The Circle, February 14, 1975.pdf
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 14 No. 2 - February 14, 1975
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1HE
Volume 14, Number 2
MARIST CO~LEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
February 14, 1975
Dean Wade and Richard
McCarty at the
Free
·
University discussion.
Serles Discusses
-
Mari
·
s
-
t Survival
by
Julie Schott
schools use .
.
Dean Wade also assuredly
.. Will
Marist Survive" was the
stated that Marist will continue to
topic discussed
-
Monday night by
exist, because
'
'there is no
_
students, faculty
.
and
-
a!l-
problem
•
in getting students to
ministrators in the first of this
Marist.
-
In
fact, lVIarist has been
·
·
semesters Free University
one of the leaders in aggressive
Dialogue Series.
recruiting."
__
P
r
inciple speakers at the
Another point that was brought
-:- gatheri!}g included
·
President
ouf; w~s that Marist's geographic
Linus Foy, Frederick Lambert,
location was very good, that this
director
.
of campus life Richard
is
a growing area and that the
McCarty,
'
assistant
.
professor of seven colleges in
·
the area
.
are
Business and
.
.Dean Thomas
distinctly different from one
Wade. Other faculty and staff another.
members who attended the
There was mention of Marist
dialogue
.
were
·
Xavier
.
Ryan
,
•
.
possibly becoming a law school in
Janet ~chilling er and Father
I
.eo
.
·
"
the future, which would
·
be ideal
·
Gallant.
.
. . . .
for the location, beingthat there
_
The.~iscussion began with Mr.
··
are
no
1a
·
w schools between New
Deepi.te
'
Fin8ncial
·
Strain
·.:7.- .•
-
-
McCarty stating
.
emph~!!cally
York and Albany. There was also .
that
·
there
..
will
pe
··
a Madst
. .
the
.
mention of expanding the
College in.1980. He exrlaiiled
·
that
;
.
.
J)sycholOg
·
y
department
.
\
.
last ye_ar the schoo! was a victim
·
_
Fred Lamberfled the dialogue
l'
Foy
Quite ''OptiDlistic"
·
of change,
.
and
.
1t
·
.
,
becam~ a
.
_
m the direction of other attributes
1'
'
question of wlfo
.
w
·
ould make
.
·
of the--college
.
Some that were
1
'
sacrjfices in the
--
face of these
.
mentioned ~ere successful
I
i
.
changes. McCarty
,
said thatthe
---
recruitment
,-
the aniouut of
_
::
real concern today \Vas .with the
.
financial
.
aid available tal~nt
of
<
state of the fut~re Marist,
:
and his
t
he
·
faculty
. (
Dean Wade
.
brought
_
.
I
-
(REPRINTED
.•
-
BY
·
·
.
.
PER-
.
students and Marist. employees, prepare them for
-
future careers. hopes are that 1t wont become a
.
out
.
the
.
fact
-
that there aren
'
t
.
!
MISSION OF
POUGHKEEPSIE
·
-
will
.
open
.
·
with the
·
spring
Off
·
-
•
campus Jnterm,hips
-
a.re
:
·
m~ t~o colleg~;
:
me<;1ning,
_
an
:
inany scJ1ools that
h::tn
.
Ph
;
D, 's
l
'
JQURNAL)
·
· ;,
.
s~i;n.1:ster. )J.nli~e
-
i:i
.
babysitting offered
-.
!11
.
communicatioll arts; mstit4t1on off(!r1~g
-
bas1caHy t~~
-
teaching
,
·
freshman c
·
ourses),
1
1
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-
- .
-
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·
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1be
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ec?nom1c
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s~t11ation
lS
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S!res
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s;1ma,~1r,ia~1~
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_
Jorc:111g us 1nto aperiod
<
of
·
con-
.13nd
: •
1911ova
_
t1on
_
:.i
_
n the fields of
·
..
··
··:
...
·
:··
· ,
,
....
·
::-
•
· ,
:
Jeacliw
_
g m~tlio
,
d~
.
_
as
_
mos~
.
ottier
•
.
terest;in Mar
.
1st
_
)
:
·
·
·
solidation. At the same'time,
j
t is
·
theater, arts and crafts
,
science
~
--
·
·.·
.
_
_
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
·
_,,:._
_
··
••
Therl:!
-
w~re
.
some very out-
prompting us to dev
'
elop in-
reading and athl
.
etics .
..
·
:
-
C
·
-
1
·
R
·..
·
c
·
LE
'•
•
A
·
•
..
.
....
.
.
.
.
:
.
.
.
-.
.·
..
spoken_reacters
·
tO the
·
dialogue
.
novative programming.
~
New
·
While innovation_is the order of
.
..
·
· ·
·
·
.
·
. • ·
·
.
·
·.
.
·
·
n
·
n
..
o
,-
u
·
.
n
•
c
·
e
..
s
O
_
ne was Kevin Brower
.
who said
ideas create new enthusiasm. So
the day in 1975
~
Marist's
·
adoption
.
.
·
.
·
·
·
.
·
·
·
.
·
.
that you have to take the problem
despite the current
·-
financial
of new educational programming · ·
·
of the state of the college from a
__ strain on us as a
·
private in-
.
did . noC
-
·
occur
;_
ovei:night.
·
·
·
marketing
·
•
pQinL
_
of view. "You
stitution, we are
:
quite optimistic
Curriculum chaIIges in the past
.
·
·
E
·
d
..
.
.
z·
_
t
.·
o
.
.
.
rz·
~
l
.
c
· ..
·
h
g
n
··
gi
-
e
.
.
.
·
have a
,
product, and then you
about the future."
·
few years indicate the
.
college's
;
_
u
u
.
have to market it.
.
The problem
This is how Dr. Linus R. Foy,
aware_ness
:
of
the
_
need~ of a
.
.
here !s that the aamiilistration
president of Marisf College,
·
changmg student population.
doesn t know the exact way to
summarizes his institution's
·
In 1971, Marist introduced
The present editorial staff of was named to the position of market
it.
They don't know what
outlook for 1975.
graduate programs in business the CIRCI
:;
E
·
has today
·
an-
Associate Editor, a post which the attributes
·
are."
The new year is bringing a new
·
·
administration and
·
.
community nounced the
·
return of orie of its gave her 51mple opportunity to
Brower and
.
Bob Sammon both
thrust to education at Marist.
psychology
.
··
This
·
year-'s edi
_
tors- and named Ms. Irene
_
learn
,
the au ties
-
of a co
.
- editor feel that Marist is held back by
Under the direction of
·
Dr.
_
·
enrolhnent
·
shows
·
a 15 percent
:
Ross to succi=!ed Lyn Osborne as
•
and prepared her for the even-
tradition
,
and
.
that can't con-
Stephen M. Panko, the
_
college's
.
!ncrease. While full - tim
·
e study
Co.:
Editor.
··
·
. ·
•
tuality
·
of
.
stepping into the tinue .
.
..
If
you've got a good
first directoF of continuing 1s
.
encouraged
;
Jhese programs
·
Gregory· Conoc
·
chioli
has position.
product, you've got to sell it."
' education, Marist is
,
·
.
offering have b~en designed primarily
_
for r~t~l"lled to
fill
his position as Co -
·
Hoth
·
Ms.·
-
Ross and Mr.
·
Fra~k
.
DeFiili, one of
·
.
the
adults in the Mi
_
d -
.
Hudson
.
area professional men and women who Editor
_
of the 1v;aristweekly after Conocchioli
:
have
worked coordmators
of
the
·
Free
several new
.
opportunities
.'
In waptto pursueadegree on a part having
-
spenLthe
fall
semester together in the past and their ~niv~rsity thought'that the most
addition to revitalizing its part -
- time basis
.
.
··
·
.
_.
· ·
·
·
studying abroad. A former news rapport should account
'
for a important thing brought out
time evening
·
pr
'
ogram, this
.
Jn}973, Marist al}
_
d Our
.
Lady of reporter
;
Mr. Tonocchiolj was smooth editorial transition.
during the evening, was "the
spring Marist is
.
offering a
·
I:,ourdes
·
H,igh School embarked first named
,
C.9 -
Editor in Febo
·
.
Not only have the two top fe~sibility
.
of Marist's surviving
,_
television correspondence course on
:
a ''bridge . year''.:-Program
.
·
ruary of last.year_-
_
.
·.
positions undergone cliange. Also
_
H's more
_
promising
_
than I
entiUed "The Ascent
.
of Man."
-
which enables high scliool seniors
·
lre.ne Ross,
.
a
·
junior
~
com-
narried today were Sports Editor thought. I think most of the
Designed for area
.
residents
,
.
to complete a freshman college murucations
·
major,
.
is
·
also a Hich
·
Burke and
_·
Photography
.
.::;tudents' questions were an-
who would like
to
.
~am college year wf!~le stiH remaining formeq-eporter for the CIRCLE.
.
.
credits but
cannot
attend
·
oil -
•
members of
.
their
.
graduatjng During Greg's'iibsen5!e, Ms
.
Ross
CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
.
.
.
CONTINUED ON PAGE
2
campus classes,
:
.
t}_le course cl?ss. The program continues
·
·
·
··
'
·
centers
.
on
'
a 13
°
week series..,.. with Lourdes and now en-
broadcast
·
on Channel
;
l3 (Public
·
· compasses Spackenkill High
Broadcasting Service)
.
Narrated
.
School. Other area schools
·
have
by Dr. Jacob
·,
Bronowoski, the ~xpre~sed
.
interest in par-
course deals with two
··
million tic1patmg next fall.
.
.
·
years
.
of man;s
.
existence as
-A
specialthree - year degree
·
illustrated through his scientific
·
program with
.
an
.
emphasis
.
on
achievements.
.
.
. .
.
·
·
·..
.
inter
.
- disciplinary studies
•
is .
Mari.st is ·also
:
-
·
inaugurating
.
offered to high school graduates
.·
.
extension centers :in
·
Peekskill, capable of
_
acc;,eleratild
.
college ·
.
·
Middletown
·
and !{ingston
_
. Both
·
·
_
study .
.
Students
.
are
•
individually
•
graduate and undergraduate
.
tutored
.
'.
by faculty, as well as
courses
-
will
.
be available to other stude
·
nts
_
.
advanced in the
residents
.
in these areas.
program.
.
.
This semester
·
Marist will also
..
Examples
of
.
new
un-
initiatea weekend college:A new dergr~~uate
'
programs
·
with
a
.
concept
.,
-
in
_~'.
education
·.•
the vocaU9nal
·
orientation are ac-
weekerid
··
·
college
·
:
~nables' adult
-
cou~ting,
•
com.inunic;:ttion arts,
.
who cannot attend
,
class'es during
·
·
~rimi11at_
:
·
justice,
·.
bili~gual
.
the
·
week
.
.
.
.
to
,
...
complete
,
ed
1,1
ca ~1.on,
__
.
..
com put er
-
re_guirements
.·
by' attehding • all
·
-
.
ma~emaUcs,
.
-~aralegal stu
_
di~s;
.
·
day
.
. ·
classes
:
90. Satur
_
day
:
.
or sp~c1,1 -
:
educ~t.19~
-
;
and
.
•
appq~d
.
Sunday for six weeks.
·;.
.
. --
:
.
sol1d.state
.
phy:51cs .
.
,. _
,
·
.
•
.
.
:·:
·
'
.
'The
_
I:.ittle People's Growing
.
.
-,
Other
'.'
-\
Uri de
'
r
'
gradua te
..
.
I>!ace;''.
.-
a
:·:
new
-
cotjc~p
(
in on - _
:
prog~a!115
,
off~
(
studel'.lts
:
an
:
o~
.
campus
·
day care
_
for pre - school
:
·
. portu01.ty
<:
to
·
~l:lrn
.
credits
:
·
for
.
children
_
of ~9ntin\lin(e.~ucation
•·
·
community
:
exper.!enc~s
thatcan
'
.
1
l'AGE
2
1
ne newly-named cast or the Theatre Guild production "George
M"
.
Theatre Guild Directors
Announce
-
''George M" Cast
FEBRUARY 14, 1975
Hous_e
.
Defends
Arbitration Policy
by Susan Dunderdale
Arbitration Board, which upheld
the fine. The proceedings ac-
As
a result of a fine levied on cording to Popus are unfair as he
Champagnat House resident, Ted said, "When you go in you are
Popus by fourth floor R.A. Pat already considered guilty and
Duffy,
.
Champagnat House
·
you have to prove you're in- .
Council policy
·
concerning the nocent. The R.A. doesn't have to
Board of Arbitration was con-
prove anything." The appeal was
tested in a hearing on February
6
.
based on the grounds that the
At the end of the three - hour initial hearing was unfair
:
hearing Champagnat House
·
was
A
very different view of these
successful in defending its policy same proceedings was given by
regarding fines
.
and the fine Pat Duffy who contended that
.
he
which was levied
.
has been did not feel at all uncomfortable
upheld
.
.
when he pr~ented
his
side of the
Approximately fifty people story to the Board .
.including
eight
witnesses,
.
Through~~t
,
the
evening
members of the arbitration board several testified as to the
-
events
and interested House . members that took place in December and
.
came to watch a judicial process
·
many of the stories con_tradicted
which is seldom enacted
.
·
at each other
.
.
It was pomted out
Marist.
·
·
-
·
that this could be the result of the
'
Judges presiding over the case time that' has passed
.
since that
were Goldie Komis and Ed night.
Kissl111g. The counsel
.
for the
, Both sides presented their
defense . was Mark Plamondon
,
cases with
·
professionalism
·
and
.
while the plaintiff, Ted
·
Popus
··
were quite persuasive and at the
was represented by Jim Elliot. end no one could have guaranteed
Some of the key witnesses were the judges' decision.
.
·
..
Don Honeman; Champagnat
Perhaps the
.
statement that
Hous.e - master Sus.an Ester-
best summarizes the
.
general
Director Suzanne Deak and family are
·
.
Fred Ashley, as graphers.
·
brook
chairma~ of the Ar-
reaction to the hearing was made
Musical
Director
.
William George, Thomas Checchia a~
·
In speaking to the cast mem-
bitration Board Pat Duffy and
·
·
by Mark Plamondon in his
_
Dunlevy have announced the cast Jerry with Chris
.
Seaman ancl bers Suzanne stressed the
:
im-
Ted Popus.
'
'
opening
~
remarks when he said,
_
for the Theatre Guild's Spring Diane Dor will play the roles of portance of good academic
The initial incident which '
'
Within the past veek this case
·
production of the
.
musical
-
Josie
.
and Nellie Cohan respec-
standings and study hab
i
ts when precipitated the judicial action has be
_
en
__
blown way out
_
of
.
comedy "George
M."
tively. Playing the parts
·
of work on the show begins, along goes back to a water _fight and proportlofl:
,
In any case Manst
The production
.
scheduled
.
for Agnes, Ethel
,
Fay Templeton and with giving ,.the show the, b!;!9t
.·
disturbance on December 3 for
·
students can rest assured that
April 24,
25,
26, and 27 is the first Sam Harris will be Maria Cof- performancethatevery member
.
which 'fed Popus was fined
.
ther~ is
·
~
•
judicif!l system at
musica~ production that the fery, Jell! Guarino, Debbie Klei11 can
.
·
She went on to say "the According to House policy Mr. Man~t w~1c~ does ~ts best!-:' see
Marist
:
Theatre
·
Guild has and Bob Morley. other members scope
·
of Theatre Guild is Popus had to appear before the that Justice 1s earned out.
producect in five years
;-'·
the last-
of the cast
·
include Geraldine changing in thapt
is
attempting
musical proquction was staged in Alessi, Mary Ellen Brosnan, to involve a greater percentage of
November 1970 when "How To Elaine
Bruscoe,
Gregory
·
the
. ·
Marist
.
P1'>tilation
.
by
Succeed in Business , Without Conocchioli, John Coughlin, producing shows that require a
.
·
Senio
.
rs Plan
·
Fina
:
[ Week
·
_
.
Really
.
Trying
'
' was presented
.
Candi Davis, Chuck Dumser, greater
·
number of people. Both
The show, produced by
·
Dr.
J.R.
Dempsey, Carrol Emmel
,
she and Bill are attempting to
Jeptha Lanning,
will
have
I;_r_ed
Chip
.
Ermish,
Bob Ferrari,
·
diminish th~ stereotyp~s
.
of
.
Lambert
.
serving as it5 mus1
_
caL Bonme • Fenyar, . Fernando '.fheat:e !]u!ld as an ehte
•
·
consultant.
·
· ·
:
.
.
.
Fuentes,
.
Gene He1mers,
.
Gus <'tgamzat10n clo~ed to
.
new
·
·
··
Based ·on
·
the
.
•
words
·
andfuiisic
:
·
·
.
·
0oµber
;:
H~1:ry
~
0ettiiiger;
-
B~bwmembers:
\!nd~r
·
this
•
·
pl_lHosophy
.
of George'M:
·
cohart the.play
;
w ..
s
•f
O'K~efe
;
•
·ca~ol
·
:
Sh~a
_
han
,
·
!-,e~ll_e Theatre G_mld 1s becommg more
,.
written by
'
Michael
·
stewar
t:
a11d
:
.
Springston
,
Maria
·.
Termm1, st~dent oriented as w~ attempt to
John and Fran Pascai and
·
was
·
Karen
·•
Tully, Dan VanDevoort, brmg mo~e students mto thef!tre
first produced on &roadway
in
and Garey Waters. Along with a~s,
_
while a
_
t the sam~ tune
•
1969
.
·
•·
...
·
·
·
•·
·
Maureen Br~y, and G~rey bnngmg ~us1cal ente~1~ent
Playi~g the parts of the Cohan
.
Waters servmg as choreo- to die Manst Com~uruty.
·
by
Rhoda Crispell
will most probably be held on
campus.
.
According to Jean Forrestal, a
.
The next Seniorclass meeting
.
meinber of the Senior Executive will be held on February 17
_
at
Committee, an invitation
·
to 7:30 in the Campus Center
.
A vote
speak at the 1975 Marist College concerning the location and cost
commencement exercises has of the dinner dance is expected at
been sentto LL Gov. Mary Anne
·
this time. Senior clas~ meetings
Krupsak .
.
If
she cannot attend will probably meet
.
alternating
other possible speakers include Mondays for t~e rest of the school
Walter .Cronkite and Barbara year.
Poverty Meal Speaker Nallled
'oppos1t10n to the government's violent community.
military s
·
pending in South
All of the Marisf Community is
.
·
A
·
PO~e~ty meal will be held at Vietnam. He
w
as
charged with invited to attend this poverty
Marist qollege on February 25,
in destroying files of a foreign meal with guest speaker Ned
_
the New
·
Dining Room fr,,m 5
·
7 government.
'
i'his was done to Murphy
.
The Marist Group on
p.m. Reverend Edward
,
,f
point out that aid to South Viet-
World
.
Hunger, which is spon-
Murphy S.J., known as ''Nc
_
d·
'
to nam was military rather than soring the poverty meal, will also
all those familiar with his caus<
,
s sustanence in nature.
·
be collecting for donations on
as a political activist, will be th
e
.
He is presently a member of February 13 and 20 in
,
Donnelly
speaker.
·
.
·
·
·
.Jona
_
h House
;
a community in Hall (by the switchboard) and in
·
Ned
-
Murphy will speak to the
·
Baltimore. The aims of this the lobby of
.·
Champagnat
'
Hall
Marist Community about
·
the community are to understand the
:
from 12 - 3 p.m. The group is
inequities which exist in
·
a
·
meanirig of resistence in today's· seeking both financial support
government whose spending for society, to realize how one must a
·
nd a greater awareness on the
.
arms holds priority over world act on this understanding, and to Marist Campus, for the problem
·
··
hunger. On Thanksgiving
•
1974, spread
·
•-.e
·
concept of a non
of World Hun_ger.
