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Part of The Circle: Vol. 18 No. 8 - November 18, 1976

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THE
.
CIRCLE
VOLUME 18, NUMIJ.ER
s
·-
MAR/ST COLLE(?E, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
NOVEMBER 18,
·
1976
Refrigerator Issue
Commuter Union Elections
Higgens New
President,
.
Student govern
·
ment vice -
.
Per~z
has
given for limiting the
.
-
,
.
.
.
-
.
List
·
Circulated
c~:~~~~: ~~~~::e
·
t~:~~ri:1~~ti::=i:~
-
C
--
e
·
1a
··
no
-
.
De· fe
·
a
.
fs
,
Mc
·
·
a
·
--
,,,.a·
th
Leo, and Sheahan halls
this
week
.
larger machines use
.
too

much
.
·
.

'
·
to ask students to sign
a
petition energy
;
and added
.
that he
_
called
·
to overturn Dean Anthony Perez'
.
a refrigerator shcip and was told
By
.
Elaine Brusoe
decision
.
to
·
eliminate
an that larger sizes "don't use much
refrigerators over 48 inches in the
·
·
more
.•
energy
than
.
small. ones."
115 people turned out to vote in
dorms next semester.
.

He stated that
.
many
.
big the Commuter Union Elections.
Dasher told the residents that
.
refrigerators are
.
often used by
.
7
'
The winners were
·
President
he wilh:riee~ withPresident Linus
·
to 12 people;
.
and
if they are Joseph Higgens, Second Vice
Foy tomorrow morning to eliminated, many
_-
snialler ones
·
Presideilt
·
Susan
_van
Parys and
.
p~ese~t the
.
.
.
petition arid
·
-
to
·
will be used,
.
thus
.. ·
consuming Treasurer Serafino Celano.
.

dIScUSS the

problem
;
.
.
.
.
.
·
..
·
Joseph Higgens,
a
sophomoi:-e,
He said that the reasons which
.
Continued
ort page
_
6
ran against abstain and wori
with
.
.
87_
.
votes. ·
.
...
Ra
·
·
t
Da
.
mage
·_.
·
.:.
susanVanParys,ajuniorwho
has .
.
se_rved a:s
.
Second Vice
..
Presidei:iUor ~e
-
pllSt
.
year, ran
·
A
·
t
150
..
·
unopposedandwonwith98votes.
·
·
n,ouff
.
S
to:·
..
·
···
·.
.
0
.
ag~:ti!~~!h~a~ari<i
-
! :
,
·
.
with a count of
60
to 45.
·
.
.
.
S~san
VanParys
.
.
Jim
.
QeFel~ce,
·
.
outgoing
Serafino Celano ·
.
By
CathY.
Ryan
.
.
·
The Rathskellar
will
not be
,
able to sell bottled beer as a
result.. of the acts
..
of vandalism
which
.
occurred
·
.
on November
'
9
:
·
.
after a
.
night fu

the
.
Rat
;
ac-
·
·
··
President," said the voting ttir~
C'lt
shows the organization
is
n~ut, which ~ompare
(
favorably really moving,'' he said. '
.
'Sue is
with_ last year
'.
s turnout of ap-; going .to give it t!oritinuity," he
pro:mnatelr 2Q; is encouragiJ!g
.
sa
.
id,
.'
'and
-
the
g
ew people are
.
going to breath in new life."
The new officers will take over
.
at a meeting in. Browsing Library
at 2:15'tom9rrow.
·
·
·
,
.
.
cording to John

VanDer:voort
,.
VanDervoort, assistant manager
:
of dining services ancl s~p~rvisor
.
of.the
.
,
Rathskellar
;
said
·
damages
.
lnCiderlt
/
Probe
Pursued
>
f< ·
:
;
',
\
}
{~iff}tJ~fi$j~~Tk~~
~
;~
::
,
i=t"'."'

:,
r
~,._
,
...,,
occurred
0
·
as
~
.
the':Ratliskellar
:
was
:
.
;
' ',
.
.
closirig
:
:
1'uesday
.
'
·
''
night
?
~
-
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'
e
'
":
L
·
:
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;
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G
.
.
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:!:_:
·
,.2':~
~
£
~~
~
.
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.
.
.
tg
.
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.
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.
:ef
·
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h
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r~
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'i
iF
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Jffe~
Z:
ha~
,
~~7rio1>rogi=ess
'
f
iii-·
=-
,?'"
a
;:--
Ma~e-couegit
'c
~ea,
·
wfi'6
'
t
(
:
•piahs
!
'
t
or'rettireciilig
'
i
tne-
'
fight

·
.··
~ppr
.
~h~n
:
cµng
'.~
tt.!1f
i
susp¢ct .of
J
lie
::jc
wisties
>
t~
·,
rerna,in
i
.
artohyinoils, ,
:
ori th~
:
pat~

to
th
'
e
.
library
·
are
'
receiver
,
was ripped
·
'
o~t
.'
of
:
the
·:
phone .
.
iri
/
the hallway, bottles
w~re broken,
garbage
was
strewn
·
and
.
the towel
·
dispenser
·
report.e
.
~
\
grabbing
.:
inciden
f
'
ac~-
·
aria

a
friend were
.
walking
·.
to the
:
being discussed,
·
said
.
.
Lambert.
cording
,;
.
,
to
·
-:
·
Fred
.
'
Lambert,
·
library from
.
Champagnat Hall
·
One possibility
i.c;
redirecting the
.
assista11~ dean
:

of studerits .
.:_
·

..•.
·
.
_
about
6
p
.
in;
one evenujg.
·
light at
.
the
,
corner of the elec-
;
Wehave_potgivehupany of the
.
_-
Feeling something
·
brush tricians
'
officeupontothepa
~
t.
A
plans we
.
'
.
ye es4lbµshed to catch
.:
against her dress she thought · problem arising from this
the suspect, said
-
Lambert.
·
·
·
:
someone was passing
·
her.
·
she possibility involves too much
was ripped out of the wall in the
·
A
broken
. .
pay-p~one
in
the
bathroom, he said .
.
··
·
.
.
.
Rathskellar was
part
.
of the
$500
Candles and
-
several albums
.
in
damage.
were
.
sto_lenfrom the Rathskellar,
.

There has b~en no repetition of
then felt
a:
hand up tier dress
.
She light shining
·
on the
.
Academic
the incidents,
·
Lambert said,
.
in turned around and a
man looked Dean's office .
.
said VanDervoort.
of four or five," said
.
Van-
VimDervoort said, a
.
Marist
·
Dervoort.
.
student saw some of the people
·
"We're going to try to keep the
i_nvolved in the incidents, and number of people attending
iaentified them as
·
Marist Rathskellar· events down to
_
lOO,
A
·
c
:
tivity
Fee Ra
.
ise
Explained
students:
.
.
~
· .
.
rather than
300."
·
.
"It's really ·a shame that
.30()
.

..
VanD~rvoort
·
said that overall
Pre,sident Linus F'oy said the
people that were enjoying
.
the event was successful and the
reason the student activities fee
themselves in the Rat
.
should majority of
·
the
.
behavior was
-
wa~ raised from $40 to $60 this
suffer because of the misconduct excellent.
.
·
·
year
.
was due to anticipated
·
.
operating
.
costs
_
of the
·
McCanri
Vandals
R
·
c1mpc1nt
:i:::·::::cti:::;..::
p~ting", said Janus. "The
r
e has
.
are
·
being
.
covered entirely
,
by
been over $20,000 worth
>
of new gifts ththe ~~~dege has rec~iveedd
;
:t
By
Edward
P.
DeLuise
To
Mi.
Fred
·
Janus, assistant
carpeting installed on caj_npus,
..
once e ie house
is
open
e
director of
.
inatntenam
~
e,
.
the
arid
.
much of it
.
·•
has
..
·
been costs of heating
.
and maintaining
.
vandalism which occurred in the
destroyed since the opening of itwillbe
'
paidinpartfrom t~tiOJJ.
Rathskellar last Tue~daY.
u;
an
school this semester" .
. ·
.
.
"OVer
·
everyday
.
occurriµice
.
at
·
Marist $4,000 worth of panelling
j
n the
-
College:·
·
·
..
·
- .·
·.
.
elevators had
to
be replaced, and
.
After a social event held in the
much
.
of
.
it
.
has
:
been defaced
.
Rathskellar a ligh~
fixture was
.
already''. Janus
say's
"There
is
._
broken,·
.
paper
.-
.
towel
·
dispenser so much damage;
·
that you can't
rippe<! out of the wall and a public
keep up with it. I wouldn't even
:
· U?lepnone d811laged
;
.
.
·
.
••
·
venture to say
:
what the
·
budget
·
·
Mr.
·
Janus; estimates
.
the for glass damagels in
this
place.
··
dainages of
·
the incident:
.
in the The· colleg~ couldn't affor:d·' to
.
·
Rathskellar to be several hun-
provide
·
a
·
sectir_ity
·
force that
dre
_
ds
.
_
of
·•
dollars, in~luding would be effective in
·
stopping
.
physical damage and "time lost"
this
damage."
·
Janus,.ft8y's
.
that
·-
,
.
by the
:
niaintainance crew
.
Ac-
since the beginning
.
of
the
·
fall
.
cording to
'
Janus
/
~
'this situation semester, ~4 glass
:
light glo~
,.
·
existsinevery donn aUeast once have bee11 replaced
· .
in the
·
aday".Janusrelatedincidentsof
.
Rathskellar
:
and 25
•.
doors have
new doors on campus having to been
hung on campuiat a cost
·
of
:
.
be
replaced due to vandalism, a

