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Part of The Circle: Vol. 21 No. 9 - November 16, 1978

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)
Volume 21, Number 9 ·
Marist College,_Poughkeepsie, New_Y ork.12601
November 16,_1978
_
Truste,s to
study
_coll8ge~s
leadership ·
·
:. By _David Potter
leadership_study. _
·.the. ~ollegeshould_:••serve.and educate toleratedinkey posit~ons,:or.:that a sub-
,
·Munitz's report to the trustees "at-
b'oard (of trustee) committees" artd ac-
stantial amount·:of tii:Ije·can:be_.taken to
A special committee to study Marist's· tenipte_d to outline· the -·.(college's): cept responsibilities-from. a president.who
·
train people who .curreii~lY---hold these -
adininistrative structure and outline the- leadership requirements for • _the next - will~ work _
m.ore with external functi9ns _ positions, must be erased!'" Foy agreed ·
- president's job description will be formed decade," clarify, th~ trustees goals for_the sucll ~s fund raising.
.
_ .
such a perception
exists
at Marist, but
· before Dec. 7: by: the college's board- of. college and evaluate the presidency.• _-- ·
Foy agreed_:withthe :i;eport and said he claimed the perception is inaccurate.
. trustees, -_ according -- to·. President
Llnus -

a~The report recommended responsibility_ would· shift . more responsibility to __
his , ·
He said "generally the faculty
is
critical
Foy.: The trustees arf forming the com~ forthe college's operation.~ delegated to present admirµstration· whicll _includes
.
of non~academic_ adininistrators," and
rilittee _- after
a'
report· on:: the college's a small a~rativeteam, who publicly:'- Academic Dean Louis Zuccarello, Dean oC_ added -_
C'it's -easy to criticize the ad-
leadership was presented Nov.
2
.to:the,, state .their goals: :which. would be· Students Antonio Perez, Director of miriistration;u Foy/also· said --the per-
board·· by . Barry'._ Milajtz, col_lSultant for_-._ monitored by· the· Marist ,fommunity. The . Development Thomas . Wade,_ Business ·• ception that mediocre administrators_ are
Johnson Associates, -who. :conducted the repo~ added, achninistrators in ~hai'ge of •
-
Ma~ge,:~thony q~mpilii, ;and_ Dean of tolerat~ is a serious pr~ble!'Il, and should
,
-
'-'~
-
-
·s: .
_
_
••.
.
.
Special:.: College 'P;rograllls . Edward be corrected.
-· ___ . ·
.
·
_
Waters. · · _ · ·
· ·
_ · · '.
·
· ·according to Foy; in order to correct the.
--stu·
"d.en
·
t·s··_-._v:
··o···,c·

~-c--o··m
:

1a·1ntS' . .
rericz;~~~a1ui?~~!tt~t
5
y!i~;i~~ -trit~~~~;~~;Tt~ri:eb:::tf~:-
.
.
·
~
.-_ -
., _ -
_
__
'.'as lo!1g as
I'µi_
still
he_re the worJ{shoiild · perception exists and• investigat,,:d for its
_
·
· _
·
_ - _.
-
.. b~ shifted down.'.!....However,
_
:_F
_
oy,added accuracy.
_
Steps then must be -taken·to
a
--
·t_
-
---,_
t d • · ._,
'·•tt · ·. -.:-,_, --~
-
-
-
_
t• .__ -,-...
some people 1'7ho·usuany·deal with the correct the-situation; he said ..
.:..c.
_
00 ..
comm
I
ee------_m_-·_ -ee 1-•n-
·g-.
presiC.:~nt_·Jyou_Id r_E:5ent
.
_ dealing c:wi~lf"a
-_.A.!50,. 'F'oy sa~d _the
·
._colleg_ e,
in
.its .
. .
~
.
,
, _
.
- .
_
dean, -
- __ , .. _ . _
_ _
.
begmnmg· y~rs,- ,hired its o_wn. people
----
·:· · _ '" .
.:.
___ -

