Skip to main content

The Circle, November 3, 1977.xml

Media

Part of The Circle: Vol. 19 No. 8 - November 3, 1977

content

THE CIRCLE
Volume 19, Number
8
~
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE. NEW YORK 1260J
~overiiber 3, 1977
Hike of 8% ~pproved
_
by workers
By Larry Striegel
coverage by a union
healtp
and
life
insurance
plan,
·
and
Marist College service em-
grievance procedures.
_
ployees
-
voted unanimously to
According to John Hennessy,
accept a contract- providing an an employee representative,
eight percent
_
raise ar'ld benefits
college administrators and the
-
at a meeting Tuesday in -the union met five times since the
-campus center.
_
union was adopted in June. He
The contract, effective Sept.
1,
said the groups met for
12
and a
1977
until March
1, 1979,
provides half hours on
Oct. 19
and for six
'an eight percent_ wage -hike for
hours last Thursday
to
design
_ the first year, and a four percent conditions of the pact.
raise for the next year and a half.
_
-
The administrators involved
The pact was negotiated by
were Vice President Edward
.
college administrators and Waters,
Assistant Dean
Gerard
employees,
_
_
along
_.
with Kelly, and
Ann
.
Hagerty, per-
representatives of the General sonnel director. Hennessy
,
Leroy
Service Employees' Union, Local Scott, Jttry Sculco and Art
:ino
1
of the
AFL-CIO.
Campbell represented the em-
The
54
workers, including
17
ployees.
.
·
_ cafeteria and
37
maintenance
At
Tuesday's -meeting, Hen-
·
Kevin Becraft (~e{t) of the General Service Employees Union helps service worker~
fill
out contracts
Tuesday. (P~oto
by
Gerry
_
McNulty).
_
_
_
-
.
. staff members, voted June
28
to nessy was elected president of
-unionize. They are the first group the group, while Campbell was
inMaristhistorytoadopta union.
-
picked as sargeant-at-arms,
The contract also includes Scott was elected to the
-
Schedule
_
proposal
..
.
increased benefits, including secretary-treasurer post, and
·
.
additional "sick"
-
and "personal"
-
Sculco was chosen as vice
·
-.-
I d
days off.
It
will provide a worker president.
-
·
·
Wo
·
u _
who has been ?t
-
the college
for
_
.
Shop stewards w~re picked f~r
one to five years with two weeks three groups
.
Charlie Decells will
·
vacation time. Thos
-
e here .from
_
represent cafeteria employees,
!%
,
·
·
,
..
,
..
:.:
110!::a
:
f
J~,~t~.
IJb
.
r,~
-
iJ
.JJ§Jt
,
·
: ..
.
..
.
.
.
.
-
...
'
.
.
,
•.
.
.
.
.
.
..
'
....
'
;
~
~
.
.
.
-.
five to
10
years will get three George Johnson will act for
weeks, and four weeks for those grounds and m~chanical workers
with
10
to
15
years experience. and Vernon
._,
Green will represent
Other ' conditions • include house!ceeping staff members.
..
noon;,,said Toscano. He added
classes meeting three times a
-
The proposed
_
new schedule week might increase the
-
library
-
change should have
·
no sub- usage on Wednesdays.
·
·
_
By Jinimy
Perez

i~tf:::.~llflt!J."~lPanel
chosen
for
forum
stantive impact on library usage,
:
Rena Guay, audio-visual clerk
acc
.
ording to Dr. Vincent believes the new schedule will not
Toscano, director
-
of tjle Marj.st
_
signific_antly affect AV usage.
College Library:
-
.
"The faculty
has
to learn what we
. usage.
-

_
_ .
.
Betty Weatherwax,
-
secretary
for Toscano also believed the new
schedule
will not increase librarv
usage.
She
said,
"If
students
have a
4a
minute break, they
won't want to come to study, it's
too short a
'.
time". Weatherwax
added she is in-favor of the new
schedule. "As you get out in life,
you're not going to get a break in
the middle of the week:"
By
Victor Small
,
chairman of the English and
communications arts depart-
Toscano g~ve several other have to offer
in
order to instill
:
factors which. would affect interest
in
·
students to use our
library usage, the attitude of the facilities." Guay said a lot of the
instructor in- organizing courses faculty don't know about the
so that students have to use the materials the
AV
learning
library, the quality of resources resources center
has
to offer, and
available, and the degree of in-
·
·
tegration of vital
parts
-
,
of the . - - - - - - -
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Panel m
'
embers
for
the
-
-
ment, and
Br.
HuglrTurley of
the
:
discussion
'
~n
·
the proposed time
·
biology department.
schedule have· been chosen,
The
·
students refused to com-
·
according to -Student Govern-
ment ori the schedule until they
ment President Jeff Blanchard.
.
talked with Blanchard about the
The panel; of three students panel.
.
· _
and three instructors, will ineet
Blanchard said questionnaires
-
library.
.
.
.
·
1
·
• d
-
Toscano said thelib.rary
is
used
_
.
·
n s
·
,
_
.
e
less on Wednesday mornings
November
8
in
the theatre at
2:15
-
about the schedule will
be
made
p.m.
..
.
.
available to students in the
Student
.
members of the panel cafeteria
.
and
-
the commuter
are: Virginia Dix, a senior lounge.
-
•-
-..__
than any other morning because
there are fewer classes and many
st1,1dents pady on Tuesday nights
and
get upJate ·on Wednesdays.
"If we supported those wlio
,
criticize the .·.present
·
schedule
then we wouldn't have to open the
library
-
on Wedne~day~ l!ntil
Wheelch~ir Day
... page 5
.
.
-
/ '
State cerjifies pre~school..page 2
Eng_lish major, Peter McFadden,
John Dwyer, the registrar, said
Inter-house Council president,
there
_
will be a questioning period
and Cathy Cornish, a commuter after the discussion.
and junior political science
·
Academic
Dean
.Louis
·major.
·
·
.
Zucarello said he will decide on
Faculty members
will be: Dr .
.
the schedule on, or about,
Daniel Kirk of the psychology November
18.
de artment Dr .
.
Richard Platt
Fire hazards abound in campus buildings
By Joe Ford
and Gerry McNulty
.
,
"We will get it done when we can
materials
in
linen chutes in Leo
do it."
·
·
and
.in
heating
.
vents in Benoit.
Many other ha~ras exist.
It was also discovered that
Gregory, Benoit and thelibrary
There are ·accumulations of - exposed wiring is present
in
the
.
-
don't have a fire warning system
·
grease on stoves, cluttered boiler
main electrical switchbox in
k
cl
t
th
F

·

rooms and a broken fire door in
_
Donnelly
_
Hall. There
is a black-

...
-
i
lin e
o
,
e
a1rv1ew
ire Gregory House, according to a
. f
f th
·t hb
·
·
•··
~
-
··
department, according to Joseph
_
fire marshall's report
.
recently
-
board m ront o
e
-
sw1 c ox
Waters, director of security at submitted to Waters.
making it difficult to reach.
Marist College.
·
Circle
repor:ter
.
s
;
final~y
To insure fire safety on campus
This means
if
a fire would start discovered a fire extinguisher m
Waters has hired two fire mar-
.
.
in
these three places, it could
"
the Donnelly
·
-
.
Hall boiler room,
shalls and a thirdhas volunteered
bum for liours unnoticed before located behind large
.
cabinets,
his services.
-
the Fairview Fire Co. would be approximatelY. five
.
fee~ fy9m the
Tom Hall, a retired New York
notified. This is thought to be the doorway
-
leaving
iL
difficult
,
to
City firefighter 'on pension,
is
.,
case in the fire
in
the chapel
-
· reach in case of an emergency.
assisting
.
in fire safety in-
·
sacristy last Easter.

···
·
It was also discovered there
is
·spections and isalso working on
According to Waters';the B
·
& W a three foot drop at the rear exit · einergencyescape
.
routes for the
Alarm_Co. has been
.
brought
in
to from the basement of Leo
·
Hall.
campus center,. according to
.
do an inspection and to
.
determine
,
.
According
-
to a
·
source,
,
fire
Waters.
:
.
·-
-
the price -of tying in the alarm alarm
srstems
iri
the dormitories
-
Geoff Phillips, a senior, and
systems of these buildings to the are
.-
antiquated and
-
do not work
·
sophomore Jim Kenney are
.
.
Fairview
.
fire
department. proJ>!!rly
··· ·-
·
·
·
·
student
fi.!"e
niarshalls con-
Fire extinguisher bi' Donnelly Waters did not give
·
anY
.
.
specific
·
.
There_-
is
an
.
accumulation
.
of
basement
is
not easily accessible. date for the hook-up, saymg
_
only, papers · and other flamable
<;o!'tin
.
u~ on p:.i;
~
6
_
_
Open electrical switch box
I!)
.
.
. Doµnelly is a fire hazard.
'
·
-~
·
~
-
.
--
.
.
.
.
-
-

•-·
.
..

.
~--
-
----
·-·
-
-
·
·--

-
~
...
,.,-
..
-
..
.
........
-
--
--
,.-----·

----
•--•
..
·

.-
.
'
.

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




























































































































































































































































































































































·,
.
~
'
.
,..
PAGE2
THECTRCLE
Execs
&
.students
.
talk
Bbollt
issues
·
·
·
MARCH 3,1977
sto11:)
Each member of the group
decisions and the• students who
was
asked
to mark
.
whetlier
.
he
are affected by theD): The groups

wanted
to
stay
to
continue the
.
agreed that the nonrial methods
'
.
discussion~ orto leave~ The ballot
of
-
interaction had
'
become
was
passed
back to junior Mel
inefficient and would have to be
Crilley. who signaled the group to
.
reopened or changed.
w
walk out. When Dr. Foy saw most
The
remaining
21
students said
·
of the group get up to leave he
.
they were .satisfied with the
complished at the time."
and dining services direc,tor
.
.
asked, "Where
are
you going?"
ev_aluation but said they wanted
The
meeting
was
called
as a
Joseph Lure11Z.
The five walked out of the room
some •"concrete" changes
.
which
_.
By Larry
Striegel
Despite
the walkout of 5 student result of a protest earlier in the
During
the
first part
of the
while the others
·
sat
.
·
down
.
to
.
they could
.
bring back
to the
leaders during a
_
meeting of
26
week in which a group of
21
meeting the students pr
_
esented
continue.
··
.
.
.
·
student body. Foy reviewed
.
each
students and 12 college ad· studentleaders
walked
into Foy's wbat they said
.
was evidence
Later,
.
other students said that
of
.
the grievances arid told
ministrators, including President office
and
presented him a list of backing up their grievances; while a few believed nothing was students that he would either
·
Llnus R. Foy, last Thursday in grievances in seven catagories while
the
administrators
being done, some felt that the work on each problem with the
the library,
·
agreements con-
concerning
.
academic,
ad-. listened. Cases concerning
,
ad-
·
students-and, administrators respective administrator; or
cerning stud~nt grievances
·
were. ministrative and financial -Lssues ministrative decisions
.
made
were . just
beginning
to
-
com-
·
agreed to
·
solve
.
the P.roblem
as
rea~
and a forewarned strike
·
while over
300
students stood
.
without student advisement were
municate~
.
quickly
as
possible: ·
..
.
·
·
of classes was prevented;
· ·

