.
·one
problem .. "I am.fearful of alcohol because
..
, ,.
.
.
out ofeveryten drinkers is an alcoholic,'
,
he I am one drink

awayJrom being a drunk.
It
said
.
·
·
·
has been five years since I had a drink; and
THURSDAY: LADIES NIGHT
(No Cover, 1st drirn< Free)
WEDNESDAY:
½
PRICE NIGHT
( except bottle beer)
Music this
weekend
by
HARVAST
LUNCH
.
AND DINNER MENU
DAILY

~o~te 9,
.
Hyde Park
··229-7976'
Chelune said sometimes a person starts it's a wonderfuHife without it. It feels good
drinking when he can't face something. to know what you did yesterday," said
After Chelune's children had
·
grown, his Chelune.
wife died of cancer. "I went into the bottle
Allen P., a friend of Chelune's and a
and stayed in it. When I woke up in the member of A.A., who requested to be
mornings I couldn't function
·
:without a
anonymous, started drinking at twelve and
drink. When you are an alcoholic your life
was an alcoholic by sixteen. "Scholar-
.
isn't your own. You're always thinking of
ships, marriage, my self-respect, and my
_
the next drink. The one fear was running
Continued on page 5.
Overland Productions present
·TALKING
HEADS
Tues.
Oct. 31
at
8
P.M.
Seats• S6.00 in advance at Box Office 56.50 day of show
-
Bardavcn Theatre
35 Market Street, Poughkeepsie 473-2073/454-6070
Volunteers Needed
Any students interested
.
in giving tour of the.
college
·
to prospective
students, please contact
.
Mrs~ Jo ~nn Daley
-Admissions
Office
Greystone Building
Ext. 226/2~7
.

















i
I
October 12, 1978
THE CIRCLE
i/":·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:.:.:.=.:.:.~-:-:-:-=-:.=-=.:.=.:.=-:-:-=-=.:.:.:.=.:.:.:.=-:-:-:-:-:-:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:~t
I
Upcoming Sports
I
SPORT
DATE
OPPONENT
TIME
LOC.
Volleyball
10/12
Pace
5:30 p.m.
Away
New Rochelle
Tennis
10/12
Fordham
4p.m.
lla.m.
Home
Away
Cross Country
10/14
Holy Cross
Worcester
Soccer
Football
10/14
Quinnipiac
1 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
4
p.m.
Away
Home
Away
Away
10/14
Siena
10/18
Vassar
Cross Country
Soccer
Volleyball
10/18 . Binghamton
4
p.m.
10/20
Manhattanville
Baruch
5:30 p.m.
Home
Cross Country
10/21
Marist lnvit.
2 p.m.
Home
Soccer
10/21
N.Y. Tech
11 a.m.
Away
Football
10/22
St. Peter's
1:30 p.m.
Home
Cross Country
10/22
NCAA
Division
11 a.m.
Away
I
E~tcy . !111!
!~l'.,:,
llf
:.m.
1~!
Ii
IL ....
;::.::11,.,,_, ,,,, '.~;~: ,}~~:~:~::, ,,,,:,::~,. . .
-~~:
JI
Giants capture
football crown
The Giants defeated the Ace Heads
6-0
last Thursday to win the intramural flag
football championship.
.
Charlie Bender set up the only touch-
down in the game with a three-quarters
length of the field run in the second half.
Ed Bowers then ran the next play into the
endzone -for•· the--score;
0
The, extra. point
attempt failed.
The game was marked by tough
defensive play by . both teams. The Ace
· Heads drove deep into Giant territory late
in the game but were turned away by the
Giant defense.
VOLLEYBALL CHAMPS
George King, Paul Meseck, Jim Lemakos,
and Keith Davisdon.
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL
The Flutterbey Bombers defeated
Fighting Fourth for . the women's in-
tramuraL.volleybalL: championship ... last
Thursday night.
TENNIS
Mary Kenndey won the women's singles
championship. Pete Kronner and Kevin
Viana played for the men's doubles
championships Tuesday afternoon.
The Fifth Degree defeated the Ace
BASKETBALL
Heads two out of three games to capture
the intramural volleyball championship.
Three man basketball started Monday
The Ace Heads led the first game 13-6 night. Slink's Finale, Ben Zingers and the
but the Degrees fought back to win 15-13. Bad Boys II, won their games that night.
The Ace Heads came back to win the The playoffs will be next Wednesday night
second game 15-11. The Fifth Degree then with the finals Thursday night.
won the deciding game 15-9.
