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Part of The Circle: Vol. 19 No. 2 - September 15, 1977

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THE CIRCLE
Volume 19, Number 2
.
MARJST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
September
15, 1977
200
Extra residents are the
cause of
·
dorm overcrowding
Ry
Pat Larkin
There are 953 students on
campus this semester, which
is
approximately 200 more than last
year, according to Fred Lam-
bert, assistant
-
dean
.
of student
life.
The extra number of students
on campus has caused singl~s to
be discontinued, and the tripling
of freshmen women in rooms
.
Lambert said the increased
·
acceptance of women by ad-
missions
-..
is
one reason for the
tripling of females in one room.
·
Another reason Lambert said
is
.
the· acceptance
of
former Bennett
students into Marist.
During the first week of school
there were about 12 students
living in the Red Bull, a
·
hotel
located about four miles
,
south on
Route 9. Lambert said the
students living there were either
former Bennett students who
requested they live there t~m-
porarily rather than receive a
room on campus temporarily,
and upperclassmen who had paid
their room deposit only a few
days before the opening of school.
Lambert said
·
these students
were given rooms on campus
after the first week of school.
He also said he has not received
any complaints
.
regarding the
tripling of freshmen girls in one
room. He said some of the
students living in triple rooms
have requested to keep them
.
-
However, three freshmen girls
,
living in room 434 of Champagnat
Hall, said they have complained
to Lambert. Jeannie Langan, one
of the students, said "We never
had any choice in the matter."
Bernadette Keane, another one
of the girls living in the room,
said the room was "disgustingly
dirty" when they moved in.
Lambert said the decision to
discontinue singles was his "last
option."
_
According to Lambert, most of
the complaints have come from
students living on second floor
Leo. In the past, rooms on
.
the
floor were singles, for girls, bµt
have been doubled up this year
due to the increase of resident
students.
·
Some residents of the floor
M.C. 76-77 bpdget in the red
.
~";"
-
.
.
By Larry
Striegel
.
,.--
Marist
College
finished
/
Ute
.
1976-77 fiscal year with a deficit
of approximately a
-
quarter
million dollars due to over
projections in its budget, ac-
cording to Linus R. Foy,
president. It was the second time
in Marist's 31-years the college
has seen red; the first was in
1965, said Foy.
by 1981, with installments coming
·
·
out of the. budgets of..tlie
,
next four
_
.
'C
years; ·
,-.

•-·.
.
.
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· ..
One of the biggest causes of the
deficit, which auditors estimate
at between $240 and $250
.
thousand, was an over projection
of last year's enrollment. Foy
said the estimate was made in
July of 1976, and fell short
because of an unexpected 30
percent drop in the number of
part-time students and a smaller
Dr. Linus
Foy
amount of upperclassmen.
the school as financial aid. Also,
.
When the drop became ap-
costs for dormitory operation,
parent to the college board of
ana for the dining service, which
trustees two months later, said
was run by the college for the
Foy, the board projected a $190
first time in 76-77, were un-
thousand
deficit and
cut
derestimated. But, it was the
department spending levels in
severely cold winter "which
the college
-
to 85 percent.
broke our back,'
~
said Foy
However, cost overruns in four
figuratively
·
areas including financial aid,
He added that the $2.9 million
utilities, dormitory expenses and
Mccann Center which was
the Dining Service, caused the
dedicated April 17, was
.
not a
deficit
to swell from $190
cause of the deficit because the
thousand to about a quarter
building had a construction
million dollars.
budget separate from the college
Foy said between $20,000 and
budget.
$50,000 too much was given out by

Foy said the deficit will be paid
A Good
.
Crack
And lest the school again see
itself in the red, Foy said,
"
Th~
year we have a good crack at
balancing the budget."
He said registration is up this
_
year, and the dormitories which
last year roomed 732 students,
are filled with fall with about 950.
He said in the past the college
didn't over reserve for the dorms
as happened this year, and
auditors waited until September
to find out
··
fall
semester
enrollment befor.e designing the
budget.
·
He said the college
will
watch
areas where overruns could
occur. The Dining Service will be
monitored by the week, and the
operation of the McCann Center
monitored by the month, said
Foy.
He added that the McCann's
summer operation was ''ex-
cellent." And pool rentals for the
fall
months are surpassing
projections. The nearly $1 million
mortgage on the newly con-
structed sports center will be
paid through capital drives, with
the interest on the loan being paid
from the college's budget, Foy
said.
New fashion d_esign center
under construction
in
old library
By Kathleen
Lynch
construction mainly involves
The new students
are
.
paying
walling in the upper and lower equivalent tuition, room ~nd
The new fashion design center, levels of the old
·
library and board as present student.sand are
being housed in the old Donnelly adding four offices.
. .
. ..
.
· now considered. part of Ma~t
Library, will be completed ~y the . r_µte ~oney, says Mr. Camp1!fi, College,- ac~o-~dm~ t~ ~mp11i1.
end of September, according to 1s commg from the
"exp-!1
m-
Mr. C~mpdu said, I think the
Marist
·
College
Business come" from the addttI~nal college
JS
f1;1rtunate
to
b~ abl_e to
Manager Anthony Campilii

The - students taken in when B_enn~tt put th~ library cavity mto
center has an estimated price College closed
and
Manst m-
productive use
.
"
between
_
$15~
;'
and $?,5,000.
·
The corpora~ their programs.
have started
a
petition stating
Lambert also said if he were to
they want singles given back to return the singles he would have
them and a written apology from
.
to throw out the students living in
the college administration for the the rooms and he said, "That
inconvenience concerning the didn't seem terribly fair to me.
;
,
irregularities of campus life.
Lambert said he does not
Lambert said he questioned consider the large number of
"the validity of the statement" students on campus a problem.
because
not
every
up-
"
It's a sign the college is
· perclassmen is affected by growing
,
" he concluded.
everything listed on the petition
.
Reynard faces death
By
Brian Deaver
·
large stacks of unsold Reynards
from the years 1972 through 1977
The Reynard, Marist College's
whichHne a wall
'
in the yearbook
yearbook, may not be published
office
.
In
all there are 54 cases
this school year because of a debt
holding 24 per box
.
This is a total
of more than $11,000 incurred
of nearly 1
,
300 yearbooks which
during the last eleven years.
will
probably never be sold
'.
Fred Lambert,
-
assistant dean
Lambert said the 1978 Reynard
of students and the faculty liason
staff will have to use clever
of The Reynard termed it "a advertising in order to generate
crisis situation." He said the
interest
-
among students, and in
biggest
...-
-reason
for
the
,
yearbook

··
turn gerierate
:
sales.U this works
,
club's financial oroblems is the
·
the distribution
·or
450 · copies
..
oC
·
staff's failure
"to
collect ad-
the Reynard should be a success
vertising pledges
_
from local
.
and the yearbook will stay alive
.
'
merchants. Lambert also said Otherwise, the staff of the
part of the reason for the large R~y~ard inay
find
themselyes
deficit is the inability of members
preparing a yearbook which
will
to sell edi
t
ions of the book
not be printed
.
-
through the years.
This claim i
s
evidenced by the
Workme~
_
prepare a wall in what was the old Ubrary in
Donnelly Hall. The four s·tory section will become the
·
center for the former Bennett (now Marist) fashion
design program. (photo by Gerry McNulty)
.
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PAGE 2
College joins

nursing
program
By Maria Troiano
Marist
College
recently
combined its efforts with Mount
St.
Mary's College of Newburgh
to create a program for a
Bachelor of Science (B.S.) in
Nursing.
·
According to Peter O'Keefe,
Director
of
Continuing
Education, Mt. St. Mary's has
relocated its program to the
Marist campus. O'Keefe said
Marist accepted the program
because the "area has been
crying for this for
,
years." He
added that Marist should have
had a nursing program years
ago.
The two-year program, which
was formally announced in
August, began this semester
.
"There is a great need for this
degree in this area. We expect a
strong response," O'Keefe said.
Presently there are about twenty-
five students enrolled with at
least one male in the group. All
students must hold a registered
nurse (R.N.) degree before en-
tering. Upon completion of the
program, they will be awarded a
BS in Nursing from Mt.
st.
Mary's.
According to O'Keefe, most of
the enrolled are part-time
students'. The liberal arts courses
taken by these students will be
regular courses already offered
at Marist. Nursing courses,
although located at Marist, will
be taught by instructors from Mt.
St.
Mary's.
·
All students will deal directly
with Mt. St. Mary's concerning
processing. O'Keefe said they
will pay the standard Mt. St.
Mary's tuition, which is $79 per
credit.
Werenko named
I
arts chairman
By Mike Teitelbaum
JolmWerenko~ a 1968 graduate
of Marist,
.
was named the
chairman of
·
the fine arts
~
_
epaqment here
_
in April: He
succ;eeds
·
Mr~