Foya¥.>o added the future presid~nt, and _ without experience~~for- ·adniinistrative
By
Chris
Hogan
:
· __ . -
-p
_
iled ..
up
on tne .loading dock and - ~~s~1:f s_houl~
''w9fk
!owards a strong_er . jobs.
0
_Howeyer, he-said this was ~ot tll_e
and
David Potter
·
_.·cockroaches-in. the· cafeteria.
. _ --
fmancialstructure for the college, while case
m
recent years. _ _
_
.
.. _-
,
· ·: ·
·
_ · - :·· ___ .
_ ._ , Dolan _claimed the: t<foe)d .. conunittee _ monitori11g the·
·
college's· progress· and
According tothe:report,'for the:college
. _ Mari~:studen~ ~lien Dolan_ arid ~ames .,.'.representat~ve.s'are_ °i!ot d~ing theirj~bs.'' __ progra.~, --
.
,
<_> . -- :~ " . .
to J1av~ ·
~
"successful enrollme~t» a!}d
:_ ... Sltann_?Il _
compla~ed --•at, Tt1esday•~,Jo~d-:
Chr!s __
Faill~;-: presidel!t ;' o~_:_c b.iter-House -
-
., ___ ·M._u11;1tz s -·report. a_lso said_ Foy_ -.-,m~st
.
_ ''retent1011_of s~und student body,_. Manst
-~ oco~ttee <m~etmg _
about _ t_he
<
"rapid _ Council,\also told\ th~ -_
cpmw1ttee ''you .~tall~h-a _
collective s~ns~ __ e>f,,conficlence
must; h~~e .. a -'sense -of_ acadei;m~ com-
-_ . deGline,of foQd l!lthe past ~wo w:~ks" aJ!d ~seem to. have a-pr
9
~1en1.with _~tte!1dance,;'. ,· 111 :_the,.:: cur,re~t_-, leader!'>lup? _. fpr. ,Jhe
'.
muJ11ty. _ Foy a~~ed and . said ttie
• the lack -of .r~presentation,-.by certam,~and added he:'!also heard aoout one floor· ._ coll_~~~~ transitlqn .. foy. ~1d,;- lle could "fac;_ulty, staff and students should have a
_ comifiittee members: at - ;pr~vJoii~/_that_w~s neve( rt:iii:e~e!}t~tt" .~ :
· i:-•:~,.aCCofll~~}llis,~~ ~reakirl~:ev.en on
tlle _
sens~. of whanh~;collegejs,''_ and added
meetings:·M_emb~rs _of t~e food collllillttee '. _:,__ HoWe:ver, p1?!1e Digit
1
_chauperso~: of ,._co.ll~g_E! s, bu~ge! and
_irl{Qn.n~,
t~e college --•
_
Manst n_o
_
wh~s a, -- ~ret~rcoheren~_ sense of
.
_
de~endedthem~elves\!_liileo!he~nl~lll~er.~ the:_foo!l comnµttee, .said the.only dor.:-:. com,~t101!y
:
:Q
_
~,:cb?th -~a11~!c!;.:a!1d ,the -,~~demic_co~~tr, .-- __ :·.•,
.· • ""
:
-:.,
argl!¢d
·wiµi
:
~e;~tu~ent~·pi:_ese~tll!g· t!Je_ • ~mitqry.:goMillly.
-
repi:es~nted is
:
Leo.
_
Hall;•--:-iP~~!~~~t s- C>~J~ti'!'~,-~e_ttµii-}
'.
paf.!:ern
. .
-·: ~~·f.a£U}ty __ ~Q~ld,-!?._e.,~- e~couraged,.to
i.s'.,.
·
.
-
complaints::::. \:_{-
,<._,.
c ;'-•-~.-;~•:'_<'
::=:-i-•_ :·
/
.
~tli~'.9~$.:-.DQ!an)!v~·,in. :--
-
~.-. ,; ..
-:;::'-r \ ;~:,fofi:t~e;;~r.~~!~i~p.,:_~~~-~!!!!
;
.'
J!~t:-1~,::-.;:--
P~£P!lll:,Pl9r!0mv.:<?~J~~::Yf
1
th;
~~,
co~lege,:
:'' ... , ~V'"_:
-
· ·"'.;-".f~-:0~,The<"majof.:'--:;coritplaintS'::cited',bY- -Dolan,,::::;Shaliiron"'"
1
a';sehior: said'he·lielieved
·this"·""'Y~r:s~i";~-"'-·::_
~-•'tl;;.:'.'":,..;; •..
,
:
.
?;
-
:_-.,. · .. ,- ,::·;,
.
,.;
,;:•according,"_t9 ,11e .:.rep_ort,,,,,by.v--~he :·
ad~-
·:: .....:. ' . . :
-
a'n"d"::-:·shan:n.'oW,.dncliidedt,a< lack:~
.
'ok~§ear'iiirie~ls.were'tlie
'
worst
h-i.four,yea
'
rs ·'.
i•·Hq~eve~;, tn~-.i:~pog s,id~~tti~
_.
per~Jltj
0
i:i
:> -:..·
-
-~~.-;; /}
:0:'b:: --·: ..
~:~<{,· . '.: ;·· .
~
.
.
·v: .
.
··.
,
.
.
.
_representation oy'·:-the '.~food: cciinmittee,· --and addecf-:tlie::quality · of" meals -·was in: tha~ :..,.-mediocre· .",a'dministrators :_ -ai:-e-
:
---'-·' - _
< -:·
~
·
on~mue
_
on p~e:
2· .. .'_
'
~
.
_
, .-5.t~ov;::t·~;:.;=•:~~
~~ma.,:
:~.~:£;.,;~r . .
MSr;S-t~~-
DiW CQ111PUtir
-
-
• ·
·
' '
-
· --
-
b T ·
M
r · ··
computer; based on the amount of.time
• tibriry
JtcilldaliZed
Friday,
,.:.~~r;;;u:~~~
!J~~=~~~=~;
-
--
-
-
-
-· - ·· ·
--
computer · system, according· to
-
Vice
Ci:!~
had risen to
$15,600,
.said Waters.
dam·age
tOSts
.111iknowlf .
.
. .
.
,
~~~:dZ'=!f:=
:met"~
~=z*l-:l.~~~~;
_
·
_ c.-·
-
,
·
-
-
'
_ .
-
-_
--
· · -
-
,
Uruversity's compQter 10 Ithaca via _computer's servi~s "have forced us to get
By Beth Weaver- --
elevator. He reported.this to the security· - telephone·_Jines. ,;-Acc<>rding
Jo:
.Waters,-
-·a
compufer ·ofour own," said Waters ..
'
.. •-
,
_
·
departni~nt,
.who.
fo·un~
twO ..
_other_~·-ex-
M~rist_·uses ~n- ou~de coinpu~er because
Marist:has_arranged
to.rent
an IBM 138
"--· At --least_ four_- Marist_. students_ -face,_ tinguishei's empty, ·one near the ·ground ·· the computer· in Adrian· Hall is obsolete, computer for
$16,000
a.month; which will
·
<liscip~ary action dU:e _to .two ,separate - floor men's, rooin ·and- the• other in _the
d_~g:ibed by Waters as "the. 'Model
T'
of be housed ·on the bottom flgor of Donnelly_
· incidences· lasfweek. --
_ · ·_ · :. -. :·:·· : : iiortlleast corner. of the, library . ..,Waters computers." -
,
.. _ ·
Hall, according to Waters.
·
Two students;-who'sidentities are being -said finger·prints anci ·foot,prints .. were
- Howev·er~the·contract·between Marlst ·
The
administration decided renting the
withheld_._ by :Security-Director: ·Joseph found where the window had been forced
and Cornell-Ithaca, arrangei:l for Manst computer·wowd be ."the most-viable op-
:waters;/0.-admitted·,.)~<> "yandalizirig
-
the ·offtheJrack. · • .
, , _
. · -
by
the· Shared· Educational,:..Computing - ticin" because; computer technology
is ·
Marist -.·college
-
Library early:'· Friday

. ·-... Later Friday afternoon, the_ Circle was
Service. (SECQS), is-tog, expensive,_ said increasing so:rapidly, a system purchased _
- morning.
- _-
- -
'
;-
>
:
:.L
·
· .-_
informed .bi W~ters that _ two _ Marist , Waters. '"Cornell has tripled _the cost of
·
this yea.r might be obsolete in another five
According' t<> .. Waters, · Fra~- · Perrone, · ·studeij"ts had ach_nitted-'to vanda~g _-the
proyiding _Matist. with computing ser-·_ years -and Jts -value would· depreciate, .he
maintenance_ \Vorker,.,.. found ,:~n~ _empty: li6rary. Waters declined to ·identify the vices;" -.
- - . · ,
- .· - - · said.
-
·
· ·
·
·
chem1calfi~ extinguisller-_~g:~n.ear.the
.
..
;:·o:mtiriued
on
p;ige's
_
· ·
·corneU-Ithaca
-
_origlQlllly .. chargE!d · ''It's conceivable that if-.we purchased
Mari st- CoUege: library
.
·Jowei' -}t:?vel
·
:
Marist
_
$5,800
per month t?,:
_use .
t~eir
- ..
0:
Con_tinued on
page
3
.
-
S11l1ltf.4fl,.fO
,
~ffl$ijn;oRin.•·•coUnseling .. ·.cenf:8r
.
.
,
:
..
......
.
. ',.
.
.-
.
'
.
. .
.
-
'
.
,-
'
. By
Lark
Lando~
here since June,
1977,
he says
HEOI>
is
_:--A~ending Cathedral frepaforf
iµgli - -
.H6wevei-
;_8ulli~ai\~ottlcf like.
to
see· .
.
.·. -
.
_ an ·•'.awak~fug, program/'<'~OP ..
School,NewYork;S_illlivan·rece1ved,a- some changes. •~'ffie'pr~orilinance,of ·
"If
you give"a man~ fi$; he
eats
for a· , · students are wllite;· black and
hispanic,
-
~a~elor ~f Arts degreeJrQm Cathedral · white, middle _class students _afMarlst· - ·
day;
·If
you-tea.cli
a
marffo:fi.sh,
he
eats ·
:who, due '.to· problems•afan
.early
·age
· G<>Uege in
·
.1956. ·
He was · ordained ::a • is detrimental
-
to students: ..
The
:at-
.
'---
for life,'~ says":the: tji~ti~,(?f:a poste,r~t · . out of tlieif''.control;":were
~!
back and.
priest· in:
1960, .
aft~r att~nding, -8.a~t ._ mosphere:-of (the
_
~it~tionr~- ~s iIJl.;.
has, hurig ,"qn
-
~s .-oW,~
_wall.-for
ten
I've seen so many 3>f.:'them olossom ·as__ - JosE:ph ·· Seminary,
y
onk_ers,_ · .a~d . _
wrtant as the course w~rki-Agreater: .
,_years;_/ .. · ',
:
,· / ..
i.:: ·· -
.;_·<'. __ - :_ ~:::'.
people h_ere;"
.. · · .. -
'
·, -~ ·
L
-'
received a Master.of Science degree 10 .vari~ty of students. from:
:
ethnic-
. >John ·: Sullivarif , Higher ~
:
-Education
-.
His
duties . also include writing a · . counseling Jri>mjona College; N. Y;· in -. backgrounds and ages; would provide
a
.-.Opportunity :TPr_ogram ;::...
(HEOP), .
yearlf eroposal for state funding ~d · '
)964 ..
This :year, , Sul!iv~n · rec~ived -_- a . -greater.·. -:educational,':_,: and
>
more •-
director at Marist; says lje:has live4 by • ··· s~bnutt10g_ three .. reports ~o ~e.
~te . _
Spec1aµst
in
.Education degre~
.
fro01 . rea~c,
_
atrposphe.re.'.' : Sajllvan
:
says
thatmotto•in·irymg_to teach ~tudeitts to-
each ,year.; Besides, ,f!Ulmtammg ._a
·
· Al~nY;
·
State Coll~ge; -
·->- -- .. -. -· _ ·
that_ ~oi'e:·ethnic·
stllff
and JS:culty
'.'stand· on .-their own .. two
'
fe~r ·a~d -_-
budget,•·SuIµv~n SUJ)E;rvlSes-:a
staff
of
.A
pnest.for
13
yeai:9,-,~lllµ_van sa~s ,::should behired,D,ot ''to ~illquQtas/':but
:'become;<indep~ndent;''c· Sulhyan
1S
four; counselors David Abrahams and . -.that as_'!one oqt of U·cl>:ildren,". he
IS .
to make.Marist resemble ''the outside
resignµig'J,rom::-~_rist;
O!}.
I>ec.
31 __
to · . Ter9:t:-J.ean '1'~9mas,: D!rector · of , - :u{affi.i!y-ori~t~u. ,H.~.:i~:now. married , world.'}.:. : , ;'' ,. _
1
,/?>'<-
0
>: -.· . -::,
0
·
-
OJ)en a _cqllllSelirig:~nd. .
.
~.1:U~~r _gui~c~
;
::. "Learn_m~
.
'
~~o~~e:
;_2enter ;:
.
~l_eanor: ; . with f~ye children;· . '._
><-
: : . .
..
.
Ari
adyocate,ofconstructive criticism~
.~enter·. in :;Newpurg!t:
~-~use.
·
~•cour1:· ·. Conk~·
_
~ ~d • :bi110gual . tutor, ..
,Irma, -: -
Sulli~an says -'~student:J .. ~t Man~, by af Marist,- Sullivan •says· students, and _ -
-- ·
·
·
seling , is
my
first'love, aside _from my .·.
casey; : · : __ .: : . --
_
: ...
.
- . :
. . , · and large, a~y~ry ambitious·and very faculty should "accentuafid:lie positive
wife?-'·
$.ulliv~n,_a~iJ·:~ys;·:he.i_is,
~Wg
~
. . ·
~ulliya~•says ~eh,~
"~e~t:
ahan~
in
.
- _ ·~r~n~J?!e'~
~d ,d~~,:
!,1JlY.-'m;~~t;',
µioi:e•~~~d~kriock't,;Marisf
·iess.~.He _- :-
'_ the·· poster~·with-_l!!µl;'t'..:
7_::
1
~·:" :_,
·
·.-,
:-:-··
. : · ·: -

counseling~(---_:_ai::Mar!st~ ·couns.elmg · ;
enjoym~nt-~. ~-~s_ · come -, Jr_ol!l .---th.,'e·:-;
·
says
Marist~s futunfis-biight:'"I've a-:.-:
. _
. -.:~or.
is a S41t~_fi:md~ pro~~m .~t .. : .. st~dents
_
fn.d!V;Idually_~!]d u:i_-gi:oups. He/ .-st1;1~ents.';
.
~e says .
the
-
staff:
ll~d
-
-a<!_-·
-
> lot of vefy positive
and
no~ful'feelings .: -·
· · -
fma~ces
·
~~-<Je.rnica_lly: ~d;fma1_1~~µy :
~
· says'·''. ~~-' ..
.
-~~:~c~ffi!ue _
to .· teach -. .-· : IDJ.Iµstrat1_on, a~ -/'d~i~ted_;':.to __ J!).8ke ": not,::-;that
·
: Marisf:.will. . only.'. .-surviv~.-: - · ,
..:.. depnye<:{·,: stud~~ts:: ~nabling-;.th~m ".~o .'.· ~"psychology,:~•IH!re
_:
a~d:.-:co~~g_ at-_· ~aijst_~
~tter:
e~ce,'!
~rid:~~:•t~dy
-:~nomically';(buf:as··,,:.good \'strong
_
--;.. ··
a~en!l::?>llegeca~-:-lS-:~~t,:!.'.for·:etlµµ~. -'.· ·;.qreenhaven.Correc~1~~al fa~ty·_~rt-<
, to ·,try mnov'!~~.on/~ · '•
»·=t ::·:~·:':;
~:;~-t:·college.~':,
\:._-t~~.;/_<·
\:c.:,, :-:
>·: !·_,::, ..
_::
:
:y
,
-~. _
•ID.]!lg~t}~i'.':::~s,ar~'.:'8-~~ra.~:

,.-}!o.r~~-~:- .. •
~~,,~~,:~~est.er:~:•:.-•
:r., ,,:, ::•.::-:; :
,
,•,, • ·' "" '·•.:
-:,•,:•.:.~:=:=: '.'

:V,~:- :": .. ~;~:•::•:\;
_
:
;;_'°:'.):,._\ •
:::\":>i(.:-::\:::,~:)~'t;~,,-:.:,~~-:'"2/:::
t
/
_"/:::r • .. ~,:;:.

.
\
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'>'·i'
.,
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-/:-::.:./:
._-_·-:,








































































































































































































































-
·
Pagel
Announcing
,
There will be a Soviet Union Tour
·
of-
fered through Duso Travel agency, from
Feb. 17-24; The itinerary includes Helsinki
(Finland), Lenningrad and Moscow. The
cost is approximately $800
·
and includes
airfare, hotel, food and travel within the
Soviet Union.
If
interested, inquire as soon
as
possible. Contact
C
.-
Norkelunias in
i;:>onneHy HaUroom 209 or
·
Mark
-
Furlow
.
:
Th~
Commuter Union is sponsoring a
wine and cheese party for students, faculty
and administrators in Browsing Library
,
,n Friday Nov.
17
from
1
to 4 p.m:
The Black Student Union is sponsoring
a
Cultural Dinner and Disco, Saturday Nov.
18. Cocktail hour will begin at 8 p.m., and
dinne
·
r will begin at 8:30 p
.
m
.
.
Disco dan-
cing will begin
.
at 10
:
30. The price of the
e
vening is
$3
for Marist students, $4 for
non-students, and
$1
for the Disco only.
·
The Senior class.is sponsoring a Turkey
Trot Gocktail Party, Friday Nov
.
17°
from
9:30 to 1 :30 in
.
the New Dining
.
Room.
Admission-$! and drinks and beer will be
served. Proper attire is necessary. All are
welcome to attend.
·
Become part of Marist's tradition. Enter
the Turkey Trot sponsored by the
.
Senior
'
'class
·
on Sunday
·
afternoon. For further
·
details contact l{ob Ryan
.
C~26.
All
.
are
we~come
to
participate or watch therace.
THE CIRCLE
Weekend Happenings
CUB
EASY STREET,
Route 9, Hyde Park,
.
· 229-7969. Fri. and-Sat.-Easy Street Band.
Friday -
·
Senior
.
Class Turkey Trot Sun.-Aura.
·
.
Cocktail Party. 9:30 in the New Dining
Room. Admi~ion $1. Proper attire.
MOVIES
Saturday -
Marist Night at the Last
Chance
8
p.m. Admission
$2.
Black Student Union and
CASO
Cultural
Dinner and Disco. 8 p.m. in the Cafeteria.
$3
for Marist students,
$4
°for non-students,
and $1 for. Disco. only. .
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
ANIMAL
HOUSE--Hudson
Plaza
Theatre,
454-~.
Eves.-7
:
15 and 9:30
Sun.-4:45.
BOYS
FROM
BRAZIL••Dutchess
Cinema 471-1440. Eves.-7 and 9:30 Sat. and
Sun. matinees-1:15 and
3:30
.
.
.
INTERIORS-:Juliet
2, 471-2124 Raymond
and College Aves., next to Vassar. Eves.-
.
0 ~ COAT CABERET,
.
51° Market
_
St.,
7:40 and 9:30 Sun.-2 p.m.
Poughkeepsie
,
452-9290
.
5th anniversarl'.-
·
Free champagne, Fri
.
.
and
·
Sat.-Roy
Atkinson
,
·
Sun.-contrast
.
in
Jazz
.
..
MIDNIGHT
.
· ·
·
·
EXPRESS--Roosevelt
Theatre,
.
Route 9 Hyde Park, 229-2000.
··
Eves.-7:10 and 9:30 Sun.-4:45
.
.
LAST
.
CHANCE,
Main
Mall,
Poughkeepsie,
·
.
452-1862. Fri.-Renburen
UP
·
IN- SMOKE--Juliet
1-471-2124.
and Stefen Grossman. Sat.~Marist Night- Raymond and College Aves. near Nassar
Last Chance Ja~z Band:· Sun>-Baby College. Fri. and Sat. 6:40,
.
.
8:20
and 10.
Grand.
·
Sun.- 7:25 and 9:10.
.
.
·
.
·
Stude
,
nts
.
fight
world
·
hunger
By Chris Egan
.
.
sa
i
~, stressing the importan~e of the day is
.
.
.
.
~is m~in concern
.
He added, "my purpose
¥.ariS!,
.
studeQts
.
are p~rtakmg
m
a is to help make people
·
·
aware of the
nationwide campaign desigQed _to
.
fight situation.'
.
'
.
.
·
woz:ld hun!{er
._
'!-4'or eacJi student who
·
_
Last year the
_
·
fast raised
,
$199,000
registers his
_
dinmg s~rvice numb.er a~d
-
nationaUy, supporting food programs in~
does not eat dmner tonight, a don_at10n will
-
.
Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka, and Upper
be
~a~~
to
.
Oxf~m
.
Am~rica, the
.
Volta, said Nolan.
..
orgamzation conductmg the program.

Nolan hopes students can raise $1
000
The program, _called "The F~~
-
Fo~ a

t~is year.· >'Can you imagine
if
a sttiall
World !farvast" 1s
.
·
part
of
.
the
·
nat1onw1de college raised that much by itself while the
.
.
cam~ign ca~?<1
"
Seven Days for World ent_ire country raised $199,000? That would
D
_
eveJopn:i
_
ent
.
.
,,
be
amazing,
.
'~
.
h~ Said.
·
.·-.
.
.
Au_guS!,me Nolan, prof~sor
~
f_;._
com-
.
Cash contributions from commuters
'
or
mµmcauons, helped orgamz~ this f~ar~s
·
any student not wishing to sacrifice a
meal
Fashion Design students will be having a world
_
hunger day at Manst, which is would be welcomed also, he said.
grand opening of their clothing store, the sponsored by Ca~pus Ministry.
·
Nolan
.
.
·
·
·
-
,
.
,
Silver Fox,
.
on Monday Nov
.
20. A
wine and
.
-
. .
-
·:
·
·
c
heese rereption
.
will be held
·
from
4
to 8 \
·
d
.
.
.
Lr. •
.
.
t
f
.
· .
1
t
:, .
.
· .. ,\
.·,.,
,;
:;,-~.
\i
:
m.
,l'.llia-re;wetcome
:
\o
•,
attend:
: .... .:
·;:.,:
l
ea e1s
.
,,1p
assessmen
tom
·pg
· ·
-
. .
.
.
.
"
h
u~~~~rw:~i:ir
:~~:
:~
~
·'-
~
;
f8[~~
·
:
~i~i~i~ti~
:~
i
~
t~~
and :;~vi~~i;g
·
·
-
i~
;
.~s
-
cio~~~::•it
i~
suppose~
-
t~ be d~ingJ•;
.
.
·
e on es i
goals
:
Foy
~
agreed,
.
and said the recent
'
msunng Marist meets its objectives
ll~en to all Manst st~dents
.
.
Each bumper
'
Title
III Gr'arit has involved many faculty
The trustees would work in commiitees
'
st
i<:ker
.
~ust be submitted by Nov.
22
to the
·
and staff
.
Also, he said the choosing of his said the · report,
·
supported
·
by
ad:
~~~=~!Smg ~
1
.u\JY !ox
838·
Cotn
-
successor
-
and the "setting offostitutional
:
ministrators responsible for the
·
com-
"
'.1
are
um .
0
ree sep~ra e goa~" would "get people to look at the -mittee's area of coneern.
.
i~:::r:1aT:~dc~p~:~o~~
st
c~;/!~~i~:i;
.
major issues
:
" He added
.
hf;. would issue _an
. For th_e trustees . to properly
.
analize
name, address and tele hone number on
.
essay
_
_
~efore Thanks~ivmg on a
.
Job
_
½1format10n. con.cernmg
¥1:
college, .th~y
it.
The
second copy wili 6e given to a
·
third d~cr~pti?n of the presidency•
.
..
-
mu~ receive
~
ormatl~n early an~ m
party, to ensure fair. judging
.
$50
will
go to ·
·
A~cordmg .to Foy, ~he,,coUege has a
concise format,
accoz:~g
-
to Murut;Z's
the winner, and second place wins $25 2000 dehperate
a~bigui~y
.. ~bout
the
~f
port. Agenda for meetmgs should arrive
copies
will
bemade°ofthe wirinin bu~ er presidency, an~ exp~amed if _they (the
·
at _least ?n~e week before"
.
boar<l
sticker to be distributed to stu3ents
P
trustees) use this
_
period o! ambiguity, we
meetmgs, said the report, so trustees can
·
·
·
. .
.
. ,
·

