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The Circle, October 5, 1978.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 21 No. 5 - October 5, 1978

content

.
.
.
Inside:
.
'Streetcar' director ...
pg.
3 Edwin
·
Newman ...
pg.
5
THE
...
CIRCLE.
.
'
.
Y~I~e
21, Number 5
··
Marist College, Poughkeepsie,
New
York 12601
··.
October 5. 1978
i -
I
I
_.
·
Qorm
damage
·unfixed
1
. .
I
.
.
-
.

--
·
•·.·~
·
.
By
Terence
Moore
.
.
The majQrity of repairs not completed paid
.
for
.
by
.
students
_
"
were repaked.
·
.
.
..
include the replacement
;
sanding a~d
-
Howev~r, Janus said this apparently did
·
-Many
.
of ~ast year's residence hall
.
-
painting_ of doors
·
an~
.
X:9011!~ except m
.
not p~event ~me damages from going
damages,
,
paid
for
_
by
·
students, have not
·
Sheahan,
.
where
au.
rooms were
,
pamted,
-_
unnoticed.
_
·
·_
._·_
. ,
.
··
· .
_
.
_
·..
.
.
-:-
-
··
been repaired because.of vandalism and a
/
acc::ording
:
to
"
Janus_.·:
:"'"'."
~Y~~'_
-::_:
,_,;;/
_
_
.
.
_
Janus said he
.
is aware
_
of most of the
la~ of time
,:_'
ac¢
_
or~g
·
)o
,
:_Fr'ed-· Ja~us~
-,;
\,
qtp
,
eJ:
repa_irs rigt :~ozflplete~}:mcI~de_ a
' .
unrepaired daipages arid explained
:
the
.
mamtenance supervISOr .
.

.
.
·
.,
.
..
gla~
.
~gtit
.
fixtiµ-e
~
on th~
·
-
third
.
Jloor of larg~ workload
·
a~d short
-
amount of time
.. ·
-
Uncompleted repairs were estimated
·
at
·
Sheahan;
·
11;bathrooirl partiti9ri oh th!!
.
first ha:ve deterred m.aj.ntenance from com-
·
~
-
$1
;~44
Jor
:
,.,
CpaJ?l~gnat

·
-
and·
-
$2041,
\
.
for
·
..
floor' of. Cham.pa gnat and
.
unpaint_ed stu~y
--.
·
pleting the rr pafrs
,
He also said eight
-
men
.
.
Sheahan, representmg-31 and
J
9
.
perc~nt of
.
booths
.
m house
,
four of Chan1pagnat.
-
. ,
·
_-
m
.
J
.
fie mamtenance department are
the total
·
r«:pairs
:
t>a.id
'
for
_
by
;
stud~1_1ts
}
n
··
·
Jn ~ampagnat,3()doors w~cltrequired responsible for all the repairs

along
.
with
each
_
-
.
clornutory

respec_tlvely .
.
_
Est
_
lI!la~es
.
. ·
san~mg
_
were 11~t
,
and c~st res1
_
den~ $27
.
5~
_
.
the upkeep
_
of
.
all campus buildiligs except
.
were tabulated by the
~
Circle from housmg
.
a piece;
_
for
,
a totaL of
.
,
$825
;
Also
,
..
d~rs
·
Mccann.
_--
_.
.
·

.
·
_
.
.
_
figlir_es:
·
~he
-
perceriufge
.
of.
.
damag~s
j
1ot
\
11~ed
_
iJlg tci be
:
replaced:
,
or'iepainted whtch
.
-
·
.
JaJ!US said
he
originally hoped to repair

repaired m Leo Hall
.
were not ayaHable,
.
wer~
.
!lot; t~tal«:<I $725 m Ch~m~agnat;and
·
all-damages by Uie sixth
..
week·of school,
,
but
_
,!Ilost
·
of
••
·
L.e?'~
-
da.mag~
·_.•
hav~
·
been ~~~h~I!
~
~omb1ne_d, a~c.:ordmg
_
to
,
Circle
but
·
b
.
ecause the
.
ainowit
_
of repairs needed
e,
repa1red,
.
ac~ord1I_1gto
:
R~1d~nt Drr.ect~r
.
estimates
_
of_housmgJigures
.'.
:
..
_
_
.
_
became· too great, he
.
said the -repairs
.
•:--
Pat Lennaha!1. Ne~therGr.
_
egory nor.B~01L
_
·.
Ja1;m~ admitted_some
,
of !lie damage~
~~t_
would talce ~til the erid of the semester.
_
.
.

·
-
·
.
.
Houses were mcludedbecaµse no damages
·
·._

repairciL were
-.
either
_
mI~ed
••
by
·
·
mam-
:
.
Janus explamed day to day emergencies
··
.
·
One emmple of unrepalred
_
damages
.
·
wE?re_ re~o_rted
iil
_
<,regory, and Be~oit o!11Y
_
ten
_
ance or
.
no~ report~ by
_
the
·
housing take. priority
.
over
.
dan1ages
_
yet to
._
be
already paid for
by
students
Is
this
door
:
·
.
had m~1v1du11t room
.
~amages; ~
.
cc<mlin~
. :
~ffIC!e. The res1de1_1ce
·
d!-l"ectors
.
and Janus
-
·
repaired
~
''We
'l'e
.
working with
·
a tentative
;'.·~
.
.
SG~id,if
[i-t
.
·
.
.
.
·
.
.
toCratteBtbtnctti.iltii~·,i;;d·:su
p po
;1;··~~
5
1
1
: .
.
.
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·
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..
·
.. :_-

:
,
. ..
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_:.·
·
·
,
7::
.
·
··
..•
·
.
..
.
.
.
.
Firial Studebt
.
_
Government
-
'
allocations
'
:
,


<
By
Jim
Townse_gd
_
•.
.
.

_.
_-
.
i
~nd administ_rato!S,
,
br
;
Dr
:
A,J!tonio
,
P~re'L,
'
par:ties was
:
talcen
,
for;
;
~rariied
£
J'pis
;
y~r;
.•
.
: ..
fof
;
this
.-
seniester were
-
allotted Tueswiy
_
·
_.
.
":,
'·-
·:·
'
"
,
,
,
..
.
:-
·
-
;_ ...
-·•
.
_ ,
·
dean of
.
st11d1:11ts.
-
-
.
<
. ·,
<
:
·
.'
'"
<
f>_eyez
..::.
!
0
ld llll,SUsp!!CtlDg
;
~U~~n~
.
hO
_
US!Jlg
·
,.
- :
with
-'
$1
-,
875
'
nit!re
·
goµig
·
to
:.
C!lmpus
'.
clubs
:: ;
Th~ ~ead of a new comrrutt~ f~nned
_
to
;
._
:
/
The C!)rnn:uttee
~
·to
.
meet Oct. 12 to e~ployees
~~t
.
_
one
.
:
of
'
the
:
f1tst
:
t,()
dor
-,
·
·
and
.
,·•
organizations;
:
·
accorcling . to
.
John
_
"
deal ~th
,
the
'
col~e~e ~l~ohol p_o\1cy
.
says
. --·
dIScuss its goals
..
w1~ l'erez,
.
who
_
say~
he
:
m1tgry
.
g!itheru:igs
_
would be
-
dry
.
·
.,- .,
_
.
'
Leacy, chairpl
_
an of the I<'inancialBoard. .she will advocate d,Iinkmg bans~tcarnpus
·
wa~ts
_
to
.
alter Manst's ~eputation as
-
a
..
Followmg obJections
.
from the students,
~ry
·
sa_1d alk ~l
.
l}bs who
,
,
a~plied social eventsfollowing the
.
upcoming
dry
-
"dri.'lkm
_
g school/'. she
.
said..
.
.
.
. .
.
.
_
1t was ~greed t~at alcohol.could be served
_
.
re~eived
_
an mcrease;
_
with the exceptio!t of dormitory~sponsored Hallow~n
·
parties,
·
,
·
_

Interviewed Tuesda~, GentUe said Per~
.
. ·
at pa
rtzes
_
t~e f1r5.t ~~ek or school, but the
.
.
·
the
_
cheerleaders.
_
Alt other
·
,
allocations
·
the first in memory .
.
· .
wants the group to des1gnate
.
non--alcohohc Halloween fest1v1ties would be non-
stayed the sa~e,_he said.