Frsher
;
who
retired i1i"November.
The 31-year old Watertown
;
Conn.
J
native has
·
travelled
throughout
·
inost
of
the Unit~d
States
,
missing only the Nor..:
\
_
hwest and Deep South. He has
been
·
to Europe twice, including
Russia in 1968. Werenko's
grandparents are from Russia
but now reside in Connecticut.
Foilowing his return from
Eastern Europe Werenko went
west to Albuquerque where he
enrolled in the U. of New Mexico.
He received a Bachelor of Arts
degree in studio art with a major
in painting in 197-l and got a
masters degree in the same
subject the next year.
Werenko has to finish his
dissertation to complete the
requirements for his Master of
Fine Arts degree.
While
attending
U .N .M.
Werenko was chairman of the art
department
at
St.
·
Pious
Prepatory School until 1973. He
also received a certificate in
secondary education in art and
English from New Mexico.
Werenko also taught painting,
drawing and design at the
university from 1974-77.
He had offers to teach at
Brescia College in Owensburg,
Ky. and a school in Colorado
Springs
but chose Marist
because he wanted to come back
to the East.
He began working on Aug. 9 one
day after Bennett College closed
because of financial difficulty.
··My major problem has been the
John Werenko
increase of the department's size
since
accepting some four
Bennett teachers and getting
enough
·
rooms and supplies for
everybody,"
Werenko said.
David Leigh, Ron Collier, Ralph
Della-volpe and Shirley Kopple
are the new art department
teachers from Bennett.
"A minor problem is the weak
slide collection of general art
history which must be im-
proved," he said.
"I feel the arts department will
grow and change but it is difficult
at this time to say what it will
mean to Marist."
·
A professional artist who
is
primarily a painter, Werenko has
his works in private collections in
Houston,
Denver
and
Albuquerque
.
When he's not with his wife
Lydia, and their two children
-
seven year old Christina and
seven-month old David, Werenko
is at his Hyde Park studio.
He has been teaching for nine
years and expects to stay at
Marist for at least five years,
depending on how the
.
depart-
ment evolves.
Amato now at Bard
By
Gerard Biehner
Peter Amato, the residence
director at Marist College during
the 1976-77 school year, resigned
shortly after the end of the spring
semester due to personal feelings
which made him choose not to
continue
.
Amato, now the director of
residential life at nearby Bard
College, says he left Marist with
mixed feelings.
Amato
submitted
his
resignation to Dean Antonio
Perez on May
_
12, 1977, effective
June 30. Perez said that he knew
of no reasons. for Amato's
resignation_. and accepted the
_
resignation without question.
Amato said the views of other
administrators, in as far as the
approaching and handling of the
many problems which were in his
line of duty, were in conflict with
his own moral and ethical views
.
Because of this conflict of
opinion, Amato experienced a
difficulty to work and thought it
best to leave. Amato refused to
elaborate on who the ad-
ministraters were and which
problems were handled wrong.
He said he left a job he
did not feel comfortable in, but
still has very strong feelings for
Marist. "I still have a close and
·
.
fond feeling for many students
and faculty members at Marist
and I miss being there." Amato
said.
THE CIRCLE
SEPTEMBER
·
15,
·
1977
Workmen take the bulkheads out of the pool in the McCann Center. The
bulkheads rusted after five months of use. (photo
by Tom Burke)
Rusting bulkheads removed
By
Ken Healy
.
The hours ;t the pool in the
Mccann Recreation Center will
be curtailed until further notice
because the bulkheads that
·
divide the swimming areas were
removed. The bulkheads, which
cost $10,000 apiece, were found to
be rusting just five months after
the facility opened. Because the
pool cannot be seperated from
the diving tank, groups renting
the pool between the hours of 6-9
p.m. have to be given use of the
whole pool.
Athletic Director Ron Petro
said that it was necessary to do
the repair work now before
permanent damage was done to
the bulkheads. He also said that a
similar problem had developed at
Fordham University's new
swimming pool which was built
by the same company.
The bulkheads whi-::h are 45
feet long were lifted out of
-
the
pool with scaffolds and put on a
truck which will take them to
North Carolina where they were
built. They will be treated with a
more corrosive resistant epozy
an~ brought back "hopefully"
said Petro within three to four
weeks. In the meantime there
will be no free swim period from 6
ti1
9 p.m. The pool will reopen for
the use of students from 9 til
10:30.
Intern
--
·
arranges
.
campus even.ts
By Doreen
M.
Bachman
"A lot of people don't view a
person in activities as
_
an
educator," said John Campbell, a
graduate assistant in activities
who aids Dolly Bodick in advising
the
College
Union
Board
(C.U.B.). He believes students
develop social skills and "
..
.learn
more about themselves and how
to relate to other people" through
activities. He says involvement is
an opportunity to transform
theory from class into life ex-
periences.
_
Campbe~l's role
is
·
to help
students coordinate activities by
identifying resources available to
them and taking care of the
details .
.
He also aids resident
advisors (R.A.'s) in developing
programs within the dormitories.
His specific duties are as yet
unclear because he has just
begun working with Marist this
semester.
Campbell, 26, received a B.A.
in History from the University of
North Carolina at Charlotte and·
is presently a graduate student in.
the program of Counseling and
Student Personnel Services at the
Southern University New York at
Albany. The program consists of
ment, was an R.A. for
two
yea:is,
and was the social director of the
University Programming Board,
which is the equivalent to the
concert and social committees of
C.U.B. He said being social
director was " ... the most
rewarding part of my academic
experience." Originally from
Charlotte, N
.
C
.
, Campbell heard
about the program at Albany
State and decided to go there to
experience the different lifestyles
and culture.
In comparing Charlotte with
Albany
and
Poughkeepsie,
John Campbell
Campbell said people are more
easy going in the South and aren't
one full year plus a summer of
as conscious of creating images
academic work, followed by a
of themselves to
.present
to
year's internship work at a
.
.
others. "They don't worry that
college. John chose Marist for his
much about putting up facades.
internship because he says I've experienced a lot of personal
students represented a contrast growth," said Campbell
.
"It
from those he was accustomed to
made me look ~t myself a lot
in Albany. He says he likes the
closer.''
area of Poughkeepsie and was
C.U.B.'s Fine Arts Chairman
impressed with the enthusiasm of Edwina Kelly, said that
c.u.B'.
the students and staff. "I felt that needed someone to lessen the
I'd be
·
comfortable here, and so
pre~sures placed upon Dolly
far I am."
Bod1ck, and John Campbell is
During his undergraduate that person. She said, "He's the
career, John played a major role
right man for the right place,"
in extra-curricular activities. He
and thinks he's doing a good job
was involved in student govern-
-
so
far:.
Chapel sacristy will be fixed n~xt year
By
David
Ng
The college will probably .wait
until the Marist Chapel's 25th
anniversary in 1978 to rebuild its
-.
sacristy which was destroyed in a
fire last Easter, according to
Anthony Campilii, business
manager.
·
Campilii said the school chose
to not "finalize" the insurance
settlement with Lloyd's of
London, the school's insurance
company, but to wait until the
anniversary to rebuild the
sacristy and renovate the chapel
simultaneously.
.
He said it would be foolish to
return the sacristy to its original
state before the blaze now and
then
_
again in 1978 to renovate
other parts of the chapel as an
anniversary gesture
.
When Lloyd's of London settles
Le insurance matter ·of the
school, Campilii said it will be
decided "what funds are ap-
plicable to the fire damage, and
what funds will be applicable to
renovating the chapeL"
Presently, possible renovations
are still in the "talking stage"
with the architect hired by the
school, according to the Rev.
Richard LaMorte, the director of
campus ministry and chaplain.
Fr. LaMorte said the old
sacristy was too large and the
school might get more use from a
smaller sacristy but" with an
added Penance room. He said the
chapel might be restructured to
have a staging room to use as a
waiting area before events held
in the chapel.
·
_
The Catholic priest is presently
operating out of a
-
confessional as
his ''.vesting" area
.
and as the
·
storage room for religious ar-
ticles.
