·
·
shou~d have a pretty good idea ot what the· "carefully" study the
·
material for it.
.
Anyone interested in doing volunteer president should look like."
.
In
the past,
·
trustee members have
.
work in Appalachia
-
for a week during the
·
~e. rol,t: of the ~oard of trustees was also
"
g~nerally done their homework," Foy
winter
.
break, please contact Dave or Ken
.
clanf1eq
m
~urutz•s
-
report. The report
.
claimed, and added the trustees "feelthey
·

.
Powers in Gregory House
.
·
ex~l~ined the
.
trustees should guide the wantto get a perspective"
on
the college's
..
policies of the college, deciding
·
on "ap-
activities
.
He also said many
trustees
have
.
.
.

.
Marist College Council on Theatrical propriate" objectives and testing
if
they interviewed students about Marist;
,
,
<
Arts'
.
production "A Streetcar Named are being met. The operatio? ~f the.college
In eval~ating Foy,
·
MWl!tz's report cited
·
~
:
t
Desire" will be presented this weekend in sho~d be left to the administration, ac-
.
the president's accomplishments duririg
·
:
:
?
th~ Marist College TheatrE:
,
It
will
begin at cordmg to
.
Munitz's report.
.
.
.
.
his
20
years at
'
Marist
.
Foy's largest ac-
~-/
8
p:m. on Thursday, Friday and Saturday,
"'f!te llasic r~~e of the trustees," ac-
.
complishment was building Marist/ both
_
f
and at
J
p.m. on Sun4ay.1'he pr<,iduction is
,
~ordmg-to Foy,,~to "rep.resent the people
,
_
physically and academically
:,
.
Duririg
..
,~
free for Marist students.
·
•:
·
• ·
_
..
.
of, N.ew York
..
·.
He said the "trustees
:
Foy's tenure, he progressed with the
. _
.,
,
,
momtor the
·
performance
.
of objectives"
·
college, and
is
"serving
·
as
·
·
external
set by theJ~dership
.
_
oUhe college
;
Foy

relations officer," according to the report.
added the trust~ "make sure the colle e
"
·
·
.
.
.
: :
-Th~
tr~e sto
_
iyofBUly Hay~s
;
an
_
American
·
college student
who was sentenced
to
30 years
:.
iilJurkey's most. notorious
jail .
.
~bsolutely the mo.st
,
stupen:
do
·
us
;
f!lm you'll see th
.
is year!
..
_
;.
·,:
'
~
.
....
.
.
:
:
:
Please prese~i
,
.., ·
<-
/
:
this"ad
fof
.
< •
·
.
.
·
a
S'Cf
cenfdiscount
:
·
.,
.
.
..
·
'
\)t·;
''.

-'·
.
··
-
Pizza:
Sicz-li~it
.
/ ·
t
llegu_l4r. ·
with
.
extrai
..
.
'
. .
.
,
Hot
a;,,d
Cold
'
Sa~divich~s
'
We
deliver~Tues •
.
FR££
.
H,Qurs:
._
~
·
J>~m
.:
~r2
:
p;m_j
).

·
;
.··
_,
\
:

5,~
:
M
:
aJ.r
(
~(,
_
.?:
.
/~ ·•

.
:
·
.
,
·
• _··
.
:
:
_
-
"
Poiig~keep$ie
})
:
-
:
::.
:
-:;;·
~
47.
-
1~2
/
tl
'
i.
·

<
.
·:
.
-.
;;
~
~ .•
'. 'i
.
.
.
,
,,
_
~
..
..
.
"<
.

'
:
<"


.:
:
,.
·
·
·
November
1~,
.
1978
Inquiring
Phot~gr~p-her
Question: Do
-
students
drink
less
this
semester now
that
the
·
alcohol policy
is
being
enforced?
-
·
.
Karen Everett, sop,iomore: "No.
think
students
drink
more in their rooms and go
out more to bars.
l
don't
·
Ulink the policy
is
effective."
·
·.
·..
·
·
.
·
-
·
·
.-
. ·.
Tom
Shine,
s~phomore:
."No, it just
seemsthey're gomg off-campus as.much,
or even more than last semester. There is
the
.
·
same amount
·
of alcohol
··
drunk
'
in
·
the
dorms."
.
·
people a
policy is,
during we
the same .
·
Diane Digit
;
sophomore:
"No.
I believe
t~t
.
if
_
students can't
·
get
liquor
here, tlley
go
;
~ff~mp1Js
~
~o
.
get
:
it.
They
.
drink
as
much this y~pn th~ dorms as
.
Jast.
year
~!~P.t:..
at
..

·
~e
.
functions
.
when
°'.
it
:
·
is
·
riot
served.
'.
.
•=
.:
·;
·
·•
.
·
:• ·
••
·
,
:
:,
_
;_
..
..
· ....
.
<'
' \
i
:
,





























November 16, 1978
THE CIRCLE
Page3
Acting andpoliticS combine for ,Touchette
By
Jane Neighbors
It seems an unusual combination, but
Joyce Touchette doesn't find it in-
. compatible to be an actress and a political
science major. She points out Jane Fonda,
Robert Redford, Warren Beatty, and
Vanessa Redgrave are politically active.
Touchette, starring in this week's Marist
College Council on Theatrical Arts'
(MCCTA) production of '·'A Streetcar
Nained Desire," describes herself as a
· liberal, and an admirer of Eugene Mc-
Carthy. She says, "I am very ·strong on
nonviolence a!ld very strong on sharing the
wealth." She adds her "Streetcar"
character, Blanche DuBois, "is a pacifist.'
But she finds herself
in
a very violent
atmosphere."
Sle has worked on the Marist College
Women's Committee, and next semester
expects to be involved with the New York
Public
Interest
Research
Group
(NYPIRG ). For many years she has worn
a bracelet for a man missing
in
action in
Vietnam. She says, "I would like to do
research on the 1960's" because she was
not old -enough to be active during that
period.
-
· Touchette, who began acting last year
Alcohol committee closes
meetings to/non-members
because of a dare from a fellow student,
Touchette rules out musicals because
says she hopes to continue acting after she can't sing or dance. Her favorite
graduation in May. She is looking forward playwright is Chekov, and added she
to choosing her roles. Touchette says, "I would like to do his play, "The seagull."
have always wanted to have. a vehicle to She says she is sure of one thing, "I just
project my political views."
don't want to play some dumb broad."
In
December, Touchette will • join a
The role of Blanche is one of the most
Poughkeepsie theatrical group, Prodigy challenging in theater, and one of the
Players. She
will
work with Aida Forrester longest speaking parts, says Touchette.
of Woodstock, and TV and movie star Blanche is a neurotic, fading southern
Michael Moriarity. Last year at Marist, belle whom Touchette describes as
she played Kate Keller in "The Miracle "flighty, but. intelligent and well-bred."
Worker," Muriel in "Plaza Suite," and She says Blanche ''tries to hang onto her
was in the experimental theater sensuality in a decadent, sexual world."
production, 'At Laura's Locker." During The part won an Academy Award for
the summer she acted in "Mame't anci Vivien Leigh. Touchette compares it with
"Touchdown" at the Bardavon 1869 Opera another Leigh role, Scarlett O'Hara in
House in Poughkeepsie.
"Gone With The Wind." Both Blanche and
. by Don Purdy
Discussing career possibilities, she says, . Scarlett are southern gentlewomen who
"I would love to be in soap opera because lose the men they love. They both play
I'm
more of a facial actress, which is hard against a sweet, simple, loving woman and
t_o project from the stage." She adds "soap a strong, caddish man, and both lose their
opera is a stable field and pays the highest family homes. But Touchette says,
money." She also likes comedy for "the "Scarlett was in the right time period.
statement,
if
needed, to Perez, said sense of timing you have to learn," she Bianche is in the wrong one."
,
.
.
Dickerson. Sub-committee members are · ·says.
The alcohol committee decided not to to be chosen at the next meeting on Nov.
.
.
open their meetings to non-committee 21 she said
.
.