appr~~~ly $90 a
·
piece.''
>
,
marble statue of the Virgin Mary;
Janus said, (IThe
.
first night
outside
·
. ttie
·
;
chapel;
:
being
·
tipped
·
that
_
they served ~er
iri
.
the
Ra~~
.
over ai:id broken on two separate
·
a Iarge
.
•number of ceµii:ig
.
tiles·
. occasions;· marble
:
,
-
show;er.
.
were_Ijp~~utinthe~~y;~'.J
·
·
.
dividers in Leo
'
being split due to
·
was
m the Ratat 5:30
-
Iast
:
nigh
.
t;
··
.
Dr. F
·
oy said that he expects the raised through tuition. But he
deficit for the first year of
emphasized that the usefulness of
operation of the complex
·
to be
the facility would outweigh
the
$210,000 but added, "You always money that it lost.
·
have
.
that problem in the
Part of the agreement of the
.
beginning when you start a new McC~n grant stipula~ed that
project of this type/'
.
In order to
Marist let the surrounding
pay off the deficit, approximately community use
.
the
·
fieldhouse.
$55,000
will
come
·
out of tuition.
·
Foy said that it
will
also be used
After the first year of
·
for outside conventions such as
operation, he said the fieldhouse
boat shows aridmeetings.
will still be operating at
a
deficit
-
of
$50,000; and that money
will
be
a
.
·
kick,
·.
and
elevator
·
:
ra.U,ngs
.
_
and it looked ni~e, 1~
.
l~ed µte
11
·
being broken arid iipl)E!d 09:t.
,'.In
,· ·
ca~et." •There
::
was, extensive
the
~
elevators
.
of
.
.
Cbampagnat;
·
damage the week of homecoming
.
they, havej>Ut
cigaretts out
.
and
.
and
:_
before
:
P~e~t•s Weekend,'
!
have even
·
urmated on
;
the car-
add¢d Jan!lS'. ·
'
' .
,
·
,
.,
'
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
."/
·
.
,
..
~t-had
a
visit
from
some
eu-fy
lloUday
weatller
.
lUt
Wecbaelcla;
monbll.
It
eoald
be
a
lip
of
a
tough
winter to come. (Circle Photo
by
Joe GJcllottl)
·
.' ·
· ·
·-
·
·
.
·
'
,•
.
..
.
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.
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.































































I

PAGE2
M'idterm marks low
By
Kevin Stack
Lambert also said that the
standards maybe getting harder,
The average mark of students
but he has no.proof.
has dropped
this
semester, ac-
Gerard
A. Cox,
Associate
Dean
cording to Fred Lambert for Academic Affairs
said
that
assistant Dean of Students.
the grades for commuting
Dean
Louis
C. Zuccarello said
--
students were about stable; but
there was a decrease in the also said that it is hard to get an
number of B's, Bplus,
and
A's average for commuters due to
awarded to students; but was the number
of
part time students.
quick
to
point out that
this
is a
Mr. Lambert -Said- that
-
the
comparison to last year's spring highest floor average for the
final marks.
campus for previous years was
Neither Lambert nor Zuc-
somewhere between a
2.4
and
2.5.
carello know why the lower The highest floor
this
semester
marks were received by the was ninth fllor Champagnat with
resident students.
-
Mr. Lambert a
2.396
followed by sixth floor
said he had a gut feeling that the Champagnat with a
.
2.346
students were studying more
this
followed by
.
sixth floor Leo
·
with
_
semester; but maybe he says it is
2.325.
·
the wrong way of studying.
Flu Shots Queried
By Weotiy Stark
shot is worse than the flu itself."
A
student opposed to
the
.
in•
Skepticism is the primary noculation program said, "I'm
reason why more
than
half of the not getting the shot. In five years
484
faculty, students and staff researchers
will
discover what
-
who signed up have withdrawn
-
the shot really does to you."
from receiving the
-
swine flu
-one student favoring the
vaccine at Marist.
federal program s
·
aid, "I'm
More than half of the faculty, getting the shot. Around Marist
staff and students surveyed by I'm
-
always getting sick."
The Circle said they were afraid
Mrs. O'Connor
is
not getting
to be innoculated. Most people the vaccine, "I've worked here so
didn't
trust the research on the long I've built up an immunity.
vaccine, while others didn't I'm not sure if there'll
be
an
expect the flu to become
-
an epidemic, but-if there is we're in
epidemic. The deaths after the trouble."
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER 17, 1976
Dr. Brothers on love
By
Charles Yates
Although Dr. Joyce Brothers,
psychologist, did not deliver her
previously announced
SJ>eech
on
"Coping With Anxiety"
which
she _
later said she had not
been
in-
formed
of,
her talk
on
"Love"held the audience interest
with love
quiz games, and kept
them laughing at anecdotes.
"It
is
not true that today only
Catholic
priests want to -get
married," she said, for "young
people still believe in the old
fashioned type marriage". Even
though only one in six marriages
succeed, young people are still
willing to take the risk
Dr.
Brothers said.
·
Dr. Joyce Brothers spoke to a
full
·
house of Marist College
_
students and guests last Wed-
nesday in the college theater.
Smiling, Dr. Brothers said she
was sure her audience would not .
be as shocked as other audiences
have been by her saying that
"sex can be enjoyed by people in
their
70s
and
90s,
as long as they
remain
.
relatively
_
free from
hang-ups and have healthy,
· active sex lives while they are
young. This develops ·both a
physical
·
and mental attitude
toward
.
sex
in
later
.
life. Many
older people, she said, stop
sex
because they think they are.
supposed to, or they lose interest.
Another
quiz
told the audience
that opposites
,
do attract, for we
look for difference
in
others.
"Human beings
-
are attracted to
the unusual in the opposite sex,"
so "value the
way
in which you
are different," Dr. Brothers told
the audience, "for it may bring
you love." Animal studies prove
that female
fruit
flies
will
mate
with the rarer variety of male
if
he is introduced into their
.
en-
vironment, said Dr. Brothers.
Also she advised men to look
for father-in-laws instead of-
mother-in-laws to find out what
kind of girl they are
·
marrying,
for fathers have a "huge effect on
the personalities of
their
·
daughters," said Dr. Brothers.
Dr
.
Brothers also
-
gave the
male audience some tips on
"signs"
and
-
"~ignals"
_
used
by
women to proje~t their interest
in
them. Sudden
·
trembling
·
_
_
when
you come into their presence is
a
·
sign of hostility, while a little
hesitancy at a touch froin a
·
male,
or leaving something
,
behind so
they may return, is a signal that
the girlis interested in you, she
told the men in the audience.
_
After her
45
minute speech, Dr.
Brothers answered questions
from the audience for
-
fifteen
minutes on individual problems
and concerns .
.
The eventwas sponsored by the
College Union Board Lecture
Committee and the
_
Alumni
Association.
-
innoculations was a third reason
,
This week, area senior citizens
influencing the withdrawals.
have been given priority to the
,
c
·
, .
,
-
.
N
Cu
·
B V

'
·
.
cotf:;~ !~!nsa~:.c~f~~ : :
:C\1fm!:
0
n:dm1ni~!ri~fg a[:!
arney
·
8W
-
,
.
_
IC8•pres.
research was
-
kind of quick. vaccine can
be
obtained from
the
Sometimes the reaction after the nurse.
.
'
ByReginaClarkln
On Nov. 11 firemen responded
to a false alarm in Leo at 2 a
;
m.
A
suspect has been ap-
The alarm was triggered from
prehended in connection with the the second floor of the building
.
A
Nov.14 false alarm in Leo Hall suspect has not yet' been ap-
according to Beth Sager,
-
prehended Sager said.
·
housemaster of Leo. The alarm
According to Peter Amato,
was triggered from the sixth floor
.
housemaster
·
of Champagnat
of the building. 250 residents were Hall, a fire alarm triggered
by
in the building at the time of the faulty wires was sounded at
2:33
1:30 a
.
m. alarm.
Nov. 14.
1-lllsl9 ....
.
·
,
By
~atby Ryan.
Camey said he wants
to
have at
-
-
-L:;
?&ite
.
C~rney~
.
,
Marist
-
-Go~ege
·
,
~e;~o;~J~e~\n;:~;~1~1=~~~
']unfor
'
"
ha$
~
-;
~~Il_
'.
ap
oin~
tile
_
-
,
putting
posieii in
-
the dorm
·
,
-and
-
'
new
·
vice
pr~ident o? the Marist the distribution
·
or
·
cubicles.
·
·
·
College Union Board (CUB) by . Dowling said the CIRCLE
·
and

John Dowling,
.
CUB President.
_
the:Marist College radio (WM-
Carney, a
_
Business Ad-
CR)
will
be used for publicity of
ministration inajor was the Food CUB events
.
"We want to get the
Committee Chairman in '74 and commuters more -involved
/
in
was a member
·
of the Gaelic campus activities."
Society.
.
·
.
Dowling said he feels
-
the
According to Dowling, Carney reason why many commuters
.
are
will be responsible for ad
-
not involved in campus events
·
is
vertising of CUB activities and because of the lack of advertising
the organization of the Cubic!~.
for
.
them.
·
. .. From ''The Mousetrap''
·
K~vta Stack, Chris
F~e
and
Barbara
~berello
being
Interrogated
by Ed
Ringwood
1n
Agatha
·
·
Chrfstfe's Mo~trap wbfcb opened
lu
_
t
weekend. More pictures and
.
review
on page 5.
.
. .
. _
-
.
-
"
,
·
·
·-
.
.
-
,
-
'
{ClrclePbotoby
_
-!_oeGfgllottl)
,
·,
..






































