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SEPTEMBER 15, 1977
Tots get new home
.
By Beth Weaver
coordinator of college activities.
The new recreation room should
The Marist College Preschool, be completed around October
1.
presently located in the basement
When the Preschool first
of Champagnat Hall, in the old started in Champagnat two years
barn area, will be moving to the ago, it was to be there only one
old gym. According to Anthony semester.
In
the beginning, the
Campilii, business manager, students in Champagnat shared
finishing touches will start the the facilities with the Preschool.
week of September 12, and it The Preschool used
_
it during the
should be ready for use starting day and the students used it at
September 19.
night.
Mr. Paul Conin designed the
Margaret Wicks, a graduate
new facility which is estimated to student and one of the advisors
cost $5000. The exact cost will not for the Preschool, said the room
be determined until the end of the did not seem to get much use by
month. The money is coming the students.
from the tuition the Preschool
Miss Wicks also said that the
collects and anticipates to collect Preschool staff are frustrated
over a period of a few years. because they expected the
According to Campilii, "we did preschool to be completed before
much of our own work and used this year. They are not looking
materials we
-
already had to keep forward to moving the equipment
the cost down."
while the preschoolers are there.
Part of the request the students The Preschool staff is hoping that
in Champagnat Hall had for 1977 the new classroom will be more
was that they get this area back specifically
designed
for
for their own use. After the preschool activities.
As
of now,
Preschool vacates the room, enrollment
is
twenty
plans are being made to turn it preschoolers.
into a recreation room for
The future of the Preschool in
Ch amp a gnat
students.
·
its new surroundings is un-
Renovations are being planned cert~in,. since the new_ Com-
--
and.vendors are being consulted, m~mcabon Arts center 1s also
according to Dolly Bodick,
·
bemg planned for the old gym.
CUB equipment stolen
By
David Potter
was no damage
.
to the lock,
someone either picked the lock or
Video taping equipment and a entered the room with the key.
reel-to-reel tape deck belonging Dolly Bodick, Coordinator of
to the College Union Board College Activities, said all keys to
(C.U .B.) and worth almost $3,000 'the room were accounted for
was stolen from the Campus from last year.
Center over the July 4th
The thief or thieves were
weekend. As a result, the video
·
familiar with video taping hard-
tape program may not
.
be started ware since all cables, jacks and
until early.November, according other necessary equipment for a
to Kevin Stack, C.U.B. video tape proper set up were taken along
chairman.
with the hardware itself. The only
C.U.B. intends to replace the other item to be taken was a
equipment with funds from an stereo reel to reel tape deck.
insurance policy. However, the Other equipment in the room
insurance policy has a $500 such as
-
an Altec-Lansing am~
deductible clause and therefore plifier
and
speakers,
C.U.B. must pay the first $500. microphones, film projectors and
The money will come out of the other hardware were left un-
Video Tape Chairman's budget touched.
and probably necessitate the
C
.
U.B. is hoping to replace the
dropping of two or three films stolen equipment which was
from the schedule, according to black and white with color
Stack.
equipment which would cost
The equipment was housed in a more. The additional funds are
storage closet with a dead bolt in expected to come from the Video
the Campus Center. Since there Tape Chairman's budget.
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
Photo shows
area
in rear of the old gym which was once a damp weightlifting
room. The area
will
soon be completed for use by the Pre-school. (photo by Gerry
McNulty)
"Bennett girls" say
Marist College compares favorably
·
By
.Joe
Ford
When the students of Bennett
College learned August 12 that
their school was closing, 380 girls
were faced with the following
options: 1) they could go to
Marist College 2) they could go to
Pace University or 3) they could
stay out of school for the year.
Mosiof the girls chose Pace, but
98 percent of Bennett's fashion
majors or approximately 90 girls
decided on Marist as their new
school.
After two weeks here, the
former
Bennett
students
described their adjustment to
Marist. The reviews were mostly
favorable despite some obvious
problems.
Benoit House, which was closed
because of an insufficient
number of students, had to be
reopened tci accommodate the
incoming Bennett students.
The house was in poor condition
from the moment they moved in,
and they still do not have a dryer,
a complete kitchen, or sufficient
furniture or lighting. However,
these incorveniences seem to
have been overlooked by the
former Bennett students when
talking about life at Marist.
"It's not too big," said Kim-
berley Fiterman 18-year-old
sophomore. "Here, you're a
person and not just a number."
Ms. Fiterman said she felt that
the girls in Benoit have been well
accepted by the rest of the
campus.
Lisa DeZalia, an 18-year-old
freshman said "I like the campus
and I like the people." Ms
.
DeZalia said she enjoys the fact
that she can now participate in
such activities as karate.
Sally Roberts, and Pat Van
Tassell, both
19
year old
sophomores and roommates said
they felt there was "a lot more
going on here. Bennett was
basically a suitcase school" they
said.
Delana Adams, a
_
19 year old
sophomore,
·
said she liked
practically everything about
Marist.
"I
like the programs, the
activitie~. and especially the
recreation center
.
"
·
Liz Bennett
a
19 year old
sophomore, said "I like it
(Marist) a lot better than Ben-
nett, because it's larger, there
are more guys, and it's a \ot more
relaxed
.
"
The consensus indicates Marist
College is a hit with the former
Bennett students. However, there
are a couple of minor wrinkles
which still need to be ironed
out.
One of these is the tab
"Bennett
girls" that has been placed on the
newcomers.
As
Cynthia
Youngman, a 17 year old fresh-
man put it,
"some
think we
're
a
bunch of stuck-up snobs."
Whatever people's opinions may
be, one thing is for certain;
Bennett girls have now become
Marist girls.
Students learn how it is on the
Marist head bartender Joe Mula shows how it's done.
o'ther side of bar
By Larry Striegel
There you are, armed with shot
glasses galore, fathoms of fizzle
sticks, goblets hanging overhead,
and the best collection of im-
bibing liquids this side of the
Lehigh Valley.
=
Then some big stud comes
walking up to the bar with his
chick and asks for Swamp Water
for her, and a Blue Whale for
himself. You search your
memory which contains an ar-
senal of powerful concoctions,
but nowhere can you find two
such exotic drinks.
What do you do? Fake it?
No way, says Marist head
bartender Joe Mula. "Never be
afraid to ask what's in a drink, or
go back to look at the bartender's
guide ... nobody's expected to
remember everything."
. This information on swallowing
your pride was only part of a
presentation by Mula Monday
night in the New Dining Room
when he showed about 80 students
how to mix some of the drinks
people swallow when they're out
socializing.
Because of a new college
drinking policy only students who
attended the class will be allowed
to act as bartenders at campus
social functions.
During the hour-long lecture,
Mula whose favorite drink is a CC
and Seven, showed students
recipes for the most popular
drinks. Such basics as a Bloody
Mary, Gin and Tonic, Vodka
Collins and a Manhattan were
mixed by volunteers at a
makeshift bar under the direction
of Mula.
Student Bo Mason whipped up a
Screwdriver with no trouble until
Dining Service Manager Joe
Lurenz pointed out that Mason
used the wrong sized glass. Mula
then explained which glass goes
with which drink and why.
After demonstrating and
distributing for a sample about
ten drinks, Mula discussed
mixology with his amply ex-
perienced
audience.
Some
disagreed with the 'tender about
some of his recipes, and he ex-
plained, "A drink isn't always
mixed the
·
same way. I can show
you three different bar books that
do it three different ways."
But aside from the many
'mixes, was the equally important
advice he gave on the etiquette of
bartending.
"If
a _customer asks
.
for a Seagrams and SeveQ, and
you don't have Seagrams, ask
him for another order," said
Mula. "Take good care of people
and they'll take good care of
you," he added, alluding to
generous tips which can be
gained.
Mula said he began bartending
12 years ago while he was in the
Army. Since then it has been his
only profession and he has
worked at several establishments
including a bar called The Wreck
which is part of the well known
chain of Castaway clubs in
Miami, Fla., and the Casablanca,
(formerly The Bachelor) on
South Road in Poughkeepsie.





















































