The Circle, May 1, 1975.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 14 No. 11 - May 1, 1975
content
)
THE
VOLUME 14, NUMBER 11-
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW
YO~K
12601 _
MAY_ 1, 1_975
Foy
Holds Answer Session
By Susan M. Dunderdale
Despite the fact that the tuition
increase of 9 percent. will affect
all Marist -students only two
students came
to
the question and
answer meeting with President
-~
be a cut back in trips to con-
getting their money's worth from
--
Foy_ on Tuesday.
· _
_
._ ventions for faculty. All depart- - a course for whatever_ reason
ments are being asked to con-
they should . let the department
sider carefully how they _spend chainnan know.
On
the other
their alloted money. But _even hand it was agreed that
·if
a
with these cutbacks tuition had to professor is providing a wol'-:
be _ increased because of in-
thwhile course that should be
creases in costs of commodities made known also. This way
such as electricity, water and promotions and rehiring will be
salaries which must be brought to made to insure the best education
Dr. E_ugen~ Best.
Best Receives
Research
Grant
..: The meeting was set up for the
students_· benefit so that_ they
wouid be· informed
as:to
why the
increase was approved. Although
the decision to increase tuition
cannot be reversed, the students
would have had the opportunity
to see where their money is being
spent and why. In respoqseto one
· of the students statements that
money should - be spent o~
campus and. not on •trips -for
. student- protest demonstrations
Dr. Foy - said tliat efforts are
beirig made to cut
Qut
"frills". He
alsoadded that the!"e is going t~
;
an acceptable level.
· /
for the student's.money.·
Desoite the large increase in
-Unfortunately because of such
tuition -!he administration does
poor att~ndance,. neither the
not anticipate a
drop in administration nor the students
enrollment }le~ause students were able to reap the full benefits
cannot meet
tl,l!
~osts. The sum of - that the meeting could have
$110,000 is -being set _aside for provided. Many Marist students
::upperclassmen who_ can prove a will be paying the increase and
financial need and therefore with not . understand _ why they · are
this increased aid the actual . paying it and the administration
increase for the student will not will
be
spending student money
be that much.
-
. ..
without a clear idea
of
what the
-_ It
was also mentioned that if students want or need.
students do . not feel they _ are
·
CominittCes .
·
Select
Residence.· Staff
By Rhoda Crispel~
close relationship between the
ByJoanStegenga_
towards dormitory living, norms, fourth floor east side-and are
.
.- _ .
.
preachers and magistrates. .
.
a:nd enforcement. Their selec-
under John's advisorship. In
~
Dz:< E~ge~e :~e~f. h9s
.
. just . As ~eligion ~e~ame plu.r~lis~ic
Tlie screening of 83 students tions. were. giveri to Fred Lam-
House I, Eric DePercin is RA. --
. rec:E?iyed,.;:t, t.\Vo Jllonµi_ ·· r~search
·
.Amer!Cc!n _
pohtic:s,;-: became/ m: applying. for-· nex( semester's ... be.rt, P!r~c!<:>tot~mp11~ y_fe,.for -,, for.the .first floor. :which:~11. be
_5! ..... .
,:gr.~1:1t·,,r_om-:,th,e<_·'Na~10~8:l:
·
"En~--;creasmglrseculimzed>an~b:~as·
--
resident··•>•'staff·
:
··••b'egarf
"
T1ast ... "'his-nn~rapprova1.:t
·
·?'•-~"""-)=-~'.bi'-ractar'Ying::n1e~,house·s:other·•·•·
~doWillenfforthe Humaruties for uprooted
from- · : rehg10us
·
January: Official notification _of
Out.side of those leavmg Mar1st ,
R.i\;s
are -Kathy :Walsh, Karen
stu~y l!lt the University of tr;:idi~ions .. Yet throughout aUspositions was_given ori April this May, alrbl!t.tw~ members of Loug11}in, Leslie Spin~stun, ~nd
Califormaat Berkely.
American history, ~ur cult~ral 15 .. _
·
.
the present resident staff Charhe l3ang. Karen is the- first
The topic ofstu9-y will
be
"Civil world view, our not10ns of r1ght
The -
·
centrat Committee, __ , reappliea for next semester's girlto be assigned to a boy's wing
Religion
i:11.
America,_" Directing and wro_ng, have been the con-
comprised of- six seniors ap-
positions_. They were evaluated i_n
Champagnat. Beginnin_g
the part1c1pants will· be Dr.- cern otJudges and lawyers who pointed by Director of Campus by their floor, R.C., - and __ salary for Champagnat R.A.s
IS
Robert Bellah, Professor of are now the spokesmen for the Llfe · paper screened · the ap-
Housemaster. Fred Lambert $600.
. .
Sociology'. and _ Comparative religious
community.
An plic~nts.
Based
on
four made a recommendation to the . Joseph Dempsey and Americo
Studies at B.:rkely, who_ wrote exampleisthe currentarg~E:nt evaluations of each person and a
I
Staff Screening groups based on Ll_uveras were hired- as Leo's
"Civil Religion in America/' .
~boµtt~e beginning of h~n hfe set oLcriteria, the Committee these ,,evalu;:ttions. None of_ the R.C.s. Virginia Albano was .
Dr, Best. expects a very m- m relation to the abortion issue. made 34-- recommendations to students had to go through the chosen as R.A. for the fourth floor .
terdisciplinary p~o~ram. Four ~f La~ers and ,u~ges had a~J1:ey. dormitory houses. The_ recom-
CeI?tral Committee in reap-
b~ys. Valari~ ~ellarosa was
the twelve part1c1pants are m role m determmmg the norms of
·
mendations were directed to the plymg.
·
-,
_
given R.A. on sixth floor, ·John
Sociology, four in Religious right and wrong . iµ
this houses indicated as first choice
In Champagnat Hall the R.C.~: Blue on fifth, Michael Nugent on
Stu~ie~, . and · four
in
in- tradit~onal · religious questio~ in on · the applications. The Staff selecte? were as follows: Dona!ci third, Ca~en_ Ramos ~n second,
terdisciplmary pr~grams.
th~ tri~l !Jf Dr. Kenne~h Edeline .. Screening Committees chose the Augustme for House IV, Kevm and Kevm ~liss on first. R.~.s
In the 1950's Will Herberg of
Rellg_!OUS
questions --are Resident Coordinators (R.C.s) Cavanagh for House III, Ray and R.A.s m Leo both receive
Dre~ _Dniversi~~ argued that ~e . be~om~g civil que;Sti~ms. '.fhe and Resident .. Advisors (R.A.s) _ M~rphy for House II, and _Pet~r $900 as beg!"!llng pay.
traditional reli~ions of America priests i,nour pluralistic ~oc1ety from these names. If they needed Wilderqtter:for House I. This will
The p~sit10n of. R. C. was
(Protesnrntism,
.Roman are those who a_re trymg to a wider selection names were be Peter's second year as House dropped m Sheahan through a
Catholicism; Judaism) are just · maintain the status quo, and the submitted to them 'on the basis of
l's
co6ri:linator. The starting decision _of their House Council.
differ~nt ways of affir~ing prophets are tho~e who challenge applicant's second choices. .
salary of these positions
if
$100~. · ~e R.A.s ·selected for the dor-
comnutment to the _American the status quo, adds Dr. _Best.
Interviews with the ·central
R.A.s ,chosen for House IV m mitory were Maureen B_rey,
· . way of life.
.
,
Lawyers· and judges ·- answer committee were eliminated_ this 1Champagnat. are ·as_ follows: Dennis Gurski, and Pete Pless.
In 1967 Dr .. Bellah identified _th_e -these ci~il qu~ti<Jns. · Lil!_co1!1, ,a year. The Committee . made -a Greg Tracy, Jim. ~illep, · Kevin Startil_1g salary for Sheah~n
phenomenon _ . called . Civll lawyer, is considered A'mer1ca s ·thorough objective analysis of McGhee and Kevm Wolff. In R.A.s is $850.
Religion. He· believed .that Civil greatesttheologian and he had no each applicant . and gave their· House III they are, Paul Monar, . Fred Lambert said that the
'R e_ l i g
ro
n
-tr. ans c e n d s church. _ Clarence . Darrow, an names to the Staff . Screening Karen Robbins, Cathi Harvey choices for Gregory and Benoit
·Prot~tantism, C~tholicism, and athei~, fought for freedom and groups;· The only: interviews and Louis Graziano. Those for : Houses R.C.s. a~e ~till being
· ?u~lS~- Ac_cordingito. Dr._Best, - equa~ty fo: -. man_Y;_ years;
In
during the entite process were House II. are, J?hn Carberry, appended_. ~eg~g mcome for
-it h1:15 _
1~ · _own · belief~,. rituals, American_ C1~ Religion he was a conducted · by these -screening Anne CUilinane, Bill J?Wllevy and these positions
is
$1200.
sacred scriptures, samts, holy prophet f.ightmgJor.
t!t~
sacred groups.. They questioned can-
Tom Lynch. The smgles from
days and churches.
An.
example, freedom and equabty . for didates about their philosophy first floor have been moved to the
is
our belief that Americans are minority groups.
.
.
·
·
·
the : chosen
peopie,. - and· .
In
the Catholic tradition a
'c· , ·. • ·, · -~ ·
p --
.
illustrations of our sacred priest, at confessional, is like _a
- _ · ..