The Fifth Degree were captained by
FILING PERIOD
Tom Crane. Other members of the team
included Jim Flynn, Bill Dweinne, . Bill
Palmeri, Barry Jamison, Keith Hollman,
Joe Curthoys, Matt Lovechio, and Tom
Tatum. Other members were Joe O'Neil,
The roster deadline for coed basketball
is
October 19. Upcoming roster filing will
be for racquetball, turkey trot, and foul
shooting.
photo• Tom Burke
. T.J. Moroney fights for tough yardage
against
the Ace
Heads
during flag football
champlo_nsblp last Thursday. The
Giants .won 6-0.
· ..
.
photo • Dove Show
Marist ball carrier runs left against Brooklyn during alumni weekend. The Red Foxes
lost
42-18
to a tough Brooklyn squad.
-
Marist suffers worst
loss of season
By Ken Healy
In front of a Homecoming Day crowd of
over
1,100,
the Red Foxes suffered their
worst loss of the season, 42-18to Brooklyn
College. The game was never really close,
as Brooklyn scored four times in the first
_quarter
to
jump
to
a
28-0
lead.
Sophomore running back Fred Wiley
scored three touchdowns, two in the first
quarter, and rushed for
120
yards as
Brooklyn routed Marist in what head
coach Mike Malet called "the worse game
I've seen in my nine years coaching at
Marist."
-Brooklyn rolled up
294
yards rushing and
another 97 in the air against the Red Foxes
who were missing three starters on
defense. Glen Murry ran for 72 yards and
quarterback Joe Shaloub was four for six
with two touchdown passes.
Shaloub set up the first Brooklyn touch-
down with a
22
yard pass to tight end John
La Barbera that went to the Marist one.
Wiley then scored to put Brooklyn on the
board for the first time with
3:40
left in the
first period.
Following a Mike Laffin punt Brooklyn
then drove 52 yards in five plays capped by
Wiley's second touchdown run of the af-
ternoon, this time for ten yards. Following
the extra point Brooklyn led 14-0.
Brooklyn's third score came following
Rich Dioro's interception of a Marty·
Crapser pass. Brooklyn then drove 78
yards on nine plays as Shaloub hit
LaBarbera again, this time for a
30
yard
touch down pass.
For the second week in a row the punting
team hurt Marist as a high snap left Marist
turning over the ball on their own nine .
yard line. . Glen Murry then ran for
Brooklyn's fourth score of the quarter, the
Kingsmen took a
28-0
lead. Brooklyn
finished up their first half scoring as
Shaloub completed a
30
yard pass for
another touchdown. Marist's only touch-
down of the half came with Crasper hitting
Charley King for 61 yards and a score.
In the second half the Red Foxes were
able to hold Brooklyn to one touchdown,
mostly because Brooklyn stopped
throwing the ball under orders from their
coaching staff. Malet said Brooklyn
sho_wed a lot
of
class in holding down the
scoring. "A lot of teams would have kept
going but Brooklyn showed me a lot of
class. You don't see enough of that in this
profession."
Marist was able to score twice in the
final moments on a 58 yard drive capped
by Tim Mancuso scoring from the one. Jim
Corbett, playing for the injured Crapser,
set up the final touchdown completing a
35
yard pass to Greg Blum. Mancuso scored
with
:22
seconds remaining.
· Malet blamed the loss on poor play as
well as poor coaching. "The team didn't
play well and the coaching staff didn't
coach well.
I thought we looked good in
practice last week but we came up flat for
the game. We made some changes for
Siena that will hopefully help that." Marist
will
face
Siena at home at
1
:30 this Sunday.
Siena is 0-3 this season and will be Marist's
first club oppoent. Marist finished last
season with a 33-18 win over the Indians.
NOTES FROM THE GRIDIRON
Last Saturday was Ron Levine Day at
Marist. The former head coach was
honored with a plaque at halftime of the
football game, for his
13
years as coach of
the then Marist Vikings.
Marist has a nine game winning streak
against Siena dating back to 1968 when the
Indians were undefeated. This was
Marist's fifth loss in a row to Brooklyn
never having beaten them. Three week~
ago Brooklyn defeated
Princeton
University 15-0 in a game situation
scrimmage.
Volleyballers lose match
The Marist College Women's Volleyball
team lost to Concordia and Iona last
Thursday. The team's record is
2-2
for the
season.
Marist lost three straight games to
Concordia in the best three out of five sets.
Concordia won 15-5, 15-2 and 15-8.
The Red Foxes also lost three straight
games to I~ma by 16-14, 15-10 and 15-9.
Head Coach Becky · Simmins said Pam
Green . played well offensively and
defensively for Marist against Iona.
. Simmins said the "scores were not
conductive to the way we played." She
added, "we lost on tiny little mistakes."
She said the team had a lot of net and line
violations and had poor serves. Simmins
added many serves did not make it over
the net.
She said Concordia and Iona were
"pretty good."
SPIKES AND SERVES
The Red Foxes played at Nyack Tuesday
night and will travel to New Rochelle
tonight. The Red Foxes will return home
on October
20
to play Manhattanville and
Baruch.