PAGE4
THE CIRCLE
THE
CIRCLE
The Marist College CIRCLE
is
the weekly newspaper of the students of Marist College and is
published throughout the school year
exclusive
of
vacation periods
by
the Southern Dutchess
News
Agency. Wappingers. New York.
P;H
Larkin
D.'.wid
~!!
<.'<H:'di
tors
Mike Teitelbaum
news editor
sports editor
feature editor
photography editor
.
business manager
advertising manager
distribution manager
l
.
.;;\[T\
..
St rit-.
_
~l'l
Kt'i! ilt\'.,*. -
Gerry
-'lc~ulry
Jim
Birda~
Jt'rry &·h,ildt>r
R1.1bRyan
~'taff:
D,m:'-en
Bad,ma.
Sue Barom. Sheila Cunningham, Joe Ford, Kevin Geraghty, Dominick
Laruffa.
:.\like
McCourt. Jeff McDowell, Diana Rosario Mills, Judy Norman, Kathy Norton, Paul
~unziata. Jinuny Perez. Dave Potter, Ellen Rakow, Margaret Schubert, Victor Small, Susan
Stepper. l\laria Troiano. Beth Weaver, Adrjan Wilson,
Mary
Yuskevich, Pat Marafioti, Albert
Volk. Brian Deaver. John Mayer, Diana Jones, Jim Dasher, Kate Lynch, Tim Clifford, Tom
Burke, Gerry Biehner, Ralph Capone, Alan Jackson.
Save
our
Reynard
There is a sign on the wall in the Reynard-
Circle office in room
268
of the campus cen-
ter which says, ·'Want Future
Memories?
Pick Me Up Today .. ,
'74
Reynard."
It
may be ironic, but the message on that
old sales poster still rings true. Indeed, you
could come into room 268 and pick up a '7 4
Reynard. And while you are at it, you could
get
a copy of the yearbook from all of.the ·
years from
1972
to
1977.
There are cases full
of the over ordered and unsold books.
And now our sister publication finds itself
facing extinction unless they can sell enough
ads for their book and then collect the money
from those ads. But another facet of the mat-
ter is that the staff of the
1978
Reynard must
s
ell their books. The reason nearly 13,000
copies of the book sit dormant brings us back
lo an old nemisis.
·
It's
that word which often makes it's ap-
pearance weekly in this space.
Apathy.
··No. not again ... you
s
ay.
Yeah. again.
The yearbook is a tough piece of work to
eomplete. and it-'s pretty frustrating for the
staff
when they :;ell only
250
or so copies in a
s
chool of 1,500 year after year. It takes a
bunch of time to put it tog~ther, and is truly a
thankless job for the staff members who give
up more nights of sleep than they'd.like to
remember.
The problem with the book is that it
'
s so
expensive. Last year the Reynard cost
$14.
Editorials
That's a lot of money. We won't say
memories are priceless and that you should
buy the book no matter how much it costs.
We say, get on the staff of the Reynard and
help them keep a Marist tradition alive. Help
them sell advertisements for their back pages
and in turn lower the price.
·
Buy a book this year. Put a deposit down
on a book when they're being s9ld n
.
ext week;
Get involved in it. ·
.
}
·
:
·
.
r
·

·
·

·. :
·
··
\ ·,
·
...
The final irony llf lettin
.
g the
_
Reyriard
become extinct is that the book which was
the purveyor of memories
will
itself be only a
memory. It's up to students - don't let ifhap-
pen. ·
Commuter involvement
With the increased enrollment of students
at Marist this year, there are approximately
1700 full
time students.
Every one of these
s
tudents must pay a
$30
a~iivity fee per semester. This $30 goes
to the McCann Center, student government,
an
-
d
CUB.
Student government funds all clubs on
campus. There are approximately
20
clubs.
WMCR. the Gaelic Society, The Political
Science· club, Accounting Society, and
Children's Theater are only a handful of the
different variety of clubs on campus.
A
club offers a student
_
many advantages.
It goes beyond the
.
classroom, ,vhere a
s
tudent learns the theories of his field.
If
he
joins a club, he has the opportunity to put
these theories into practice.
·
Notice
The following schedule has been prepared
for students on work study and other
working students for the fall semester. There
,~•ill
he no formal notification when time
Payroll period
9/1 -9/16/77
9/16 -
9/30/77
IO/I -10/14
10/15 · 10/28
10/28 · 11/11
ll /12-11 /25;
11/26/ - 12/9
12/10. 12/31
Due to
Mr. Gerry
'
Kelly
9/16/77
9/30/77
I0/14/77
10/28/77
l l/ll/77
11/28/77
12/9/77
12/30/77
Most of the students involved with clubs
are residents. Commuters do not get involved
in clubs at Marist. Commuters can offer the
clubs needed support they need to operate on
a maximum basis.
Part of the $30 goes lo CUB
,
who plans ac-
tivities on campus. Ho~vever, only resident
students attend mixers, cocktail parties, cof-
feehouses, and movies.
All
CUB events are
posted in Champagnat and Donnelly Halls.
Commuters should look at the bulletin
boards and attend events on campus. CUB
should also be reminded to keep the com-
muters aware of the activities on campus.
Since the commuters pay
$60
per year
.
then it would seem that you are wasting their
money by not attending events on campus.
sheets must be submitted to Gerry Kelly and
the business office. .
All students must fill out W-4 fom1 before
September
20.
Due to
Business Office
9/20/77
10/4/77
10/18/77
11/1/77
11/15/17
l l/29/77
·
12/13/77
l/3/78
PAYDAY
9123177
10/7 /77
10/21/77
11/4/77
11/18/77
12/2/77
12/16/77
1/6/78
Help
...
Us
To the editors,
The
·
time is now to become
involved in the production of the
1978
Reynard - the Marist
yearbook.
We are making a concerted
effort to involve as many people
as possible including incoming
freshmen and graduating seniors
as well as faculty members and
residents and commuters. We
need you to build this year's book.
We
need
writers, photographers,
sales people, layout people,
typists, advertising represen-
tatives and anyone with any
interest in seeing a quality
.
book
produced this year.
In the past, the staff of the
Reynard has been disappointed.
Why? Because we have only been
able to sell a limited number of
books. This situation has put the
yearbook in a debt of $12,000
incurred over an eleven year
period.
·
We are asking for positive
suggestions,
constructive
.
criticism, and any ideas that
YOU, THE STUDENT can offer
in order to make this year's book
the finest ever ... not to mention
one a student will be proud to
own.
We are, however, faced with a
dilemma. The Reynard
is
in
It can't happen
To the Editors:
We are at a point in the history
of this campus wnere the
residents, must decide to what
extent they
.
wish to . govern
themselves,
.
·
·
and
·
.
to what extent
they'
:
will
·
be
content to .. play 'a
· 'consultative' role in their own.
, lives.
Mr. Fred Lambert b.elieves
.
that the only function of the In-
terhouse Council