·
·
when most Americans were
celebrating the traditional feast,
he began a fast which consisted of
a water diet. This fast, which
Walters.
In an upcoming issue
·
of ·the
In a Senior class meeting held Circle two packages for Senior
Monday, February 3, which 35 Week will be presented for
students attended, it was decided
-
seniors to vote on .
that senior week activities would
Committees involved in Senior
last three nights
.
Tentative ac-
Week activities include the
ti vi ties include a
·
boat ride, a Senior Executive Committee, the
cocktail party, a dlnner dance, Senior Week Committee, the
and possibly a picnic. The dates dinner dance committee, the fund
of such activities have not been raising
·
committee, and the
set as of yet.
publicity
,
-eommittee.
.
Although no decision has been
·
If interested seniors want a
made affecting the dinner dance, share in making decisions about
·
the majority preferred that it be Senior Week activities tliey can
held off
~
campus. Dinner dance attend the meeting on February
committee
members
.
are
.
17 because
·
plans are still being
checking
·
out possible locations formulated.
for
.
the dance.
A
·
cocktail party
..
·
·
1asted until Christmas D~y, was
·
to show his con,?ern for the world
hunger crisis
.
as well as a mark
CIRCLE STAFF
directly under Irene Ross.
biology
chemistry
and
Both Greg
·
Welsh and
_-
Tom mathematics
.
majors have op-
MARIST SURVIVAL
.
Continued From 1
Continued From 1
·
of protest against U.S~ military
\
.
.
priorities in the face of this world Editor Al Adolfi. Both have
- wide farr.ine .
.
·
·
worked with the CIRCLE
·
in the
After hi::; ordination as a Jesuit past and should provide the
priest in 1968, Ned Murphy im-
experience
·
necessary for two
mediately
.
associated himse
_
lf such posts.
-
.
with the Movement for Peace and
·
Rather ~h~n haying one person
·
Justice. He actively
·
supported - supervi~e tht(
·
e
.
ntife. c!)inposition
·
movements of draft res1stence
.
of the
·
paper each week,
·
the
In 1969, he was one of the New CIRCLE
has named a
·
layout
York Eight who
·
destroyed staff composed of Linda
·
Franco
Selective Service
files.
He
·
was and MaryBeth
·
Pfeiffer .
.
Ms.
· involved
iri
·
a
·
sLmilar action with Franco has been working
-
with
the Harrisburg
.
·
Eight, as was the
·
former
·
CIRCLE layout
Daniel and Philip Berrigan. lie Editor during the past year
_
and is
continued as
a
counselor for draft proficient in the art of com-
resisters and deserters arid also position .
.
Ms. Pfeiffer
i
s
· ·
a
.
established a G
.
I. coffee house .
.
·
newcomer to the staff, but
_
with
Iri 1973, Murphy
·
was
.
again
·
·
sufficient
.
background
.
to
.
irisure
·
indicted for expressing
-
strpng her success. Both girls wm work
.
McDonald
·
are staying
·
oil
·
as·
·
portunities
for
student
Business
and
.
Advertising
.
originated
researcn.
The
Managers, respectively. Regular
··
'
University Year for A.!;tion, a
swered though not all of them,
features will include Father Leo
.
federally -
.
funded program, but then again, we didn't have the
Gallants· column; Tom~'Mc-
·
permits 30 Marist students
·
to
whole campus here. We did have
Ternan's "High On
·
Sports;" spend a year in the Poughkeepsie
a very good turnout however."
..Dialogue," the
-
Counseling community working
.
in one of
Marie Donovan, coordinator of
column; and, in the spring, track three vital areas -
urban the dialogue series,
•
was also
art
_
icles·
.
by
_
Coach Stevens.
'_•· , ·
education,
urban
·
busine.ss pleased with the turnout, and she
economics
and
juvenile felt that the discussion
W,!S
op-
delinquency prevention.
,
timistic. Marie said that these
·
"Economically
.
.
speakir,1g, we
.
dialogues are good because they
FOY "OPTIMISTICI'
Continued
.
From 1
will not incur any new de
_
bts in
·
bring
·
everyone together in an
l!l75," summ
.
arizes Dr. Foy. open forum, which makes it
·
·
From an educational stand-
'
easier
for
-
students
.
to op~n up.
point,
_:
Mc1rist wiU continue to
The- nexr dialogue, scheduled
respond to·
.
the
.
. n_eeds and for Febrhary 24th, entitled,
·
. "Is
.
. .
.
.
.
.
· ·
, aspirations of current and America
·
·.
·
Unconsciously
_
~n add1t~on, environmental
·
prospective students
.
,
In most Prepar!ng !or War?
'9
will be the
sc1~nce
,
maiors use the Hudson instances,· this will demand that same
.
casual.format, and Marie
River as a living laboratory, and we continue tg be innovative." says that
_
ev~rY,one
.
is .inv!t~d.
·
·
I
I
I
FEBRUARY 14, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE-~
Committee To Open Communications
by
Genevieve Fitzgerald
A student Government com-
mittee has been formed to open
the linas
of
communication
between the
.
students and the
Marist Maintenance Depart-
ment.
student Government secretary
Tom Walsh will head this com-
mittee, the idea for which was
suggested
_
by President Brian
Morris in a "brainstorming
session
.
"
what can be done. Since the
They hope that through the committee consists of both
cooperative efforts of the student residents and commuters who
body, the committee and the will voice other student's com-
Maintenance Department, some plaints in the meetings, the
of the problems on campus can
be
priorities of
all
can be aired.
solved.
•
Problems can be dealt with more
The aim of the committee, effectively this way than
if
people
whose
first
meeting
was complain on their own.
Tuesday, February
11,
is to
Mr. Pavelko is receptive to this
,
discover what· students view as
·
idea.
He
welcomes
com-
problems. Tom Walsh and Mr. munication with the students. He
Andrew Pavelko will then discuss sees this "body to come up with
Student Positions Available
by SUSAN DUNDERDALE
facts" as a vehicle of com-
munications through which
his
department and the students can
become more aware of each
other's problems.
An offshoot of this committee
has been suggested by Mr.
·
camplii.
His
hopes are to make
the students more conscious of
the campus, and to inspire them
to
help
the
maintenance
department keep the college
grounds clean and attractive.
An experiment attempting to
"phase out" the women cleaning
the rooms has been tried and
found unsuccessful. Mr. Pavelko
is
hopeful that his dilemma can
be solved by the end of the year.
There has also been a problem
could be brought to the com-
mittee's meetings.
It
is
still early to tell what the
organization will accomplish.
Ideas are encouraged, however.
Tom Walsh will still welcome
people to the committee. Names
can
be submitted to him, put in
the SG mailbox - 840 - , or slipped
under the office door -
Rm
265 - in
the Campus Center.
•
.
Suggestions can also be made
to Fred Ashley, Gene Reimers,
Paul DeFranco, Mike Maloney,
Jim Britt and Glen Looney,
·
members of the committee.
If
you are a college student
looking for
a
job you may end up
working in Europe. Any student
between the ages of
17 and-27 can
have a temporary job in Europe.
Most openings
.
are in hotels,
resorts, offices and restaurants
in Austria; Belgium, France,
Germany, Spain and Swit-
zerland .. Positions are available
to all college students who submit
their applications by mail in time
to
.
allow for processing permits
and working papers.
Tom
says
that though this is an
ad hoc committee, he hopes the
lines of communication will be
kept open next year. He also
hopes that a policy of con-
structive
criticism
and
awareness on both sides will help
solve any problems there may be.
with plowing the parking lots this
language is required, the door is provided on a
non-- profit basis, winter. This is partly due to the
open to anyone within the age and brief orientations are given number of cars - more than
limits. Wages range from $250 to in Europe just prior to going to previous years - parked in the
morethan$450 a month, plusfree work. These packed sessions lots. Solutions to these problems
room and board, leaving wages speed adjustment
to
Europe and • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
Working periods vary from 60
days to one year, but some
students have stayed longer. As
no previous experience or foreign
free and clear.
make certain all goes well on the
In addition to living new ex-
job.
periences, and seeing
·
Europe
.
Any student interested in a
while you can, working in Europe temporary job in Europe may
offers the chance to travel on a
.
write directly to SOS - Student
pay - as~ you - go basis without Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberte,
really being tied down. At several Luxembourg, Europe. Requests
reunions recently held by for job listings
'
and an application
students who had worked in must include your name, address
Europe, the most heard comment and one dollar or the equivalent
was, "The experience alone was
·
in stamps or internationa
_
l postal
worth it."
·
coupons.
Jobs and working papers are
Students
To Form
Club
by
Joe Sexton
To serve the . needs of Marist
veterans, yeterans and other
interested students are forming a
Veterans Club with an as yet
undefined purpose:
·
.
..
According to
.
Frank DeSiervo,
manager of the Veterans Office if
this becomes a formal club it will
need a declaration of purpose in
an attempt to receiv~ C.U.B.
funds. If the club remains in-
formal
·
it
·
may offer social,
educational or community
'
ser-
vices depending on the chofoe of
its members.
There will be an
.
organizational
meeting on Feb. 13 at 5:30 in
D204, for. all those who are in-
terested
·
in becoming Club
members.
BO
·
YCOTT
.
GA
.
LLO WIN ES.
MADRIA MADRIASANGRIA
SPANADA
RIPPLE
THUNDERBIRD
CARLO ROSSI
RED MOUNTAIN
,,_
·
PAISANO
BOONE'S FARM
TYROLIA
ANDRE CHAMPAGNE
ANDRE COLD DUCK
EDEN ROC
JOSEF STEUBEN
OR ANY OTHER LABEL WHICH Sf\YS M~DE .IN MODESTO, CALIF.
GALLO IS THE ONLY WINERY WITH HEI-\DOUARTERS IN MODESTO.
TO HELP PROTECT FARMWORKERS RIGHTS
'
.-.
_-
._
.
,
DON'T BUY THESE LABELS!
BOYCOTTS HAVE' BEEN ESSENTIAL IN PAST FARMWORKERS VICTORIES
SUPPOR
.
T THE
.FARMWORKERS!
<...,
,,,_.-,-
-,-
·
·
,
-
.
.
.
-
-
.
-
72733
\\\8
Leave Your Head to Us!
GUTTERY
UNI-SEX
- F ~ O
H~IRCUTTINGG
.
$
6
w1·th
BLOW ORVIN
STREAKING, FROSTING
&
PERMANENT WAVING
Marist ID
CALL 454-9239 for your appointment now
·
Joinfhe
third biggest
lamilyin the
world.
Imagine an order of
22,000 priests and brothers in
73
countries
around
the
world.
(That's
a
pre!ty big family.) .
But that"s what the
Salesians of St. John Bosco
are all about - a large family
of community-minded men
dedicated to the service of·
youth
.
(And no one gets lost.)
ON THE MAIN MALL
3
LIBERTY STREET
(Above Capitol Bakery)
Entrance Around Corner
In Italy
in
the 1800's a chance meeting between a poor
priest and a street urchin served to create a movement of such
.
success that
it
is still growing today. Don Bosco became the
priest who brought youth back from the streets - and
back to God.
He reasoned that a program of play, learn and pray would
make useful citizens of the world. He crowded out evil with
reason, religion and kindness in a (what was then unheard of)
atmosphere of family.
_
,,.
The ideals of St. John Bosco are still with us today
.
His
· work goes on in boys clubs, technical and academic schools,
guidance centers, summer camps and missions. And his very
human approach is very evident in the family spirit
of
the
Salesians. This is the way he wanted it. This is the way
it
is.
The Safesian experience isn't learned - it's
lived .
..
-----------,
I
For more information about Salesian Priests and
I
Brothers, mail this coupon to:
I
Fsatha~r
IJoBsepsh
·,Maaffenl,
ss.D·:~
s:o::N
BOSCO
.
I
I
Box
639, New
Rochelle,
N.Y
.
10802
I
.
I
am
interested in the Priesthood
O
Brotherhood
D
I
Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Age _ _ _
_
·
I
-
Street A d d r e s s _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I
I
C i t v - - - ~ - - - - - S t a r e
_ _ _ _
Z i p _ _ _ _
I
Phone
I
I
Education
·
. . . Your Current Job
·
1
·
~-----------
.
PAGE4
THE CIRCLE
FEBRUARY 14, 1975
I
.
ME
• CIRCLE
VOLUME 14 Marlst College, Poughkeepsie, N, Y,
'!be Marist College CffiCLE
is
the weekly newspaper of the
students
of Marist College and
is
published throughout the school year ex-
clusive of vacation periods by the Southern Dutchess News Agency,
Wappingers, New York.
Co-Editors
Photography Editor
Sports Editor
Layout Staff
Business Manager
Advertising Manager
-
Gregory Conocchioli and Irene Ross
1
Al
Adolfi
·
RichBurke
Linda Franco and Mary Beth Pfeiffer
Greg Welsh
Tom McDonald
Staff: Peter Allen, Janice Colleran. Rhoda Crispell, Susan
Dunderdale, Genevieve Fitzgerald, Father Leo Gallant, Charles
Garret, Joe Gigliotti
,
Tommy Kelly, David Livshin, Paul
Mangieri,
__
Thomas McTernan, John Reilly, Ca
_
thie Russo,
Richard Schneider, Julie Schott, Reid Scott, Joe Sexton, Karen
Tully, Rick Whitsell
.
Editors
-
an
_
d Critics
It may or may not be
-
somehow symbolic that the editorial change -
over of the ClRCIE always falls during Valentine's Day
.
week. There
is certainly no love lost on the CIRCIE ed
i
tors by many on campus,
·
By assumingthe du~es of editors, individuals set themselves up for
·
criticism: in s~me cases, well - deserved. Just look at the "letters"
column today
O
the CIRCLE is not only charged with having little
,·
..
<::>
~-
·._,
&;>
-
~rJo
.
·
-
v
:J"
:
'
"'
·
.
~
..
-
(
\
:
I
:
·
~
.'
'DON'TAPPLAUD!JUST THROW ROYALTIES AND
.
HONORARIUMS!'
Letters To The
·
Editors
journalistic taste, but also accused of trying to be avant - garde. We
didn't know innovation was a
,
sin; (And we haven't heard direct
Editorial
.
.
is to be satisfied by a " ... Sex and
·fill
itfor himself, without giving
·complaints from either of the very photogenic pairs of hands.) As for
Birth
·
Control
Information an organizational form to another
our opinions about the new information center, if.we wrote our
·
·
·
Center.'
'
Why isthere a need for
"concern
/
'
.
·
·
_
editorials from the pages of the Encyclopaedia B
.
ritanica, they would
Observations
this
'
at" Marist? The editorialist
3
.
Ut's
.
proceed
·
further
_
to
.
a
· ·
l;>e just as dµll as some of the things
_
that come
·
out of that fine set of
-
·
believes that the lot
of
us are
thorny problem;
.
the editorialist
_
books
:
·
("Besides
;
_
we'd hate to i:ead
_
up on brairi surgery and perform Dear
·
Editor:
·
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
walking aroun!] uninformed remarks
·
that the birth
·
control
·
thatoriourselv
_
es,eventhoughsomewouldargueweneedit).
The editorial "Information about birth control
;.:..
and that center is
'
'
.
.largely the work of
The new editors will face much of the same sort of criticism for the Center" (
F
eb
.
6)
speaks about
a
those
·
iri the know are concerned
one student working iri an area to
.
remainderoftheiryearin office: fortunately, they are used to
it.
They matter that
·
is much
.
_
agonized about
·
ttie rest of
us!
If
so,
so create
a
'
common
,
good
.
;'If the
.
know from past experience that not everyone can agree with their over today
_
- birth control in~
.
what?
.
Any student who
:
wants
.
common goo<1 must be
·
created,
sentiments as expressed in the CIRCIE editorials, and don't expect formation. Unfortunately, the information about birth control
·
therefore not yet existent, and it's
them to be met
with
approval at
all
times. They
also
know that few
.
editorial writer has aJJowed
or abnost anything else,. needs
-
·
being done by
◊nlY orie person at
people have the ccmrage; or perhaps just plain good will, ~o..tell them himself to be infected by the
.
only access to a)ibrary. A half -
tliat
•
(the
.
unnamed
·
woman
when' they've
·
doiie a
·
good
'
'job
:·
·
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
· ·
·
.
. .
·
· same
,
kind
,
of
.
senseless.
/'~OI\;
houi
.
,
:
yiit'1:
>
the
)
''.Encyci9p~edi~
.
maybe?)
--;
how d.o you know it's
.
Besides;· without critks,
·
ho-iv would they know how well they'd
.
done
·
cern"
.·.
that
·•·
has
·
seized<
others.
Brittaiiica"
.
·
wiU
_give
him;
·com-
·
for the co111mon .good?
.
·
.,.
,
,:
·
::::
,
, _·
· ·
theit'job
?{the·
·
-
'.
Letters;,
,
~pl
_
Ulllll
·
has to be filled
"
bf
§Omeone
'
,- whether Concerning
.
the
"
'.
e"ditorial
/
a few : ' pfet~·
:
aut)ioritative
;'
information
:
·
.
.
. ·
·
1
_4
:'
,
Tiie
•
writer coniments
·
sadly
,
just
to
see their namein print orto
:
attempt rational and applicable observation:
.
·
·
.
For the more inquiring minds,
on the fact that Marist is male -
·
criticism of either the ideas orthe editors themselves.
.
·
1..
The
editorialist begins there is
a
bibliography on all
oriented (how, we are not told)
·
Counseling ColUmn
Among the·new services being offered to the college community this
semester, the CIRCLE is happy to announce the establishment of"a
new column, slated to appear
.
weekly in. the CIRCLE
.
Working in
conjunction with the Marist College Counseling services the CIRCI..E
has established a counselin
g
column in an effort to create better
·
communications between that c;>ffice arid the community
.
The CIRCLE
feels that rriany students who 111ay have specific or general questions
concerning school, adjustment. family and pers,onal problems may
not use the counseling offices and we feel that in
t
he
establishment of a
confidential question ~ervice, many
.,
studcnL
<;
may lose their
inhibiticms concerniru
:
lhe
whole counseling area of the college. This
column, however, will
11r,t
attempt
to
answer people's problems. but
rather it will attempt to
givr.
advice and guide
~_
people in the right
direction to finding their own
_
aqswers. .
..
•
.
·
·
The
_
CI,R«:::I;.E
makes the presupposition that as mature individuals,
no one person or group will attempt to "goof'.' on this joint endeavor by.
submitting questions
in
an effo~ to stump tl}e counselors.
·
Once ;igain another service
is
being offered to the community and
we are in theJ1ope that students will use and not abuse the serv~ce
_.
As
students
ii
.
is important to
.
remember that it is our support of new
activities
that
.
make them work and become
-
effective tools to
enriching our lives.
·
·
·
·
Now that· t! 1e CIRCLE
·
staff
·
has officially turned- over,
-
there are
some thank yous in order to the people
who
worked so hard dur_ing the
past year ..
·
·
.
.
·
.
·
· :
·
•
·
·
·
·
.
,
·
.
.
The CIRCLE would like to say a special thank
·
you to Lyn Osborne.
Dave Fri.stash, and Tini DeBaun. These talented people ga:ve
:
alot
of
.
.
their time and effort tothe·paper: Their knowledge and skill was a big
boost to
;
the CIRCLE.