.
·
'
·
Kathy Gentile,
8
graduate intern,
-
was
·._
activities at the house parties during the alcoholic.
.
. :-
.
_
.
_
.
·
·
Smaller_ organizat!ons appea~e~ ~o ha~e named
_
chairperson
'
of Jhe .12-member
.
Hallciwe·en \Veekend.
_
.
._.
.
_
_ ·
Gen~ile
_
said she
:
would suggest the
·
·
Illore ach1ev,e~ents and orgai;uzation this group, which includes students,
.
faculty
·
·
.
I~ past years, the use of hquor at the
.
committee gC> further than ac;_ting on the
year tha'n last year, and therefore
--
took
.
· .
·
··
·
·
·
..
·
.. _
Halloween e~ents and deal
'
with other
-
some mon_ey
'
away from
'
the_ larger
'-
~
d
·' .
i ·
. '
',
-
-
_
t
-
cl
.
'
n
·
'
!
events. She said
_
she couldn't elaborate
organizations, he added.
.
..
_
·
--
an a ,sm
.
·a e
QaA#
.
because the group doesn't know what its
:
'nlis year's allocations include the Cil:cle

.
·
1
.
tnr
J
objectives will be.
·
·
.;
--
$7
;
000,
·
the Marist
.
College
:
Council on
.
,_

.
1
__
.
.
·
On
the committee are: Gentile, who
_
is
'
a
Theatrical
Arts
·
:
·
$6,800,
;:
Marist
.
College
·
ByMarlal;Ule
Beyer

representative of ,Perez'
.
and a non-voting
"
·
Radio
.
;
:
.•-
$3
;
000,
:
Jntra.imirals
'
:
~
:
--
$1,800,
piece. Also,
a
shower
·
head
was
.
ripped member; Linda

Dickerson;
_
the college
·
StuderifGQvemnient
}
,
$1
;
500; the Literary
-
Vandalism
~
stiU
occurs
on
the Marist from a Leo fµth
-
floor
_
bathrooin
_
_
wall, coor~inator
_
of
.
public information; Kathy
'C
Clut:>
-
~i
$1,59()
;
the Varsity
:
Club
>
-
$700;
'
the campus;
.
but during the
'
first month of
which
resulted m the flooding of two rooms
'
O'Neill, an admissions
'
counselor; Fred
,
Gommuter Union' - $500, the Blacl(Student
·
.
school it has
been
"much Jess than
·
last and the rµiriing
of
a rug.
·
·
·
Gainer, a housing administrator; Dr.
~-,
,
:
Union
:
and the Psychology
·
Club
·
:-
$400~
a
year,'? _
according
·
to ·Fred
··
Janus,-
.
main.:
·
.
_
Ten

letters have· .
beeri taken
··
off the Jeptha Lanning and John G. White, faculty
.
·
.
piece
/
the Spanish ·Club
7
$350,
.
the Ad- ··tenarice supervisor. .
_
_outsid~ campus center Champagiiat Hall representatives;
anq.
Dolly Bodick, ac-
·,
·
·
,
yert~g
:
Club .,, $325, the Ch~rleaders,
_
..
Although
-
Janus
·
said its too
early
to sign. Each letter
will
~ost betwe~n $15 and tivities administrator.
_
.
_
: .
.
_
·
.
Sigma
/
Phi
·
'
Epsil9n
.
and
.
OASO
·
·
-
·
$250
·
a
determine dormitory
·
roo~ damages; he
_
.
$20 to replace _according
'
to Janus.
·
.
: -
··
· · Student
_
members
_
include
Lan-y
Mc-
.
·
·
piece
/
an<i
>
the
:
Student ·
-
Academic
·
com:.
said vandalism
-
in
;
public areas·such
--
.
as
·
pespite
_
the recent da~ge, ~anus
:
said Ca~e,
·
ll
_
resident coordinator; Lisa
mi~~,.
~2:>.-
9tl_ler all~tfo~s include the
·
lo~ges;
~
stairwells and hallways has
,
been
?
hir"dpes not forsee:th~
.
aJnount of
:
darriag~
-::'
Gi~oscoli,
·
a
_
·
student
-
CUB
~
repr~en-
Gaellc
.
Soc1ety
-
-
-
$200;
.
the
'
Karate
',
Club
'
-
mirum
_
at
_
-
.
,
.
_
-.:·
::
->,
·_.c:..
_
·
that:was
_
qone_la~y~rtooc~urthisyear.
-
..
tat1~e; Karen Muckenfuss, ~
-
.
,
resident
.
$175
;
·
Sigma.Zeta
.
.: $125;
:
and the Fristiee
· •
Janusdted this month's damages as Leo
. ·
·
,
Pat.
-
Lenpahan, res1d~t director of: Leo
_
adV1SOr; John Hughes
;
who Gentile said
-
Club
-'
$50
:
·
·.
· · . ·_:
._ .
_
.
.
.
·
·
,

·
Hallthird'floor\vall which
;
was replastered
·
Hall
;
supportedJanusandsaidmuch more will represent commuters;
-
~d
.
Paul
.
An
:-
ipcr~a_se
·
of
$2,spD
:
fo
_
r adclition~f
:__
thr~e times
.
aft~. tmirks
)
,:ere le~
:
in th~
:
l
va~dalism
~a~
been ~one by~ tim
_
el
_
~
_
Reeves, a
_
resident.
·.
.
.
·
.
• .
.
allocations
,
is
.
due
·.·
by
;
November,
,
said
;.
fresh pl~ster;
:
an4
four
_
broken ffi!1dOlW,

Ye:aJ:'.
_
He said ~here
IS
a ~efwte change.
·.
·
The memb_ers
:
volunt~red to Jom_after
Leary.
-
.
·
·
·-
·
·
·
·
1
·
~ · : " .
·
· ·
. ·
one
in
ChampagnatHan
·
and three m
:
Leo;
··:,,_
thisy~!", but add
_
ed h~
_
d1d n9t know
,
_
why
-
Per~,made 1t~OW!l ~the was forming
··
.
.
-·.•
Janus said the windows cost $50 or more
·-
a
··'
thechange
.
occUITed ..
:
.
·
:
.
-

·
· ·
·
the group,·Gentile said.
- .
·
--:
,
r
-
~
-
:~·
.. ,
,

. _
,
. .
·~~·
,
.
···
,
·
•·
:
.
·
.
·

-
,
.
,
..
,.

,
;
:
.
·./:
.
.
_
~
MAI>.ISCJN
>
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:'
~
As
the
j
oga
.

_
While
,
lll(!S
_
t
·:
s~udents
~
~ore
..
passed-:bY: revealing a Jofof leg
·
_
nothing but
~oosebumps
~s they",
\
:-:-
party
_
c~aze
.
continuecl to
;;
sweep
_.
standard
_
!.~t~ she~t~ there
.
v,,er~ ben~th her ~ee~
.
·
: ::· ·.
.
_
_
_
i
danced fr~ntically
ts,
ward off
40-
· ·
_
.:~
the_ nat_1on 's

.
camp1:1ses,
;;
_
10,000
:
.
m~y:, s_tn~ or
,
-
pnnted t~ga
_
s,
\
:.P.r:1z~s
•.
,we.re a warded
·
-

.
~or d
.
egree
:
!ernperatures;
__
·
-
-
.
--.
·· _
-
-
·
:· .
Umversity
.
ofWisconsm
:
studerits
'.
there
_-
were

even
~
a
i
fel\'.
_
J.1Ackey
_
wmnersofthetoga
.
fashion
_
show
-
:
_,.:
'J,'ogas
.
could be seen anywhere
.
,:
'
-.
wearing bedsheets
·_
g~~he
·
r~d
..
Mouse
,
togas
,:
a :£ew
.
Jigerskin
:;
and
:
a-~?ga ~nee called
'
'
.
'
.
The
.
!Jl
·
~e to~ that ni~t as the
.
· ·
>
"
·
.
.
undei:: a huge tent Saturday for an
-,
. togas
/:
on
_
e toga o~ sat~· ~eets
-::
.Wonn "
.
m which dance~
.
would young peQpl~ ~
.
lked,3ogged and
·:" '
·
.
·
./
e_vening of beer; food;·
Iliusic
;
arid
, :
and
(
sever~l : g~s
:,
wea,ring
:
littl~
/:'
t~ble.Qq .the flood
in
:
spami<><ti,c .• -

rode· everyt
_
hing from
::
l>icycl~ to
:
.
':,~
_-
,•
.
;
,
·
.
.. ;,,
_
_
:
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·
·

·
·
·
:_:
__
·_

_
•···
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.
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a
·
P.~~s:report
,'
sai<l;
,.;:_.
tog~~
'
~at---~ppea
_
~
:
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~~
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.
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f~~!
:·i
~iz~re,-;
>.:
\
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-
'it::.
·
·
_
_
·
·,'.
;
,:~ateb~
-
~
:
·
~~
:
an~
:t
fl:o_rn .. '_~e.
_
-
·
_
_
.
..
Jnspir~d
,:
.
,
by
,
. ihe
·.~.
· c9l_lege,
,
_
,
fr9m
,
pillq~~ses.
;-:,:-:-:
,:'-,
..
-
•:
-
.
"
·
A>ile
_
~'\ld~t s
_
att~ptto entice
_party.
:
.
.
.
:
__
··
.
_,,.
,
.: ·
·
_
.
.
..
.
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·
a
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little
interest.
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·
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I·•
;
Page2
THE CIRCLE
Weekend Happenings
-----
-
--
-
--
-
----------
October S, 1978
Inquiring
Photographer
Question: Would
you
be
wDlJng
to
CUB & ALUMNI Homecoming Weekend LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
.
support the
Yearbook?
·
·
Announcing
The Third Dutchess County CROP walk
for Hwiger will be held Sunday, at .the
Jewish Community Center, 110 South
Grand Ave., Poughkeepsie, between 12:30
and 1:30 p.m. The walk will be held within
the City of Poughkeepsie, rain or shine.
F.or further in£~ation contact Stewart
Smith,
226-5484:
-
'
_
·
The Family
·
Educational ~ights and
Privacy Act of 1974 specifically provides
that a school may safely provide what is
termed "directory information," - such
personal facts
·
as ~ame, address,
telephone number, etc. to third· parties
without fear of having its federal funds
wit~drawn. The institution providing such
directory information is required to give
public
notice
of the information it plans to
make available to the general public and
Fri. -
8:00 p.m. - Fireside Lounge -
In-
formal Reunion
·
Classes
'63, 68'
'73 -
Bonfire
&
Pep Rally.
Sat. -
10:46 a.m.
Alumni
Crew Race :.
Riverfront.
-