is to act as a
conduit of
communication.
Believing this, he has decided
that the Interhciuse Council has
failed and should
be
abolished.
He is wrong.
The salary of every ad-
ministration
.
·
official is depen-
dent upon the existence of a
sufficiently sizable student body.
One can naturally conclude from
that, that we are the arbiters of
what policies we are paying them
to administrate. The issue is not
communication as such; the
issue is now selfdetermination.
A
Senate of 38 would be much
less able to make firm decisions
than a Council of 12. Mr. Lambert
not only conceded that point, he
made it a cornerstone of his case.
He does not think that the multi-
dorm student body, whatever it
may be or become, should have
any right to make decisions. It's
job must then be to apply the
proverbial rubber stamp to
autocratic
.
pronouncements. To
oppose autocracy
.
is therefore to
SEPTEMBER 15, 1977
danger of extinction as a result of
the tremendous deficit.
In
order
to "Save the Reynard" we must
increase sales by a significant
margin.
Sales of the book
will
com-
mence starting Monday Sept.
~rd. Names and room numbers
of those selling books will be
posted in each dorm. Yearbooks
will also be sold outside the
cafeteria .
.
during the dinner hour
each night next week. The
number of copies sold will have a
direct bearing on the fate of this
year's Reynard, as well as future
yearbooks
at Marist.
The editors and staff receive no
monetary compensation for the
tremendous amount of time spent
in an effort to produce
a
publication which represents an
"invaluable investment" in the
·
memories of your Marist ex-
perience.
_
·
Please take time to write your
positive suggestions on a piece of
paper. We urge all students to
help us "Save the Reynard" by
sending their name and room
number with suggestions and
criticism to the Reynard Box
which will be located at the door
in the cafeteria during meals.
Please help us "Save the
Reynard."
Thank You,
Suzanne Gallucci and
the staff of the
1978
Reynard
defend the council.
If
the ln-
terhouse Council has not
·
been
very effective in the past, that is
a
fault which more careful
selection of members may im-
prove, but abolition certainly will
'
not.
·
If
a referendum is taken on this
question, as I have been told it
may,
,.:
y
.
,
urge. all
.
students
.
to
boycott it:
,
The
·
administration
should propose such a change
only through the same channels a
disgruntled student would use
(although far be it from me to
suppose that such beings exist).
I am asking residents to take
four simple steps to defend their
council so that it. may later
defend them.
1.
House Council elections shall
be held within the . next two
weeks. Insure that your floor
Tepresentatives support the IHC.
2.
Boycott any referendum on
the issue, in that it is an evasive
procedure
.
3
.
Let Blanchard, Breen, Ng
and Biscardi know how you feel.
We elected them.
4.
In many of the dorms one or
both
of
the
Interhouse
representatives have left the
,
dorm they were to represent,
thus creating a vacancy.
The
House Councils, when cori-
stituted, should . fill these
vacancies so that a complete
Interhouse Council will be
.
in
existence.
Hop~fully, although
i
ani not
hopeful, these actions will be
sufficient.
Christopher Faille
·
Announcements
There will be a poetry
workshop in conjunction with the
Marist College arts and literary
magazine, Mosaic 2, beginning
Thursdays from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
The first meeting is Sept. 22 in
Campus Center room 270.
·
This workshop is open to all
members of the college com-
munity.
·
For more information, contact
John Witter at 255-8738.
The Marist College tennis
courts will
be
opened at ap-
proximately 9 a.m. and close
at
dusk.
.
Sign-up sheets will
.
be
posted daily. Do not play more
than an hour
if
people are
waiting. Sign up when you play to
playing time. The ball machines
cannot
be
used.
The women's tennis team
·
will
bepracticing throughout the rest
of the fall. Their practice times
and matches will be posted.
The courts
will
remain open
untiJ Oct.
31.
The
Marist
.
College
Beautification Committee will
-
hold its
·
first meeting · on Thur-
. sday, Sept. 22 at 2 _p.m. in the
Campus Center Room 269.
·
.
All interested students,
·
faculty
and administrators are welcome.
Refreshments will
be
·
served;
.
,
.
L---------------------------------------1
insure yourself at least one hour
The COilUJ!ittee
is
.
looking for
individuals who would be willing
to work toward
.
the physical
improvement of the campus.
·












SEPTEMBER 15, 1977
THE CIRCLE
KOLISCH
RETURNS
Hypnotist stuns audienc
for second
year in
a row
By
Pat Larkin
Former President Richard M.
Nixon made
.
.
a special guest
appearance
_
Saturday night in the
Marist College theater during the
show put on by John Kolisch,
hypnotist.
The part
.
of Nixon was played
by
Jim
Kenney after

Kolisch
·
hypnotized him and told Kenney
he was Nixon pleading his
in-
nocence to the audience.
.
Kolisch, who calls himself the
world's fastest hypnotist
,
en-
tertained
·
a crowd of more than
300. The show, which lasted
approximately three hours and
forty
five
minutes was divided
in
half. Kalisch said he used extra
sensory perception
in
the first
half while in the second half,
Marist students were hypnotized,
then acted out post hypnotic
suggestions -given
·
to
them by
Kolisch
.
Kolisch demonstrated his ESP
power when he gave the serial
number of a ten dollar bill given
to him by a member of the
audience. He performed this feat
with a blindfold
.
and tape
covering his eyes
.
During the second half of the
show students who were hyp-
notized were asked how they
would spend $100. Some of their
responses were "go to Franks
and do shots of Jack Daniels and
beer chasers all night," "rent a
yacht," "buy a couple of cases of
scotch"
-
-
and "go
-
visit my
boyfriend."
Other highlights included a Mr.
America contest featuring eight
Marist students yYing for the
title, a karate expert giving an
exhibition, singing exhibition by
Diana Ross, and an opera star
performing "Please
give
me
back my bellybutton."
·
Visitors from Venus were on
stage to give the audience the
sleeping, eating and sexual
habits of creatures from Venus
.
The final scene featured a pair
of imaginary X-ray glasses given
to the hypnotized students. They
looked into the audience, oc-
casionally making a request for a
member of the audience to stand
up so they could get a better look
.
Kolisch then told the hypnotized
Jim Kenney thinks he's Richard Nixon and pleads for his
innocence while Kolisch cracks up. (Circle photos by Paul
Nunziata)
·
Mesmerizer with an accent
Aside from making people do hypnotist
,
and can put a person
funny things on ~ge. !)r findine:
into a trance in five seconds.
hidden objects while blindfolded,
"I work most with college
hypnotist and showman, John . students, it is my particular
Kolisch has a serious side and an specialty," he says
.
"I would turn
interesting past.
·
down a nightclub job if I could
be
He came to America from working at a college instead
.
I
Vienna in.1938 when Hitler came like being around college
to· power in Germany. He was students."
introduced to hypnosis in 1952 by
·
In his show, the grey haired
a psychiatrist who taught him and goateed entertainer selects
about the field worked with volunteers from the audience. "I
medical hypnotism until 1957 have developed an acuity
'
for
when the American Medical picking the best subjects
.
I try
to
Association
rejected those keep the show on an entertaining
without
.
a
-
degree.
.
·
level. The audience is paying
-Kolisch decided
to
go into the good money and I don't believe in
entertainment field after he saw shortchanging anyone."
hypno~ism used on
_
stage. He
Kolisch says he has a favorable
claims to
be
the world's fastest attitude towards life
.
"I'm
basically an introvert and I like
people. I think it pays to
be
positive in life
.
"
Speaking with a deep Austrian
accent, he explains that he would
never use his hypnotism for the
wrong reasons.
"If
a subject
should have a problem, I would
never let it come to the floor. I
feel that as a hypnotist I can only
·
tell them to do what they want. I
would not take advantage of
anyone."
The Jackson Heights resident
said that hypnotism can
be
used
to
help a person stop smoking or
to improve athletic performance.
It
is also used
in
natural child-
birth and in important surgical
operations.
PAGE 5
Hypnotist John Kolisch
students they were naked and to when you wake up you forget
cover up
.
There was a scramble everything." The
.
cro.wd stood
for the chairs to use as coverup. up and gave him a standing
Kolisch ended the show saying
·
ovation
.
"It's (hypnosis) like a dream,
A student under the influence of Kolisch's hypnotism
sings, "Please give me back
my
bellybutton!"
































