ter from
pg
1
membe_rs because its "members might . _Also disc~ssed at the_ Iil~eting, said
new com u ...
-------
hesitate in voicing their true opinion", Dickerson, was a new price
list
on quart
~
accor,ding to Linda Dickerson, coordinator bottles of liquor received by. the committee the 138. now for $519,000, in two years,
it
However, Marist expects tc- generate.
of public· information at Marist
fr~m Ma~iott food service: Ma_rriott's list might . be worth only $200,000," said $100,000 in revenue_t~ defray the cost of
~~e
The proposal to open the meetings, was ·prices will be compared with hquor store Waters.
computer by providing computer service
discussed at the committee's closed prices in the ·area by two committee
-Marist chose an IBM computer because for other institutions, according to Waters.
meeting ofNov.14. 'J.J}e general consensus, members, she said. The committee will maintenance and service are readily But Waters said he could not identify these
said Dickerson, was it would hinder· the askMarriott for a_ price list on half gallon , accessible "since IBM is right down the prospective clients_ because "we're still in
personal expression . of . committee bottles of liq4or in the future.
road" and "all the programs we have now the discussion state and no committments
members and would create "a wide area
Also discussed at the meeting was in- · will be . transferrable because Cornell~ have been made yet."
of misinterpretation," she said, However, formation provided to . Dolly Bodick,
Ithaca also uses an IBM system," said
Waters said after the initial costs of the
Dickerson said· she is available for in- · coordinator of-campus activities, by the
Waters.
·.
first year to put the system into operation,
formation · on the contents of the closed executive director of Dutchess County's
Waters said it will be more expensive for Marist may save in the long run.
.
meetings.
·
Alcohol Control Board who explained the Marist · to rent its own computer rather
"I wouldn't predict any savings at this
Dickerson said the alcohol committee legalities of Marist's liquor license. "He
than use another institution's because of a point but I'm quite confident that within.
decide_d ·at Tuesday's 'meeting.·
to
form a gave us a lot of information and we will try
special aiNcmditioning system which will two years of operation, we'll be close to the
sub-committee to analyze a-written Jo consolidate it," said Dickerson.
have to be installed for the computer. budget which we had last year but I won't
statemei;it by Dean of Students Antonio
The A.B.C. controls liquor in the cou_nty
Additional costs include personnel hired to guarantee it. The number of outside users
Perez and distinguish· between the alcohol . and state _and its guidelines must be
run the comput!:)r and $400 a month more in which we can attract will be the key to
policy and his interpretation of it. The s·ub-
strictly followed-to retain a liquor license. · rental cost than the, rate Cornell-Ithaca whether or not we can increase savings,"
committee will recomm.~nd changes in the
· currently charges. ,
said Waters.
·
. j
· . .
"-·, -·.·-..-'
-?,;._;, .. ; "'"':":; /.~ •• ,_ .. --~~-::::·::· ,._ •
.
,~tHuRs'nAv:
LA01ESN1GHr- ., ... . .
.
(No Cover, 1st drink Fre~)
WEDNESDAY:
½
PRICE NIGHT
.
(except bottle beer)
.
_/
·M·"'sic this--week~·nd
·by
-
EASY ·STREET .AND
·-
,
LUNCH~AND.DINNER MENU
.
.
.
'
.-
.
. DAILY
_ Route 9, Hyde
P3r.k
i
--229~7976
·
\
BENCHCRAFTED SINCE 1863
MON.
~
FRI. 10· to 9
SATURDAY
10 to 6
Hyde Pork ·Trading Co..

CUSTOM
ST.ERLING
SILVER
AND LEATHER
.APPAREL
· C~lONIAl PLAZA - llOUTE 9
HYDE
PA•X,
N.Y.
U53f ·.
(914) 229- 7900
I
_ I
I
I
.. J


































































































































































































































































































,:
:

.
.
1··
I
r
.
.
f
Page4
THE CIRCLE
THE CIRCLE
TIie Ci_rcle is !he weekly newspaper
of
the stUdents of Marist College and is published weekly during the school year exclusive
of vacat,on
periOdS
by the Southern Dutchess News Agency. Wappingers. N
.
v.
.
.
·
Beth Weaver
LarkLandon
Pat Larkin
DaveShaw
Bob Whitmore
TomBurke
George Connelly
RobRyan
editors
sports editors
Dave Potter
associate editor
KenHealy
photography editor
·
cartoonist
business manager
advertising manager
distribution manager
.
.
Photographers: Gerry McNulty, Tom BaU, Tom Burke.
Staff: Clare ~co, Marianne Beyer,_Paul C_eonzo,
Lina
Cirigliano, Chris CQrren, 9hris
_
Egan,
Joe
Emmets, C!Jris Ho~an, Maureen Jenrungs, Dianna_ Jones, Terry !r{oore, Patti Morrison, ,!ane Neigh-
bors, Valene Polen, Dave Powers, Don Purdy, Brian Rogers, Rich Sohanchyk Leslie
.
Sharp Susan
"- Squicciarini, Roy Stuts, Jim Townsend; Jo~ Mayer, Loretta Kennedy.
.· ·
.
'
·
'
.
.
~
Uon'tbe
shy
At last Tuesday's meeting, the not. ,o
newlv formed alcohol committee decided
Le>"
keep'.its meeting; closed to all non-committee
mernbers. That's eve~vone at Marist, minus
12.
.
.
.
·
complishes its goal o_f
-
issuing a statement
defining
. ·
the
·
alcohol policy, this
in- ·
terpretation stands
a
good
_
ch
_
an
_
~~ of effecting
Editorials
The alcohol committee'
§
·
reason for
·
this
dosed-door policy was
:
that
.
menibers~
_
o11ld
be inhibited bv the presence of "outsiders"
.
and
.
\~
·
ould ~ot expre
s
s their personal
.
·
how µmch alcohol is to be seh•ed at which
:
·
o
pinion
s
. Ho\,
·
ever. it
:
·
is
·
these
.
.
personal
•.
·.
e
vents.
.
-. .
.
_
opinions which could affe
c
t the future social
.
Why rio~
·
.
open
lip
your in
e
eti~gs
~
a~d
·
_
let
events ofstudents and that"s important.
e
veryone
·
~vho \vants
to~
attend
:
C'nion, don't
.
When. and if, the
.
alcohol committe~
ac~
.
be shy.
.
.
November 16,
-
1978
LETTERS

...
-
.
.
.
·
-
All letters must
be
iyped triple space with a 60 $poCe margin, and submitted •~ the Circl~
.
ollice no later than 6 p
.
m. Monday. Short letters ore pref!rred. We reserve the right to ed,t
oll letters
.
Letters mu$1 be signed. but
nomn may
be
w,thheld upon ,equest. Letter• wtll
·
be
published
_
depend
i
n
_
g upon availability o
space
.
In reply
To the Editors:
rather a question
_
of
when
repairs
In the November 2, 1978 issue of would
-
be completed
:
The Circle,
-
Chris Faill~,
The
procedures
· n?w
.
President- of the Inter-House established call
.
for the HoUSJ.Dg
Council reported on the worK of staff
to
work to~rd . reducing
, the
·
Inter-House Council.
_
reckless and malicious damages
·
.
Relative to the issue of
_
room and
-
for
.
tiniety
·
reporting of
- damage charges; l reported to needed
·
repairs
to·
the Mai!1-
.-
the Inter-House Council, the tenance-iitaff
.
The procedu~,
111
rationale of Andrew Pavelko,
.
tum,
call for timely completion of
-
..
P~ysical Plant
.
Dir'e"ctor, for
.
repairs
.
by the Maintenance~-
·•
charging dariu~ges to stuclE!nts
If
the
.
procedures
·
~re
followed
-:
·
·
before repairs are completed. I through, the question '!f when
incorrectly gave the impression repairs sh~uld be done wiUno
_
t b
_
e
·
that
_
it
·
was
.
Mr. Pavelko's
_
a
major problem
:
·
.
.
.
decision
·
whether
·
or not the
.
.
.
- repairs would be completed. It
is
· not a question of
whether or not
.
repairs
WOU!
_
d
~e
.
completed but
..
_
--
:
-
Thanks
Sincerely,
.
.
:..:__
:
GERALDE.KELLY
.
·
Assi$.nt De.in of Students
To the Marist Community:
.
the children
:
.
.
.
.
.
.

.
-
.
Not jUst
_
in January
-
Th~s is a speci~lthank you note
.
·
.
We here
-
at
_-
Cabrini-.would just
to a group of
l\113rist students
.
who
·
:·_
lik
_
e you at Marist to kriovi whaf a
went
·
thro
.
~gh a. lot
·
of
,
time and
.
-.·
fine organizatiorf
'
and wonderful
-
ene~gy to
:
do ·something nice for
:~c:
group of
.
people you _have
·
·
cin
·
.._: _ someb?dY eJse.

Th~
:
name of the campus. Ayetyspecialtha~you
:
gr<>up
IS
CASQ, whiclt stands for
·
to the president of_. CASO, Victor
.
,,;...
Community Action
.
S.twient Fragosa, and
to
Ms
:
Nidia
_
Flores
C(>mplaints about th
e
qualit
y
of
·
food at
tli
~
r compli
<:
atirig their sh~rtag
e
probl~ms;
-
Organization,
:
and
,
the· special
·
for their extensive planning and
.
.
:\!Jarist were voiced
at
Tu
e
sdav
-
:S
food
·
coni-
·.
Well
,
efiaybe
if
students
·
got
t
<,
gether and
;.

thank youi~ forthewonderfuljob
-
organj._zin1f
of
this eVent.
_
We
·
cari
',
·
-
:
.
·
.
·
'I'l'
·
·
·
.
d
·
decided
fo
he
.
consistent in
'
their meriu seiec-
.
· ·
th~Y
-
d!d}oi:
J
the
·
cnil~ep ofth,e
:
only hope that

:
the
,
Marist co~
<
.
·_
.
1mll
ee
meetmg.
us
m
a
y
not souil unusual,"
.
.
.
.
· ·
·
·
·
Samt
·
Cabr101
:.
Ho°'e
.
m West
.
munity wili
.
b~
as proud of th}S
-
:
.
_
·
but
-
some of the complaints are_the same ones
.
tion
s
, the
_
pi:-oblem
·•
of running ou
f
of
_
certain
.
.
Park; N:ew York~
As
.
a
·
former
..
.
organization
_-:
as· we
,
are ap-
·
.
·
·
·
listed
in
the Sept.
J4
is
s
ue
~f
the Circle, com
~
-
·
:
m
e
nu_ items
· -
\~ouH <lisi{~pe~r
~
-
Qr
;
·
.
fl}aybe
.
if
·
Marist
.
student,
I
_
·
.c~n
·
~~adily
:
.
i;>r.eciative.
.
-
·
··
·

·'
cc-,

plaints the sttident
s
wer
e
a
ss
ured
·
would be
·
..
.
· -
th
e
food service got their act
·
together after
· ·
appreciate
.
the sacrifice 10
'
both
..
_
_
.
.
_.
~
SiQcerelyy~~ts,
:
··
:
.
corrected.
·
·
more
_
thari
_
t,vo mcinths
:
of
_
operatiori ~nd st6p~. time
·
art~
eriergt
_
\Vh!':11
,t
t
_
he~e
,
,
_
;
:
~
><
.
Rori Glackin
-
·-
.
.
.
. ',
Howe,'.er,
h~o
·
11101)
ths later;
the
:
food.
ser~
'
.
~-
·
red f!}aking
.
e,i:cuses;
-
the
;
problems
-,
could be
.
: , students
_
:
ga.ve
.
lll
-
throWIDg
,
.
.
A
;
.
.
.
:
>
::
:
.
l~~r.e
:
a,!ifn ~era,~ist
.
.