1_1:00
a.m. Soccer -
Marist
vs. Kings
Point College.
·
12:30 a.m. Tailgate Picnics
2:15 p.m. Football game -
1
Marist
vs.
Brooklyn College
·
8:00 p.m. Dinner Dance'" Campus Center
·
Sun. 11:00
a.m. Cross Country
Race -
·
Alumni
-
·
·
·
·
.
OLD
·
COAT CABERET, 51 Market
Street,
Poughkeepsie, 452--9290-
Fri.
Singer
Rudy Robertson; Sat. - Singer Roy
Atikenson.
.
LAST
CHANCE
Main
Mall,
Poughkeepsie, 452--1862 -
Fri.
&
Sat. -
.
Last
Chance Jazz Band, Sun. - Sound Creation.
Admission
$2.00.
·
GOOD TIMES CAFE,
33
Academy
Street, Poughkeepsie. 452--9290. Fri. - Sat .•
White Tiger; Sun. - Ladies Night - Jesse
Bolt
.c ·
.
-
·
-
.
. ·
·
EASY STREET,
Route 9, Hyde Park,
229-7969. Fri. -
Sat. -
Easy
·
Street Band.
Admission $1.00.
-
12:00 a.m.
·
Brunch.
&
Entertainment
.
-
MOVIES
Ratskeller
.
12:30 a.m; Third Dutchess County Crop
'
The Good Bye Girl, Dutchess Cinema,·
Walk for.
:
1:1Ut!ge,;-<-'
.
1ield
-
at
·
the Je\Vish
·
Dutchess Shopping Plaza, Route 9, 471.I
Comm~ity ~enter,
.uo
South
'
Gr~nd
'.
A.ve., 1440: Time 7 :05
&
10 p.m. on Fri.
&
Sat.
Poughkee1>sie. For information contact
chairman Stewart
-
Smart.
·
Phone 914-226-
5484.
-
Black Pearl
&
War
.
of
the Worlds
&
Horror
of
Dracula,
Roosevelt Theatre
'
Hyde Park,
I_«'.
9,
22.9.2000.

.
_ .
·

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.
should not be released. Manst will release
f
i
ft
·
·
at various times the following information
__ .
·
il~~r:i~
_
=
_
-
1
J;b:~~£:
aimind tor expallsion
ma1or field of study, participation
m
of-
.
·
· ·
-
6
·
·
·
-
.
ficially recognized activities
··
and
.
sports,
-
·
--
·
·
weight and height of members of athletic
By Lina
Cirigliano
Bulloke will talk on the Bakke reverse
teams, dates of attendance, degrees and
-
.
·
·
.
'
.
.
discrimination case. Both are at
8
p.m'-. in
.
awards received arid the most recent
.
The Black Student Union is not only a the fireside lounge.
·
previous educational
-
institution attended cI1;1b_ for ~lack stude~ts, according to Eddie
.
Also,
'Yilliams said BSU is sp9nsoring a
by the student.
·
·
.
Williams;
BSU
president.
"A
lot of people
.
kiddy Halloween party on Oct. 31, from
4
to
Students must notify the Office of the think that BSU is just for black students,"
6
p.m. in the fireside lounge. Children from
Registrar in writing should they not want said Williams, "but it's not. Anybody can the Marist Llttle Peopll:! program and town
information made available. For
_
purposes
be
a member."

.
.
.
of Poughkeepsie schools are invited, ac-
of implementing this procedure, the
Williams said BSUwas forined to meet cording to Williams.
.
.
_
·
Coll~ge'Yill~llow
.
t~rty
_,
daysfrom date of
_theneeds
ofthe black ~udents afMarist.
_·_
A
50-50'
raffle during
:'
the St. Peter's
-
t~:t:t~~n~~c~~:~~i:~~w,;:tTu1
:
JiiW£f:hlt~ftii~i~~~m-~e~~trsl~J~
,"
~~Jlo\~a~w~{}
)
~~t~i~
-
:~si'ln~f
campus for students to respond.
;A'form'.
this;
~U
.is considering changing
'
tile.if
'
sale for the raffle, said Williams.
has been developed and can
:
be obtained natn~;
·
·
According to Williams,
·
·
"the'
·
·
The BSU received a $250
:
allocation from
from the Office of the Registrar.
·
At the students
will
notbei1nmediately
-
turned student government
·
which Williams
beginning of ea ch semester, the notice
will
·
off, and think
.
the
.
club is only
,
for blacks,
·
claimed
is
almost impossible to work with.
be placecl.
iri
the
_
Circle. Students may alter more people will join!'
·
/
-
·
· .
·
.
.. _
·
.
He l[laid the club met with the financial
or file at any time during noi:malworking
·
_
The BSU has 35 members. Williams said board
to
request
a:
larger allocation. As
hours.
- - - - - - - ' - -
they have planned numerous functions and
·
.
yet,
BSU
has no office, but are trying to get
·
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 - o~
servers in secondary schools during
.
Spring 1979 and
·
will establish their
eligibility for student teaching in their
senior year.
·
·
·
Further information and applications
are available at the Teacher Education
Office, Room 168, Donnelly.
.
Marist. Jaycees
will
sponsor a . foul
shooting contest, Wednesday, Oct._ ll, 7-
to
10 p.m. at Mccann Center. Trophies to be
awarded.
·
.
T .J. Pizzeria
Pizza:
Sicilian.
'
Regular
·with
extras
Hot
_
and Cold
-
-
Sandwiches
-
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
We
deliver-Tues •
.
FREE
-
·
Hours: 4
_
-p.m.-12 p.m .
.
595 Main St.,
Poughkeepsie
.
471;.1
.
131

events for this semester .
.
Two guest one, according to Williams.
·
speakers from the city of Poughkeepsie
Williams said he hopes for more par-
will appear at Marist. On Oct. 9, Victor ticipation from both black and non black ·
Morris will speak on the decline of the students. "It's never too late to join and be
black newspaper, and on Oct. ·15 James active," he said,"everyone is welcome."
Reynard staff to begin
f3tef ul
.
drive for orders
,
);ly
V alerle Polerl
Monday. to get the orders. In
a
meeting this
.
·
.
_
week with administrators, the club's
$7,840
There
will
be
no
Rernard yearboo~ _this
,
budget deficit, incurred during
.
the past
year unless nearlY:400 orders are obtiun~
-
nine years, was cited
_
and it was agreed

by N~v
-,
1,
a~orcpng to ~arth~ Trabulsi,
·
that this year's edition should not add to it,
co.ooitor._
.
:
-
.
~
.
·
.
Trabulsi said.
·
·
-
·
, ·
.
She said the club
wilJ.
begin a drive
Meanwhile/in
an
effort to fill
in
the
budget
·
gap, alumni have beenoffered the
,
opportunity to
-
buy
past
Reynards
.
from
between
1969
to
1978
at a cost of
$10
each. -
The books, stockpiled inside
-
the club's
campus
center
office,
will
be offered for
- ~ - 111
sale during this week~d's Homecoming
.
·
_
W
_
elcome Back
activities. She added; about
26
inquiries
have been made by alumni.
,
,
·
Al

According to Antonio
_
Perez, . dean of
·
Ufflnl
students, the
-price
was
set by himself,
½
:
prfce
drinks
..
$at-al
l"afternoora
-.
Last
Chance
·
Jazz
Band
·
Fri~ay
&
Sat~rday
,
nights
.
Reynard co.ooitor Jony Mairo, and an
officialfrom the .Alumni Office. He said he
did not think the price of the old books was
extravagant.
.
...
.
Trabulsl said
·
the cost of this year's
books
will
be
$15
;
The club plans to order
~-
·
perez
:
said
600,
were ordered last year
with about
200
still unsold. Last year's
staff inGtirre<i a deQt of $1,743,
.
butthat was
offset"by the payment of
$1,400
left from
'
the Student Government's budget, Pera
said; :.
,'- .
.
·
.
_
· .
.
>
. ·•
,___
·
..
-
·
_
Trabulsi said the
.
club
will
take orders in
the·
_
cafeteria
and
probably Donnelly Hall,
with students receiving a bill mcludectin
·
"
their springJuition
·
assessment.
.
-
.
;
:'
Trabulsi
-
said
;
the
'.
newly.:cteated
Ad-
~
-
4
·--
s
·
.
2:
_
·

.
1-862
_
.
-_
·
v,ertising
Club ha.~
<>ff~ed
!9
;
Be1,l
spa~
_
afl~
market
!'1e
book.
;;·_
,
:
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....