NOVEMBER 17, 1976
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
Gym
To
Be---Communications
Center
second floor of the center, would
be used for art classes, the radio
station, a television center, film
. processing, the newspaper and
other college publications.
"It
must be cited that we are
still in the preliminary phase of
discussion, we've only had three
formal meetings with the ar-
chitect," said Lanning.
.
Final plans still have to be
designed and approved. by the
Executive Council and Board of
Trustees of Marist.
"A
very rough cost estimate, at
this
stage, for the renovation of
the structure would be in the area
of
$750,000
and that does not in-
clude the cost of new equip-
ment."
The subject of funding
this
enterprise still has to be resolved
before serious action can be
enacted.
When asked when the structure
could be slated for completion,
Dr. Lanning said,
"It
would be
nice, and is conceivable, to think
about the center being ready for
use by September
1978."
After the James
McCann Recreation Center
is
opened, the old gym
will
be
made into
a
Com-
munications
Center.
.
(Circle-J. Gigliotti)
By·Jeff Benedict
Preliminary plans for the
renovation of the old Marist
College gymnasium into an·
art
and communication center are
now being drawn up, according. to
Dr. Jeptha Lanning, chairman of
the department of English and
Communication
Arts.
The plans, being designed by
school architect Paul Cariin, call
for the renovation of the original
gymstructure·and the addition of
a second floor around the present
court area.
"The court area would be made
into a small theatre seating about
125
people, which could be used
for - films and drama produc-
Uons," said Dr. Lanning.
_ "Around the perimeter of the
theatre would be lounges,
classrooms, art rooms and music
practice rooms, and studios."
The studios, situated on the
Taste
Testers Unite
. By Andrea Anthony .
Profs enjoy
'Guided Design'
By John Gavigan
Dr. Milton Teichman, a
professor of · literature and Dr.
Florence Michels, head of
religious studies at Marist, have
returned from a · -workshop in
"Guided Design" at West
Virginia University, October
13-
15.
The workshop included visits
to classes, which was sponsored
by · the Exxon Educational
· Foundation. They found the
· course to be an "educational
innovation." .
Teichman
comments,
"Students 'm11ke .use of printed
materials that the instructors
prepare in advance and through
discussion in small groups, work
· their way through various steps
. of a given problem, while making
step by step decisions leading to
an ultimate solution".
. There is no formal lecturing at
all. The teacher is simply a
consultant in the cla~sroom.
"Students are helped to solve
problems and make decisions the
way in which a professional in the
field might", says Teichman.
"I've never witnessed anything
like it. Students work harder than
any other course.
If a student
doesn't do well on a test, he can
take it over," says Michels.
Teichman adds,
"I think very
highly of the system. I was
im-
pressed; I saw it opera~mg in the
area of a interdisciplinary
Humanities course. This course
shows how professionals in a
variety of fields gather evidence
and interpret
it."
"You show your knowledge to
your teacher instead of · the
teacher showing
his
knowledge",
replied Michels.
Michels and Teichman have
applied to the Exxon Educational
Foundation for a grant to im-
plement "Guided Design", in a
course of Social Problems which
they hope to teach jointly next
fall.
or new food items'.
If the
suggestions are economically
The Food committee will not fesible, then we'll give t~em a

·
begin. taste testing new food
try;'' said Guido.
Jerome Maryon
comments ...
items for the menu until next _ "Signs will be posted con-
semester. "It's too late to start cerning when new food will' be
this semester, with the holidays
tested," said Dasher. The food
coming up", said Frank Guido, · committee members wiU be
dining services manager.
responsibie for informing the
The shape. of things to -come
· "In this way; we won't have to.· students cif the results.
·
worry about waste on new items
The food committee is com-
-
By
Jerome Maryon
The economy must be restored to
"Not a word was spoken."
thatthe students might not like", ·prised of sixteen students. Four .
.
.
, .
a vigorous state and integrity ..
First of all, there is the
said Jim Dasher, Chairman of students are presently needed to
P1cture.~he s~e11e_. ~ts Januar_y mus~ ~co~e 1!1e by_-word of the
challenge to get the nation
the
food
committee.
. . . · .
. represent nineth floor Cham-
,20_
~n~
tl)e_ Pre~n~elltialparade
is
admunstrat1on
s
actions at home
moving again,
If.
the economy
· : The ·
food coinriif tte·e·'. was .
pagriat; fifth''and-sixth floor t.eo~,;;mn~g
::_~lS,f .~Y.,;;!!1,r2:i1gE-·::~~e. ,,_.,!id:~P:1:.98:d'. .. :.
_','c_ :' ·.:
< -.: ,:, .·. ·: -.:
persi!:.!,s- · in':. . its
, present
-,,
,
._., ... ,,,ctioseifti:(&ffirstto't.aste
tfie'new-· ·and.Bernot'.' Eacfrstiiaent~orf'the': '.·n~t1~11.'~•~l.'lp1~l.
'.fhlS·lS
n~t J~t
Beyo~d the broad g~neralit1~s
.
sluggishness,
we
may very well
food items.· "If left to random ·committee
·
represents . a . floor .
,~nr
pr_esidenttal maug~ation; It of pru:mng t~e. econom1c_pwnp m
expect a tax cut next spring, and
picking of students.each week to from the three dorms,. and one• 1s a triumphal procession of the Am~nca, ~1ding the dJStressed
perhaps even increased govern-
taste test food; it would be unfair representative from each of the· self-styled party of the people. f?re_1gn_ J?Olicy, there are a few
ment spending by the Federal
to one group who got bad servings two houses; Benoit and Gregory.
;The Democrats, are. b~ck and srmilanties betwe~~ the ~enor of
Government. This is a point at
one week, while another group
The food committee meets with~ vengeance. All thm~s are the K~nnedy admmJStration and
which the Carter and Kennedy
got to taste something really every Tuesday at 2:30 in the new possible. . The
candidate, the ~r?babl~ tenor of the Carter
administrations may well fired
good", said.Dasher.
dining room to discuss the menu repr~senta~v~ ?f
3!1
h~retof~re a~101Stration. There are deep
their greatest similarity. Beyond
"We have not planned exactly
and suggest changes to help d~pJSe? mmo~ty,
IS
flush
witp _
differences.
.
.
this they will diverge. Kennedy
whatthe new items tasted
will be.
improve food quality.
The
victory. the_ nation even tho!!g!11t . The easy co~1~enc~ IS gone.
So
eagerly explored new programs
Seafood Newburgh and Stuff meetings are open to all students. be by the _s~mest of ~luralit1es,
IS
the sunplist1c view of the
with the aid· of an infusion of
Peppers has been suggested,"
If
you have any complaints, has put hrm
10
~e White_ House. worl~, and ~f the S\!PP,~sed
academe. Carter will tread
said Dasher.
·
suggestions, or want to know whc
As
the next Pr~s1dent, he JS ready ~encan dommance. of_ 1t~, . The
cautiously among established
"We're
open
for
any your floor representative is, to le~d Amenca t?ward a new trmes they
~r~ a-changm. you programs, with
the aid
of
suggestions concerning the menu
contact Jim Dasher.
frontier. He and his party have could fe~l 1t m the campaign.
technocrats. Innovation has
·
· the dream and the people's Recall,
if
you can, the oh-so-
yielded to reformation .
.-------._,._
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . support; together they have· the muted rhetoric of the Carter
That brings us to the second
V. •

·
power.
.
campaign. Recreate the at-
point: the Carter drive for ef-
·


,
.
_er
rz
VQ O
us.
America has a -call to great-
mosphere offear, of the future, of ficiency.
n
•his performance as
ness; this call could only_ be change, of the Georgian subtley Governoris at all indicative the
S l I
,
heeded. by striving to fulfill a encouraged by the Ford forces.
federal
bureaucracy
in
. . . a .
I
moral role;
The thrill, the challenge just Washington is about to ex-
This moral role is one of social wasn't there. Where was the p_erience its greatest shake-up
concern. While America must color, the fire in the campaign? smce the New Deal. This time,
1~ Academy St.
Entertainment 7 _
_Nights A Week
Wednesday
Nite
Happy Hour
Prices
.
·~onday-$ound- Creation
Tuesday-Buswell
Wednesday-Grounder
Thursday•Zaden·
Friday•,::Mary Lou Arnolds
· Brick
Oven Band
Saturday-Back
Room
Blues Band
su
·
nday-Westwinds
Food Served .
Until ClQsing
No· Cover-No-Minimum
maintain her military strength, Where were the dreams?" however, the aim is not ex-
her- primary goal must be. to care "Where had
all
the flowers
pansion of scope; it is rather a
for her underprivi).eged at home gone?"
reallocation of scope. Jurisdic-
-
and to respond to the needs of the
No, the campaigns of
1960
and tional conflict, duplication of
les~ fortunate. peoples oyerseas. 1976 were not at all alike really.
If
effort and unaccountability
Will
it was at all known that again the probably be worse f~r their · up-
Taking Computer
Science?
Is
APL
A Problem
. Language for you?.
Get in touch with
ED RINGWOOD
452-468'7
· '$3.~0 per hour tutoring
$5.09
per
~()llr
projects
Democratic
ticket
was coming encounter with Carter.
challenging the nation, then it
. must have been known tacitly .
ADULT
BOOKS
for age
21
and over
_Cousi~'s
Book Shop
phone
452-9222
Open 5 days a week,
10-8
· Saturdays
10-6
216
Parker Avenue
Near Andros Diner















































































































PAGE4

THE CIRCLE·
The Maris
!
College CIRCLE
i
s lhe weekly newsp11per Of lhe SIUdenls Of Mar
i
s
!
College and is publ
i
shl!<l throughout the school year exclusive o
.
f vac11!ion per
l
oc:ts
by the Southern Dutchess News Agency, Wappingers. New York
.
Gigi Birdas
Daniel Dromm
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, Patrick Larkin, Kevin Stack, Maurreen
Tully, Wendy Stark, Jim Birdas, Elaine Brusoe
,
Sherry
Smith, Regina Clarkin, Andrienne Howard, Alison Hickey,
Lisa McCue,
-
Cathy Ryan,
·
Wanda
.
Glen, Robert Morley,
Carmen Rivera, Bill McLoughlin, Edward DeLise, David Ng,
Tom Hillan, Andrea Anthony, Phil Colangelo.
Unneeded
Last Tuesday in the Rathskellar there was a socialevent sponsored
by the Marist College Dining Service. Beer, drinks, and hot dogs were
sold at a reduced rate.
.
·
Over 200 people attended, and according to observers they had a
"great time."
·
.
.
·
.
.
Unforyunately, a few people got out of hand and caused some
disturbances and vandalism ... vandalism which resulted in more than
;500
worth
_
of
damage
i

. :-"
'
..
/::
''.
"
\
..
-
:
,\,:
:
.
::
:
::c
;
.f.
<
...
·
:-,:
,
·
We are not sure, at this
·
point whether ornot.the peop1e
:
in~glyed
were Marist students
.
The person or persons involved are immature,
destructive and totally irresponsible
.
They are not adults, and they
.
do
not belong on
a
college campus
. __
_
.
.
.
·
Each member of our college community should feel insulted by this
unnecessary act
.
of vandalism. This is our home for 8 months of the
year. How would we feel
if
someone enter~d our homes and caused
$500
worth of damage? Hopefully the same way we feel when we hear
of an incident such as this.
Although only a few p~i>ple were involved in the actual incident; it is,
unfortunately, a bad reflection on the entire Marist community.
.
The editors of the CIRCLE are making a-plea to the community to
help prevent, in the future any occurances like that which happened
last Tuesday
.
·
Giving Thanks
Thanksgiving is here once again and we may ask
what
do we have to
be
thankful for?
'
·
. ·
The editors feel that we need not itemize all the blessings we, the
Marist community, have received. W.e need only look at all the im-
provements on campus.
·
·
.
·
·
· ·
.
.
.
It
remains
·
a fact,
_
however, that there are many pe(?ple in the nation
and the world who are literany
·
starving
to
dea~ and we
.