·
outside and
·
cheered
.
The group given,
·
and students detailed
.
After the walkout
·
there was
.
Afterwards
Foy said be was
Dr. Foy and the administrators had warned Foy that they would issues such
as
~
high
·
costs
of
more, sometimes loud, discus.si~g_ pleased with the
·
meeting .
.
·
l'It
.
agreed to comply with the call a student g;rike of classes
if
dormitory maintenance, the lack
betw~
the
two grou~,
.
~
w:ho. took
an
hour and a
half
to get
· ·
student request fot
-
an
ex-
th~y did not see some changes by of a 24-hour study
·
area
.
on
tried. to
.
exchange views on the- people started,.,
-
he said, "but the
planation of college financial the end of the week
.:
,
.
campus, housing and room
issues. Much of the c
·
onversatfon administration got
a.
sense
_
of
·
records· to work towards in-
·
The administrators who at- reservation
.
proceaures,
·
the
concerned the breakdown of where the students_ are coming
.
e r ~
.
student
.
input in policy tended the meeting, conducted in amount of f';lll~
·
provided for
·
.
c~mmunicatfon during the school_, fro!D. Jt gives
W:.
a
base from
.
.
·
·
decisions; and to set up a
24
hour the reading room of the library, student actlv1ties, and
·.
the
..
year,:between .those
.
who make which to operate.
student study area within the
·
were: Foy, vice-president
Ed-
budgeting of the college dining
·
·
-
·
coming week.
.
·
"
·
.
·
_.
ward
Waters;
Louis
Zuccarello, service
; ·
·
·
·
·
Howeve~, the student proposal
. •
·
academic
_
.
.
dean; Gerard. Cox,
After some discussion,
.
Dr. Foy
·
Greell
u-ses
P.A~--
for
-two-thirds
veto power
-
con-
·
assistant academic dean; David suggested that the problems be
cerning administrative decisions;
-
Flynn, admissions
.
director; divide
.
d into subgroups
so
·
that
·
·
··
considered by the student leaders Thomas
.
.
Wade,
·
development individual administrators could
.
' ·
:
,.
·

~s~s~~~~~!~i:re~ritJ~~

~:;~c~~,~o~t:~:~~nf~
;;tic
0
1!rf:.
0
_~~~~Jie
%~~::~
.
With
'
out
-
p
···
ermissio,r
-
m
the
..
"worltout stage" by
.
the pilii, business manager. ~er reJected this idea · saymg that
.
.
,
.
.
-
·
·
·
group.
administrators there were
An-
·
they did not
WjU11
·
committees
.
-
'
-
·
·
.
·
·
-
·
-
.
·
The five students who walked
.
tonio
·
Perez, dean of students·,
be_
ca
.
use
·
they be
.
liev
_
ed th
.
a
.
t
.
the
·
·
By
·
David
..
N
•.
g
-
·
·
·
·
..
.
·
·
·
thalf
thr
h
.
·
f
.
-
proce9ures
·
used
.
by Green
··-
as
ou
_
way
oug the our hour
.
Fred Lambert, assistant dean of issues woul.d not
..
.
be
so
_
lv
.
ed.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
·
.
,.
·
meeting bef
th
·
·
·
t
t d ts D
ll
B di k ·
0 •
thi. •
·
t
·
· ·
··th st d
·
··
·
·
-
·
··
,
''inappropriate/
;.
She
.
was never
·.·
.
ore
e agreemen s s u en ;
o
Y
o c ;

coor-
urmg
s
.
~e, . e
,
u
ents
'
Andre Green former . studeni . contacted by
.
Green concerning
.
were m
.
ade said later
.
that they dinator of college activities; were secretly pas~µig a ballot government president,
,
:
used the
..
use
.
oUhe syst~,
:
she
.
$liid.
:
felt
·
"nothing
: ..
:was being
_
:.
ac:-
P,e
.
ter Amato, resi~~n
-
~e director;
.
among themselves. (see related
'.'inappropriate
:
procedures
'-
' in
.
Dombrowski and stack w
·
ent
to
·
' ·
acquiring t!te putiiic address Ms.
,
Bodick's
'.
officLand asked
2
..
.
w
·
.
h
.
·
.
1
·
.
,
t
·
.
.
~
.
·
.
.
.
,
b
·
· .
··
1
·
_
.
system when he spoke to iµore
Pam ·Miµ;e, ... µte ~
.
secretary; if.
.
·.·.·.
·

·
·
_
..
.
·
o
·
_
·
.
·
·
.
·
_e
·
·.·
.
_
.

·
.
.
·.
:
.
a
·
_
·
r
·.
e
:
..
·
. .
·.
·
·
.:·.
:

a

·
·
.
.-
c
·· .
·
·
_
.'
".·
.
·

:-
.
.
,
··.··
.
.
.
than
.
300 students
..-
at dinner
.
Greenh'adreceivedpennissfonto
·'
Thursday
;
.
according to
--
soifrc.es
.
use
..
the
.
system
in
,
the
cafeteria.
·
·
Green
.
left talks with
·

ad-
According
:
to Stjtck
/
Ms.
:
:
Muse
,
.
.
_
,.
.
mmistrators and then discussed was «nebulous" in .her answer
;
.
By Da:ve Ng and Pat Larkin
students entered the
~
·
cafeteria. out
·
or stay, then one of -the
plans
:
with four stndents who also
.
Stack told Ms. Muse th~t he and
·
Gi-een
·
addressed
·
more
,
than
·
330
student
-
leaders
.
wrote under the
·:
·
.
·
le.ft the meeting:
_:
.
·
.
.
·
Dombrowski woilld set
up
:
the
Andre Gre
.
en resigned
:
as
·
students through the use of a ''walkout" column, "first
·
let
-
·
:
Later, Green asked
_
William
system ariyw:ay,
.
..
..
. ·
.
.
.
,
student government"- president pub!i_c .address system. He said · tl:lem
.
.
do
.
s~me talking, weare
.
Pom9rowsk,i and Kevin ~~ck, · "While Stack
,
arid Dombrowski
·
after he and four other students President Foy wanted the student
_
on the offensive, they are on the
~tudent~; to set up a public ad-
were
.
:setting
·
:
up t.lie system,
walked out of talks between leaders
.
to break lip
_
iJ!to com-
,
defe~fve
.
''
-e-
·-...,
.
·
.
.
·
.
·
. . . .
: ,
.
.
dress syste
_
m ilith~ cafeteria by Frank Gl!;ido; manager of
.
the
.
.
st~~enl leaders
.
_arid

..
..
ad-
mitteel? and
.
added, ''commiU~~s
·
'fhfvote
w~
nine for walking
...
5:20
P·f!l·
:
·
,
.
:::, .-
·
.
.
·
..
<
·
. ·
..
·
:
di~_g ~~rvice
.
; ~i~
-
tha~ per-
'.
.
·
mmistrator,s on
/
I'hursday.
.
are the
.
reason• we're falling out,
-
e1ght .said to stay, and
·
five
.
. Stack
,
ask!;!d Green why
.
,
he:. mission for
.
.
the system to
"
be. set
..
.
,
.
.
..
•;.
,
Michael
·:c
.Dwulit
·
.
-
:
and
:
Mel
.
apart.,.
Greerf
also
-
said student
·
sttidents
.
cbeck~<i µmier:Jhe
.,
third
needed the
PA
system.
_
According
.
up
· ·.
in the
·
cafeteria had to be
-
.
·

·
: .
.
/ :.<
<:-fµi
_
.
~y
~
i
\
~~
,-
~
t
~h
~J
1te
'
Yi\j9.
)
ef
f
\
..
d
·
_
ern~ds
i
~re
.
.
,
~~
-
·
~
-:
~irig
.
t(
.
on
__
·
_._
0
.
iel!
,
c
_.
_
a
_
t
.
egpf.Y
__
i
_
_
_
{
:s
..
·
o.il
i
i;~J?
;;:
_
~
_
a.~-
t
_
M
_
.
_
.
e
_
:
:
_
l
·
:
}o
:
:D.
___
,
_
.
o
.
mb
_
._
r.p~~ki
_
.
·!~
,
~-~~~
:
·
_
·_
t.epli¢d,
_

_
.
.
.-
__
_
d~~r.ed
_
_
~
,-
by
·
1µs
_
_
of
.
fie¢
:
.
. it:
'
t~at
.
.
.
;
.
"
the
·.:>
meetmg
;.
·
·
returned
,.
to
·:
the
·.·
and
:
_
the
"
a~mstrators ; were Crilley
;
0
-
int
.
erpi;eted
o;
the
;~
third
:...
.
'.'Yoifllfind
.
put wlj:e~Tmak:e''.tlie
·.
t'i~e
·
r
··
'Stack'
:
.
'f~'tnoved
?
:.'tfi

e
group
· ·
representing
:
the
:
Marist
.
sialling:
·
.-
~
"'·
>
.-
.-
:
:
·
0
• • •·:: .

-
;
'
:
, •
·
categ9fy of:
#V!:
,
.
vqte$
.
as
a,
,
vote
~pl}9uri~~W~t:''
.
';'
'
":.
~
:
.''..:
'.
i
-
~
-

-
:-:
\:
microplione"'Jrom
,
tlie
~
system
,<
students.
.
.
.
·
.
Green then resigned as S
,
G .
.
· for leaving the
talks,
thus making
- · ·
,
. :
·
.
.
,
· ,. '·,
_
·
:
-
· ·
·
When .,_Green arrived
·
in
·
the
.
·
shlrlarie Ferrante, Guy Greco,
.
president
.
apd also said

'Mel the vote}1"8 in
:
favor ofleaving.
<
Nopenniss
_
ion
.
-
.
cafeter~a; Stacktolfhim
.
that he
-
and
.
Green have not"rejoined
·
the
.
Grilley
·
had resigned
as
.
Chief Kevin
,
Cavanagh
said the
third
.
.
. ..
.
· · .
. ,
_ _
·
:
would have to
:.
ta:lldO
·
Guido .
.
student leaders.
.
_
·
·
JJ,1Stice of the Judicial Board.
category
·
was meant to
.
be'
.
in
.
Dombrowski a~ke
.
d Green
if
he
. '
Green said he
.
wanted tp
,
make
The five walked
out on the
.
.
.
favor of staying.
.
·
. .
.

·
had permission from Dolly _a ''few. announcements" ac
-
meeting)ate Thursday afternoon
.
Secret Ballot
.
Green told the dituier crowd the
. '
-
B
.
odick, th_e --.
·
coordinator
;
·
pf · cording 'to Guido.
_
Guido . then
and went
to
the Campus Center
to
.
.
.
_
,

vote wasJ2-8 i11 favor
.
of leaving.
-
campus activities, Dombrowski
gav_e permission
to
·
Green. Guido
discuss their plans; They decid~d
Accor~g to sources,
.
during
'
·
'
As
.
the only speaker over the

.
said Gree~
;
"didn't ~eally r~ply
;
"
.
.
1ater. said he
·
'
_
'didn't know
the student body shoilld be.
in-
the meeting a baµot
W!lS
secretly P.A.
·
system,
,
Green told the
,
According to
.
estabhshed .anything
>·
about"
-
what Green
formed of the walkout.
.
·
passed around to vote on whether crowd; «you as
-
Marist students
Campus
.
C.enter policy, the
.
woilld
.
say. · He
.
'!felt he
·
deserved
During dinner, the five the student leaders should walk
.
have gotto make
:
tne committee
.
:
;
acq~itio1fof any campus center · the
.
courtesy"
·
to
'
know Jhe
·
work for yourselves-:" ,
·
·
eqwpment m~t be
·
cleared by
reasons behind Green's an-
wha_t are you going
.
. t'?
do
.
wit
_
h your life?
,v
·
.
CONSIDER .... ~
·
\
CHRISTIAN
COMMUNITY
SERVICE
·
,
MINISTRIES
.
u
FE
OPTiONS
..
.
A
·
SERIES
,
OF
.
·
,
SEMINARS
.
.
..
.
.
.
,
.
MARCH
·:
6,7,
8
.
·.
MONDA v-.::1uESDA v.:.....wEDNESDA v
~.
,,
\
-
7:30 PM
.
DIJ(LOGUE
-
CENTER
'
3rd
FLOOR
LE()
·
:.,
·
.·Runaround

·
.
Afterwards,
.
Green
:
said
~
his
reasons
.
·
for
.
leaving
:;
.....
were
·
_' because, "we
..
were
.
getting the
runaround.~. arid
·
double
·
crossect ,,
.
.
.
Ms.
Bodick and members of
.
the nouncements
,
·
C.
U
.B.
.

