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Part of The Circle: Vol. 18 No. 6 - November 4, 1976

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. Dr. Joyce Brothers . ·
.
.
.
Dr.· Brothers To Lecture
Dr. Joyce Brothers, nationally well known advice column. She .. psychological consultant for a
famous columnist and television modified the column
in
the. wide range
of
businesses, such as ·
. personality
will
appear
in
the modem image·
of
professional· "Celebrity Game" on CBS -
Marist College · theater
~
on scientific assistance.,This article,· television and the
Magee
carpet
. November 11 at 4:30 p.m.
iii
a
now
known
as the'Joyce Brothers
Company. :.
·
program sponsored jointly by the · column ;. appears . in over 300 _ Dr~ -Brotl}ers
!8
a gradua~
of
College Union Board (CUB) :and newspapers;·
_
_. · -
Cornell Umvel'Slty and obtained
. the.Alumni.Association~
.
-or.
Brothers has a nationally
her· PhD in Psychology from
Dr. BrotQers-is .·a contributing broadcast radio show on the ABC
Columbia. She·
has.
taught at
editor_c..for GoodJiotisekeeping network~ Her,. daily
lialf_ hour- µunterCollegeand Columbia and
. magazine. She also-, .writes .. a
television program
has
beep '·
IS
a frequent guest lecturer· at
: column on~ the m~gs behind telecast
in
the
New York ar~ for
colleges and universities across~ '
:- the news for the.North American· more
than
7yearsandABC Films
the.nation ..
· N~wspaper AJfuince: Ji'o~ ihree . has been syndicating- her show ·
Sigma
Xi,
the honorary society
·
, •Y~
it has been a_ regular · nationally fo~ 5_
y~.-
. · . .
_
for. men in scientific · research;
feature in over 21)().Jiewspapers
iIL .
Dr; Brothers-IS a regular gu~t. broke tradition :by awarding
thtt country.
Dr.
:Brothers
too~_.
on
~C!s
Johnily carson 'fonight '. nie!nbership
~
_Dr., ~rothers. . ·
overtheDoro~y DixJ::ol~,ca Show;·,She .also serves··as,.a
-•
.
"7--:--:,. -.,:·~. -. .'
.
I












































































































PAGE2
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER 4, 1976
Senior Gathering
CUB
Update
By LISA MCCUE
c9mmittee in charge of providing
a list of possible commencement
There were two points of order
~
speakers,
By CATHY RYAN
to be dealt with at the senior class
The el
ted.
hairpeo
1
·th
.
ec
c
p
e,
WI
.
.T
. .
meeting that was held on Oct. the exception of Cavanagh are to ·
_here are several College
15th. The meeting, which was research viable plans for ac- _ Umon Board (CU~) events
called by Fred Lambert, tivities that can be undertaken by planned for the_ coming. weeks,
Assistant
Dean
of Students, was the .se!rlor class. Once they have says_ ~ohn Dowlin~, president of
convened in. order to inform organized various possibilities
Manst College Uruon Board ..
seniors that planning should they
will
present them to the rest
Monday, f:lov~bE!r
8
The_ Fme .
begin for senior activities. of the senior class so they can be Arts Comnnttee
lS
sponsormg a
Elections were held to fill the five voted. on. .
·
Print Sale and Exhibition, which
positions on the executive board
·· Cav~nagh's responsibilities , w~ pr~sented through_
.
the
of the senior committee.
entail organizing ftihd raising cooperation _of The- Fer~and
Brothers
has
appeared ·on the · appeared in lhe . cafeteria
Johnny Carson Show, the Merve Tuesday afternoon and picked
Griffin Show, and many other people at random to be hyp-
major talk shows.
.
.
notized. The event was sponsored
Dowling says
"I
think
·
the by the social ·-'and fine
arts
students should be interested in
committees.
going
because
tbis
is one of the
Dowling said there are some
rare opportunities that such . a
future
·
CUB events now being
personality will be on. campus.
I
planned. "We're hoping to have a
think
it will be a learning ex-
'chess championship; because
perience·for all who attend.".
th!!re seems to be
a
lot of people
Dowling is optimistic_ about the who can play well.
L
think the
After a period .
of
self -
activities, such as senior cocktail Rote~ Gallei:ies n:_om Baltimore.
nominations, voting commenced parties, so the senior class
will It .will
!>e
held· m . the gallery
with the following results: ·Dena have funds to work witli .once· lounge
m
the campus center,
Kenny
is
the executive coor-
plans are_~complete.
· w~ere many of the
P!"!°~
will
be
dinator of the senior committee,
Although the meeting was . on sale for students.
It
s a g ~
Kevin Cavanagh is the chairman almost a month ago, any senior · way for s~d~nts to ~ecorate therr
of the. fund raising committee, who missed it and is interested in rooms," says Dowling._
. upcoming
(CUB
r
events. whole campus c_ommunity would
.
Saturday~ October 30, there was . be interested."
. .
.
CUB dinner dance for Manst
There are tentative· plans to·
Sylinder Curtis and Marian helping on any of the committees . November
1~
_Dr:
Jo}'.'ce.
Conneally are . in charge of need only contactthe chairperson Brothei:5; psychologist
lS
~ommg
planning three possible · options of the committee he or she would . to Manst · ~o·. speak . on different
students featuring a band called . have ·a beard growing contest
"Stage One". Ther_e was a free which would entail various
cocktail hour at
r:oo
PM.in
the . prizes. Dowling said there was
Rathskellar, followed by-dinner one last year and :prizes were
and afterwards there ,was dan-
given out for the fullest beard, the · -
c~g and
a .
cash.' bar ·
in
the.. neatest beard and the scrawniest
for senior week activities and .like to work for.
psychol~gical .. topics~
Dr.
Ken Porkka is · chairman of the·
( ·'\;
Nat'l News ...
.
,.
.CORE
Explai~ed
This Week
. By
Wanda Glenn
All
proposed .
CORE ·
courses
cafeteria; · --
. _
·
.•
.
beard.
'
· . · ·
Dowling said the dinner dance
· Dowling· said there is also a
went well, arid _the. stµdents en- . concert planri.ed for some tinie
in
joyed themselves; . . ·
. · · . November. ~ands al'e being-lined
~esday, November
.
2 ~olisch, · up and pres~ntly the pri<::e and
a, Widely . known mentalist per-.·: place are bemg decided.
-
formed in the theatre:.
As ·
a ·,
· ·
· ·
· prelude to
his·
show, Kolisch- ·
.-
,,.
In Review.
~-
will
be submitted by · the · in~
'
I. -
-
"
By
Kevin Stack
The proposed curriculum diyidual departments to - the. '
revision (CORE) would require Academic, Affairs Conunittee
· incomµig freshman to . take 24 , proposing' the revision for ap-
credits of CORE· courses, proval.
, ~: ,. - · .
preferably' !luring their fresfunan
~lection
.will_ ..
be · made -- ac-
The United
States
Court of ~nd sophomore~years;
.
_cording to four basiccriteria, ·
-:
··~-
.' 7:'o·
. -~·::J '
.
.
.
. .
\
Appeais · has ruled that · White
. ·.These _would inctude six credits
·
1) ·
D~s · it confront _
the ..-basic .
House
tapes:
_use!l
·
, ,il!, ,
the
qf philosophy and ethics; three
in
value qu,estions of
•a
discipline;
Wa~rgatemvestigation; can be, the .i~atural sciences; three in ·-· 2) · Does·: it expose : the
'
~ ByDANIELDROMM.
orily .to teach people .about the.
copied, sold or: broadcasted,_ as . language. literature
.
or_~_foreign . disdpline~s · .. methodological
matters themselves but to· help
• ~:nJs1~b~~~nlS<>f Wtii~k~ out for lan~age, litera!Ure; ~ee
-in_·
approach to truth;<_ . ·. _ ·.
A' new ~ourse - _concerning p·eople . come to .. some__.:moral
·
, ·
pes.
social sciences; three
1
m math,
3) Does it. t~ch a -demon-
"Sciepce, Medicine and.Ethics" concl_usion concernm~ the 1_ssues.
President. Ford· has approved. busin~ss . _or computer. sci~~ce; . stratable skill associated
with
the
will be team taug~t ~his spiing•by .. ~a~tlcular emphasis .. will ·be.
the sale of 2 Control Data Cor- three-in history; and three m
the
discipline; and ·, -.
.··.
.• . the_ Rev. Rh)'s Williams_and Dr. placed on death_and dymg anda
pora,tion Cyber172 computers to arts:· ' ., • ··,
. '. ·.
: .. ·
_
4) J?~sj~ eIIlploy ~e content of Lam;eHce Manap~ce._
_
.. . . good ~xamp!~- of_ the ,-t_ypes: 9f
. Red. China, . _ . .
.
. ,
. .
D~pen4u1g .. on . :,&choh1st~c " the;clis<!ipline. to a
9
hi~~e all of the. . .· . ~lS is_th~ ~rst ti??-~ a,c~urse)>f
;
. Jlrob!~ms.wN,ch
~
b.~ dlS~}18se~
..

.. The·computersaresaid to\have·'--AC~~eyem':!l~c"-~~st;;...~<?ores-,1,n, .
.;;abov,e\4~"'''~..,.. •.
,,r---·i-,"-•,.:-,;{.,-,cthis---;nature,;--lS-be~g'.'of!~red,•a_t;_-:..,..IS,~e:,Kap~n,.Am:1.~q~ian case.
defense
ca
P.
a bi lit i es
writmg skills mcommg fresh-
,According to Dr Edward' Manst ?lth.ough.· a pilot. course · · Qur metbadology mcludes our.
~
Negotiations for the sale are still · man would b; reqwred to take {)'Keefe · · coorciin~tor -.
'
· for ·similar _to.this one ,was off,ered · attempt to keep the·· _c~ass
underway:
·
six, three,,or no credits in writing curricultim revision, "the >main .. la~spnng.··
·-~will.·. ..
t .
·-d
... :r:~.ar:en~p·
:;~!~id~-·
opmions
. - - - -
skills, and pass 'a writing skills ·point of the CORE 'is to provide
· . tE: course
~e9 er abrloun
·uitoccured tome that we teach
A
·1 ·
t· · t
h
f' ·
te· t
·
th
t d. · ts •th. ·
>
.
·
ted -ques ions concel'l!mg pro ems .
··
.
· .
. . .
.
rmy
nves iga ors . ave . p~o lClency , s .
.
e s
~
en
wi . an mtegra .
about
DNA
research, genetics, . students how to do .. (scientific
charged the South Kor.ean
Before
graduation, . each. educational expen~?ce based on human . experimentation --and research) ~ut don't often ad~ess ·
Government with condoning

or student would have to
P~~
all a theme of values.
according to· Williams, <ewe·
will
the problem,· should you _do."
A
controlling a practice of collusion CORE courses.
g~ve the class some share in what stu~ent. comes away with' . the
among Korean businesses in
we decide to discuss."· •
.
f~eling if you can do somethmg,
bidding for army c;ontracts. The
The
purpose of the class is not do it," Menapace. said.
· ·