...
....





































.
..,''-,..,
·
October 12, 1978
The Running Red Foxes
Marist's winningest team
Jimmy
Downs jumps up to head the ball toward the
U.S.M.M.A. goal. The Red Foxes
defeated the opposition
3-1
during
Alumni
weekend.
-Boote
rs beat C.W. Post;
increase record to
6-1
Due to popular demand High on Sports
is
about Marist's all-time winningest team,
the Running Red Foxes. Over a 16 year
period including this season, the cross
country team has had an uncompara~le
178-59-1 record. Since 1972, coach Rich
Stevens' first season, the Red Foxes have
recorded a 99-16 record with a cham-
pionship in each season.
In the Red
·Foxes
16 year history the
team has had but one losing season,
coming in 1970 with a 5-14 record. Three
years later in Stevens' second year as head
coach the team had a perfect (16-0) year.
Stevens is the fourth man to coach the
Red Foxes, succeeding Bill Olsen and
Marist English teacher Bob Lewis. He took
the job in 1972 after several winning
seasons as cross country coach at
Roosevelt High School in Hyde Park. At
the time Stevens took over the cross
country team it's future was in dimbt.
Despite several winning seasons and an
overall winning history the team was
By
John Mayer
·
running with only
.
a six or seven man
ball in their end with good pressure, and squad. Stevens remembers the team as
we had good passing to go with it."
being a good one despite it's size. "We had
Freshman Joe Bilboa scored a goal from
Last Wednesday Marist traveled to
a pretty good team with a strong 1-2-3-
20 yards out at the 9:28 mark of the second Siena College and came away with a 4-1
combination.
-
We had one outstanding
overtime period to give the Marist hooters overtime victory.
runner in Jay
.
Doyle but except for him
a
2-1
victory over C
.
W. Post Tuesday af-
·
After a scoreless first half, Fermino
(Doyle) they wouldn't compare to the
ternoon at Leonidoff field.
Naitza
.
put in a Bilboa pass to break the team we have now."
The victory raises the soccer team's deadlock and give Marist a one goal lead.
Though he has won
88
percent of his
regular season record to
6-1.
Ten minutes later Siena's
.
Terry meets over the past seven years, Stevens
C.W. Post began the scoring at 35:31 of Pacheco scored on a penalty kick to even can't tell you his record without looking it
the second half when Scott Fries took a
.
up the
.
match
l-1
and send the game into µp. He only knows aboutthelosses,_all
16
of
.
,
.:
,~:.:
'atiii'1if!r::11~ltt1
:
t~~rilfidict~ifoii-
-
QYZ~~lti~
scored ~t
8:52,
of
the first
1~~r:1~~~
~h~/;~~:,~.t~~ie::~~l~e=~~
beating Marist goalie Kevin Black.
overtime period. Bilboa was again the
weather
conditions.
Stevens'
The Red Foxes tied the game with just credited with an assist on the play.
philosophy about coaching is unique. He
over four minutes to go in regulation time.
The score remained
2-1
until 7:06 of the only cares about the losses because he
Zenone Naitza scored on a penalty kick second overtime when sophomore Tom feels they are the coaches' fault. "Coaches
which beat Post goalie Jim McGuiness. Homola scored his first goal of the season never win players do. Coaches only lose,"
The kick was the result of a hands in-
on a Z. Naitza pass, to increase the Red
is how he feels about his job.
fraction.
Foxes lead 3-1.
Z.
Naitza put in his second
Despite his success as a coach, Stevens
Earlier in the week Marist defeated goal of the game a minute and a half later never ran competitevly. "When I was in
Beacon. It's funny because at Albany Stat~
they didn't start a cross country team until
I was a senior and I didn't run."
Stevens got into coaching cross country
ahnost by accident. "When I got a job
teaching math at Roosevelt they were
looking for a track or cross country coach.
The only sports I thou~t I could helo with
were those that I knew about;
·
baseball,
basketball and wrestling. The day before
school started they told me to take _the
cross country teain. I didn't ~ven want 1t.
I
decided to take it and we did prettr well
that season." With no background
m
the
sport Stevens got his introduction to cross
country through books about cross
country. Eventually Stevens began to run
on his own and between the
.
two he
developed his own five
.
point training
program that has become an important
part of the Red Foxes overall program.
Put simply, the program Stevens has
gradually developed over the years puts a
runner through five different stages. The
runner begins with endurance running l:!-t
the beginning of the season and works his
way up to running for speed. The program
is based on the way the heart, lungs and
cardiovascular system works. There is
another part to Stevens training though.