.
.
~t::tlgl:e:ti~
.
itoti>ijo~
:
:1~:j;~cta!Z;i
t
:
,
:
:
1:7itlith,1~:t1
~~u;::::i
1
i:ii~~!~tt:::~
~
r;:r
~:
JVl
i
$t~pre
'
se
.
n~ed
-
·
.
.
-
.
:
:
.
Jl
e
t
~
Oillqtte
:
ni'~intain
.
the
·
S
tu
J
rt~g~
_
s
-
ha
·
~
·
~
-
oC:
~
·-
.
to
.
P~)
~
.
for
..
an ent1~~~ ~emest~-1:
.
?
~
rn
~
a•~
,,~~1~ch
·
-
-
-
-.-
curred Lecat1~e they
:,
ha
~e
no
.
portion
'
figtffes
: ·
:
D_lll"Ollt or are
of
_
poo~ qt~ahtY_; fhe food ser
,
To the Edito~s:
:
=~--:'
ii
b
i
cli
is
·
~~ed
·
on orie of'the
ai:~
-
-
-
..
from last year in which to
_
bas
e.J
l
_
1eir
:
serving
.
. \IC
e
problems
ID\IS~
be resolv~d
.
~o~v. becau
_
se
-I w
_
ould
"
·
appteciate your
·
Ji~lE:5
_
is
.
.
t~~refor~
-
-
·
_basec( on
:
.
e
s
timates on. Also •
.-
Gillotte claimed students
·
.
:
-
~tud~nts are paymg for the
·
ser
-
v1ce pow, not
.
f'
g
· -
f
.
'this statement. 1
.,
m1~10format_10n
~_
and
:.
10accurat~
_
J
.
,
prm
.
in
_
.
0
.
. .
.

.

·

reports
_
.
o(
,
:
my
,
statements.
,
·
As
.
are incons
_
istent
-
in their n1enu
s
elections.
fur-
.
,)
11st
m anuary.
'
·
regre~
.
to
_
say, as
_
has ~appened
_

~lways;
1
would
.
be prepared .to
:
.
:
.
.
.
.
._
·
oft~n
ID
.
th
_
e
-
~st,
.
thatJhe two
·
repe~Land to
·
clarify
:
my com~
1_
#i
._,•e·
.
·
.
U . I
_
·
_
·
,
• .
·_.
p
_
_
·
·
.
,
·
,
o
·
.
___ ·

·
,•n
'
.j_t
·
•_
-
--.....;..;..,;... ___________
.l!!!i.i
artg~les
ID
which I am quoted on meitts fcir the
.
Editors.
(cf.
"New
VJ
-
~
·
.
1
·
.
~
·
,
Thurs!l
.
~Y,
·
-
~
-
Nov~mP
.
er 197
-
8,
~
Teacher Evaluation Forms
_ Wlfortunately
rmsrepre~ented
Utilizep,
1•
'!Everyo
,
ne
Will
.
.
F
.
a
.
,.
_
th

a
.
nd
·
.
v
.
a1
-
u
.
e
·
s
~y c~mments as given 1:llt~e
_
Benefit,, "Core Response ... ") •
posecl
:
to be going?
·
- •
.
:
How are we to know? No science is equipped to
Values may mean
.
what each of us thinks worth
even ask the question. If there
is
a mind a tour
.
having,
·
admires
.
in others, wishes he had him-
origin arid
.
the mind reveals to us what we are
·
.
self.
·
·
.
·. . ·
-
·
. ·
.
made of and for; <mly then can we kpow. For the
.
What individuals can value,
·
can
_
vary to in~
·
:
Christian Christ has given the answers .
.
·
..
. ,
.
.
.
finity -
·
vary in value righ._t
_
down
·
to
·
the utterly
·
For each of us individually
'
there
~
is the
.
valueless. I would reflect
.
here, however, on r.eal
"
.
.
possibiljty
_
9.(Jeaming from Christ
·
what we are; ·
values, on things valuable

even
.if
no
.
one valffes
· .
.
·
_
why we are; what our goal is, and how we should
them, if no one kriows abcititthe
r
like vitamin B
. reach it. Thus intelligentliving is possible for the ·
or insulin before they vier
_
e discover~<L
:.
Clearly
·:
·
Chri~ian: and
_
if all Christians
·
mastered this
--
the the test
·
or their actual value is theit relation

message an~ were prepared to utter
.
it,
-
our
.
_
. ··
to reality: they are valued by
'.
u's
in,
pr9portion to
·
society could re-shape its own way of life .
.
That
.
mterviews. The Circle editorial
-

·
·

·
··
·
·
-
. ll
-
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
·
·
Cordia y yours;
·
_
Louis c,
.
zu:cca
~
ello
·
PRCf:ES$6R:}'ov_g ~P~
_
~IMEITTf\1,-RAT
15
.
.
·
::
_
·:
_AL.L
.
.
'<el-LOW ANQ. 8L.OAT'el)
>
W~AT
·
'
·
:
P!?
y~,.)_-r::~E:D
·
·
-
1r-
-
?
i
REopyE.
_..
~o •
.
2J
.
·
ye.1..~CJ\,,/
-
PYE.
-.
tJO. 5
>
5 f\C<:t\ARJiJ
.
.. •
.
_
.
·
our knowledge of
.
re.ility; In the bodily order this
all Christians
:
should act
·
thus does
.
not
·
seem
· ·
test
·
goes witbOut
· ·.
qllestion.
:
:
H
.
~lth
,
is.
·
Seen
·
as
· ·
· •
Pr0babl¢; anq there
·
is
not much you and I
can
· ·
knowing th_e laws cif reality and
.
living by them
;
.
do about "all Christians."
.
What of ourselves??
.
ND)
AG,VAUY
.
'
1jJ.~A~
A
·
_
MA.RIST
COC~~f:
.
.
.
·
·
, .
-
'.
·
. ·
.
.
w
tJ
C.r\ •
.
.
:
·
.
·
· --
·
Our
.
values
·
depend not" only-on how much of
:
,
>-
·
wfc.in
-
give our
.
minds tci the study of Christ
·
reality the intellect sees
:
Toere is the will clut-
i
_
arid his
·
message; but ourselves
will
still have to
.
ching at wh~t we warit,
.
~vading
.
what we don't.
It
.
:
be
:
,
coped with. ~owing the
will
of God, in full
is more subject ·to
_
imagination and emotions
.

·
aw.freness of01.ir own folly,
·
we can sin:
"
i.e. w~
even than intellect ... though so much o( what we
.
·
·
:
-can
:
grab the illlmediate pleasure
_
and damn the
take for thinking has happened outside the mind.
: :
·
consequences.
_
Disobeying the
.
laws of reality
All this goes into the
,
yalues we live
.
by, soni~
·
.
always damages us_ - bodily;

mentally: For.the
gocid-:-some bad, with only
,
a
-
catch-as;-eatch-can
.
..
,
.
:
·
.
Christian there is always the possibility that he
relatfori to·reality
/
as likely to
stunt
or aistort us
.
.
,
_
11iay
ce~se to grow
in
under~ndiilg or
.
.
Chr1~•s
as to help us grow; Btit
_
ev~n
·
this rr.tish-giash of
;
.c
:
ct~ching .. :whe~ he leaves th~ e4uca_tiona! arena;
values is
.
not
-
wholly of our
_
own
-
makqig; its

.
AtJhis
\
1>9-uit his
_
contact-:-stich aiut Wcls!~with'
.
finishing touches are our own individual addition
-i.
.
phristiari valiies
·
expresset:l
.
in
.
word and actiori
·
:
·
to the values ofthe
,
sodety we ar~ ~om
in-
:
-.
may
_
be
-
effectively snapped
:
·
If
~
~
_
the resµlt'
is,
.
_
to
.,
.and or
.
presently.Jive in.
>
-
-
·
.
;
•....
.
.
·
>
'
inevitable
;
lie
is lQOkirtg atthe
·
world with
_
two
\
:
·
·
-,.
·
Real values exist in
·
relation to
:.
reality. But
·
eyes whiclfdo
not
focus. There
.
is
,
the
_
st
-
rong
.
eye; .
.
there is such
.
a mass of realitythat
,
we cannot
·
growirigdailystrotiger;
·
withwhichheseeslife_as
see,
.
eitlier with the eye of the body cir the _eye of
he lives
it
.'
There is the weak eye, growing
-
all the ·
the mind. We mtist either be shown it, or remain
·
.
time weaker;
_
with.which
-
he sees:Iife as

,
Christ'
ignorant of jt,to· the confusion of.oµrjudgemeilt
·
..
. :
tells
.
us i(i~ .
.
If
he'is not much given
.
to thiilk.ing, ..
.
. on act;ion:fand
.
values
>
.
·
· -:
.
.
:
·
:,:
, .
. _.:
,
:- :. :,_,;
<
::
.
:
_
he
'
jnay
:
coiitiiuie
'.
'soine

·
mempership
:
in
_
_
the ::-
.
·
,

- .

:
:
,An
obvious example is the meaning of.life~
Wif

·
-
-
~
:
church,
-
barely noticing
,
the
trouble

.
in
-
his eyes.
:
·:
·
ar~ on the ~~
-
d
.
~f Jife;
_
a
_
w¥e
ag~
_.
we
\~er~. n<>t;~a
>
:
·
B_ut
~
n~
h
_
a~
an
aijive fi:lind
;
~l!en
:
h~
.
'w.i_ll find if-:
\
·
,·.
while
,
before
·
no one
<
was; m another \\'.hile
.
we
-
'.

.
<iifficwt,to look
.-
searchmgly
;
at

life
'
.
Wlth
'
eyes·
.-
..:.

·
.
shalfno
·
longer be
·
on ,it;