.
.
.
.
"-
·
.,
:
When · asked later about the
Green did not ask Ms. Bodick
,
incidEmt, · Green said he had
a
for
_
pennissionfor
.'
usEf of~he
PA
right
:
to the
PA
system as a
system.
Marist student.
.
Ms.
Bo9ick
.
-
.
termed
·
.
the
- - -
··
·
core
.:
co11tinufid ......
·
---------
At the time Crilley
.
walked out,
he said the comniittee was "no
longer
:
functionfug the way it was
·.
feel that more time was needed to .. · ''requirements'-; we
~e
to,see in
· ·
·
suppose
·
.
to." Crilley had
·_
also
·
study the curricWum change arid
:
the college curricula. "Dr; Teich-
. tentatively resigned as a member to perhaps _
look at other alter:
_
man also
:
had specific
:
r~ser
~
of the Leo House Council; and as
.
natives.
Dr: .
Florence
·
Miche~s .
.
vations against the core relating
·
Chief: Justice
·
·
of
:
the
-
Judicial
'
,
suggested
..
a -
multi-disciplintj
~
to the group~pgs
.
of
.
certain
,
Board; Sine~ then,
.
he
·
'
:
has
·
co~rse;
<
.
''.The
Nature
<
of
:
requit:ed
-
c;ourses;
,
,
<!hanged
his
mind, saymg
·
"the

Evidence;'! as an alternative to
< -
·
Dr. D.A.
,
Drennen said, "I felt
·
-
.
workout of the new coUege
·
.
the proposed core:
.
_ .,
,
.
..
that it
.
was a political decision in
-judicial board and the parameter ·
:
She said that -while attending a-- effect· rather
·
· .than curtj.culmn
.
, oii which
it
works o
.
ut
will
give the workshop
ii!
Guided
Design;'
an
decision.'' He
.-.
did feel,
.
_though,
·
.
·
.
students
·
a new voice in student. educational innova~ion; at
.
West
-.
that "many
,-
people devoted. a

.
·
goverrtment.'.'
>·
-.-:·,
· .
·
·.
..
.
Virginia University, ''we had the
-
great deal of
,
tj.me
-
arid energy to
·Michael I::>wµlit
said
-
he was
.
opportun)ty of gatheJ.:ing
"
Jirst
·
.. the planning
.
'~
>
>
:
.
·
.
. ·

·

.
·
..
·
-
· asked - by
:
.
th
.
e _people <·he
·
.,
hand, knowl~dge
.
about
-
a: .-
_
.
:
John White
·
said· "What
I'm
.
represe11ted torejointhe.leaders'.
·
~~ltidisciplinai:y
.
course
.
The
~
opposed
.
lo is
_.
what Lsee
--'
as a
·
·
'.
According
·

to

Dwtilit,
'
peopl
_
e
":,
he
::
n_iost
:
important goal was to help

·
· .
.
failure
.
of the;:
,
core curriculum to
. ·
C<didn't even know'\asked 1lim to
·
each studennearn how different·
·
really Ulke
:
in account the liber~l
rejoin the committee.
·
·,
. professionals in ~he natural arts tradition." ,. .
· ·
_
.
:
.
.
. For
.
differing personal
:
reasons,
..
'
·
sciences, the social sciences, and
.
.
.
All
t
these ·
.
faculty
·
members
·
Ferrante; GreCQ, ~d Gr~eil have
·
..
-
the'}_1wn~ties gather
.
eyi~ence
\;
i
de~ite
_
~eir

.
vote
;
said they in:
·
not returne
.
d to
·
th
_
e_gro
.
up;
· ;
.
·
.
. an
.
d use it to
·
make a dec1S1on so
'.·
tendtoworkandsupportthecore
: Ferrante said she attende(l.the · th
_
e :~tudert . coul
_
d
~ot
.
only . curric~um. which
;is
:
to begin
·
student Jeader
.
meeting
.
on
.··
compare the different techniques ·
.
n~xt
.
fall:·
Dr
1
·
Milton
·
Teichman
February 25 to see what decisions
i
but
also
develop the s ~
.
needed
:
:
-said, "despite iriy
:
reservations;
·
I .
woulg
.
be made. Ferrante
-
said for pr~fessional
·
work;"
<
\.

_
will
support
.
the
·
core
~
.
,
very
'-
she

.
''didn't agree
:
.
with
··
the
·
..
·
Dr ..
-
_Milton·:,·Teichman;
_ /
wlio -
;
diligently
·
and
,
do
·
my best to
'
·
see
..
·
·
·
decisions•~ and
··
.
told' th
·
e
·
com.:
.
attende<i the ·Guicled Desjgn
that .its. best
;
qualities are
·
mittee
tliat
,
slie \V!>!Jld
'
not
,
rejoin
'
·
worJts}iop
)
yith Dt.
·
Mi<:!1
.
els, also
:
.
.
}
_
realized.''
~
<:
.
.
:
_:-,:
-
:
,
,
,-'
..
-
.
·
·
.
. :
_
'
.
th~ .
.
.
>·

r.,:
;
;
:
·
-:
·
·
:
.
t
•;
h~d ~rso~lll
'
r~ervations con•
'•
:·.:.r
fvir.Roberq'.,.ew1Ssays,
:
'.'lhope
.
Greco sai~,
i
'it
was
a matter of cerning the core;,''Although there .
:.
that
.
the.
;-
cor
.
e
·
:
:will
·
become sue~
.
-
·
principies .. :
·
J:.agree
:"
will) 'their
:
.
·
are:9ualltie~ 'of tlie
·
pi:oposed cor(<

.-C~ful
;:as
.
the faculty,
;
talk
;with
'.
:
.
fatherrlchard
la
morte
·
.
.
.
.:.:-
··':
goals
_
but;not with their
-
methods
,
that
f
L
'
a ~ e
:
.~_
and
t
~
<·
are:
:,
':
on~

:
~other
.
and

·defin~
::
more
.
,
,
.
broth.jr
ferry
'
doherty
.
'
:
.:.
.
.'
0
:
I

~o
.
n't
°'.
hold
'
.
m,ijthing
{
per'."
<-
yaluable, my o-.:e~
,
reservati
_
on
.
'. clwWcertam.
~
courses/
.
'
:
-=-
.
:.~
·
·,:-;
.
·..',
.
,
.bf~~~err,c,n gagnc,n
: •
~"
·
·sonally against
,
the
·
committee:•·
.
lS
.
that

co.r~
>
1S:
too
.
close
-
in
.'..
·.·
,:/-
.
>:
.
_.
;
-

.
·
.
............. - -... - ....... - .............. - -.... ---....... ~
.
,.,:s,,
r...
,.
v

:
.::
:-;
1
r
':c~
'.f
i·\
:::->
1>2.'
,
~
·
-<
<---:,:
;
~
,,
..
cha~
.
}}C.
.
~':
}
t~
.
~the
-;;
.
tradi!~~n~l\ •
:
,
,
,
:
_,
·
,,,· .
·
,
:;
·
;;>
~
.•
:•
...
..
.
.
-
--::
,:
~..;.
,
·
_
;
~
.
·.
•'
..
·-
.
-
.•
..
..-
-
..:.
·
·-
·,
:
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
·
-
~
_
·
-
:
.
.
·

..
-
..
.
.
.
-
...
\
,
.;•
,
,,
·
:.:. ,
_
;·:/--:;,
'
·
:
··
'
;•
,
;
-
~-
.
-
.~-
_.
.'
'
..
.
:
'.,
.
.
'
'
,
~
,,
.
,
,
.
_
.•
.

.
'
'
.
..
:
·
'
:,
.'
·
,
\
, '
;
·

.,,
:
},'.:'.
'{
\
.\i
:":'
·
.
'
·
.


,
/




















































































































MARCH 3, 1977
THECIRCiE
.
Personality
of
the week ...
9
Mor~
-
weeks
·
to go
-
PAGE3
Marist
'76
grad
#ound
·
·
stabbed
·
by Phil Colangelo
Last semester she taught the -
By Daniel Dronun
with her attacker but there
was
no sign of forced entry into the
apartment, according to
Lt.
Ronald Quinlan of the city police
force. He said that there
ap-
peared to
be nothing
taken
from
the apartment by the assailant.
fourth and fifth grades of the
.
After · 'kn~king around' for
Franklin Elementary School
in
A
Marist College graduate was
four years working with un-
Poughkeepsie.
found stabbed to death
in her 90
derprivi'eged children at a day
This
semester she
is still at Montgomery
.
St. apartment,
care center, Lorry
,
Plover,
26,
Franklin but she also teaches a
earlySundaymorning,
_
according
thought she would like to "know
class. of eight children with to . the City of Poughkeepsie
how to help children deal with
learning disabilities.
·
She also police. .
their problems.". Two
,
years ago
earns extra money tutoring two
Cynthia J.
_Kelly,
26~
a
class of
It
is believed that Mrs. Kelly
was killed sometime Saturday
she
·
enrolled· in the University
children.
.
.
·
.
·
1~76
Enghsh maJor,
was
Year f<!r Action (UYA) program
·

Ms. Plover says it \really diSC:overed by~ friend ~d neigh-
night, police said.
·
Funeral services were held for
Mrs. Kelly Tuesday morning and
her body
was
flown to Ohio, for
burial, where her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Berger, live.
at Marist .
.
In
nine weeks she will
doesn't matter
if she teaches bor clad only
m
a T-shirt.
have reached her goal
and
be
a
·
normal children or those
·
with
Although an autopsy report has
licensed teacher;
·
learning disabilities.
not yet been released police say
In
the UYA program, a student
After two more weeks at the body . had sev
·
eral stab
spends
his
junior or senior year
·
Frariklin, she will be transferred wounds.
off.
·
campus working with people
to another school to teach a
There were
signs
that Mrs.
Police have not determined a
motive for the murder
and
no
suspect has been arrested.
,
in the community
in
the fields of
·
'
Lorry
Plover
regular class for seven weeks.
K~lly, who lived alone, struggled
criminal justice and
.
education
.
Dr.
-
Michelson suggested that
·
After
·
completing her assign-
.
In
.
return
·
__
for the
.
work, the
·
she look into the UYA progralll, ment,·Ms: Plover will become a
·
·Psych·
.
m
·
aJ·ors m
·
1·x
·
·
student
·
receives
30
'
credits, which she took an interest in licensed teacher.
·
money for
.
room
-
and boar9,- and because of her previous ex-
Ms. Plover, who has a
3.5
in- -
funding for his tuition.
·
.
,
periences working witli children dex,
_was
born in Staten Island.
·
·
Ms. Plover got started·mthe at theMother·Hubbard Nursery
-
She attended 'Dutchess Com-
theory
··
an
·
d
act·1on
program by
-
accident in 1975. She School jn Fishkill
.
and the munity College as a liberal arts
had
-
been taking
:
a
1:hemistry
Po~ g h keeps i e
·
Fam
ii
y
·
major for one year but qropped
cour~
·
at Vassar College which
'
Development an
·
d
.
Day Ca.re out for financial reasons.
was instructed by Dr: Malvin - Center.
·
.
'
·
She said the
four
years she
Michelson,
·
chairman of the UY A
_
.
.
.
She enrolled
.
in the education
·
spent out
of
school,
·
working with
,
program at Marist.
,,
· - ·
program at Marist and spent one ctilldren ~•put
.
a completely
dif-
.
Ms. Plove_r did
·
well in

tlie year talµng
.
priinary and
-
special
·
ferent
·
perspective on things."
course, _but told Dr. Michelson
.
·
education courses at Motiilt St. She saysit made her niore goal
.
-
that she
·
WC)Uldri't be
·
able
.
t<t Mary's
·
CoUege in: Newburgh, ·
.oriented
and aware
.
of where she
continue
her
·
education because
,
.
wJuch is
'
associated with the UYA wanted to go in the future.
of a lack of mon
,
~Y:
·
program at
·
Marist.