0
m_ ·m
z
t-t·
e·e. . ·. _
·o·_
·
_
.
·
.
.
·
_
.
·
r.e~
n
n
__
.r·
-
e
scriptures are the Declaration of. -judge. Protestant' . .
ministers
.
_
.
I'
U
Independence .. and- the Con- . articulate the world view in their
_
_.
stitution .. Our saints - include sermons.
.
--
-
Lincoln, Kennedy and King.
Dr. Best special interest in
thisR
t
o·
F .
d
-
•
Thanksgiving and Memorial Day
-
research.-topic stems.from }u.s·•.
·•
·
e~·nor
.
n ·un zng
. are our holy days and. in school earlier experience.as a candidate
·
_
'_I-' _ .. • • ,
, ·
..
. .
·.
:
·
we learn a ritual of allegiance for Town Justice of La<:lra!lge.
1
•
• ...
and loyalty.
,
Last summer Dr. Bestrec~1ved
By Rhoda Crispell
further south. Dr. Balch thinks Manager will encourage him to
. In
''The Broken Covenant" a . grant . to· go · to Colwnbia
that railroad traffic
is
increasing carry on discussions with various .
B~llah .says that the values of University to ~tudy South Asia for
. Dr. Roscoe Balch's Citizen's -and that' Poughkeepsie is . the, businesses. ·
·
community expressed .in the eleven weeks. ·At the -end of _that Committee., has received a. $750
logical place for. such ll station.
The committee
is
in negotiation
Ma~ower Compact have J?een · per!~ he_ ~~tE!_ a pa~r entitled
I
~rant fr~ni -IB~ t?. ~repare a
The purpose of this Committee with the MTA, Amtrack, the
lost m · the course of American C1C1v1l
Rehg1on
m
South
I
report on their fmdings and is to reaffirm .the rieed for local _ Department · of Tr~portation,
History.
·-
__
Arileri~." -•.··.
._ · • •_ - . _ - _ recommendations on
mass mass transit with facilities for ,and the Dutchess
County _
,
:
·Dr. Best's specific topic.will be . "I ex~ct t~s se~l!lrwill l~k transportatjon.,
· • _
· _
the entire county.
:Transportation_. Department for_
the role of judges and lawyers as at tpe American. ._Civil,- Relig1~m
. Last spririg- Dr. Balch held. a
According. to Dr. Balch, the .the development of a full rail _of_
priests and prophets of America. from .the' perspective o(Jh.elogy, historical preservation seminar; , Citizen's Committee
is
th~ only
-
mass ~ransit in the Poughkeepsie·
When Constantine.established · history, _ant~ropology;c ~nd Specifically~·"the .seminar in-
citizen's group concerned .with area.· · . ·
_. ,
. Chr,istianity he'gave prophe~ the . sociology. I'm -·_really -looking vestigated the Poughkeepsie · the ,.full range of ~ss tran-
Additionally, the Committee
_
·
. function-of maintaining law and fo!ward
to
it.''. D!; J3est_fee~s th,t railroad station. : .
.
. · , , • ._ _ .
,
, -· spoi:tation in th~ Poughkeepsie ·thopes to rehabilitate the station
order in the ·Christian ·com- t ~ program will·help him-m
,The.MTA had proposed·the ,area.__
·
· ·
·-
·
withintwoyears,and:develqp.a
munity~- stated Dr.--Best.
In
.the
~
teaching American Cultur~ I
&
~ demolotioii of the station, and
The group is hopeful that their parking __ lo~ -w~st of the
stalltffl _
'/puritan .nor;theasfth~re -was.·a next year.;-<
·
plaMed to build a.smaller·one May 12.i>resentation to the City
.
,
.
.
· , -
·,
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
' .
'
.
.
'
.
'
.
~·
;
'
\.
',',
'
,'
,
'
..
·.·
.
·.•.·.;
PAGE2
VOLUME.'14 Maritt
College,
Poughkeepsie,
N.Y.
· 'lbe
Marist
Coiiege·cmcLE 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 Ro~
,
--
Afi\dolfi
.
.
Rich Burke
Linda Franco and Mary Beth Pfeiffer
-Greg Welsh
Tom McDonald
Staff: Peter Allen, Janice Colleran, Rhoda Crispell Susan·
Dunderdale, Ge~e~ie~e Fitzgerald, Fatlier'Leo Gallant, 'charles _
Garre_t, _Joe Gigliotti, Tommy Kelly, David Livshin, Paul
M_angien, Th~mas M<;Tern~n, John Reilly, Cathie Russo,
Richard Schneider, Julie Schott Reid Scott Joe Sexton Karen
· Tully, Rick· Whitsell.
'
.. '
'
.
Forfeit-
THE CIRCLE
MAY 1, 1975
tetters To- The Editors
Suggestions
· these committees, it appears to
and colloquia -are open to
me, should be regular features of
students; matters discussed
the cmcrE:.
therein are of vital concern to
. It
is
presumed you·know that
students. The· CffiCIE should
the Faculty Policy ·. Committee
announce these and urge students
\ Dear· Editors,
has petitioned the administration · to attend. (A faculty meeting is
Newspapers are a powerful for a minimum and automatic
scheduled for April 22 .
.
and a
; force for justice.· The rise of across-the-board increase of 16.7
colloquim
for
April
25;)
' democracies was para~elled and percent, plus
a
2.
percent pool for
Evidently,· such
reporting
abetted
by
the
rise
of merit "increases.
It
is also
presupposes commitment .to
newspapers._Newspapers inform· presumed you know that ··any
quality education on the·part of
reader~ of current events and, increase . in· exp~nditu:res is the · editors and ·of· ·the Student ·
more unportantly, they shape predicated on concommitant - Government;Jt presupposes vital
public opinion to.· rally behind increases in your tuition. Now in
interest in th~ intellectual life of
positions and causes which a~ 'the normal course of present day· Marist. . . · ... ·.
.
.
· . .
-
pear to the editors to be of fun- events;_tuition mµst certainly go - ' These are a few of the ~oughts
damental importarice.
.
. up in order to enable Marist to - that run through .my mmd as
I
-· It_
appears to ~e tJiat your continue· its intellectual and ____ jefiect .on recen!· editions of ;the
articles and
ed1tor1als are educational
~i.s~1on.
The qwbbl~
CIRCIE . .
There
IS.really ~oJittle
. missing some of the events and cannot be with_ the - increase:·'· timeirilifetoworkforpeople
that .
causes which most intimately However, do you editors·and your it is a
'
pity to see.so much time,
touch the . lives of . all your readers believe in · automatic, · ·'tnergy, and student money go to
readers.
_
across-the-board increases for·an _waste.
·
The · editorial
on
.
Pne
of the major critical events teachers;_withoutexceptfon, even . Manipulation _-has appeared. to
of this year has been the sear- - for those, few indeed but real; • ~nyofy~urreaders,:wrongfully
chiiig . and • agonizing study . of
~
who are known to be corisider_ably . it
is
supposed, as a mere personal
solu~on to financial distress at .and }:labitually uiisatj_sfactory? • vendetta : against _
_pr".
Xavier .
Students on this campus have once again forfeited their rights as Ma!iSf; College. The Academic Are students,·ready ,to see Ryan. Now, Dr. Ryan,is the one .
students of Marist College to be effective in securing a voice in this Affairs Committee, the Student themselves now ·pay these:~--
facultyniemberatMaristwlio in.~--
institution.
Academic . Committee;
·
the s a tis fa ct
o
·r y· , te a ch er s
the opinion
,
of severalhundred
·
This has_ been clearly exhibited by the fact that· only three students -~acuity · Policy Committee, (and,. -presun:ia bly more • than .· •75- · per students, alwmii, · and colleagues;
attended the recent meeting with President Foy regarding the tuition ·its ad .. hoc- Campus Llfe Com-, credit instead of the present$68,--· has been the single greatestforce .·
.
-_·
increases, only three students have submitted their names, for mittee); together with ad-, withoutan editorial yell? (Many
for
the
improvement>of
positions with the College Union Board, only 186 studentsvoted in the ministration and staff have
all
studerits, showing clear cause, · education,
·
intellectually and
recent constitutional election, only two students have submitted their been grappling with this enor- have received tuition remissions . residentially; atMarist College in
n~es for Student Government positions, and representation by
mous
problem since September.· in thepast.Maristisby no'means the pastthree years. This Vicious __
department reached its lowest level in submission 'of names for the The __ AAC, - in a- · preliminary profiteering.) Several _ of my, • editorjal
has
.indeed made _raany
Student Academic Committee.
_ ·
· ·
:
·
document dated January 10, 1975, colleagues ; and I are against:·, of : your -readers sincerely
-
Although it is late in the semester the CIRCIE edit9rs would r_eally ·· concluded that the major con~ automatic
across-the:board· question your ,¢ommitment to -
be interested in knowing why these practices occur, just what is going tributoi:- to financial viability _at· _increases, even for the cost-of-· .educational excellence at Marist; : .
on on this campus; what type of identity are Marist students searching . Marist College
is
toIKiuality living; We:believe increases of all · thereby also guestioning the .
for, and why aren't students interested_ in giving their time to become academics/Consequently, -the
kinds
should:.be predicated· on
validity ofa hard year's work by
involved in these very necessary and worthwhile activities? : · _
.