111111111111111
·
,
PaulCeonzo,
senior, "Yes.
I
felt
last year's was a success.
I
feel
every
·
school should have one. It's
a
memory.of your four years here. In

other words it's · very important._"
Bill Losardo,
senior,
"I
would
definitely support it. I think
·
·
the
yearbook is essential to us now
·
and
later in life. It's always good to
reminisce about one of the best four
years of your
·
life, botli socially and
academically."
..i




















































































October S, 1978
THE CIRCLE
Page3
'Streetcar'
mentor recalls past
"
·-
;
By
Jane
Neighbors
.
"Girls
wanted - actresses for Marist
College productions" read the ad
placed
in
local papers
in
the early 1960s
when Marist was an all-male school by
Marist
·
College
Theatre
Guild
originator, Jim Britt. "We were
inundated with females" says the
.
director of next month's production of
Tennessee William's Streetcar Named
Desire,· of the response to the ad, and
added many eventually married the
Marist students they worked with.
_
Recalling the early days of the Marist
Theatre Guild, now the Marist College
Council on Theatrical Arts (~CCTA),
.
Britt
says the club "had absolutely no
·
money" and
.
once made footlights by
dipping Eghtbulbs
in
coloring, only to
see it bum off :lurit?g
_
the show.
MCCTA
-
.was founded
by
Britt in 1960
\
when he was drama coach and in-
strudor of English at Marist and it was
·
the firstextracurricular activity for lay
students. Faculty cutbacks in 1973
_
forced Britt.to leave Marist and he said
~
·-
"there was a job waiting for me as a
_
drama therapist" at the
.
Hudson River
Psychiatric Center, where he had done
volunteer work.
Britt, nnv head recreationai
therapist at Hudson River Psychiatric
Center says he uses "creative
dramatics" and has had success
in
&'using the imaginative stimulus to get
natural responses .. from patients.
QuittiJ!g
high
sci
:
ool
-
d1
1
ring
WWII
to
join the navy,
·
Britt said n.e earned
his
·
high school diploma
hy
taking the
equivalency exam "with no study at all.
·
I got my education
in
libraries and
drugstores,., where Britt said he hung
out with other actresses and actors.
"We talked over coffee and 'Oh Henry'
bars
because that's
all
we could afford.
You meet a lot of people in drugstores,"
says Britt, "and every person is a living
book."
,
_
·
A heart attack in
1969
did not deter
Britt from receiving his Batjlelor of
Arts degree from Marist in 1971. "I did
my course work at Home," says Britt of
that time. "It was delivered to me
in
brown envelopes."
.
-
Britt, who considers theatre an ex-
tension of the classroom, wanted to be
in theatre since age
9;
when a skit in
parochial school made
his
friends laugh
and "I liked
that,"
he says.
Trying out unsu~essfully for the
Brooklyn Dodgers after
WWII,
Britt
landed
an
electrician's job where he
performed comedy acts during lunch
hour for the.other employees. He later
.
quit the job to study drama.
·
Britt,
who
say~ his acting career
-
has
ranged from "doughnut commercials
to diving off a forty foot
board in
a
clown act and acting in fund raising
groups," landed his
first
role in a show
that closed before reaching Broadway.
"I did
just
about anything that would
give me
an
audience," says Britt, "I did
a lot of things for nothing."
Later, Britt directed summer stock in
Connecticut and also worked with the
Archdiocese
'
of Newark, N.J. as
assistant director ot radio and TV,
doing public service shows which he
calls "the origins" of Channel 13.
"I am a very disciplined person in the
theatre,"
.
says Britt who was
"delighted to be asked" to return to
Marist aft~r a five year absence. He
says he "enjoys the verve, the tone and
excitement of these young people. The
John
Britt
joy of it is to see them come to know a
little more about themselves and about
life. Whatever they take from me I
certainly take something from the~,"
he says.
Project director discusses prisoner problems
By Dianna
Jones
the psycI:iology club.
_
.
end up
back
in jail, he said. They cannot
.
.
Jail is a place of punishment whic!J- can cope with the outside world because of the
Time spent
·
in jail is time lost from life, be compared to being given the death negative impact jail has had on them.
-
said Charles
Rich,
director of Project penalty for a certain part of your life, said
Society's attitude towards inmates
is
to
Gateway, a project involved
.
in assisting Rich.
"It
is a chunk of life that has been "lock them up and throw away the key,"
inmates in education
·
and employment; taken ~way that can never be reclaimed," said Rich.
This is because the inmate is
-
locked away he
,
said. The timelost has a psychological
When prisoners are released from jail it
.
from the outside world, he said.
impact on a person.
is difficult for them to get a job, because
of
"With · a nwnber of inmates on the
Slides showing the lack of
_
comfort,
_
a criminal record and
.
sometimes poor
Marist campus, it is important that they be privacy and freedom in a prison cell, were working history, said Rich.
"It
is
difficult
treated as brother and sist
_
er students presented by Rich.
_
to convince an employer the offender
will'
rather than ex-offenders. They have a lot
"Prison is
a
different kind of life; it is a
·
do him good," he said.
to contribute as students," said Rich, after
·
negative experience,'' said Rich. Fifty to
· ·
The iruqate usually has problems he
a lecture Friday afternoonsponsored by
_
seventy-five percent of inmates released must deal with. said Rich. "He has to
straighten up and take responsibility for
his own life,'' he said.
It
is very difficult for
·
an inmate to
change in
.
prison because of the negative
atmosphere
.
According to
Rich,
an in-
mate's concern
is
not how to change, but
how to get out. "Anyone who is in prison
wants to get out," said Rich. Some even
resort to claiming madness or choosing
mental hospitals over ptison, he added.
Most of a prison's income is used for
security, to keep inmates separated from
the outside world, said
'
Rich
.
.
.
-
;=


_
·.·
·
-
-
.
.
"
.
-
~
:
_,
:"-~·
-
:
-
:
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.
·
-
;,
._
.
:
·

:
·
·
:_
; __
r
,
- .·
-
-
The
,
·
HOURS
MON-SAT
9:30AM-5:30PM
,
THURSDAY ·LATE NIGl;IT
471-4383·
17SOVTHHAMII.TONST.
POUGHKEEPSIE
t
1
/2 81.0CK
-
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i
\
j
).
i
.
'
Page4
THE CIRCLE
THE
CIRCLE
The Circle is the weekly
.
neW$paper of the students Of Maris! College and is published weekly during the school year exclusivq
ot vacation periods by the Southern Dutchess News Agency, Wappingers. N. Y.
·
Beth Weaver
editors
Dave Potter
October S, 1978
LETTERS
All lottors must
be
typed triple •P<J<o with o 60 space ;.,<1r9in, and submitted ta the Circle
office no later rhan 6 p.m. Monday. Short sett•rs ore preferred. We resen1e the right to edit
all letters. Letters mu,t
be
signed. but names may
be
~ithhetd upon request. Letters will
be
published depending upon ovoilabiHty o space.
·
Lark Landon
associate editor
gain in the
-
long run.
·
Pride.
Pat Larkin
sports editors
Ken Healy
So
CI
ose
Student support. And an ahnost
Dave
Shaw ·
photography editor
assured upward movement in the
.
Tom Burke
. business m
_
anager
"' th Edito
st
·
t
·
anking
G
Co
11
.a.o
e
rs:
.
·
a e r
s.
.
.
eorge
nne
Y
advertisingmanager
"&?++?&?!++?!&"sort of
Wewouldliketopubliclylhank
Rob Ryan
distribution manager
sums up how we felt leaving the
.
the Marlst College Soccer Team
h
soccer field today. (Wednesday
9-
~d its staff for
90
minutes of
P
otographers: Gen-y McNulty, Tom Ball, Tom Burke.
Zl)
•.
after the Marist_ College pure soccer excitement.
.
Staff: Clare Amico, Marianne Beyer, Paul Ceonzo, Lina Cirigliano, Chris Curren,
Soccer Team came
so
close.....
They truly deserve all the
Chris Egan, Joe Emmets, Chris Hogan, Maureen Jennings, Dianna· Jones, Terry
The feeling is one of those that praise and applause given thelh:
Moore, Patti Morrison, Jane Neighbors,
.
Valerie Poleri, Dave Powers, Don Purdy,
comes from deep
·
inside. It
·
·
·
·
·
·
Sincerely,
Brian Rogers, Rich
.
Sohanchyk, Leslie Sharp, Susan Squicciarini, Roy Stuts, Jim
wrenches the stomach
·
and ties it
David Metz
Townsend, John Mayer, Loretta Kennedy.