.
..
.
. .
We would also like to thank
.
the people in last semester
'
s In-
.
(
iroduction to Journalism class for their contributions to the CIRCLE,
along with Mr; Ed Baron who taughtthem.
.
.
•
·
·
.
.
..
.
_
._
We would also like to thank Mr. John Tkach for his
·
sports articles.
Finally, we would like to thank all of the people - faculty, s~ff, and
students - w!10 submitted articles for publication.
.
.
.
·.
,
.
.
..
:
badly; he says, "As stU<lents we
·
aspects of birth controlincluded.
and he concludes that bothnien
-
-
are often moved by trends,
;.:
''
_ ·
The need for education is clearly
and women need birth control
Wrong
.
The college generation is
.
'.
more apparent in learning how to
education before they can,act as
not often moved by trends, - we
use a library rather than in in-
·
individuals
.
.
·
live and swear by
.
them
.
.
.
forming t)le student body on birth
···
·
·
Maybe the
r
e is
·
a need for'this
·
2.
Marist has a problem, the
.
control
.
Why expend
.
the time,
after all. We could prevent a
problem we have
·
, says the
·
energy, agd human resources on
recurrence of this breed of
writer, is that
-
there is a " ... need this project? If there is a desire
c o n c e r n e d
p e op l e .
.
to be educated in the areas of sex
-
for birth control information, it
is
·
Yours in abstinence
,
and birth control." And this need
within any student's capability to
Andre' Bronzo
Journalistic
Taste
.
Dear Editors,
·
I would like
.
to register . a
complaint with regards to last
weeks regretable lack of jour-
nalistic taste
.
!
am specifically
referring to the picture of Brian
Morgan handing over a check to
Jay Bauer as a reward for his
service to Marist. Readers will
remember that the picture was
only of their hands
.
1t did not
show the faces of either of these
two
outstanding
·students
.
Perhaps this was the Circle's
feeble attempt at being jour-
nalisticly avantegarde. Whatever
the case may be, I find it
deplorable
·
when apathy is
rampant on this campus,that two
energetic arid concerned students
should
~
-
be treated so cavalierly
.
The Student
·
Government was
attempting to let it be known that
we appreciate the
,
efforts and
energies of.
.
students who
·
care
about Marist. How ironic and sad
it is, that with this one instance of
tastelessness, the
.
student body
will be wrongfully led to believe
that Marist does not care about
'
them. To the Student body, I can
only say that I'm very sorry if
·
you don'tknow Jay Bauer and
.
.
Brian Morgan, two students who
·
have worked very hard for you. I
'
·
am:
.
·
·
·
__
Sincerely yours,
.
·
_.
Brian Morris (not Morgan)
'
:
President of Student Gov't
,
Weekly
_
.
·feople
_
·
•
Students and others who have
.
.
Pawn}
.
·
.
.
·
never had the
·
opportunity
of
·
1.'here will be a question and
·
·
hearing a
.
SOCIALIST LABOR
answer period;
.
This is to let readers know that
the gift subscription for the
Spelman Library to the official
newspaper of
_
the
.
SO'CIALIST .
LABOR PARTY, the WEEKLY
PARTY spokesman, will be able
SOCIALIST LABOR PARTY
to do so on
·
Sunday afternoon
··
Hterattite will be on display, plus
-
·
starting at 2 oclock February 23.
·
copies
of
the
WEEKLY
•
·
Robert E
.
Massi, who was the
.
PEOPLE.
SLP
C
candidate fast year for U.S.
Thank you.
.
Senator
;
willdeliver
a
free Public
.
NATHAN PRESSMAN
•·
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - . - - - - - - PEOPLE, has been renewed.
·
The
CIRCLE
is funded
by
ad~ertisers and
_
receipt
_
of
·
•
Arri
·
pleased to know that
'
ap-
Lecture in Kingston'.•at
.
·
the
12 Catherine Street
Governor Clinton Hotel.
·
·
·
Ellenville, New York 12428
The title of the talk by Massiis:
Member ofthe socialist labor
.·
st:udenl
Goverrirrient
Funds
' .
.
'
.
•
.
·
.
parently soI1'e
·
Marist College
.
students are
.
reading
·
it.
.
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-
--,--~..,..,...-r
'
.
~
~
-
,.-
,.
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,
,
,
.
..
....
..
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The
·
Tragedy
'
·
o
r-,
.Palestine
·
-
'
party
·
·
·
.
,.
Jewish Homeland or
:
Im~rialist
_
·
Telephone: 914-647-6696
;
-
·
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.
.
.
.
.
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-
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:
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,
-
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-
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:
..:
:·
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.....
(
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Mi4QW,UW
.
W
AW4
,
W
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A W
_
....
..
FEBRUARY 14, 1975
THE CIRCLE
Snyder Heads Renamed
Placement Office
Marist's one - time placement job after graduation. Businesses
The reference folder also
office has a new name and a new in the area can also use the contains any reference letters
face. Renamed the Office of service to make any openings in from faculty members or former
Career Development, it is headed their firms known to the Marist employers that the student may
by new Placement Director community. lnfonnation can also want included.
If the student has
Larry Snyder.
be
obtained concerning test dates this on file in the office he can use
·
The
Office
of
Career for Civil Service exams on all the service free of charge for as
Development
is
officially part of government levels.
long as he wants. By giving the
'
the
Counseling
Services,
So
how does a Marist student prospective employer the ad-
although it operates
_
almost obtain help or guidance in ob- dress of the office the reference
entirely independently of the taining a job? First the student letter will be sent to the employer
other· branch of Counseling" makes an appointment with the absolutely free
,
.
.
_
services called Personal Coun- Counseling Services secretary.
At the present time the office is
seliitg. They
:
do however share a This sets aside a specific tiine for open from
8 :30-5:00
and students
secreta~y who
~
kept very
b1!5Y an "interview"
·
between Mr. should feel free to drop in any
scheduling appointments, typmg Snyder and the student. During time they need advice. Students
ti!~ many letters and sign~ that
_
the
.
interview a student will be
·
are encouraged
.
to make an ap-
Mr. Snyder has been sending to asked basic infonnation con- pointment for the first
.
visit.
the students; Except for this help cerning his major, other in- Between
12:00
and
1:00
the office
the
,,
office is run almost single - terests, past work history and
is
open for what Mr. Snyder calls
·
hancledly by Mr. Snyder.
.
most important future career openhouse. During this hour
To many st1;1den~, the n~1:11e goals.
If the _student _has no idea th~re are no scheduled ap-
Larry Snyder 1s still unfamihar about what kmd of a Job he wants pomtments, but the director
is
i~
__
sj:>it~ of hl:s. "appearing daily" or that may be open to someone there to answer any questions.
signs advertISmg the new career of his background Mr. Snyder has The Career Library, a collection
placement office. Mr. Snyder several manuals and pieces of of information about jobs and job
joined
·-
the
.
staff in
.
mid
.
- literature to guide the student. requirements, is also at the
November, but wasn't finally Even
if_
the student has already students' disposal.
settled in until
..
the semester decided what he can do with his
Mr. Snyder's plans for the
_
break.
:
Now that students have degree, he may be shown a few future include a separate room
.
returned, Mr. Snyder is ready to new possibilities that he was for the. Career Library. He feels
help in any way he can.
never aware of before. For Mr. this will make the Library more
The office is designed to sei:ve Snyder, the key word is "aware". accessible to the students. With
all of the Marist student body, but
·
He wants students to be aware of the present conditions a student
because the seniors
will
·
be
all
the various types of job op- cannot use the library
if
there
is
a
_
graduating in a few short months P.QMunities that are open not
·
just scheduled interview taking place
they
.
are
:
the prime targets for
·
the traditional jobs.
or
if the office itself is closed.
career counseling. However,
M,:.
Tlle next step
in
the interview
is
·
With the separate room
a
student
·
Snyder feels that his job will be putting together a reference would be able to use the library at
more effective in the futureif.the folder. An important
part
of this his convenience. Another idea is
under
_
~la.ssman bec
_
am
_
e folder is the
_
resume' and for tollaveanotheropenhouseperiod
acquainted
'
with the placernent those who do not know the first possibly one night a week
if
there
service early in
-
their college thing about writing, Mr. Snyder is enough student interest.
careers. The office can also help has a free pamphlet which shows
For further information drop in
alum~i
.
of ¥ai:i_s_t C
_
ollege.:
,
how to write_ a res~e and
_
givesa · at the of_fiC.E?
,
:
in Room
no
-
Placementµelp
is
given for part -
.
..
few samples. He will also check a
•
-
Ch~mpagnat;
•
.
or
call ext. 201
to
.
.
timejo~_dtiring_the·.sc!loql'year,
·
resume·and:give
i
"advice
·
·
-:
oii
·
iiri:::
malce
i:10
appointment.
; :
·
'..
_
·: ..
··•
~swell as for that all important proving it if necessary,
·
·
· ·
- - - -
-
.
.
.
•
.
-
Letters, Continued~
_
Wine
Boycott
·
Dear Marist Commuruty,
Second semester is well
,,
un-
.
derway and it's prime
.
time for
another letter
·
·
to the editors
·
concerning
·
the United Farm
Worker's boycott on Gallo wine,
( as well as Teamster
ice
- berg
lettuce
.
and table grapes).
·
Ernest and Julio
·
are
.
still
ignoring the wishes of their
workers to join the union of their
choice. However, there are a
good number of consumers who
refuse to agree with the tactics
employed by the Gallo brothers.
Gallo wine sales have dropped
c1nywhere from
15
to
20
percent.
In their defense, Gallo has
stepped up their advertising and
have subsequently refrained
from using their name in
television spots, (Madria Madria
Sangria, for ex
_
~mple). A close
'
.
=--~
'
.
.
.
'
-
, -
/,
.
.
-~?~✓
•
--:_
: . ~ ~
.
;.,
.
-
--r: "''.
.
...
:
--.,.,,,""" ...
,1113
_,.
- -
·
11.
look at the label tells you that
these wines are made in Modesto
California. Gallo is the only
winery in Modesto.
·
We
are
asking
you
to
BOYCOTT ALL WINES MADE
IN MODESTO, CA. BOYCOTT
ALL GALLO WINES!
YOU can help farm workers
win their right to belong to the
union of their choice. Refuse to
buy Gallo. Support the United
Farm Workers.
·
Gregory House
--,·-
PAGES
Mr.
Larry Snyder
Notes Front Abroad
by John Dellamanna
seriously than the Americans. By
10:00
p.m. the halls are silent; a
Just a few lines from Paris, as
·
far cry from my first year on Leo
I'd like to share a few of my 4! Eachroomhasasinkandmine
feelings about the city with the has two balconies. We are served
Marist Community.
all of our meals, and I am in a
Paris is, in so many ways, a
·
Catholic upper - middle French
city I can never take for granted.
Income. The general attitude
·
of
Alt):lough I see it daily, Notre
the French students are con-
·
Dame can never become
"just
servati've and very politically
another church."
A
four-month-
aware when compared to
old tourist, and I still stare at the American :;tudents. There has
structure that has been called been no sexual revolution in
everything from the world's France.
If
you happen to see
biggest lamp post to a rusty nail -
Emanuelle, a film which
I
un-
The Eiffel Tower.
derstand
has
hit
American
.box
-
Adjusting
:
to life
_
in
a·
foreign
.
offices, keep
in
mind,that this is
country was not easy. The first
the very controversial height of
thing that most of us had to get French pornography! We are not
used to wa
.
c; drinking a beer
in
a
allowed to receive female visitors
quaint cafe' that shuts its doors at in our rooms! But, that's the way
10:30
sharp, without wishing it things are done
.
and the French
were
in
a pla
.
stic cup
·
from
just don't question
it.
,
·
_
Frank's! I will not beat a dead
Another thing thaf the French
horse complaining about the
just don't question is
"greves"
-
toilet paper.
·
Adjusting also
strikes. We have gone mail- less
means trying to be understanding
for two months, and go without
when the dormitory nuns that
·
television at- least twice a week;
keep track of our Marist girls tell
and
·
less often without electricity
you it's bad manners to telephone
for two or three hours on a day set
after
9:00
p.m. These customs
aside for such manifestations.
are not very easy to understand
This year's general strike was a
·either
.
If one
"just
pours" a glass
flop, but from what I understand,
of wine for a friend at dinner, you
last year it
.
paralyzed the
may rest assured that the next country. A general strike is when
time he will just take the bottle the telephone, telegraph, mail,
and pour his own, a' la francaise
!
newspapers, public transit, and
(Bottle and glass do not touch,
you name it all go on strike on a
and the label
is
covered with the predetermined date. In a word,
palm of the hand.) Another
it's chaos.
Parisian custom
.
seems to be
As diversion· from all. of this,
sidewalk surfing. You see, Paris the Marist students have what is
always has· been a world center of
known as Marie - Louise.· Marie -
freedom and the Parisian dogs
Louise is our residence direc-
take all they can get; much to the tress, teacher, complaint bureau,
surprise of the newly arrived comedienne, and general raison
"Marister."
·
d'etre! Ed Benisz perhaps put
ir
The Parisian Metro on the best when he told me last year,
other hand does not take much "Marie - Louise?; she's a doll!"
getting used to.
It is the cleanest, She has a party at her place on
mose efficient, and far - reaching alternating Thursdays. All of her
system of public transportation students from all over the globe
that I have ever
·
encountered. are invited. What prevents this
With
a:
student ID, each ride costs from becoming a multi - lingual
about 8 cents; all others ride for mess is a
1
franc fine for speaking
about 25 cents. The outside anything but French! We the
temperature can_ be predicted Maristers have the honor of being
within degrees by the number of able ·to show slides, watch
bums in any
.
g~ven, spotlessly,
.
television, eat popcorn,
-
or just
clean Metro stop.
talk at Marie - Louise's just about
Aside from the already men- whenever we want. (The key is
tioned canine contributions, the under the doormat!) Father
-
Parisians keep their streets Gallant, you've got competition!
remarkably clean: at the cost of
Bro. Belanger only smiled
dirty pockets. I say this because when I asked him "What if I like
litter baskets are few and far Paris so much I don't want to ·
between in Paris,
so
one is leave?" Well, I don't think I'll
obliged to walk for blocks af a stay, but last Saturday night as
time with would - be garbage in our Marist group walked down
one's pockets!
·
the Champs Elysees toward the
Getting used to dorm life here illuminated l' Arc de Triomphe.
is nothing more than getting used as well
as
the golden arche
de
to silence. I find that for the most McDonalds (gospel truth!). I
part, the Fr
_
ench students seem to
-
began to think it wasn't such a far
take their studies much more . out
_
idea
to begiri with.
a
·
r
a
II•-
I
1.
I
>
l
I
• •
1.·
I
I
(
r·
1.
PAGE 6
THE CIRCLE
Code
99
As
I write
this
article, which
happens to be a few weeks before
it will be published,
I
don't know
how the "fast for the starving
people" program will succeed.
I
don't know if students are going
to do something about their
hungry brothers and sisters. But
I kn.ow ·one thing, students _who
come to college with the hope of
making money had better
become 'moral about money,' as
a recent article in U.S. Catholic
developed. Money is a tool and we
have the responsibility of using it
in a proper and moral way (Feb.
'75)
There is too much money used
for profit and not enough to make
a better life for the poor in the
world. Maybe we should all
acquire an understanding of how
money works in our... society;
economics. Then we should
develop a sensitivity and open-
ness to the needs of our brothers
and sisters according to our
God •
given gifts.
Our Lord was not opposed to
wealth but the selfishness and
misuse that often accompany ·
money. It's sad that in the name
of profit, many in our society are
more than willing to throw_
.
.
.
.
morality outtbe door. To demand for usmg 1t Wisely and domg the
the right to profit at any price
is
most good with it possible. Jesus'
an affront to the commandment teaching is awesome. But our
to· love our neighbors as our-
society is so bound and gagged by•
selves. Wealth .for wealth's sake money and it complicates
is
not only sinful but harmful and matters with such a false
stupid.
sophisti~ation that our con-
Gandhi once said that the sciences are seldom-touched. We
greatest problem facing the give, maybe, but seldom _till it
world was the hardness of the hurts.
educated the affluent the in-
Maybe, good people . ,are
vestor. There is no e~cuse for waiting for leader:s, for prophets,
such wealth and poverty existing to show them· t~e wa;r. ls Marist
in the world in the 20th century; · College ?ey_el~pmg such leade~s'?
. ·If
one of our talents
is
·making. ·Are th~ m~lVl~ual ~tu~ents domg
money, then. we are responsible any thinkmg m this line?
Center-Op.ens, Provides
Students With- lnforn1ation
FEBRUARY 14, 1975
Coun·seling _Answers
Students' Questions
by Julie Schott
Beginning next week, the office
of the Marist counseling services
will have its own weekly column
in the Circle. The column, called
Dfalogue will answer any letters
submitted in regards to anyone's
personal problems. The answers
to these letters, space permitting,
will appear the following week
in
·the Circle, and will be answered
by one or more of the three
counselors on campus.
The counseling services is
made up of
Ann
_Haggerty, a
personnel officer who graduated
last year from. Marist's com-
munity psychology program,
Larry
Sullivan,
assistant
professor. of Religious Studies,
and is directed by Cagle Moore.
· The counselors feel that since
they
cannot
possibly
see
everyone
on
campus
in-
dividually, it would be beneficial
for students to express them-
selves through the column.
As Greg Conocchioli, editor of
the Circle stated, "this would
give. students the opportunity to
J!Se the·counseling services while
remaining anonymous if they
wish."
·
·
Conocchioli, who first came up
• that Marist has had a full-time
counseling . service, it is im-
portant that students realize
what is offered to them.
What actually will be offered in
Dialogue was explained by
Ann
Haggerty. "We will not be merely
answering the problems ·we
receive, rather, we will help the
person to re-examine his problem
by offering more effective
problem-solving techniques. We
will
offer different perspectives,
in the hopes that the person will
be able to solve his own problem
if he sees it in a different light."
Ann feels' that the column is
important,. because as she ex-
plained, "Llfe is a series .. of
problems that confront us, and
often, rather than dealing with a
problem face-to-face we try to
disguise it, like trying to hide an
. elephant in the closet. First we
must keep covering it up, then we
have to feed it, and clean up after
it, and in the long run, we spend
much more energy disguising it
than it would take to confront it."
The Circle asks that allletters
be sent to:
The Circle
P.O. Box 857
c-o Counseling Column
By Joan Stegenga
interviewed
by Garcy
to
guaranfee that the center would
be well rim. The staff has been
trained by a p·rofessional coun-
selor, Marleen Gallo, from
Planned. Parenthood.
They should be signed, though no
names will be used in the column.
!
with the idea of Dialogue. feels
the Dutchess County is available. that ~ince this- is the first year
Someone_wishirig- consolation ·in - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
A
new Sex and Birth· Control
Information Center. opened
· Monday, February 10. Largely
the work of Urrey Waters, a
sophomore,
the . center
is
supervised by Ann Haggerty, and
is also aided by a Planned
Parenthood counselor and a staff
of twenty .- four student volun-
. teers.
All workers were.recruited.and
Volunteers · can
easily
recommend
a
reputable
gynecologist that is within close
reach. Appointments with a
Planned · Parenthood counselor
can also be set up and --dn-
formation-on all social services in
·-:,:··ait·ex,ra-,···
six-packs f~r.the
weekend.
,.
GPACKS
_j
d'rlure/eA
.
when you're having
more than one.