AAC with the ·_ SAC has ,been' merit. Nobody should
be
afraid of -·AAC, SAC, FPC, CFD, and ad-
It
cannot
be
that all the Marist. students are that much into. their devoting all- its time and energy ·• evaluation. This'. educational· ·ministration and staff, Is it these
.
work, that they do not have time for theseactivities, it cannot be· that tQ, the · study':· of _
those ·. avenues . ·cause.· and , financial' coricem;-it - grou~, ·.in._. fact; . · thaVbave
_
-been ...
~.~~,:,,,,.:,,,;,."~' ,,-c-,~~-qst
?ff~!_S
so
D,lU~
to.~£! st~<i,ents, in_~e~.~f
~9:~il,iµes;
w~am19t
¥ •
·
.. ·
!~ding
x:iiost
dir,ec,!l)',
_
Sur~!Y.dfnd /-app~~r~ :; to.,
._ip~ .. '.
shoul~ .
_b~: .
of" • misdir~t~g · time;• e11ergy,, and
>
·
·
tnat an tne
stude~~
are
sat1:511~d1"\-Vlth;~e·
con<I?-t1on .. of the college·m· p~rmanently •· to ,
_
a<;~dem1c-;;:~x- param'o.imt:
·
: unP,Orlance,_·-lo' ·
0
the . stude~t '.'. money::?:/
Qri~.·rr,WQnC;l£!r,;s
i ·
'.
" . '
·
terms. of academi~s ~nd social n_iteraction an~ 1t· certa~y cannot be .ce~lence:- -One·• of--.,~he
•
.· ~ajor •CIRC~_E\"editors_• arid•,to' :tlie ,··_·about llitent;anti"..in~Y.,e~t~lisJA;: ..
thefac~thatthere1Slittleornothingtobecomemvolvedm.
.·
-
avermes under consideration
K Student.: Government which·. on the-part.of the editors, or·at- ·-.
. _. While we do r~lize that there is a .c~rtain percentage of _students honest. student evaluations. of appoints them.· . . . .• .· · _
. - least ~f th~0 011e prin.i_arUy ;:
who have become mv9lved to make Mar1St a more workable place, we - courses . and
·
teachers, • and .,the. . One of the most knowledgeable --- responsible for the present·spat£!. -
argue mat these students are being spread too thin, because other SAC
is
currently working closely groupg _ on campus concerning
I suggest, Irene, that at least you,
. ·
st~dents are not carrying their own
weight.
In
nearly every editorial with . the Academic Dean to academic~ is the · Student
if
not both you and Greg, sign up,·
·
this year we have spoken of ·or at least mentioned the word com- guarantee valid evaluation. Such Academic Committee~ Con-
for one of Dr. Ryan's courses,
munity, and at this point we feel that there does not exist a real evaluations will enab1e the Dean, sequently,the.SAC should have a
jump into the intellectual swim,
community here at all.
In
a commuriity we feel that those who can, do the AAC, the SAC, the FPC; arid guaranteed column ih . each _and find out firsthand what the
and that others do what they can, ~ut there still exists that common the CFD (Committee on Faculty CIRCIE edition in which to bring . man isreally likerather_ than rest
denominator that everyone does ~omething. And that is clearly not the Development} to then decide and to the attention· of the readers all .. your · opinions on. misinterpreted
case here at Marist. .
- _
·
.
.establish_ better policies for ex- matters of educational
import.
sources.
· ..
· ·
What leaders we do have have spread themselves so thin that they. cellence at Marist and, cori~ The editorials, . furthermore,
·-.,
.
Fraternally,
no longer have
enough
hours in the day to do the things that they want ·sequently perrnanent financial should add .. their weight ·to. the .
·-Dr. JosephL. Belanger
~o do, what wi~. meetings overlapping meeting after meating.
When viability. Reperts on the work of . SAC positions .. Faculty meetings
-..
-
·
Jobs get done, it
IS
because of fi!ework of these few peopl". nv~ because
·
·
'
many students gather to help. However; it is ironic that whenever
.criticism occurs - and it very ·often. does - it is usually. from those·
·. --
-students who bad the opportunity to do something but didn't.
Reflections
.
would ~e to . leave you with a admitted no private sphere;. not ·.·
If students want changes, they have· to work for them. We urge
passage that I think will be
ini-
even- inside a man's skull. we .
students to get involved through such activities as Student Govern-
p_ortant to·. all of _us at qne tun· e· 0· r _ Ii -;.,~
d
th ·
--
uls
t Th Coll
U
·
B ·· d
d th St d t
..
V,:u·
un er
e -comp
ion of
men ,
e
ege ruon
oar , -an
e
u en Academic Com-
·another· .. ,:_. ·- · ·
·
kin
thin
mittee to name J"ust f
The CffiCIE ·
1
h
th t st d t
·
. wor
g
. gs out to' their final
.
, .
.
a e~..
-.
su_icere
Y
OJ>E:S
a _ u ens Dear Editors,
._
_
,"Wehave.learnedJtlstorymore conclusions. Our-minds were so . ..:,
will begmtoactively:participatemtheMaristCommumty. · · ·
- · One year ago last February, a - ~oroughly'
,
than the othe~s: We tensely chargedthat_the slightest
.
_
Thank-You
good ~riend of mine and myself differ from all others m our · collision caused a mortal short- ·
sat ·down and talked about· logicalconsistency;·WeknowthaL · circuit.-'lbus' we were faded,-to·-
writing a proposal for a house _virtue qoesn't matter,to history; .· mutual destruction. ...
-~-
··
that would allow science: majors and · that crimes remain '. un- :
:J ..
was one of those.
L
have
-to have a placeto Uve and work. I punished;
·
but that every:
:
error ·• thoughf and acted asl had to· I -
wrote some ideas down and last had. ~ts.·: consequences _·._and .. its - destroyed the people.whomT.,;as
_
..
_
.
: smnmer_lsperitagoodpartofmy vengets_ onto the generation. -.fond.of,andgavepowertoothei-s
-· This is the last issue of the CIRCIE for 1974-75 and there are many ~pare . tune. formulating: those Therefore ,we concen~ated all_ I did· not like. History put· me
thankyousandcongratulationstobesaidtomanypeople.
'. • ·
_
. _ id~as .mto
a
proposal as an ap- .. our efforts _on-pr~venting err9r · wher~ I ~ood;_I·have exhausted
--The CIRCLE would like to extend-best wishes: to Dean Richard . plication to • one · _of ~e
-,_smaµ ·
~nd destr~ym~ the very seeds _of. the. ~edit .w~ch she accor~ed
LaPietra who will soon leave his position of Academic Dean arid to Dr.. hou~e~,
·
not
Jus~
>
Benoit ,
1
.t .. Nev.~r m history ~as so much. · me;if lwas _right I have:nothing ·
Louis
Zuccarello who will replace
him.
We..:would also like-' to specifically. !gave it to Fr~d power._ over· cthe·
:
ofuture; of to repent of; ifwr.ong~I will pay.'~
congratulate all newly appointed departmental heads; the ri:ew· Lambert. and he app~oved it, humarutybeen_concentratedms~
- · ·
• FromArthurK~estler•
.
s~
residence staff, and those faculty members·who will
be
on sabbatical however, .no o~e else did. ~any few ha~ds as m our Cf:lse_. ~acli
·• -·-- Dar~ess atNocm
next year. . ·.
._.
: ... ·
·.·
· ,
. -- ,_
..,_
peoplethought!t~as a ~~tldea wr;on~ idea ~at we fo~ow is. a . ¥J_h9:ven't learne<tanything ·
There are a number of thank yous in order for a great many people: but few.were :willing_t~ Jom.
That ..
crime .· commi~ed · agllmst · · o~ · · fro.m ·._.
this! ; ·
and . I
have, .··
I'ye
We. thank the peopl~
in
the Introduction to ·Jourrialisnr class. for· their _
was laSt s~eSter, This ~emester ·. future gener~tiollS;Ther~fore_ w~ , ·• learned thi_s · much. . . _, . . .
contributions to the CffiCIE, and
Mr.
Robert Norman who taught ~e whole idea_ was ~evise~ and · have to P~sh '1'ong, ideas as -
·
Iw.ould like to close this whole
theni. Tom McDonald, Advertising Manager, Greg Welsh, Business mcl_ud8? I?~r~ than Just S!!ience 0thers_ purush cp.Illes. -We were ord~l, on my> end_ anyway,:- by _
Manager, and Al Adolphi,-Photographer,are also to
be thanked for maJors'. it was open _to 0ther held · madmen, becaus~ ,we sayin:g th~nk~. (something,
I---: .
their time and effort In addition, we \\jsh to thank all people_.;; faculty · ma,1o~s . as .well: The idea.·• was ·
!
0llo~ed, every,thoug~_t: down to : -•· have~ 't'll_ear~
in
a_. year!, foi:_ all
: and students - for, their contributfons, especially Father
Leo
Gallant, . good,- the appi:9va,l
'WBS
there and
O
its, :_f~l:!l: consequence ·and
-
ac,ted . _
the .time· eve_ryon~ · gave•; to .. the
. Tom McTernan, and
Linda
Franco. ..· :
-
.
.
; . : . ;.. . ·
.. . · .. · . we had the pe9ple "now.
We.
then
,
_ a~cor~gly; ~e. ~ere compared ·· prQposal. And special
thinks to .