in knots.
.
.
.
.
.
Dennis
.
Goff·
- - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - . . . . ; ; , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
·
For
90
minutes, the Marist
KathyCleary
Kickers played their
.
hearts out.
.
Maureen Doolan
And it showed. They totally
Jim Lemakes
dominated play;
~
They took the
.
Rose ~agano
..
play to Oneonta. Oneonta knew it.
.
Debi Y:oung
They' were frustrated.
.
·
0
Gtegc,ryBltim
·
Marlst's defense was ''tough as
Linda Boscardin
naBs." An:d the . · Goalkeeoei:
Donria
Laypod
came up with some key saves and
Deirdre ~owell
.
punted the Hfe out of the ball.
_
The
Barry Jamison
..
offense was executing with crisp
Bill DeWinne
·
~
Pay now
.
.
'
repaired
·
when?
.
Last semester, as a result of dormitory van-
formed, and which possibly will not be com-
dalism and damages, students were charge().
pleted until the end of
:
the semester. The
as a group for repairs needed for their wing,
college should have taken into consideration
floor or house. However, after five weeks into
the magnitude of the problem before it
the n~w semester, many of the slated repairs
·
assessed
damage
_
payments to students.
·
have not been completed.
The problem is multiplie
·
d when, under the
·
passes that
.
were
..
clicking .
.
The
Joe O'Neill
-
only thing that eluded them was
_
-
,.
·
MarkForlan
.
.
Fred Janus, maintenance supervisor, ex-
.
proced
_
ure o~~"comn:ion
_
damage"
-
assessmen-
plained
·
the unfinished repairs were
•·
due
·
to
·

.
their I~rge nuniher and the small amount of
time maintenance had' to correct ihem. He
also said his department had only ·eight men
Editorials
the
_
"magic" goal. But then~
_
· -
Gerry Mayerhofer
Orieonta's
is
hardly
,
a
.
slouch

· ·
_
. -
Joe Caim
defense.
.
.
.
.
-
.
._
.
.
.
·
-
--
Keri
Sullivan
.
Mllrist lost, 1--0.
·
But only on the
-
Kathy Grady
..
scoreboard. We feelthat they will
-
·
·
·
'
Dori Ball
io pe~form repairs for the entire campus, ex-
cluding the McCann Center.
ts, many students are ch;trged for damages
.
.
they are D<>t responsible for; and now must
C
. .
..
.
Mr.-Healy was
IllY
oWn !-!)tensity
Though the Circle can sympl!thize with tl!
.
e
maintenance department's
,
problemst we can-
,i
.
ot support the charging of students
_
for
reriairs which
as
yet have not been
c:om-
pleted. Marist stttdents should not have tQ
pay for repair work which has
·.
not been per•
.
pay for repairs
.
which have
-
not been com~

rowdimport~nt
:
asto my involvement with
~
the
pleted .
.
_
· . .
. .·
·
- ·
.
_
ac,tion of the
·
game. I'm oftei1 riot
If h
..
11
· ·· ·
.
·
·
1
·
To the Editors:

aware ofthe
·
crowd but definitely
.

t
e
!!O
ege can
·
not co~p ete services on
.
.
The article
·
by
·
Ken Healey
.
in n(jt
11
nappreciative of
,,·
their
.
time
..
which students
:
ha
·
ve paid for, then
-
the September
:
28th
.
Ci.rel~
_
w~s
,
pre~e11ce<fhis was esped!iµY
·
s_o
dearlya new system for the payment of dor-
-
--
appreciated
·
by
·
mySE!lf and the
·
dlll'lJlg the
_
Oneo11ta
,
g~~e.
_.-
tm
-
rnitory da_mages_!s necessary.
·
.
.
team. However;
.
I do riot-think
.
I
..
SUn!
;
the
...
crowd
.
appreciated
.
an
said
"I
really don't care about the
excellent
game.
·
I
Jmow
we
were
crowd." lii'fact, I said the-crowd
:
very
i
thankful'for their support;

was
important and: appz:e~iatei:L
·
. .
.
. . ...
·;
sincerely,
Wl)atI
-:
~strying,to imp.fess ori
_
.
Dr.Howard'(¼oldman
·,
.
·
·.:··- .
.,.
,.:.-:
· ·
.
_
,:
.
:
.
., :
· .·
·
.
r\:
· :,
~
·
:.
·
:.-
~
-
::
-<
.:·
:
-
~
-
-

:·:
'.
.-
::.:

-
.
·
.
·
··:
-• .
•,
.
.....
.
.
' ..

-
.~
._:!;
- ',.
.
¥earboo
,
k
neetls
"
yOu~,"s:uQport
·
·
'
.
.
"':.
.
-
~
~
.
~
,
.
There will he no yearbook this.year unless
longer afford, and rtine y;ais is a long time to
400
orders are placed with its editors
.
by
N~~:
.
,vait for payment.
-:-.
The

administration's
I.
Unless
400
orders are placed,
.
the
· .
:
ultimatum of
400
books ordert:d by Nov.
"f
is
hrraduating class of
1979
will be thefirst class

understandable.
<
••
·
. . ·
·
·
in
18
years not to Jiave a yearbook for its last

-
.
However,

ifis t
_
his
.
year's
"
edito~s whoniust
year at Marist. Unless
400
orders are placed
·
~ry
'
to
·
rectify
the
.
mistakes
.
of
their
within the month, the Reynard, Marisi.
·
predecessors and we
.
sincerely wish to en-.
College's yearbo~k;
·
will ceas~ to exist.
.
·.
.
.
courage them in this endeavor; One month is
The mismanagement and overordering by
not
a
long time to correcCthe
_
errors of the
previous Reynard
,
editor:s
..
has. caused a
past nine years. J:>lea~e support them.·
$7,840
defibit w_hich
·
the coUege_. can no
,
ViewjJOint------------3-


.
;>
·
·
.
~
·
...
i
_Aghostic
or
Searching Believer
In college we can often discover, with pain and
,
.
.
timent fulfills a creative function. Because it has
fnistration, that a mature religious man is very
a wiifying_ power, it brings together
.
the many
close to the agnostic, and often we have difficulty
·
isolated realities of life and casts them into one
-
·
in deciding which name
_
better expresses our .
meaningful whole. The thousand disconnected
·
·
state of mind: agn~tic or searching believer.
.
piece$ fall together and show
a
pattern which we
:
'
One
_aspect
o~ adulthood which has
.
special
co~dn't
.
see before.
In
-
a unifying perspective,
significance for our religious attitude is that the
then; the many
.
facets of life prove to belong
mature adulfmind is characterized by a unifying
..
.
together and point in a definite direction.
This
is
philosophy of life.
If
we could look at our daily
·
what we refer to
if
we say that
a
mature religion
life from above, we might wonder what we are so
'
.
:
giyes meaning to life, gives direction, reveals a
busy for, so excited about, so
.
concerned with:
goal and creates a task to be accomplished:'
It
We might ask with Alfie, '.'After all, what
is
if
·
·
can make us-leave job; country and family to
all about?" And
if
there
is
no
·
real answerto this
_
dedicate our Ufe. to the suffering poor.
-
·
.
.
·
question; the-niost
.
honest
·
reaction
··
might
.
·
be
_
• ·
:•
.This new perspective is what we can call faith.
boredom. Many people who no longer see. the
·
It does not Create new
:
things bufit adds a new
meaning"oflife, the meaning of their daily, often
·
:
dimen~ion to the basic
-
re~liti~s of life;
It
brings
--
utterly diill activities, feel bored.
.
-

.
our fragmented personality
__
mto a meaningful
If
we a
·
sk ourselves
-
what boredom really
..
wh<>le~
unifies
our divided self.
It
is the source
'
of
..
This year,
.
as
th~
-
Soccer team

.
.
is,)'ve
too
are off to
a
good start .
.

We
.
are
;
8 and
2
:
so
far on the
·
·
To
the Editors:
;
..
·
·
·
..
·
.
·

·
-
·
.
. ·.
.
·
regular season
·
arid placed first in
.
.
We would like to
.
point out that
·
the
_
prestigious
.
. S.M:U.
in~
although the Marist Soccer
Team
..
vit1:ltional for,the first
;
tune;
.