-
" COllege

may
get
MALS
·•
·
.
.
-
·-
.
by Michael Brennan
five-day a week schedule. In
addition to their activities and the
"Our
.
program is the most weekly seminar, they must
extensive one of its kind of any m~ntain a careful journal of
college
that 1
know of," said the!r ~ork. Emp~sizing the
Midge
Schratz,, Assistant seriousness of the program and
P_rof~or
_of
Psychology and denying the notion that student
director of her
·
department's interns are little more than free
undergraduate
internship help
·
doing
menial
tasks,
program.
"It
is a fulltime
12
Professor
_
Schratz says: "The
credit program and
is mandatory agencies are not just getting free
for all psychology majors."
· empl~yees, but they're providing
. Marist ~sychologr majors trallllllg and close supervision.
involved
m-
the
·
internship
·
The program,'' she adds,
"is
a
·
program work at such local area capping process in which skills
by
Pat Larkin
·
O'Ke¢fe took a survey of teach the courses needed to agencies as the Dutchess Mental learned in,class are put to actual
-
students at Marist asking them
if complete a Llberal Arts degree. Health Center, the Qutchess
.
use."
·
.
AproposalforaMasterofArts
·
they
:
would be interested
.
in the Hesaidinterestedteacherscould Rehabilitation
.
Center,
_
the
As a sort of payment to the
in Liberal Studies (M.A.L.S:) was
.
graduate degree: He sent: out 317 add one extra course to their
.
Poughkeep~te Rehabilitation agencies
which
serve
as
the topic
.
of discussion at
·
a
questiQnriaires, of which
107
were·

teaching
-
load and would receive Center, the Astor Clinic, the placements for the program,
teac;her colloquinilast Friday in
·
returned
;-
48
said
,
they ate in-
$1200
per course.·.
.
·
Cardinal Hayes Home, and the Marist
.
gives free courses to
Donnellf Halt
..-,
.
.
terested in the degree
-while
85
·
O'Keefe estimated the cost for Dutchess· Office of
·
Probation. members of those agencies who
·
According to Dr:
Peter percent said they wer~ thinking the first year of the program at The_work includes psychological wish to availthemselves to this
O.'Keefe, dir~cioz:.
,
of
-
J:ontiriuing
-~bout_
it.
_
.
.
·
·.
_
,. .: .
.
:
.
. :.
.
,
$37,000._ H~
said
an enrollment of test~g,_ play therapy, and_ acting
.
opportWlity.
.
.
·
.
educetion,
,
,,-,
one
-
,
0£-~~
,
.~major
.
.;..
.,
S01m~J
.
~c;!i~r.s
_
J~!t th~s~ey
'
15fulltiniestudents
·
wouldenable
a.~
-
~SS~~ts to probatlo~ of-
.
M~ist psych interns ·seem to
·
.
reasons
,
for
-
the~prQpo~!qs
-
-
that
-did
.
not cover enciugn_
;
.
~t~d~µ~
.::
-
t~e
·
prog~~
t_o
:
bx:e~·even,
··:
,..,.-
·
:
beers, ~s .. well_
.
as_ a
_
Wednesday
:
_
agree
'
-
:
with
<
DY
;"
'
/;:
Schr
·
ati'
the '!undergraduate
·
·
~beral arts and should have involved
-
·
more
·
'
The'
·requirements·
for
'•
•jui
afternoon semmar conducted
,by
,
.
evaluation cif the program
.
-
They
·
education is
.
at best frag~ented, schools.
·
·'
.
-
·
M:A,L.S.
'
degree would
be
:
a Ms. Schra~z.
·
.
.
.
stress the
'
importance of getting
inco~er
.
ent~nd la_cks
_
ariy sense of
·,
~
Ttiitioµ
-
-
for the de"gree,
_
if.
~
'
-
'successful completion <if
30
·-
Th~
.
progr~ began
m
1_968:
At out of the classroom and into the
continuity)' Some.teachers at the passed, woulq cost $75 per credit,
·
credits
·
and submission
-
of an
_
the time _Part1c1pants were paid a
challenging work. Senior Bob
c<:iUoqtiiin belleved before
.
a
-
nine dollars less than the present interdisciplinary thesis or project
.
. •
substantt~l salary ~ttook care Goodwin echoed
Dr.
Schratz'
graduate program is
-
organized undergraduate
-
credit
--
cost. on a topic chosen
·
by the student of travelling and miscellaneous
"capping
process"
description
of
the under
·
graduat~ program O'Keefe said there are
·
enough
·
and approved by
an advisor," expenses., The sala~ was cut to the work.
"As
a
.combination
of
~hould be improved.
·
· ·
~--
·
qµalified teachers on cain~us to O'Keefe said.
·
.
merely gas money
m
1971,
and textbook theory and personal
-'
·
·
soon
.
after that support was involvement in pscyh
-
related
Cafeter
,
ia mcly
:
'
be improved, ~:::::·.:::::
~~\~•
!he program
~
a vital
stlldents
,
Will deC:ide fate
by The Circle
Staff
stalled
·
on pillars; and carpeting
will be put
in
the coves which line
-
The
-
Marist College
·
Dining the windows
:
on one side of the
Service is planning
·
to renovate cafeteria;
·
the cafeteria beginning !}ext fall

·
·
Jn phase two, · partitions, eight
.
if they make
.
a profit and; get
·
.
feet high and eight feet-wide, will
stµQent support for the
:
project, be added to
form
booths. Lurenz
-
says.Joseph Lure112, director.
.
said
the cost for the secf.>nd phase
·
The improv
·
ements
·
will be
·
would be
.
"about the same as the
chairs.
Lurenz
·
said
he
favors
·
the
improvements because they will
.
a9d a~osphere. to the cafeteria,
·
and make food more palatable
.
made
_,in three phases during first."
'
.
·
·
.
·
·
vacations, and
·may
·
take up to
Phase
,
three, :which
he
·
three years to complete, said estimated at
$35,000,
will include
He
added
·
that although costs
have gone
·
up, the service uses
choic
_
e meats and grade
A
.
vegetables,
.
and
,
provides five
salads each night
·

as well as
added extras such as cheese and
c;rackers.
·
Lurenz.
·
.
·
.
·,
the addition of new tables and
·
The funds' for
.
·
-
the im- . .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - -
provements
will
copie from
dining service profits;
.
·
Lurenz
explained
a
·
certain amount of
money
:was
·
designated as profit
when the dining· service
-
budget

was drawn up for the school year,
·
and at the
_
end of
_
the year the
mon
_
ey is automatically,put back
into the service. .
_
.· .
,
.
He ~id
_
the
•·
student· dining
service
committee
will decide
.
what the rrioney°'~ill
be
,
used for.
·
,
However, the
.
projected profit
·
·
may not.
be realized
this
year
because extra
·
money
.
is
·
being
spent on food due to rising costs
·
and student demands
.
for better
quality.
:
. :
·_,
.
.
-
The first
phase
of
the
planned
renovations, which Lurenz said
will cost "about
$11,000," entails·
.
reorganization, .·
..
of
·
beyerag~
..
_
distribution.
:
Beverages
·
will
·
:
be
.
:
placed along
'
the
-
rear
wall
:
to
·
make ·them
·
·
"more
.
accessible;"
'
-
~.41:?I\
·
l)ISCOU,-.T
/

El:Vl:~4f;I:.
·1,-..c~
ALBANY POST RQAD
..
HYDE
.
PARK
.
N. V. 12538
TELE.,H0NE-1914) 229-9000
"returilabl~s '
.
'
.
.
~absfs
'"•posit •
.
$4~
-
25
.
:
12
oz.
bottles
Also,
oak
paneling
·
will
-•be;
in
~-
---!lllli--al!I---------------·
.
.
·
.
·
.
.
.
:
·
:<·

;
, '._
·_';
:'

'.
·
_
I
_
, I
The
·
VILLAGE
CUTTER
UNI-SEX
HAIRCUTTING
If
you like good music
friendly people and great
haircuts then you '!I like
the. Village Cutter
Uni-~ex Haircutting
Salon,
6
LaG,;_dnge Ave.
· 47:1-3750
3 Church St .
New Palti
255-9925















