. , .·•: .To ·the seniors leaving us we would like
to
wish
the very. best
in
the -proc_eed~ to·. apply for the hous_e _
to .
:
the-· ~quisiti[!n_;: because,.• ~e -· ·Danriy,: Charlie~·•·
-
· ·JiJiuny, ....
Tim; ,. .
future. - .·
_
.
;
; _·. ·.·.·
.:.. •. ·.
<. ·. . .: .. -.-.·:
:and tile-outcome need:not·/oo··theI!,l, we;:constantly~Jelt
-
:in ··Rich; Marie,-.'Jim;;.Bob;~Ernie, .
. _. ,: At
this
time'
l\'.e
would
like
to
.thank
all.
tliose
people who contr_ibuted :: retol~< Every~ne.J~no\VS /fairly·•- · o~elv~-_the
·
. -w}!~l?
..
we_ight .:of
·
•: Greg/ ~nd, Steve .· fo~
;
,
p~tti:D.g
.(in,
, to·the
Marist
community,at large .. :. ·
> - . . ·. ··-. __
,
>: .
.
well,Just;\Vliathappe~ed,,:and if-,,.~esp~n!1bi~i!Y ~or:)he ~uper:- • their:•tune_, an~~putting ,up,;_with ..
·
. ,7""Finally, to all studerits,
we
extend
best
wisbesfor good luck and good•· ~ey _· don t
~e.:t,:·
pr~~.~l_r }l:on't_/ ~dividmd :·
·~e: ....
~
~
•
9ome: ;
We. :-•~~;
:/?-' :_- :· .·. :: .'
:
.:
> - , ..
·.·> ... ;, __
· ·•· ·grades··9n.final--exams.
Enjoy yotµ-•.vacation!
·
·
·
·
~are ilnywa!·: ; · : · \' •:: · ,:::: : _.!'.~!!ib1~>tlle
:
greatc inqws,itors,.
·,·:-
·
i
:- •· : ··; ._.-·.
-:MikeD'E!ia · •.
__ .,, .;,
., ..
., - ·
· ·
.... _ , , .· - · ·
- ~e Jear
1
of: ~rd: work ,~d;,·_mtliitwe.pe,:-!38Cuted tl)ese~of: ' ..
:
·:,· .. :Amemberofthe.:perverbu~t
, : :
:IQanf .,d~ep
~
~gltts;yvent mto:" •
~yll
nott1111,.~ IJ?,en'.s ~eeds,:but _,:
•>·
.·
,·
:·--
·SheaJ18nGroup~-- ..
. ,
_ . · .
tllatidea.It'sallovernow{but.l. m:.thell'
~
~thoughts:·as·welli We-
-,--:
.
:,. ·
- :
•
'
I
•
; , : , · . · ·
__
.::,·
,
;
'.
~
: . : : _ : : . • · . '
...
· '
.
· ~
:..·~~:·
•
. : · · ~
,·l·,1!._::····.
''~-:
' .
.'
.· :
;
·:-,
:·.
.
,
·
'
:.:.
.
..
·-
.
.
,
..
'
...
"
•
•
.•
',,
...
,
.
•.•··
......... .
.
.
.
.
.
.
··•
' . '
.
..
'
.
MAY 1, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
Code
99.
Sabbatical Given
.-
-
. By
Fr.
Leo Gallant
· · became man he made you and
me ·and the rest of us pretty
Man occupies planet No. 3 of a important people. He not only
quite obscµre_ star which is redeemed us. He saved us from
located sonie 30,000 light years the terrible burden of infinity. My .
from the center of .the galaxy.
In
hands, my feet, my poor little
·. our galaxy, some 10 billion stars . brain, my eyes, my ears all
.exist while one hundred thousand matter more than the sweep of and suffered and died, even as
million billion appears to•.
be
a these constellations. God himself, you and
I.
Blah for the immensity
conservative -estimate· for the the God to whom this whole of space! Blah for those who
· number of the· stars in the .whole universe. speckled display
is
as would have me a microcosm in
universe .... Some · scientists nothing, God himself had hands the meaningless tangle of an
estimate the age of the·earth as 5 like mine and eyes and brain and endless evolution! I'm no
··billion years,·the sun 10 billion, . ears. Without Christ we would be microcosm! I too am a son of
-- the· universe 27 billion. Man's little niore than bacteria living on God!"
position in the universe- equals . a pebble in space. Because · of
My . whole life at· Marist is
nothing.
.
.
. .
him, I. can stand here under this dedicated to instill in everybody a
Buy Myles·Connolly in his book cold immensityand kriow. that sense of greatness, of self-
"Mr. Blue", has · the main my pulse beats arid acts and confidence, discovering joy . in
character on a roof top looking up thoughts are of niore importance self, not needing to go further
· in
.
the sky and saying: . ·
· _than this whole show of the than self to find everything. In
· ""l_think my heart would·break ·universe. Only for him I would-be ·. this last column I give thanks to
with allthis immensity
if I did not crushed beneath the weighL of all everyone who made life beautiful
• kriowthat God himself once stood · these worlds. ·0n1y for him, I for me at Marist, my Jewish
beneath it, a young man, as ·small . would
·
.· tumble dazed into
·
the friends, my Christian friends, all
as
I.
Did it ever occur to you that gaping chasms of space and time. my people. I say "my people"
it was Christ who humanized.- But Behold! ·Behold! God wept because I dare to consi~er myself
· infinitude, so
to
speak? When .God·- and laughed arid dined and wined your shepherd: ··
--
An.nQuncein.ents.
-
,.
. . .
To Norkeliunas
by Julie Schott
thesis, which · is on Myth and
Symbol in the Poetry. of Jury
Casimir Norkeliunas, Gennan Baltrushaits, a member of the
and Russian teacher, and head of Russian Symbolists Movement,
the Modem Language Depart-
he will enrich his courses, since
ment, has been. granted a sab-
the topic is directly related to
batical leave for the spring Russian
literature.
Mr.
semester of 1976, during which Norkeliunas will work on
his
time he plans to work on a thesis in England where his wife
translator training program for will be teaching on a teachers
the college, and complete the exchange program.
thesis for his Doctorate.
Also during his sabbatical
Mr~ Norkeliunas, who began leave, which he defines as
teaching German and Russian "academic refreshment," Mr.
language at Marist in 1963, has Norkeliunas plans to· travel
· since introduced history and through Europe with his family
literature
courses
in
the and will return to Marist in July
department.
of '76.
He feels that by completing his .
Reflections On
"George
M ''
Attention Juniors! The. In-
Final Notice
to
AU
Seniors!!!
The
offict'.
of. Career
stitute of International Education · Tilete 1s still time to sign up for Development will be open for
1
has announced the opening of the the dinner dance. -Payments in regular business during the · ·
197~77-coIIlpetition for grants for full $35.00 per couple must: be __ summer hours. Graduating
• graduate•_ stu_dy,ior · resea!"Ch paid by Wednesday May 7. Those seniors are welcome to continue
abroad.in academic fields and for with a · l,)alance of $25.00 -per using the office. Also, according
By
Dav!d
B.
Livshln
production
with
the
self-
confidence and assuredness of a
The Marist College Theatre thoroughbred. In the Saturday
· professional training in the couple must a1s·o be paid by this to Larry Snyder the summer .
_creative and·pedorming arts.
It time;
.
·
·
:__ ... .
months would be an· excellent
is expected that approximately· - Seniors partaking. the Senior time for underclassmen to drop
550 awards to fifty countries will W~ek Festivities are requested to · by the office to familiadze
be available for the 1976-77 fill out the coupon appearing in themselves with
him ·
and the
academic· year. Applicants must this week's CIRCLE. Please facilities. ·
be United;States .citizens. at the return all coupons by. friday May
time:of thl;! application who will 9.
gerietally•-·hold. a bachelor.'s
·
.
.
__
. .·.
There will be a Senior Class
·.gi1ffee·~~~r~;·-~eTu~~El:1~ ·
re~~~~~:.
·
wbr:~~-furieW&~:~i~, ..
~i1:tt}1fdtP:a~~1-Pr~:\·
willbe proficient in the language local college and_public libraries p.m. - 11
.
p.m. ~.
·
of- the host country. Selection is before leaving for the semester. ·
Guild brought a bit of_Broadway night performance· he nearly
to campus with their highly brought the house down with his
entertaining. presentation of heel clicking and fancy dance
GEORGE M.
steps.
The production moved rapidly
Not enough can be said about
through the two hours thanks to this production, with its simple;
· expert· direction by Suzanne but effective staging, excellent
Deak, and superb choreography musical direction, the rapid
by Maureen Brey, Chris Seman, pacing of the dance numbers, and
Moira Coffey, Garey Waters and its most effective costume
Carol Emmel. As George M. design.
·
.
Cohall, F'red}.shley, a. Ilewcoroe.~
_
With George .
M . .
the Theatre
to _the stage, was nothing less Gtiilil lias truly outdone
itself:
that). fantastic. Ashley danced,
based on the academic and-or. Think of the next person! ··
professional record· of the ap-
Distribution of- the · 1975
I•-----------------------•
plicant,
the . validity ·· and
_
·.
. ,
Reynard will begin tomorrow,
feasability of his or _her proposed
~e .College Bookstore mll be _Friday, May 2.
If
you have not
study plan, his or her language. buyi!1g bacl,t used textbooks· paid in full,
too
balance must be
preparation ·.