what are
we doing to prevent this?
·
·
·
·
.
.
_
. ·
.
:
.
.
·
.
.
This afternoon the Office of
.
Campus Ministry is sponsoring a "F'ast
for World Harvest Qay." We urge ev:eryone
to
participate in these
activities.
If
the skeptical person might
ask,
''What can this do
.
for the
great masses who are starving," we believe it
is
at least one way of
showing how grateful we really
are
because we can eat.
·
·
·
·
.
·
.
.
·
From experience we have learned
.-
that
"it
is
when
"'
you give of
yourself, that you truly give
to
others.'.'
.
.
. ·
.
·.
.
.
THE CIRCLE
NOVEMBER 17, 1976
Stepping down
·
way to go before fulfilling
its
past year, Jerry Kelly and Fred
goals as a representative boc!Y,
Lambert, were invaluable to the
and its dimensions as a social organization's progress. Pertmps
To the Editor:
.
organization have not yet been
·
most importantJy they advised
I would like to thank the completely sketched out, but and did not attempt to direct, a
membership of the Commuter there is much to be optimistic sign of their confidence in the
Union and the college community about.
Executive Board and the Com-
in general for their cooperation
I believe that most of the credit muter Union as a whole
.
during my tenure as president of for the forward motion of the
The Circle has aided a great
the Commuter Union.
By Commuter Union over the past deal by providing coverage of the
cooperation I do not mean con~ year belongs to three people who organization and the college
cession, for I probably owe as served on the Executive Board: community in general.
much to those who have Maria Troiano,
·
first vice
··
There are many
.
other prople
disagreed with me as I do to those president - secretary; Susan Van who have helped the Commuter
who have agreed
.
Parys,. second vice president; Union: students, administrators,
The Commuter Union has come and Susan Gregory, treasurer. faculty. All deserve
-
thanks and I
Th ·
·
b
ht th
am sure that with their support
a long way in the past year.
It
is
.
eir energies
roug . .
e the Commuter Union will con- .
now an organization "to be
_
organization back from virtual
reckoned with," serving in-
extinction.
The
Commuter tinue
.
to grow.
.
·
creasingly as a focal point for Union's work
_
study
.
secretary,
Sincerely_Yours,
s.tudent needs and concerns.
It
is Mary Gannon, has also played an
·
James DeFelice
recognized as co-equal with the active role in the organization's
MaristStudent
Student Government and the vitalization.
_
·
Inter-house Council as
a
student
The advisors to the Commuter
representative body.
It
still has a Union executive board during the
Academic Affairs Committee pears to me however, that it may
Let's find out
has, after many long months of p<>ssibly be
.
caused
,
bY
,
a com-
work,
prepared the

Core bination of inadequatfa reporting
To the Editor:
Proposal
for
Curriculum on the part of the Circle; a lack of
On Tuesday, November 23, Revision·, which is
.
to be communication on the part of the·
there will be a Faculty Plenary presented at the
.
Plenary Session. Stud e n t
Gov
_
er n i n
__
g
Session held at which all mem- The main problem
·
which
__
the
.
Organizations, and
·.·

likewise,
a
bers of
.
the
·
Marisf College

Core proposal is attempting to lack
.
of effort by
·
the Ad-
Faculty will vote either for
.
or overcome, is one thatis plaguing ministration to communicate
against the adoption
..
and
·.
in- many other
colleges
and
·
with the Student Body.
--
stitution of the new proposal for 11niversities nationwide. The
It
is afthis point that.I would ·
curriculum revision.
·
.
.
·
· .
.
. ,
.
.
problem is best illustrated
in
an like to urge
·
the Students
;
.
of the
·
Fqr the pastfew years, Mari~t,
·
article which appeared in
:
an Marist College Commwiity, to
as a result of a lack of unified article
in
the
·
November
10, 1976
_
take the initiative to find out what
direction
.
and structure iri issue of The New York Times. In is going
·
on
.
.
Either by working
·
academics
,
in dormitory living;
-
the article Henry Rosovsky, a throughthe Student Government
in the area of student gover-
·
.
bean at· Harvard University, Structures
;
:
or by contacting the
nance, and in the College as a expresses
his
concern for a Academic Dean's office directly,
_
whole, has
:
been struggling to similar problem to the on~
.
at
I
.
would urge that all students
maintain its reputation of of-
Marist, which is facing his
in- •
reques~ to receive a copy of the
fer,ing a quality educatio~al stitution
.
Dean Rosovsky says,
'
.
'I Core proposal and Jo have the
experience
.
Consequential to t,his
·
was worried that students
.
were opp<>rtunity to have it
·
explained
insti~utio11al
:
lack,of ~ecti.:on; the
.
. _
going through
..
il_E!re
/
}md com,ing
.
to them, po~~bl¥
by
m~s
.
o~
a
·
:M.a~st ~W,dEin1p.ci4Y
-
~~ J<J§l
,
si~hf
:
.
\
qu
.
t
j
w~thout
.
;;
an?
·
comm
·
on
·•
.
Student C~
_
lloq~~ which could
:
of
·
1ts
-.•·
1dent1tr,
-:--::
ei:1ucat1ona1
~·.:'.
structure of education."
.. ·
....
·
,
'.
.
be
_
beld
.
sometunem
the future.
values
;-
'seilse
\
of
-'
challenge
;
?Jld
7"
'.
People a~ Marist have
·
be~n
:
·-
r~ouid
'•
further encourage
_
all
atmosphere
.

of Jivinf
·
and tear-
_
··
working for 3 years in an effort to students,

· •
and
.
student
·
11ing, all of which
.
must be in-
overcome a problem. which some organizations, to support this
tegral parts of any academic other institutions
·
.
are
.
just Core proposal,
·
and
that
they
society.
beginning to realize exists.
It
is emphasize, to the member_s of ~e
Last year the .faculty and ad-
_
the feeling of those who have
·.
Faculty, the need for its
J.!ll·
ministration took a step toward worked on developing
·
the Core
·
plementation. I sincerely wish to
remedyin
·
g this situation, when
.
proposal that it will begmto solve
.
express the importa!lce
.
of

.
they elected to adopt the Master manyoftheproblemswhichexist developing c
·
ommunication
Plan. This Master Plan laid a
.
.
in our present
:
ac
.
ademic struc-
between
.
the Stud~~ts
,
_the
philosophical groundwork, and ture.
.
.
.
..
.
li'aculty, and the Admuustration,
designated specific fundamental
1'4any studerits,
·
here
.
. at the and · · personally urge
·
the
_
se
educational concepts, upon which
·
·
Marist Campus, may be totally varioµs branches of the Manst
the college would begin t<>
~ware of the
-
develop1:11ent_and
·
· .
Commwiity J?Ulke an ~d~ed ~ffo~
restructure itself
.
.
scheduled proposal of this change to
.
expand
lplS
commwiication m
In accordance with the
·
fun-
in
;
the
·
academic structure. This the future.
.
·
·
damental s~ctures set forth.
by
"
:
lack of information may be the
.
Sincerely,
the Master Plan, and in an effort
·
result of a lacking initiative on
-
Jeffrey Blanchard
to assert
,
its direction., the
·
the part of the
.
students.
It
a~
.
'
"The StudentJudicialBoard is
the
·
following
form.
It must be
_.
Offi
.
cial ,Vofice
in
-.
charge of all hearings of a
.
typed,
.
d~ted;
-
signed and
.
judicial
.
nature concerning and
presented
·
to
.
the Student
-
In accordance with established pertaining to students, and may
.
Government
·
.
·
Office.
Fur~
constitutional procedures, the
-
determine the action to be taken.
thermore,
.
}1
·
you
.
have been
President of Student Government The Board may levy fines, and
.
it.
placed on probation and wish to
·
has appointed Mel Crilly, Jerry possesses the
..
authority
·
to
-
appear such
·
a move, your
Maryon and Jack Timµions
to
fill
·
·
suspend or to dismiss a student
.
deposition as
.
a defendant
·
must
the
'
three
.
·
·
vacancies on the
··
from campus residence
·
and from
·
arrive at the Student Govern-
Student Judicial Board. Shawn the college .:."
.
·
ment Office
within
seventy-two
Pine has graciously consented to
·
In brief, said Board .has
,:
hours of your receipt of a typed,
serve as Secretary to the
.
Board. sweeping powers with which 'to
signed letter informing
-
you of the
Therefore, be it
·
known
·
that

·
serve
this
collegiate comm~ity.
disciplinary action.
.
said
-
Judicial
:
Board, as of this
·
The degree of
'
service,-however,
·
In summation, it is the duty of
·
publication, is available to
.
must
-
be determined by-the
m:
each branch and department of
consi<ter all
_
cases that may be
.
dividual members of said Student Government to notify the
brought
.
oefore it.
.
·
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community.
.
.
,
.
.
.
_
.
:
student.body
;
of the services it
. "The
·
Judicial Board shall have
Therefore,
if
you perceive a
offers.
·
It
.
ts
the .. duty of the
jurisdiction
·
over
.
matters con-
leg~timate grievance concernmg
.
students to avail.themselves of
cerning Studen
.
t Governm~n!, yourse~ ~r the commlllli~_ .at
_
t.hose
_
se_rvices. .
.
.
_
_.
such as the removal
of
an officer
.,
large, 1t
)S
your responsibility
·
-
_
,
·
·.
Mel Crilly, Chief Justice
from office, or the determination from
this
day forth to bring
that
_
Jerry Maryon, Associate Justice
of
.
the
.
validity of an election.
grievance before said Board in
·
JackTimmins,AssociateJusti~e
·
Two
Walk
.
-
for ·Hunger
.
.-
.
.
.
.
~
.
B)'
Cynthia
Fair~
.
including Jdain
-
MalL Kennedy Council of Churches.
-
.