\
Fou
·
r .rooms
burglarized
By
Mary Yuskevich
There were three burglaries in
Leo Hall and one in Sheahan Hall
during the long weekend.
Joe Waters, director of
security,
said the
rooms
burglarized were Leo
321, 112
and
106
and Sheahan,
102.
·
He said items taken included
two black and white television
sets, a stereo turntable, a
calculator, a clock radio, two
desk lamps,
$11
cash, and a
checkbook.
Waters added some of the
· stolen
items
have
been
recovered.
.
Louis Wright,
21,
of Mansion
Street,
~oughkeepsie,
was
arrested on a charge of grand
larceny. Waters
said Wright
. cashed a check, which he
allegedly stole from Wayne Sch-
midt of Leo Hall, for
$500.
When
he allegedly tried to cash a
second check at the Dutchess
Bank in the Main Mall, Waters
said he was app"rehended by
Poughkeepsie police.
Wright has been released on
$3500 bail, according to police.
Waters added Rodney Smith,
20,
also of Mansion Street, was
arrested. He and Wright were
charged with the other two
burglaries., Waters said it is
presently under investigation
how Wright and Smith allegedly
entered the rooms.
. According to police, Smith has
· been released on · his own
recognizance.
Detective James Burke, of the
Poughkeepsie Town police said
the Sheahan burglary may not be
connected to the others, but it
is .
under investigation.
,
Burke said Marist Secuiiti
should be doubled during long
weekends because it is one of the ,
most . important times for
security, when the buildings are
virtually empty.
HYDE PARK
TRADING . Co.
-COAT SALE NOW~
Parapha'nalia, Sterling Silver, Boots,
Leather. Goods, 14K gold neckl~~es
Adjacent to Barkers, R( 9
THE CIRCLE
Novem~er 3, 1977
Food
being
w~sted during Tuesday's dinner. (photo
by
Gerry
Mc-Nulty)
I
Single servings threatened
By
Maria Troiano
and
Beth Weaver
Unless resident student waste
less
cafeteria
food
and
beverages, there will be no
seconds on some items, ac-
cording to Joe Lurenz, director of
the dining service.
_
· Lurenz said
$20,000
is
lost on
wasted food and drink.·
"Students sometimes take up
to six· glasses, and I. have seen
$20,000
wasted
,, seconds and then do not finish lhe
portion.
thein returning. one and one-half
to. two glasses partly filled," he
said.
The · cafeteria spends
$600 on
iced tea weekly, acco_rding to
Lurenz.
He added students often ask for
"If
you can't eat it all, ·just say
so" he advises. "Don't be afraid
to ask for a smaller portion." -
He said other colleges have
. instituted
more
stringent
-. measures such
as
one-serving
policies on many items and using
- lower grades of meat.
According to Lurenz,
milk
and
produce ite,ms are wasted the
most.
State, certifies pre-school
By
Kathy Norton
Marist Pre-School received
state certification in October
from the ·New York Department
of Social Services, according
to
President
Linus 'R; Foy.
Dr. Marjorie Schratz, director
of the program, said for the·past'
two years the pre-school has
violated a state regulation which
requires certification of a day
care program operating more
than three hours a day. After
discovering the violation, cer-
tification was applied for and
granted, she said.
According to Dr. Schratz, the
program was evaluated by the
New York Department of Social
WANTED:
Student to organize
ski trips to Aspen and
Vail with a leading ski
charterer with TWA
and United fo.r
Dec.
21,
31
or
the month
of
January..
,
You
may
get
a
FREE
TRIP
·
for your efforts.
Contact: Anne Simonet
Western Ski Vacations
(212) 688-2400
3 West 57th Street
. New York, N.Y. 10019
. , Gaelic Society
will
meet
Saturday
.in
Fireside at 9 p.m.
---;
-
Services, the Dutchess County
Board of Health, · and the local
fire department. In each case,
authorities visited the pre-school
for
an
evaluation.
Areas
evaluated were the ·· facilities,
worker-s, and care given to -the
children.
·
·
The pre-school
is
a service
designed to meet the need of the
Maris! community for a low-cost
day·care program. A majority of
the children's parents are
students or employees of Marist
College. All of the workers are
Marist students. The cost for
each child is determined by. the
. time spent
at
the. pre,-~choof ~nd
. the amount the parent can
affora.
. Appfoxirri.ately,
30
"'children
attend the program on a full-time
basis. The pre-school operates
from
8:15
to
5:00
on weekdays in
the rear of the old· gym.
'Smitty' dismissed
By
Mary Yuskevich
Harry Smith, security officer -
supervisor, was discharged on
October
25.
"Smitty" as he was
known, worked for
Marist
security for
15
months. Joseph
Waters, director of· security,
relieved Smith of his duties.
Waters said he would not
discuss the matter at this time
because he "does not want, to
prejudice Smith's right of ap-
peal."-
According to Smith, Waters
gave him the choice of being fired
·
•or resigning. Smith chose the
former.
· ........
Smith said he liked working at
Marist. He said that he and
Waters just did not get along.
Smith said he had received six
reprimands. He · said things
others would do would get them a
. pat on · the · back,- but,.· :Smith
continued
"I'd
do the same_thing
· and I'd .get a reprimand;"
Smith
is -
appealing to
Ann
Hagerty, director of personnel at
Marist, to, get his job back;
Bac~elor of . Pro.
Studie·s
goes
up · for
a vote
By
Margaret S<;hubert
The Board of Trustees will vote
today for the- Bachelor of
Professional Studies in Fashion
, and Retail Studies (BPS).
If
tµe
Trustees approve it, the .
BPS program will go before the
State Board of Regents
If it·is~'t vetoed at any of
those points, "the program could.·
be put into effect Spring '78,"
Dean Zucarello said. "However,
if
the. state delays, everythi!}g
gets pushed back," he added.
''The· degree is· for people who
would like · to place greater
emphasis in fashion," Zucarello
. said. Fashion is one of .the largest
. industries in New York State, and
"there is no similar program
between
N.Y:C.
and Albany and
perhaps beyond that," he said.
There are 59 students studying
fashion, and David Leigh, fashion
design instructor, said
if
the
program is accepted, the figure
could. doubJe next September. He
said ·, the · form.er · library has
sufficient studio room
to
itouse ·
· : the program.
·
Marist's location
is
ideal for the
progr~, Leigh said, because it
serves as a cushion for in-
depen'clence
I
from home. New
York City can
be frightening at
. first, "but we're close enough to
ease the students into th,e N.Y.C.
:· environment; we take field trips,
but then we· can get away from
it," he said .
·
j
I






















P~ge4
THE CIRCLE
THE
CIRCLE
Th~
Marist College
CffiCLE
is the weekly newspaper of the students of
Marist Coll
·
published thro1;1ghout the school Ye{lr exclusive of vacation periods
by the Southern Dutch~ ar
15
Agency, Wappingers Falls, New York.
ews
Pat Larkin
Regina Clarkin
LaITy Striegel
DavidNg
Gerry McNulty
JimBirdas
Jerry Scholder
Rob Ryan
co-editors
Photographers: Paul Nunziata, Tom Burke.
Mike Teitelbaum
news editor
sports editor
feature editor
photography editor
business manager
advertising manager
distribution manager
Staff: Dor~n Bachma, Sue Baroni, ShE:ila Cunningham, Joe Ford, Kevin Geraghty, Dominick
Laruffa, Mike McCourt, Jeff McDowell, Diana Rosario
Mills, Judy Norman, Kathy Norton, Jimm
Perez
Dave Potter~ Ellen.Rakow, Margaret S~hubert, Victor Small, Susan Stepper, Maria TroianJ
Beth Weaver, Adr1an Wilson, Mary Yuskevich, Pat Marafioti John Mayer
-Diana
Jones J~
Dasher, ~ate Lynch, Gerry Biehner, Ralph Capone, Alan Jackson: Ken Healy. '
'
No Ivory Tower
. It
migh! offend some people - the sight
ot a handicapped person in a wheelchair.
But during Saturdav's Wheeichair
In-
vitational at the McC;nn Center, the first
of its kind in the Mid-Hudson Area,,it was
a beautiful sight.
Approxiniatcly
70 wheelchair athletes
from six states competed in swimming.
track. slalom events and a basketball
game.
It
was good for all those involved.
It
raised the consciousness of spectators.
And most importantly, it gave the
wheelchair athletes the opportunitv to do
what most of us like to us - to comp~tc.
They. canw not for oi1r sake, not to
pron• something to us. Thcv came for
competition·s sak1·.
.
·
ln
spite of the wheelchair, they arc ·no
different from the Olympic competitor or
·tlw
sandlot baseball player.
· ·
People could say they displayed d~tcr-
mination tinlikc other athletes. But not
really; athletes, in the real sense, are
determined. And no one should pretend
the,.· _ arc
endowed
,.,1·
th
·

.SUJ>er10r·
emotional drive.
Yes, they have uniquc:~-prohlcms hut
true athletes perform lo the hest of their
abilities no matter how adverse the cir-
cun1stanccs.
And as many said Saturdav, it is time to
stress those abilities.
·
,· ·
\
Thos~ who organized the invitational,
especially Joseph Hines, director of the
special services,office, and Rich Barbara
the student intern, should be com:
mended.
·
· Marty Ball and Na"talie Bacon, who were
participants as well as consultants, should
he thanked for a job well done.
-
Editorial
Marist College should also be noted for
being involved With the invitational.
But we should avoid images of an ivory
tower extending a helping hand to the
handicapped athletes. The McCann Cen--
ter, hy cJesign, is suited for h,mdicapped
individuals.