•
and
personal startmg on Tuesday, May 6, paid before picking up your copy.
qualifications .. For more in- through Th~sday May 8· ~e
If
you have not yet reserved a
formation~-
,
contact Maurice bookst0re Will be open for this copy Y-.ou still have time to buy
Bibeau, the. Fulbright program purpose f~om · 4 p.m. • 8 p.m. one. You must have your receipt
advisor at Marist in rm. D209;
It
Boo~s will be bought back when picking up. your copy.
· is strongly suggested this be done regard1ess. of whether they were Please . see Mike Maloney,
before the end of the semester used on this campl.ls or not.
Reynard Editor for further
since the applications mu~t ·be
details.
submitted by mid-October.
Students are once again
.
· .
reminded by the editors of the ·
Studen~ are on~e. agam asked CIRCLE.to return all books and .
to. ~ubrrut. papers ~to ~he next. library materials to the library
edition of the Ac~de me _Q~ar- before leaving for the semester.
terly. Please submit
8:
!paper~ to Failure to do so will result in the
.Dr. Georgl;! Sommer m Fontame Business Offices holding of
:~t:,r
:Mary Snrder, ~regory Spring grades.
.
.
Final Exam Week begins this
Monday 5, The CIRCLE editors
wish everyone Good Luck \Vith
their finals and extend our best
wish~s for a pleasant summer.
'> ; "·.
(;roup Returns,
, With
Honors
various. commtttees so as to was assigned to the Population
By
Bob Nelson
maximize tne strengths of the Commission.·Fred_Eberlein and
.. . .
. delegation. · Fred Eberlein, Julius. Hajas were . ~lected
The Marist. College delegation delegation co-chairman, · was.- spokesmen of th~ Afr<r.Asia!l bloc
to· the National Model .United· assigned to the Political and in ~eir respecbve ~ommitte~s,
Nations conference returned last Securitv
Committee .. in while the resolution on m-
Saturday with a third place ·the General Assembly (G.A.). ternational development
honorable mention award. This Wayne Kezirian represented assistance sponso!ed by Bob
means that.the delegation placed Marist in the Legal Committee, ·Nelson was passed m the plenary
in the
·
top
.
fiftee.n colleges, of while Joe Gigliotti handled the. session of-Ecosoc.
.
I
.approximately a, hundred.·and
.
Social·•· and : . Humanitarian
~
_the tl}ree years th~t the
1
fifty collcg~s represen~ed.
The
Committee:· . In the General . Politic8:l Science Club has i;ent a
· awards were .determmed by Assembly conferences, Bob delegation to the Model U.N., at
secret ; ballot;:' with .. ;
s
eacb\·Baulch; was . assigned • to no time has it been so su~cessful
. .
delegation ._giyerf one·: .vo~e,. ~on-. Mu.ltinatiorial · Corporati?ns, both
:in
the passage of_ bills_, the
. . / .sisting opive .. recommend~tioqs :~ulius, Hajas to World DlSar-:·- el8<:t!on of st}ldents to unpo~nt
· · ·. for,.best college in ,the ·Economic:" ; mament, and Rod L&non to
Raw.
posit~ons; or m overall de~egation.
.
and- Social ·Council.> (Ecoso¢)~ Mate~ials.Jn the ·Econo_mic and.: ranking.
~Y
represen~~ the
\\\6
Leave ·Your Head to
iJs(
GUTTERY
UNI-SEX
F ~ O
HAIRCUTi\NGG
$
6.
w1·th
BLOW ORVIN
STREAKING, FROSTING
&
PERMANENT WAVING
.Marist ID
CALL
454-9239
for your appointmen~ nc;,w
ON
TH ■
MAIN MALL
3
LIB■RTY STR■■T
(Above Capitol Bakery)
Entrance Arqund Gqrner.
Get extra
six-packs for the
.
weekend.
6PACKS
~
when
you're
having
more than one.
Marist·thus.ranked close
to
such :·Social Council, Bob'. .Nelson,
.
African nation of Zam_bia, it was
delegatioris\as
U.S;L;A.;
1
Indiana,:-,deI~gation co-ch~n, wa~ the . felt that.· ~e .. del_egation -had a
University~
and
Georgetown who·:representative
to
the C:Olpmittee. hea~ sblrt:m the !!wards se.J,ec~
·<
were rt1ted
in
the
to1>
ten
colleges.: ··on:a New Economic Order;•
Basil_
·Uon,-due to the a~ye leader~p
>·-- : .. '
The Marist~; students who< Charlemow. was -• on . the . Food of the real Zambia m the Uruted
, ~
; -
•
•
•
•
•
I
·partldpated
·;were\assigned
i
to
/Co~~~,
and
Kathy
Brennan Nations.
.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..._
.:,_.:;,·:.
. -
~
·.
'··•·•·•··;,;,;'·\/_
;
.··::
',.
·
;
.
·
•
·,,.•'.·
.
.
. ~- ,
·
... ~·>/:-'. :·::: .'' -
.
'.
~
;
..
::··,
,,
:
'
.-.~
1 · · · . , ; : ; · · ' • · •
;
: •. ·.:
,
: · ·
:~.---,.
,
•'/:;:;,._:;
t;:,:;
' '
.
........ .
.
..
'
.
..
..,
-
/
Ernie J\r
.
ico
on
the
courts.
High
-
On
.
-
Sport~
.
.
by
Thomas l\lcTernan
.
McGRAW NAMED ATHLETE
.
OF
THEWEEK
THE CIRCLE
MAY
1.
1975
Marist Tennis Outplays
_
Bard And_
Kings
by
Thomas McTernan
loss came
.
when Gary Hartz
·
playing
·
well now."
:
rallied for a
3-6, 6-4, 6-4
decision
He added, "We never came this
There was a lot hanging
oh
the over Larry Stenger
.
.
close to Vassar (6-3) and abnost
net when the Marist tennis team
·
·
On
Friday Carberry blanked beat New Paltz
(5-:4)
for the first
faced Concordia here yesterday. Dan Josephs
6--0, 6--0
to lead the time ever. We lost 8-1 to New
f
ed F
· th
er Haven but all matches were
At stake was the championship o
R
oxes m
e
.
sweep oy
.
clos
·
e. I'm
.
only disappointed
in
the Central Atlantic Collegiate Bard.
It
was the most
un-
Conference, a title that Marist pressive performance
of
_
th,e the losses to Siena (8-1) and Kean
has won the past two years. Both season by Carberry, the teams state
(5-4).;,
·
.
teams entered the match with
3-0
n~ber_ 1 player,
W?O
ha~ ~en a
Losing
·•
only Carberry to
·teague records.
·
.
disappomtinent
.
this sprmg. He graduation, Petro has high hopes
The match would also deter-
now stands
5-5
in singles play.
for next year's team but feels
.
mine whether the Red Foxes can
·
In other singles match~, Fred that they need a strong nwnber
end
this
season with
.
a winning
·
Kolthay won
_
over Alan Bigelow~
·
one player who can win; Juniors
record
.
after a 5-5
·
finish in 1974.
4,
6-2; Metzger edged H~nk Re~m Kolthay arid Arico will be back
Last w~ek they routed Kings (8-1)
_
6-4,
6-3 for his fifth str~ight wm;
but neither player with much
and Bard
(9--0)
to boost
·
t\}eir Arico ripped
&,y
He_~n 6-1, 6-
.
consistency this year. ~etzge~, a
currentniarkio5-5. Maristcloses 3;
.
McGraw ~last~
Al
~ e l
6-
sophomore;
·
has been- unprovmg
·
out the 1975 season at home
·
.
o,
6-1 for
his
ninth
wm
m ten constantly
·
and could move
..
up
.
Saturday agairist Quinnipiac.
,
·
o~tings; ·and Stenger
.
outplayed next season. McGraw, wliom
,
Taking
·
five of
·
six singles and
·
Rich ~lackshaw
.
6-2, 6-2.
,
,
Petro referred to as "the spark-
all
three
doubles, the Red Foxes
After the shutout, ~e teams plug" enjoyed ~
-
most s11.ccessful
had little trouble with Kings last second of the
.
campaign, coach spring
in
his first season
..
as
·
a
Wednesday. In singles, Steve Ron Petro remarked, "rm
·
regular
.
Petro also· feels that
,.
·
Bl ·
h 6-
·
·
· d
B
d has had strong several newcomers could break
,
Garberry topple~
·
Bruce
eic.
.
surpris
.
e .
.
-
ar
.
.
.
11
.
m· to the top
·
six·
..
n
_
ext spring.
•
.
o;
·
6-4;
Jay Metzger defeated Rick teams m the
·
past,. bu~ we ,;ea
Y
Stotz 6-2 6-2·
-
Ernie Arico held off outplayed them
this
time
'.
·
Saturday's finale
.
with
·
Qum-
Rick
·
Tho~s
·
6-4
,
·
.
7-5;
·
John
.
.
·
Looking back over the season,
.
nipiac begins at 1 p.m
,
on
·
the
-
McGraw beat Steve Miller 6-1; 6-4
Petr~ said, "It's a shame that we
Marist
•
courts:
and Mike Fcirn
·
aci downed Steve had
_
all our tough opponen~ so
.
·
J~hn McGraw,
_
a ~ophomore froni
.
Isla~d Trees!