cost to the United States
is
.
· -·· --
estimated at
$20
million per year.
The United Auto Workers
(U.A.W.) have given the Chrysler
· automobile corp. untif_ 6 p.m.
'Friday, Nov. 5 to come
to
tenns.
on a new three year .contract.
If
the company does not reach
an
agreement before , the deadline
.then the U.A.W. says it will
-strike.
·
·
. . 1
k
proposed plan in Berkley,
. Calif. could cost motorists
$1-
$2
· per day ..
The plan
-~ns
for :all-
.· people who,wish to drive on the .
,_streets to pay a daily Jee. The.
fees would . be .used to pay for
mass transit.
.
The· Food an·d : Drug '
Ad-
ninistration: (F'.D:A~) .has
two
- wrnings
·out this \veek',First
is , :·
hat women in the last 3.months .
· ,f pregnancy ·should: ·not .
take
' 1spitj.n :
or pain relievers
~ems ·
mder doctors orders. _t\spirin
is .
aid to prolong labor· and
.:iJi.:
rease clotting time
in
_mother
·nd child:
·
· ·
· ·
· In their second warning.they
. aution againstthe use of· ~irin
nd ·: antacid . combinations .
in
. eople
:with
ulcers. According
to
1e
F.D.A,
the combinations
can
ause
ulcers
to
bleed .. · .
. The. Swine Ffu. Vacciriation
.
\
MEET MAX!
\
.
. .
. Brother Joseph "Maxie" McAllster Is involved In th~ Encount~r
Progrcam_in ~s~pus, N.Y. and coun~ls come of the
.154
college
.. st~ents considering a com'mitment to the Marlst Brothers.· .
. lrotf!er John Rogener,wo.rks in an:inner city.parish In-Newark, .
visiting the el_derly,auisting those onW~lfare,·counseling high .
. school
dropouts as he a!Jeinpts to serve thelNst favored. . .
:.· --Most Marh;t · Brothers; like· Brother Mlchaellarcitonda are
,
educators. Mike, in ciddltion,writes:(!_Weekly fllin coluinn and .
. conducts film 1nograms for adults. . ,,- . .
.
.
· Down In Brownsvill~;_ Texas; one.·of,·,the poorest .cities In ihe· .·
i:'atlon, Brother •jul,art Phillfpp Is inv~lved in ho~slng cievel~p- .. :
ment~_-His work·helps him m-t-one· of the basic:·n-ds·of the.
· Mexka~-American co~munity.(··.',
> . · · · .. ._
.
. • .
:·Extend,ing himielf beyoncl:working with high school'stude~ts,
8-l"otl'ler Bob Englert works in Campus Ministry at Hofstra· Univer:-·
·. slty. Hls··work ... coi.inselh'!g,Jlturg,cal planning and orgcinizlng
>
·. religlous·"ctivlties: '. .
.
,.
.
. -:. , ' ·• · -
· .. -- .
· .
·
. 'Af~ctr the'i~. "l,~~in~sr:,day" th;, . . men continue c:in e~richinglife -
•. toge~her
,
with their Brothers-sharing In community and
con-
·
tributlng·to ttie community they serv~. · : : • · .
· ·.
· • .·.
. .
_The Marist rirot~ers shout tci
.
the, world Clbout the specl~I lo~e .
an_d concern the' Fath11r ha, fof .each
c:1iii
0
d every person': And the
-sound_ they ':reate is also a -~all to -ch ~ther to a now Ufe ~very
.
. day.
..·
.
•.
..,··.
·
·
.•. ·
.. • ·." - .
You can be-a part
~ti.ti
a
life of sh,iring .. :i.oith th()se in need,' with .
other Broth_ers, ·with Christ;
· ·· · : ·.
.
· · · . . · ·. · .. ·
rogram is picking up
steam
as.
,
. ,
.
.
,ore people are . being; vac-
,"Mommy, please come and get me, I'm lost, I waona·go home. ·1
._
:
_
M·A·R
·
1•s.1· ._-_
_
,.-___ ·
· nated.
,Despite reports: tha,t_ don't Uke·thfs strange.place I'm at.'~
.
·
. · · ,
·
:
·
.
.
-
)Out·.
40
.l~-~ople have died
Jr~m
. L_ast Sunday, about 5 p.m. a IQSt kitten 'wandered bito_Sbeahan
Ball.
-:- ·
·
•" ·. C~ntai::t:
. B~othe-i-
Philip
Robert .::- ·
Archbishop
MoJloy .
H .S.
,:iiu~~:;;i~fa;:
0
,~~~~a!
·:·=~~:r~t;~~:r~:fu!~;:~!:
¥:ofs;~tiTii:~;~/~-~~~~-~-.
·.;.?BROTHERS·~.·
nated. • · -, .. ,-. : . ,
· ·.: ·
:'Thecatispresently,befngtakencai:'~bY..Sheahanresidenlsandbave
.... -
.'83-53·Manton'Str~i'./.,·- ..
Jamaica;-N.¥.·. 11:435
.
.
212441~2100·-;c .

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PAGE3
NOVEMBER 4,
1916
Hypnotist John .KoUscll
attenipts
·
to
Identify two objects wtlile bliildfolded.-(Clrcle Photos by Joe
,
Glgllottl)
.
·
·
. ·
·
·
·
·
· ..
·
__
Giselle Velez legs are painlessly suspended
In
Midair.
Who toot
Ute
liassock?
·
.
-
KOli~ch
Hypnotizes Marist·
to be "stiff
as
an iron bridge" by
Koliscn. Kolisch pulled out the
middle chair and Shannon
remained
_
without the middle
support. A volunteer stood on
Shannon's stomach and he
.
theater.
your business:"
.
-
1

-Belly Button?" a performance by
Kolisch hypnotized students
Kolisch said under
:
hypnosis he Elvis Presley singing
"I ain't
By Gigi Birdas
Giselle Velez said "Ladies and and
.
demonstrated
:
pqwers of does control
his
volunteers, but Nothing But A Hounddog," and

gentlemen; I
....
'.' she was
in-
·
K;S.P.; Deja~vu~ and pi:e- only for:Ythe better;
·
He
·
said the creation of
-
a new language,
terrupted by Paul Conway yelling cognition in a sel!, out per-
"Everything you tell them has to whose origin is the planet Venus,
:•Goflyakite!"SuzanneGallucci
formance
·~
sponsored by the bepositivean:dexact.JJHeadded took place on stage
-
under the
supported the weight.
.
.
Audience reaction was positive
and loud throughout the per-
formance .
.
quickly fQll~wed with "It's not
·
College Union Board
(C~)-
he could not make anyone under direction of Kolisch.
nice to fool Mother Nature'

'
.
at
.
.,
Highlights of the ·show included hypnosis do anything they were
The show, which lasted

which-,pQint _ Jimmy
.
Sh~hon an ice cream licking contest in against morally.
·
'
·
-
. hours had a well accepted finale.
made a noise like thunder and
·
which eacfi
·
volunteer wQn
$100.
.•
Sylinder Curtis believed she · Volunteer Jimmy Shannon laid
The CUB committees spon-
soring the event were the social
committee, chairman Peter
Boudoin, and the Fine Arts
committee, i::hairman Sue Smith.
··
shook his arms and legs
;"
__
Under hypnosis; Kolisch asked was Aretha Franklin'and sang for across three chairs and was told
·
_
·.
This
-
.
i:;
_
a
~ample of
Jhe
con:: each what they were going to do the audience and Toin Hammond
versation student
-
..
volunteers with the prize money
.
Responses thought he was Fonzie and tried
·
participated in
_
Tuesday night
_
on were
,
"Buysome booze," ."Find a to set up a date with a member of
.
,
stage atthe
.
,
perfonnance
_
of J:ohn
·
-
good woman;JJ "Get soooo the audience.
·
.
.
Kopsch
/
hypnotist; in the c~llege stoned," and one said "None of
·
·
An
operetta) "Who Stole My
..
.
.
~
.
.
.
.
,
·.·
· . ·
/
.
. Some Mariltltadelltl enjoy Ice creamdarlqtlle
llaow.
I
About The
,
Man
.
.
By Larry Striegel
In his show, the grey haired
and
·
goateed entertainer selects
_Aside
from
·
making people do volunteers from the audience,
"I
funny
things o~ stage, or finding
have
developed
an acuity for
··.-hidden objec\:5
,while-
blindfolded,
·•
•• -
pickingthe best subjects;·1 try to
.
-
·
hypnotist
,
and showman: John keep the show on.an entertaining
'
·
Kolisch has a serious side and an
_
level. The audience is paying
interesting past.
.
,
good
.
money, and I don't believe
He came to America from
in shortchanging anyone."

Vienna in 1938
when Hitler came
Kolisch says he has a favorable
to power in Germany. He was attitude towards life .
.
"I'm
introduced to hypnosis
in
1952
by
basically an introvert and
I
like
·
a
psychiatrist who taught him
people.
I
think
.
it
pays to be
about the field worked with positive in life."
medical
·
hypnotism
until
1957
Speaking with a deep Austrian
when
·
the American Medical accent, he explains that he would
Association rejected
those. never use his hypnotism for the
without a degree.
wrong reasons.
"If
a subject
Kolisch decided to go into the should have
a
problem,
I
would
entertainment field after he saw never let it come to the floor.
I
hypnotism used on stage. He feel that as a hypnotist
I
can only
claims to be the world's fastest tell them to do what they want. I
,
hypnotist; and can put a person would not take advantage of
into a trance in ten seconds.
anyone."
"I work mostly with college
The Jackson Heights resident
students,
it
is my particular said that hypnojism can be used
specialty;'' he says. "I would turn to help a person ·stop smoking or
down a nightclubjob if I could be to improve athletic performance.
working at a college instead. I
It
is also used
·
in' natural child-
like being around college birth and in important surgical
students."
operations .
.
·
.K~uicla pats
·
Jeir,
Scbolder
to
1leep
whlle
_
otller
1abj~~-•~
oa.
>
·
These
1tudenti
tlike a nap on stage:
They
were
the only
ones
who found the show·bormg.
'
.
.
'
.
·.'
.-
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..
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.
.
,

·
--
-_
,.
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;,
..,



























































































































































































































PAGE4
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER 4, 1976
Imperfect
. .
.
issues consisted of eight pages around
.
the campus Is not being
The Maris! College CIRCLE is IIJewi!ekly newspaper Of the students Of Marls!
c,·rcle
·
--
while two (the 1st and
'
3rd) done asenthusiastica
.
lly as it was
College and Is publiShed throughOut the schOOI yea
.
r exclusive
ot
vaca!lon .....,.IOds
t
·
bytheSouthernDutchessNewsAgency
.
Wapplnger~.NewYork.
""'
"'
contained fOur.
-
ln the Spring Of
·
in
the pas•

~
·-
'
.
1-------------------------1
To
·
the Editor
:
1974 the Circle was published
11
·
·
While n.o attack Is valid without
_
,
.
This
letter
will
concern itself
times, with nine issues containing
_
a pr
_
oposal
.
of · a legitimate
GigiBirdas
Daniel Dronun
Joe Gigliotti
Tom McTernan
Larry Striegel
Rena Guay
Peter Van Aken
Kevin Cavanagh
Editor
Associate Editor
Photography Editor
·
Sports Editor
.
·., Layout Editor
~
Assistant Layout Editor
Advertising Manager
·
Business Manager
"
·
.
·
Staff:
·
Sam Delgado, Patri
~
k Larkin, Kevin Stack
,
Maurieen
Tully, Wendy ~tark, Jim Birdas, Elaine