,
in an imm~surabl~
:
:
- :-<
iinf9cusedandhiswholetenden~yWi-Ubeto
:
ciose
-
,< ·
·
:
while no one
will
be.So whBtisit all about?
Why
·
,
.
_
,
.
one
:
eye.:.
;
.
~
the
:
weak one. ··
'',1 ;
:
:
·:-~
.
·
. -
~
:.-
:
·
'
.
·
.
:
~r:e.
::
r~
.
;
~
-
~f.~~
·
tr~~~
W
t
r~h~~
:
:
\
~~~)t~
-
::
~~i -
·
,
·
-
·}
i/)>
·
-
:
.
_
:
,
'•:-
-
·.

-
~-·_
:
-
<
·
:
,
:.c
.
:
::t
.
-~:
~
-
'.
t
?
\
:
·
·>)
.
-
.
;
·
-
.-
-
~
:
. .
.
.
.
'
.
-:
:
,.;.
/:
'.
.
·
·
-,
-:-
-
.

















































































































































































































































































November16,
1978
THE CIRCLE
.Page 5
.
.
.
Students
·
predict local election outcomes
By
Dave Powers
-
Dutchess County
189
voting
precincts
served
as a
·
classroom for
95
political
>
science students, who conducted a voting
,
poll on election
day
according to
.
their
faculty advisor Professor
Lee
Miiingoff.
Students from Miringoff's Political
Parties
.
and Pressure Groups class, along
·
with
three
other
_
political science classes
took
part
in
the project which attempted to
predict the winners in 14 local elections
. ~d the reasons voters yoted the way they
did;
.
.
·
.
·
.
According to Miring off, the student' poll
took a random sample polling
in
each of
the 189 · election districts in Dutchess
County. Although some voters would not
answer the pollsters, the response was "by
and large cooperative," said Miringoff.
The random samplings were turned over
to seven
''core
people" who tallied up the
results which were broadcast over
WKIP
Miringoff said the polling project was
radio starting at 9 p.m. According to
"an
enormous success in getting students
Miringoff, the seven core people-Chris more involved in the whole election
Faille, Erin O'Neill. Cathy Cornish, process." He also said "it was an awfully
.
Barbara Carvalho, Jim Kelleher, Vance good way to learn about voting behavior
Slaw, and Pat McNiemey were in-
and how to study polls."
.
strumental
in
initiating and organizing the
Some of
.
the pollsters agreed. Clms
poll which was scheduled in conjunction Faille said "It was a l~t of hard wo~k
an?
with WKIP radio.
-
-
-
.
worth it." "It was qmte an experience '
According to Miringoff, the results were said pollster Dave
-
-
~ac~annis. Another
surprisingly accurate. The poll sue-
pollst~r Joe Krzys said
'
!t
allowed me to
cessfully predicted. the winner of all 14 exper1encethetruemeamng of grass roots
·
local elections within a few percentage poli~i~s."
.
.
·-
points. According to Miringoff the poll was
M!nngoff said th!: analysis would
be
so
accurate, the Poughkeepsie Journal ava~able to. any interested students.
.
Fashion·
.
.
D8Sign
Center
·
. site
of
'
.
'Camecr
WorkshopH
-
.
used the Marist
·
findings in
an
articlt: Mirmgoff said he would attempt the
analyzing the sheriff's and County project again next year.
executive elections.
By Mariam}e Beyer
describe each model.
_
_
_
_
,.
.
.
. \
.
.
.
-
The modeJs presented casuai
..
plaid,
·
ru
·
rke,v Trot
111
C [
'Marist
student designed, sewed anq beige,

arid
-
green creations to background
_
.
J
.
.
1r.1.arist
ol
ege
modele<;l tl?,eir
O!?
creatio_ns, ra~ing £~om
.
music like Billy Joel's
-
''Just the Way You
Cockta
·11
_
p
·
arty
···.
casualoffice attire to bright, shmy disco
'
Ate," a:Jid
·
Barry Manifow's t'Weekend
in
Jaycees
.
wear __ at Thursd~y evening'~ ''.Ca~eo New England/' saving the
,
slinky, sexy
;
Fasluon
,
Show" m the
:
fasluon
:
des.1gn evening Vlear for songs like "Native New
Tha
·
nksg1·v1·ng
.
_
center
in
Donnely Hall.
·
.
·
.
Yorker"
·
and "What IDid for Love."
•.
_,
.The
:
Cameo Workshop,
;_
a
:
••sman
·

With the
·
theme
:
from
.
"Rocky" as
Sponsored by the
r
·
. s
.
·
·
representation
.
of wha_t
-
will
-
come
·
.
·
ne~t' background, the six
.
.
male models
·
ap-
3XI
ervice
.
·
..
semester;'.' i,nvolved thifteE!n
__
se_co_nd
.
year
.
.
peared dresse
_
d in casual vested outfits and
-
Senior Class .
·
·
(fashion design) _stude~ts and
SlX
_
_
_
male suits ... Joe Kennedy, one
·
of the four men
$1 donation for
.,
models, two of whom are freshman m the who
_
is
not a fashion major. was asked to
F · d
a·y··
N
·
o
-
17
-
.
..
program,- according to
.
David Leigh, model while visiting the
Leo
delL He said
.
n
.
.
V.
.
a
worthy cause
-
-
fashion design director:
.
·..
.

-
modelingisfun;andadded"I'lldoitagain
9 30 1 30
-
_:_
·
.
·
,
The models designed and sewed their
,
in
-
the spring ifthey
·
want ine.".
·. ·_
.
··
:
·
-
~
:
Tuesday 12:56 thru
:
own outfits;
_,
many
·
consisting
of
jackets;
.
_
Leigh said the more extensive spring
W d d
5
.
.
·
vests, and knee-length coats. T_erry Frost; show willJastlwo or more hours,
.
unlike
-
_
·1n
t
·
h
·
e
e
nes ay-until
.
.
a
male fr~shm
_
en; deSi&Jl~d
_
and'made tpe the l'~ameo'
_
' which·w~s an hou(in length
to Poug·
hkeeps,·e
..
.
:
black tuxedo he wore m
.
the
·
-
.
~ow.
:
and
:
mcluded
,
,
14 _fashion presentations.
·
·
-N
--
.
o
·
· •
R
-..:
-c
Leigh,
.
who
_
''dfesn
't' like fashion
SDO}VS
·.
-
Leigh
;
said the students prepared for about
.
·..
.
e
_
_
W
__
rn
Ing
-
-
·
...
oom
Tra ,· n
st
·
ation
.
because
.
they're
.
-.
duJ,l,'
\~_
choreographed
_
two
,
and a)1al_fweeksfor the'faUshow; and
:1
.
dance
:
~eps ,and l?<>dY
·-
movem.ents to w6r~ed a~o_st.!lll:semestetfor the spring
,
·
sem1·
-fo
·
rm
al
Contact 452-9715
contemporary music· as
part
of the
.
affair which mvolves both second and first
modeling
:
process, rather than
_
the year stticf~nts. .
'
$
·
1
·
·
.
·
·
o
·
o.·
ad
·
m
·
.
·1ss;.1·
on
Jim Gilligora
_
_
n-LS12
,
traditional
'
reacling
g,f
,
index cards
·
.
to
.
·
,.
·
·
,
· .··
.
_
_
_
·
··•
kJOQd-COll)plJints.~.1ro111
_
,
pg
1
--
-
· ..
·
_
.
·
--
_
·
._
--,
_
I

....... -----_.;..;... ---------------- -- -......
~-G-err_y
s_ca-nla_n
L_
·
so_s--.
-
~
-
-
·-

.
.
Pet~
Gilloite,
food
.
p~oduc:iion
lll;m'ag;~.
.
''usu~lly
' ;
~~~er~Q.
;
upn
c~
~nd
·
•.
addict
:
:
tlie
.
.
..
:)
~fl~~~i~r::~~nti~6~pbiv;i~tbi
·~
?;iatiec~#~elttfR:i!;~~a:~~~~~
-
ttte
-
-
:
~(
.
.
·,
_
~
_.,
_
~

.
.

.
.-
~~nuary.
·
.
·.
-'
·
-
.,.
-
.
,
·
·
-
~
-:-·
·, _···-
.
.
···
.
.
n~w
~
g~rJ:>age
_
bm
··
,
which
:-
:was
..
ordered
,
h~s
oL
·
o
··
CQ/t~
.
c.;f\
.
l~I
RET
Barry
·
Cheatham; dire~tor of
.
dining not
peen
delivered.
.
·
.
·
·
.
·
.
·.
·.
__
·
. _
·
·
-
_
_
services,
,
claimed the food
·
·service
has
Students also voiced complaints about
__
improved and added he had not heard any
·
·
cockroaches
·
in
·
the- cafeteria ..
_
However;
complaints since September aboutth1Hood Dean of Students, Antonio Perez claimed
:
_
-
service until Tuesday's meeting;
·
he h~d "not seen
a
cockroach in a month."
-
P.
P.
·
P.
·
J\lso,
the
·
stu<lerits
.
complained
·
about_
.
Cheatham ~id the cafeteria
-
is sprayed to
·
.
.
.
a
rt
·
y
.
a
...,_y
·
_
.
~
rty
certain
·
food items running out during exterminate cockroaches
·
every
.
other
• • •
-
·
·

~ •
I
£
• • •
·
U
• • •
·
-
·
mea~
.
. Students complained a~olit pizza Saturday; and added the cafeteria will be
rUJ1I1ing out last Sunday night after only
15
"boll_lbed" to eliminate Jhe
.
cockroaches
minutes into dinner.
·
·
·
during
-
the Thanksgiving recess.
Gillotte explained he is "guessing
·
at
Add
_
itional co.mplaints .were·. made
.
by
what you're going to eat," arid said the Betty Brix, a senior, who complained there
figures for.
·
what students eat at each meal
was
not enough
.
seating in the
·
cafeteria
can and do change. Gillotte also com-
during meals, and asked
if
more "meat
.
plained about not having records from last and potatoes" could be served in addition
.
.
.
.
_
.
:
·
year to base fo_od consumption figures ori; to Italian dishes .. ,,
..
:
-
-
Shannon claimed the food service has
Gillotte satd "ey
_
eryone comes (to
·.
-
been leaving
-
breads; meats arid
_
sauces d~er) at once because of night classes,"
.
·
uncovered
in
storage: He
·
also said gar- creating a seating problem. He also said
:
..
bage lias been piling up on the loa!llng dock
·
the food seryice is "looking into" buying
.
in the rear of the cafeteria,
-
creating a more tables
-
for the cafeteria. The food
hazard.
.
·
·
·
,
·
service is also working 011
.
serving more
~
-
·
·
· Cheatham said most of the food was meat and potato dishes, said Gillotte.
.

:
~Jd~~~~r!~ !~~~~,
1
!~~d
::;!~~~en
~~2:udent
_
__
in
_
-
to
over to· the Dean of Students to be taken his room, while the off-campus people
.
-
.
care of.
.-
tried to provoke the student
.
back info the
.
:
.
·
'-.
·
The· Dean of Students was unavailable hall.
·
·
;
:
forcominent.
.
·
--
·
·
.
_
According to
.
Hogan,
.
the fighting
·
· .
·
Another incident, an "altercation" in- resumed, and a tire iron was brought out .
.
volving Marist students, broke out early
-
He said "someone got hit, or it was swung ·
--:
. Sunday .morning, according to Waters .
.
or something•~ ~nd Cooper-got hold of the
·
Security
.
guards Chris C09per and Chris tire iron
_
a~d took_ it away.
,
.
.
Hogan respond.¢d to third floor
-
Leo Hall,
_
Hogari said he then heard someone shout
attempting
.
to-:-"quelL the
·
disturbance'} ''some~Q(iy's got, a knife,"
·
although he
without success.
·
.
.
·
.
·•--
_
·
_
didn't actually
-
se·e one .
.
The fight then:.-
_
·
According
.
to responding securi~y officer
.··
resumed;
.
_
but
,
broke
_
up

.
again wben the
Chris Hogan; at 3 :30 a;m:
-
a caU·came into people involved heard the police were
.
the security office,
·
reporting a"' fight on
.
coming.
,.
.
.
. .
.
.
_
-
third floor
-
Leo Hall: Hogan said he and
The off-campus group fled down the
·
/
:
Coopef:
·
.
weilt
:
fo
Leo,. wher~-he
·
sajd
·
they
·
stairs as the Town
_
of Pougltkeepsie Police
.:...
saw approximately 20 people fighting~ with arrived,
·
according to
·
Hogan. He said he
another 20
·
on each side trying to. ge~ into
-Jalked
to one student for a while, and
.
the
the fight.
> ·
·
,-
-
·
:-
_.
:,-
.
-
:
~

police,
·
armed
.
,with
,
nightsticks and
.
.
.
1-!ogan said he wasJri
.
th~
_
middle ofthe
-
carrying large fla§hlights did _not come
.
:
:
•.
fight~amorig
;
Marist resident students

and
;
:'
u~tairs
:
1.mtil
.
approximately 20 · minutes
>·
·
:
-
. ~-

.

soin:e
\
:
off

campus
:,
Jtud~rits
:
amd
0
-
the1r

_later;
-
;
·
\,. ·
·
-:
--
·
<:

:.
,
·
.
.
_
_
.
-
.
.
'
:,
.
f
~
friends
:
He said hiri:iself,
'
R~ident
A~\'.~I:'
_
.:

,
:
m;gan
·
said two
.
off campus people were
·:

'
.
·;

Stan
,
Kieltyk~~
:
and· BiJ,1
-
Qei;nicl(form@
_
a
\
,
retaiJ.le<i
/
for
·

:
questioning
:

in
i
:
Resident-
:.

<
;;:
:,°'
·
)
barri~1:-betweeri:thc(grou~;
-
Hogan,
_
wlio
·
.
_
Director:
·
:pat
·_
tennehan's
:
apartinent. To
·
,
:
·
.

<,;.
:_said--.-_
the
/
groti~the~
?.
'!verbally
..
11buse~

··
his khowleqge;'Hogari

-
-
~id
_
the.
Leo
..
Hau
·
The
Old
Coat
Celebrates
its
5th
Anniversary
~
.
_
This Weekend
Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.
Nov.16,
17, 18.
Appearing:
tonight-
Rudy Roberson
Fri. & Sat.
Roy Atkinson
No Cover-door prizes-Free Champagne-
•: .Party .. ~Party ... Party ...
... A resta-uraot, an alternative, a diff
ei■ent
place
4IMll80
-
~
·
<>
each
other'
\
said iidiveminutes the fight
~'
-
resident
-.
was notquestioqed;·
_
·
·
.
/
:'.
'.
/
f~ft
{~1
:
1
gN?·
/:~<F!:
:
~
:
;,
r
~
,
::c{•\:;/
,
·:7
:_
~:;?;
;
:
·,
:'
'
'.
'''
"
i,
;
.
•:
·
.
.
:::,
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<';
.,
'
.
·
·
:
~-:
:
.
___
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -......
-
..
·
·
- - -
·
-
··
- - - - - - "
, - .