·
has b
.
een named Kohler 6-2, 6-4. The oruy
·
Marist early in the season. Wear~ really
,
.
.
MaristCollegeAthleteoftheVfeekfor.t.!teweeke.nding_April26.
·
··
·
·
·
·
·
:
·
· ·
.
·
·.
E
..
.
·
·
.
->
d
. ·
·
-
.
..
.
·
s
.
·
·
·
tbr"!f,:~~·.~~n:;:::J.~,r..:·t;:i;,t~i:,~J•~;t:"~~
La
C
-
rO
sse
n
,
S
.
eas<>;
n
prove his season record to 9-1.
·
·
··
,.
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
·
NOTES
·
FROM
THE
SPORTS
DES&:
.
.
byThomasMcTeman
.
.
wer~ ready
.
for
.
hiin," coach Jeff
·
The Red Foxes took
a
4-4
.
Joe Cirasella, a senior wllo
.
:
was player - coach
·
of.the golf team, was
Behnke declared after the game
.
record
·
into yesterday's final
named'Marist Athlete of the Year Tuesday hight
.
Cirasella alsp was a
·
It was supposed to be a con-
.
FQUjumped off to a 6-0 lead in home match with York
,
They will
·
,
standout-forward on the Red Fox basketbaUteam:..
frontation between
,
the
·
top two the first period and increased the then close out_ ·their' most sue-
.
.
The
i
w_ome~•s tenni~ t~am shut out Bard
4--0
Tuesday. The
_
w~~~n,
.
pointmakers in
,
the Knicker- margin to
·
9-1 by the half. "This cessful season ever Saturday at
who were ramed out with Vassar
,
last week, close out their mitial hocker Lacrosse Conference. But was the best team we've seer. all
·
Fairfield.
.
season at home against Ulster Community College
_
todal:'
.
.. Mike Hart Bruce Neville turned it into a.rout season,"
·
said
.
Behnke, "they
_
It
will
b~
.
the final game for
·
..
(37 points)
.
and Earl Holmes (33) sparked
.
the Marist b~sketball and FDU-Teaneck followed suit were big and
·
strong- and used seniors Doug Hampel,
.
Jim
·
·
players in
'
Sunday's
.
95-8~
.
win
:
9ver
.
Danbury
_
State
_
·
Correctiomd In- with a
.
12-6 victory over
-
Marist their weight effectively."
.
·
·
-
. ·
Cassaro, John
·
Tracy and Mike
stitution
.
..
.
.
·
· ,
_
.·
.
·.
·
.
·
.
··
.
·
:
-
.
·
Saturday.
.
·
·
Attackm.an Jim McCue Jed Gentile. Hampel and Cassaro
,
co-
.
·
The track team: <!efeateq
".
York, Siena and Kings at
_
New
.
Pa)tz
Neville, a
_
6'5", 250-pounder Marist
.
.
with three goals while captains along with McCue,
.
have
Tues9~y to compl~te the bestsea~on
with
an~ record. Fr~ Kolthay who was
·
drafted
-.
by the
.
N.
y_
.
Gregg
.
Stent
.
tallied twice and started
.
every game
·
in the f9ur-
set a
·
new; record
m
.
the two-mile
.
(9: 4.1), 'placmg
.
se<;:9nd
.
Fir~
:
place Giants football club
,
scored five
·
midfielder
.
I)oug Hampel
·
added year history
.
of Marist lacrosse .
.
.
)inishers.!,Ilcludeg
_
Johnyand~ryo9rt m the
·
~40; J?av~
,
Sch90Is
_
m the
.
·goals
;.
and assisteq
.
.
on
_
an9.th_er. the other.
·...
.
.,,.
.
·
.
Hampel is
:'
the all
0
tiine
·
lea~g'
i
•<':
·1
,;
,,~
.
1
,
1:,i,,."
.
.
/;};,c
mt~~~<iiate
;
hurdl~s
.
an<:1.~e
,
Jlli!~
relay, of
Jun Gillen,
S
p
hools,
·
~e"."e ·
.
·
Kevin
•
McGhee, second m
~
scormg
.
_
Sophomore
·
·
defensemen Jim scorer for the team while Cassaro
; ··
· ·
·
:
.
..
Van Kuren a~d Vanclervoort
:~;
-
·
.
.
..
·
"
·
.
·
..
·
.
.
·
:
.
·
:
·
\
·-
.
.
·
.
.
in
tlie
.
conference
r
·
.
was
,
played Boliren
·
and Tom Quinn both qid a
·
has been the "core"
·
of
·•
the
.
The w~rpen's crew lpst to Rhode Island ?unng the ~reside
_
nt
_
§. ~up
·
very tight throughoutthe games
~
good job of checking the powerful defens~
.
·
·
·
regatta ':'ver th~ weekend
;
H~weyer, men
s
,
coach Bill A~tm p
_
omts and was
.
held pointless. "They
.
FD.!.!
3
tta~k
.
·
.
. ·
·
·
.
out, '
,'
They had so many new girls
(!n
the team tha~ they were fo
_
rced to
.
.
·
•
·
·
~:~e~~~.slo~er rate in order
·
to give the newcomers a ch~J)Ce to
w
·
1·
•
n
· .··
·
d·
·
s
.
,
··
·
W
·
ate
.
r
F-
_
Orce
·
·
.
A FINAL NOTE: Any sportswriter
will
tell you the value of people
..
who provide information and ideas for colwnns and articles
.
With
this
in mind I would like to thank
t!>~
following people for their help in
R
.
·
·
p
·
·
.
t
.·
t
keepingmeabreastofthelatestinMaristsports:Georg~l)YicCutcheon;
·
··.·
eg
_
at
·
.
t
·
.
a
.
os
·
po
.
n
·
.
-
e
.
.
me
_
n
.
Vito Aprigliano, Ron Petro; Ed Conlin, Rich Stevens, Bill Austin, Jeff
Behnke, Mike Secone, Jim Cassaro, Vinnie Caruso, Tom McDonald,
John Vandervoort, Lorraine Conklin, Doc Goldman, John Tkach.
GI-:-~
by Thomas McTeman
for those who wer~ competing
ip
The only official Marist win
Malaspina, Al Adolfi
-
and Marie Kelly. The contribution~~ i.hese and
their last home race," said was in the freshman fours.
others to the Marist snorts scene is greatly aooreciated.
·.
'
·
Strong wings and rough waters varsity coach Bill Austin,
The other senior on the team is
'TID
.
S
-WEEK
IN
MARIST SPORTS (May 1-11)
·•
· ·
·
forced
the
I.3th
annual referring
.
to
seniors
Jim Kevin O'Connell who paired with
·•.
Thursday,Mayl-Women'sl'ennis-vs. UlsterCC-home-3:30p.m. President's
Cup
.
regatta, Browning and Bob Sneeden. He
Kevin
,
Sommar for a second
-
Saturday,
-
May3-Lacrosse-atFairfield.:2p.m.
scheduled for Saturday, to be did
.
add,
"It
could have been
place behind Manhattan.
:
Tennis-vs. Quinnipiac-:liome~lp.m.
·
.
postponed until Sunday at 6:30 worse; there might not have been
This
·
·
saturday the Marist
- Crew-vs. Trinity, Wesleyan, Williams at \Villiam's-1 p.m.
a.m. But for both heavyweight a race at all, the conditions .were oarsmen travel
to
Williamstown,
·
- Sailing -
.
Hartley Cup - home
.·.·
crews, it was virtually a cari-
so bad."
· .
..
·
·
·
.
.
.
Mass .
.
to meet Trinity, Wesleyan
-Track~
CTC
Championships
.;
at
King:;
Point -10 a.m.
cellation.
·
The most exciting of
.
the
·
races and
-
Williams.
·
Trinity is
·
the
- Women's Crew-vs
,
William's, Wesleyan- at William's- 2 p.m;
Holy cross and Washingto!l,
'
t~at wer.e held
~a~ ~
the varsity strongest of the three,. hav~g
Swtday,May4-Salling-HartleyCup,-home
·
_
.
·
the only other schools entel'e~ m lightweight divis10n: where def~ated
U.
Mass ea~her this
.
Friday; May 9-Crew - Dad Vall Championships- at Philadelphia -
the varsity and
·
J.V. heavyweight
_
Rhode Island upset Manst by two spring .
.
The
:·-
Dad Vall
.
cham-
heats
-
.
·
.
·
·
·
,
.
races were unable to stay until feet.
It
marked the first time R.I
.
·
pionships will be held
.
next
Saturday,MaylO-Crew-DadVailCl,lampionships-atPhiladelphia Sund~y .
.
So
both
,
Marist
·
crews has ever beaten a Marist crew
.
weekend in
.
Philadelphia and
-
,
finals
·
·
·
·
·
.
had to
•
race
·
as unofficial entries
.
It
was also the crew's firstJoss
Aust~
.
.
remarked,
"I
think we
.
.
Sunday,
May
11
'
-
Women's Crew -
E;A WRC
Sprints -
·
at Middlefield,
·
in other races which they
·
easily of the season. "They've
.
done an should
:
make
.
the finals in all
Conn.
•.
·
·
·
won
·
:
. ·
·
.
. .
·
outstanding job considering they races
·
we
--·
enter. A good
:
race
Until.September 1975 "
'.
·
.