Brusoe,
'.
Sherry
Smith, Regina
·
Clarkin; Andrieiuie Howard;-Alison Hickey;
Lisa
Mccue, Cathy Ryan; W~nd~
"
Glen, Robert ,\\1orley,
·
Cann en Rivera, Bill McLoughlin, Edward DeLise, David Ng,
Tom _Hillan! Andrea Anthony, Phil Colangelo.
·
.
with certain- policies and at-
.
_eight pages and two containing
'
remedy,- the stagnation
·
and
titudes
_
that surround the school
four. In the f~ll
of
1974 the Circle decline of the school newspaper Is
newspaper.
publishecl 10 times, with eight
·
-
a
.
complicated issue, and
:
there
In the 1958 AAU Track and issues consisting of eight. pages may be
·
:
factors l have chosen 'to
Field Championships
· ·
Harold and two consisting
of
four pages.
-
ignore. I cari offer
this;
however:
·
Connolly threw
.
the
-.
hammer In the spring
of
1975 the. Circle
·
more

students should
.
try jind
226'4'~-
to
take
_
first place.
published eleven times, with six generate
.
more excitement
in
the
-
'
In the 1976 AAU Cham-
issues
:
consisting of eight
·
pages school newspaper; Suggest ar-
.
pionships, .the winning t~ss was
and fiv_e.issues
_
with four pages;
. ,
ticles, (or bette(yet, talte
..
your
~
225'10'
'.
, six inches less
tlian
that In the fall
.
of
·
1975 the
.
Circle idea and ~rite
-
it up· yoursel(!
r
·
of Connolly's effort eighteen
-
publishe<!._ el~v
_
en~es_,wil;h,fo~ seIJ,
_
adve~ing space:_to ~ollege-
-
years ago
:
.
·
·
.
:
·
.
·
. .
.
.
i~ues ~ontammg eight pages, six
~
student
·
;
o~entated
:
:
bus1:11esses,
-.
.
Whathastbisgottodowith the
.
~tl_l
.
f?ur~ges,
.
3!1d
,
o~e:12page
s
(and
.
. ~
e~_e1ve
·
a ten p
_
ercent
.
school newspaper?
·
Simply
this
.
-
•.
·-
pa~r ~~r
-
:_
Parents
-
weekend .
.
In
.
commISSion
_
on "le
.
ad
_.
~ t
-
·
you
.
·
-
The hammer throw event in track
,-,
the
·
spnng
':
o(
.
'1976
;
the
_
Circle
-
sell!).
·
d9
-
a
:
.~
weekly
'
column,
and field has riot progressed for · publisht;d
·
eleveJL
'
t~es,
_
':Vith
:
-
~b~f
,
jokes
r
;
riddles or
.
in-
..
the last eighteen years, while the . seven ISSues _
_
~ontaining
·
. ~1~ht
tngwng
:
Puzzles
:
to :
:
~e s~ff
_
_
__
times and distances for the other pages, an!f four 1SSµes
.
containmg
-
members. By C!Omplammg about
-
·.
events .
-
have
.
,,>
il!1proved : _four ~ag~s,,
_
(.
.
.
.
_
._
0


-
_
:~
the ~O()r
'
qtiaµ_~y _of·the p~per you
remarkably.
It seems to 1ne that ·

Whµ~ ~uan,tify
~~s
not always
..
are 01
_
1ly I?r«?longt!lg .the P!,Oblem;
.
the schoolnewspaper'has
'
shown
.
equate
,
:with 9uality,
.
the purp~se
.
by sugg~~g
:
ways_ to improv:e
:-
~
a lack of development
.
over the
~~
of th~ loo.k back atthe p
_
receeding and
~Y-
taking
_
an active part, you
:
: .-
:
past few years
/
and
has
even
:
three
-
years~as
.
~show
,
~t~e aremvo
!
V~
:
_
mthe
;
cure;
·
..
'
-
"···
initiated
a
decline
.
.
.
-
··
·
_
.
_
effo~
.,
expended
.
m l,'.~searching
_
.
_
.···
_
PeterVanAken
,
-~
.
:
In the fall
,
of
:
1973 the Circle
·
·
story
,
!~ds,
_
selling advertising
..
. .
.>._
<, · ·
~
;
·
>_/.'
Clasi(of '77
·,,
-
~
: .
·
·
was published
11
tini~~
and nine
._
sp_ace,
:
~nd reportirif(on
-
eyerits
~
.
'
.
.
·
.
'
·
-,
'
·
"·
·
·
.
.
__
.
-
-
-~-
·
-
.
,
.
,
;
'
.
-.~-
-
-.
-
_.·
·
D.ay~hap
·
:;.
;
·
.
:
-c
: .
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
..
.
. . .
.
' _,.
.
.
.
. .
.
. .. .
Mosf~ttidents dori't ~ealiie
that
.
;'
'sc'ti6o~
~
iffaits,
:.
:
r.a
·
sv
·
Y.~,
0
f
(!r..
.
..
. :E/f!Cfions
:
.
·-:thecommuterwiionhasasmuch
~
_
·
ins~ncde;
.
thd
.
e
.
colleg~:
.
board
Editorial
·
.
.
_
power
in
.
n.ianY.
;
,
administrative.
_'<
rev~ew.e
.
:
aq
~'.
e"1d6rseg __ (except
To ~e MaristCoriu~unity:
-··
· · decisions~ thtl
,_
student govtirn-
.
_
fo~~~(1
~
U/s.representativerthe
.
·
Th~
.:
comilig
~
_Commuter
-
Union ment. ~
.
-:
year,
,:.,
for
/
instance;
.
J~~on.:
·
:
increase.
,
,The
.
;;C.u.-
:
is a
..
elections, to beheld on November
,<_
student groups haytl
-
_lieep
.
cl.S~ed
: --::
.
st ucle
.
~ t
,
o rgan1
_
za
ti
on,
:.
·
.
.
.

.
•-
15th

and
·
16th
/
will

.
be
.

very
..
im~
_
.
.
·
0
Jor
,
;
inpu~
:
on
.
the proposed
.
time :
•.
rel?res(ir:tting
::
s~de!}t
.

iri~res~".
·
·
.
. .
·.·
portaritno~ jiist
_
to
:
~e
.
C.U;, but to
·
,
sc~uledlal!g~
;
The com.m~_r
,
:
I~
lS
.'
C>rtly.
as actiye alid
:
e~ecti!e
-
.
. ,
:
_
,
Marist
.·•
College
:
in
.
generil.L N_ow
·
-
~on
-
executive
~~
..,
ha~
-
CO.!l".'
i
_
li~Jhe
~
~tu~
-
~I!!!
~Ile:>
,
w~rJt., for 1!,
·
·
·
that a

formal constitution
has
:
tinuailyop~ed

the changes and
-_·
;
·
Stude11ts
.
.
have
-.
~
-
~~endous
.
:
·
·
been.
• .
.
3dopted,
· .
:
the
•·
commuter
.
-
justre~nl!Y a
·
decision
!V8~
made
_
·
._
a~o.u11t
·
:
-
~f
..
po'!~~;
_
j!_'s
._
s
only
: ..
·
'
union -'¥ls th~ structure
to
really
:
.
to po.to~ 11_:nplem,en~!ion
of
.
-
~•t
wa~~g
~o
-
~
~
~
<
: .
.
>
· .
.

.
-
; .
----;
. _
.
· _
:
start doing things

.
Plans
:
are
~
.-
.
P~n
w:1:til
c~mprehensiy~
·
s~~~
;O:::
.
J
gi;g~
~V~fl ~~Illµl~tertp vote
_
~e editors o~ the ~frcle have
·
-
m~med1ately. To
--
begm, the
._
be~g_
1:fUlcl~
,
fo(
.
V:ati
.
cms
:
·
s~jal . ,£.8n be:«:OJ!lPleted,_
.·,-
·
~
-- -
~
-
.
·
·
.EI
-
~~
--
~J~~o~
:
...
.,.
.
.
-:-
·-
·
.
rea~
-
there
_IS
a
-
_
situati(ln
.
o~
.
·
.:
·
editors
.
of .theJ:::~c~
J
,,1
.
.
th~
•.
activ1t1es,
.
but
·
..
-
the.
:
real _1m-_- .. :;·
.
~~dition,aµy;

the
_,
pr~\g~t,;oL
·: :,
·
.,
>.
:

•··
:
·a.
--~.
'!i,::
: ·;
,Sincerely,
camp~
.
t!lat
,
. ne~
_
.
,
m:im~te .
;
__
~lk.
i
·iiqa:~U>ebll!een
-.
Ctuunpa
_
~~
-
;
-,
... ,por,ta11ce":~
_:
~e
·•
commu~i
:
_wuon
':tµie:commjrter
.
uni~1!_~\~i~I_l'.~~
·.-
:=;,;-'
~+
:{,
~·:;;;:;:,':'.::
'!!;'
"::
·.
·
:
~rm DeF_eijce
a~~mtlon. An •unfort:unate
. \
m- .
;
,
120,
a n d ~ ~ t9
_
th~ llQr~ IS
,
.
is as_- ~
. :
.rep~epta
_
tive
.:
·
stu<!_ent f?ll~ge
J3~hi,
aJ.1
.
~~ecutiv
_
e
~Y
.
·
.
· ; .;,,_:.;
:
:
9ou;imµter U~on ~~£!S1dent

·

c1dent qc,_curred. on
·
the c~p11S
.
_
not
.
well lit.i.W1th
·
the up~tmg of
·
body.
•c.-::
:
;
:
:.
,
.
,_ .• ,
,,,
_
~
/>
£;:~
."
:/:,
.
,
~tli
_
_
tr~n,i~~~~US
:
:
.:.
i.nfl~~~e
._
1!1
'
.
:
:
:-:'."
"':
).
\
,
.
.
.
·
:
:-: .
..::. ·
:··:·
;-:.- -•
·
Sunday
·
evening
•·
A Marist'
;
the college library it is foolish
.
-
·
..
.
·

.
.
.
·
·c
·
.
·
·
..
·
,
;
.
-
·
_
'-C:.
:
· ·
·
.
.
·
·
·
·
· ..
·.
'
·
·
·
·
·
·,
,_.
.
a
--:

··.
·
0
"'·~·
-,
-
·•
-
,,.,,~
_,.
-;:·

student Jas Cll>otµ~~ed
!
~
>
and we
·
-
not to
_
be
_
sure t11e"route
:
tQ arid
~
cutff!rs
·
,
.
:
...
,:
.,_
·,
·
.
' /
.
>
:::·
_
·
·
.
;
..
:
·
:'\
.
.
:
·
:.
f
·:·
:
.
.
'
'.-
.
. ,
..
.
-
,:'
·
·.
use that tennloosli~bly, by Tha ~n
.
fCrloR
.
mC

.
LltE
'
IS
<
adlso
:
UIHif
.
atled
;.
The
.•.
. :
:
.
:
.
.
,-
.
~
-
~utting,inline.Tfi~te
:
seeins.to
.
be haye
'
~n
.,
wait_!rlg
'.
for
:
_19
.
OJ:'.
15
,
.
:~ ..
-
on her way to the
rary .
.
lS
.
~
..
-
e itors
ee
.
more
·
se
·
·
ware
··
·
>
-<
abounl dozen
:
sti.iderits
"
who
'
feel
:
_
inin
.
utes.
:
_.
. /
·:
.
:
>,
·
·
·
...
·
~
-
--..
. ; .
extremely
unfortunate, lighting is

needed between the
·
:
·
-
·
:
that
'.
they do riot
.
haye to stand in
·
These
:
_
same
.
students also turn
.
.
. .
especially in a
_
community such
gym
and Fontaine:
.
.
·
.
:
__
Jo the Marist Coininunity,
.
·
line
:.
like everyone
.
else; l
will
ilieir
'
heads wherL p_egple
·
steal
·
·
as ou1:1.
.
.
·
·
The CIR':~ editors feel it is
.
,
As
.
your new Dining
:
Room_ warn thenf_once
/
the9
if-I
see food out of the
·
cafeteria
.
or wheri
·
·
-
M~rist, . bemg
,
a small
.
com-
th
.
e responsibility of the CIRCLE
..
Manager, I spend a
,
f?out
..
80
.
hours_ -
.
them do it again,
.
they
will
tie sent
·
rion7resid~nt students sneak
in for
-
-
mumty enJoys an atmosphere of to d~n:13nd _an an~_w~r from _the a week
iilnning
your
.
Dining Hall. ·to the D~an .
. ·
·
.
.
.
_ .
.
. _
.
free mea~
:
.
R¢meµiber,
.'
this is
closene_ss and to
!1.
large degree
.
·
~dmm~trabon
·
t~
.
this
q~~~ion, This·· includes
·
.
~pervising
_
the
:- The probl~m is that iH
am
not
.
youdood they are: stealing. Food
:
·
·
there
1~
an attitude o
_
f
.
t~t
.
What
15
now bemg dolle.
•.
.
office staff, µ:te sn~ck
.
bar per-
.
at
:
u1e·
.
,
line;
..
~hese
i,
."sp~cial" · bought with
.
your>moriey;
,.
Mr
>
among
11$ members. To fmd it
_
IS
·
·.
When approached by CI
_
RCif
.
sonnel, both regillar
._
and student students
_
continue to cut
ip
line
.
Lainbeii;Mr:
Lurenzandmyself
~ot saf~ to walk; alone to the rep?rters
to_o
.
_often
a •

employees,
·
chefs and
··,
_
cooks.d without
:
regard
_
·
for.
:
anyo11e.
--.
spend
_
countless hours figuring
·
li~rary m the e~erung shocks and
·
mimstrators_
will
_
give

no com-
.
·
.
alsoaniresponsible for inventory
.
.
Remember,
..
they ~re
~
ciitting

iii

-
waysto keep
·
dowri costs
.
so as no
_
t
disturbs the editors of the
_
CIR-
.
m~n.t.
It_ 18 time the ad-
_
and
·
orderi11g
,-
financial
front
·
-
of you
:
L
_
am
.
Jryi.ng to
-
to rajse roQm and board
_
fees.
-
-
.
CLE gre~tly.
·
.
_
.
.
mmi~tration made comn1ent
,
statements
'
·
and cash
/
control pl'Qtect yo~ rights.
;
,.<
.::
,
·
-~
-
-
..
Then
:
you
.,
turn
:
another
·_
cheek
.
:rtte editors of the CIRCLE f~el
especially
.
w_hen_
·
the welfare of
.
systems
;
As
you can see,
this
is
a
.
.
.
...
·
~
U
sfyikes me as
:
very
_
·
frohical
;.
·
when
_
people
·
steal
.
from
·
you,
this problem should be _dealt with · the
.
commumty
15
·
at 5t:ake.
:
full-time job.
>
·
.