·
,
has been
:
a
•·
very_
:
_ successful
·
·
:
Not
too
·
many' people realize
organization oyer µie pa~ y¢ars,
c
that
.
Marist
.
College
·
has
a
first-
as you stated
m
the last lSSUe of
.
rate
cross~country
_
team:
the
'.
Circle, the Cross.COU!'ltry
-'
Perhaps this is because of. the
team
·
has been equally
.
sue- poor coverage we are given by
.
cessful. Over the past four years
-
the Circle.
·
\
we have compiled a record of 65
,
,
_
_
,
.;
Matt Cole
~-
wins
and 10 losses, and nave been
_ .
·
Dennis Goff
successful
:
in
many
.large
.
in-
Co-captains 1978
-__
vi!ati~nals;
}..a.st
year
.
we
.
pl~ced
·
cross-country
.
team
th1rd
·
m theIC4A College race.
·
·
FRANKlY
SPEAKING
.
. : ..
by
phil
fraok
·
..
:
::
eo·
_
AHEAP
_jtJtlH
NHAT_~-
-
-

t<~'Re
DdIN@.~-
-
ex,~~rte.r
:
·_
/
AAE
.:-·
1ijn:RROPT:~
·
.
-
-
~ -
, - •
.
means
.
we
·
might
_
~y;
·
'it
·
is
.
the isolation
.
·
~£ ex-:
.
· :
...
inspu:ationfor a
.
~ea~ll~rig
_
mind
{
the basis for
perience! That is to say; we have an
;
expenence
·

·
,
.
~rea~ive • conm111mty. hvmg
_
and
~
a c~nstantJn,-
in life which in no
way
.
seems to
,
be .connected
,
·:
centive :for i.tn on-going re_11ewal.of life.
:
-
,
.
.
with the past or the ,uture; Everyday seems
·
to be
·
· -
~ ~e pome to the end of o~r.trip from magic
to
.
just anoth
_
er
--
~
.
~
.
¥
.
;


.
in~e
.
rent,. c. o_. for~ess
__
·
.
. '
.and
·.
.
fa
.
.
i t
.
h; ;W
.
est. a.rt
.. e. d.f~\ded
. ·
~
..
our
.
m
··
· o
·
t
.
.
h~r
..
's "'.·
o.
pi.
·_.b,··•
:
.
bleak. Boredom ts

the disconnected.life,
,
filled
. -
one
.
with the, w:orld m which welire<t We slowly'.·
:
.
.
with -. thousands
'.
·:
of different
.
words,
c.
ideas; ·
·
unfolded<_out. oLthe
"·
rnagica}:
,:
unjty
-
into
·
an .
·'
·
.
thoughts and
acts
which seem
to·
driftlike pie~es

·.
·""
autonomous existence;
_
._
in
'
_
:which
i.
we disc(iveted
>
.
· .
of garbage'
in
still watei:-"'
:
Bore~ontwhich
:
SO
·
·
.
_
fl!at we w,~_re
:
.
119t,:.alone
:
~µ(stoo~ in
:
a
"
cons_tarit
·
'.'
·