<
"Itwas unfortunate;
·
especially had to re~uild
.
the whole
·
boat," against Trinity should help
us
---••111!111•
·
•
•
·
•
·
-•iiiiililia-~•---••-•--•
·
-
·
•
Austin
:
poin\ed
,
out. Only Jim attain our
-
pre-season goal of
·-
------------"'II
·
·
·
·
·,
Hoyle and Frank Hoover are
.'
qualifying
the
.
varsity
..
Attention! .
·
SENIOR WEEK ACTIVI'qES
•
.
,
,
NAME
.
ADDRE~SS
Clambake - Wed.
May
14
/
7-12
p
.
m.
No~ in
•
party
.
,
·
.
-
·
~
.
.
.
Cocktail
Party-Fri.
May
16, 9:3~
.
12
p.m.
'.
(~~ts
.
and ~ends
invited)
.
No.
m
party
.
·
aia~pagne
Brunch -
Sat. May
i7
;
.
.
)1:30-:L
p.m;
''.(
parents
and
friends
.
invited) $4;()1)
.
per
person.
·
~;~,::.
.
~
i~}
R
.
f
.
.
-
.
.
-
.
·
Frank
·
·
s
,
Restauran:t
,
.
.
. .
.
.
.
-
'
.
.
..
" '
.
_
8oz.
glass
·
25
-
'-
:
·
·
.Pitche(
.- 12
;
~00
~
-
.
·
:
.
.
.
.
~.
""
~
-
..
.
.
.
. .
-
.
.
.
'
'
. .
.
,
'
.
.
,
,.,
·
,
'
,
,
,
,
.
•
'•
•
.
.
·
•
·
•
·
·
.·
..
·
.
•
·
.·:·.:
.,
·
•
-
.
·
•
_
\."
-:.',',
'
,
.
seniors
on
the
.
f?oat that includes
.
heavyweigµt for
·
the
·
first time."
:
s~
freshmen.
··
.
1
-
Insurance from
MOf
~hall
G.
ote,ling, Inc.
,
•
11
\\'.(~
Spl'dalizc i~l
,-
tOll~l)rrow'
.
·
,
.
.
..
.
. ' '
':
.
.
.
.
~
;
.
ARLINGTON
·.
44 Plaza
·
·
.
-~
171
:
6100
.
.
..
~OUGH'<EEPSIE
75Washingtc,ri
st:
.
454~0800 .
,
.
.
·.;.
_-
.
.
.
.
WAPPINGERS FALLS
·
·
·.
lniperialPlaza
297
~
3701
14.11.1
14.11.2
14.11.3
14.11.4
THE
VOLUME 14, NUMBER 11-
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW
YO~K
12601 _
MAY_ 1, 1_975
Foy
Holds Answer Session
By Susan M. Dunderdale
Despite the fact that the tuition
increase of 9 percent. will affect
all Marist -students only two
students came
to
the question and
answer meeting with President
-~
be a cut back in trips to con-
getting their money's worth from
--
Foy_ on Tuesday.
· _
_
._ ventions for faculty. All depart- - a course for whatever_ reason
ments are being asked to con-
they should . let the department
sider carefully how they _spend chainnan know.
On
the other
their alloted money. But _even hand it was agreed that
·if
a
with these cutbacks tuition had to professor is providing a wol'-:
be _ increased because of in-
thwhile course that should be
creases in costs of commodities made known also. This way
such as electricity, water and promotions and rehiring will be
salaries which must be brought to made to insure the best education
Dr. E_ugen~ Best.
Best Receives
Research
Grant
..: The meeting was set up for the
students_· benefit so that_ they
wouid be· informed
as:to
why the
increase was approved. Although
the decision to increase tuition
cannot be reversed, the students
would have had the opportunity
to see where their money is being
spent and why. In respoqseto one
· of the students statements that
money should - be spent o~
campus and. not on •trips -for
. student- protest demonstrations
Dr. Foy - said tliat efforts are
beirig made to cut
Qut
"frills". He
alsoadded that the!"e is going t~
;
an acceptable level.
· /
for the student's.money.·
Desoite the large increase in
-Unfortunately because of such
tuition -!he administration does
poor att~ndance,. neither the
not anticipate a
drop in administration nor the students
enrollment }le~ause students were able to reap the full benefits
cannot meet
tl,l!
~osts. The sum of - that the meeting could have
$110,000 is -being set _aside for provided. Many Marist students
::upperclassmen who_ can prove a will be paying the increase and
financial need and therefore with not . understand _ why they · are
this increased aid the actual . paying it and the administration
increase for the student will not will
be
spending student money
be that much.
-
. ..
without a clear idea
of
what the
-_ It
was also mentioned that if students want or need.
students do . not feel they _ are
·
CominittCes .
·
Select
Residence.· Staff
By Rhoda Crispel~
close relationship between the
ByJoanStegenga_
towards dormitory living, norms, fourth floor east side-and are
.
.- _ .
.
preachers and magistrates. .
.
a:nd enforcement. Their selec-
under John's advisorship. In
~
Dz:< E~ge~e :~e~f. h9s
.
. just . As ~eligion ~e~ame plu.r~lis~ic
Tlie screening of 83 students tions. were. giveri to Fred Lam-
House I, Eric DePercin is RA. --
. rec:E?iyed,.;:t, t.\Vo Jllonµi_ ·· r~search
·
.Amer!Cc!n _
pohtic:s,;-: became/ m: applying. for-· nex( semester's ... be.rt, P!r~c!<:>tot~mp11~ y_fe,.for -,, for.the .first floor. :which:~11. be
_5! ..... .
,:gr.~1:1t·,,r_om-:,th,e<_·'Na~10~8:l:
·
"En~--;creasmglrseculimzed>an~b:~as·
--
resident··•>•'staff·
:
··••b'egarf
"
T1ast ... "'his-nn~rapprova1.:t
·
·?'•-~"""-)=-~'.bi'-ractar'Ying::n1e~,house·s:other·•·•·
~doWillenfforthe Humaruties for uprooted
from- · : rehg10us
·
January: Official notification _of
Out.side of those leavmg Mar1st ,
R.i\;s
are -Kathy :Walsh, Karen
stu~y l!lt the University of tr;:idi~ions .. Yet throughout aUspositions was_given ori April this May, alrbl!t.tw~ members of Loug11}in, Leslie Spin~stun, ~nd
Califormaat Berkely.
American history, ~ur cult~ral 15 .. _
·
.
the present resident staff Charhe l3ang. Karen is the- first
The topic ofstu9-y will
be
"Civil world view, our not10ns of r1ght
The -
·
centrat Committee, __ , reappliea for next semester's girlto be assigned to a boy's wing
Religion
i:11.
America,_" Directing and wro_ng, have been the con-
comprised of- six seniors ap-
positions_. They were evaluated i_n
Champagnat. Beginnin_g
the part1c1pants will· be Dr.- cern otJudges and lawyers who pointed by Director of Campus by their floor, R.C., - and __ salary for Champagnat R.A.s
IS
Robert Bellah, Professor of are now the spokesmen for the Llfe · paper screened · the ap-
Housemaster. Fred Lambert $600.
. .
Sociology'. and _ Comparative religious
community.
An plic~nts.
Based
on
four made a recommendation to the . Joseph Dempsey and Americo
Studies at B.:rkely, who_ wrote exampleisthe currentarg~E:nt evaluations of each person and a
I
Staff Screening groups based on Ll_uveras were hired- as Leo's
"Civil Religion in America/' .
~boµtt~e beginning of h~n hfe set oLcriteria, the Committee these ,,evalu;:ttions. None of_ the R.C.s. Virginia Albano was .
Dr, Best. expects a very m- m relation to the abortion issue. made 34-- recommendations to students had to go through the chosen as R.A. for the fourth floor .
terdisciplinary p~o~ram. Four ~f La~ers and ,u~ges had a~J1:ey. dormitory houses. The_ recom-
CeI?tral Committee in reap-
b~ys. Valari~ ~ellarosa was
the twelve part1c1pants are m role m determmmg the norms of
·
mendations were directed to the plymg.
·
-,
_
given R.A. on sixth floor, ·John
Sociology, four in Religious right and wrong . iµ
this houses indicated as first choice
In Champagnat Hall the R.C.~: Blue on fifth, Michael Nugent on
Stu~ie~, . and · four
in
in- tradit~onal · religious questio~ in on · the applications. The Staff selecte? were as follows: Dona!ci third, Ca~en_ Ramos ~n second,
terdisciplmary pr~grams.
th~ tri~l !Jf Dr. Kenne~h Edeline .. Screening Committees chose the Augustme for House IV, Kevm and Kevm ~liss on first. R.~.s
In the 1950's Will Herberg of
Rellg_!OUS
questions --are Resident Coordinators (R.C.s) Cavanagh for House III, Ray and R.A.s m Leo both receive
Dre~ _Dniversi~~ argued that ~e . be~om~g civil que;Sti~ms. '.fhe and Resident .. Advisors (R.A.s) _ M~rphy for House II, and _Pet~r $900 as beg!"!llng pay.
traditional reli~ions of America priests i,nour pluralistic ~oc1ety from these names. If they needed Wilderqtter:for House I. This will
The p~sit10n of. R. C. was
(Protesnrntism,
.Roman are those who a_re trymg to a wider selection names were be Peter's second year as House dropped m Sheahan through a
Catholicism; Judaism) are just · maintain the status quo, and the submitted to them 'on the basis of
l's
co6ri:linator. The starting decision _of their House Council.
differ~nt ways of affir~ing prophets are tho~e who challenge applicant's second choices. .
salary of these positions
if
$100~. · ~e R.A.s ·selected for the dor-
comnutment to the _American the status quo, adds Dr. _Best.