And
as the colJcgc l~ith thc·J~rgt~st
s1><>r~
ts facility in the area, it is the student,
faculty, and aclministration·s duty to.sup-
port such an event as a service to the com-
munitv.
It
is· the rarity of suclran event which is
important, not that ··wheelchair athletes
com J>cted.
And if the invitational grows, which it
should,
it will' become a regular sports
event. That is its place in the future. But
now it is still a rarity.
Viewpoin•1---:>--
Th e caU
to
greater living
letters
Lac~_ of pride
Novem~r 3, J 977
college.
Marlst
College
was
our
home for 36 months of 4 years: we
To
the Editors:
weren't visitors
and
neither are
On Friday, October 7, I was
you, and _it should
be
taken care
fortunately able to accompany
of the same as you
will
your first
Dean Anthony Perez and
Mr.
residence when your careers
. Anthony Campilii on their weekly
begin.
·
inspection of the residence
I
do not excuse the ad-
facilities of Marist College. What· ministration for the deterioration·
I
perceived was a lac}rnf pride by
that has occurred.
If
culpability
both
studeots
and · ad-
for damage can be ascertained
ministration. ·
that individual', must
be
held
- How else to explain bottle caps
responsible for
the
repairs. We
forced into ceiling tiles; marker cannot charge off . grievous
· pen
writing on walls and doors;
destruction to "normal wear and
fumi11:1re broken
lip
or damaged;
tear'_': in so doing, we_ penalize
holes
m
walls and doors; ceiling
~e w~ole community by spen-
tiles and frames by the bookstore
~g
its money. to rectify the .
destroyed; cans and litter strewn
selfish actions of a minority.
about the dorm area;. fixed
Colleges and
universities
are
ashtrays
~ ·
ana -sfgns
said to be microcosms of society.
_damaged,
·
destroyed or
If
that
is
true, where are the
missing; a public bench turned ·- analagous rules at ·Marist that
over and damaged;_ phones
reflect those of society? Littering
ripped out; and more, but I do not
a public place may cost me $200
wish to go on.
·
·
in New Jersey; what constraint is
I
fully realize that all of this did
placed upon the Marist -student
not happen last week; some may
who drops a beer can
10
feet from
even be attributable to students
a trash receptacle?. What
already _graduated. Further, the
~pai-tment management allo,vs
dorms have been in service for
its occupants to throw garbage
over a decade. (Sheehan Hall,my
out the windows without taking
first residence as a frosh, opened
restraining steps ( e.g. eviction)?
in
1962), and have -had wear Laws are legislated at all levels
through normal ~sage. Nor do I - oLour government concerning
believe that
a
large majority of
the social behavior of its citizens.
students_ are responsible. Yet,
Those laws protect the majority
however few they be, those that from ~he tyrannical misbehavior
-. are to blam1fare a disgrace to the
of the misdirected few. We at
college community. -
Marist should welcome some well
· Society has changed, but I do
conceived rules to assist in the
not feel so far removed from • containment of those who do not -
today's students., Having · met care.
some of you personally has en-·_
I
am proud to be a Marist
•forced my beliefthat·you are
Rt
College graduate, and devote my
Marist for the
SllJ.®
_r_eil_sons
I
time to
it
today because I do care
attended: to study, learn, create-
about it and the people who
and have
a
damn good time too.
comprise its community. We
But ·destroy, desecrate and sho!1ld all Cc!_r~.about the quality
abuse? Somehow, they were of life at Marist, so that everyone
never in the·plan.
-who spends.4 years.studying,~nd
Don't misunderstand:
-
angels living here can look back as
I
do,
we were not (Who do you
think
on _a fulfilling and .happy_ ex-
spontaneously started River Day
perience ..
"a few'.' years ago?!) But if we
Stanley J. Becchetti
· Class of 1966
MemI?er, Marist College
Board of Trustees
got pissed off at something or
somebody, we didn't taKe it out
on the physical plant' of the
Art stolen
To the Editor:
This is an appeal to the Marist
Community to help me Ret back a
sculpture taken last Tuesday·
night or earl3Wednesd~ymormng
from the Gallery Lounge in
Champagnat H;ill where I was
exhibiting a series · of my
suspended kinetic sculptures.
Any exhipitor at this gallery
signs a release holding th!;l
college blameless in the event of
loss because there·
is
no insurance
but to rely on police methods.
Since the piece is valued at $1,-200,
it's not a minor offense, a)J.d I
would be obligated to cooperate
with the police in pressing any
charge they saw fit. I will not rest
until I ·get my sculpture back. -
This , determination overrides
whatever distaste I may have
about the second option.
I'm deeply motivated in
this
intent because I believe that each
work ah artist makes is· in a
symbolic sense a special kind of
"To laugh often and much
with data that is continually
To win the respect of· intelligent absorbed out of experience. The
people
stuff without is environment and
and the affection of children; other people. To santify, to in-
To earn the appreciation of tegrate, by effectively utilizing
honest critics
what is within and without is the
models from all areas and times. coverage for exhibited material.
Their example contains a call to This theft is my personal loss. I
create something unique with our exhibited at Marist with faith
gift
of life.
that there exists the respect for
We, as well, need to meet and· others and their property which
understand heroes and sheroes are integral elements of the at-
simply as people who did their mosphere of a higher educational
thing - who lived out God's per-
institution.
·
sonal call in a uniquely creative
My show was scheduled to open
way. No one heroe or sheroe can Oct.16 through Nov.13, but I had
be a total pattern, although one to close it Oct. 20 because as we
can have- a special appeal and all . know lightning .can strike
relevance to us. I believe, we
twice. I will reassemble the show.
need to know and be 'sensitive to for a special invitation program
-child of his creation. I feel fhaf
someone has taken one of my
·children. The artist is free to
bestow his children on others for
whatever reason he believes, but
it is ·particularly immoral to take
his work by stealth. I'm not
flattered by the idea · that · my
work was appreciated enough so
that someone had to take
it, as
I .
do not feel that being raped is an
extreme form of . flattery of
someone's sex appeal.
A
pragmatic consequence of this
act is that thetheft_has deprived
an artist of
his
opportunity to
gain a livlihood. Most artists~
and endure the betrayal of false challenge of life. We are an' called
friends;
to be equal to that challenge.
To appreciate beauty;·
There are many men and
To find the best in otners;
women who have bee
1 t
To leave the world a bit better
-
n equa
0
whet.her by a healthy child
that challenge. Christians call
ed
them saints, we all call them
a r eemed social condition
heroes or sheroes. Some are
or a job well done;
To know even one other life has · known beyond their own time and
breathed
for space in the history of man
easier
and some arc known within that
because you lived -
span. These people are whatthis
this is to have succeeded."
article is about.
To deal with heroes and
This is perhaps to be·a saint-
a
sheroes is to deal with our family
holy one - a one set apart • a - the family of man. That's
Heroe or Shereo! This is to have probably the most-· important
taken the gift of life and shaped it reason for an interest in such
so that there is something to people. They · form part of -our
l
gh
b t
nd
ld d ·t
th t roots! All _generations need to
au
a ou a
mo e i so a
know that tliiere are "anc··estors"
others were better off.
·
The stuff that Heroes --and for them to beinspired by and, in
some instances to
be
.emulated.'
$heroes are made of
is
the stuff They also need_to·sense that they
that everyone has at his or her themselves have an . individual
disposal, both within and without. · call to be heroes and sheroes
· The stuff within is· a complex within their own lifetime -
mixture of personal strengths, situation. Heroes and sheroes are
weaknesses and talent co~pled not blue prints· - but ·creative
as many of these people as we
on Nov. 6.
.
___ ..__
can- some-better than others, but
The person or persons who.took
many, at least a bit. That heroes my work probably reads this
a,nd sheroes come from every paper or is perhaps known by a
walk of life is unimportant; that reader. I'm asking the person
they are young, middleaged and who took it _directly or through
old people; that
it
didn't just someone's good offices to see that
happen to them but they made it the piece is returned.
happen.
'_Here's why I feel you should.
Knowing saints, heroes and first of all, by_ ins~inct, I_'m not
sheroes. c_an help people get in
mtereste_d
~~.
this pomt,, in
.touch with the potential in prosecutmg · perpetrators . I
themselves .. Knowledge of such
would see that the voluntary
heroes. and sheroes puts us in
re~um of
the
wor~ would serve as
contact with people who can give
eviden~e of ~ving und~r~tood
us the deepest kmd of roots. The _Jhe wron~ ~f t~s act and m i1st;lf
greatest sense of hope and ·
l;>e
rehabilitation. _Therefore, ld
potential - for the human family
press
AO
cha_rges since th~ hoped. -

· for action will speak for itself.
If
. the work is not returned through
this appeal, I pave_ no recourse
· financial security is a precarious -
state at best, and the net affect of
- this act is to increase the
dif.
ficulties of my ·continuing to do
this work. Most of what one gains ·
by selling is that it finances the
opporturuty to continue.
From the Marist Coinniunity
standpoint, this occurrence can
only blemish your institution's
reputation. This does not speak
_ well
0
.for the development of
ethical- attitudes lo which the
process of higher education
·
supposedly contributes and in·
· wliich. we all play a r.9le. Your
_beautiful gallery-.:.may remain
Continued on page S



































































































I
I
I
I
l
t
I
I
I
I
i

f

-•·
,
-,
i!
.
Page 6
HAVEA
CHECKUP.
ITCAN
SAVE
YOUR LIFE.
Johnny
Bench
During one 8f my check-
ups,
the
doctors found
a
spot
on my lungs. I
thought it might be
cancer. So did thev.
luckilv, it wasn\. Most
people
a;e
lucky
.
Most
people never have cancer
.
But those who find
thev do have cancer are
far better off if their
cancer is discovered earl v
.
B
e
cause we
knowhow
to
c11re-111any cancers
when
we
discover t/Jem early.
American
·
I
-
Cancer Society.
t
Hazards
·
from
..... page 1
THE CIRCLE
Quarterly
will be
published
Quarterly, said it was started in
1973
by a Marist senior, Thomas
Rabbitt.
Sommer kept the Academic
Quarterly alive by finding
an
editor for the succeeding years.
A
staff of students chooses the
articles to be
·
published. , This
November 3, 1977
year the staff
is
Pat Huseman,
Ginny Dicks, lngred Gappelli,
and Gerilynn Sprague.
Sommer expects to put two
issues together this year, but he
said "we need the submission of
more papers from all areas."
'
.
ducting periodic fire inspections
and
maintaining
fire
ex-
tinguishers. All three have
submitted recommendations to
Waters regarding numerous
safety violations.
·By Doreen
Bachman
The first issue of the Academic
Red Foxes .. .from page
8
Although Waters said he is
primarily concerned with safety
he said unmediate correction is
not possible. "Being a realist, it's
just not going to be done in one
day," he said.
Waters said he has had good
cooperation from
_
the main-
tenance department but noted the
staff is limited. Fire marshall's
reports have been turned over to
maintenance by Waters.
Andy Pavelko, director of
maintenance, was unavailable
for comment.
·
·
Quarterly, a journal of scholarly
works by students and faculty,
comment
of the ra~ was "Some
-will be published in the spr~.
of our runners made the mistake
Three issues were published·. of going out too slow, and with
last year, but two have not been such a narrow course tl}is proved
distributed because the printer to hurt them. Es~c1a~y Bob
returned them to Marist after the Coufal, who was tnpped at
the
spring semester had ended. three quarter mile mark. Then
These will
be
distributed at the Jerry and Dennis not bei~g at
mid-Hudson Modern Language their full potential didn't help
Association conference matters any."
November 28 and 29.
Dr. George Sommer, faculty
advisor for tbe Academic
NEW IMAGE
Marist's
Top
·
and
'
Most
Valuable Runner awards went to
Scholder, while the Most Im-
proved Award went
·
to Ron
Gadziala.
The junior
·
varsity team placed
third of six teams in their
4.2.5
Hair
Salon
·
Park Plaza, Rt., 9, Hyde Park
Are
-
you sick of
.the routine places?
-
mile-long race also held at
Albany
.
.--
Dan Kelly led the Marist squad
by placing
fifth
in a time of
22
minutes and 27 seconds.
His
time
was
26
seconds behind that of
first place finisher Robert
Easalle of Plattsburg. The Univ.
of Mass. "C" team placed first in
the team competition;
Next across the line for Marist
was Dennis O'Dohetty who was
·
eighth, . then
··
came
Keith
Millspaugh, loth; Pat Lappin,
20th;
and
Rich
Duff rounded out
the scoring by placing 23rd
.
.
·
Other Red Fox runners were:
Ed Gilteran, ?.6th; Ralph Cosenza
30th
and Gary Weisinger
36th
in a
_
field of
60
harriers.
Coa
·
ch stevens is now loOking
ahead to Saturday when he will
be sending three parts of
his
team
to three different championship
races.
His top seven ninners, with the
exception of Scholder,
will
be
heading to Rochester. Albany st.
and host Univ. of Rochester will
provide Marist its toughest
competition.
.
·
'
The next seven will be headed
to st; Bonaventure Univ. for the
N.Y.S. Upstate Championships.
·
There Niagara and Oneonta are
expected to· lead the field.
·
.
The remaining
12
.
Marist
harriers
will
go to the Collegiate
Track
Conference
Cham-
pionships at Van Cortlandt Park.
The f~vorites are Fairleigh
DickinsonUriiv., Southern Conn.,
and
C. W.
Post.
Looking for a
new style?
·
Try the
NEW IMAGE
OPEN illONDA Y
THRU SATURDAY
PHONE:
229-0658
CUB Activities
-
Thur. Nov. 3,
"Who
Shot J.F.K." Ross Ralston
will
speak
in
the
theave, 7:00 p.~.
-
Fri.
Nov. 4, Bogey
in
"Casablanka" 9:00 p.m~ Theatre.
Sat. Nov
.
12, Marist Night atthe Last Chance - 9:00 p.m., All invited
for the best party
_
of the year!
.
Grove Street
Productions
·
pres~nt:
~
• .,. j ~ ; . :
.,
~•





'
.
• '. .
:
.
~

.--;
.. -
• - t .. "
'
.
-~
'
.
.
.
'
-

:
IN
.
CONCERT
'
Thursday No~ember 10
-
s
~
pm
at the
:
Mid Hudson Civic Center
Two
sets-Acoustic
+
electric
\
.
·
Tickets available at
all
Ticket:ron outlet~
Nearest: Hyde Park
_
Trading Company
-
.
1
-
.
-
-
-
-
__
-

-
··
·
I
.,
.,,,
.
. , . ~
-
_,..


























