·
.
,
.
:
:-
-
·

·
:
.

-

,
tl_lat !h~ majority
,
o~ ~ilden~
~
who
-
<:
·;
Sp~king
·
as
,
an
::
ind!_v,idual,
:
I._
'
·
.
.
.
.
·
Lately,l'hav:e be~n spending a
'
,
are so set
_
:
on
.
fighting ·for
-
:
th!3ir
:
:
reel
:
tha
t
the
:
~ajorify
::
:
_
of
_;
y!)u
..
- - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - -
·
·
disproportionate alll~unt'of time ~rights
.
.
oil Jssues
·.
like
.
the
·
"
key
-
:
.
s{udent~
~:
:
must:
·
re-evaltiate
.
.
''playing••
~--
·
grammar
.
·
·
school . deposit arid ~e Leo
~Ii
just
:
tw-n
·. ·
yourselv~
,
.
-
anci
·•
your
: ·
attitudes.
·
monitor. I stand at the dinner line
their cheek when someone cuts in
..
::-.
:
,
·
·
'
. :-.
;.·
·'
Frank Guido
trying to prevent studell:ts
·
fro~ '.·_ f~o_nt J?_f'them
in
·
line aft.er they
· ..
.
-
·
~ming· Room Mgr.
',-
.
>
:·.
·
. ;:.
:--
~
-
.
'.






























































· NOVEMBER 4, 1976_
I -- ..
SUPER SAVINGS ON ALL
YOUR LIQUOR NEEDS.
4
'ii
BLEND ........ ·
.•
GI_N 80°..... ..•..
399
VODKA 80° . . . .
399
.
.
GIN
990: .. ~
-
.... .
45~
- .BOURBON 86° .
6yaaro/d
·
s·coTCH
80°
" COMPARABLE. SAVINGS.::
. - ON 112 GALLONS ,_
SCOT.C.H.
860
D1ST11 LED ~'BOTTLED BY LEAOl'-'G.
-
_
,AME<11CA'-' ;>•S\: cE_AS _ .•
HYDE PARK MALL - RT. 9
I N . .
I to Shopril•l
·JUNIORS.
499
499
·519
_
t'llings.-.,wi·,1~:·-,.·ber:so.ld .. :·
--Nov. ,2· ...
12,
f·Jti1'()$S;ffi>'lfi·.·}:H:/,s,
ilcl-L;ibrary" . .
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Monday,November 8 ..
9:30 am
-A:00
pm
Tl!_esday, November. 2
&
9
. .
9:30 am - 4:00 pm
Wednesday, _November 3.
&
10 9:30 am .; 4:00 pm-
Th_ursday, November 4
&·1-1
9:.30 am-4:00 pm
Friday, November
5
&
12
9:30
ain
~
3.:00 pm
. Ev~nings Mon-Thurs.-
· 6:09 pm ,. 9:30 pm_.
Frivolous
-..Salll-
19
Academy
St.·
-.
.
-,
_..
.,,..
:
~~_ntertainm·ent
-,_ Nigh~s
A
We!ek
.
.
.
. .
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.
---
··ednesday
Nite
~appy'
Hour
Prices. ·
Monday - Sound Creti.tion
· ·
Tuesday-:-. Buswell
.Wet!nesday- Grounder
-
.. . _, __ Thursday :. Fat City·.
-
Fri_day"-·Mary L~u flmold~ Bnck _Oven Band
--.< ·
-:Sat1Jrday__,-Back Room Blues
_
·.
-
'· ··,Synaay·-:_West~inds .-_
Fo6d-Served - -.--
_·-_., .. -::uf{fi,f
_·(Jlo~i,ig
·, , ... , ,
.
':•,•, ·>:·
<-.'·
.
~•-• '
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. • •
' ;\~~;N~ Aclllli-.ion
J
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
Marist students dressed
as
a.clown,
a
little girl,
a
juggler, a cowboy,
a
gyspy, and a witch invaded
St.
Fr~cis' Hospital, Friday, for
a
Halloween party. .
··
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·
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The.party included grabbing
fot
candy, juggling acts and lots of fun for everyone!
1s·---THERE
-
LIFEAFrER
·COLLEGE?
L...
.
It depends on what "life" means.,.;
. For inost of us, life is a good job, a good wife, a good house,
agoodcar,
·_
:: __
,
.
.
/
,
' ·'For some (and perhaps for you) this is not enough. The
'.'good life••·so·inehow 'is not' enough. Life must-mean some-
'--- thing different: th_eattempt to live in union with God, to serve
_ others, to. give8s totally and as generously as you can.
· : . i
To·e Paulists offui-
a
way oflife ~hich can. satisfy young ~en
who,seekID()T~ than
the~~gQOdli{e;':,As•a-s1na\Jco1ninullity_
: ofCatholic'piiests,' we have worked
fol'
over
a
century
·
throughout the United States and Canada,......from Manhattan
·to Toronto, from Greens.b9ro t~ Houston, from_Los Angeles
to:Fairbanks. Our missio11? To speak the message of Jesu,s
_Christ to this modern world: to communicate His shattering
love and overwhelming forgiveness in a time and world where
He so often seems absent.
. _. To do so; we are actively involved in.parish work, preach-
/· ing, adult education, campus ministry, publishing and mass
· -communications. We _are missionaries; we. are .. bridge-
builders. We seek to serve.the Gospel in ever new w1.1ys .
The Paulist lif~_is not an easy one. But one who dares will
find rew~rds beyond expectation, satisfactions beyond
dreams. But not_ complete satisfaction, for we are constantly
searching to make the Gospel real to more people in today's
world.
·
Don't let your idealism die. Discover what our community
· can mean to you.
·•
Fill out the coupon below for more information about the Paulists.
Dear Father DeSiano:
.
Please send· me more information on the work
·
.
·
of.th,€' Paulists and the Paulist Priesthood.
Rev.
Frank DeSiano,
c.s.P.
·
.
Director
of
Vocations
NAME .....;... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
PAULIST FATHERS
.
Dept.8146.
STREET ADDRESS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
415 West
.S~h
Street
. C I T Y . . . . a . · - - - - - - - STATE-- ZIP_
New
York.
N.V.
10019
. COUEGEATIENDING _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
CLASS
Qf _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
~-~-~
<U;
~
I I
I
~
l
I\· I
I \ I
\Wu
\.l..u.'.
Unisex Haircutting for Guys-Gals
STUDENT .DISCOUNT
$6
,,
- ~
--The Latest in.Volumetric Cuts from N.Y.C.
~-
.
.
---
'
,,.
• Volumetric
.R'-9.
$1 7
50· .
c
0
:c~•
1

·_
:,rcgr~
BQDY PERM
29.50
.
Conditioner.
Shamp
(Cirlce Photo by Wanda Glenn)
Want To
Work?
By Daniel Dromm
So
far
this
semester ''the Office
of
Career
Planning
and
Pla,cement has placed over 50
people in part-time· off campus
-
jobs," according to Larry
Snyder, director.
, : ' This is one ofthe services
the
";_-office
'fui's
to 'offer: .
'

. .
"We have placed people in
retail positions,· assembly lines,
office
work, · child
care,
babysitting,
drivers,
housekeeping
and
ground
maintenance as well as . some
bank positions," Snyder _said.
· "We try to match up jobs with
the students available hours to
work." "We welcome students
coming to apply for jobs which
are posted on the bulletin board
outside the Financial Aid Office,
1st floor Champagnat," he said.
Snyder also said, "l would
appreciate anyone who knows of
part-time positions available to
contact
us
here in the office."
-T.V.'s_
Swiped
By Regina Clarkin
Two
22-inch
television
monitors, stolen from Donnelly
Hall rooms, 201 and 206 on
Oc-
tober
6
will
not be replaced ac-
cording to Carol Deyo, Coor-
dinator of the Audio Visual
Television Center.
·
The monitors were com-
mercially valued at
$300
a piece.
"We bought them on a state
contract for $155 each," said
Deyo.
.
The monitors were noticed
missing by production specialist
Ken Muckenhat.ipt. "To the best
of our knowledge the monitors
had been in Donnelly on October
·:.Highlighting .Special Precision Cuts
Conditi
17
So .. Hamllton St., Poughk . .
piie
(1/2
B1ock South of Main Mall) .
:·:·j_.-~-
. ·· 471-4383~54-9984 Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30
Thurs. Open
Late · -·
6,"
said Deyo.
.
Phillip McCreedy, ~ector of
Security refused
to
comment.
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
'
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NOVEMBER 4, 1976
THE CIRCLE
PAGE6
Pysch
Majors
-
.
-
Get Experienc~
New
·
PaltZ Administrator
T·eaches
Here
By
Regma
Clarkin
By Alison Hickey
Scratz. This program provides a
free service
to each agency and
.
Senior Psychology majors in return each agency provides a
work _ for an agency off good experience to each student.
campus for
12
credits during
the
·
Senior seminars are
run
once a
spring
·
semester in a job related month
·
and
·
the workstudy
Standing behind a lecturn and
sitting behind a. desk are two
·
_
different
_
thirigs, to Bob
.
Van
Meier, a new history teacher
at
Marist.
·:
Center in Wisconsin, Washington,
Jefferson College in Western
Pennsylvania and was a visiting
,
professor at the University of
Maryland. More recenUy
-
he has
taught at S.U.N.Y. in New Pal~.
He is especially interested m
political
_
matters. "My research
interest has been the
-
economy,
·
how it has been involved with
Van Meter is a part time ad-
ministrator

at
_
State
.
University
College at, New Paltz and a
·
to psychology. There are ele\'E!D
students meet
.
ana discuss their
agencies in which Marist experiences
with
faculty
students are placed; some
·.
of members and
other
students.
Tbe
which
.
include the Dutchess students also
_
recor
.
d; their ex-
Mental Health
_
Clinic and the perierices in logs.
-
·
Hudson
River State Hospital.
Students apply for placement
.
history teacher here.
·
American·foreign policy."
·
Dr. Midge Scratz,
'
who
is
the
-
in these ~genc~es just like
a
job.
head
of
the
Psychology
_
.
Each
.
student
_
fills out
an:
ap-
_ ·
Workstudy Program says,
.
''.It
·
plication and gives a resume
.
then
·
gives the
.
student an opportunity
.
the agency picks the student that
to formulate their goals." She they feel is mosfqualified. There
says the workstudy program
is
has been/in
.
the pasfm(?re jobs
the best feature of the psychology open than were ~tudents.
.
·
,
.
.
program because
_
it gives
.
the
Marist offers
·
one free
un-
-
.
·
carter
student
-
a good chance to ex-
-
derg-,:-adll8te
course
·· __
to
.•
8ach
· ·
perience different job
-
op-
agency; This idea
is
'
aimed
·
at
··
F~om
P~g~ 1
A
·
native
.
of Kentucky,
·.
Van
Meter holds a bachelor
.
's degree
from.theMassachusetts Institute
of Technology,-a doctorate and a
master)
_
degree
iJl
.
history from
the University of Wisconsin .
.
·
;
He
has taught atthe Green Bay
·
I'm interested in a liberal arts
·
·
teaching,
-
I like the
-
department
.
here and I've wanted
to get back
·
in
teaching/'
'
said Van Meter;
·
These are the reasons he ac-
cepted°a teaching position here .
.
.
portunities in the field of rewarding
'.,
the agency for...
-
·
.
- • .
.
,
_
.
· -
- .,.
.
.
psychology.
. .
training
.
the
·
student
.
and
·.
ill.so . usually
,
dt;lter,mmes the outcome,
Marist was one of the first
.
helpmg to upgrade the person11el Ford
_
lo~t the unde~ ~
:
group t~
.
.
•--~a..~ ..
111111111. . ; ~
. . .
-------~-•---nt
colleges to offer a
.
workstudy at these agencies;·
·
Ca~r lather ~dily~
_
-
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·
·
·