i
l
.;
PAGE6
THE CIRCLE
SEPTEMBER
15, 197i
The ligh·ter side / / - - -
"Outsiders" give a Sunday brunch
The
born
loser
·ByDavidNg
Nearing the end of Sunday's
Mass, the Rev. Richard LaMorte,
the campus chaplain, told his
standing room only congregation
of more than 350 to "go in peace"
and then told them to go for cake
and coffee.
- - - - - - b y Alan Jackson
The priest was inviting the
he heard a crunch while looking . congregation to an informal
for his brand-new $250.00 contact coffee and cake brunch after the
lens.
service. The brunch was a
There w s always a certain
type of gu in high school that
everyone voided. Everytime he
looked for he silver lining, it was
tarnished. Frank was the born
loser of m class. I usually felt
sorry for rank, but he had the
worst luck! with life.
It never : failed. Frank was a
pretty good actor. For three
consecutive years, he played a
corpse, a wart, and a tree stump.
He portrayed them well, and it
finally paid off in the
senior
class
play. He won the title role in our
production of ·'Beauty and the
Beast" playing the Beast.
I le
bought a calculator for a
tri,; class that set him back a
ht.
1dred dollars.
A
new model
,·ci.:ie
out the next day with ten
extra
functions for twenty dollars
less.
Frank's luck with girls was not
better. He walked around school
::!,e
day with his fly down and
,::ibody
but guys noticed.
At
a
p_.irt)',_~hile on his knees
Frank bought a sharp-looking "welcome
back"
gesture
late model car. While bookin' organized by the people Father
down the highway the radio LaMoret calls the "outsiders"
announced that that model was area residents who attend weekly
being recalled because of Mass at the ~-a~st Ch~pel but
defective brakes.
have no affiliation With the
He once ·• complimented his college. They brought their
mother on the excellent raisin home-made jeUy-topped cup-
bread she had baked. His mother cakes, walnut bread, and
called the local exterminator
chocolate chip cookies, along
His dentist always snicke~ed with t~eir families to the outside
while studying Frank's X-rays. gathermg.
.
His powers of observation left
Mrs. Ro~emar1e Dudek of
nothing to be desired either.
Pough~eeps1e, who has been
Frank always did his 'thing' attendmg mass here for the ~st
before checking out the toilet seven years and helpe~ ~rgaruze
tissue situation.
the Sunday brunch, said 1t was a
Frank was fun to be with and chance to "share something with
we all liked him. Unfortunately
the~ (students)." Betwe_en
for Frank, his parents did not
serv1_ng cups of cafeten~-
share our fondness for him He
contributed coffee, she also said
returned home from school· one
"it's a privilege to attend mass
day, and discovered that they had
here."
.
sold
their
house and moved away
Students and faculty, mstead of
·
talking over desks, were talking
over family
folding
tables the
Students sample pastries prepared for them by town-
speople to welcome them
back
to school. The brunch
took place outside of the chapel on Sunday. (photo by
David Ng)
outsiders supplied for the oc-
casion. Augustine Nolan, a
communication arts instructor,
said it was "an excellent idea, an
opportunity to practice some of
the theories of community and
.. .intermingle."
A senior, Rosie Nguyuen said it
was a chance for students to
socialize with the people they
only see once a week at mass.
Tony Salvia, a sophomore, said
it
"gives
the student the chance
to
meet with a different variety of
people
from
the
area,
Poughkeepsie and-Hyde Park."
Lawrence
Menapace,
a
chemistry teacher here who
.
also
helped with the brunch said
"If
we are to have a community in
the church, we should start out to
find out who we each other are."
The brunch lasted · about 45
minutes, soon after the bees
started making their way into the
jelly-topped cupcak~.
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OIITIIII
IIAI■
MIAI.L.
a
Ll8IIM'Y
nam
(Above
Capitol
Blkefy)
Entrance
Around
.Cc>mer
By
Larry Striegel
Last spring if you happened to
get back to your dorm after 2
·a.m. you probably had to go find
a campus guard to · unlock the
front door. But this year you
shouldn't have that problem,
according. to Marist College
Security Director
Joseph
Waters.
to the calmpus, acct•rding to will be arrested. The signs warn
Waters.
people to ~e the stairs in case of
He also snid the extra weekend fire.
As part of changes made l.n
security operations for the fall,
dormitories will be locked at
midnight but a student guard will
be on duty in Sheahan, Cham-
pagnat and Leo Halls from
6
p.m.
to
6
a.m.
Last year guards would work
from 4 p.m. until 2 a.m. when
they would lock the door and
leave.
·
"I think 1it will be convenient
for students," Waters said. "It's
the most vliluable change we've
made for their safety."
Other ch!' nges for the depart-
ment inclu e the addition of six
students to staff which numbers
52, with 48 tudents working part-
time and our full-time guards,
Waters sai .
During t e first two weekends
of the sem ster, six guards were
added to t e usual night staff of
two. The
tra guards,. working
in pairs, p trolled Champagnat,
Donnelly
nd Sheahan parking
lots to pro ect women returning
patrols we1re temporary unless
future ones. can be financed from
his department's budget.
In additi1on to those changes,
full-timers Terry Bilyciu and
Harr~· Srrrith received ex'tra
secunty ttraining in late June
when they attended a Campus
Security Officer's Training
In-
stitute at !ockland Community
College in uffern.
Waters aid the two learned
about the penal law, first aid,
narcotics, bomb identification
and camp{ fire safety.
The fou -day program cost
Marist $40 . uition for each of the
two guards.
Waters i:ilso said the main-
tenance department will be
removing i e cement cylinders
near the f ont entrance of Don-.
i
nelly Hal which block the
parking lo from the main path-
way to Cha pagnat Hall. He said
a barrier of two · poles . and a
removable chain will be con-
structed tct provide quicker ac-
cess to tne dorms by fire trucks.
The security director said four
new signs, valued at $4 apiece
and postedluring the summer at
campus
evators have been
stolen. He aid if the. signs are not
returned to his office by Tuesday,
Sept. 22, a yone found with one
pr
i
n ting
'FOR THE JOB YOU NEEDED YESTERl;)AY
6 RAYMOND AVENUE
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12603
.(914) 473:9511 .
Grant for
handicapped
By
Margaret Schubert
Marist has been selected by the
Nathional Science Foundation, to
receive a $40,000 grant, enabling
handicapped high school students
to explore the option of a career
in science.
.
Under the leadership of Dr.
Robert Rehwoldt, head of
Marist's
Natural
Science
Department;'Dr. Timothy Ryan,
of the psychology department;
Mr. Joe Hines, director of Special
Services; and with the aid of six
non-handicapped Marist science
majors, who will be trained as
para-professionals, twenty-five
high school juniors and seniors
from the eastern part of .. the
country will be exposed to the
science experience during the
month of July, 1978: The students
will live in the dormitories with
their assistants and their ex-
posure will include an en-
vironmental
science
in-
vestigation.
The Federal Government has
said there ~re not enough han-
dicapped people in the field of
science and Dr. Rehwoldt agrees.
He feels "many handicapped
people are encouraged not to go
into science because it's a ·
laboratory career and a han-
dicapped couldn't handle
it." He
disagrees with this reasoning and
adds "You don't know the extent
of your handicap until you try it."
. Labs-can be equipped to meet the
needs of the handicapped and
there are scientific careers which
are not lab dominated but do
require an understanding of
scientific methodolgy.
The goal of the program is
for'
the students to experience first
hand what science has to offer;
the students are being offered an
experience without_ commiting
themselves. The project is being
designed to serve as a model that
can
be
easily duplicated at other
post secondary institutions.
'
i
i .