.
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.

said about
·
325
.
)eft th~ s ~ g
Kennedy explained, ''T~ey use .
-Two
;.
Mar~st students,
;
J1~
·
~ointonCollege
·
Avenue, !'around
.
the money to buy tools and .
Ken~~
.
dy a~d Dav~ Schools,
-
one o'
.
clock;Jt too!t a
:
few
·
hours,
·.
~upplies to w.ch- poor people
participated m a
10
mile Walk for we got back around
,
five.
n
..
··
·
around the
_
world how
to
grow .
Hunger orgar:uz~d by
the
·
Dut-
-.
~achwalkerhadasponsorwho ·their own food.''
:
.
...
·
.-
.
~
chess Interfaith Council on
Oc-:-
.
pledge<;t, money for each
·.
mile
-
Ple1iges totalled
$600;
however
.
tober
31.
·.
·.•
__
.
·.
,
walked.
:
The
.
money
will
·
go
·
,
to the full'amount received
will
not
Schools, a member of the
_
tr:ack
_
·
:
CROP, the .Community
.
Hunger
.
be known until :November
·
30,
tealll,
ra,n the route,
,
through the
·
Appeal of Church World Service

'
according to Martha Miller ··
J-_.,; _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..;.;. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~~-~
streets
,
of
Poughkeepsie,
anc!_:'
,
Jt is a
-
~visioii:_ of the
:
N~tional
.:
Dutchess Jnterfaith
.
_
Execut(ve:
,
.
.
·

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NOVEMBER 17, 1976
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
Christie's Whodunit Closes
Freshman Barba~a Cherello
and
Sophomore Kent Mcffale
.


.
.
I
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--.:>A.121\ l)i~cou,-.T
_,:
131:Vl:12~61:
!J
_
I ~C.
AL.:BANY POST
,
ROAD
.
.
HYDE
PARK.
N. Y. 12538
·
TELEPHONE
-
1914)
229,9000
.
Gibbons 12 oz. 2-~99
ByDavidNg
The
·
Marist College Theatre
Guild opened its curtains last
weekend on "The Mousetrap" a
'
play by Agatha Christie. The play
is
microscopically set in the
snow-bound Monk.swell Manor
guest house where
·
among the
eight characters, there lurks a
·
homocidal-maniac
.
Through the
course of the play the plot
develops around the long-
forgotten crime of the Longridge
Fann children
.
Now, decades
later, someone is avenging the
atrocities committed against the
young Longridge
·
siblings. One
·
murder
:_
-
has occurred and the
·
promise of another
is
eminent.
The company operated the
mystery drama with all the
sophistication of professional
quality. The Marist community
received the production in good
.
cheer and because of the quality
of the drama and the way
·
in
which it was performed, the play
only highlighted the reputation of
the Guild.
Maureen Crowe, in her por-
trayal of a cynical crass Miss
Casewell, delivered a strong
performance. The British accent
was genuine with no "chip-chip-
chiriro" overtones. Emotion not
only came across in her tone of
voice which was
.
clear and
precise but in her total com-
posure, eyes, face and all, a
showcase of
Ms.
Crowe's talent.
Freshmen Barbara Cherello
gave a fine performance in the
character of Mollie Ralston for
her collegiate debut.
·
She showed
no signs of nervousness but was
composed and delivered her lines
with
stress where there should
have been stress and relaxed
when the script called for it.
The "short-lived" role of Mrs.
Boyle was filled nicely by Regina
Clarkin who gave the character
all the snobbery and arrogance
that a "Mrs. Boyle" would have.
Mr. Paravicini, the foreigner,
the strange traveller who arrives
from no where in an air of
mystery, complete with heavy
accent and goattee beard was
played by Shafig Fathsazam.
Fathsazam appeared the most
comfortable of the cast, the
character was definitely well
portrayed. Fathsazam and
Paravicini are synonomous.
Chris Faille must have reached
deep to bring
,
to life the per-
sonality of Christopher Wren a
cotting unusual young man.
Faille started off ahead of his
pace but as the play progressed,
he settled down
into
his
role.
Ed Ringwood, acting as
Sgt.
Trotter, played a stoic man and
did not until the end tip his hat as
the stalking
·
murderer. The
Trotter character seemed to be
the only cast member with_out an
accent and prevented a broken
record
affect
of
British
monotone.
Kent McHale fulfilled the role
of Mollie's husband, Giles, ef-
ficiently while Keven Stack
rounded out the cast as Major
Metcalf the detective in disguise.
r,~
.
~
-
lirnable$
..
.
..
.,
.
.
.
p,lus
de,po~iit
_
:
,
.
:.~,;
,
:,

:
•_
,
!
:
:
••·
:
·'·
;,,,·::t
:
Cas
·
e
·
ot
.
24
-
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·
:
,
.
,,,.
-
,
,.
,
,,
->
··
·
·
Miller
Cans
..
·
1.39
six pack
good until november 25
·
One
.
_
yood Man
.
becoming a
Christian' Brother
-
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YEAR
CAN
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-
IN
FUTURE
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(THE CHRISTIAN BROTHERS ARE A
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WHO SPECl;-'LIZE
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I
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ROA0
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.
12208
'
.
-
~
Maureen Crowe as MJss Casewell, a guest at Monkswell Manor Guest House and Ed Ringwood as
Det. Trotter, who
is
investigating a murder at Monkswell Manor.
·.
2001 DISCO
.
Si~mons Plaza. New Paltz
Wednesday 2
-
For 1
2
drinks for the price of
1
'till Midnight
Friday College Nite
$1
at door,
2
free drinks
wit~ college I.D. before 11
-
Coming
November 20Crown Heights Affair
·
December 18
Carol Douglas
-
BRING THIS AD FOR
FREE ADMISSION
SATURDAY NIGHTBEFORE ll
vo10 NOV. 20 and DEC. 18
.
.
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j,
PAGE6
THE CIRCLE
Science Jobs Discussed
Scientific minds gathered
_
on Tuesday,
_
giving informaUon
_
to
tnteres~d
-
_
Scie~ce
. _
majors
-
_
during
_.
Science Career Day sponsored
by
the
Office of Career Planning
& Placement.
-
-
-
. __ ,.
.
· _
-
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.-~
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_ _
_
·
_
·
J
C!ircle-Joe ~igliotti) .
·.
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~;
-
,
~
.
By Wanda
Glenn
Approximately
200
students
-
took part in the first
'.
"Science
Career Day" at Marist.
.
Sixteen agencies were present
to offer advice to students con-
cerning job opportunities
in
the
science field.
According
_
to Michael
Dwulit,
student coordinator of the career
day, "We got an
·
excellent tur-
nout," he added, "I heard from
the various representatives that
they were all very impressed
with the students."
,
• John Mason, a 1972 Marist
graduate in chemistry, who
represented IBM said, "This
is
the first time back for me. I got
a
chance to
talk
to students and ex-
professors. "The p
·
eople I've
talked to and their quality has
been
excellent and • very
rewarding."
·
Aside
_
from Marist students;
there were a number of students
from other colleges
-
present.
Dr. Richard
'Straub
from the
N.Y.S.
Agricultural Exp{!riment
-
Station said, ('There was
a
pretty
even balance between two-year
students, Vassar students, Marist
.
students and we even had one
'
person with a Masters degree."
He said,
"I think they got some
insight into what opportunities
there are
for
them."
Students had a chance to deal
with the representatives on a
.
one
,
Regrets
The
CIRCLE
regrets erroneous
·
and misleading wording
in
__
a
story last
_
week on the dea!,h of
a
Queen
-
College student,
"College
Student Killed," page
2.
-
Refrigi;fator.
~