November 3, 1977
THE CIRCLE
Page 7
Vikings' first losing season
in
14 years
Lose 30-14 to Brooklyn
First win
By Ken Healy .
scoreless until 3:23 remained
in ·
Vs•
Red men
A bigger, stronger and faster
Brooklyn College football team
handed the Vikings a 30-14 loss,
their fifth of the year, last Friday
night. The loss insured Mari.st's
first losing season in 14 years.
the game. Jeff Hackett hit Ron
Clarke with a 36 yard pass put-
ting
Marist on the Brooldyn 41.
Two plays later Hackett hooked
up with tight end Jim Piersa for a
41 yard touchdown. The two point
conversion was no good and
Marist kicked off to Brooklyn.
One second down running back
Don Brown fumbled on the
Vikings 48 and Marist recovered.
A pass to Steve Maschi was good
for four yards and then'Hackett
found Gary Lambert for a 48 yard
By
Ken Healy
A 26 yard touchdown run by
J.C. Gersch in the second quarter
and a Ron Clarke field goal with
2:49 left in the game was all the
Marist Vikings needed for their
first victory of the season against
St. John's University on Oct. 22.
The Vikings' 9-7
win
was their
first against four losses and a tie.
The game was really over in
the second quarter when
Brooklyn, held scoreless in the
first period, put 20 points on the
board before the half. The
scoring e;plosion began with a 23
yard touchdown run on the first
possession by Everett Branch.
Later, quarterback Arnold
Tooma ran a sneak two yards for
another score. The final Brooklyn
touchdown of the period came on
a 22 yard run by Ed Conroy, who
was one of two Brooklyn runners
with over 100 yards rushing. The
extra point was good and the
Kingsmen led 20-0 at half.
,
scoring pass. Hackett then threw Ron Clarke and Steve
Mlsuta
bring
down
a
Brooklyn ballcarrier as Art
to Piersa for the two point con-
Ozols moves in to help Friday night. (photo
by
Paul Nunziata)
version and that ended Marist's
scoring for the night.
St. John's only score came on
the game's opening kick-off. Will
Johnson returned the kick 96
yards and the extra point was
good. That was all the offense the
Redmen could muster against the
Vikings. St. John's was held to 1.08
total yards on the day. Marist's
defense, ranked second in the
Met-7, intercepted six passes by
quarterback Keith Sullivan.
Sullivan was able to complete six
out of 24 for only 55 yards.
After a scoreless third quarter,
Jorge Fidel kicked a 32-yard field
goal that capped an eight~play
drive. The Vikings remained
Brooklyn scored once more in
the , closing seconds · when Ed
Conroy scored his second touch-
down of the night. Conroy had 148
yerds rushing against the Vikings
and was followed closely by
Everett Branch with 105 yards.
Defensive coaches Mike Malet
and Tony Celenza agreed Conroy
was the best back they had seen
this year.
Brooklyn had 358 yards total
offense, 303 on the ground. Even
though this was the Viking's fifth
loss it was the first game that got
out of hand. Jeff Hackett had
another good game completing 9
of
22
while running for his life. He
aJso had two touchdown passes
and an interception. Hackett,
with, only four games under his
belt,
is
the third leading passer in
the Met-7.
Adding another interception
was Ron Clarke, who now has 18
in his Marist career, and is only
three shy of Bill Faison's school
record. His two receptions give
him 13 on the season and his 30
points put him second in Met-7
scoring behind Sal Ali of St.
John's.
MotiVation.
keeps
Co_ufal
running
The big story of the game was
the Viking's resurrected offense.
Until last week it had been
ranked sixth in the league but
against St. John's the Vikings
marched for 339 yards, by far
their highest total of the season.
Gersch and freshman Pat
Lannotti led the way for Marist
with 62and 92 yards respectively ..
By Larry
Striegel
Pete Rose has it.
So
did
Thomas Edison, J o·nas Salk,
Michelangelo and Abe Lincoln.
Maybe you have it too.
Psychologists call it intrinsic
motivation; but as Bob Coufal
will tell you, it's
a
feeling inside
which makes a person strive for a
goal with total dedication.
Coufal, 20, is the number two
·,ranked runner on the Marist
'""cross country team, behind Jerry
Scholder. He is also the only
senior on a squad filled with a
number of promising freshmen
and sophomores.
Coufal knows about both the
practical and theoretical aspects
of intrinsic motivation. Before his
freshman year at Marist he
prepared for cross country by
running a total of 400 miles
duripg the summer. The next
year he ran 600 miles, and last
summer he logged 1000.
Bob Coufal
personal gratification. Many
athletes begin working to be
great because they are in-
trinsically motivated, he says,
but end up playing for the sake of
fame.and huge salaries.
"I look at that as a pretty
miserable place to be,'
1
he says in
a mild-mannered way.
"It
ap-
plies in education too when they
set up strict grading systems."
Students are forced to work hard
for high grades instead and not
because they have a realinterest, -
he says ..
As a senior at Maria Regina
High School, Coufal, ~ho weighs
125 lbs., and is 5 foot, 9 inches tall,
was a member of a two-mile
relay team which recorded the
nation's fastest indoor time of the
1974-75 season;
In his freshman year he was
the number two ranked Red Fox
harrier behind Fred Kolthay,
who was graduated in 1976. Last
year he ran in the NCAA finals at
Cleveland with tonsilitis, and was
the fourth finisher for Marist.
This season he has been the
team's most consistent runner,
and has been either the first or
second Marist runner across the
finish line in every meet but one.
The exception was at the New
The Merrick, Long Island
native is on .the Three-Year
Program as a psychology major,
and the topic of his . required
thesis, due before he is graduated
in June, will be intrinsic
motivation. ·
Harriers finish 10-5
, . . Coufal says he got interested in
·, the subject when he began a
· .:··course about it this semester ..
"Studying it has made me stop
and ask, 'Why do I do the things I
do?'," he says. "The greatest
athletes have to
be
int insically
. motivated."
He says th~ key is working for
something with the knowledge·
that the only reward will be
By John Mayer
In their last two meets, the
Marist Cross Country team
managed to defeat three ·of its
five opponents. This gave the
harriers a final regular season
record-of 10-5.
On· October 19, the Running
Red Foxes were represented by
their junior varsity squad when
they hosted Vassar and Nyack
College. They were able to defeat
Vassar 15-49 and Nyack 15-50. /
The race was won by Marist
freshman Charlie Powers. He
covered the five mil.~. long,
muddy course in a time of 26
mUUites ·and 25 seconds.
He was followed across the line
by teammates Pat Lappin, Gary
Weisinger, Ed Giltenan, .. · and
rounding out the scoring in
fifth
place was Rich Duff.
Marist's Top
and . Most
Valuable·· Runner awards were
given to Powers. The ).\fast
Im-
r-------------------------
proved Award went to freshman
--
ua,-
Your Hea.d lo
Us/
·cun11r
=
F ~
5
Bwith
.
.
STREAKING, FROitiNG
Maritt
ID
. :a
PERMANENT
WAVll(G
CALL
.:454-1239.
for
.your
appotnti,,ent
D(IW
.
-
.
.
.
.
:
..
""
...........
au111111vn...,
. (Aboile
Clpitof
Balleq)
Entr1110t
Around
Cc)rner
/
Lappin.
Three days later the varsity
ran up against tough competition
when they faced Fordham, C.W.
Post, and Stony Brook on a sunny
Saturday morning at Van Cor-
tlandt Park.
They were able to defeat Stony
Brook 19-42, but fell at the hands
of Fordham by the score of 45-18,
and C.W. Post 36-19.
Jerry Scholder was the top
finish'er for Marist, placing'
fourth. He completed the fiv,e,
mile long hilly course in a time of
26 minutes and 2 seconds. He was
35 seconds behind race winner:,
Gene McCarthy of Fordham;
The next Running Red
l'"OX
across the line was Bob Coufal,
who was 15th, then came Paul
Welsh, 16th; Ron Gadziala, 17th;
and in 18th place . Steve
Deleskiewi~z completed the .
scoring.
York State Championships at
Albany when he fell in the first
mile. He says he . had to pass
almost, 100 runners during the
remainder to gain 35th place.
The Champagnat Hall resident
says he may apply for graduate
school, to further his psychology
studies, but may wait awhile
after graduation. He also says he
probably won't run competitevly
for a graduate school, but would
. continue running and possibly
enter Jong distance road
.
races.
He says he might · run in a
· marathon like the · one in New
York or another on Long Island.
Marathoners like Bill Rodgers
and Frank Shorter are among the
most intrinsically motivated of
athletes, he says.
''It
seems the longer you run
the more intrinsic it has to be. If
you found any of those guys
running 26 miles for an extrinsic
reason, I'd be shocked."
It
was the first game Lannotti
had seen any extended action.
Gersch is the Viking's leading
rusher with 463 yards. His touch-
down was his first of the year.
Tight end Jim Piersa caught
three of the Viking's five com-
plete passes for 91 yards. Bob
Brarmigan, who regained his
starting spot at quarterback, had
a good day going 4 for 10 with 102
yards passing. Marist's other QB,
Jefi Hackett,·-saw only limited
action ·due to a shoulder injury.
Marist's six
interceptions were
more than it has had all season.
Mike Freer, who joined the team
only two weeks ago, picked off
two. Mike Overbye, Steve
Misuta, Ron Clarke, and
Chris
Daly had one each. Clarke's
interception was the sixteenth of
his career putting him second in
career interceptions by a Marist
player.
SUPER SAVINGS ON ALL
QT.
YOUR LIQUOR NEEDS
BLEND ........
439
GIN 80° ........
419
VODKA 80° ••••
419
Jli;br llark
GIN 90° ........
479
Gin 80'
4'9

BOURBON 86° .
6
year old
499
SCOTCH 80°
,
.
.
.-~-~-~~.
SCOTCH 86°
529
r---------------~
1-
WINE VALUE
I
I
IMPORTED LAMBRUSCO
I
I
OR GERMAN TABLE
WIii■
·1
I .
YOUR CHOICE
ONLY 99c
I
·---------------~
SAVE
ON
ALL NAME BRANDS WINES AND Lto·uoR SAVE!!
t.lquorama
0
J~cu
0
o
0
R~T
·---
---
-
I
HYDE
PA'RK
229-8177
HYDE PARK MALL-RT. 9
(NHI lo Shopnl•l
...































