AVAILABLE: AT FRANK'S RESTAURANT
&
MARIST RATHSKELLER
Frank 's Restau·rant
Draft
Beer
8oz. glass
25q:
Pitcher
'2.00 ·
•
•
0
'
0
the area .of religious morals and
birth control could be directed.to
such couseling · through · the in~
. formation center. . .,
.
Because this center is func-
tioning as a midway
point
bet-
ween the student and various
services, ·all ·calls can be kept
anonymous . .In this way .a caller
can obtain all the needed help
without experiencing the em-
barrassment. of. facing· someone
.:, in' her next class who knows alLof-
her personatprciblems//::
-
.
..
:· Plans for the future· include
hiring a nurse from Planned
Parenthood· to arrange ap-
pointments for students with
gynecologists: The nurse would
~come to Marist on a regular basis
<>f once or twice a month.
·
· · Also being tentatively planned
by Garcyis a special session to be
presented here by a gynecologist.
Such a session· would include a
professional explanation of in-
ternal examinations, information
on testing for breast cancer, and
the opportunity for students to
obtain
other
pertinent
knowledge.
·
Garcy put almost a year of work
into bringing about this center at
Marist. She began by pr,esenting
proposal plans . to Cagle Moore
who referred·., her to Ann
Haggerty. Ms. Haggerty directe~
c.;ar~y to the necessary people to
put her plans to work. When no
other office space could be found,
it was decided to use M~.
Haggerty's office after the
regular business day.
The number of liours available
and the hours the switchboard is
operating limit the center's office
time. In turn, the number of
staffees needed has also been
limited. Presently the staff
consists of students from
Sheahan and Leo and three
commuters. In the future Gary
hopes to expand membership to
include residents from Cham-
pagnat and HEOP students.
Important
.
,
Announcements
Musicians ai-e .needed for the
Spri~g. produc:tion ... of GEORGE
M\:t5y·the Theatr'e -Guild. Brass·
instruments are especially
needed. Any student, interested
in becoming. a member of the
Production Committee please see
Suzanne Deak, room C416 P.O.
Box C456 or Bill Dunlevy, room
C516 or P.O. Box C106.
'fhere will be an organizational
meeting on February 12th at 5:30.
in room D204 of the Veterans
Club. Veterans and interested
students are urged to attend.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerry Kelly have
become the -parents of a baby
boy, Matthew Michael. born
jobs covered by the PACE Exam.
Please see Larry Snyder in the
Placement office for · inore
details:
·
On Thursday February 20, The
· Campus Ministry will begin a
series of consciousness raising
sessions entitled .. Awareness."
C:ach session will be held in the
Vireside Lounge starting at 5:00
p.m. The first session will be
moderated by Laurence Sullivan
and will center around the topic
··Loneliness,. · Awar_eness
of
Yourself." Please see next
week's CIRCLE for further
details concerning success
meetings and topics.
January 17th, at 3:28 a.m. Get Them While They Last ·
Matthew weighed in at 9
1
•2
lbs.
Reynard editor ·Mike Maloney
and
was
19
1
2 "
long. reports that orders for the 1975
CONGRATULATIONS.
Reynard are. going very well.
- Those who have not ordered a
copy should contact the yearbook
office no later than March
1.
Cost
of the yearbook $12: checks
should be made payable to the
As of February 17, there will be
a film available entitled Breast
Self Examination. You will be
able to make reservations for its
use through M.r.s. O'.Connor in the
lnfirmary.
It
will also be shown
ii} room 248CC on Tuesday,
February 18, at 2
1).111.
The placement office has
received a booklet containing the
1975 projected• hirings in New
Yo~k and New Jersey/or college
graduates seeking, F~deral
career employment. Specific
locations of . employment are
given .. Included in this list · are
1975 Reynard, and sent to
Reynard, Box C-843. Delivery is
expected by May
1.
According to
the editor, many of the ·book's
selections have been expanded,
· including those concerning
faculty
arid
student
organizations.
In
case you might
be looking for the year:book ofs
fice. it has been moved to room
.268 Campu_s Center. :--
Tbcn· v.:i/1 be
,1
.I
11i1ior C"1ss
Cockt,1i! A11·ty
011
Fri,l.iy.
Feb1·11,11y
2 I
S<'e 111'.\'t1JJeek"s CIRCLE·
for Jitll d,•tails. · · ·
FEBRUARY 14, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE7
Student Academic Committee Announces Plans
by Peter Allen
student Academic Committee
Chairman Bob Sammon has
announced plans and ideas that
are to be put into action this
semester.
·
Among these plans
is
the
formation of a committee to
review those faculty members
eligible
·
for either
·
tenure or
promotion: Toe committee, made
up of seven SAC members, will
Management
Assuliled
Over the vacation, the Campus
Center, with the cooperation of
Don Honeman and the Cham-
pagnat House Council, assumed
the
.
management of the Barn
from Champagnat
-
House. In an
effort to create a campus-wide
recreation area, the Campus
Center will provide a larger and
more varied assortment of
equipment. Scheduled
.
to be in-
cluded are: two pool tables, two
bumper pool tables, t\vo· air
hockey machines, two ping pong
tables; .two football machines,
one shuffle bowling machine, one
electric table tennis machine and
seven to eight pinball machines.
Staffing for
·
the project will
consist of one manager
·
and
several attendants .
.
Opening is targeted for today,
.
February
13 -
watch for specifics
to be posted soon
.
·
.
.
.
.
Details on the continued use of.
the
Barn
for small parties are
being ironed out' at
_
this time.
Rental
.
Charge
will
remain at
$15.00, with an additional $15.00
·,_
refundable deposit required.
Social regulations agreed to by
the Campus Center,
C.U.B.
and
the Champagnat House Council
will be
_
enforced. Copies will be
available in the Campus Center
.
.
at opening.
Forfurther information, please
contact Jack Schofield, ~xt.
203,
or the Campus Center
.
Beginning
Soon.-
·
,,.
.
Weekend
College
The weekend college will make
its debut at Marist on March
1
and
2. A
new concept
_
in high~r
education, the weekend college is
designed to meet the needs
.
of
men and women who, because of
work or family responsibilities,
are
.
unable to attend classes in
.
either the
•
day or
.
evening
division .
.
They can now take
classes at Marist on Saturdays or
Sundays and earn three
·
un-
dergraduate. course credits by
attending only six classes.
Students who register for a
Saturday course attend classes
from
-
9
a.m. -
3
p.m., including
lunch for three consecutive
.
Saturdays. During the following
• three weeks they do not attend
classes, but they are expected to
do independent research and
reading.
·
They return to the
campus for
·
three additional
Saturdays to complete their
course work. The same schedule
is followed for Sunday courses,
except that the hours are 10 a.m--: -
4 p.m., including lunch. Thirteen
courses are being offered this
semester. According to director
Stephen Panko, Marist .will offer
four weekend coUege sessions
during the 1975-76 academic year
<two ih the Fall and 2 in the
·
Spring). C.W. Post College ori,
_Long
Island has been
a
·
pioneer
with this type of college course
scheduling.
·
Another
problem
being students could meet faculty of
their various departments on an
informal basis. Presently three
SAC members are on the com-
membership capacity of 35 seats
of which
25
are filled.
Anyone interested please
contact Bob Sammon Ext.
255.
examine
those
eligible
backgrounds
focusing
on
scholarship, mastery of their
field, and also what they view as
excellence in education. When
asked why such a committee was
formed, Sammon said,
"SAC
feels that tenure should not be a
deciding factor when dealing
with exigency. Marist College
will survive due to quality,
therefore we should have the best
faculty."
discussed by SAC includes
inadequacy in the Teacher
Education program. Students
teaching in various schools
receive no Education credits and
do not have
a
faculty sponsor.
Toe curriculum also lacks a
course that supplies instruction
in methods of teaching reading.
mittee
searching
for-
a _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
Sammon also spoke of the
possibility of having afternoon
socials during free slots where
In the
time
it takes to drive
your friend home, you could save
his life.
·
If your friend's been drinking
too much, he shouldn't be driving.
·
·
The automobile crash is the
number one cause of death of people
your age. And the ironic thing is ·
that the drunk drivers responsible
replacement for Academic Dean
Richard A. LaPietra. Some of the
achievements made by SAC
during the fall semester included
later library hours during mid-
term and final week and the
adding of Computer Mathematics
as a major.
·
Toe SAC has a
for killing young people are most
often other young people
.
Take ten minutes. Or twenty.
Or an hour. Drive your friend
home
.
That's all.
If you can't do
that, call a cab. Or let him sleep
on your couch.
We're not asking you to be
a doctor or
.
a cop. Just a friend.
·
, - - - - - - - - - - - - 7
.
-
1
DRUNK DRIVER, DEPT. Y*
.
I
BOX
2345
·
I
I
ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND 20852
I
I
I want
to
save a friend's life.
I
I
Tell me ~hat else I can do.
I
My
name 1s _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
I
Address. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I
I
City _ _ _ _ _
State _ _ _
Z i p _ _
I
L _ _ _ _ _
_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
_J
wy1J1:JJfHUiJJ\\
,
\Y'.",
,
\l-f
:
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AJ)\
'
J
Sl)JIY
t:tl\J\lfrtt:I
;
.
LISTEN ...
To Marist College Radio
WMCR
640
on your
.
AM dial
FE.
IF YOU LET
A
FRIEND DRIVE DRUNK, YOU'RE NO FRIEND.
0
.
.
.
;,,-
-
''4rnol:-,.
'
I~
1111'
,
\ltl'.\lt,.'.\I <II lt<
,
\'.\~l'Olll
1
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.
IIIGIIWA:
·
1HAHICSAH
'.
'
f)'All'.\1IMSTltAl'ION
,...,-
...
i
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..
\.
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}
.,
..
;,.
PAGE8
,,yy7.•
·
_
.
nr.znter
·THE CIRCLE
FEBRUARY 14, 1975
.Cagers.Shot Down In
Monday's Sienna· Contest
By
Thomas Mc Terna
keeping guard Eric DePercin
But the visitors fought back and
back waiting. With two baskets
cut it to seven before Hohnes put
After winning -three straight by Mike Hart in the final minute it out
of
reach with four straight
games .last week while showing of the half Marist had cutthe lead baskets with nine minutes left._
signs of the-sharpness and to 48-42 at halftime.
Holmes finished with 24 points
shooting ability that enabled · Al Fairhurst kept the offense and a season-high 17 rebounds.·
them to win nine of their first moving at the start of the se~ond Forward Ray Murphy also · got
_eleven games, the Marist cagers _ session and his dri~ing layup hot down the stretch and scored
were shot down in Siena 103-87
brought the visitors within 5614 22 points on 8-14 shooting.
·
Monday night following a valiant with fifteen· minutes left. But
With .Fairhurst_. providing
comeback from a 17-point defecit Siena, ranked sixth in N.Y. State_ leadership and Holmes blocking
early in the gam~.
for college division teams, shots- from all angles, the ·Red
Due to poor shooting, which rediscovered their fast oreak Foxes had little trouble defeating
was followed up by the Indians' and, ~ith the help of tw~ critical Bloomfield ( 12-4) Thursday.
fast · break offense leading to offens!ve foul calls agamst ~art Fairhurst, hittirig all_ five . of his
layups or Marist -fouls, the Red . an? Cirasella, opened up a five-
shots before he was· forced to sit
Foxes found themselves trailing pomt lead at 70-65.
with foul trouble early in the·
35-18 midway through the first
Earl Holmes, plagued by foul--- second half, played his best game
half. Following ·a •timeout, Joe trouble throughout, finally -was in several weeks, as did his back~
yirasella led the Fox rally with
forced to the. bench with ~:17 court partner, Eric DePercin,
njne points while the home team left after sc~nng only
6.
pomts, who scored 14 points and handed
was-denied the fast b_reak by. "'.a~ below his 19.6 average. The off 12 assists, his season high.
,
·
· Indians took full advantage, Holmes once again took scoring
.
!
eeding sophmore center .Gary honors . with 26 points, while
n ·--
k
' ' P.l · d
Holle for eight. of his game-high Murphy contributed 20 .· and Joe
-
0 C
ev .
9
ve
27 points during a 13-3 stretch Cirasella 18.
. .
J: ·
U
J _.
_.
that boosted Siena to an 84-68
Saturday night, Concordia
· ·
-
· .
_ margin which they maintained jumped off to a 7-0 lead as the
.
Ai
1-,,,qocir
'1'oqt1te/v_· ·
ii?~}~i~~;f;l~~i~
~if~I~;tFi?i:~\~
J
cause. ·
··
to open up a commanding 60-43
Last week the Foxes beat New lead;Holines had 30 points and 16
by
Thomas McTernan
tourney was completed, .. Ger ·uecisfon over Kingstqn. The sc~re
Paltz ! 99-80), Bloomfield .( 98-61)
rebounds despite fouling out with
_
. . .
mania
B
emerged victorious
by
was
2-_2,
but. Marist led 3-l in. and. Concordia· !95-80) at Dut-~ over seven minutes left. Hart, the
Who ever heard of winter :blanking.the host team 1-0 in the corner kicks, Api"igliario con-
chess CC with Earl Holmes team's leading scorer, played his
soccer'! For most people, soccer finals. Marist; coming off its best verted a centering pass from
scoring 80 points and grabbing 47 first game in a week and added
is .a · garne played
)n ·
warm
,
outdoor season ever. had the right wing Jo_hn Metzger fifty
reboun_ds to earn a spot. on the
11
points.
.
climates on a wide green expanse misfortune -of··_playing the .Ger- seconds into : the.·
,
game then
_E
1
•
1
'_C
1
•A.
c;_
All-?tarteam for Division
Marist, 13-6 before last night's
that.prohibits close viewing of the ·
maniaA
team twice and.lost both" ·scored .imassisUict·at 12:39
·
off
'
a
game at Sacred Heart, returns to
action. Such was. not the case, times, sandwiching a 3-1 decision scramble iri front of the net .
Fr~shman
-
guards Paul Kane Dutchess Saturday ( Feb. 15)
.. however. for the 750 people who over. Kingston on· comer kicks._ Kingston .tied the score with two, and Glynn Berry came off the · ·against . Monmouth
before
braved
cold
temperatures
·Germania.
A
scored. twice. ofi goals in two minutes, the second
bench early in the game to get the rematching 22~ Dowling
·
(fifth -
Sunday to attend U1e
.
i•'ourth
Hed _
J<'ox goalie
:
Jay
·JVIetzger coming when Tim.Trottalost the
Foxes moving against New Paltz.
r~n_k~d in _ state in college
Hudson Valley Indoor_ ·soccer while his teammates were unable ball in front.of hi~ own net:Marist
They combined for 18 points <to
division
J
m
Oakdale next
Tournament at pu~he~_s
cc. . ••. ·
to get anything started and
We[!! .
outshof Kingstoo}l-8' overan. · _ _
_ gixe M
_
~rist a 47-36 halftime edge. . Tuesday
I
Feb.
18 ).
They wefe,t~e~te,1 to a_cl<>s~up _ taking shots that wotlld haYE:-?ut
,
;}n::t~e ·. relll~t~[:lJrgaii,isC Ge~~- · ··
· ·
look of thlc!: _
_£)1.eckmg,'the passmg;· · of bounds _ev,en outdoors, s::u_lmg.: n~ma_:A.:Apngh~no,wa~ hurtm
the shootmg• .... and:;. the. superb ' way over the net or high into.the.· the third mmute·:and §at,ouUhe
goaltendingthat make the game ·stands.· Al
·
Robinson puf the re·mainder oLthe game .. The
what itis outdoors. Because the Foxes on the board with 3:31 left victors held
a
2-0
lead until John
playing area is much smaller and , when he took a· bloop pass from Metzger scored off
a ·
steal with
the games consist of only one Tom McDonald and beat a
,t
::12
.left. But the· Foxes -were
fifteen-minute period; indo.or wandering G·ermania goalie. The unable
to
penetrate for
a
good
soccer is quicker and tightly- · victors put it out _ of . reach, shot the rest of. the way and were
played; providing for continuous however. wheri they" headed one eliminated from the tourney.
·action and excitement that arc past Metzger with
l
:57 left. .
Marist will· play· in one more
sometimes lacking in the outdoor
Vito . Aprigliano scored two tournament at Dutchess later this
game.
goals and just missed
011
several month before entering the RPJ
When the double - eliminatio11 others as he led _Maf1st to 'the: timrney in March•
·
High On Sports
VIKINGS ENTER NEW LEAGUE
Marist's club football team, long a dominant figure in the Eastern
t
'.ollegiate Club :Football Conference, has joined with seven other
colleges and universities from New York and New Jersey to form the
Met
8
Football Conference.
.
· _
.
The league, which will begin operations in the fall, also boasts such
strong teams
as
Manhattan, Iona, Pace, St. -John's and Brooklyn.
There will_be seven league games with a bi-annual home-and-home
series against
each
team.
·
HOLMES
NAMED
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
Earl Holmes; the junior center from Buffalo, has been named
MarisfCollege Athlete of the Week for tl!_e week ending February 8.
This marks the second straight week Holmes has been the recipient of
the award.
·
·
·
·
Holmes, who was also named to the ECAC Division
III
All-Star
team_. scored 80 points on 35~59 FG shooting and grabbed 47 rebounds
to spark the Red Foxes to three consecutive victories. - -
:'-JOTES FROM THE SPORTS DESK ,
.
.
.1:
V. Basketbal~ teazp. lost to Sien~ 107:91- Monday after leading
most'
of first half. Damian
I◄
arley and Neil LaJeunesse led the attack with 26
points apiece. Lajeunesse scored 30 in 84-83 squeaker over New Paltz
last Thursday ... Rich Lotze. ass_istant soccer coach here, played· for
: -~ ·o~ches' · at Dut<:hess Indoor Soccer Tournament Sunday:·Team was
e_hmmat~d.m semis by D~t~hess ... Stev~ Van Kueren,-ranked in top
five on X-Country team, fm1shed second m the three-mile winter run
spons?red by the Hudson Valley Athletic Association Saturday •..
. IJurmg_ recent floor h?ckey intramurals, scheduling of games last·
l~ndat mght caused qmte a furor: Seems that Friday night attracts
ab?ut,5 or so basketball enthusiasts who were forced to the sidelines
w_hlle _!he _µucks t~ok over the _gym ... ~o-Names emerged as cham-
pions m f1f!als held Monday mght. Behmd John Davern's two goals,
they beat C,eorge McC 2~0. Tom McDo~ald addedassisfon first goal
while ~econd · was u~ass1sted .... Speaking• of pucks,. the club hockey
~ade its_ debut agamst the Culinary Institute at Millbrook School
~unday mght. · Pete Celetano scored only goal in losing effort . ..
• · -·-
.. lntra~ural ba~ketb~ll begins next week. l:Pick Eric 'DePercin':;
Pet~o s Hejects · to wm. Led by_ 6-8 Dave Bean· and supergtiard Ernie
~toms! -~h
7
r .
~ave ~~od shoo~mg, speed, and depth to win. ·Ron
l,lack_lm s - M_1lkba~s s~out ~ive_the_m a run, however ... What is a
~~st_ ~unner ,like, Rich Sehr.eider domg walking around Donnelly'!
lrymg to beat 1ony Wilger, of course.·
·
THIS
WEEK IN MARIST SPORTS
.
1
Feb: 13 -
l◄'eb;
19) · -
.
. Saturd~y!_-rebruary, 15 - Basketb~ll. vs. Monmouth--at Dutchess
. l
ommuru~y Coll~ge Falcon Hall, Varsity at,8 p.m., J.V:at6 p.m
-. ~yomen
s
Basketb~ll
af Nyack, 1
p.in. .