cont.
more energy.·
-
He also
_
contended that the
transportatio~ of
·
· the · larger
.
refrigerators will
_
not
cause
damage
·
t-0
the dorms
if
pushcarts
already owned
by
the school
are
-
lent
to
students.
to orie or
-
~maff g~oup basis.
Cheryl Powell,
a
senior biology
major said,
"It
was very
beneficial.
It
-
gave me the op-
portunity to see what is available
and what
.
direction you can go.
Most people were very helpful;
they supplied
a
lot
-
of in-
formation."
Dr. · Thomas Huggins, from
Central Hudson Gas and Electric
said, referring to the career day,
"I
haven't seen it before. I'm
somewhat shocked. It is a hell
of
a chance for the students/'
·
-
_
.. i~
1
·
;
~
·
,
,
,j
~
-~:·
~
~
-
L~
·::
;~ ..
~
~j
~\:.~~
:
,.
l:i:~~:: ,:~ ;"
~~~
;~
"i.
Many
--
·
of
the
·
representatives
were
-
optimistic
:
about future
·
job
opportunities in the
-
science field.
They stressed
_
experience and
specializations as very important
in getting a
job.
Mr. Frank Gaetani, research
chemist. for Texaco, said; "The
students were articulate, fairly
knowledgeable and could make
significant contributions to many
-endeavors." He added,
"I en-
joyed being here and I hope some
questions I answered
·
were of
value to the students."
SUPER SAVINGS ON ALL
YOUR
LIQUOR
NEEDS.
4
'i1.
COMPARABLE SAVINGS
ON 1
_
12 GALLONS
01ST1l LEO 6
80TTLEO BY LEA0
1r-.
C,
.
.
M.1E~ICA
_
~
_
p
1
s
,
r
.
•~
~
E~~.,.
BLEND .....
-
...
_
GIN80°.' .......
.
399
VODKA 80° ....
'
399
.
GIN 90° ....... .
.
4
59
BOURBON 86° .
499
. 6
year
old
SCOTCH 80~
499
SCOTCH 86°
519
,.
.
.
.
'
.
, •
.
'
'
.
. SAVE
_
ON
,
ALL NAME BRANDS WINES AN_D
qouoR
SA VE!!
Mia
Norma
I.
Cancel
of
the Federal Job laformatfon Center speau
with a student.
If
you -
like
good
_
musi~
friendly-people
and
great
·
·
haircpts
-
then
you
'll like
the
Village:.
:
Cutter
-
-
:r
t
[)":fit~seXHUircutting
·
Salon.
6 LaGrange Ave.
473-3750
160 YEARSLATER
3
Churc.h
St.
New Paltz
255-9925 .
Established In France after the F~;nch Revolution, to me
,
at the
,
,
needs of the times, the Marlst Brothers of the 70's are still In
search of ways
to
help mankind meet the neecJs
_
of today.
,:
From
_
our conception
In
rural France we have moved through the
world Into sixty-seven countries.
From our
-
beginning ministry In elementary education we have
become Involved In high schools, colleges, and even broader
areas of education.
-
.
.
,
·
Fr~m
-
a small
band
of
hi.i~
Brothers
w_;
now number eight
thousand. Today, five hundred Marlst
'
Brothers
·
1n
_
the United
States are servlng_the needs of our society •
There are over one hundred fifty college students on college
campuses
·
across the-country who· are members of our Contact
_
Program, which' allows th~m to. pursue their lntere~t In the
.
Marlst
_
Brothers. Nine college graduates are presently sharing In
our community· and
'
apostolate, This
,
year sixteen men wlll
pro~ess their
_
first-_ vows as Marlst B
_
rothers.
There will always be a need to serve.
·
We are trying t9 meet that need,
_
W~ Invite
you
.
to consider our Ufe.
-
i
·
MARIST_
BROTHERS
-
Contact:
_
,.
Brother_Philip Robert
-
Archbishop Molloy
H.S.
-
83-53 Manton Street
jamaica,N. v .
.-.11435,.
212-441-2
_
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NOVEMBER 17, 1976
THE CIRCLE
PAGE7
Epilogue: The Last Miles -
ranked 29th based on
·
a team The Magnificent Seven were
effort, the same position they disenchanted with themselves
accomplished in 1974.
from NCAA performance, some
"Disappointed, obviously", were
_
severely ill, and it was a
was coach Steven's summation .. long season but they had
to
fit
all
The
·
season
started
with the pieces
back
·
together again
speculation that the harrier crew for one last race.
would break into the top fifteen
Jerry Scholder surprised
team
rankings of NCAA Division everyone, still plagued by his
III colleges .
.
Upon arrival, cold but now in war:.mer climate
knowing that his
.
top runners crossed the finish line for a
were
below par and seeing the bronze medal in seventh place
conditions that fate had set, also thus also making the IC4A All-
missing Dennis O'Doherty, an Conference honors and setting a
ace freshman athlete, a berth in school record for the Vanny real·
the top twenty-five area seemed estate.
more realistic. "At the mile
Fed Kolthay also benefitted by
mark,Tkn~w we were in trouble, the change in weather, hitting a
.
Jerry wasm 50th place," recalls personal best time for the Vanny
the Red Fox's coach. After 5.0 mile route at 26:15.
McCutcheon came across the _ Brian Costine muster whatever
line, a fallen coach "didn't even was left from the five day road
·think
~e had 2~h".as_a team..
trip to put together a 27:01 per-
Despite the mcµnuat~ settmg, formance, like Kolthay this was
Stevens does not
.
feel 1t was a this last official cross-country
major factor in the team's per-
meet.
Jerry Scholder
crossing
the ftnlsb line ID
90til
place at the NCAA formance, "everyone had to
Predictions before the race had
championships
at Cleveland.' (Pboto
courtesy
of Poughkeepsie
.
combat the weather."
a feverish Bob Coufal either the
Journal).
·
'!be NCAA Division III Cross-
seventh man for Marist or
,
country
Champions~ips, . a dropping out the race totally. At
By David Ng
90th w:hen the clock hadticked
off
contest of the utmost mtens1ty, the finish a coughing Coufal came
On November 10th, head
coach
26: 30;
glowing dreams of iwhere although seven seconds across as the
.
fourth team man
Rich Stevens and
the
top seven becoming an ~-Americl;Ui were
separated Steve Deleskieiweicz with a trernedous effort at 27:17.
runners of the Running Red now
forst-bitten
disap-
8:nd To~ Gilligan there was _a
Toni Gilligan locked
the
Red
Foxes embarked on a nine-hour pointrnents.
field of twenty-seven run
_
ners m Fox . scoring at 27:24 when he
.
drive to Cleveland, Ohio to match
Brian Costine, senior co-
between the two,
·
that a meet of concluded his season.
themselves
against
other captain, came in at 26:48 but was
this
rnagntiude could be poorly
Steve Deleskieweicz (27:30)
colleges across the nation in the
'
fifty-five runners behind of
o!g_an~ed: Both the starting .and and George Mccutcheon (28:03)
NCAA Division III Cross-couritry Scholder
in
145th as he
·
was
·
Ju~1shmg of the race
.
were had the responsibilities of
Championships.
·
Marist's second scorer.
~ishandle~; the gun put µte race displacing other opponents.
·
By Sunday evening, when the
Steve
.
Deleskiewicz,
. .
an
.
mto motion
.
actually three
Marist finished in overall team
Marist community sat down for alternate nam-ed to· the Marist
minutes
.
ahead of the schedule standings at 13th in a field of 42
dinner, avid sports fan were
·
NCAA team on the
'
eve of th~
which did not allow enough tiine teams.
questioning each other:
.
How did departure was now the third
for some competitors to remove
To coach Stevens it seemed the
the team do? When rumor soon team man and clicked off
a
time
.
their warm-up suits and at finish seven put in
a
little extra effort on
leaked in that Jerry
·
Scholder of 27:12.
.
exhausted and frozen athletes this particular Monday; he cites
came in first for the Red Machine
Just a notch of the clock later;
'!a!t up_ to fifthteen rn~utes
~
~e the possibility that the team was
at 90th
.
position, an awe of
.
Bob Coufal crossed the finish line
f1msh-line chutes. while off1c1al making
.
it up for Saturday
in
disbelief set in.
,
.
·
with a 27:13 performance. Coufal
scrambled about m bedl~.
Cleveland, "I think they gave to
This is
.
the prologue to the was stricken by
a
'
throat in-
The team started the Journey
the lirnit...(the team) have a lot
epilogue.
·
flamrnation
which

caused back, not to Marist but
to
Van
to
be
proud of as far as effort and
On November 13th, the day of respiratory problems.
. . .
.
Cortland Park, New York City for
_
time."
-
This is the epilogue.
The season is over, track flats
· are now shelved, article!! are
·
scrap - booked, coach's data
sheets are junked, and what
remains are the memories.
On paper to the average
reader, the Running Red Fox had
close to the same win-loss record,
a dip in the NCAA's, a repeat in
the Upstate Champs and the
CACC's, but not really.
It
is not
because the team
is
not im-
proving, it has, but the schedule
is tougher and the opponents are
on a higher grade such as the
University of Lowell whom' the
Red Machine beat on October
16th, that same team placed
eighth
.
in Cleveland contest.
Cross-country
is
still the only
Marist sport conceived on a
national level.
Talent, times, and per-
formances are factors in what
makes simple act of running a
sport but more import_antly it is
from w:here those things stern
from, that make cross-country
worthwhile, the people.
From a coach's

viewpoint it is
called "attitude and youth", for a
coach its having expected per-
formers like Scholder or Kolthay
and the surprises of the season
like Gilligan, or Deleskieweicz.
Coach Rich Stevens terms it "no
major problems of discipline, the
team was sensible. A coach hopes
for next year, that everyone
will
improve and that there are more
surprises.
From a runners viewpoint its
something they don't have
a
name for except they know it was
hard work and fun but its ''the
guys", people like Jerry or Fred,
. Torn or Steve.
If
it wasn't for the
"guys" the whole three months
isn't worth all practices, races,
and road trips,
.
or the pain,
frustration, and defeats .
.
. reckoning
.
..,was ~disillusioned
-
,by.
;. .
'.
.
A-
-
beardless: $red:.Kolthay
;
the
.
IC4A - Championships,

-
a
·
two
inches
·
of snow<and twenty-
.
cleaned-up the· Marist scoring match of eastern seacoast cross-
degree weather. Thirty-eight when he came in at 27:17, also a
.
country powerhouses: Although
schools which totaled 341 college victim of illness, Kolthay's the seven athletes, Scholders,
runners
.
crammed
.
into
,
'
a bronchitis
troubles
.
were Costine, Deleskieweicz, Coufal,
Cleveland golf course for the maginfied by the Cleveland
·
cold.
Kolthay, Gilligan; arid Mc-
Cagemen
Set
,
NCAA contest.
A
starters pistol All-American hopes for this
.
Cutcheon did not pack medals or
cracked through sharp cold and a senior were also gone.
All-American honors into
.
their
stampede of long distance run-
Torn Gilligan (27: 19) and suitcases for the return trip; they