Motivation. He feels his ability to motivate
runners has helped him become a suc-
cessful coach as much as any training
program. He feels motivation is especially
important in cross country because Jle
says it«is basically a loner's sport with
very little persorial
·
glory:"
·
·
·
.
.
Besides running on his own to develop
his program he also runs with the team on
distance runs at the beginning of the
season
.
Although he sees no point to
running with the team all year, Stevens
says he can see
·
·
his runners better by
·
running with them and he thinks it helps
him as a coach to know what his runners
are going through.
Kings Point 3-1,
·
with all the scoring to ice the victory.
high school we didn't have track at
coming in the second half.
"It
took us
90
minutes to get warmed up
Continued next issue
Senior Russ Beckely gave the Red Foxes and untracked," said Goldman,
"In
the . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
a 1-0 lead atthe 41 :43 mark when he booted overtime we kept the ball on the ground
in a
Z.
Naitza pass.
and started passing well."
Less than two minutes later Joe Carroll
put in a goal for the
U
.
S.M.M.A. to knot the
score at one apiece.
The game remained deadlocked until Z.
Naitza kicked in a goal from
2()
yards out to
give Marist a 2-1 advantage at the 22:01
mark.
·
Andre Collins added an insurance goal
·
with 10:03 remaining to give the Red Foxes
its margin of victory.
According to Marist Head Coach
Howard Goldman, "The
·
first half was
fairly even. In the seccind half we kept the
Corner Kicks ... Marist was ranked 14th in
the state this past week ... Freshman goalie
Kevin Black has remained in the goal
.
while Rich Heffernan continues to
rest
...
The Red Foxes go on the road for
their next three games: they take on
Quinnipiac on the 14th, SUNY at
Binghamton on the 18th, and New York
Tech on the 21st. Their next home
,
.
game
will be on Wednesday, October 25th when
they host
·
western Connectucut at 3 p.m.
Running Red Foxes
place 2nd at Mansfield
By
Chris Hogan
The Marist College Cross Country team
finished second out of five teams at the
Mansfield State Intivational in Penn-
sylvania Saturday.
Edinboro State College beat Marist by
two points while the Running Red Foxes
defeated Mansfield State College, Alfred
University, and St. John Fisher College.
Ron Gadziala finished in second place to
lead Marist. He covered the 6.2 mile hilly
course in 33:51.
·
Jerry Scholder finished behind Gadziala
in third place in 33 :51.
.
Matt Cole and
Dennis Goff finished in fifth and eleventh
places respectively in times of 34:59 and
35:17 in
a
field of 43 runners.
Other Marist finishers were Rich
Schenkewitz,
·
19th,
Dennis
Martin, 23rd,
Bill)'
Sweeney,
'
24th,
Joe. Burles~i, . 28t~,
Rich
·
Sohanchyk 33rd,
.
Junmy
Z1elinsk1,
37th, and Jim Cebula 4oth.
·
Coach Rich Stevens said the team ran
well. He said "we have a lot to be happy
about."
.
Paul Welsh, one of the top runners on the
Red Fox team missed the meet due to
illness. Stevens said, "I'm sure we would
have won if Welsh was there."
Stevens added "Gadziala ran super
again. Jerry (Scholder) also ran fine fine
·
and
is
showing improvement, espedally
on this tough course. Matt Cole ran really
super and closed the gap that seperated us
from other- runners."
Next ~eek the Running Red Foxes
varsity will compete against Holy Cross
·
University and Worchester Polytechnic
Institute in Massachusetts.
·
The J.V.
runners will race at Van Cortland Park
·
against Hunter College, Montclair
State
College, York College
·
and Brooklyn
College
·
.
·
·
·
Athletes of the week
The Giants, intramural fl~g football
champions, have been namt?d athletes
of the week.
·
·
The Giants defeated the Ace Heads
6-
0
in a game dominated by tough
defensive play by both squads.
The Giants lost only one game during
their schedule, that coming when they
were two men short.
Most of.the Giants played football for
Marist when the team was on the club
level. Dennis O'Neil was
.
backup
quarterback last year. Bob Daniele saw
considerable action last year as a wide
receiver.
Bob McAndrew and Chris Clarke both
started on the offensive line
·
during
their years on the club football squad.
Charlie Bender was a reserve run-
ning back last year.
Front row: ll·rl
)oe
Walsh, Ed BO\vers
."
·
·
'
·
·
.
·
Sitting:
T.J.
Moron~y. Chris Clarke, Dennis O'Neil,' B~b MeAndrew
B9:ck. row: Bo~ Daniele, Paul Miano, (mascot) Lava Lava Lenny, Charley Bender
M~smg: Kevm McCormack, Larry McCabe, John Mcinerny
·.
·


21.6.1
21.6.2
21.6.3
21.6.4
21.6.5
21.6.6
21.6.7
21.6.8