SEPTEMBER
is,'
1977'
THE CIRCLE
Booters
will
face tough schedule in 77
By
Ralph Capone
Coming off their most suc-
cessfw fall season of succer in 14
years, the challenge for the 1977
edition of the Red Fox hooters
will be to improve on last years
accomplishments while facing a
tougher schedule than last year.
1976 was the year they won the
Eastern Collegiate Athletic
Conference title.
Marist compiled a powerful 14-
1-1
record, stained only by a
3-3
tie with Siena and a 1-0 setback on
a rain-soaked field in Nyack. And
in the voting to determine the
four teams that would make up
· the
1976
NCAA Division
2
playoffs, Marist turned up fifth.
At the time, some cited bias as
a factor in the outcome, but coach
Howard "Doc" Goldman pointed
to what could have been con-
sidered a somewhat lighter.
schedule for Marist than other
teams vying for the four spots.
PAGE7
So, gone from the
'77'
schedule
are weak teams such as Dowling,
and Bloomfield and gone · is
Marist from the CACC. Thus, the
Red Foxes this year, for the first
time, will be facing NY Tech and
sixth.:ranked powerhouse
Oneonta, with the Oneonta match
serving as the most crucial for
the Marist hooters who are
ranked 12th in the state in pre-
season polls.
"Doc" Goldman, Marist's head soccer coach for 15 years, instructs his players during a pre-season practice.
The Red Foxes
will
face a tough schedule this year in their attempt to repeat as ECAC Champions. (photo
by Gerry McNulty)
Gone, also, however, are goalie
Jay Metzger, mid-fielder John
McGraw and fullbacks Jim
Titone and Kevin McGhee.
Replacing these positions which
were vacated by graduation will
be coach Goldman's biggest task,
especially with that of Metzger,
who compiled seven shutouts and
a
0.79
goals-against average.
The netminding job will be
mostly. handled
.by.
two.,top
prospects, returning sophomore
Rich Heffernan and first year
player John Vandervoort who is a
junior. Both have been playing
injured in pre-season .. contests,
and doing a good job save for
some errors that experience and
confidence, coach Goldman
notes, will serve as remedies.
As for the rest of the defense,
Goldman has had the good for-
tui1e of getting "very skilled"
freshman, most notably Gill
Ventoro, who appears to have the
top nod at the vacated sweeper
spot.
.
.
.
.
-
Returning defensemen Scott
Roecklein, John King Charlie
Blum and Russ Beckley assure
Goldman of added defensive
strength.
Junior transfer Joe Curthay is
likely to tackle the center half-
back job, as far·as the rest of the
offensive setting goes, all are
returning including the "Italian
Connection" of Zenone Naitza,
Fermino Naitza and Vito
Aprigliano. The trio, accounting
for
43
of Marist's
60
goals scored
last year, are joined by Tom
Ham,olo? another promising
freshman prospect,· and
·sure-
footed returning men Julio
Intramural program expanded
By Larry
Striegel -,
Imagine yourself stanqing at
the foul line in front of
2,000
cheering basketball fans. You are
about to sink the crucial basket
which will make you the
champion. That's right, YOU'LL
be the champ, not your team.
This new twist is part of this
year's improved intramural
schedule. The main attraction
will be the finals of three sports
which will be decided during half-
time or preceeding three Varsity
basketball games.
The foul shooting finals will be
held
during
half-time
on
December
7,
when Marist plays
Hartwick College. The cham-
pions of the tug 'o war, an event
just added this year, will be
decided during the Trenton State
game on Feb. 18, which is
homecoming weekend. The two
best
teams
in intramural 5-man
basketball will square off before
the C.W. Post game on Feb.
25.
In addition to the finals at the
Mccann Center, Intramural
Director
Eileen Witt has
scheduled a dozen new sports for
students to
try
their luck at
during both the fall and spring
semesters.
Already in progress is flag
football. The game is different
from the regular touch game
played last year in that each
player has a flag in his belt, and
play is dead when the ball
• carrier's flag is pulled from his
belt.
Other new sports on tap for the
fall include archery, foul
shooting, tennis, racquetball, and
EASY STREET
Live Music Wed. - Sun.
Easy
Street Band
r-----------------
1
FREE DRAFT BEER : .
I
.
with
coupon
I
, I
Thu,sclay or Sunday
I
IL
LIMIT ONE PER PERSON
I
-----------------
mixed
2
on
2
basketball. Ms. Witt
got the idea for the coed b-ball
when she saw
it
played at
Madison Square Garden where
she said it is very popular. The
new competitions will join
volleyball, soccer,
3
person
basketball, and the annual turkey
trot.
·
New sports for the spring are
tug 'o war, wrestling, wrist
wrestling, indoor track, bad-
minton, handball, and swim-
ming.
But despite the new programs,
Ms. Witt says a mechanical
problem has stifled the growth in
fall intramurals at least tem-
porarily. She says she spent all
Rostran, and Jim Downs who
will
alternate as midfielders and
strikers.
Zenone led the Red Foxes in
scoring last year with
25
goals,
followed by Vito with
11,
and
brother Fermino who had
7
tallies respectively.
Thus far the Red Foxes have
done well in scrimmages against
Albany State, West Point, and in
particular Vassar. Against the
crosstown college the Red Foxes,
fielding no one higher than a
sophomore, during the game's
last
20
minutes as Goldman put it
but two weeks during the sum-
mer vacation preparing the
schedule, but a broken down
copying machine prevented her
from getting out information for
the football and volleyball roster
deadlines until a week before
they were due. As a result then.
are only five men's flag football
teams this fall while last year
there were eight.
Also, only four
men's and two women's teams
got their rosters in on time to
enable them to compete.
Ms. Witt says each student will
be receiving an Intramural
Handbook soon which contains
the year's schedule, and in-
formation on rosters, equipment
and rules for the competition. She
hopes the book will help students
get rosters in on time so a
maximum amount of teams will
be able to compete in every sport.
·'literally walked down the field.''
showing exceptional ball controi.
"We have a very good passing
team," Goldman added, "and if
someone beats.
us, it's because
they're
a
better ball club .. :·on that
particular day."
The Red Foxes open the season•
. hosting New Paltz
•.m Wednesday,
Sept
21
at
3
p.m. on Leonidoff
Field. They will end the pre-
season by squaring off against
the Alumni this Saturday,
gametime is
2
p.m. on Leonidoff
Field.
.
High on Sports
Con't from page 8
as comptroller of the Brooklyn
Democratic Club for Mayor
Beame. At least IBM's future is
a
little more stable than Beame's.
THIS WEEK
IN MARIST
SPORTS
(Sept.
15
to the
21)
Saturday, Sept.
17 -
Cross
Country: Albany, Coastguard.
Hartwick - at Alba:iy -
2
p.m.;
Soccer: Alumni Game - home -
2
p.m.
Sunday, Sept.
18,
Football -
Plattsburgh - home -
2
p.m.
Wednesday, Sept.
21,
Cross
Country: Trenton State, Mon-
mouth - at Trenton -
3:30
p.m.;
Soccer: New Paltz - home -
3
p.m.; Tennis - women - Vassar -
home -
3:30
p.m.






