La
·
1 ·
5
t
·
f 20
t
d
·
ts
.
Such
IS
the general picture.
Th~
:
program m psychology and smce
_s
·
yeitr . ou .
0

.
· ·
8
u en,-
·
.
democratic
:
ticket succeeded· by
then
__
many
othe~ -
colleges have..._ received full tune Jobs dt;1
_
e to
.
this ·
gettmg·
-
out
·
their own party
started
·
one.
"It_
IS
a f~ur m~nth, workstudy program.
·
·
.
members
.
to the pol)s
.
and by
full time expenence, says Dr.
'wooing
a large percentage of the
yo,iiriger
·
Ind~pendents.
~
-
.
MHMLA
.
.
Set
-
-
Conference
,
...:,
A

closer
·
µispection
·
·
of the
_ res
_
ults
:
would reveal that in
a
·
state like New
·
York, Carter
_
pitlled
~
85
percent of his
'
own
party•~
-
vote, plus
-
a healthy57
·
-
·
percent of the· Independents
_
and
.
15
.
percent
·
of the Republicans
vote. Breaking
· :
dowri
·
_
these
·
groi.lpsi-,parter's su~
_
cess is found
.
\
in gaining
94
percent of
the
black
banquet
,
on Monday everung,

vote;-
·
12
·
percent of the
·
Jewish
.
N;ovember
.
~9.
Dr. ~rtla11d
.:
P, vote;
52
percent of the Catholic
'
Marist College will
.
again
.
host Auser, Presidentof.theNort_h~~t (despite
:
strong overttirei·
_
bY:
_.,
·
By Nina Schwenk
·
.
the Hudson
.
.Valley
·
Language Modern
.
Language Ass~iation Ford to the Catholic electorate)
-
Association
-· ..
CC>nfer~nce
,
>
on
.
.
·
and a profess!)~
,,
of
.
·
Englisll
,
~t
(
·
and
-
77' P
.
EffCe
·
nt-otthe.-uriiori
vote
/
:
Nove1:nbert
,
2.9
:;
,
_
~nd·.JO,
·.
F()r
/
~o.
,.,.
_
,
Br~m,
_
;
CO.Inffi.!!!1!~·
.
·
G<>\\f!ge,
1 ; ~
..,.:;
an
\;,,
,2ther-\-.,wQrds~'i"
'
all
'"
·the
.
,;
~
.
d~ysstudentandfaclilty scholars
·.~be
.
the featured
.
sp_ea~er at
,
the

minorities
·
·
'
gaye
.. :
Carter
>
th
·
e
·
will meet to
·
read;
·
hear; ~nd ~anquet.
·
..
,.
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. ,

.
-
.· .
.
_
.
:
·
majority.
The
.'·
tiaditionar
comm~nt _on
.
~ore
,
tha~ fif~y
Dr. Sommer has c~eated a,nd Democratic
,
appeal.to
·
the in:
papers on
_
va~ous topics
rn
_
developed
-t~e
M~d-1:{u~son
.
digent,dhe middle
-
and
<
lower
'
l~~guage and literature.
~
_ad-
conference,
It
IS
the first wut
or
class and intellectuals paid off. In
dit1on to the papers there w~ be the
.
~odern
..
Language addition, while holding the
.
cities,
two three-hour semi?ar sessions Association_ ~ha~ encourages carter, through his southern and
devoted
_
to the speci~l proble~ student pa~1cip~tion.
-
.
_
famier images, did considerably
eilcoun~r~d today m Eng1:i5h
,
P~e-re~ist~atio~ for1:1s
.
a~e better among the farmers than
,
.
compos1t~on
~nd
foreign available m
his
offl~e
-
which 1s m the Democrats normally do.
·
language mstruction.
.
Room 206 of Fontal}le.
-
-
·
·
This year's Conference . will
have section meetings in fift_een
areas of literature in addition to
the two
-
seminars in
.
.foreign
languages and English com-
position. All sections will meet
in
the classrooms adjacent
_
to
.
the
Gallery Lounge and in the
Theatre.
The Confer~nce
will
feature a
Broken Into
From
Page 1
to the security office.
It
was at
this
.
time Blankly realized
·
.

the
.
theft.
.
...'.
..
.
.
According to Blankly security
said that they had
a
policeman
watching the
Sheahan
lot during
the weekend arid that nothing
-
was
reported.
.
.
·
:
Phillip McCready,
_
director of
security was not av:ail~ble for
comment as he
is
on
,
vacation.
Classified
"D.D
••
write. L.G. ·"
"Happy
Birthday to you
Happy Birthday to
voo
.
Happy errthday Barbara
.
and SkltCh ... "
"Happy
Birthday to
vou
·
Happy
-
Birthday to you·
Happy
.
errthdav
Marv,
Jane,
Kate, and Sherry ...
'.'
"Do
It
!Of" the
room1i•
.
. .
J.A.19
.
"H. 19th
B
·
J.H.
'.
B.V.M,•••
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you liki good music,
Jrtendlj,
.
Pt!ople
_
-and great
haircuts
'then
you
,
1
ll
like
·
-the
·
.

Vill~gi{Juttir1\
Uni-Se~
.
Hairc,Uttitzg
·salon .
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__
6
:
LaGrange
:
Ave.:
· '
473-375..f!
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·
:
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Gibbons
·::-
1
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2
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oz~
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2
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returnclbies
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plus
deposit'
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old
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tans 1~19
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'
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becoming a
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Christian Brother
.
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THIS
:
YEAR
,
·cAN
HELP
MA
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NY
PEOPLE
l°N
FUTURE
-
YEARS
-
-
CTHE
'
CHRISTIAN B
_
ROTHERS A
.
RE
-
'
A GROUP
.
OF
-
CATHOI..IC R
.
ELIGIOUS BROTHERS WHO
.
SPEC
.
iALIZE
IN DIFFERENT FORMS OF
·
EDUCATION
I
BROTHER
,
STEPHEN FS
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I DE LA SALLE ROAD

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ALBANY,
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NOVEMBER 4, 1976
THE CIRCLE
Rooters
_
Hope For Tourney Bid
By
Tom McTernan
I
-
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scored in any *game this
fall
a first half which saw both teams
.
visitors scored their only goal on
against
..Marist
and goalie Jay
take 14 s~ots on goal. But Marist a Marist defensive error that led
.
.
Metzger, who entered the match
was unable
to
get the equalizer.in
to
a
breakaway attempt
by
Jose
Seeking
to
keep alive their
_
witha0.3lgoals-againstaverage.
the second.half despite an 18-6 Carlato.
Lucius
Bonneson,
hopes

for a post-season tour-
·
·
·
·
advantage on shots over the final Aprigliano and
Jim
Downs
also
nament bid,
~
bounced back
Vito
-
Aprigliano started the
45
··
minutes.
scored for Marist.
n:om a 3--0_ deficit Sa~day
to
tie
Mari:st
comeback by converting a
-
·
The 4-1
win
over Ramapo was
The Red Foxes took out their
Siena
~
m_ Loudon"!lle,
.
pass from Fermino Naitza for
-
his
the 100th of Goldman's coaching frustrations of the Nyack loss by
T.le_-tie g i v e s ~ a
~e-
sixthgoaloftheseasohatthe2:0l
career. Dionesio Vasquez gave exploding fora 7-0
win
over Pace
game
.
unbeaten strmg s1~ce mark of the second half. Twelve
,
Marist a slim 1-0 halftime lead on Oct.
23.
2.enone regained his
_Nyack
s~pped the Red Fox eight minutes later, Dan
,
Wakely
before 2.enone scored three
.
times scoring touch with another three-
game WIIUlµlg
streak
on Oct~ 20. scored on an assist from John
.
in
the second half to put
··
it out of goal hat trick and then assisted
The 1-0 !o
.
ss thwarted ~ t • s bid McGraw to cut the Indian lead to
teach.
·
-
·
on a goal
by
Firmino.
for th~ir
·
se~ond straight
·
CACC
3-2
before
·
2,enone tied it.
·
·
.
2.enone netted four more goals
That made it
4--0
early in the
championship.
Goldman was pleased with the
in a 7-1 romp over
.
Bloomfield. second half.
·
The Red Foxes_ l!ere 1!)-1-1 team's
,
comeback, adding,
·
.
''.W~
·
The Red Foxes had a
60-4
.
.
ad-
···
At
the 9:45 mark of the second
ov~raU befort': . hostm~ Kmgs could have pulled it out but we hit
vantage in · shots on goal. The half, Goldman chose senior Jim
_
Pomt at ~orudoff Field on
·the
poston several shots. And the
PAGE7
·.
Titone
to attempt
a
penalty
kick
·
awarded to Marist, and the co-
captain responded with the first
goal of his four-year varsity stint.
Freshman Julio Rostran and
Vasquez concluded the Marist
scoring while goalie Jay Metzger
recorded 10 saves to gain his
sixth shutout of the season.
The Red Foxes ended their
CACC schedule with a 5-1 record
after their 3-1 triumph over
Western Connecticut on Oct.
Z'/.
Rostran and Wakely registered
first half goals and 2.enone scored
his
22nd in the second half.
Marist
will
close out its 1976
regular season at home against
RPI Saturday (2 p.m.). By that
time their post-season plans
should be very much finalized.
Tuesday. With_ the NCAA tour- muddy conditions on the
.
sinaU
Coach's
_
Corner
nament
.
co~~e scheduled to fi~ld
caused
us
.
.
problems by
,,,
meet
late
·
this
·
week, the game eliminating the benefit of our
·
c
·
-
h
.
c
·
·1d
·
11 O
t· . t·
waie:~~~riti~;t;:~ f~~n1o8:~i ~ki'l:~~st
.
travelled
for
their
._
·
·
oa
C
-
.
.
a
-
We
_
P
lffl IS IC
an~ther
·
reco~-breaking cam- show~own with Nyack following
-
~
·
-
.-/
·
·
·
pa1gn, scored his 23rd goal of the home
·
conference wins over
ByTomMcTernan
.
Trinity and never had a freshman
·
1974
and
the
freshman
season with
.
17
:39
remaining in Ramapo (Oct 13)
and
Bloomfield
.
boat finish lower
than
third at the hea vyweifht race
.
in 1975~
regulation time Saturday
-
to (Oct. 16;)
,
,
·
"l'mnotanautocrat.Thereisa Dad Vail, considered to be the Trinity's last appearance on the
climax
.
the
Marist
r~y.
·
Neither
-
_.
The game was marred
_by
a
reason for everything I do and
·
national rowing championship
Hudson was during the 1974
~
.
could
·