.-·
·
_l_rack vs. Trenton State ~nd Queens at Queens College,
11
a·.m. _
l
uesd~y, February.18 - Ba_:3ketball at Dowling,.Varsity· at 8
p.in.
J
V
at " p m --
·
·
..
_· - · · ·
.. ·
· · ·
'
.
•·.
u
.
.
<.
.'....
. • '
;
.,··,
,: • •
14.2.1
14.2.2
14.2.3
14.2.4
14.2.5
14.2.6
14.2.7
14.2.8
Volume 14, Number 2
MARIST CO~LEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
February 14, 1975
Dean Wade and Richard
McCarty at the
Free
·
University discussion.
Serles Discusses
-
Mari
·
s
-
t Survival
by
Julie Schott
schools use .
.
Dean Wade also assuredly
.. Will
Marist Survive" was the
stated that Marist will continue to
topic discussed
-
Monday night by
exist, because
'
'there is no
_
students, faculty
.
and
-
a!l-
problem
•
in getting students to
ministrators in the first of this
Marist.
-
In
fact, lVIarist has been
·
·
semesters Free University
one of the leaders in aggressive
Dialogue Series.
recruiting."
__
P
r
inciple speakers at the
Another point that was brought
-:- gatheri!}g included
·
President
ouf; w~s that Marist's geographic
Linus Foy, Frederick Lambert,
location was very good, that this
director
.
of campus life Richard
is
a growing area and that the
McCarty,
'
assistant
.
professor of seven colleges in
·
the area
.
are
Business and
.
.Dean Thomas
distinctly different from one
Wade. Other faculty and staff another.
members who attended the
There was mention of Marist
dialogue
.
were
·
Xavier
.
Ryan
,
•
.
possibly becoming a law school in
Janet ~chilling er and Father
I
.eo
.
·
"
the future, which would
·
be ideal
·
Gallant.
.
. . . .
for the location, beingthat there
_
The.~iscussion began with Mr.
··
are
no
1a
·
w schools between New
Deepi.te
'
Fin8ncial
·
Strain
·.:7.- .•
-
-
McCarty stating
.
emph~!!cally
York and Albany. There was also .
that
·
there
..
will
pe
··
a Madst
. .
the
.
mention of expanding the
College in.1980. He exrlaiiled
·
that
;
.
.
J)sycholOg
·
y
department
.
\
.
last ye_ar the schoo! was a victim
·
_
Fred Lamberfled the dialogue
l'
Foy
Quite ''OptiDlistic"
·
of change,
.
and
.
1t
·
.
,
becam~ a
.
_
m the direction of other attributes
1'
'
question of wlfo
.
w
·
ould make
.
·
of the--college
.
Some that were
1
'
sacrjfices in the
--
face of these
.
mentioned ~ere successful
I
i
.
changes. McCarty
,
said thatthe
---
recruitment
,-
the aniouut of
_
::
real concern today \Vas .with the
.
financial
.
aid available tal~nt
of
<
state of the fut~re Marist,
:
and his
t
he
·
faculty
. (
Dean Wade
.
brought
_
.
I
-
(REPRINTED
.•
-
BY
·
·
.
.
PER-
.
students and Marist. employees, prepare them for
-
future careers. hopes are that 1t wont become a
.
out
.
the
.
fact
-
that there aren
'
t
.
!
MISSION OF
POUGHKEEPSIE
·
-
will
.
open
.
·
with the
·
spring
Off
·
-
•
campus Jnterm,hips
-
a.re
:
·
m~ t~o colleg~;
:
me<;1ning,
_
an
:
inany scJ1ools that
h::tn
.
Ph
;
D, 's
l
'
JQURNAL)
·
· ;,
.
s~i;n.1:ster. )J.nli~e
-
i:i
.
babysitting offered
-.
!11
.
communicatioll arts; mstit4t1on off(!r1~g
-
bas1caHy t~~
-
teaching
,
·
freshman c
·
ourses),
1
1
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-
- .
-
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.
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·
.
'
.
.
:
·
.
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.
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.
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1be
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ec?nom1c
.
s~t11ation
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Jorc:111g us 1nto aperiod
<
of
·
con-
.13nd
: •
1911ova
_
t1on
_
:.i
_
n the fields of
·
..
··
··:
...
·
:··
· ,
,
....
·
::-
•
· ,
:
Jeacliw
_
g m~tlio
,
d~
.
_
as
_
mos~
.
ottier
•
.
terest;in Mar
.
1st
_
)
:
·
·
·
solidation. At the same'time,
j
t is
·
theater, arts and crafts
,
science
~
--
·
·.·
.
_
_
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
·
_,,:._
_
··
••
Therl:!
-
w~re
.
some very out-
prompting us to dev
'
elop in-
reading and athl
.
etics .
..
·
:
-
C
·
-
1
·
R
·..
·
c
·
LE
'•
•
A
·
•
..
.
....
.
.
.
.
:
.
.
.
-.
.·
..
spoken_reacters
·
tO the
·
dialogue
.
novative programming.
~
New
·
While innovation_is the order of
.
..
·
· ·
·
·
.
·
. • ·
·
.
·
·.
.
·
·
n
·
n
..
o
,-
u
·
.
n
•
c
·
e
..
s
O
_
ne was Kevin Brower
.
who said
ideas create new enthusiasm. So
the day in 1975
~
Marist's
·
adoption
.
.
·
.
·
·
·
.
·
·
·
.
·
.
that you have to take the problem
despite the current
·-
financial
of new educational programming · ·
·
of the state of the college from a
__ strain on us as a
·
private in-
.
did . noC
-
·
occur
;_
ovei:night.
·
·
·
marketing
·
•
pQinL
_
of view. "You
stitution, we are
:
quite optimistic
Curriculum chaIIges in the past
.
·
·
E
·
d
..
.
.
z·
_
t
.·
o
.
.
.
rz·
~
l
.
c
· ..
·
h
g
n
··
gi
-
e
.
.
.
·
have a
,
product, and then you
about the future."
·
few years indicate the
.
college's
;
_
u
u
.
have to market it.
.
The problem
This is how Dr. Linus R. Foy,
aware_ness
:
of
the
_
need~ of a
.
.
here !s that the aamiilistration
president of Marisf College,
·
changmg student population.
doesn t know the exact way to
summarizes his institution's
·
In 1971, Marist introduced
The present editorial staff of was named to the position of market
it.
They don't know what
outlook for 1975.
graduate programs in business the CIRCI
:;
E
·
has today
·
an-
Associate Editor, a post which the attributes
·
are."
The new year is bringing a new
·
·
administration and
·
.
community nounced the
·
return of orie of its gave her 51mple opportunity to
Brower and
.
Bob Sammon both
thrust to education at Marist.
psychology
.
··
This
·
year-'s edi
_
tors- and named Ms. Irene
_
learn
,
the au ties
-
of a co
.
- editor feel that Marist is held back by
Under the direction of
·
Dr.
_
·
enrolhnent
·
shows
·
a 15 percent
:
Ross to succi=!ed Lyn Osborne as
•
and prepared her for the even-
tradition
,
and
.
that can't con-
Stephen M. Panko, the
_
college's
.
!ncrease. While full - tim
·
e study
Co.:
Editor.
··
·
. ·
•
tuality
·
of
.
stepping into the tinue .
.
..
If
you've got a good
first directoF of continuing 1s
.
encouraged
;
Jhese programs
·
Gregory· Conoc
·
chioli
has position.
product, you've got to sell it."
' education, Marist is
,
·
.
offering have b~en designed primarily
_
for r~t~l"lled to
fill
his position as Co -
·
Hoth
·
Ms.·
-
Ross and Mr.
·
Fra~k
.
DeFiili, one of
·
.
the
adults in the Mi
_
d -
.
Hudson
.
area professional men and women who Editor
_
of the 1v;aristweekly after Conocchioli
:
have
worked coordmators
of
the
·
Free
several new
.
opportunities
.'
In waptto pursueadegree on a part having
-
spenLthe
fall
semester together in the past and their ~niv~rsity thought'that the most
addition to revitalizing its part -
- time basis
.
.
··
·
.
_.
· ·
·
·
studying abroad. A former news rapport should account
'
for a important thing brought out
time evening
·
pr
'
ogram, this
.
Jn}973, Marist al}
_
d Our
.
Lady of reporter
;
Mr. Tonocchiolj was smooth editorial transition.
during the evening, was "the
spring Marist is
.
offering a
·
I:,ourdes
·
H,igh School embarked first named
,
C.9 -
Editor in Febo
·
.
Not only have the two top fe~sibility
.
of Marist's surviving
,_
television correspondence course on
:
a ''bridge . year''.:-Program
.
·
ruary of last.year_-
_
.
·.
positions undergone cliange. Also
_
H's more
_
promising
_
than I
entiUed "The Ascent
.
of Man."
-
which enables high scliool seniors
·
lre.ne Ross,
.
a
·
junior
~
com-
narried today were Sports Editor thought. I think most of the
Designed for area
.
residents
,
.
to complete a freshman college murucations
·
major,
.
is
·
also a Hich
·
Burke and
_·
Photography
.
.::;tudents' questions were an-
who would like
to
.
~am college year wf!~le stiH remaining formeq-eporter for the CIRCLE.
.
.
credits but
cannot
attend
·
oil -
•
members of
.
their
.
graduatjng During Greg's'iibsen5!e, Ms
.
Ross
CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
.
.
.
CONTINUED ON PAGE
2
campus classes,
:
.
t}_le course cl?ss. The program continues
·
·
·
··
'
·
centers
.
on
'
a 13
°
week series..,.. with Lourdes and now en-
broadcast
·
on Channel
;
l3 (Public
·
· compasses Spackenkill High
Broadcasting Service)
.
Narrated
.
School. Other area schools
·
have
by Dr. Jacob
·,
Bronowoski, the ~xpre~sed
.
interest in par-
course deals with two
··
million tic1patmg next fall.
.
.
·
years
.
of man;s
.
existence as
-A
specialthree - year degree
·
illustrated through his scientific
·
program with
.
an
.
emphasis
.
on
achievements.
.
.
. .
.
·
·
·..
.
inter
.
- disciplinary studies
•
is .
Mari.st is ·also
:
-
·
inaugurating
.
offered to high school graduates
.·
.
extension centers :in
·
Peekskill, capable of
_
acc;,eleratild
.
college ·
.
·
Middletown
·
and !{ingston
_
. Both
·
·
_
study .
.
Students
.
are
•
individually
•
graduate and undergraduate
.
tutored
.
'.
by faculty, as well as
courses
-
will
.
be available to other stude
·
nts
_
.
advanced in the
residents
.
in these areas.
program.
.
.
This semester
·
Marist will also
..
Examples
of
.
new
un-
initiatea weekend college:A new dergr~~uate
'
programs
·
with
a
.
concept
.,
-
in
_~'.
education
·.•
the vocaU9nal
·
orientation are ac-
weekerid
··
·
college
·
:
~nables' adult
-
cou~ting,
•
com.inunic;:ttion arts,
.
who cannot attend
,
class'es during
·
·
~rimi11at_
:
·
justice,
·.
bili~gual
.
the
·
week
.
.
.
.
to
,
...
complete
,
ed
1,1
ca ~1.on,
__
.
..
com put er
-
re_guirements
.·
by' attehding • all
·
-
.
ma~emaUcs,
.
-~aralegal stu
_
di~s;
.
·
day
.
. ·
classes
:
90. Satur
_
day
:
.
or sp~c1,1 -
:
educ~t.19~
-
;
and
.
•
appq~d
.
Sunday for six weeks.
·;.
.
. --
:
.
sol1d.state
.
phy:51cs .
.
,. _
,
·
.
•
.
.
:·:
·
'
.
'The
_
I:.ittle People's Growing
.
.
-,
Other
'.'
-\
Uri de
'
r
'
gradua te
..
.
I>!ace;''.
.-
a
:·:
new
-
cotjc~p
(
in on - _
:
prog~a!115
,
off~
(
studel'.lts
:
an
:
o~
.
campus
·
day care
_
for pre - school
:
·
. portu01.ty
<:
to
·
~l:lrn
.
credits
:
·
for
.
children
_
of ~9ntin\lin(e.~ucation
•·
·
community
:
exper.!enc~s
thatcan
'
.
1
l'AGE
2
1
ne newly-named cast or the Theatre Guild production "George
M"
.
Theatre Guild Directors
Announce
-
''George M" Cast
FEBRUARY 14, 1975
Hous_e
.
Defends
Arbitration Policy
by Susan Dunderdale
Arbitration Board, which upheld
the fine. The proceedings ac-
As
a result of a fine levied on cording to Popus are unfair as he
Champagnat House resident, Ted said, "When you go in you are
Popus by fourth floor R.A. Pat already considered guilty and
Duffy,
.
Champagnat House
·
you have to prove you're in- .
Council policy
·
concerning the nocent. The R.A. doesn't have to
Board of Arbitration was con-
prove anything." The appeal was
tested in a hearing on February
6
.
based on the grounds that the
At the end of the three - hour initial hearing was unfair
:
hearing Champagnat House
·
was
A
very different view of these
successful in defending its policy same proceedings was given by
regarding fines
.
and the fine Pat Duffy who contended that
.
he
which was levied
.
has been did not feel at all uncomfortable
upheld
.
.
when he pr~ented
his
side of the
Approximately fifty people story to the Board .
.including
eight
witnesses,
.
Through~~t
,
the
evening
members of the arbitration board several testified as to the
-
events
and interested House . members that took place in December and
.
came to watch a judicial process
·
many of the stories con_tradicted
which is seldom enacted
.
·
at each other
.
.
It was pomted out
Marist.
·
·
-
·
that this could be the result of the
'
Judges presiding over the case time that' has passed
.
since that
were Goldie Komis and Ed night.
Kissl111g. The counsel
.
for the
, Both sides presented their
defense . was Mark Plamondon
,
cases with
·
professionalism
·
and
.
while the plaintiff, Ted
·
Popus
··
were quite persuasive and at the
was represented by Jim Elliot. end no one could have guaranteed
Some of the key witnesses were the judges' decision.
.
·
..
Don Honeman; Champagnat
Perhaps the
.
statement that
Hous.e - master Sus.an Ester-
best summarizes the
.
general
Director Suzanne Deak and family are
·
.
Fred Ashley, as graphers.
·
brook
chairma~ of the Ar-
reaction to the hearing was made
Musical
Director
.
William George, Thomas Checchia a~
·
In speaking to the cast mem-
bitration Board Pat Duffy and
·
·
by Mark Plamondon in his
_
Dunlevy have announced the cast Jerry with Chris
.
Seaman ancl bers Suzanne stressed the
:
im-
Ted Popus.
'
'
opening
~
remarks when he said,
_
for the Theatre Guild's Spring Diane Dor will play the roles of portance of good academic
The initial incident which '
'
Within the past veek this case
·
production of the
.
musical
-
Josie
.
and Nellie Cohan respec-
standings and study hab
i
ts when precipitated the judicial action has be
_
en
__
blown way out
_
of
.
comedy "George
M."
tively. Playing the parts
·
of work on the show begins, along goes back to a water _fight and proportlofl:
,
In any case Manst
The production
.
scheduled
.
for Agnes, Ethel
,
Fay Templeton and with giving ,.the show the, b!;!9t
.·
disturbance on December 3 for
·
students can rest assured that
April 24,
25,
26, and 27 is the first Sam Harris will be Maria Cof- performancethatevery member
.
which 'fed Popus was fined
.
ther~ is
·
~
•
judicif!l system at
musica~ production that the fery, Jell! Guarino, Debbie Klei11 can
.
·
She went on to say "the According to House policy Mr. Man~t w~1c~ does ~ts best!-:' see
Marist
:
Theatre
·
Guild has and Bob Morley. other members scope
·
of Theatre Guild is Popus had to appear before the that Justice 1s earned out.
producect in five years
;-'·
the last-
of the cast
·
include Geraldine changing in thapt
is
attempting
musical proquction was staged in Alessi, Mary Ellen Brosnan, to involve a greater percentage of
November 1970 when "How To Elaine
Bruscoe,
Gregory
·
the
. ·
Marist
.
P1'>tilation
.
by
Succeed in Business , Without Conocchioli, John Coughlin, producing shows that require a
.
·
Senio
.
rs Plan
·
Fina
:
[ Week
·
_
.
Really
.
Trying
'
' was presented
.
Candi Davis, Chuck Dumser, greater
·
number of people. Both
The show, produced by
·
Dr.
J.R.
Dempsey, Carrol Emmel
,
she and Bill are attempting to
Jeptha Lanning,
will
have
I;_r_ed
Chip
.
Ermish,
Bob Ferrari,
·
diminish th~ stereotyp~s
.
of
.
Lambert
.
serving as it5 mus1
_
caL Bonme • Fenyar, . Fernando '.fheat:e !]u!ld as an ehte
•
·
consultant.
·
· ·
:
.
.
.
Fuentes,
.
Gene He1mers,
.
Gus <'tgamzat10n clo~ed to
.
new
·
·
··
Based ·on
·
the
.
•
words
·
andfuiisic
:
·
·
.
·
0oµber
;:
H~1:ry
~
0ettiiiger;
-
B~bwmembers:
\!nd~r
·
this
•
·
pl_lHosophy
.
of George'M:
·
cohart the.play
;
w ..
s
•f
O'K~efe
;
•
·ca~ol
·
:
Sh~a
_
han
,
·
!-,e~ll_e Theatre G_mld 1s becommg more
,.
written by
'
Michael
·
stewar
t:
a11d
:
.
Springston
,
Maria
·.
Termm1, st~dent oriented as w~ attempt to
John and Fran Pascai and
·
was
·
Karen
·•
Tully, Dan VanDevoort, brmg mo~e students mto thef!tre
first produced on &roadway
in
and Garey Waters. Along with a~s,
_
while a
_
t the sam~ tune
•
1969
.
·
•·
...
·
·
·
•·
·
Maureen Br~y, and G~rey bnngmg ~us1cal ente~1~ent
Playi~g the parts of the Cohan
.
Waters servmg as choreo- to die Manst Com~uruty.
·
by
Rhoda Crispell
will most probably be held on
campus.
.
According to Jean Forrestal, a
.
The next Seniorclass meeting
.
meinber of the Senior Executive will be held on February 17
_
at
Committee, an invitation
·
to 7:30 in the Campus Center
.
A vote
speak at the 1975 Marist College concerning the location and cost
commencement exercises has of the dinner dance is expected at
been sentto LL Gov. Mary Anne
·
this time. Senior clas~ meetings
Krupsak .
.
If
she cannot attend will probably meet
.
alternating
other possible speakers include Mondays for t~e rest of the school
Walter .Cronkite and Barbara year.
Poverty Meal Speaker Nallled
'oppos1t10n to the government's violent community.
military s
·
pending in South
All of the Marisf Community is
.
·
A
·
PO~e~ty meal will be held at Vietnam. He
w
as
charged with invited to attend this poverty
Marist qollege on February 25,
in destroying files of a foreign meal with guest speaker Ned
_
the New
·
Dining Room fr,,m 5
·
7 government.
'
i'his was done to Murphy
.
The Marist Group on
p.m. Reverend Edward
,
,f
point out that aid to South Viet-
World
.
Hunger, which is spon-
Murphy S.J., known as ''Nc
_
d·
'
to nam was military rather than soring the poverty meal, will also
all those familiar with his caus<
,
s sustanence in nature.