ners pounded out a wicked start. George Mccutcheon carried out were not about to lose com-
.
Jerry Scholder, fatigued ~th a the displacirig duties of the team. pos
_
ur~,.
.
-
By TOM MC TERNAN
what team we're playing. He can
be expected
.
to choose among
"We'll have a difficult time in
juniors John McKee and Damian
the beginning but as the season
Farley and freshmen Mike
progresses, things
_
will improve Sheldon and John Cogswell.
as we see who'll play the most."
McKee, at
6-4,
averaged 3.6
col<! since Monday, did
lf.mish
-
The red and whjte of Marist
There was nothing to be said,
the IC4A champs was the last
coach
1
s corner
race of the season for the team.
With those words head coach
points and 2
.
5 rebounds last year
Ron Petro put the upcoming 22
while the 6-1 Farley chipped in
game 1976-77 basketball season in
with 2.3 points. Other candidates
_
Van Wagner
.
appointed swim coach
_
perspective as he prepares a
are senior
.
Walt Janeczek
.
(4.3)
team with just four returning and junior Walt Brickowski (1.9),
lettermen but plenty of depth for
both returnees, sophomores Gary
their season opener at Iona on
Deisel a11d John Vasquez from
.
ByTOMMCTERNAN
Van
Wagner
supervised ming team for four years before Nov. 27. The Red Foxes hope to the J.V., and
6-5
freshman Jack
operations of the college
1
s out-
becoming a graduate coaching improve
_
on last year's 15-10
McHare.
door pool this summer and will assistant. He captained the
team
record.
With letterman Glynn Berry
assume further duties
·
upon the during a senior year in which he
Petro, entering his eleventh· (academic reasons) and John
opening of the new pool facility in
received NCAA Division JI All-
·.
year as head coach, with a 146-110
Moro, a transfer from West
the Mccann Recreation Center American and All-New England career record, realizes that many Point, ineligible to play this
early next. year. Along with honors._ Orie of the
·
better people are already looking for-
semester, the Red Foxes will
coaching the swimming club he swimming schools
.
in the East, ward to next year when the Red
have to open the season with
recently started, Van Wagner Springfield. was coached
.
by Foxes
will
begin p.taying in the three small, although quick
will be responsible for organizing former U.S. Olympic coach McCann Recreation Center. "A guards.
and supervising all aquatic Charles Silvia.
lot is being geared to the future.
Sophomores Dave Wasilenko
programs
at
Martst: .
·
Silvia pioneered a philosophy of We had a good recruiting year and Ken Grimes both starred '.>n
A resident of Hyde Park who the mechanics of the sport that andalrnosteveryonereturnsnext last year's J.V. team, while
·
attended
·
F .D.R. High School, Van Wagner intends to employ in year. But we're not discounting
junior Oliver Jones is a transfer
Van Wagner expressed-delight in his teaching.here. According to this
·
year by any means; we like from Post Junior College
:
Jones
his
latest appointment. "I wanted Van Wagner, there are two such the team to progress and lead the
·
and Wasilenko are both good
to stay in the area and was hoping general philosophies and that program into the new gym."
shooters and Grimes is starting
.
to obtain a teaching or coaching b<,>th have produced Olympic
While the team's overall depth
to return to last year's from (22.4
positi
,
on at
·
the college level
.
.,
swimmers. But Van Wagner feels may force changes in the starting ppg. on JV). following an
Upon
· graduation
from that the Silvia philosophy
is
lineup from game to gmµe, the
operation.
Springfield College (Mass.) in based, to a greater extent on lack of experience has; made
The Red Foxes have always
1975 with his B.S. and M.P.E. in scientific principles.
.
defense the team's major played Iona close, with Iona
physical education, Van
-
Wagner
"I want people
to
learn not only weakness.
winning 77-74 at Dutchess last
had accepted an appointment
as
howto swim but why they
swim
In
·
any event, the key to the year. But Petro feels
_
that this
Associate Physical Director of as they do and the reason for seas~>n could rest with
6-6 junior year's game may be more dif-
·
Larry Van Wagner, the new the Tablto County (Md.) YMCA. different motions," he said.
Neil Lajeunesse, who averaged ficult. "They are supposed to
aquatics director at Marist, Butassoonasheheardaboutthe
Althoughthenewfacilitylsstill 7.7 points and 5.6 rebounds per start two
6-3
guards. Although
believes that swimming should opening at Marist, Van Wagner some months from its opening game before leaving for personal they are only freshmen, we still
be a part of every person"s immediately contacted
.
then date, Van
.
Wagner is busy reasons midway through last have to contain them." The Gaels
educational experience:
.
.
Athletic

Director
Howard planning.a.program that will run season. Lajeunesse is being are led by senior Kevin Bass,
·
"There
has
been an increase in Goldman.
up to 16 hours a day. Initially, the counted on by Petro to
_
provide their all-time leading scorer.
the ways that people conie in
·
"I just happened to be
in the program
will
consist of two in-
much help in both scoring-and
Back to assist Petro on the
·
contact
.
with water . through right place at the right time," he structional courses,
-
recreational rebounding.
·
coaching lines Frank Davis and
recreation,
·
competition, in- pointed out. "I like being at a swimnµng and
-
the swim dub.
"Neil gives us the size up front Ron Hildreth. Hildreth
will
also
struction and jobs," Van Wagner small
.
school. and here I can "The
swim
club
will
compete in that we really need," said Petro. coach the J.V. squad that begins
asserts
~
14Tlils
increase in aquatic contribute to the expanding MU-affiliated events until we "He has looked very strong in their ·season as a preliminary
to
activity makes
it
necessary
_
for
·
physical
. ·
education
.
en-
become establish~ as a
.
varsity scrimmages both
i,n
scoring and the varsity home opener with
people• 'to learn. certain
"
basic vironm8!'t."
: .
·
.
.
.
.
t~,''
he
_
noted.
·
,
·

.
·
passing off."
· .
.
·
·
'Kings
at Dutchess on Tuesday,
survival techniques such
,
as
·
AtSpnngfield Van.Wagner was ·
·
Van Wagner
will
also coach the
.
·
As
for the forward spots, Petro Nov. 30.
propelling and floatjilg."
-
,
-
a member of
.
the varsity swim-
..
Marist
·
golf
team
-
in
the
·
spring.
,
notes;
-
"Who plays
will
depend on
'
. :
.

'.
'.;~.; !.
• ~,. •

'
























































PAGES
THE CIRCLE
.
-
-
John McGra~ (dark uniform) deflect
Upsala pass
fn ECAC championship
game at
Leonidoff
Field
Sunday. (Photo. co~esy of Poughkeepsie Journal)
..
ECAC ,Tourn_ey Marist--Ca_ptur~s-
NOVEMBER 17, 1976
High on Sports
. MARIST PLACF.S SIX ON CACC SOCCER TEAM
The disappointment of failing to repeat as CACC soccer champions
was somewhat lessened when Marist had six players selected to the
AU-CACC
last
Wednesday. Nyack, the new champions, had just four
players named to the
team.
·
·
Representing Marist are Firmino and 1.enone Naitza and seniors
Jim Titone, John McGraw and Jay Metzger. The Naitzas and Metzger
. were also named to the
team
last year.
. ·
1.enone
was
the top vote-getter
in
the balloting
of
conference
coaches, as he led the conference in scoring with
11
goaJs and
3
assists
for 14 points. "1.enone's just a super soccer player," said coach
Howard Goldman. "He should also
be
selected to the All-state team
. later on since he was ~ong the top
ltwo
or three scorers
in
the state."
·
- His
brother, Firmino, was hampered by a broken
arm
which
decreased his effectiveness from last year, when he was the CACC's
leading scorer. But Goldman noted; "He worked very hard and made.
things happen with
his
smart plays from the outside."
: Another hard worker was McGraw, who earned selection to the All-
CACC
team
two years ago as a scorer.
This
year, the .I.evittown native
. scored just one goal.but Goldman explained, "More important
than
any goals was that he did the job of controlling the midfield and setting
up our offense from the middle.''

..
Titone. was described by Goldman
as
a "steady and ·Jl~~ble
player,w ho : · controlled our backfield for the last three years." The co-c ·-
c~p~in also scored his first goal of his varsity career
this
season on a
penalty kick against Pace. . · ·
-
· -
.•
-

· -
-
By TOM MC TERN.AN
"The greatest goalie ever at Marist" is the label Goldman pins on
Metzger, who recorded two shutouts and a 0.67 goalssagainstaverage
in the CACC. The native of Orchard Park also was a co-captain and
was noted for his leadership qualities in the defensive backfield. ·
John McGraw had given Marist·a on
to
win their first socc~r ·
Marist finished 5-1
in
the CACC, losing their chance to repeat,as
1-0 lead_with 24:25 to go by taking tourna_!IlE:nt ever.
_
.
conference champions as a result of a 1-0 setback by Nyack.
It
-r-¾S
a weekend-that will be a bouncmg pass from 1.enone and .
Reflecting back on his most METZGER NAMED ATIIl.,ETE OF WEEK
remembered as long as soccer. is conn
.
ecting orihis first goalof the---·successfulcampaigri in fourteen;_ · Jay Metzger, a· senior from Orchard Park, N.Y., has been-named
played at Marist. The-Red Foxes, year:·
.
.
. years at: Marist, a season that Manst College Athlete of the Week for tlie week ending Novemberi3.
concluding · the most successful
- When the ·game was resumed· included his -tooth coaching
win,. .
Metzger, a goalie arid co-captain of the Marist soccer teain "turned
season in: their ~14-year history, Saturday, .Trenton took a 2~11ead Goldman . said ·• he was most in two outstanding performances last weekend . to enable the Red
emerged with_ two dramatic at 7:36 of ~e f~st overtimes on a
.
satisfied with the way his team Foxes to capture the ECAC regional championship with
wins
over
victories to capture the cham... goal by Tom FISher, who made-a . came back in crucial gam,es, Trenton State and Ppsala.
.
_
pion ship
of _ · the
· ECAC good
.
move in close and beat adding, . -"They
·
developed · con-
INTRAMURAL ROUNDUP
·
Metropolitan Regional - tour.-
Metzger to his left. But Marist
_
fidence in th_emselves and ·each
Champipnships were decided in soccer and three-man basketball
nament held at
,
.I.eoriidoff Field. came back just 84 sec~nd~ la~r o~E:r/ becai:ne awai:e