scor~ ·
m
~e t_wo freezing drizzle which slowed
that
-
I want my
.
rowers
.
to un-
for small schools. He also started President's Cup races, when they
overtime penods.
•..
.
,
down the action at both ends. But
·
derstand.".
.
.
·
a successful women's crew • won the overall team cham-
Siena
,:
took advantage
·
of
·
Goldman still felt the Red Foxes
,
With these words tiead
·
crew program at the Connecticut pionship. But Caldwell again
seve~l Marist defensive lapses
.
played well enough tQ win. "We
coach Gary Caldwell expressed school but
is
quick to point out,
came up short against Marist in
·
to build
-
a
.
3--0
.
lead
·
at
c
halftime.
-
totallyoutplayedthemandhit the
.
his basic philosophy in co~ching
"It
was the success of the•fresh-
both of his frosh races.
"The
ball
control and defensive post five times. The score could
-
rowers, a philosophy he hopes men that got me here."
·
The new coach sees the sport as
coordination was very poor and easily have been
5-I. All
in
all, -it
will
ultimately
.
lead to
·
future
Caldwell got his start in rowqig one that
fulfills
a basic need for
Sj~na
·
.
just capita~d on our
·
was an extremely frustrating
Marist success in national at Yale,where he was coxswain many students. "Crew develops a
misplays;" said coach "Doc"
_
loss."
·
'
·.
·
·
competition.
·
of the varsity heavyweights for
basic physical condition pattern
Goldman;.
·
.,·
'
Tom Mangham scored the lone
"So
-
far I'm satisfied with the three
·
years. His fondest memory that stresses discipline. I've
.
. ·
The th!"ee goals were 'the
_
most goal with 12 minutes remaining in
way things' are going,''. noted of that period was a Christmas participated
.
in other sports like
·
·
·
Caldwell. "With two months at
·
·
trip to Egypt during his senior baseball and soccer and I think,
Marist behind me, l'.v~ learned a
year. "We rowed up the Nile
in general, that crew athletes are
lot
.
and· am now better
·
prepared River. The trip
as
a whole
.
was more dedicated and work harder
·
for the job facing me
.
"
·quite
an
educational
ex-
than ·other athletes." He added.
Caldwell, who coached the perience. "
.
·
·
.
"There are no b~g heroes in this
Trinity
College
freshmen
.
Upon graduation from
Yafe
in sport; The crew
is
only as good as
lightweights to the "unofficial'\ 1972 with a B.A. in American its weakest nwnber."
-
Halted
national championship earlier History, Caldwell took a position
He has set one major goal for

this year,
.
was named during the teaching histor.y and sociology at Marist: to expand the program
summer
·
to
·
succeed Alwnnf the Robinson Private School in over a four-year period to include
-Director Bill Austin
as
head of
.
West Hartford. His most recent a full lin~up in all
.
levels of
·
·
B PATLARKiN-
given.'.'
.
.
.
the
_
Maristrowing program. He
.
:
teaching post
·
was at a
Man-
competition - freshman,
.junior
-
'
.
..
Y
·
·
·
··.
This
.
whole study is the result of
·
was a_lso ~amed Sp.arts In-
chest~r junior high school last varsity, varsity and women's. At
K
decision on. changing
~
a
.
commitment on the part of the formation D~ecto~ ~f the college.
-
·
year; while coaching afternoons the moment, he believes the team
master time
·sch~dule
has

been administration' to review
.
•·
the
...

In May? hlS
.
'fyimty fre~hmen and weekends at Trinity.
will. race five boats next spring
temporarily postponed. However
.
current
.
schedule, according to
"
l\'on
~~
·lightwe1gh~ race
.-
m
-
the
Caldwell;
who
presently with
a
goal
of
placing each one
in
a
.
decision
.
will be reached in the
_
Dwyer.
.
·
,
.
.
pre_stigious pad Vail _Reg
_
atta at resides at.the _Marist boathouse, the finals at Dad Vail.
·
near future.
:
.
·
"While
_
indications

.
from the
.
Philadelphia, culmmat
_
mg ~n recalled his earlier experiences
Upon
·
its completion, the Mc-
.
According to
/
John
>,
Dwyer,
.
~es_earch alrea~y
.
completed
.
undefeate~. season wh~ch ~n-
as a rival coach.
"It
took-me two Cann athletic complex will
rMistr~r; "The
_
purpose for
·
the ~dicates there is_
a
ne~d for c!u~E;d a victory over Umv~r~1ty
.
.
years
,
to beat a Marist crew. By contain a rowing tank similar
postponement is-to ·enable more
,
·
un~rove~ent we
will
continue to
.
d~vISmn champ ~ale. In ad~tion, then I had developed nothing but tothe one Caldwell found very
input from students and faculty
review this matter and reach a
.
his fres~men. heavyweights respect for the Marist program. beneficial at Trinity.
"It
will give
especially those
.
that

felt
_.
sul
·
conclusion in
,
the very near placed thml !h~s r:ear after a
They· were no pushovers by any us 2-2½ months of additional
ficient notification
wa:(
not
---
future," says Dwyei,-.
secAond-plahcehfm~sh mll
·
1975. t d means." Caldwell finally got his work on rowing techniques which
·
··
·
._
coac w o 1s we -respec e
revenge at the Callow Cup can make quite a difference," he
by his peers, Caldwell compiled a
Regatta in Ritchfield,
.
winning said. That difference may be
55-7 record in four years at the varsity lightweight race in another victory at Dad Vail.
.
People You Meet:
,Zenone Naitza,_ Soccer Superstar
By
Tom
~cTernan
goals
·
and 4 assists and finished the English language. Since the scorer has many goals for both
·
·
with 19 points overall. Both were school did
·
not field a team in
.
himself and the team (such
as
"to
After
.
years of
.
losing seasons
·
ruimed
.
to the all-CA CC team and soccer, z.enone kept his skills
·
go qndefeated and qualify for the
the low spectator interest, soccer 2£none -also received honorable
-
sharp by playing
in
various NCAA's") but just hopes that
at Marist has recently undergone
-
mention All-state.
leagues in the city. Upon Marist continues to have a strong
a
.
steady growth in popularity.
· ·
This fall;· Firmino
-
has been graduation;he·was offered
a
full
team in order to make soccer
·
While much of it can be at-
.
slowed by
·
a
broken left arm scholarship to Adelphi whicb
he
more popular in the area.
tributed to
the
team's overaff which has limited his output to turned down
because
they
were
"Soccer is the best sport all
-
improvement(29-8-2 over the ~st two goals aqd_five assi:st:s. But un::-ble t~ o~er o_ne to
Firmino. over Europe.
It
is
inexpensive,
3 years) the impact of two Italian
.
2.enone has more th~ picked up
.
He (Fll"lllmo)
is
the only one I
.
,
natives
.
cannot. be ignored.
.
.
. .
the scoring sla£k.
-
His game-tying
.
understand
_
that w~}l and we
have
The
:
Naitza
.
brothers, 2.erione
-
:
:
,
goal at Siena Saturday
_
was his ~layed together
.
since
w~
we~
.
.
and
,
Finnino
·
have
·
been

in-
23rd of the season, more than the
-
five.
·
We wanted to continue
to
.
strµmentaF in
:1
neady

every
·
team used to
-
~core
:
overan
_
entire play on the same team/'
_E~ept
Marist
wiri
since they joinecUhe sea~n.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.

for another
·
brother,
.
BenJammo,
,
·
·
team
.
irt 1975 and their
,
ex~iting
:
:_ :
"He is playing much better this who plays ~or the local G e ~
:
:
style of
.
play has been a
·
major
.
year/! notes Goldman;
·
While
.
his
·
club,._!lle ~est of the
_
family has
fac;tor of
:
the
-
increasing
:
at-
:
a~ist.t<>tal
.
is_down fr<>m 17 ~
-
5
:
remamed· m Italy
.
.
.
·
. ·
.
'
·
,
tendance at home gaines. In fact,
·
this

season,

Go_ldman. explams,
.
Althou~h ~none
_
concedes
that
.
three
.
o~t-o~
·
five ~~ectators at a "No one
.
·
e~e

lS
getting dow:n
.
h~ and
~ll'?11DJ,
ha~ mu~h to
do
,
recent
·
.··.
game·
,
agamst Weste~ enou~h f~r
him
to pass _to and his with ~airung. Ma~~ its
.
first
.
Connecticut disclosed that they
..
shooting
·
has really· improved. CACC championship last year.
·
·were
:,
there
·
to
·
··
"watch
·
2.ertone
. ·
With
.
his
.
brother hurt,, ~e
··
just 2.enone poin~d out, "~e
also
bad
score
·
a
few goals."
.
. · ·
· .feels he has to score more to help a great goalie ( Jay Metzger)
-the
·
CoachHoward"DocJJGoldman the ~m."
·


.
.
.
. _
,
.
.
.
.
bestl'veeverseen .
.
Wehavealot
·
sees the Naitzo's
.
.
·
contribution
·
·
To anderstapd· how·a player of of young players, who are
gefflq
:
from another perspective. "They
.
1.enone's
· .
.
·
ability
·
.
ended
_
up_
.
at
.
·
·.
better ~th experience.
And
our
inspire
'_
the
.
other~
.
players

to
·.
·
Marist,- one would
'
have
:
·t<> go
.
team
is
united
in everything, in
_
achieve
_
a greater degree of skill. backto-1.erione's early days in his
~
the l~ker room and
;
oui
.
"
-
-··
.
TheyJook
-
at
·
tnem
,
and say,
,
'if, native
·
Italy
/
where
·

he started

A bit small for center~ forward
·
they can do
it",
maybe I can,
too/
'.
playing soccerwheifhe was
-
five.
-
(5'7'9 the· Spanish major ~o
-
Iri
this
\YSY,
everyone ~trives to 'f!lere be met college f>resident notes !he.advantag~,of
_Ills
size.
improve
·
-,
_the
team is mor~ at,; Linus Foy a!1d worked a~ odd jo~s "My size
is
good for me-
1~
makes
·
tractive to watch·-and we get for the Manst brothers m Rome .. me faster, more balanced, and
.
:better
.
high school players for the
;
~
So the ~am~ "Marist''
~ay
ha~e able to get around other p~arers.
nextyear.''
<
· ·
·· .--:
.··
_,
'
:
0
-become a pe~ent fixture m !score be.cause I'm aggressive."

·
:
As
a freshman last
yE!llj.°
2.enon:e
·
his mind.