...
L
Page8
IBECIRCLE
November 3, 1977
Booters down
-
siena despite poor play
By
Ralph
Capone
Goalie
Rich
Heffernan
recorded his fourth shutout of the
year as the Red Foxes downed
Siena
4-0
Saturday at Leonidoff
field for their fourth straight win
following the 1-0 setback to
Quinnipiac two weeks ago.
However, the style of play
that
led Marist to the victory over
Siena didn't impress coach
Howard "Doc" Goldman
at
all.
'"They didn't play any style,"
said the disappointed coach after
the
game.
"They
played
terrible."
"It
was probably their
··
worst game in three years,"
added assistant coach Rich
Lotze.
The only consolation for
Goldman, besides
:
the 4-0 score,
was
·
the improvement of shots on
net by the Red Foxes.
-
Matt
Lovecchio gave Marist a ·1-0 lead
w'ith his first goal of the game
after 27 minutes 58 seconds in the
first half. He scored on a per-
.
_fectly placed shotthat went just
under
the
crossbar into the upper
coming up with good plays when
· left comer of the goal.
needed to keep Heffernan's
Jim
Downs
followed suit just a
shutout intact.
minute and six seconds later with
"They took the game much
too
a
hard
shot
that
deflected off a
lightly," Goldman said. "'Ibey
.
Siena defenseman and into the
_
just
weren't mentally prepared
goal, giving Marist a
2-0
lead at
-
for the game."
.
the close of
the
first half.
.
.Marist outshot Siena
24-9
while
-
·
·
"I told them· at halftime that raising their record to 9-2-1. The
they were playing sloppily,'.'
three other victories in the Red
Goldman said, but Marist didn't
Foxes four game streak were a 2-
pay notice as their opening play
1
win
over Western
·
Connecticut.
in the second half was at best
Vito Aprigliano and John_King
lethargic, with Siena playing_ seored in the game on November
more like the Red Foxes should
?Ji.
The Red Foxes also had a 2-1
have.
win over
NY
Tech on November
·
After
33:08
in the half Tom
22,
and a 7-0 laugher over Nyack
Hamola took a pass from Zenone
that st~frted the streak on
Naitza and let go a bouriching
November 19.
shot that beat Indian
·
goalie Jeff
In the game, John Metzger
Burnham, who dove to his left.
tallied Marist's first penalty kick
The Red Foxes increased the
of the season.
,
·
lead to 4-0 five minutes and nine
The Red Foxes tried to make it
sseconds later when Peter Ryan
five in a row as they hosted
.
scored from in front of the goal
Montclair Wedriesday, and they
mouth after mak
_
ing a smooth
will close out the regular_ season
trap on the ball: Marist then
against Rensselaer Polytech
finished the half as sloppily as
Saturday at 1:30 p.m.
-
they began, with the defense.
Scott Roecklein (right) strains
for a
·
· bead shot
.
while Matt
Lovecchio (9), John Metzger
(14)~
and goalie Rich Heffernan
watch in first
half
action
Saturday.
_(ph~to
by Gerry
-
McNulty)
Pair sixth
~
at
S~h~ylkill
Tom Clifford· and Bo
.
Mason
he said. "During the ~ace they
rowed well "con~idering they've
Fo-x
·
es
·.
p
1
-

·
·
c
·
e
·
8th
'•
placed sixth out of 15 crews
were gettmg two morefeet of
tun --
only rowed together twice before
.
··
.
·
·
Saturday at the Thomas Eakins
than normal at a 32
·
(stroke
the race.''
.
·
.
.
,
:~
.
.
.___
_
_
f
Head of the Schuylkill Regatta in
rating)."
Two freshmen
·
·
boats were
Philadelphia.
The
Marist
A second Marist eight finished
entered
.
in the scholastic
·-eight
heavyweight eight was 11th out of
16th in the race with
-
a time" of
competition
.
. ·
0ne
.
boat finished
·
1
'
.
·· 1· 1
s
·
.·'
h I d
19 boats:
15:31. The boat was comprised of
13th out of
-
18,.
while the other
.
.
o
.
s
·
e
··.
1
·
_·_ '·
.
-.
C
·
·

. .
er
Clifford and Mason, winners of
coxswain Sharon. Mannain, Bill . gained 16th place.
.
the pairs competition at the Head
Graham, Rich
·
Neal, Da-ye Fein,
"It
was a
·
good weekend in
of the Connecticut Regatta
.
Frank Hildenbrand,
Mike
Ball,
terms of
·
'
how
'
.
we
rowed
By
John Mayer
earlier
·
this fall, had the fourth
Frank Biscardi, Wayne Schmidt technically .arid how we pulled in
fastest time of the day, finis~g
and Mike l.anza.
·
·
·
,
comparison to the Head of the
the 2.7 mile-long course in 16:58:
A M-arist women's eight Rideau," said Caldwell of the
However, they
·
were penalized a
·
finished 15th
out
of
22
..
crews in
.entire
cr~w's showing. "It's
Marist's Cross Country team,
.
minute because they were forced
18:13. Natiorial champion Vespe"r
.
always tough to lose, but I think in the midst of.its worst"season in
off course. to pass a ~lower boat.
Boat Club finished the course in
we showed some ipiprovement in five years; "finished eighth out. of
-
Fairmount Boat Club won the
14:50 to win the race. The the program."
_
. :
~ ·
24 teams Saturday in the Albany
race with a time of 16:31.
members of the boat were: cox
He said the team
will
begin state Invitationat On top of_that,
-
In the collegiate eights coin-
Reenie Courtney, Kate Lynch, r:qore intensive training to they
.
have lost
.
the sei:vices of.
petition, Marist's heavyweight
Debbie Drop,
.
Sharon
.
.
Mallet, prepc\re forlhe Frostbite Regatta their number one runner, Jerry
boat finish-ed 11th with a time of
Mary Hard, Maureen Heiser, on Nov.
-
~8 in Philadelphia. "We'll Scholder.
.
_
14:39. The members of the boat Alison Kleinshoj, KimFilstra and be puttmg ~ogether the best
Scholder, recently r;anked
were: cox
.
Mike Davis, Clifford,
Sue Vinall.
·
·
possible varSity boats we can," eighth among
-
division three
Mason,
Tony
Lynch,
Jim
In the fours with coxswain he said:
_
"That race should be the runners nationwide,
is
suffering
Palatucci, Pete Lamb, Joe Ford,
competition, Marist
-
was 10th of best indicator·of what we can do from
.
a
.
mild
case
of
Butch Josephs, and bowman Bob
18 boats. Potomac Boat Club won on a varSity level.
_
"
mononucleosis. He will
'
be lost to
Missert. The race was won
·
by the
the r:ice with a time of 14:37,
Last .
y~ar
Marist's the team
.
when Marist competes
u.
of Pennsylvania in 13:24.
·
while Marist's was 16:18. Sue heayYweight eight J?laced se~ond
-
Saturday at the New York state
Head coach Gary Caldwell said Dabatowka was the boat's be~nd It~ca, while the hgqt-
Collegiate Track and Field
he was pleased with the boat's coxswain; other members were
.
weight eight was fourth
m
Association Championships to be
performance. "I think they're
.
·
Josephs, Palatucci, Lynch and -another contest.
held at the Univ. of Rochester.
beginningtoshapeupasacrew,"
·
Jack Boyle. Caldwell said they
At Albany Scholder
_was
the
Running Red Foxes' top finisher,
·
placing 12th. He ran the five mile
long course in, a. tiine
.
.
of 26
minutes flat. The race
-
.was won
oy.Dlck
Gartvrrigbt _
·
of
Hartwick
College in
a
time of 25;14. The
winning team was C.W. Post.
"'
The next Marrist harrier
across the line was Matt Cole who
·
was 3oth,
'
then came Bob Coufal,
35th;
Ron Gaqziala, 43rd; and
completing the scoring
..
was Paul
Welsh who was 62nd.
Other finishers for Marist
were: steve Deleskiewicz, 84th;
Dennis Goff, 93rd; Tom Gilligan,
-
.
109th; and Charlie Powers 110th
,
in
a
field of 190 runners.
Head coach Rich Stevens
··
Continued on page 6'
HIGH
·
oN SPORTS
·
•Y Larry Striegel
B-ball team to scrimmage Ulster
·
Marist's- men's basketball team will
have a scrimmage Friday at 4 p.m. in the
Mccann Center against Ulster Community
College. The squad has been practicing for
two weeks and has
"18
players, although
head coach Ron Petro said he'll probably
·
cut the team to 15 after its
.
first three
scrimmages.
Petro said he did not cut the team to 15
earlier because he wanted to wait for mid-
term grades to be released, and said the
·
marks of some players were not as high as
expected.
.
Nyack.
Offensive Line Also Honored
.;..
Marist offensive line have
·
been named
Athletes of the Week ending Oct.
24.
They
are Jim Piersa, Kevin Rolleter, Bob
McAndrew, Jeff DeCarlo, Ed Williams and
..
Kevin Charter.
'
··
The group blocked well enough to help
Marist gain 339 yards against St. John's in
the team's first win. "They have played
·.
well
<}-11
year," said line coach Steve
Hallman. "They are a lot" smaller than
most offensive· 1ines but the execution is
·
·
there and they work hard getting ready for·
e_yery game," he said.
... t'.f}.
.
Benzingers
.
Win 3-Man Basltetball
9,
11-13 and 11-7 for the shirts.
_.
The champions are: Andy Aurbach, Joe
Lavin, Paul Pless, Sal DePalma and Rick
.
Rider .
Ace He
.
ads Are Soccer Champs
\
The Ace Heads became
·
Intramural
Soccer Champions when Kevin Sneeden
scored the wi~ing goal with 27 seconds
left in double overtime to beat the Sweet
Headers 1-0, last Thursday:
The Ace
·
Heads are: Vinny Barone,
Brian Mahon; Kevin Sneeden, Joe Walsh,
James Stella,
·
Bob Shanahan, Chris
Walion, and Walt Herlihy. Also Kevin,
Kelly, Jim Walsh, Kevin McDevitt, John
Cifercella, Brian Mccullough, Bill Carew,
.
and Mike Hirschman.
·
Most notable amongthose cut on Oct. 18
was John McKee. McKee, a senior, was a
starting forward for the team last year and
·
averaged 10.3 points and
-
six-rebounds a
game. Petro said McKee reported to the
·
first practice "out of shape" and said,
"I
honestly don't think he would have played
this year. We have

better shooters and
.
John Metz~er
_
Benzingers defeated Raucus Caucus two
.
·
This Weck in MaristSports
'
·
·
rebounders on the team now." McKee
·
said Valley, has been named the Marist Coll~ge games to one last Thursday to beconie]
,
977 -
"No comment," when asked about Petro's
·
·
Athlete of the
.
Week for the week endmg
·
Intramural 3-Man Basketball Champs.
Friday - Ba~ketbail - scrimmage vs.
remarks.
OcL31.
The winners ended the season tied with the
Ulster Community, 4 p.m. at M,cCann
The team will also scrimmage Dutchess
Metzger, one of two seniors on the soccer Ace Heads for second
·
in the East and
Center.
,
Community on Wed.;Nov. 9 at 7 p.m. and team arid one· of four co-captains, has defeated them 11-8 and 12-10 to qualify·for
Saturday - Cross Country - NYS CFTA
Quinnipiac on Sat. Nov. 12from 10 a.m.to <.impro~~ as a midfielder and ~as ~~o":n the playoffs.
·
• ·
Champs, noon at.Rochester.
·
noon and 2 to 4 p.m. Both are in the Mc-
steady hustle
..
for
.
the hooters.
. •
He s
In the semifinals they
.
defeated West
:
Junior varsity
:.
will be at NYS Upstate
- .
.
Cann and all three are open to the public .. matured
.
into a real fine player," says division champs Leaping Gabusellas 11~9 ·

·Champs, noon
·
at Saint Bonaventure
.
_
·
,
.
.
.
-
·
·
··
·head
coach Howard Goldman. "He goes and
_
12-10, while East champs Raucus
Soccer
.
vs. RPI, 1:30 away.
··
·
Metzger
~Athlete
of the
.
week .
.
for the:~u well::.and c~rribine~ speed ~th Caucus defeated -Tri-State; second in the
'
w
ednesday -
·
Basketball scrimmage vs.
.
.
·
·
,
.
...
.
versatility." Metzger scored his only goal
West,
by scores (If 12-10, 6-11, 11-7. Ben-
Dutchess Community, 7 p.m. at Mccann
--
.lohn
Metzger, a senior from P~easan
_
t of the
·
year ori ·
:
a
'
penalty shot against zing~rsthen went
.
on
to
beatthe Caucus 11-
.
.
center.
·
·
·
-
- ,

l
,
.
_
.:;_
·
. ·
~
.,.
. .
·'
. .
.
......

••..;.
·
.

.,.~
- ~
·



19.8.1
19.8.2
19.8.3
19.8.4
19.8.5
19.8.6
19.8.7
19.8.8