·
be collecting for donations on
as a political activist, will be th
e
.
He is presently a member of February 13 and 20 in
,
Donnelly
speaker.
·
.
·
·
·
.Jona
_
h House
;
a community in Hall (by the switchboard) and in
·
Ned
-
Murphy will speak to the
·
Baltimore. The aims of this the lobby of
.·
Champagnat
'
Hall
Marist Community about
·
the community are to understand the
:
from 12 - 3 p.m. The group is
inequities which exist in
·
a
·
meanirig of resistence in today's· seeking both financial support
government whose spending for society, to realize how one must a
·
nd a greater awareness on the
.
arms holds priority over world act on this understanding, and to Marist Campus, for the problem
·
··
hunger. On Thanksgiving
•
1974, spread
·
•-.e
·
concept of a non
of World Hun_ger.
·
·
when most Americans were
celebrating the traditional feast,
he began a fast which consisted of
a water diet. This fast, which
Walters.
In an upcoming issue
·
of ·the
In a Senior class meeting held Circle two packages for Senior
Monday, February 3, which 35 Week will be presented for
students attended, it was decided
-
seniors to vote on .
that senior week activities would
Committees involved in Senior
last three nights
.
Tentative ac-
Week activities include the
ti vi ties include a
·
boat ride, a Senior Executive Committee, the
cocktail party, a dlnner dance, Senior Week Committee, the
and possibly a picnic. The dates dinner dance committee, the fund
of such activities have not been raising
·
committee, and the
set as of yet.
publicity
,
-eommittee.
.
Although no decision has been
·
If interested seniors want a
made affecting the dinner dance, share in making decisions about
·
the majority preferred that it be Senior Week activities tliey can
held off
~
campus. Dinner dance attend the meeting on February
committee
members
.
are
.
17 because
·
plans are still being
checking
·
out possible locations formulated.
for
.
the dance.
A
·
cocktail party
..
·
·
1asted until Christmas D~y, was
·
to show his con,?ern for the world
hunger crisis
.
as well as a mark
CIRCLE STAFF
directly under Irene Ross.
biology
chemistry
and
Both Greg
·
Welsh and
_-
Tom mathematics
.
majors have op-
MARIST SURVIVAL
.
Continued From 1
Continued From 1
·
of protest against U.S~ military
\
.
.
priorities in the face of this world Editor Al Adolfi. Both have
- wide farr.ine .
.
·
·
worked with the CIRCLE
·
in the
After hi::; ordination as a Jesuit past and should provide the
priest in 1968, Ned Murphy im-
experience
·
necessary for two
mediately
.
associated himse
_
lf such posts.
-
.
with the Movement for Peace and
·
Rather ~h~n haying one person
·
Justice. He actively
·
supported - supervi~e tht(
·
e
.
ntife. c!)inposition
·
movements of draft res1stence
.
of the
·
paper each week,
·
the
In 1969, he was one of the New CIRCLE
has named a
·
layout
York Eight who
·
destroyed staff composed of Linda
·
Franco
Selective Service
files.
He
·
was and MaryBeth
·
Pfeiffer .
.
Ms.
· involved
iri
·
a
·
sLmilar action with Franco has been working
-
with
the Harrisburg
.
·
Eight, as was the
·
former
·
CIRCLE layout
Daniel and Philip Berrigan. lie Editor during the past year
_
and is
continued as
a
counselor for draft proficient in the art of com-
resisters and deserters arid also position .
.
Ms. Pfeiffer
i
s
· ·
a
.
established a G
.
I. coffee house .
.
·
newcomer to the staff, but
_
with
Iri 1973, Murphy
·
was
.
again
·
·
sufficient
.
background
.
to
.
irisure
·
indicted for expressing
-
strpng her success. Both girls wm work
.
McDonald
·
are staying
·
oil
·
as·
·
portunities
for
student
Business
and
.
Advertising
.
originated
researcn.
The
Managers, respectively. Regular
··
'
University Year for A.!;tion, a
swered though not all of them,
features will include Father Leo
.
federally -
.
funded program, but then again, we didn't have the
Gallants· column; Tom~'Mc-
·
permits 30 Marist students
·
to
whole campus here. We did have
Ternan's "High On
·
Sports;" spend a year in the Poughkeepsie
a very good turnout however."
..Dialogue," the
-
Counseling community working
.
in one of
Marie Donovan, coordinator of
column; and, in the spring, track three vital areas -
urban the dialogue series,
•
was also
art
_
icles·
.
by
_
Coach Stevens.
'_•· , ·
education,
urban
·
busine.ss pleased with the turnout, and she
economics
and
juvenile felt that the discussion
W,!S
op-
delinquency prevention.
,
timistic. Marie said that these
·
"Economically
.
.
speakir,1g, we
.
dialogues are good because they
FOY "OPTIMISTICI'
Continued
.
From 1
will not incur any new de
_
bts in
·
bring
·
everyone together in an
l!l75," summ
.
arizes Dr. Foy. open forum, which makes it
·
·
From an educational stand-
'
easier
for
-
students
.
to op~n up.
point,
_:
Mc1rist wiU continue to
The- nexr dialogue, scheduled
respond to·
.
the
.
. n_eeds and for Febrhary 24th, entitled,
·
. "Is
.
. .
.
.
.
.
· ·
, aspirations of current and America
·
·.
·
Unconsciously
_
~n add1t~on, environmental
·
prospective students
.
,
In most Prepar!ng !or War?
'9
will be the
sc1~nce
,
maiors use the Hudson instances,· this will demand that same
.
casual.format, and Marie
River as a living laboratory, and we continue tg be innovative." says that
_
ev~rY,one
.
is .inv!t~d.
·
·
I
I
I
FEBRUARY 14, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE-~
Committee To Open Communications
by
Genevieve Fitzgerald
A student Government com-
mittee has been formed to open
the linas
of
communication
between the
.
students and the
Marist Maintenance Depart-
ment.
student Government secretary
Tom Walsh will head this com-
mittee, the idea for which was
suggested
_
by President Brian
Morris in a "brainstorming
session
.
"
what can be done. Since the
They hope that through the committee consists of both
cooperative efforts of the student residents and commuters who
body, the committee and the will voice other student's com-
Maintenance Department, some plaints in the meetings, the
of the problems on campus can
be
priorities of
all
can be aired.
solved.
•
Problems can be dealt with more
The aim of the committee, effectively this way than
if
people
whose
first
meeting
was complain on their own.
Tuesday, February
11,
is to
Mr. Pavelko is receptive to this
,
discover what· students view as
·
idea.
He
welcomes
com-
problems. Tom Walsh and Mr. munication with the students. He
Andrew Pavelko will then discuss sees this "body to come up with
Student Positions Available
by SUSAN DUNDERDALE
facts" as a vehicle of com-
munications through which
his
department and the students can
become more aware of each
other's problems.
An offshoot of this committee
has been suggested by Mr.
·
camplii.
His
hopes are to make
the students more conscious of
the campus, and to inspire them
to
help
the
maintenance
department keep the college
grounds clean and attractive.
An experiment attempting to
"phase out" the women cleaning
the rooms has been tried and
found unsuccessful. Mr. Pavelko
is
hopeful that his dilemma can
be solved by the end of the year.
There has also been a problem
could be brought to the com-
mittee's meetings.
It
is
still early to tell what the
organization will accomplish.
Ideas are encouraged, however.
Tom Walsh will still welcome
people to the committee. Names
can
be submitted to him, put in
the SG mailbox - 840 - , or slipped
under the office door -
Rm
265 - in
the Campus Center.
•
.
Suggestions can also be made
to Fred Ashley, Gene Reimers,
Paul DeFranco, Mike Maloney,
Jim Britt and Glen Looney,
·
members of the committee.
If
you are a college student
looking for
a
job you may end up
working in Europe. Any student
between the ages of
17 and-27 can
have a temporary job in Europe.
Most openings
.
are in hotels,
resorts, offices and restaurants
in Austria; Belgium, France,
Germany, Spain and Swit-
zerland .. Positions are available
to all college students who submit
their applications by mail in time
to
.
allow for processing permits
and working papers.
Tom
says
that though this is an
ad hoc committee, he hopes the
lines of communication will be
kept open next year. He also
hopes that a policy of con-
structive
criticism
and
awareness on both sides will help
solve any problems there may be.
with plowing the parking lots this
language is required, the door is provided on a
non-- profit basis, winter. This is partly due to the
open to anyone within the age and brief orientations are given number of cars - more than
limits. Wages range from $250 to in Europe just prior to going to previous years - parked in the
morethan$450 a month, plusfree work. These packed sessions lots. Solutions to these problems
room and board, leaving wages speed adjustment
to
Europe and • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
Working periods vary from 60
days to one year, but some
students have stayed longer. As
no previous experience or foreign
free and clear.
make certain all goes well on the
In addition to living new ex-
job.
periences, and seeing
·
Europe
.
Any student interested in a
while you can, working in Europe temporary job in Europe may
offers the chance to travel on a
.
write directly to SOS - Student
pay - as~ you - go basis without Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberte,
really being tied down. At several Luxembourg, Europe. Requests
reunions recently held by for job listings
'
and an application
students who had worked in must include your name, address
Europe, the most heard comment and one dollar or the equivalent
was, "The experience alone was
·
in stamps or internationa
_
l postal
worth it."
·
coupons.
Jobs and working papers are
Students
To Form
Club
by
Joe Sexton
To serve the . needs of Marist
veterans, yeterans and other
interested students are forming a
Veterans Club with an as yet
undefined purpose:
·
.
..
According to
.
Frank DeSiervo,
manager of the Veterans Office if
this becomes a formal club it will
need a declaration of purpose in
an attempt to receiv~ C.U.B.
funds. If the club remains in-
formal
·
it
·
may offer social,
educational or community
'
ser-
vices depending on the chofoe of
its members.
There will be an
.
organizational
meeting on Feb. 13 at 5:30 in
D204, for. all those who are in-
terested
·
in becoming Club
members.
BO
·
YCOTT
.
GA
.
LLO WIN ES.
MADRIA MADRIASANGRIA
SPANADA
RIPPLE
THUNDERBIRD
CARLO ROSSI
RED MOUNTAIN
,,_
·
PAISANO
BOONE'S FARM
TYROLIA
ANDRE CHAMPAGNE
ANDRE COLD DUCK
EDEN ROC
JOSEF STEUBEN
OR ANY OTHER LABEL WHICH Sf\YS M~DE .IN MODESTO, CALIF.
GALLO IS THE ONLY WINERY WITH HEI-\DOUARTERS IN MODESTO.
TO HELP PROTECT FARMWORKERS RIGHTS
'
.-.
_-
._
.
,
DON'T BUY THESE LABELS!
BOYCOTTS HAVE' BEEN ESSENTIAL IN PAST FARMWORKERS VICTORIES
SUPPOR
.
T THE
.FARMWORKERS!
<...,
,,,_.-,-
-,-
·
·
,
-
.
.
.
-
-
.
-
72733
\\\8
Leave Your Head to Us!
GUTTERY
UNI-SEX
- F ~ O
H~IRCUTTINGG
.
$
6
w1·th
BLOW ORVIN
STREAKING, FROSTING
&
PERMANENT WAVING
Marist ID
CALL 454-9239 for your appointment now
·
Joinfhe
third biggest
lamilyin the
world.
Imagine an order of
22,000 priests and brothers in
73
countries
around
the
world.
(That's
a
pre!ty big family.) .
But that"s what the
Salesians of St. John Bosco
are all about - a large family
of community-minded men
dedicated to the service of·
youth
.
(And no one gets lost.)
ON THE MAIN MALL
3
LIBERTY STREET
(Above Capitol Bakery)
Entrance Around Corner
In Italy
in
the 1800's a chance meeting between a poor
priest and a street urchin served to create a movement of such
.
success that
it
is still growing today. Don Bosco became the
priest who brought youth back from the streets - and
back to God.
He reasoned that a program of play, learn and pray would
make useful citizens of the world. He crowded out evil with
reason, religion and kindness in a (what was then unheard of)
atmosphere of family.
_
,,.
The ideals of St. John Bosco are still with us today
.
His
· work goes on in boys clubs, technical and academic schools,
guidance centers, summer camps and missions. And his very
human approach is very evident in the family spirit
of
the
Salesians. This is the way he wanted it. This is the way
it
is.
The Safesian experience isn't learned - it's
lived .
..
-----------,
I
For more information about Salesian Priests and
I
Brothers, mail this coupon to:
I
Fsatha~r
IJoBsepsh
·,Maaffenl,
ss.D·:~
s:o::N
BOSCO
.
I
I
Box
639, New
Rochelle,
N.Y
.
10802
I
.
I
am
interested in the Priesthood
O
Brotherhood
D
I
Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Age _ _ _
_
·
I
-
Street A d d r e s s _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I
I
C i t v - - - ~ - - - - - S t a r e
_ _ _ _
Z i p _ _ _ _
I
Phone
I
I
Education
·
. . . Your Current Job
·
1
·
~-----------
.
PAGE4
THE CIRCLE
FEBRUARY 14, 1975
I
.
ME
• CIRCLE
VOLUME 14 Marlst College, Poughkeepsie, N, Y,
'!be Marist College CffiCLE
is
the weekly newspaper of the
students
of Marist College and
is
published throughout the school year ex-
clusive of vacation periods by the Southern Dutchess News Agency,
Wappingers, New York.
Co-Editors
Photography Editor
Sports Editor
Layout Staff
Business Manager
Advertising Manager
-
Gregory Conocchioli and Irene Ross
1
Al
Adolfi
·
RichBurke
Linda Franco and Mary Beth Pfeiffer
Greg Welsh
Tom McDonald
Staff: Peter Allen, Janice Colleran. Rhoda Crispell, Susan
Dunderdale, Genevieve Fitzgerald, Father Leo Gallant, Charles
Garret, Joe Gigliotti
,
Tommy Kelly, David Livshin, Paul
Mangieri,
__
Thomas McTernan, John Reilly, Ca
_
thie Russo,
Richard Schneider, Julie Schott, Reid Scott, Joe Sexton, Karen
Tully, Rick Whitsell
.
Editors
-
an
_
d Critics
It may or may not be
-
somehow symbolic that the editorial change -
over of the ClRCIE always falls during Valentine's Day
.
week. There
is certainly no love lost on the CIRCIE ed
i
tors by many on campus,
·
By assumingthe du~es of editors, individuals set themselves up for
·
criticism: in s~me cases, well - deserved. Just look at the "letters"
column today
O
the CIRCLE is not only charged with having little
,·
..
<::>
~-
·._,
&;>
-
~rJo
.
·
-
v
:J"
:
'
"'
·
.
~
..
-
(
\
:
I
:
·
~
.'
'DON'TAPPLAUD!JUST THROW ROYALTIES AND
.
HONORARIUMS!'
Letters To The
·
Editors
journalistic taste, but also accused of trying to be avant - garde. We
didn't know innovation was a
,
sin; (And we haven't heard direct
Editorial
.
.
is to be satisfied by a " ... Sex and
·fill
itfor himself, without giving
·complaints from either of the very photogenic pairs of hands.) As for
Birth
·
Control
Information an organizational form to another
our opinions about the new information center, if.we wrote our
·
·
·
Center.'
'
Why isthere a need for
"concern
/
'
.
·
·
_
editorials from the pages of the Encyclopaedia B
.
ritanica, they would
Observations
this
'
at" Marist? The editorialist
3
.
Ut's
.
proceed
·
further
_
to
.
a
· ·
l;>e just as dµll as some of the things
_
that come
·
out of that fine set of
-
·
believes that the lot
of
us are
thorny problem;
.
the editorialist
_
books
:
·
("Besides
;
_
we'd hate to i:ead
_
up on brairi surgery and perform Dear
·
Editor:
·
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
walking aroun!] uninformed remarks
·
that the birth
·
control
·
thatoriourselv
_
es,eventhoughsomewouldargueweneedit).
The editorial "Information about birth control
;.:..
and that center is
'
'
.
.largely the work of
The new editors will face much of the same sort of criticism for the Center" (
F
eb
.
6)
speaks about
a
those
·
iri the know are concerned
one student working iri an area to
.
remainderoftheiryearin office: fortunately, they are used to
it.
They matter that
·
is much
.
_
agonized about
·
ttie rest of
us!
If
so,
so create
a
'
common
,
good
.
;'If the
.
know from past experience that not everyone can agree with their over today
_
- birth control in~
.
what?
.
Any student who
:
wants
.
common goo<1 must be
·
created,
sentiments as expressed in the CIRCIE editorials, and don't expect formation. Unfortunately, the information about birth control
·
therefore not yet existent, and it's
them to be met
with
approval at
all
times. They
also
know that few
.
editorial writer has aJJowed
or abnost anything else,. needs
-
·
being done by
◊nlY orie person at
people have the ccmrage; or perhaps just plain good will, ~o..tell them himself to be infected by the
.
only access to a)ibrary. A half -
tliat
•
(the
.
unnamed
·
woman
when' they've
·
doiie a
·
good
'
'job
:·
·
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
· ·
·
.
. .
·
· same
,
kind
,
of
.
senseless.
/'~OI\;
houi
.
,
:
yiit'1:
>
the
)
''.Encyci9p~edi~
.
maybe?)
--;
how d.o you know it's
.
Besides;· without critks,
·
ho-iv would they know how well they'd
.
done
·
cern"
.·.
that
·•·
has
·
seized<
others.
Brittaiiica"
.
·
wiU
_give
him;
·com-
·
for the co111mon .good?
.
·
.,.
,
,:
·
::::
,
, _·
· ·
theit'job
?{the·
·
-
'.
Letters;,
,
~pl
_
Ulllll
·
has to be filled
"
bf
§Omeone
'
,- whether Concerning
.
the
"
'.
e"ditorial
/
a few : ' pfet~·
:
aut)ioritative
;'
information
:
·
.
.
. ·
·
1
_4
:'
,
Tiie
•
writer coniments
·
sadly
,
just
to
see their namein print orto
:
attempt rational and applicable observation:
.
·
·
.
For the more inquiring minds,
on the fact that Marist is male -
·
criticism of either the ideas orthe editors themselves.
.
·
1..
The
editorialist begins there is
a
bibliography on all
oriented (how, we are not told)
·
Counseling ColUmn
Among the·new services being offered to the college community this
semester, the CIRCLE is happy to announce the establishment of"a
new column, slated to appear
.
weekly in. the CIRCLE
.
Working in
conjunction with the Marist College Counseling services the CIRCI..E
has established a counselin
g
column in an effort to create better
·
communications between that c;>ffice arid the community
.
The CIRCLE
feels that rriany students who 111ay have specific or general questions
concerning school, adjustment. family and pers,onal problems may
not use the counseling offices and we feel that in
t
he
establishment of a
confidential question ~ervice, many
.,
studcnL
<;
may lose their
inhibiticms concerniru
:
lhe
whole counseling area of the college. This
column, however, will
11r,t
attempt
to
answer people's problems. but
rather it will attempt to
givr.
advice and guide
~_
people in the right
direction to finding their own
_
aqswers. .
..
•
.
·
·
The
_
CI,R«:::I;.E
makes the presupposition that as mature individuals,
no one person or group will attempt to "goof'.' on this joint endeavor by.
submitting questions
in
an effo~ to stump tl}e counselors.
·
Once ;igain another service
is
being offered to the community and
we are in theJ1ope that students will use and not abuse the serv~ce
_.
As
students
ii
.
is important to
.
remember that it is our support of new
activities
that
.
make them work and become
-
effective tools to
enriching our lives.