of. -
their last week. "Leo's Lions". nippea "~. Peter's and Company" 1-0
in
a
Marist edged Trenton State
3-2
to J?ull even on a goal by finn!Do abili~y and didn't pamc.- Because P!ayoff gall?-e for th~ soccer championship; Charles Rao captained the
in the longest soccer game every Naitza that w~s set u_p by a· pass of this. they were ab!e to adjust ~o victors, which also mcluded · Joe Passaretti, . Peter DiStefario, Ralph
played by Marist when · 1.enone ~rom_ Zenone m the nght c~rner.
,
the _
.. different·· · styles of all. our · Capone,, J?ave Powers, :Peter Engels, Joe· Hekl, · John Shannon, -Mike
Naitza scored on a penalty kick
in · .
Neithert~am coul~ score m the op_ponents." The result of which ~nza, Rick Heater, Pete Rickard, Mike Cjalatta,' Rick Szafran and
the third sudden death overtime. next-.. overtune penod and two was a 14-1-1 record marred only BiU·-Ba~es.
.
~
·

·
Marist th~n nipped Upsala 2-1 on sudden .death· periods were · by a 3-3 tie at Siena and

1-0 loss . The "Leaping Gabusellas'' took. the title in three-man basketball -
Scott Carter's second half goal in 'completed . before Marist was at Nyack that prevented- the Red havin~ won theircfinal game by a forfeit. Members of the team wer~
Sunday's _ champio~hip . game. a warded ·a. penatly
·
kick. as Foxes -from· gaining 'the _ CACC captam Patlntintoli, Jim SteUa, Ron Glacklin and Andre Green.--rn
Marist had to come from behind Trenton goalie Chris . Meagler
"
. title for the second straight year. second· place,· there ··was
a
three-way tie· among ''Holy· Erasmus•'.'
in both games. ·
. .
·
interferedwithDanWal~elywllile
·
. · Goldman had praise for' his "Moro's Jocks,':·and "~ajor Stivic.''-.
~
."This tournaill.ent -showed the_
.
. atteillpting to stop his brea~away b_ench. :as; 2~ell ·' ~s •
Jlis'
Illi>re~
, Five-man basketball. opened Monday night. with two games.
·The
rating. comn:littee~, the <Mar!,st attei:p.pt · in the i>e,nalty;, ai;e~. , herald~d ·
l!~rters:' ;
'-'W.
e: didn't ~\~~etsl~ r<?tp.ped ov:erf 'Join_tEffect" 58-34 behind
the
scoring of Greg
. students and the local commwnty - _wak~ly suffered a broken leg
i¼S
a weaken, __ ,ourselves· by··.·. s_ub~ ~iles (1~ pomts)
anq
John McGraw (10). Terry Marbley hitfor l!i and
that we play pretty good soccer result -of the collisi9n~
• . · ·
sti~utitig: All of
_
those guys on the Rpd ~n.uth added 14 as the "No-Mads" held oft-tne._"Rednecks" 48-41
in
here,., noted coach Howard
·Goldman chose Zenonefor the bench would havejitartedfor us - therutecap. - _. .
·
-
.· _- . .
.·· -.
_
.
-
"Doc'' Goldman. ''Ualso-gives pena1ty ·shoL •"He __ w~s still four or five_years ago.
As
far as-
_
All students, faculty and staff {excluding members of the cross-
our players the feelirig that at our - hurting'
from
the RPI game and I'm concerned, they were all country team) are · urged to sign up by tomorrow in Fontaine Room
level, they can step on the field had missed three days of practice most v~lluable olavers."
·
31_9 to enter the annual Tur~ey Trot.
The
race will be held on Monday
against anyone."
. _
last week but I had no doubt he
Loo~_g to next year, the Red ~tl!allconte~tantstomeetmfrontofthegymat3:30p.m. Thecourse·-
'.They ha_d to step on the field would make it.'' And after 131 FoxEl;S biggest loss appears to be
~
f?e
1~ miles_formen and one mile for women. Winners in each
twice to beat Trenton. The game minutes it was all over. The final, goalie _Jay
Metzger, . w~o divISion will receive a turkey and an intramural T-shirt.
_ was begun on Friday and was how:ever was still. to come.
recorded 7 shut~uts to go with his NOTES FR~M
_
THE SPORTS ~E_SK:_
tied
1-1 at the end of regulation
Upsala .. had look~d unim-
0.7_9_ goals - agamst average. But
The-41 pomts_ scored
~Y
the .Vikings Saturday were: the most they
time
-
when
the
referees pressive in its 2-0 semifinal
win
Goldman notes that freshmen })ave scored_. smce rolling up 54 against Siena in 1973 ... That
suspended the game on account over Stonybi:'ook Friday but it Rich Heffe,rnan andRich Friend chee~le~der m the sheet w~s Firmino
~ Niftxa, who had just finished
of darkness.
.
·
seemed like a completely·
dif-
are both good prospects ~nd are playmg m the marathon with Trenton State. Who said the soccer and
The two teams returned ferent te~m out there Sunday. capable of doing the job next fall. football teams don't get ~ong? ....
Saturday morning and fought Upsala, ·seeded second in the - The ot~er . two captains, -
.As a re~ult of complamts receive~ after :M:onday's opening in-
through two fifteen minutes tourney, controlled most· of the , fullback Jim Titone and Ke~in . tramural five-man basketball games, mtr~ural director Eileen Witt
, overtimes. and ten minutes·. of first. half and took. a 1-0 lead on. a McGhee alsograudate along With has anno1:1t1ce~ that ~wo re!erees will be provided for future games and
sudden death before ·zenone goal by Henry Tamayo ju.st ten midfielder
John . McGraw. thatplaymg tune will be mcreased from 15 to 20 minutes a half. The
scored his 25th goal of the season minutes after· the game got un-· Goldman may find these players reason why only one referee had been assigne~, according to Witt, was
atthe31-secondmarkofthethird derway.
tougher to replace, due to the duetolackofmo_neytopaytherefs.:.
. . - _
-
--
suddendeath period.
. .-
"We were emotionally drained exp.e~ence necessary ·for those
AFoosQall tournament was held
1:ll
the Rat ~unday nig_ht for Dan
· ·"It
was a very even game from the Trentongame,"_noted positions.-
.
.- . . . Wakely,;w~osuffer~dabr~kE:nlegmSa!urdaysgamewith'fl:enton
throughout," said Goldman. "But _Goldman. "Our defense was very
_But the ~ntir
_
e. offensiye \1;llit ~ate.Ii:t smg}es, Vito AI?ngliano defeated
~0¥
Vandervoort m the
the .referees lost control- in the poor in the first_~ minuJes but . will re~, mcluding the '_Italian fn:ials. Jim leig~ and IA:vm Bolder upset ~pngliano and Gus Beltra to
second half Friday and aw · -ded Jay Metzger played an out-
Connection". ofZenone _Naitza (25 wm the doubles title. _Prizes were $10 for f1rst and a case of beer for the
them a penalty shotfor no, ason sta~ding go~ ~roughout.'_'
goa~; .8 ass1Sts, 33 pomts~, V_1to runnerup.
·

-
at all.''·_
_
.
· ·
Vito Apr1gllano sc~red an - Apngliano (11-4-15) ai:id Finnmo TlllS~EKINMARISTSPORTS (N~v._18-D~c.1):
That call enabled Mike -Lyons . unassisted goal lit the 16:04 mark (7411) that accounted for 43 of
Sattii:qay, Novem~r 20 - Crew: Philadelphia Fr_ostbite; - Sailing:
to tie the game for. Tr~nton. with. to tie the game before Carter won . the team's 60 goals; .
Southampton Frostbite .
. .
.
17:17
-
remaining in regulation .-it by conve~g the reb~und of a
So ·don't· be surprised to find
Sunday, November 21 - ~iling: Southampton Frostb~te
·
·.
time.Lyonsunleasheda·low·shot Firmino Na1tza shot with 10:48 yourselfaspartofanSROsoccer
.Sa.~rday, Noyember 27 -_Basketball: at Iona; varsity- 8-p.m.,
to the right' corner that Red Fox - remaining·in the game.
crowd ·ne~ fall.
It
may be the women - 6 p.m.
.
.
_
goalie Jay Metzger got a piece.off _ Metzger, who finishep with 18 .best show m town.·
Tu~day, November 30 - Basketball:_ Kings - at DCC Falcon Hall;
bufcouldn't stop.· . - .'.
.
. /sa\7~,mad~seve1c1.lgood,topsin
varsity- 8 p.m:, _J.V. - 6 p.m.
_
. - ·
·
After. a scoreless first half, the fmal minutes as Manst held
-----V-i~_ings
Trounce
Siena, 41~1·5
~y TOM MCTERNAN
,
"They threw a lot of short reach the end zone, scoring from yard, 16-play drive that ended
.
-
passes," noted. -Levine, ·ex-. the nine. JohnCovell'sPATmade- with Cosmino Crupi scoring on a
The Marist Vikings closed out plaining.the yardage differential. it 7-0 after 3:58had 4!llasped in the three yard. run. Crupi followed
their 1976 campaign on ari upbeat "Our triple· option ~ea_lly worked game. _ ·
_
. with the extra point to narrow it
no~ _with a resounding 41-15 well for us. _I'm just glad ~e
A
25-yard punt return by to 14-7.
victory • over_ Siena· at Leoni.doff ended the sea~on on,. the· winning W~rren Hocholowski at the end of
But Marist stnick again with a
Field Saturday. -The
win
enabled . -side." ..... -
. . . : ·-
·
, ._ , . •·
. the.quarter set up
"!e
next_Marist tion, -highlighted by Laffin's 26
Marist to finish 4-4-1 and avert __ Manst took the lead on its f1rst touchdown at the Siena 31.Three yard run to the Siena 5; On the
their first ·losing . season since posses,sion. ·After the Viking plays into the second _ quarter, next play Nick Mancuso took it in
1968,-
. . _ . -
> , ·
.
.
- _
d~ense · stop~
.
Siena. on. thr~e quarterback
Phil- polange~o-
and; alth,ough Covell missed the·
, Rick DeVoe r~ for two touc~ _ d_owns,anindian snap bounced
in,_
~pped,the 54-yard drive with a
point ·after, ·Maris_t; had a 20-7
dow~, in .. the :second __ ~
·
as ·. fi'c>~t- of ,p1111ter
:}4ike,
.Ehlers,
.
,
su:-yardrun.
It
was his eighth TD, halftiriie lead.
.
yards to make it 26-7. DeVoe's
second score came . early in • tlie
final· _period when he headed
around. right ~tackle and found
· daylight
fol'.
a 52-yard sprint. . ·
·After Cov_ell's. kick incre~ed
the bulge to .33-7 the substitul'es
took over and reserve
QB
Stan
Kieltylea -took advantage
of
the
extr~ playing .•. time to complete
his first pass of the season, a 25
yard scoring strike -• to
Frank
Rizzo;:
-
Manst __ to~led 167
yards
,on . the_- 60-yard ~ch on: th~
.
triple .o~ -:., ot, .. the season and
.
. Covell :'added
.After
receiving the second
half
ground. -Siena did outgain Marist_
.
_
giving_.!t~aristcoqtrol at t~e Siena. the.
~8:
point for aJ4-0 _Marist -
kickoff,
the-Vikings
put the game
o v ~
.. 237-"34-holVever, as In-
24~.-'.. -:.
c -:
.
..
_ .· ··.·-·
lead,:-
: , __ .
..· .· ...
_.
...
. . away with a-70-yard drive that
.
· ·
Next
issue:-.I.evine reyi~ws the
. dian_;q~rback-~Tom,-Lamb· :

.MikeLaffin,wholedtheMarist .>Siena ·finaUy.•got
,
on the; saw DeVoe score.hisfirst TD
season;-
·
: raid~
the
aidorl6ly~ds})~ _15 "'. ·
grourid
attack
wi~ 86
yards
on 14 _ scoreboani J>n
their.
¥}e~t,_:series . after takint·,-a·: pitchout _
from
· for
~
35
passing. - _
_
carries, n~ed Just~ tri~
to
~
~
~bs
passing ·on a- 74-
:
Colangelo an~ -running·. eight
' . '
,,,
'
....
' . '
.
.
'
.
.
'
/


18.8.1
18.8.2
18.8.3
18.8.4
18.8.5
18.8.6
18.8.7
18.8.8