·-
..
easily lea~
to:
deP.re~i~n,
-
~ften can
.-
bepo~e
-
a
,
(
.
. ·
d_ialo~ue;'!1th
_
ot1r
;
surrolU!~mgsy~d
:
Jve_
:
en.d~ci"'
.
••
· pervasive fe~ling,
:
a..
:
cr:ee1>mg
}emp~ti~n
\
dJf-
.
.
Pl'
bnn~mg_!ogether
.
au
the
:
~~~~ties of}ife
1!1'
8:
._
·

ficult to
·
shake
.
off
:
.
,
.
:
<;:
·
·
..
·
· .
.
:
:,
.
,_,
,r
;.

.
·
.
ne\V
·
.
un1ty-
.
not that
_
of.mag1c
but
that ofJaith.
·
_
=
~:
rn.
:
~
t>ers~tjv~;
a
:
~at~e
:
r~~g
_
io~'len
~:,::
/
:
,
:
·
::
\':+
~
,
:
_"/
.
·
,
~
-::_:,< ;;
,
.•
,
,· /~;
·
·
.
'.
·
'.
-
,
,;
·
-

.
-

:
:
_
~
·
·
-
.
,
,
.
-
_
.r
__
-_.
_
7

, :
'
'
·
·
·
;
• :
_
:.
..
:•
,
·
·
'.
·:
.

-
·:.>•



































































































































































October
5, 197~
THE CIRCLE
Newman assails 'pulpless' language
By
Jane Neighbors
li
the Boy Scouts of America were in "there is no comparison between he and _..........,
.,.r:r2l\1
...
~
~~
·
.
choosing a motto today, instead of "Be Staubach," "there is no problem between
w.
'
We must "dig Ourselves out from Wlder
Prepared" they would probably adopt he and Dorsett" and "there was nothing
~
,:,;,
the jargon and boneless, pulpless "contingency plans and a calculated between he and the goal line." Newman
l
,,
i
,
language" in which we have "bU:ried response reaction," according to remarked "Either He is extremely ver-
ourselves" according to author and N m
til
d h
t
ch
·
k
th
t
ew
an.
.
.
sa e an c anges eams ea wee or e
w
television commentator Edwin.Newman.
"A
bibliography of books of easy
dif-
Hes
are- a remarkably gifted Chinese
J
f;;
''.Thereisnohopeofdeallngwithproblems ficulty for recreatory reading,"
a
widow
.
football family."
t
ffi-
"·
·
unless
we understan<Uhem,"he said in a
whose "husband predeceased her" and a
Midway through his speech in Falcon
~
,.
·
speech _!1t Dutchess
.
Community College weather report on ''the occWTence of non-
Hall,
.
Newman congratula~ Terry Orr,
~
~
last
Thursday, adding "verbosity" the sunlight" are intended to give "overtones interpreting Newman's speech in sign
I
,.
wordy
use
of speech, "is both dangerous of complexity" to simple
·
situations, language for keeping up with his exam-
~
· ancd-
-
t~errifically
1
duU.'ch'
"t tall
Ne~man said. He quoted an optometrist's ples.
~
1
l_Ilg examp
es
su
.
as a room
o
Y
notice
"It
is time for a progress case study
Newman, a journalism graduate of the
m
involved in a
·
fire situation," an expense
·
to
see how your visual system is operating University of Wisconsin, has worked for
~
acco
_
unt described
as
<'falsely padded," in its new environment," or telling a
International News Service; United Press
I
and President
Jimmy
Carter's phrasing of patient to get her glasses checked.
International; and the National Broad-
W:
I
~
"a temporary reprieve"
from
the oil
The audience of more than
600
laughed casting System for
26
years. He was head , -
crisis; Newman said "readingis
a
chore". and applauded Newman's description of
of their news bureaus in London, Rome
;i
when we must "slog through repetitions." the
use
of "he" by football sportcasters, as and Paris;
-
as well as drama critic,
lt0.h
"'E?k
»
.
__
.
-
- -
·
·
-
.
Page 5
.
.
.
.
.
BusineSS internships
~
.
.
. .
·
t8i-medUi,likety prospect
correspondent, commentator, and "the
Edwin Newman
network's h~use grammari_an." He
is
the
1
"The rules of language help
us
un-
author of" tw? best se~g
,,h
00
ks
,?n
derstand each other. They save time, save
la.~uage
.
St,1;1ctly Speakmg,
aod
A
effort, save uncertainty," Newman said.
Civil
Tongue. .
.
.
·
.
·
"Language
is
fun, it shapes attitudes, and
Newman sa,1d he obJects t~, mvented makes it possible to look at life," he added.
words ,;md phrases su~ as. ~at~pial "Correct language requires that you think
·
parent ,!or mothe~ and tenrunalio/
·
for clearly and frame thoughts in a concrete
d~th.
Oh_ tenrunality, where 1s thy way" said Newman
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
.
.
~
.
.
.
.

>
_
_
By
Rich Sohanchyk
program,
:
said Kelly.
stmg?" he _1oked.
'
Internships must fit into the context of
. T}Jough there
is
tremendous pt~uteto the business program
.
as outlined by the
sb1rt
'.
business
·
internship
·
programs
:
.
they department, said Kelly. He did not know
.
.
.
.
are
still
a
_
di:'eam
of the future, accor:dirig to now soon it would
be
.
befor.e
__
a full-scale
D
d
f
}
>·.
Business
.
Chairman Jack.Kelly.
·
.
...
.
businessinteinsbipcouldbeimplemented . .,.__
orm
:
·
·
amage · rom
·
pg
.
---
.
Kelly said the possibility o~ bul!iness
·
ijow~ver, a-non-credit program
is
_
of-
· ·
.
..
• • •

internships
.
has been
.
discussed
.
within
.
the
·
fered atMarist, according to Jake Maness,
.
·_
.
.
.
_
_
~
-.
...:
.:
.
>
:
t:
.-.
··
·
department, however he said he will not assistant professor of business
~
He
·
implement
·
internships
··
until
·.
he
·
can stressed
· _
the program, sponsored by repair schedule contingent on the amount allow seniors to
miss
paying their share,
"guarantee that it
w.ill
be a quality' Iear
-
Northwastem Insurance,
is
no way con-
of daily wear and tear on campus.'
.
'
leaving the difference to be absorbed by
·
ning experience
·
.''
~
,
·
·
.
.
·
..
nected to the business department, and is
.
Inter-House Council has drawn up a other students. Janus also said that
· One
·
problem
·
is that
.
.
inany outsi<ie
.
open to
:.
~11 students.
·
·
proposal whereby students not be billed for elthough the prices charged for certain
.
agencies 1>ee interns as cheap labor, said
.
)~.faness saidthe pay
.
is based strictly on common damages until after they have repairs may seem unreasonably high, they
Kelly, and he doesri 'twant this to happen.
,
commission. "I just give them (students)
been
.
repaired. Also,
m:c
proposed that are the lowest possible prices for
·
such
· Another problem
_
in starting an
,
in-
·
news about it," and the students have to work be done first, before students are .work, since they includ~ materia_ls, labor
.
ternship
.
program is the lack of fllDds and
.
.
look into
_
it
themselves.
·
.
..
.
.
billed for the actual cost of repairs rather and hardwa~. The highest pnces are
·
..
manpower
~
MaJJY
faculty
·
members
.
don't
_ ·
Maness said h(offered it because it
is
a ~han being assessed a flat rate for repairs.
.
charged by mdepe~dent contr~ctors w~o
have the tune necessary
~
to
..
fonniilate '
'
good opportuility for
.
experience"
·
and it
···
.
Janus said he would be opposed to such a mu
_
st be brou~t m for maJor repall'S
.
·
·
"policy
,
guidelin
.
es" essential'to
-
a
,
good has been successful at other_ schools
.
.
·
·
proposal at this time because it might w~1ch the mamtenance staff cannot do,
·
·
· ·
·
·
~aid Janus
.
SlJtEAKING
'
·
'
FROSTING
·.
AND
.
PERMANENT
.
)'IAVING ·
·
CALL
454-9239
.
C!
Leave
·.
:Yotirllead
;
To
Us!
.
~-.:·
·
~
--
·.,
..
'
...
.
-
"
,
.
.
.
-
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
-,
-
~
-
-
-
.
UNI-SEX
HAIRCUTTING
AND
BLOW DRYING
.
. APPO~~;MENl •••
HA_IRCUTTERS
.
NOW .
ON THE MAIN MALi
3 llBERTY
:,
STREET
.
(Above
_
Capitol
Bakery)'
·
·
En,rance ~round cor
·
n
·
er
·
FRANKS
Across
:
from Mar:ist
·
Thursday-LADIES~TE
_
·
2.5c
drinks, ho cover
·
;..
Friday-CHEAP DRINK NITE
.
.
.
-
.
''A,n~hi1ig
_
Goes''
.,.
·
_
Tuesday:~MIKAZE
&
BEER
·_
NITE
·
·
·
·
·
:
.
·
.
--
·
·
$3:oo
.
.
... :
.
:'.:
:
\
·
_
'. ·
:
Lunch~o:n
~aily
.
X
8/XPACKs
·
_::
T'O
.
GO
:

I •
. ~-
.
,
~
.
'
.
.
,
.
.

POLICMU
( ~
.
NY
·
...
,
.
PRESENTS
RltLPlj
A ROCK ORCHESTRA
IN CONCERT
WITH
.. .. 11!\\1!11
...
-.
.... ,1111111 ..
.
.
MIO-HUDSON
CIVIC CENTER
.
'"'Qlijj
l
l
1
"""'
"
1
1lq)I
F
'
.'
AUGUST AND THE PLAYERS
SAT., OCTOBER 21st
8:00 P .M. to 12 Midnight
(?)
ALL SEATS -$5.00
ON SALE NOW AT
..,,11llllt11, .....
,
,,11tlll1111, ..
MID-HUDSON
CIVIC CENTER
:
"••111111111••"""1111111111''"
POUGHKEEPSIE. NY
.
ALL TICKETRON OUTLETS
AND
~ . I l l ;


























































































































































. Page 6 .
THE CIRCLE
October
S, 1978
.
I
"The Hudson Valley's Newest
And
Largest Rock
Ballroom!"
LIV-E BANDS EVERY N
_
IGHT
·
25' Drink Specials Every Night _Exe. Fri & Sat
-
SUPER SPECIAL -
Thursday,
Oct 10
Rare
.
Club Appearance
NEW RIDERS
OF
THE PURPLE SAGE
2 Shows 9:30
& 11:30 P.M_
-
-
Tickets $5
CLOSED MONDAYS
SPECIAL FEATURES
Tuesday, Oct. 3 -
RALPH
Friday, Oct. 20 -
TWISTED-SISTER
Tuesday, Oct. 31 -
HARLEQUIN Halloween
Costume Party with Prizes
PLUS .•. TWISTED SISTER every Thursday
in
October
~
Return Engagement
&
Final Appearance
Wednesday, Oct. 4
·
SALUTE TO THE BEATLES
-
.
$2 Admission
-
A GEMINI PLUS -
T-SHIRT SUNDAYS -
Every Sunday in October
Free Gemini North
·
T-Shirts to the first 100 people
Rosevie\li
.
StableS
·
tro.
Frat installs pledges
In
a "rush ceremony"' 19 Marlst students pledged to join the Sigma Phi Epsil<:>n fraternity•
_
Nineteen Marist students pledged to join events. He said the
.
fraternity does not
the Sigma Phi_ Epsilon
.
fraternity
in
a believe
in
hazing because it -degrades a
"rush
ceremony" held on
·
Sept. 28, ac- person,
_
is illegal and often dangeroqs,
·
cording to David Fine, president.
''but
·
there
are
some · initiation
The fraternity retained 22 members requirements that are. beneficial for both
_
from
-
last year, and need at least 30 the pledge
-
and
-
the fraternity . .,
·
members
to
apply for
·
a charter and
·
The fraternity
is
planning~~~ activi~ies
become a chapter of the national £rater- such as a horseshoe i:narat.?10~, a
Christ-
nity, Sigma
_
Phi
·
·
Epsilon.
-
Fine. said he mas P!lrtY
fo~
the children s
.
war~ of St.
expects at least
10
more
_
students to pledge Francis _hospital
·
~d
.
are repeating t!le
by Oct.
4,
and added "We
will
be a chapter • blood drivE: of .last year because of its
by
the time next semester ends."
.
_ success, said Fine. .
.
-
.
Each pledge, according to Fine, must
_'Ihe
·
.
marathon
wi1:1
·
attempt to r~use
-
partidpate in the · Brother Development ·· money for the American Cancer Society
Program, - a program of educational1·through student pledges.
Lite to
be
b
.
Uilt
..
tor
·
.
col/eg.e
.

disabled
By Dave Powers
·
-
plaints. However, Perreira said "We
_
_ (Marist) don't ne