.
.-
.
.
·,
.
·.
·_
-:-
·
,-
.
:....
..
-
·-
I

• •
•.
- ~ •
·-·
-
·····
-
-
-
-
----
---
-
-























































































































































































r
'
I
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Page6
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)
]>
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---
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I

THECIRCLE
_
·November 16, 1978
/
·(
.
.
-
Do
you want
.
to hear about some unusual c;areer opportunities ~vailable to
_
ll)en and wo~_en
.
-while
they
stay in school and
~
·after
they graduate? Marine Corps career programs-
-
:
in Data- Processing, Telecommuriications,Police and Criminal lnvestigati~ns, Avaiation
_ .
.
,
_
Business Management, to n
_
ame
_
iust a few-are among.the best offered in
.
or
-
out
.
of the Military.
·
--
-
-
.
Thtf
Marines Officer Selection Team will
be
visi.ting
:
the following colleges.
·
in-the Poughkeepsie
.
area-
·
· '
·
·
, ·
-
MARlST
·
COLLEGE-
-
DEC.
4,
:
5
&
6
.
·
:
'
.
.
,
i
.
.
.
--
.
\
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/
-
DUTCHESS
COMMU
.
NITY· COLLEGE-DEC. 6
&
:
J
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_
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.
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·
.

-,,,
·---
_
·
SUNY
NEW
·.
-PALTZ~DEC.
4
.
:'
&
·:
·
5
~
:
·
.
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:
.
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I
· .
.
.
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.

.
.
.
\
Jesting
·
and i~terv1ews
for
·
interested
·
individu_als
•.
wiH
·
be
cond_ucted
:
~~n.
Dec~
:
4-Wed~
:
-
Dec.
'
7
-
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
;
.
.
.
.
.
.
_
,
.
.
at
.
the
Holiday
Inn in
Poughkeepsie
-
(Route
9
and Sharon
;
lfoad}
-
-
-.
6
PM
·
ro
.to
9
PM
.
.
.
-_
-
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.
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·
.:
c
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.
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·
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,.
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·•
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·.
FOR FURtHER INFORMATION cALLCAPTAltfgiE.D Af
(212)&20-&118,1&119
·•
··•.·
·
·•
·
·
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V
-----------------------------·----------------------------------
Novem_ber 16, 1978
THE CIRCLE
Page 7
Marist finishes 1•8
ends worst
season
-·~~!~~he~!
the Week~
Marist football team has been named
Marist Athlete of the week for the week of
November 12.
·
Laffin, a senior from Wappingers Falls,
'
intercepted four passes in Saturday's 19~
passing, with two interceptions and he loss to Niagara. The interceptions were
c~uldn t match the performance. of vital in keeping the loss from turning into a
Marist's longest football season mer- Niagara quarterf?ack Joe Read and tight rout
for
the undermanned football team.
cifully came to an end last Saturday as the end Steve Devano.
~
(See football story.)
by
Ken
Healy
Red Foxes lost 'another game, this one to . Read comp~ete<! 17 of 29 passes and ~s
Throughout the season Laffin, a
' Niagara, ·19~. The loss gave Marist a 1-8 m~ercept~ six tunes (four by Manst s defensive back has held together the Red
record in their first Division III, varsity Mike_ ~ffm) bu~ p<>mpleted 12_ passes to Foxes shakey secondary despite playing
·season.
Deveno. DeverfO s 12 receptions were hurt With shoulder and leg injuries. ··
The· fact that the Red Foxes ":ere even goo~ for 132 yards an~ a ~ouchdown.
One of the most versatile players on the
. able to p~ay the game wa~ a cred~t to. head.
Niagara sco~ed their first touchdown team, Laffin has played halfback, wide
coach MU.ce Malet a_nd
~
coaching staff. when . Read -ra~ over from the ~wo receiver, safety, cornerback and punted in
_ ~st week Malet had to info!11111 players - follo_wm~ a pass· mterference _call agamst his four years at Marist. In 1977 Laffin led
th!3t they would not be m~mg the trip to ~anst
10
the e_ndzone. Bri_an ~onvey the National Club Football Association in
Nia&ar~ because of low mid-term_ grades. kicked a 38-yard field goal to give Niagara punting with a 4l yard -average. _
As
a
The _ rught f?efore .th~ · game Malet a 10-6 halft_une lead.
.
.
sophomore playing halfback he was the
.
s1;1spe_nded ~ive. ~layers for curfew . Conve:f kicked anoth~r 23 yard f~eld go~l •second leading rusher on the Marist team.
_/ violations. With m1unes to_- several ~ey m the third quarter t~ mcrease Niagara
s
Last season· in ·addition to his punting
players,,most notably defensive ends Mike lead t~ 13~. Then late m the fourth quarter Laffin was shuttled between wide receiver
. Ragusa and Jir1 Pagano the Red Foxes Deveno ~aught a 1~ yar~ TD pass from and defensive back.
Mike
Laffin
took the field
m.th
only. 30 plaY,ers.
Read to insure Manst's eighth loss of the
Despite being und~rmanned Maristtook season. .
.
an early 6--0lead when Jeff Hackett ran
61.
1'.he wm :UPPed Niagara's record to
4-2:1
yards for the Red Foxes only score. The whi,le Manst's loss left them at 1-8, their
13 frosh lead swimmers
_
· extra point atteqipt failed.
wor~t season ever.
It was the second loss
Hackett rushed for . 110 yards while __ Manst had suffered to a club football
· fullback Phil Tripkin r;m for 100 and Ed~e · tean:i, ,the othe~ coming against Siena.
Williams gained 57 yards·o~ the:ground . .
Manst s only victory of the season was
· Despite the Red Foxes impressive rushing against Manhattan, also a club.
.statistics, Hackett was only six of thirty
Booters · knocked · out
.
.
.
.
-
.
'
.
--of first.
NCAA'S
By Jim Townsend
Two goals of the Marist College swim-
- ming team this year are to establish a good
base for swimming at Marist and to retain
this yea_r's freshmen for the future, ac-
cording to Coach Larry Van Wagner.
· Entering its first varsity season Marist
has 13 freshmen on its 16 member squad.
Van Wagner said the large number of
freshmen will
be
the nucleus of the
swimming team for the. next four years'.
He also said he would like to add about 10
- freshmen each year to the program.
faces
St.·
Francis December 9 and Kings
Point February 10. Van Wagner said he is
interested
irt
seeing the Red Foxes' im-
provement between these two meets.
Van Wagner said he expects strong
showings from Rich Conlon in the
backstroke, James Cash in the breast-
stroke, and Steve Cronin in the butterfly
and freestyle events.
.
Other freshmen on the Marist squad
by Pat Larkin
The Red Foxes
will
be competing in the
Adolphus Lawson was credited with ~n · National Collegiate Athletic Association's '-
asstst on the play.·
_
Division
_II
Metropolitan Conference. The
. include Frank Burbance swimming the
breaststroke and butterfly, Tom Daunais
in the freestyle sprint, Steve Hopson in the
long distance freestyle, Phillip Legare in
the freestyle sprint, Bill Nolan in the
backstroke and freestyle, Patrick Rush in
the butterfly, backstroke, and freestyle,
John Cutillo, Henri Rivers, and Maryann
Mulligan.
The· Marist College soccer team lost to _ Goldman said both goals were scored as team will have eight dual meets during the
Southern Connecticut State College 2-0 "a result of defensive mistakes by Marist.
season; four home and four away. Marist
Friday to finish its season with
a
9~ He said the Red Foxes lost their con-
will open its season at- New Paltz
record.
.
centration twice, both times goals were November · 28. Van Wagner said Kings
Southern Connecticut will advance irito scored.
Point and Saint Francis will give Marist
~etuming upperclassmen include Mike
Boyle, Margi Mons, Susan Barrett, and
Fonda Leyden.
· the NCAA regional finals this week with -
Goldman added two Marist backs had the most trouble quring the season; Marist .
. :r~;;:tiom1l finals December
1~
~?~,
2,.in,i~ts~~ii-~UTJ;t~\~n-t~t!~~?fl~e~~a_h: . .
~---•.:•
·
--:·-•.·: : ...................
•.;~;--
,
- . - - •
__
,
:..!Ill,·-•-•_-------------.
~~l~~~:?.;:t~fa!=,t:?~~t~:"1-lf
·Marisf
3fthe
Garden
·season. He compared the· team with some excellent diving saves later on.
M ·
f
M
f
f ·
St t
Oneonta who Marist lost to earlier in the
The Red Foxes "were not generating
·
3r1S VS.
On C air
a e
·season. However- he .said Southern Con-
enough· movement" according to Gold-
. necticut had more overall depth on the man. He said the team tried to go up the
Dec. 2 ai. l
p.m.
field than Oneonta. ·
,
middle too often arid. should have gone to
-· Goldman added "I was very impressed the.outside more than it did and he added
with their skills." He said the Connecticut "we didn't get the ball inside the penalty
team was not weak in any position and area enough."
·
· continued the team
,
was very quick.
Marist was outshot during the game
30-6,
Sal Barbagallo. opened, the sc?ring for had only three shots on goal to Southern
Southern Conn. at 13.33 of the first half ... Connecticut's 17, and had only two corner
The goal came off a direct kick which · kicks to Connecticut~s 14.
bounced off .goalie
!µch
Heffernan's
Heffernan was forcedto make)4•saves
hands.
·
.
while Ed Mira had an easy day making
Jason Whiteman scored the second goal only three saves in the net for Southern
of the first half off a corner kick. The goal Conn.
·
· ·
came with
3:25
left to play in the first half. ·
1978-MARIST
~AL.SOCCER CHAi.'\IPIONS: Pictured left·to.right. Top
row: Mike Pruyn, ;l>atLar~ (sports edltc,,r), Jim Townsend, GerryMcNulty.
Bottom
-· ,·, .. row:·:PautClanzcfo Mike ~,Paul-Kee~~ Due
Uhl;
Patil PlesstNot~plctured::
. ,
Paul ~ano
.(ma:8coU
.
••-· . ' ·,;,. . · ,·
·· .
-- .
, ..... _ .
. '
.
/
.STUDENTS - WITH MARIST ID - Seats are on the floor behind baskets.
PLANA
$3.00
PLANA
$3.00.
PLANB
$8.00
PLANC
$13.00
PLAN D.
$10.00
Game Ticket• $3.00
Gome Ticket· $3.00
· Provide your own transportation
Game Ticket
Bus Ticket• round trip - leave at 10:45 A.M.
leave MSG at 4:30 P .M.
Gome Ticket
Knick vs. Portland ticket
Bus transportation• leave at 10:45
A.M.
leave MSG ofter Knick game
Gome Ticket
,
Sus ticket • round trip (bus to MSG• Iona• return to Moris!)
Gome ticket to women·s game at Iona
ALUMNI
& FRIENDS. Tickets ore side court in ·loge
PLANAA
~
$5.00
PLAN BB
$10.00
PLAN CC
$18.00
College G~rjie tkket
College Game ticket
Round trip bus transportation• leave at 10:30 o.m.
: . , .
leoveMSGot6:00p.m .
. College Gome tick~r . • .
Knick vs Portland game ticket• $9.50 ticket for $7.50
Sus transportation - leave at 10:30 o.m.
leave MSG after Knick game
PLAN DD
-
College Goll}e ticket
.
$)?,-.50_:
,,
Knick.vs P<?rtla~d Gome ticket, $7.50
l Alumni ge"t tol!ether. Relr~~hin~nti·~rovided by"alumni ollic~ • $1.00
Students .
Plan
. A (3.00) _ _
_
C(13.00) _ _
8(8.00) _ _ _
0(10.00) _ _ _ _
·
Alumni
& Friends
Plan
AA(5.00) _ _ _
CC(l 8.00) _ _
_
BB(l0.00)
00(12.50) _ _
N~ME. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Tele.
No. _ _ _ _
_
... ·~- ~;~'~·~1.•:.,:.-.:A.QP.~_~S$i.~-:-,;.....;..~~~~~~.~~~.~~-:-':":~~--... · .....
-::7-::7.··:-::<~-;·-,.:·.;",-'."''t,-.:;_•··~·
· Return
to
Mi:Cann Center• Allen. Ron Petro ..
....
...
...
,




















































