.
.
:
·.
·
: .' ·
·
-<
:
·
·
,
·
<
And for that matter, remarkably
sliattered
0
·-
a11
:
enstihg Marist
,
When
'
2.enonecametoA,merica·
.
durable:
,;
in that
,
he seldom .is
·
scoringrecor.dswith 16
_
goal{."aiid
,
'
iJi
:
-1971;
•-
he and Firmino· stayed
·
.
si~elined
..
'
with injuries
:
.
despite
·
.
17
..
assists
·
for.
·
33 points.
:
·
Firmino with
,
the
,
Marist brothers
.
at Mt;
·'
.
:
bemg

.
a

·
target
·.
for .
.
.
opposing
·
led
ti-
,
'the
'
·
.
,_
Ceritral
·
t
Atlaritfo
/
St. Michael
'
.
High SchooJ
:
in
:
the
,
,fullbacks.
· ,·
,
'.
_
.
.
,,
:,.
,,
!
~1~
f
;r1_,,~{
-
.
B'F
i
·
j~
:
!
1
1
~;~J~
ia

'}t·

·
t1
,
.~
·
·
..
jt/~
.
"

~
.
.........
. ,~.f1;i
fi
i.
(:{;.~t
~
~i:-
;,
ik
:.
~~1~·~i~:211i
i{
:
;
-,
:
,:·
fast, and requires that you use
your brain and master certain
skills.
In
about ten years, it
will
be the most popular sport in the
U.S. after football.''
The comparison is only ob-
vious. What Pele is to the Cosmos
and American soccer, 2.enone
·
Naitza
is
to Marist.
.
. .
::
.
:
i
;';
...
)/>/'-' ·.
\:2
.
A'i'i
;
...,
..
I
'
l
I
I
J
j
I
j
-
l
f
.
I






















































































































































































































































































































































PAGE_
-
8
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER 4, 1976
ROWERS PREPARE FOR FROSTBITE REGATrA
·
After
competing in the prestigious Head of the Charles Rega~ on
Oct.
11:
the Marist crew team began ~ e we
_
eks
of
double
.
sess10~
Monday
..
in preparation for the Frostbite
_
Regatta to
be
hel~ m
Philadelphia
.
on Nov.
20. ,.
·
,
·
·
·
·
-
·
boats·
Acc:Ording
to
_
coach Gary Caldweµ, the Red Fo~es
'!ill
en~r
.
m
the varsity
and
J.
V:beavyweigbteights, the v~sity ligh~ei~bt eights
·
and the freshman fours.
.

..
·
:
.
·
·
.
.
-
_
.
·
·
·
.
The best Marist finish at Boston was in lightweight eight race, with
25tb
·
place out of 40
teams
entered .
.
Caldwell
.
commen~,
"Bo~ U.Ie
intermediate "(32nd out of40) and lightweight_eights we_re Just
a
mmu~e
.
The Marist
·
College Running
·
three Post runners as well
as
two the
·
Albany
siate
·
Invitational. behind the leaders' over the
.
three
~
mile
_
race.
·
That kind of a
.
mar~
/ RedFoxesarenearingtheendof stonyBrookrUJUlersthatbehad:·"our
.
top
three
-
of
.
Scholder, c
··
an
.
belowe
·
reddurm
·
· g·:the
.
n
.
ext_
.
three_
·-.in_oQ
_
ths."
,

,
...
.
.
at1o~er record-breaking season
_
. beaten ~ce
this
year.
·,
Kolthay arid
·
Coufal ran
'
fine, but
.
Caldwell also expressed satISfaction with the :w~men s
_team,
which
Although the team
·
ach!evements
.
.
Bob Coufal was nursing a foot we did
.
not have the kind of
-
placed
29th out of 40 at Bosto_n~
..
"They improved on th~1r
38tb
p
_
~ce
have been great so
.
far,· Coach
·
.
injury
.
but
.
was
.
able to
.
.
defeat

support from Costine,
_
O'Doherty;
·
.
finish
-
of
last
year but, mor:e unportant; they
.
w_ere very competitive
Rich
_
Stevens put the ·proper
.
,
,
teammate

Fred Kolthay;

w~o

and ~orge
"
McCutchepn that we
:
and
within
·
striking
di_stance
¢
the top
-
ten."
·
.
.
_ .
.
.
_
.
.
.
,,
pe1-spective on the season
,:
by
·:
·
suffered cramps during the race.
-
-had gotten all
season
;
It was not
.
.
-
·
..
.
..
saying "Although we
.
have had a
~
De11:nis
:
.
O'~oherty
fellc
;
down -enough to
.
place ·second
.
or. third
great season so far the end
:is
the
:
' .
d~g the ra~e in t!_ie :wO<>ds_imd whic~ I
think
we could have
.
if
two
.
, .
..:. '-
most impo~t part; ~aybe you
·
Brian Costm~ ~ad st~~ach or~ three
.
of
the~
ran norm;a1.
1-
_
;..;.....;,.
.
-J-
..
-
-
.
- - -
__ -
....,.;;...~---
.
-
-
~
,
~--~--:"".--~~~~----""1
couldevensaytheend1Stheonl~
.
problems
.
before 9:11d
_
dunng the
._.
Wewereonly14pomtsfrom
.
third
-
11
, _

,
··
Ii
.-
·
·
..
part."
.
.
-
~
·
ra~.
-
T\yo
_
~f
-
~ • s other
-
~p and
_
we
-~
definitely
,
cowd
·
-
have
·
·
.
,
.
..
Ig
·
The team completed ~e
.
1976
.
runne~, J~
-
Nystro~
-
and
·
St~ve g~tten
,.
;that
.
wit~i_
.
normal
,
per-:_
·
·
,
regular season
.
with 16
.
yruts
.
ah
.
cl
:

Del,eskiewicz,
"
~<>~
:
~d
_-
not
·
~
.formances
:.
perllap~
.
fronyeyen.
_
·
,
.
.
. -
·
o


·
-
.
-
_
: '
onlyone
,
Iossfora .941,mark; 'lbe
:-
;
;J
>etjluse
·
.
otankle ll1Jllrl8S
i
:.;_
T11
.
us
.:
one
·
·

otthe
.
three."
,
1
:
;
L
,
·
·
.
'~
'
·.
.
·_ .
.
n
-
_
_
:
·
.-.
team went into
·
the
·
last
meet of Marist was far...below ilormalfor ·
.
:
.
Keene State won the varsity
the y'ear.lllltiefea~d
.
b~ ~a~e
·:·
this
l'.3~
~
·
:
·
<~
\:
--·
</>
,.
-,
.
ra~~th~
~oirl~
f_o}!oweg.
_
by U
.
·
ot
·

problems
..
to
•·-
au
.
~
of
>
their
··.·
·
::..
~
'
.'.
¥011
.
can
_
't
·
be~ta

strong te~
>c
~ss.
(61);MillersvilleState
(90)
··
~:~:,iicik
'.
~~a:
:
:}!ttJ.WJt~!
L
:
.:
~tt~~
~
::~:J:we
·
~~n~
~:,.-
~t:frei~
.~
~Ml
J
-
Jl~i
·
.:
ii~
·
.
fi
;
..
niu
;
·
·· .
_
:
.
.
·•
_
_
:
__
_
:
·
·
·
.
':
:
.
.
S
..
·
:
..
.
···.·
·
-
.
.


_
·.
·
.
.
·
·
p
.
·
"
·
..
.
:
.
· ..
·.·
:
O .
-
_
·
·
·.
-
. ·
.
.
·
....
.
. . .
.
_
·

.
:
:
.
:
·
·
1
.
·.··.
:
s _
·
·.
·
;
·
.
·
.
:
·

.
·

·
. t~rii 21~34:.'lbis had co.me ~ruyj1
;
{
the bestwe
·
l)!l~
on
~l_lis_p~c~r:
,
strength
.· .
:fiom
.
~:
hi's
;'
recent
_
.I.
/
_
·
,
week'
,
after ttie
·
team
-
'.registei'ed
'
day; but they)ire strong. Tfigure
·
sickness;
·
placed
:
Mb;
·
Kolthay
{ts biggest croSl3-co~try
·
regular
:
. that we c911ld
:
~~y:~emc;l~~~ly if
.
was
.
tjgl:>t
;
.
behind
·

sojrte
~,
twelye
_
....,_ ..... ____
~---------...... - - - - . - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - ,
'
season
·
..
·
win
'?
.:-.
ever
·
,
over
>
the

\Ve were at full strength
,
based
·
on
·
seconds
·
1ater
--:
in
·
sixth
·
·
:
place.-
--
Universfty
:
<>f
i:;.oweli
)
~t
.
h<>me
/
:
-
.
' ·,
~
our
.
:
i>1;~yioj!s
\
-jietfo
f
tii8ll'c
.
es
·:
Coufal
~
:
rwinmg
_.
i
{
very
'.,
stroiig
•.
.
'.
By Tif:OMAS
MC
:
TERNAN
·
.-
.
:
Marist
.
.
Jopped
·,
.
Lo'!ell
\
28:'.3J,
·'.•··
ag~~t~g:OrBrookSt
..
;"-
who
\
~
1itii!
_
:
raci
f
placedfifteentlt St~V~118f!?lt-
,:
.. ·
...
·.:~
,
;
--
.
. ,
.
;;
·;:-:t---
-
-
,
·cc
:
setting
.•
m1meroti$
·•
;
_
records
>
in
.
~
.
the ;.SM.1~
-::
r,ac~"
.;
. evens c;<>m~

thatc
:.
ScJiolde1(
·
noi'mally
·
woilld
:
·
:

. .
··.
-
,
,
.
.
·
,
-
--
--
ciuding:
·
th~~pesqiiri;eJ<>r;
1ts
top
:
.
ment_ed 'aft~_r
:
the
:
iµeet:
~-
'~{
\
: :
:
have
:
won
.,
the race
·
:
or
:-,
certalllly
. .
.
·.
.
· .
. :
. ·
. .
..
:
·.
_.
. ~:
.,
-
five ruruie
_
f!!,JPe
.
first
,
ti:me
.
~~
;
:
·
Stevensalso
_
thought
.
that1t~~s
_
J:!laced
·
second since

he
~
~
.
fthe
·
··
"
..
-
0
·-





-

-
-

-
,
·-
-
· _
:
team
.
had
·
seven
:
runners
:
unµer
.
·
good tl(at
all
the bad_Iuc~
;
c~e
J.JJ.
_
two Keene State runners aheaa of
-
_-
ZE~QNE

NJ\ITZA
.
~AMEi?
_
ATfil..ET~
OF WEEK-
..
, .
.
.
·
- ·
25:00
oii
~
.the honi
~
·
course
;
.
and
.
·
the seas.Qn fi~uile
:
and_
.
~e(<>re
--
~e
;::
liliiHn
~
the Glassboro
~
lnvitational
..
·
.
7£;':lone Nill~
,
a
_;
_sophomore fr<?~
..
.
t,h~
.
B~onx!
,
Jias been
,.
named
_
Jerry Sctfolder's
.
new
..:
school se
.
ries
.
of big
_
m~ts
.
and he
_
hoped
_
in
.
the
·
season's
'
first-
.
meet
:
It
-
is
.
Mai:~TCollege Ath~ete of Uie ~eek
-
for the. ~eek en_dµlg Clct9ber 31
_
..
:
<'
.
.
.
re.cord
·
of
:
~
'
:33.2
;
J~w
_
eil
was}~
I
:
tti~
Jo~
w'<>ajl:l
,
get
the
·
~ajti
J
}
.
~C~
(
~pected:J.hat
lie
·.
!rl.ll
;
.
be
-
biicl( ~()
/_
t
..
::
~a1tza,
.
lli.e }ea~g sc,orer
0~
.
th~
;_
MarJSt
:
soccer team,
--
sc~rE!d
.
his
_
.··
before the
'
meet
J
osmg only
'.
.to
·
..
·
·•
.
up,for tht fmalthree weeks.
:. ·
.
·:
· form
:
·
;tor
:.
this
:.
,,•e
.
ek:s
·
state
:
22rid and 23rd goals
_
()f the se~son _lal,t_ weelc.
-
The
.
latter goatlifted the
..
·
.
Bran_de[s
·
uri
_
ive~iir:;
;
·
one
·
):>f
~
~~
;:~
.
If p~irved
,:
tru~
-
~
-
th~
·:
Ce11tr.c1l_
C
ct,fampioµs.~ps·a(on
·
eol)ta:
('
.
..
·
..
.
·
.
r
~
.
i~~
F~xes ~o
,
~
.
¥
-
9e.'.i~?Ct~1t~ Si~na Satw:~a! .
.
·
· -
top five NC.t\A D1v:
:
.
III
,:t
eam~
ill
:
.
Atlantic
:
C:9lleg1ate
c.
J:omere.nc
_
e
,:
.
:
This
,\
Saturday
:
'
.
lli.e
:
toQ
...
e1ght
,
.
..
'.
..
::
~--
·
.
-
..
_.
.o:
·
.
~-
:
~


.
\
·
,.
_
• •
..
,
the c
·
oun_try'
·
ah~ nf,;lybe
.~
eyel(tqe
.
.
:
Champtonships
i
!
,the
:
f~ll~\Ying
-;-':
rilJWers will}epresent
)
darist:m
.
.
.
-
~
.
.