_
ed to make every area
·
The Office of Special Services is seeking · accessible; butthelaw states that by 1980,
approximately $10,00Qto
:
install a
:
power any
,
:feclerally
.
:
·
funded 'facility must
:
be
lift:in
the
·
Campus Center
:
for
:-
the coll~ge'.s
. ·
made accessible
-
for the
.
disabled."
-
:
wheelchair bound students
/
according to
According to Perreira, plans have been
,
Special Services Director Diane Perreira.
made by Brother Nilus Donnelly
.
forjhe lift
-
,
·
The.Campus Center is one of.the few areas
·
wjth copies of the blueprints
_
submitted to
on campus
:
not
.
easily
.
accessible
·
to
Dean
·
of Students Antonio Perez and
wheelchair disabled
-
students,
_
she said.
Business Manager Anthony Campilii.
-
The proposed power lift, similar to
·
an
At pr~sent the college
·
is
·
1ooking for
.
elevatof, would make-it easier for disabled
foundation
_.
funds for the project.
.
students to ascend and descend Cham-
Perreita said
"In the most part," Marist
pagnat stairs to the Campus Center,
is
easily accessible
.
for
napdicapped
cafeteria, and Post Office, sa~d Perreira.
students. Recently maintenance· installed
At present, disabled students must use the new-tar. ramps
.
by many of the curbs on
outside entrance of the theatre leading to
campus. However, Perreira also said the
the Campus Center. In the past,- students
doorways in Champagnat are narrow for
have had to wait
_
lorig periods of time
iri
·
whe
.
elchair
.
students an_d the freight
-
!
inclement weather for someone
.
to open up
elevator used by disabled
-
students in
'-
the outside door,. she said.
.
:
Donnelly
is
not reliable. Perreira said the
According to Perreira, the trek to the elevator has a tendency to getstuck bet-
j
Campus Center
_
is
one of the disabled
.
ween floors as
.
it
did on the second day of
,
students biggest environmental
_
com~ classes
.
·
·-
·
;
c4e•de
.
m
·
y
.
WINE
&
LIQUOR
.
Z&
-
ACADiMY-
ST.
· --
INSTRUCTION
-
PO'KEEPSIE, N.Y. 12601
Tel. 45,a~--
4i:io
.
Tuesday through Sunday. 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.
for
all
ages. Both sho_w and pleasure riding. Hunter. lum-
per. Equitation. Reside
,
nt instructors of high ac-
c~mplishments. Video tape available for lesson
analysis.
,~
-
--------------------------~--.~
-
-~--~----------~-~--,
.
.
.
.
.
~
HEAD
TRAINER
.
I
LOCATION
,
Reinhard Teeter - formerly trained under Mr. Arthur
Mclashin - first captain of the USET Jumping T earn.
·
-
He
has also trained under ..
:
see copy.
JO-NEL'S UNISEX SALON
Colonial Plaza
Hyde Park, New York
229-8800·
·
Dry
Cut
-
$4;{)0/Wet Cut
$6.00
.
..
.
·-
~
.
.
. .

,'
.
.
.
Dutchess
Hill
Road, off East Dorsey Lane, Ap-
·
.
-
proximation from the following: four miles from
'
·Main
St.,
Poughkeepsie; · si~ miles from Vas~or
.
Coilege; three miles
from
Morist.
.
.
.
Jleg.
Priced
Perms

IO% ~ff
'-
.
-...
'
··

·
-
'
-
>
· ~
·
.
. .
·· .
. -
.

.
~
:
.
-.
-..
-
.
.
-
·
·
·
·
,
·
· ·
·
SpeciahatesforMariststudentsMon,J'iies
;
Wed
Phone:
914 47
:'
1
-
~
:
19
:
11
;:_
I
..
,:
·
----·<
wi~~~
:
:
~~
,
a~~v
-
~~i~S
-
!udentL~·~1;
·--
~
<-.
_
..
_
.·.
·
'
--_
.
.
·.
.
,
~.;.~~~
....•
~~
....
,.
.....
~
•..
~.~···----·-
..........................
-------..----~-------
·
··'
·-
.
.-
-


.
·,
--•··
..
..
_
._
..
_
.
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·
-

...
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·
.
.
·-·
.......
·
:
·

·-
·
.
-
·
-
.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

·
I
I
I
.
I
.
I
.
I
.
I
--
.
·
-
,

I
I
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October 5, 1978
THE CIRCLE
Page7
Runners win invitational;
record now 12-2
By Chris Hogan
Jerry Scholder ran super and improved a
lot to be with Ron Gadziala. We needed
The Marist College Cross Country team that strong one-two punch. Ron
ran
won the Southeastern Massachusetts another super race and is still very con-
University (SMU) Invitational meet by sistent. I think that consistency is very
defeating four teams on Saturday. Their important for the entire team's success,"
record
is
now 12-2.
he said.
The Red Foxes defeated Southeastern
Massachusetts University, New Haven
J.V.
Places 3rd
University, Plymouth State College and
Bryant Coliege.
The Marist Junior Varsity
(JV)
placed
Jerry Scholder finished second to lead third at the SMU Invitational. Rich
Marist. He covered the five mile flat Schenkewitz led the Red Foxes finishing in
course
in
24:25. Ron Gadziala finished in fourth place
in
26:31. While Billy Sweeney
third place in a time of 24:27.
finished sixth in 26:37.
Matt Cole, Paul Welsh and Dennis Goff
Other finishers for the jayvees included
had . strong races for the Red Foxes Rich Sohanchyk in 14th and Jim Cebula
in
finishing tenth, eleventh, and thirteenth 20th.
respectively. Their times were 25:19,
25:20
"Schenkewitz. and Sweeney both ran
and 25:32.
. super and are clearly ranked as our eighth
Other Marist runners to finish the race and ninth men on the team," said Stevens.
were Keith Millspaugh and Dennis Martin· He added nine of -the eleven runners ran
who finished in 24th and 28th.
well.and showed good improvement.
"We finally did it after four successive
The Running Red Foxes will travel to
second place finishes," said Stevens.
"It
Pennsylvania to race in the Mansfield
took five good races from five good people. State Invitational on Saturday at noon.
-This Week i_n Marist Sports--.
Joe Curthoys att~mpts to advance ball agabist Oneonta last Wednesday. The ·
Red Foxes lost a heartbreaker to the number one ranked team
in
the state. See
story on page,.eight. -Photo - Dave Shaw
Giants
-
vs -Ace Heads
for football title--~~--
,·.
'-
:.'·-~ .- ~.. • . -.~li. .• ,:..
The Giants will play,the Ace H~ds f?r
·w~men's
Volleyball
the Intramural flag football championship · ···,Th
F"ght·
F urth
ill
t th
Th
d
t ·3.30 ·pm on the ·McCann
e
1
mg
o
w
mee
e
urs ay a
·
· ·
Flutt b
B
b
. th
f"
Is
f th
Field. _ ·
·
_
er, ye om ers m
e ma
o . e
The teams met once during the regular women
s
volleyball league Thursday rught
season with the Giants winning
6--0.
at 7:30 p.m:
.
.
.
Toe Ace heads defeated Lanza's Last
_The two_ fm~lists played_ Tl!,esday rught
~and 19-~8 in overtime. to gain entrance :1th the Fightmg Fourth wmrung 9-7 and 8-
mto the finals.
.
Th
f"
l
t h
ill b
l ed t 15
Bob Missert of Lanza's Last Stand . . e ~a ma _c w . e pay
o
opened up the scoring with a
20
yard run in pomts mth no tune_ limit bemg set. .
the first half. The extra point attempt -
Men_ ,
8
Volleyball
failed.
.
John Lusa tied the game with a 40 yard ·
The Ace Heads will play in the finals on
touchdown catch on the_ last play of the Thursday .night · at 8 p.m. Games were
,
first half._
_
_
played last night to determine the other
·
Kevin Kelly caught the second bomb of finalist.
.
the game in the second half for the Ace
The match
will
also be determined by 15
Heads giving them a
12-6
lead.
point games with no time limit being set.
Mike Lanza tied the game atl2-12 with a
·
·
'
10 yard run late· in the game'. · ·
Archery
Paul Pless ran the opening kickoff
µi
the
Debbie Mazzocchi won the women's
overtime period to the .five yard line for division of the archery tournament" by
Lanza's Last Stand. Missert then ran the· defeating Carol Vecchio 15-12. ·
ballinforthescorefora18-12lead.
·
Tom Crane won the men's division by·
. Bobby Shanahan caught the third bomb_ beating Paul Miano. 30-25.
of the game for the victors with 36 seconds
.
. left in th~ 10 ininute overtime to tie t~e
Filing Period
_
\
.
ga~e. Bnan Maben scored ~e extra poµit __ . Rosters are due for coed basketball (2 on
to give the Ace Heads the victory.
2) starting October 9.
Volleyballers··Win, two ·games
'lhe Marist College women's volleyball
Simmins
said Vicki Nurena and Cindy
team is
2-0
in its first varsity season after Mazur were the "outstanding defensive
defeating Mount St. Vincent and Ramapo. players" during the,niatch.
Heaq Coach Becky Simmins said the
The Red Foxes crushed Ramapo in their
opposi!ion was not that good in tlie :first • varsity debut on September 26. Marist won
couple of games. ·
. the first two games 15-2.and 15-3.
Simmins
· _The Red Foxes crushed Mt. St. Vincent -said the_ team served well but· added the
in their home opener 15-1,.15-2 and 15,9 last opposition wasn't good enoµgh to return
Tuesday.
•· -
·
· the serves.
.
Pam Hyde scor~ nine straight points on
serves to open up a commanding lead for
Spikes and Serves
Marist. Betsy_ O'Conner
wrapped
up the_;:..
game- with six -consecutive
points
on
The Red Foxes travel to Iona this af--
serves.
·
·
· · · ·
temoon to play the. Gaels and Concordia.,
_
-Hyde led the Foxes in the· second game Coach
Simmins
says the Red Foxes should:-
by serving for another rune straight points; -not have too much difficulty ~ g
the:
· ·Renata Wynnyk served for seven points in- -match. She added. the Foxes should
haV;e:;
~- the
third
game to finalize the victory for ."pretty clear. , sailing" until they hosti,
·
~
Marist;,···. -.. .\ · · __ , .,
·
,_· :-,.,._ -· :-'- .. ,-., Manhattanvllle and Baruch on October·2(ft
.
;{'}.:._
SPORT
DATE
OPPONENT
TIME
0
r.
lOC.
Volleyball
10/5
Iona
5:30
p.m.
Away
Concordia
Soccer
10/7
Marines··
11 a.m.
Home
Football
10/7
Brooklyn
2:15
p.m.
Home
X-Country
10/7
- Mansfield ·
State
Noon
Away
Invitational
Volleyball
10/10
Dominican~
5:30
p.m.
Away
Nyack
Soc~er
10/10
C.P. Post
3:30
p.m ..
Home
Tennis
10,io
New Paltz
3:30
p.m.
\-\ome
MEET AT
MIKE'S TA VERN
Always
a-nightly
.. special
MON.
·TUES.
VODKA
RUM/BEER
RYE
GIN.
WED.
THURS.
FRI.
SAT.
TEQUILA
SCOTCH
happy hour~-
7
·nRAFT
15c
FRI. SPECIAL Bottled Beer-12 oz.
.50
.50
.50
.50
.50
.75
Bud, Miller, Lite, Genny, all
soc
All imported 12 Bottle Beer . . . . . . . 75
c
3: 30 P.M. Till 7:
00
P.M.
2s·MAIN: STREET
. .f ..
-
~
.. -
-:~_ ... ·"
:·_'._,
·.t-:--:· ·_:··
.-:.,~
·i-·.~
"'.:
·,·:-.-_
~·~
.. ,.~ ..
~
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I
·
..











\
\ .t:<

'1
-
-·,
j- .:~; .·
,.
..
Page 8 .•
'
-----
.. Joe Biboa (23) battles Oneonta player for balflast Wednesday. ~arist co-.
captain Russ B~ckelygets ready
to
join battl~ ~or
ball.
photo- Dave
~haw·· ·. · ·
Athlete
of.
tile week-
October 5, 1978
An· equal opportunity
By
Pat Larkin


21.5.1
21.5.2
21.5.3
21.5.4
21.5.5
21.5.6
21.5.7
21.5.8