j
·
I
PAGES
THE CIRCLE
Red Foxes place sixth
in Glassboro Invitational
By John Mayer
against host Albany St., Hartwick
College, and the Coast Guard
Marist's Cross Country t~m
-
Academy. Starting time is 2 p.m.
finished sixth of eight teams on a
Picking up the slack for Marist
hot Saturday afternoon at the was junior Bob Cougal who
fifth annual Glassboro In-
finished nineteenth with a time of
vitational held at Glassboro 26:35, Ron Gadziala, who was
State Coilege Glassboro, New thirty-second with a time of 27: 12,
Jersey.
'
and Matt Cole who was thirty-
The Running Red Foxes were ninth with a time of 27
:?.8
out of a
hurt by the absence of three of fiel~ of approximately 80 com-
their
top
runners:
Jerry petitors.
Scholder, presently Marist's
. The r~ce ended in a three way
number one runner and last· he for first place between Randy
year's winner and present record Gratehouse, Barry Nelson, and
holder of the Invitational. He was Ed Brennan all of the winning
sidelined with a muscle pull.
team,
Fairleigh Dickinson
Also out were two other soph- University. They covered the 5
mores Tom Gilligan and Jim mile, relatively flat course in a
Nystr~m with a sprained ankle time of 25 :05, about 25 seconds off
and virus respectively. All three
.
the record.
·
are expected back for this
.
According to
.
Marist Cross
Saturday's regular season opener Country coach Rich Stevens, the
heat (82 deg. and 83 percent
humidity) hindered tb~ runners
and was the main reason for the
·
slower times over last year. He
also said he was pleased with the
performance of his runners and
has high hopes for a,strong
_team
when everyone is healthy.
Coufal was named Marist's Top
and Most Valuable Runner, while
Matt Cole was given
·
Most
Im-
proved for his performance in the
meet.
Other Marist finishers were:
Paul Welsh, fortysfirst, 27:37,
Steve Deleskiewicz, forty-fourth,
27
:38,
Gary Wiesinger, forty-
sixth, 27: 42, Ralph Cosenza,
forty-seventh, 27: 46; Dennis
O'Doherty, forty-eighth, 27: 50,
and Dennis Goff, fifty-second,
28:09.
Viking$ kick off
·
season
Sunday versus Plattsburgh
By
Ken Healy
are short at is receiver. Levine
has three defensive players at
The Marist Vikings kick-off
·
that spot. Ron Clarke, transfer
their 1977 season, at home on student Gary Lambert and
Sunday against Plattsburg. This defensive back Mike Laffin will
will be the fourteenth season of see action there.
football at Marist, all of them
Defense
"
will again be the
under head coach Ron Levine. Vikings' strong point. Coach
Plattsburg is a Division III Mike Malet has most of last
varsity team that is coming off a year's team back. They will be
3-7 season. "They looked very big
.
playing the familiar
4-4
defense
on film and they play a full that has been a staple for years.
varsity schedule so they are used Malet said the linebackers would
to
,
playing high calibre football be especially tough. They are led
teams," said Levine.
by outside linebacker Ron Clarke
Marist will be going with an who was the
Met-8
defensive
almost
all new offensive line-up. player of the year in 1977.
·
The only returning players being
Joining Clarke at linebacker is
linemen Jim Piersa, Jeff senior Mike
Schlitte
and
DeCarlo, Bob McAndrew a,nd Bob newcomers Steve Misuta, Mike
Keller. The offensive backfield is Overby and Gary Lambert.
completely new. Freshman Malet also said back-ups John
Quarterback Bob Brannigan will Kelly and Rich Haubenriech
be working with
·
five running would see playing time.
backs, only one of whom, Charley
At defensive end Mike Ragusa
Bender, was with the team last and Jim Pagano are back and
season.
.
there is a five way battle for the
The only position
two tackle positions. The back.:.
field
has sophmore
Brad
Callahan
,
returning and Mike
Laffin has been switched from
halfback to defensive back.
·The
Vikings have one of the
toughest schedules they've ever
played. This season will have
four varsity teams, St. John's,
Plattsburg, Brooklyn College,
and Siena as opponents. In ad-
.
dition familiar names like
Manhattan, Iona and Fairleigh
Dickenson will face the Vikings.
One late change was made in
the schedule. Niagara
will
play
Marist on October 2, instead of
Concordia. Concordia dropped
football for the 1977 season and in
doing so caused the league name
to be changed to the Met-7
Conference.
All home games will be at 1: 30
p.m. this year. Tickets
-
will be on
·
sale at the gate for $2.00. Season
tickets are now on sale at the
athletic office and from team
members.
.
They can be pur-
chased for ~.00.
SEPTEMBER 15, 1977
High On Sports
.
By
Larry Striegel
BOB COUFAL NAMED ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
Bob Coufal, a junior from North Merrie~, L.I. has been named
Marist Athlete of the Week for the week ending Sept. 10.
Coufal was the top Red Fox finisher at Satur~y's ~lassboro
Invitational when he crossed the line nineteenth with a tune of 26
minutes and 35 seconds.
CREW BEGINS FALL PRACTICES
The Mari st crew began fall workouts Tuesday, Sept. 6. Acco~ding
to 2nd year varsity rowing coach Gary Caldwel~, the tea1!1 ~11 be
practicing on the water three times a week until t~e begmn~ng of
October. The crew has also begun using the new rowmg tanks m the
McCann Center for the· first time this y_ear. Man~
?f
the oarsmen
have given favorable reactions to the mdoor facility.
A poot script to the finish of last sprin~ saw the R~d Foxes co~e
away empty handed from last Mays Dad Vail Regatta m
Philadelphia.
·
.
The lightweights, freshmen a~d women's
_teams
all failed. to
qualify for the finals. In a weird turn of events, the varsity
heavyweight eight thought they had qualified for the final for the
first time in the school's history, only to find they had to row an
extra race to become one of the final boats.
·
In their semifinal heat the lead boat, St. Josephs, was
disqualified because of poor steering, and Marist gained the final
by virtue of the decision .
.
However on Friday night it was decided by a group of regatta
officials and coaches that Marist would meet Wesleyan in a match
race Saturday morning, and the wirin~r would adva~ce to _the
finals. The heavies lost the race, and their chance to be m the fmal
race.
A happy post, post script saw Red Fox graduates Greg Tracy and
Pat O'Rourke place fourth in the pairs at the Intercollegiate
Rowing Association (IRA) Regatta held in Syracuse at the
beginning of June. Another
·
Marist boat,
-
with a crew of Pat Brown,
Jim Palatucci, Dan Gualtieri, and graduate Art Curran placed fifth
in the coxless fours at the IRA.
WOMEN BEGIN TEm-lIS SEASON
The women's tennis team will be competing during the fall this
year for the first time. They have four matches scheduled, with the
first against Vassar College
this
Wednesday here at 3 :30 p.m.
Coach Eileen Witt says she has only one returning letterperson in
Suzanne Galucci.
Tb(;'
rest of the team will be made up of freshmen
Jenny Johnson, Barbara Dow, Jane Brennan and Rita Kolb. Ms.
Witt says all were either ranked first or second in their respective
high schools.
INTRAMURAL ROUNDUP
-
-
Fall intramural competition kicked off on Monday with flag
football. In Memory of Goober's Tool defeated Shannon's Heroes 29
to 6, and in another game the Bearded Clams proved inpenetrable
and beat. Wakely's Whalers 15 to 6.
-
In Monday night volleyball the male version of the
·
Gregorian
Chancellors took two from Mango's Boys 11 to 7 and 7 to 2. The
female Gregorian Chancellors had a tougher time but held on to
win two games from Brews Crews with scores of 8 to 6 and 7 to 5.
Note: Filing for intramural tennis ends tomorrow. Names can be
entered
at the sports department office or in Ms. Witt's office, 201C,
both in the Mccann.
Rosters for soccer must be handed in by Friday, Sept 23.
NOTES FROM THE SPORTS DESK:
Congratulations to Marist Aquatic Director and Swim Coach
Larry Van Wagner and his wife Virginia who were married on Sept.
3 in Sche
'
nectady. They spent their honeymoon in Bermuda .... This
season marks
"Doc"
"Doc" Goldman's fifteenth year as head
soccer coach at Marist ... Former sportswriter Tom McTernan has
found a job with IBM here in Dutchess
_
County. He was also working
H·t ·1
1
I I .
M~rist football coach
.
Mike Malet drills his charg-~s
on
the low
-
~r practice field
next to the~McCann Center.
·
·
The Vikings
will
meet
Plattsbu~gh here on Sunday
at
2 p.m. (photo by ~er~y McNulty)


19.2.1
19.2.2
19.2.3
19.2.4
19.2.5
19.2.6
19.2.7
19.2.8