·
·
·
·
Now that· t! 1e CIRCLE
·
staff
·
has officially turned- over,
-
there are
some thank yous in order to the people
who
worked so hard dur_ing the
past year ..
·
·
.
.
·
.
·
· :
·
•
·
·
·
·
.
,
·
.
.
The CIRCLE would like to say a special thank
·
you to Lyn Osborne.
Dave Fri.stash, and Tini DeBaun. These talented people ga:ve
:
alot
of
.
.
their time and effort tothe·paper: Their knowledge and skill was a big
boost to
;
the CIRCLE.
.
..
.
. .
We would also like to thank
.
the people in last semester
'
s In-
.
(
iroduction to Journalism class for their contributions to the CIRCLE,
along with Mr; Ed Baron who taughtthem.
.
.
•
·
·
.
.
..
.
_
._
We would also like to thank Mr. John Tkach for his
·
sports articles.
Finally, we would like to thank all of the people - faculty, s~ff, and
students - w!10 submitted articles for publication.
.
.
.
·.
,
.
.
..
:
badly; he says, "As stU<lents we
·
aspects of birth controlincluded.
and he concludes that bothnien
-
-
are often moved by trends,
;.:
''
_ ·
The need for education is clearly
and women need birth control
Wrong
.
The college generation is
.
'.
more apparent in learning how to
education before they can,act as
not often moved by trends, - we
use a library rather than in in-
·
individuals
.
.
·
live and swear by
.
them
.
.
.
forming t)le student body on birth
···
·
·
Maybe the
r
e is
·
a need for'this
·
2.
Marist has a problem, the
.
control
.
Why expend
.
the time,
after all. We could prevent a
problem we have
·
, says the
·
energy, agd human resources on
recurrence of this breed of
writer, is that
-
there is a " ... need this project? If there is a desire
c o n c e r n e d
p e op l e .
.
to be educated in the areas of sex
-
for birth control information, it
is
·
Yours in abstinence
,
and birth control." And this need
within any student's capability to
Andre' Bronzo
Journalistic
Taste
.
Dear Editors,
·
I would like
.
to register . a
complaint with regards to last
weeks regretable lack of jour-
nalistic taste
.
!
am specifically
referring to the picture of Brian
Morgan handing over a check to
Jay Bauer as a reward for his
service to Marist. Readers will
remember that the picture was
only of their hands
.
1t did not
show the faces of either of these
two
outstanding
·students
.
Perhaps this was the Circle's
feeble attempt at being jour-
nalisticly avantegarde. Whatever
the case may be, I find it
deplorable
·
when apathy is
rampant on this campus,that two
energetic arid concerned students
should
~
-
be treated so cavalierly
.
The Student
·
Government was
attempting to let it be known that
we appreciate the
,
efforts and
energies of.
.
students who
·
care
about Marist. How ironic and sad
it is, that with this one instance of
tastelessness, the
.
student body
will be wrongfully led to believe
that Marist does not care about
'
them. To the Student body, I can
only say that I'm very sorry if
·
you don'tknow Jay Bauer and
.
.
Brian Morgan, two students who
·
have worked very hard for you. I
'
·
am:
.
·
·
·
__
Sincerely yours,
.
·
_.
Brian Morris (not Morgan)
'
:
President of Student Gov't
,
Weekly
_
.
·feople
_
·
•
Students and others who have
.
.
Pawn}
.
·
.
.
·
never had the
·
opportunity
of
·
1.'here will be a question and
·
·
hearing a
.
SOCIALIST LABOR
answer period;
.
This is to let readers know that
the gift subscription for the
Spelman Library to the official
newspaper of
_
the
.
SO'CIALIST .
LABOR PARTY, the WEEKLY
PARTY spokesman, will be able
SOCIALIST LABOR PARTY
to do so on
·
Sunday afternoon
··
Hterattite will be on display, plus
-
·
starting at 2 oclock February 23.
·
copies
of
the
WEEKLY
•
·
Robert E
.
Massi, who was the
.
PEOPLE.
SLP
C
candidate fast year for U.S.
Thank you.
.
Senator
;
willdeliver
a
free Public
.
NATHAN PRESSMAN
•·
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - . - - - - - - PEOPLE, has been renewed.
·
The
CIRCLE
is funded
by
ad~ertisers and
_
receipt
_
of
·
•
Arri
·
pleased to know that
'
ap-
Lecture in Kingston'.•at
.
·
the
12 Catherine Street
Governor Clinton Hotel.
·
·
·
Ellenville, New York 12428
The title of the talk by Massiis:
Member ofthe socialist labor
.·
st:udenl
Goverrirrient
Funds
' .
.
'
.
•
.
·
.
parently soI1'e
·
Marist College
.
students are
.
reading
·
it.
.
-
.....,....---,---
-
--,--~..,..,...-r
'
.
~
~
-
,.-
,.
,:
,
,
,
.
..
....
..
.
The
·
Tragedy
'
·
o
r-,
.Palestine
·
-
'
party
·
·
·
.
,.
Jewish Homeland or
:
Im~rialist
_
·
Telephone: 914-647-6696
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FEBRUARY 14, 1975
THE CIRCLE
Snyder Heads Renamed
Placement Office
Marist's one - time placement job after graduation. Businesses
The reference folder also
office has a new name and a new in the area can also use the contains any reference letters
face. Renamed the Office of service to make any openings in from faculty members or former
Career Development, it is headed their firms known to the Marist employers that the student may
by new Placement Director community. lnfonnation can also want included.
If the student has
Larry Snyder.
be
obtained concerning test dates this on file in the office he can use
·
The
Office
of
Career for Civil Service exams on all the service free of charge for as
Development
is
officially part of government levels.
long as he wants. By giving the
'
the
Counseling
Services,
So
how does a Marist student prospective employer the ad-
although it operates
_
almost obtain help or guidance in ob- dress of the office the reference
entirely independently of the taining a job? First the student letter will be sent to the employer
other· branch of Counseling" makes an appointment with the absolutely free
,
.
.
_
services called Personal Coun- Counseling Services secretary.
At the present time the office is
seliitg. They
:
do however share a This sets aside a specific tiine for open from
8 :30-5:00
and students
secreta~y who
~
kept very
b1!5Y an "interview"
·
between Mr. should feel free to drop in any
scheduling appointments, typmg Snyder and the student. During time they need advice. Students
ti!~ many letters and sign~ that
_
the
.
interview a student will be
·
are encouraged
.
to make an ap-
Mr. Snyder has been sending to asked basic infonnation con- pointment for the first
.
visit.
the students; Except for this help cerning his major, other in- Between
12:00
and
1:00
the office
the
,,
office is run almost single - terests, past work history and
is
open for what Mr. Snyder calls
·
hancledly by Mr. Snyder.
.
most important future career openhouse. During this hour
To many st1;1den~, the n~1:11e goals.
If the _student _has no idea th~re are no scheduled ap-
Larry Snyder 1s still unfamihar about what kmd of a Job he wants pomtments, but the director
is
i~
__
sj:>it~ of hl:s. "appearing daily" or that may be open to someone there to answer any questions.
signs advertISmg the new career of his background Mr. Snyder has The Career Library, a collection
placement office. Mr. Snyder several manuals and pieces of of information about jobs and job
joined
·-
the
.
staff in
.
mid
.
- literature to guide the student. requirements, is also at the
November, but wasn't finally Even
if_
the student has already students' disposal.
settled in until
..
the semester decided what he can do with his
Mr. Snyder's plans for the
_
break.
:
Now that students have degree, he may be shown a few future include a separate room
.
returned, Mr. Snyder is ready to new possibilities that he was for the. Career Library. He feels
help in any way he can.
never aware of before. For Mr. this will make the Library more
The office is designed to sei:ve Snyder, the key word is "aware". accessible to the students. With
all of the Marist student body, but
·
He wants students to be aware of the present conditions a student
because the seniors
will
·
be
all
the various types of job op- cannot use the library
if
there
is
a
_
graduating in a few short months P.QMunities that are open not
·
just scheduled interview taking place
they
.
are
:
the prime targets for
·
the traditional jobs.
or
if the office itself is closed.
career counseling. However,
M,:.
Tlle next step
in
the interview
is
·
With the separate room
a
student
·
Snyder feels that his job will be putting together a reference would be able to use the library at
more effective in the futureif.the folder. An important
part
of this his convenience. Another idea is
under
_
~la.ssman bec
_
am
_
e folder is the
_
resume' and for tollaveanotheropenhouseperiod
acquainted
'
with the placernent those who do not know the first possibly one night a week
if
there
service early in
-
their college thing about writing, Mr. Snyder is enough student interest.
careers. The office can also help has a free pamphlet which shows
For further information drop in
alum~i
.
of ¥ai:i_s_t C
_
ollege.:
,
how to write_ a res~e and
_
givesa · at the of_fiC.E?
,
:
in Room
no
-
Placementµelp
is
given for part -
.
..
few samples. He will also check a
•
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Ch~mpagnat;
•
.
or
call ext. 201
to
.
.
timejo~_dtiring_the·.sc!loql'year,
·
resume·and:give
i
"advice
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oii
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iiri:::
malce
i:10
appointment.
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~swell as for that all important proving it if necessary,
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Letters, Continued~
_
Wine
Boycott
·
Dear Marist Commuruty,
Second semester is well
,,
un-
.
derway and it's prime
.
time for
another letter
·
·
to the editors
·
concerning
·
the United Farm
Worker's boycott on Gallo wine,
( as well as Teamster
ice
- berg
lettuce
.
and table grapes).
·
Ernest and Julio
·
are
.
still
ignoring the wishes of their
workers to join the union of their
choice. However, there are a
good number of consumers who
refuse to agree with the tactics
employed by the Gallo brothers.
Gallo wine sales have dropped
c1nywhere from
15
to
20
percent.
In their defense, Gallo has
stepped up their advertising and
have subsequently refrained
from using their name in
television spots, (Madria Madria
Sangria, for ex
_
~mple). A close
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,1113
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11.
look at the label tells you that
these wines are made in Modesto
California. Gallo is the only
winery in Modesto.
·
We
are
asking
you
to
BOYCOTT ALL WINES MADE
IN MODESTO, CA. BOYCOTT
ALL GALLO WINES!
YOU can help farm workers
win their right to belong to the
union of their choice. Refuse to
buy Gallo. Support the United
Farm Workers.
·
Gregory House
--,·-
PAGES
Mr.
Larry Snyder
Notes Front Abroad
by John Dellamanna
seriously than the Americans. By
10:00
p.m. the halls are silent; a
Just a few lines from Paris, as
·
far cry from my first year on Leo
I'd like to share a few of my 4! Eachroomhasasinkandmine
feelings about the city with the has two balconies. We are served
Marist Community.
all of our meals, and I am in a
Paris is, in so many ways, a
·
Catholic upper - middle French
city I can never take for granted.
Income. The general attitude
·
of
Alt):lough I see it daily, Notre
the French students are con-
·
Dame can never become
"just
servati've and very politically
another church."
A
four-month-
aware when compared to
old tourist, and I still stare at the American :;tudents. There has
structure that has been called been no sexual revolution in
everything from the world's France.
If
you happen to see
biggest lamp post to a rusty nail -
Emanuelle, a film which
I
un-
The Eiffel Tower.
derstand
has
hit
American
.box
-
Adjusting
:
to life
_
in
a·
foreign
.
offices, keep
in
mind,that this is
country was not easy. The first
the very controversial height of
thing that most of us had to get French pornography! We are not
used to wa
.
c; drinking a beer
in
a
allowed to receive female visitors
quaint cafe' that shuts its doors at in our rooms! But, that's the way
10:30
sharp, without wishing it things are done
.
and the French
were
in
a pla
.
stic cup
·
from
just don't question
it.
,
·
_
Frank's! I will not beat a dead
Another thing thaf the French
horse complaining about the
just don't question is
"greves"
-
toilet paper.
·
Adjusting also
strikes. We have gone mail- less
means trying to be understanding
for two months, and go without
when the dormitory nuns that
·
television at- least twice a week;
keep track of our Marist girls tell
and
·
less often without electricity
you it's bad manners to telephone
for two or three hours on a day set
after
9:00
p.m. These customs
aside for such manifestations.
are not very easy to understand
This year's general strike was a
·either
.
If one
"just
pours" a glass
flop, but from what I understand,
of wine for a friend at dinner, you
last year it
.
paralyzed the
may rest assured that the next country. A general strike is when
time he will just take the bottle the telephone, telegraph, mail,
and pour his own, a' la francaise
!
newspapers, public transit, and
(Bottle and glass do not touch,
you name it all go on strike on a
and the label
is
covered with the predetermined date. In a word,
palm of the hand.) Another
it's chaos.
Parisian custom
.
seems to be
As diversion· from all. of this,
sidewalk surfing. You see, Paris the Marist students have what is
always has· been a world center of
known as Marie - Louise.· Marie -
freedom and the Parisian dogs
Louise is our residence direc-
take all they can get; much to the tress, teacher, complaint bureau,
surprise of the newly arrived comedienne, and general raison
"Marister."
·
d'etre! Ed Benisz perhaps put
ir
The Parisian Metro on the best when he told me last year,
other hand does not take much "Marie - Louise?; she's a doll!"
getting used to.
It is the cleanest, She has a party at her place on
mose efficient, and far - reaching alternating Thursdays. All of her
system of public transportation students from all over the globe
that I have ever
·
encountered. are invited. What prevents this
With
a:
student ID, each ride costs from becoming a multi - lingual
about 8 cents; all others ride for mess is a
1
franc fine for speaking
about 25 cents. The outside anything but French! We the
temperature can_ be predicted Maristers have the honor of being
within degrees by the number of able ·to show slides, watch
bums in any
.
g~ven, spotlessly,
.
television, eat popcorn,
-
or just
clean Metro stop.
talk at Marie - Louise's just about
Aside from the already men- whenever we want. (The key is
tioned canine contributions, the under the doormat!) Father
-
Parisians keep their streets Gallant, you've got competition!
remarkably clean: at the cost of
Bro. Belanger only smiled
dirty pockets. I say this because when I asked him "What if I like
litter baskets are few and far Paris so much I don't want to ·
between in Paris,
so
one is leave?" Well, I don't think I'll
obliged to walk for blocks af a stay, but last Saturday night as
time with would - be garbage in our Marist group walked down
one's pockets!
·
the Champs Elysees toward the
Getting used to dorm life here illuminated l' Arc de Triomphe.
is nothing more than getting used as well
as
the golden arche
de
to silence. I find that for the most McDonalds (gospel truth!). I
part, the Fr
_
ench students seem to
-
began to think it wasn't such a far
take their studies much more . out
_
idea
to begiri with.
a
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PAGE 6
THE CIRCLE
Code
99
As
I write
this
article, which
happens to be a few weeks before
it will be published,
I
don't know
how the "fast for the starving
people" program will succeed.
I
don't know if students are going
to do something about their
hungry brothers and sisters. But
I kn.ow ·one thing, students _who
come to college with the hope of
making money had better
become 'moral about money,' as
a recent article in U.S. Catholic
developed. Money is a tool and we
have the responsibility of using it
in a proper and moral way (Feb.
'75)
There is too much money used
for profit and not enough to make
a better life for the poor in the
world. Maybe we should all
acquire an understanding of how
money works in our... society;
economics. Then we should
develop a sensitivity and open-
ness to the needs of our brothers
and sisters according to our
God •
given gifts.
Our Lord was not opposed to
wealth but the selfishness and
misuse that often accompany ·
money. It's sad that in the name
of profit, many in our society are
more than willing to throw_
.
.
.
.
morality outtbe door. To demand for usmg 1t Wisely and domg the
the right to profit at any price
is
most good with it possible. Jesus'
an affront to the commandment teaching is awesome. But our
to· love our neighbors as our-
society is so bound and gagged by•
selves. Wealth .for wealth's sake money and it complicates
is
not only sinful but harmful and matters with such a false
stupid.
sophisti~ation that our con-
Gandhi once said that the sciences are seldom-touched. We
greatest problem facing the give, maybe, but seldom _till it
world was the hardness of the hurts.
educated the affluent the in-
Maybe, good people . ,are
vestor. There is no e~cuse for waiting for leader:s, for prophets,
such wealth and poverty existing to show them· t~e wa;r. ls Marist
in the world in the 20th century; · College ?ey_el~pmg such leade~s'?
. ·If
one of our talents
is
·making. ·Are th~ m~lVl~ual ~tu~ents domg
money, then. we are responsible any thinkmg m this line?
Center-Op.ens, Provides
Students With- lnforn1ation
FEBRUARY 14, 1975
Coun·seling _Answers
Students' Questions
by Julie Schott
Beginning next week, the office
of the Marist counseling services
will have its own weekly column
in the Circle. The column, called
Dfalogue will answer any letters
submitted in regards to anyone's
personal problems. The answers
to these letters, space permitting,
will appear the following week
in
·the Circle, and will be answered
by one or more of the three
counselors on campus.
The counseling services is
made up of
Ann
_Haggerty, a
personnel officer who graduated
last year from. Marist's com-
munity psychology program,
Larry
Sullivan,
assistant
professor. of Religious Studies,
and is directed by Cagle Moore.
· The counselors feel that since
they
cannot
possibly
see
everyone
on
campus
in-
dividually, it would be beneficial
for students to express them-
selves through the column.
As Greg Conocchioli, editor of
the Circle stated, "this would
give. students the opportunity to
J!Se the·counseling services while
remaining anonymous if they
wish."
·
·
Conocchioli, who first came up
• that Marist has had a full-time
counseling . service, it is im-
portant that students realize
what is offered to them.
What actually will be offered in
Dialogue was explained by
Ann
Haggerty. "We will not be merely
answering the problems ·we
receive, rather, we will help the
person to re-examine his problem
by offering more effective
problem-solving techniques. We
will
offer different perspectives,
in the hopes that the person will
be able to solve his own problem
if he sees it in a different light."
Ann feels' that the column is
important,. because as she ex-
plained, "Llfe is a series .. of
problems that confront us, and
often, rather than dealing with a
problem face-to-face we try to
disguise it, like trying to hide an
. elephant in the closet. First we
must keep covering it up, then we
have to feed it, and clean up after
it, and in the long run, we spend
much more energy disguising it
than it would take to confront it."
The Circle asks that allletters
be sent to:
The Circle
P.O. Box 857
c-o Counseling Column
By Joan Stegenga
interviewed
by Garcy
to
guaranfee that the center would
be well rim. The staff has been
trained by a p·rofessional coun-
selor, Marleen Gallo, from
Planned. Parenthood.
They should be signed, though no
names will be used in the column.
!
with the idea of Dialogue. feels
the Dutchess County is available. that ~ince this- is the first year
Someone_wishirig- consolation ·in - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
A
new Sex and Birth· Control
Information Center. opened
· Monday, February 10. Largely
the work of Urrey Waters, a
sophomore,
the . center
is
supervised by Ann Haggerty, and
is also aided by a Planned
Parenthood counselor and a staff
of twenty .- four student volun-
. teers.
All workers were.recruited.and
Volunteers · can
easily
recommend
a
reputable
gynecologist that is within close
reach. Appointments with a
Planned · Parenthood counselor
can also be set up and --dn-
formation-on all social services in
·-:,:··ait·ex,ra-,···
six-packs f~r.the
weekend.
,.
GPACKS
_j
d'rlure/eA
.
when you're having
more than one.