..
-
·
Page{J
THE CIRCLE
November 16, 1978
Hoopsters.
prepare
··
for season
·
in
·
MCCann
7 wom
_
en return~~s

open
_up
·agains~ C.W.
By
·
John Mayer
effort. "Both. are
.
outstanding defensive
_
_
_
.
players," said Rogers, "C8rey
is
a
r~l
'.Che Ma
_
rist College women's basketball hustler and
_
has a
.
very good ~cormg
team
will
open
·

its 1978 regular season at
_:_ _
potential (13.1 pts. per gameJast
-
year),
hom
·
e November 29th against
c.w.
Post
.
and Salmori
is
-
simply a good all around
with seven returning lettermen and a new player."
'
·
_
.
.
_
head coach, Linda Rogers. -
.
-
The other two returning players are
-
Rogers, who
spent
the last
.
six

seasons sophomores Pam Gr~
·-
(5'9'')
-
a!)d Irene.
coa_ching wom1m's basketball at.Tappan .Bol,an.-(5'11"). Green•~ strength
1S
under
Zee-High School,- believes that
_
the unity the boards where she
.
pulled down 192.
which has
·.
been established· between-last rebounds last
·season::
Bolan who played·
yearsJ>layers should
.
help out inAvhatsh~ inost of-last season has been ·
:
quoted by
calls a
·
"nior~
_
competitive-schedule.
_
"

.
_
Rogersasbeing '.'mu~

improved and ca.n
."'llle
:
niajor changeima~e
:
~s that l
·
be
.
expected· to play m
_
many games
this_·
hav'eJnstituted a fast
:
break offense,'
.
~
_
said
-
year.''
·-
_
_ -
-- _·
,
_
·
0
.•
,
:
·:
:
_ _
_
_
_-
_

Rogers;
·
_.
••The
-
girls.
are handling
-
-
if
.
well,
-
-
Kristine
_
McDonald, the othe! freshmen
and I've found we ~n
·
control
a
game with
-
on
_
scholarship~
:"
is
-
a 5'6';
.
guard
.
wffo
is
it.
\,
I've
:
:..also"· str:~
.
mo_Ee
-
-
def~ns~
.
than
_
expec1edto add
·
greatl~ to the depµi
~~f
the
~
_
offense;
_
rve
..
tned-to
.
develop
·
a
~
sense
:
of team.
:
Rogers
.
~s
.
:
McD9nald
~
as
.
--_
'
.
'ex-
prid_e
·
in
;
it.''
·
·
:
·
·
•_-
.
__
.
_
·
-
·
· _
_
tremelycquick,
~
an excelleiit'.pa~er and
a
-
.
More
-
'
con9itioning _and foul
'
shooting·
:,
person capable of controllingthe tempo of
practice
_
have

been
;:
added-to this
:
yeats the game.tt
,
-
·

· _ ··
>---
-
·
,
practice
·
:
~
workotitll:-'. for· -the
,·:
15 member
,
_
The,- rest _of the
,
depth
t
·
-wlugi Rogers
squad, according
to
Rogers;
'.0-
>

.
.
.
.

>
believes "is one
-
of
•.
thiL teams strongest
..
SQphoinore MaureenMorrow(5'11), last, points,· is expected
,
to come
,
_
, .•
fronf·the
·
,-
years
-
)eading
_

rebounder,

(13:2
.
ayg.
_
.
per
_
:
remainder_
_
of

the
--
squad
:
;
,
_
Toey
-
_
·
include
,
g_ame)
.
-
i~

_
expected
:
to be
Jn
,
the
··
starting
_
-
.
-
junior transferJ.,ynn
·
Eaton
:
,
(5'8'') ;
·
_
fresh~;
·
forwar
,
d
·
@sitiori:
-~
R9ger~ js seeking
,
for
.
:
tnen GayJmes
·
(5'8'
_'
) ;
·_
Cynt~a
_
ThomJ)SOn
°c
.
Morrow to
·
be
·
"instrumental
in
snatching
.
:
~
(5'4"), Kathleen
.
Cannody
·
:(5'7"); Sharon
_
-
.
febowids
,
for fast brl?aks:'~
,
_
·
: _.-
-
·
:
·
'.'."
-
:
.
Colucci
-
(5'.3");
'
and
;
sophomore Rhonda
i
·
Helping Morrow
-
up
.
front
:
will be 6'0"
Chadwick
·
(5'
.
7'').
,
'
·
•-
-
_.
·
.
•-_ ·
-
_
_
.: -
_ :...
~aroo,ra
:
Torres
/
one
·
ohhe two new Ji-es~~
-.
· :
;
Rogers
·
consid~rsJJie
"
team
,
to be
_
smifrt,
·
men
,
scholarship players_.
;
Roger~ believes
_
able to control the ball
·
verfwell,
:
and know
:
the two
'::-
shciuld
.
make --Marist
_
a
-
strong
hciwto use the filllcourt press effectively;
'
, reboW1ding
.team..
·.
.
.
:
··.
-
.
·_·
:
Thestdactor~ will be c:rudal especially
.
Rogers

saiqsheish9pingthe bliJR
,
9f the
·.-
when tbtf;Red
·
Foxes
.
play
'the
-
teams
_-
. S<!oriilg
,
~lLcorne.-'once:
_ag~_in
:
Jroxi(l~~
_-
-
__ .
:
!{ogers-:-is ~pectirig
.
to
_
be
<
tot1gh:·
-
They
·
years
,
s~cir_ing
·
leaders,sophomore
.-_
Patty
_
_
·---
mcludeC;W.Post,WesrPoint;
_
Domiilican;
_
-
Po
_
wers
_,
·
and
C,
Senior
_
Anit_a
-_
Morario;

.
.
who
--
Mercy: Manhattan:
:
and
·
Adelphi.
·
-
,
-
,

_
-
-

_
_
-
·
,..
averaged
-
14:5
.
and 14.2

pomts

per
.
game
:
·
.
~'
Marist
will
bf frying

to

improve last
respect"i,vely~
:
Rogers.
,
.
sa~d
,
;
she
,
also
:"
af
-
:
,
-
_-
season 's'recoi:d
-•
(1 ~)
~
-
H~~~vet
.
this
year
:
_
preci~tes
:,
-
Mara!lo
.
for.
·
the
:.~
lead~i:ship
.
,1 0
th~
:
W.O~en :will
_
bf coajpet~g in the
A[AW
:
_
qualities ~he.
;
possesses.
,
.
-
.. _
,.;
;
:
·· , :·-
·
.
··
.
:
oivis~onTopposed
_
toJasfyear
·
wheri
·
they
Sophomores Eileen
,
Carey
·
and
:
Helen
.
_
competed hrDivisfoidI.
'"

·
.
:
·
.
'

·
.
.
Saijno11are
·
~~~~ed
__
tolead
_
the
·
~efensive
:.
.
.
-
.
.
: :• '
·
'.·-
, . :
, .
. ·
:.
i
_
·
1
·
:
·
-
·.
:*?,
;
fl~;~
~
~
/JJi£JHi
,
t~
B
~il!ittJti~,f
~t:
.
·.,. ,-.
'.
_
: _
_ .-
.
.
_
.
..-
·
-
_
·
.
Sophomores
_
Barry Januson; 6'2", and
_
The MaristCollege
.
men's basketball
..
Tom G_rotty, 5'10" ,
.
ari:i slated
.
for
·
plenty of
teairi
·
\vill
:
be
-.
reaching two
inilesTuries
~cti9I1 at_tlle
:
gu~rd posit~on, Crotty will see
·
_
_
during
-
tlie
:
1978-79
·
season and Head Coach
·
·
most of his a~ion
_.
at
·
point guard.
_
Jamis<>n
:
iron
·
Pet~ is optimisti_c about the t~;n•
_
s
-
_
_-
led last
~_
YE:3r
.
'(t!!!l
_
min fre~
~
.iiµ:ovv·
per:::
chcinces on improving last year's 7-19
··
centage
,
with an
,84
_
0
.
mark while Crotty
.
:
record~·Pe.tro
.
said
·
"We have
.
the physical
·,
wa~ ~econd with an -~tn:tal'.~
"c ..
.
'.
,
_
.
_
size to match any of our opponents.''
_
·
>"
i;:c,ui;freslurlerrare
·
also expected to see _
_
.;:
· <
Marist's first milestone
will
·
occur action aUhe guard positi9n for the Red
D~ember
-
2ri!}, when Marist plays Mont- Fox~.
:_To~a,-
H~ssler; 6'3",
.
and. ~an
·
_
clair State
::
in Madison_ Square Garden,
-
Davidson,_511", have been
.
the µiost un-
This will
_
be the first timeMarist has ever-
--
pressive.,,according to
.
Petro
>·.·
.
_
-
_
played in the
New
York
.
City sports center.
.
Hassler, who
is
on sc}Jolarsllip,-
is
very
·
The second milestone for Marist
is
its strong offensively with a·good outside shot,
.
_members~p
in ~he
-'
_newly formed Big
·
_
acc
.
?rding
-to.
Petro
~
-
P~tto
.
describes
.
·
·
Apple Conference
:
which consists of C; W. Dayids~n as bemg very quick. Other fresh-
.
·
Post,
-
$outhampfon,
:-
Monmouth
;'"
Pace
-

ineri
vying for playing
.
time at guard
·
are
Univer~ity;
,
Prattlristifote; and Dowling. Roil Cole,6'0" and Rick B,aITetta, 5'9",the
·
_
-
-
Petro said he believes
this
year's.team can shortest member of the team.
·
_
,
_
..
win
Jhe
'
conference title: He said
·
·
'
·
'We
-
Sophomores J<>hn
Lusa,
6'5'' ,
__
and Mike
.
-
-
.
defeated ev~ery team thatwill
be
playing

-
Hirscfurian, 6'6'.~; wiU
:
be seeing plent:v: of
the conference last year except
c.w.
Post, action at the forward position: along with
·
-
so
:
we are
.
optimistic."
-
__
George Martin, a
.
transfer
.
from•
.
Petro;
·
.
·
now
·
in his· 12th. ·year
_as
head
·
.
Morrisville.: _
Community

College. Martin .
·
· ·
coach,
_
~~d
he has· the personnel fo im-
·
has been a pleasa~t surprise according :to
·
prove
'
l~st
_
feal''s record. Although)ast
.:
~~t
-
~.
-
-

· -
.
.
:
::
·
.
,_:
'

.
-
:
.
year's
·
leading scorer .Glen Berry and
.:.-
Atcenterwill be two sophomores,)3ill
-
_
_
·guard
:
Ken Grimes, ire no'fonger with the
.
OeW
_
inile
.
6tT
\
aild
.
Dave
\
&h~w
.
.
6:6''.
_
Last
::
-~
,
.team,
:-_:_
·1'4arist
·
:..has
:
eight
·:
r~tuming
.:
let-,
·
:
year DeW~e led
Man~
lll f1eld
,
goal -
·:
_
tennen.
-
·
,-
_-
_,
-
- • .
,
·
_
_
.-
_
_
"'
·
percentage
-
.~12, Jree t.}lrQws made
.
55,
.
-.
Accordµig to
_
J>etro there is
,
depth at the
·
rebounds 198; and reb_ouri~in~
_
avetage 7.9 .
..
gua~
:,
position.
·
.
Junior
-
.
John,
_
Boylan
'
is
.
:ee was_ also seco!ld m sconng wi~h a
:
9.1.
_

·
expect~
_
to see plenty of action as·a wing
:
average. Shaw will back up DeWmne.,
·•-
guard. ~oylan
.,
average_d ~.7
_
points
·
per
.
According
.
tq P.e.tro~
"
.
tlii':ee ~oals for the
--
·-

·game)ast
,
.
year-incl~ding a·22 pomfpel'.~
·
s~~on al'~-)o
_wm ;a~
.
Madison Square
·· ·
foi-rriance
_
in
-
a victory against-Monmouth
>
4
arden, t9 wm the B1g
··
:Apple <;_onference,,
-
CoUege.
:
He
:
-
~Hso
,
led, the teain with
,
58
arid
,
to
earn
ari
NCAA bid.
'
.
.
-
.
··
assists. Only 6'2"; Boylan
:
:was
,
the
.
thlrd
<'.-
.
.,

-
.
. .
.


21.9.1
21.9.2
21.9.3
21.9.4
21.9.5
21.9.6
21.9.7
21.9.8