.
.

>-
"
<
..
·
_
besEJ.p.weU
_
llad als
.
o beate~
.•
I_>!y
i
::

.\Vednesd~)'
:,
~
r
!-1a~
.
s~
,
as
:
~
~!
R;ed
.
~
:
,
the
;~,
N;~
~
:

xofk
\
_
~
-
~
\e
.
':
__
Up~tate
' :
INT
.
RAMµI_lAL
:
ROUN9.JJP
_ _ .
.
.
..
.
.
_
.•
,
_
:
.
.
.. /
.
.
.
.
·
Lpowei:
B
_
o~to
_
n
·
Co
.
llege e~rlier
:
~
.
,
~<>xes ~i:a~bed
;
a
_
ll
.
~f
.
thet1:<;>~Nei.
::
. Champ14?J1ship.~ wbileJhe r~st
~
o
f'.
·
..
After-three weeks of copil)E!~tion,
'!Le<f
s Lions'' are m f1rst place
_
m
• ·

.
·
:._
·
: .
the sea
_
s011.
-:_0;.
•. (
i
..
<
·
:
(,
.;
.•
<
.
<.
giclud1rtg
_;
~
..
;.
;;:.Il
/;~
.;
~ey~p
.• -:
All'." .. th~
'
teru.n
:
,
p·arti~!p~tt!s
·
·
.
in;Jhe
' .
s~cerwith3~
:
whil~ ?J,30
.
~e'sBoys:1_~11d ~e "Untouch.1:1b~es" are
.
.. -;·
:-:
Aft~r
·
:Ma_r1St
.
t91>pe<;l
i
Nya,ck
l?
;
,~
:
C~
_
~f.~~erce
_
·
~roph1es
::-:
an~
_:,
t~e
.
·
...
CQlle~tate
:
:'!'ratk
,
.
q
orif.e
_
re.nce
,
.
ti~<Uor"s~¢~~d with
..
~
\\'inS.
>
apiece:
<
.
:,·
. ..
L\
"
;-
~: .
·

-
- . . .
, ·· ·
·
..
.
..
··
.
.
:
44
on th~ toug~JiYa
.
c~
:
c
.
ourlS~;
:
~e
.,
;:
ct;amp1onspp
..:.-,
teaµi ir~phy
_.
u;i)t~
_,:"
_Champ~e>ns
.
l_rlps
_,
a~Va~
.
Co~Ia~dt
: ·
·
.
.
In
,
three
,
:
'
:
wa~
.:
ba:_!!iketb,all;
'.
'The
,
Leaping
· ..
G-~buseUas
1
'.
lead
·
~e
·
"
Req

F)>X~
/
IJ:1
,
et th~ir
.
Illatc~
:
at
,
,
~t
c;
t~m
:
,.
P~~~~
.
!lqe
:,-
o
f_.:
.lp~
;/
p~u;_k;
_
/
11,_i.anst IS
;
o:,t
l}e
,
_;:
de(~!ldb!g
··
SW:!ldipgs
WI!h 6
Wl;flS
,
'

:
Holy ~rasmus''
.
and
!
.
'l\1oro's/ocks" _are tied
.
···
:
-- ·
·
.
.
.
.
_.,.,
ya~~<>ttlantlt;g::ii:k
,
on
J
?ct.
::
µ
_
;
,
•,'
season
;
·
'.~
I:

lmeff'.
i
'Ye
,
sh.9~
-
~~'
:"

c.tjamp1on
.:
aud
J
avored
:
·
~O
,
retaJ.11
_,
.
forsecondw1th5
.
wms
.
eac.h~md the "Jomt.,and
·
-
"~1orStov1c'!..both
··.
-
:
:.
:,
'i:
•:\::i
J:.
'-c.c..
·
•·
,, .
,
;;
,
.
;
C9lleg~
::
~i9, anc;I
,
tn~n
;.
i:eeJ~d
..
of
t
}:
llll~er:
,
~: {!0
1
·
Q~
;
!.
.!5
_
U<,!µ
·~
!):
t
<;9!i
t
,
~4
z.
•:c'P~~e
}.Il
·
.
~~-~op
t~I}
_.
of
.
all
:
vars1t:Y::
:
·
.
tober
.
l~
gam~ willbe;_J1gl<H<>mg_htJTh.t1r~~?Y)
·
.
~t
7· p,m
_
:
rheJ)cto~r
··
·
.
:
meet

Scholder
.
.
\YaS

rll@lilg
;
f<>I"
,
coilf~renceJ~ llcld
,
gi,:~b~
all
,
'.
,
Ineets
"
of,the
~
y~r so
:
far
,
and f<>r.
"
.
cafetena
;
Watch
·
1t
-
:
for
.,
the-JatestJnformatlon rega.rclmg
--
sct1eduJing
-:
..
..
.
..
.
, _
:
·
.
.
t
.
h~
fµ,-~
1
ttll!lei
.
ri piree d~yfatt¢
t
:ii
"
.
:
-
th~
-
llµlr~les

in

th~
,
c~p~onship
/
·::
s~Ili~
rtiiuiers
it
:WW
.
Ile
'.
tll~
:
ii'.firi~I
-
:
.
·
:--:
,
T?day_
:
~t,hursday). ~
·
tlie
·
·
dea~e
'
for
:
filln~
.
rosters (or
:
!Jl~afriura~
1:
.
I .
!
.
,-
1
.-,
I
(
:}
\-.
··
,·.·
:·<_
._·: ---
1
, :::,
~-
-
'
..
·
·
.~
·
.
.
·
.
·
bout
-
with the flu;
\
He
.
was able
.
to
..
On Sattlfday Ma1_1S~ pla~~d 4_th pf
_
..
race
~
0
of
,
..
th,~
'
•year
.-
.
·
.
The
:.
NCAA
..
five
.
- man basketball;
.
Those who
·
are
·
still mterested ca.I)
.
fiU
~mt a
.
-·c.. •
,
.•
mana"ge only
~
,
s ~ p~ce
:
firii!l!t
\_
17
-
teams
;
~
-
th,e: v'~itfra~~
m.tcl,
/Nciti
_
on~r
<
Jeaip
-'
iil~
)
J:i'(
'.
pi,cked
: :
r~i;teri~ Jtoom
._
~19 Fol_!taine;
,
there
·
will.be
a:
separate league _for
·
in
.
the
-
meet aQd was beat~n
:
bY 3rd
_
Qf-~ tea~m the·
JV
race
_
at after
this
S?t.Jll'day!s
.
r~ce~.·-
,_.
.
.
woinen;:who are also en~our~ged to participate. .
:-.
.·.,.

-
·

••


'


.
-
:
, ·




,

1

-




,

_
.
The rest of the seas<>Jj
·
wilJ tell
_
,
There will be a mandatory meeting for
all
managers of five - man
.
.

'
how
,
the
.
fypica.J.
fan
.
regards
·
tf!is
_
.
basketballteams today
·
at 3 :40 p.m
~
in Room 300B Fontaine; followed
team
:
Wm
t~e
.
team perfoTTD wen
.
.
..
by a mandatory meeting for officials at 4: 15 p.m. Officials' checks will
·
~--------"'""!"-----------------------~
inthebig
:
ones?~illtheyputit~ll
;
be ready tomorrow (Fdday) in the I}usiness Office.
.
-
.
'
'
together
·
for the Upstates,
·
the
,:
..
Tentative
.
startiµg date foi: five - man basketball
is
Wednesday,
NCAAs and the IC4As?
.
The team
November 10
; ·
·
·
·
'haS:
not
riµi
at full strength all
·
·
- · ·
·
·- ,
~
,.
_
.
year but had two very
;
good team
:
.
_
.
.
·
·:
.
·
rac~,
.
both at
_
home,
·
against
_...
·
Upcoming
:
Event: Turkey Trot, Mo~day, Nov.
_
22. All meri and
Lowell and
·
·
for
·
the CACC
··
women are ericouraged
t9
run for their dinner;
·
consult
this
colwnri for
championship
/ ..

Such
:
· per~

_
fu
··•
.
rtb
··.
,.·
.
....
. er
details
.-
:_
:
.

.

..
2,·

.
·
·
·
•·
. .
·
,
...
form.an,c~s
·
mu~t
be

repeated
·
f9r
·
the
>
team
·
to.::-acbieve
:
its .late-
;
.
.. .
,
...
,
.
.
.,'.
.
.
·
-
·
sea~on goals of
-
winning
.
the up-
'
:
-
.
:
:
:
. .
.
.
·
.
.
__,
__
state
,
-
championship
.
again
-
and
.
.
~
,
~
~
_
.
.
_
·,.
_
-._
.
__
_ --
.
.
...
_
,.
·:

:
.
_
. -
~
~
.
.
·
.._
·
.
placingin
-
thetopJenat
-
boththe
:
:
·
NOT~
,
FROl\_f
~
SgORT$DESK
:
•.c: -
-
•··
.
·
.. :
·
· .'.
.
.
NCAA~s
:
and
-
the
..
. JCM's
;
:
.<
,
·
;
;
;,
'
Arlington ffigh
·
~h~I succ~sfully defended i~ team
_
title at
:
the
. Achieving these
·
;
goals
:
would
,
foui:ih
:
a~ual }'4anstHigh Sc:ho~llnvitationa! Cross -:
,
Country Meet.
,
..-certainly
-
make·
.
the
·

1976
:.
season

Tl}e, Adm1r;ils
~
:
Steve
.
,Fi:ancis won
.
.
·th~ varsity
.
''A''i race
·

.
and
.
atso
·
the
.
.
best

.
by
:
far in
'
-
the
,
eyes

.
of
·
captured the '.fop Runn~r award .
.

lt's goodt<> see George
,
McCutcheon
;
.

·
anyone
;
·
The teairi
.
coul~
:
pr_oduce

·
n:ia
_
~g a ~troI1gJate -
,
s~ason coineback on
.
the ~arist crass :. country
:
·
threeo
r-
four
'
All
;
Americans
if
the
·
t~m
.
·
.-
9eorge
,
was-the
;
~P
.
runner
-
oLtJte
'.
team's largest freshman
,
top:four
,
produce
C.
supe
f
efforts in
\
contingent in-197 4 and pQw
is
..
the
.
only:
m~ber
of
.
th~
,
Class of
_
1978
still
t!I
.
e
,:
Nationals.
·
,
On
:'..
paper ,
:.
::-two
,
.
on the
.
tea:D?
·
~'.~oss
.
• country C9Sch
met,
Stevens
lS
.now a

D.J:. on
rtlilllel'§
_
are strong c~didate~ for
\VMCR radi~ (64:QLevery Slllld~Y
:
frQmJ~l
,
p;mi .. .:.;,
._._ .
·
·
All~American status
;
and the-top

-
.-
t.ast wee~
u:i
~e Met~~ Bro
_
oklyn t<>ok over first place in Division A
c?.5
:
fifil$~r.r
in
'
the
~
~CAAs
·
~
~e
::
with
_
~
,
40-9 r<>iilp Pv
.
erJo~: The K,ipg~>;_nen had
:
suffei:ed
.
their only
-:
classified
as
All
;
Americans
;,
,
As
:
.
def~t ofJhe
.
season ~e~eek before ma a&-14 10$
:
to Pace
;
Pace
they
:
sat';·a
_
n~itiscertainly.
_
true
in
·
qi~~wbile
i
·
cliric~ Bz:st pJ.ace
/
in
j:
Diyisfon
,
B
.
witb

ti
:
14;.1
.
win ove;
·
cross
,
C<>l!Iltry;
_
:
''Opli:Jime
:
will
: .
Manhattan.__.
:
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18.6.1
18.6.2
18.6.3
18.6.4
18.6.5
18.6.6
18.6.7
18.6.8