AVAILABLE: AT FRANK'S RESTAURANT
&
MARIST RATHSKELLER
Frank 's Restau·rant
Draft
Beer
8oz. glass
25q:
Pitcher
'2.00 ·
•
•
0
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0
the area .of religious morals and
birth control could be directed.to
such couseling · through · the in~
. formation center. . .,
.
Because this center is func-
tioning as a midway
point
bet-
ween the student and various
services, ·all ·calls can be kept
anonymous . .In this way .a caller
can obtain all the needed help
without experiencing the em-
barrassment. of. facing· someone
.:, in' her next class who knows alLof-
her personatprciblems//::
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..
:· Plans for the future· include
hiring a nurse from Planned
Parenthood· to arrange ap-
pointments for students with
gynecologists: The nurse would
~come to Marist on a regular basis
<>f once or twice a month.
·
· · Also being tentatively planned
by Garcyis a special session to be
presented here by a gynecologist.
Such a session· would include a
professional explanation of in-
ternal examinations, information
on testing for breast cancer, and
the opportunity for students to
obtain
other
pertinent
knowledge.
·
Garcy put almost a year of work
into bringing about this center at
Marist. She began by pr,esenting
proposal plans . to Cagle Moore
who referred·., her to Ann
Haggerty. Ms. Haggerty directe~
c.;ar~y to the necessary people to
put her plans to work. When no
other office space could be found,
it was decided to use M~.
Haggerty's office after the
regular business day.
The number of liours available
and the hours the switchboard is
operating limit the center's office
time. In turn, the number of
staffees needed has also been
limited. Presently the staff
consists of students from
Sheahan and Leo and three
commuters. In the future Gary
hopes to expand membership to
include residents from Cham-
pagnat and HEOP students.
Important
.
,
Announcements
Musicians ai-e .needed for the
Spri~g. produc:tion ... of GEORGE
M\:t5y·the Theatr'e -Guild. Brass·
instruments are especially
needed. Any student, interested
in becoming. a member of the
Production Committee please see
Suzanne Deak, room C416 P.O.
Box C456 or Bill Dunlevy, room
C516 or P.O. Box C106.
'fhere will be an organizational
meeting on February 12th at 5:30.
in room D204 of the Veterans
Club. Veterans and interested
students are urged to attend.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerry Kelly have
become the -parents of a baby
boy, Matthew Michael. born
jobs covered by the PACE Exam.
Please see Larry Snyder in the
Placement office for · inore
details:
·
On Thursday February 20, The
· Campus Ministry will begin a
series of consciousness raising
sessions entitled .. Awareness."
C:ach session will be held in the
Vireside Lounge starting at 5:00
p.m. The first session will be
moderated by Laurence Sullivan
and will center around the topic
··Loneliness,. · Awar_eness
of
Yourself." Please see next
week's CIRCLE for further
details concerning success
meetings and topics.
January 17th, at 3:28 a.m. Get Them While They Last ·
Matthew weighed in at 9
1
•2
lbs.
Reynard editor ·Mike Maloney
and
was
19
1
2 "
long. reports that orders for the 1975
CONGRATULATIONS.
Reynard are. going very well.
- Those who have not ordered a
copy should contact the yearbook
office no later than March
1.
Cost
of the yearbook $12: checks
should be made payable to the
As of February 17, there will be
a film available entitled Breast
Self Examination. You will be
able to make reservations for its
use through M.r.s. O'.Connor in the
lnfirmary.
It
will also be shown
ii} room 248CC on Tuesday,
February 18, at 2
1).111.
The placement office has
received a booklet containing the
1975 projected• hirings in New
Yo~k and New Jersey/or college
graduates seeking, F~deral
career employment. Specific
locations of . employment are
given .. Included in this list · are
1975 Reynard, and sent to
Reynard, Box C-843. Delivery is
expected by May
1.
According to
the editor, many of the ·book's
selections have been expanded,
· including those concerning
faculty
arid
student
organizations.
In
case you might
be looking for the year:book ofs
fice. it has been moved to room
.268 Campu_s Center. :--
Tbcn· v.:i/1 be
,1
.I
11i1ior C"1ss
Cockt,1i! A11·ty
011
Fri,l.iy.
Feb1·11,11y
2 I
S<'e 111'.\'t1JJeek"s CIRCLE·
for Jitll d,•tails. · · ·
FEBRUARY 14, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE7
Student Academic Committee Announces Plans
by Peter Allen
student Academic Committee
Chairman Bob Sammon has
announced plans and ideas that
are to be put into action this
semester.
·
Among these plans
is
the
formation of a committee to
review those faculty members
eligible
·
for either
·
tenure or
promotion: Toe committee, made
up of seven SAC members, will
Management
Assuliled
Over the vacation, the Campus
Center, with the cooperation of
Don Honeman and the Cham-
pagnat House Council, assumed
the
.
management of the Barn
from Champagnat
-
House. In an
effort to create a campus-wide
recreation area, the Campus
Center will provide a larger and
more varied assortment of
equipment. Scheduled
.
to be in-
cluded are: two pool tables, two
bumper pool tables, t\vo· air
hockey machines, two ping pong
tables; .two football machines,
one shuffle bowling machine, one
electric table tennis machine and
seven to eight pinball machines.
Staffing for
·
the project will
consist of one manager
·
and
several attendants .
.
Opening is targeted for today,
.
February
13 -
watch for specifics
to be posted soon
.
·
.
.
.
.
Details on the continued use of.
the
Barn
for small parties are
being ironed out' at
_
this time.
Rental
.
Charge
will
remain at
$15.00, with an additional $15.00
·,_
refundable deposit required.
Social regulations agreed to by
the Campus Center,
C.U.B.
and
the Champagnat House Council
will be
_
enforced. Copies will be
available in the Campus Center
.
.
at opening.
Forfurther information, please
contact Jack Schofield, ~xt.
203,
or the Campus Center
.
Beginning
Soon.-
·
,,.
.
Weekend
College
The weekend college will make
its debut at Marist on March
1
and
2. A
new concept
_
in high~r
education, the weekend college is
designed to meet the needs
.
of
men and women who, because of
work or family responsibilities,
are
.
unable to attend classes in
.
either the
•
day or
.
evening
division .
.
They can now take
classes at Marist on Saturdays or
Sundays and earn three
·
un-
dergraduate. course credits by
attending only six classes.
Students who register for a
Saturday course attend classes
from
-
9
a.m. -
3
p.m., including
lunch for three consecutive
.
Saturdays. During the following
• three weeks they do not attend
classes, but they are expected to
do independent research and
reading.
·
They return to the
campus for
·
three additional
Saturdays to complete their
course work. The same schedule
is followed for Sunday courses,
except that the hours are 10 a.m--: -
4 p.m., including lunch. Thirteen
courses are being offered this
semester. According to director
Stephen Panko, Marist .will offer
four weekend coUege sessions
during the 1975-76 academic year
<two ih the Fall and 2 in the
·
Spring). C.W. Post College ori,
_Long
Island has been
a
·
pioneer
with this type of college course
scheduling.
·
Another
problem
being students could meet faculty of
their various departments on an
informal basis. Presently three
SAC members are on the com-
membership capacity of 35 seats
of which
25
are filled.
Anyone interested please
contact Bob Sammon Ext.
255.
examine
those
eligible
backgrounds
focusing
on
scholarship, mastery of their
field, and also what they view as
excellence in education. When
asked why such a committee was
formed, Sammon said,
"SAC
feels that tenure should not be a
deciding factor when dealing
with exigency. Marist College
will survive due to quality,
therefore we should have the best
faculty."
discussed by SAC includes
inadequacy in the Teacher
Education program. Students
teaching in various schools
receive no Education credits and
do not have
a
faculty sponsor.
Toe curriculum also lacks a
course that supplies instruction
in methods of teaching reading.
mittee
searching
for-
a _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
Sammon also spoke of the
possibility of having afternoon
socials during free slots where
In the
time
it takes to drive
your friend home, you could save
his life.
·
If your friend's been drinking
too much, he shouldn't be driving.
·
·
The automobile crash is the
number one cause of death of people
your age. And the ironic thing is ·
that the drunk drivers responsible
replacement for Academic Dean
Richard A. LaPietra. Some of the
achievements made by SAC
during the fall semester included
later library hours during mid-
term and final week and the
adding of Computer Mathematics
as a major.
·
Toe SAC has a
for killing young people are most
often other young people
.
Take ten minutes. Or twenty.
Or an hour. Drive your friend
home
.
That's all.
If you can't do
that, call a cab. Or let him sleep
on your couch.
We're not asking you to be
a doctor or
.
a cop. Just a friend.
·
, - - - - - - - - - - - - 7
.
-
1
DRUNK DRIVER, DEPT. Y*
.
I
BOX
2345
·
I
I
ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND 20852
I
I
I want
to
save a friend's life.
I
I
Tell me ~hat else I can do.
I
My
name 1s _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
I
Address. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I
I
City _ _ _ _ _
State _ _ _
Z i p _ _
I
L _ _ _ _ _
_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
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,
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;
.
LISTEN ...
To Marist College Radio
WMCR
640
on your
.
AM dial
FE.
IF YOU LET
A
FRIEND DRIVE DRUNK, YOU'RE NO FRIEND.
0
.
.
.
;,,-
-
''4rnol:-,.
'
I~
1111'
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f)'All'.\1IMSTltAl'ION
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PAGE8
,,yy7.•
·
_
.
nr.znter
·THE CIRCLE
FEBRUARY 14, 1975
.Cagers.Shot Down In
Monday's Sienna· Contest
By
Thomas Mc Terna
keeping guard Eric DePercin
But the visitors fought back and
back waiting. With two baskets
cut it to seven before Hohnes put
After winning -three straight by Mike Hart in the final minute it out
of
reach with four straight
games .last week while showing of the half Marist had cutthe lead baskets with nine minutes left._
signs of the-sharpness and to 48-42 at halftime.
Holmes finished with 24 points
shooting ability that enabled · Al Fairhurst kept the offense and a season-high 17 rebounds.·
them to win nine of their first moving at the start of the se~ond Forward Ray Murphy also · got
_eleven games, the Marist cagers _ session and his dri~ing layup hot down the stretch and scored
were shot down in Siena 103-87
brought the visitors within 5614 22 points on 8-14 shooting.
·
Monday night following a valiant with fifteen· minutes left. But
With .Fairhurst_. providing
comeback from a 17-point defecit Siena, ranked sixth in N.Y. State_ leadership and Holmes blocking
early in the gam~.
for college division teams, shots- from all angles, the ·Red
Due to poor shooting, which rediscovered their fast oreak Foxes had little trouble defeating
was followed up by the Indians' and, ~ith the help of tw~ critical Bloomfield ( 12-4) Thursday.
fast · break offense leading to offens!ve foul calls agamst ~art Fairhurst, hittirig all_ five . of his
layups or Marist -fouls, the Red . an? Cirasella, opened up a five-
shots before he was· forced to sit
Foxes found themselves trailing pomt lead at 70-65.
with foul trouble early in the·
35-18 midway through the first
Earl Holmes, plagued by foul--- second half, played his best game
half. Following ·a •timeout, Joe trouble throughout, finally -was in several weeks, as did his back~
yirasella led the Fox rally with
forced to the. bench with ~:17 court partner, Eric DePercin,
njne points while the home team left after sc~nng only
6.
pomts, who scored 14 points and handed
was-denied the fast b_reak by. "'.a~ below his 19.6 average. The off 12 assists, his season high.
,
·
· Indians took full advantage, Holmes once again took scoring
.
!
eeding sophmore center .Gary honors . with 26 points, while
n ·--
k
' ' P.l · d
Holle for eight. of his game-high Murphy contributed 20 .· and Joe
-
0 C
ev .
9
ve
27 points during a 13-3 stretch Cirasella 18.
. .
J: ·
U
J _.
_.
that boosted Siena to an 84-68
Saturday night, Concordia
· ·
-
· .
_ margin which they maintained jumped off to a 7-0 lead as the
.
Ai
1-,,,qocir
'1'oqt1te/v_· ·
ii?~}~i~~;f;l~~i~
~if~I~;tFi?i:~\~
J
cause. ·
··
to open up a commanding 60-43
Last week the Foxes beat New lead;Holines had 30 points and 16
by
Thomas McTernan
tourney was completed, .. Ger ·uecisfon over Kingstqn. The sc~re
Paltz ! 99-80), Bloomfield .( 98-61)
rebounds despite fouling out with
_
. . .
mania
B
emerged victorious
by
was
2-_2,
but. Marist led 3-l in. and. Concordia· !95-80) at Dut-~ over seven minutes left. Hart, the
Who ever heard of winter :blanking.the host team 1-0 in the corner kicks, Api"igliario con-
chess CC with Earl Holmes team's leading scorer, played his
soccer'! For most people, soccer finals. Marist; coming off its best verted a centering pass from
scoring 80 points and grabbing 47 first game in a week and added
is .a · garne played
)n ·
warm
,
outdoor season ever. had the right wing Jo_hn Metzger fifty
reboun_ds to earn a spot. on the
11
points.
.
climates on a wide green expanse misfortune -of··_playing the .Ger- seconds into : the.·
,
game then
_E
1
•
1
'_C
1
•A.
c;_
All-?tarteam for Division
Marist, 13-6 before last night's
that.prohibits close viewing of the ·
maniaA
team twice and.lost both" ·scored .imassisUict·at 12:39
·
off
'
a
game at Sacred Heart, returns to
action. Such was. not the case, times, sandwiching a 3-1 decision scramble iri front of the net .
Fr~shman
-
guards Paul Kane Dutchess Saturday ( Feb. 15)
.. however. for the 750 people who over. Kingston on· comer kicks._ Kingston .tied the score with two, and Glynn Berry came off the · ·against . Monmouth
before
braved
cold
temperatures
·Germania.
A
scored. twice. ofi goals in two minutes, the second
bench early in the game to get the rematching 22~ Dowling
·
(fifth -
Sunday to attend U1e
.
i•'ourth
Hed _
J<'ox goalie
:
Jay
·JVIetzger coming when Tim.Trottalost the
Foxes moving against New Paltz.
r~n_k~d in _ state in college
Hudson Valley Indoor_ ·soccer while his teammates were unable ball in front.of hi~ own net:Marist
They combined for 18 points <to
division
J
m
Oakdale next
Tournament at pu~he~_s
cc. . ••. ·
to get anything started and
We[!! .
outshof Kingstoo}l-8' overan. · _ _
_ gixe M
_
~rist a 47-36 halftime edge. . Tuesday
I
Feb.
18 ).
They wefe,t~e~te,1 to a_cl<>s~up _ taking shots that wotlld haYE:-?ut
,
;}n::t~e ·. relll~t~[:lJrgaii,isC Ge~~- · ··
· ·
look of thlc!: _
_£)1.eckmg,'the passmg;· · of bounds _ev,en outdoors, s::u_lmg.: n~ma_:A.:Apngh~no,wa~ hurtm
the shootmg• .... and:;. the. superb ' way over the net or high into.the.· the third mmute·:and §at,ouUhe
goaltendingthat make the game ·stands.· Al
·
Robinson puf the re·mainder oLthe game .. The
what itis outdoors. Because the Foxes on the board with 3:31 left victors held
a
2-0
lead until John
playing area is much smaller and , when he took a· bloop pass from Metzger scored off
a ·
steal with
the games consist of only one Tom McDonald and beat a
,t
::12
.left. But the· Foxes -were
fifteen-minute period; indo.or wandering G·ermania goalie. The unable
to
penetrate for
a
good
soccer is quicker and tightly- · victors put it out _ of . reach, shot the rest of. the way and were
played; providing for continuous however. wheri they" headed one eliminated from the tourney.
·action and excitement that arc past Metzger with
l
:57 left. .
Marist will· play· in one more
sometimes lacking in the outdoor
Vito . Aprigliano scored two tournament at Dutchess later this
game.
goals and just missed
011
several month before entering the RPJ
When the double - eliminatio11 others as he led _Maf1st to 'the: timrney in March•
·
High On Sports
VIKINGS ENTER NEW LEAGUE
Marist's club football team, long a dominant figure in the Eastern
t
'.ollegiate Club :Football Conference, has joined with seven other
colleges and universities from New York and New Jersey to form the
Met
8
Football Conference.
.
· _
.
The league, which will begin operations in the fall, also boasts such
strong teams
as
Manhattan, Iona, Pace, St. -John's and Brooklyn.
There will_be seven league games with a bi-annual home-and-home
series against
each
team.
·
HOLMES
NAMED
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
Earl Holmes; the junior center from Buffalo, has been named
MarisfCollege Athlete of the Week for tl!_e week ending February 8.
This marks the second straight week Holmes has been the recipient of
the award.
·
·
·
·
Holmes, who was also named to the ECAC Division
III
All-Star
team_. scored 80 points on 35~59 FG shooting and grabbed 47 rebounds
to spark the Red Foxes to three consecutive victories. - -
:'-JOTES FROM THE SPORTS DESK ,
.
.
.1:
V. Basketbal~ teazp. lost to Sien~ 107:91- Monday after leading
most'
of first half. Damian
I◄
arley and Neil LaJeunesse led the attack with 26
points apiece. Lajeunesse scored 30 in 84-83 squeaker over New Paltz
last Thursday ... Rich Lotze. ass_istant soccer coach here, played· for
: -~ ·o~ches' · at Dut<:hess Indoor Soccer Tournament Sunday:·Team was
e_hmmat~d.m semis by D~t~hess ... Stev~ Van Kueren,-ranked in top
five on X-Country team, fm1shed second m the three-mile winter run
spons?red by the Hudson Valley Athletic Association Saturday •..
. IJurmg_ recent floor h?ckey intramurals, scheduling of games last·
l~ndat mght caused qmte a furor: Seems that Friday night attracts
ab?ut,5 or so basketball enthusiasts who were forced to the sidelines
w_hlle _!he _µucks t~ok over the _gym ... ~o-Names emerged as cham-
pions m f1f!als held Monday mght. Behmd John Davern's two goals,
they beat C,eorge McC 2~0. Tom McDo~ald addedassisfon first goal
while ~econd · was u~ass1sted .... Speaking• of pucks,. the club hockey
~ade its_ debut agamst the Culinary Institute at Millbrook School
~unday mght. · Pete Celetano scored only goal in losing effort . ..
• · -·-
.. lntra~ural ba~ketb~ll begins next week. l:Pick Eric 'DePercin':;
Pet~o s Hejects · to wm. Led by_ 6-8 Dave Bean· and supergtiard Ernie
~toms! -~h
7
r .
~ave ~~od shoo~mg, speed, and depth to win. ·Ron
l,lack_lm s - M_1lkba~s s~out ~ive_the_m a run, however ... What is a
~~st_ ~unner ,like, Rich Sehr.eider domg walking around Donnelly'!
lrymg to beat 1ony Wilger, of course.·
·
THIS
WEEK IN MARIST SPORTS
.
1
Feb: 13 -
l◄'eb;
19) · -
.
. Saturd~y!_-rebruary, 15 - Basketb~ll. vs. Monmouth--at Dutchess
. l
ommuru~y Coll~ge Falcon Hall, Varsity at,8 p.m., J.V:at6 p.m
-. ~yomen
s
Basketb~ll
af Nyack, 1
p.in. .
.-·
·
_l_rack vs. Trenton State ~nd Queens at Queens College,
11
a·.m. _
l
uesd~y, February.18 - Ba_:3ketball at Dowling,.Varsity· at 8
p.in.
J
V
at " p m --
·
·
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.. ·
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•·.
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<.
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,: • •
14.2.1
14.2.2
14.2.3
14.2.4
14.2.5
14.2.6
14.2.7
14.2.8