Interviews with the ·central
R.A.s ,chosen for House IV m mitory were Maureen B_rey,
· . way of life.
.
,
Lawyers· and judges ·- answer committee were eliminated_ this 1Champagnat. are ·as_ follows: Dennis Gurski, and Pete Pless.
In 1967 Dr .. Bellah identified _th_e -these ci~il qu~ti<Jns. · Lil!_co1!1, ,a year. The Committee . made -a Greg Tracy, Jim. ~illep, · Kevin Startil_1g salary for Sheah~n
phenomenon _ . called . Civll lawyer, is considered A'mer1ca s ·thorough objective analysis of McGhee and Kevm Wolff. In R.A.s is $850.
Religion. He· believed .that Civil greatesttheologian and he had no each applicant . and gave their· House III they are, Paul Monar, . Fred Lambert said that the
'R e_ l i g
ro
n
-tr. ans c e n d s church. _ Clarence . Darrow, an names to the Staff . Screening Karen Robbins, Cathi Harvey choices for Gregory and Benoit
·Prot~tantism, C~tholicism, and athei~, fought for freedom and groups;· The only: interviews and Louis Graziano. Those for : Houses R.C.s. a~e ~till being
· ?u~lS~- Ac_cordingito. Dr._Best, - equa~ty fo: -. man_Y;_ years;
In
during the entite process were House II. are, J?hn Carberry, appended_. ~eg~g mcome for
-it h1:15 _
1~ · _own · belief~,. rituals, American_ C1~ Religion he was a conducted · by these -screening Anne CUilinane, Bill J?Wllevy and these positions
is
$1200.
sacred scriptures, samts, holy prophet f.ightmgJor.
t!t~
sacred groups.. They questioned can-
Tom Lynch. The smgles from
days and churches.
An.
example, freedom and equabty . for didates about their philosophy first floor have been moved to the
is
our belief that Americans are minority groups.
.
.
·
·
·
the : chosen
peopie,. - and· .
In
the Catholic tradition a
'c· , ·. • ·, · -~ ·
p --
.
illustrations of our sacred priest, at confessional, is like _a
- _ · ..
0
m_ ·m
z
t-t·
e·e. . ·. _
·o·_
·
_
.
·
.
.
·
_
.
·
r.e~
n
n
__
.r·
-
e
scriptures are the Declaration of. -judge. Protestant' . .
ministers
.
_
.
I'
U
Independence .. and- the Con- . articulate the world view in their
_
_.
stitution .. Our saints - include sermons.
.
--
-
Lincoln, Kennedy and King.
Dr. Best special interest in
thisR
t
o·
F .
d
-
•
Thanksgiving and Memorial Day
-
research.-topic stems.from }u.s·•.
·•
·
e~·nor
.
n ·un zng
. are our holy days and. in school earlier experience.as a candidate
·
_
'_I-' _ .. • • ,
, ·
..
. .
·.
:
·
we learn a ritual of allegiance for Town Justice of La<:lra!lge.
1
•
• ...
and loyalty.
,
Last summer Dr. Bestrec~1ved
By Rhoda Crispell
further south. Dr. Balch thinks Manager will encourage him to
. In
''The Broken Covenant" a . grant . to· go · to Colwnbia
that railroad traffic
is
increasing carry on discussions with various .
B~llah .says that the values of University to ~tudy South Asia for
. Dr. Roscoe Balch's Citizen's -and that' Poughkeepsie is . the, businesses. ·
·
community expressed .in the eleven weeks. ·At the -end of _that Committee., has received a. $750
logical place for. such ll station.
The committee
is
in negotiation
Ma~ower Compact have J?een · per!~ he_ ~~tE!_ a pa~r entitled
I
~rant fr~ni -IB~ t?. ~repare a
The purpose of this Committee with the MTA, Amtrack, the
lost m · the course of American C1C1v1l
Rehg1on
m
South
I
report on their fmdings and is to reaffirm .the rieed for local _ Department · of Tr~portation,
History.
·-
__
Arileri~." -•.··.
._ · • •_ - . _ - _ recommendations on
mass mass transit with facilities for ,and the Dutchess
County _
,
:
·Dr. Best's specific topic.will be . "I ex~ct t~s se~l!lrwill l~k transportatjon.,
· • _
· _
the entire county.
:Transportation_. Department for_
the role of judges and lawyers as at tpe American. ._Civil,- Relig1~m
. Last spririg- Dr. Balch held. a
According. to Dr. Balch, the .the development of a full rail _of_
priests and prophets of America. from .the' perspective o(Jh.elogy, historical preservation seminar; , Citizen's Committee
is
th~ only
-
mass ~ransit in the Poughkeepsie·
When Constantine.established · history, _ant~ropology;c ~nd Specifically~·"the .seminar in-
citizen's group concerned .with area.· · . ·
_. ,
. Chr,istianity he'gave prophe~ the . sociology. I'm -·_really -looking vestigated the Poughkeepsie · the ,.full range of ~ss tran-
Additionally, the Committee
_
·
. function-of maintaining law and fo!ward
to
it.''. D!; J3est_fee~s th,t railroad station. : .
.
. · , , • ._ _ .
,
, -· spoi:tation in th~ Poughkeepsie ·thopes to rehabilitate the station
order in the ·Christian ·com- t ~ program will·help him-m
,The.MTA had proposed·the ,area.__
·
· ·
·-
·
withintwoyears,and:develqp.a
munity~- stated Dr.--Best.
In
.the
~
teaching American Cultur~ I
&
~ demolotioii of the station, and
The group is hopeful that their parking __ lo~ -w~st of the
stalltffl _
'/puritan .nor;theasfth~re -was.·a next year.;-<
·
plaMed to build a.smaller·one May 12.i>resentation to the City
.
,
.
.
· , -
·,
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
' .
'
.
.
'
.
'
.
~·
;
'
\.
',',
'
,'
,
'
..
·.·
.
·.•.·.;
PAGE2
VOLUME.'14 Maritt
College,
Poughkeepsie,
N.Y.
· 'lbe
Marist
Coiiege·cmcLE 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 Ro~
,
--
Afi\dolfi
.
.
Rich Burke
Linda Franco and Mary Beth Pfeiffer
-Greg Welsh
Tom McDonald
Staff: Peter Allen, Janice Colleran, Rhoda Crispell Susan·
Dunderdale, Ge~e~ie~e Fitzgerald, Fatlier'Leo Gallant, 'charles _
Garre_t, _Joe Gigliotti, Tommy Kelly, David Livshin, Paul
M_angien, Th~mas M<;Tern~n, John Reilly, Cathie Russo,
Richard Schneider, Julie Schott Reid Scott Joe Sexton Karen
· Tully, Rick· Whitsell.
'
.. '
'
.
Forfeit-
THE CIRCLE
MAY 1, 1975
tetters To- The Editors
Suggestions
· these committees, it appears to
and colloquia -are open to
me, should be regular features of
students; matters discussed
the cmcrE:.
therein are of vital concern to
. It
is
presumed you·know that
students. The· CffiCIE should
the Faculty Policy ·. Committee
announce these and urge students
\ Dear· Editors,
has petitioned the administration · to attend. (A faculty meeting is
Newspapers are a powerful for a minimum and automatic
scheduled for April 22 .
.
and a
; force for justice.· The rise of across-the-board increase of 16.7
colloquim
for
April
25;)
' democracies was para~elled and percent, plus
a
2.
percent pool for
Evidently,· such
reporting
abetted
by
the
rise
of merit "increases.
It
is also
presupposes commitment .to
newspapers._Newspapers inform· presumed you know that ··any
quality education on the·part of
reader~ of current events and, increase . in· exp~nditu:res is the · editors and ·of· ·the Student ·
more unportantly, they shape predicated on concommitant - Government;Jt presupposes vital
public opinion to.· rally behind increases in your tuition. Now in
interest in th~ intellectual life of
positions and causes which a~ 'the normal course of present day· Marist. . . · ... ·.
.
.
· . .
-
pear to the editors to be of fun- events;_tuition mµst certainly go - ' These are a few of the ~oughts
damental importarice.
.
. up in order to enable Marist to - that run through .my mmd as
I
-· It_
appears to ~e tJiat your continue· its intellectual and ____ jefiect .on recen!· editions of ;the
articles and
ed1tor1als are educational
~i.s~1on.
The qwbbl~
CIRCIE . .
There
IS.really ~oJittle
. missing some of the events and cannot be with_ the - increase:·'· timeirilifetoworkforpeople
that .
causes which most intimately However, do you editors·and your it is a
'
pity to see.so much time,
touch the . lives of . all your readers believe in · automatic, · ·'tnergy, and student money go to
readers.
_
across-the-board increases for·an _waste.
·
The · editorial
on
.
Pne
of the major critical events teachers;_withoutexceptfon, even . Manipulation _-has appeared. to
of this year has been the sear- - for those, few indeed but real; • ~nyofy~urreaders,:wrongfully
chiiig . and • agonizing study . of
~
who are known to be corisider_ably . it
is
supposed, as a mere personal
solu~on to financial distress at .and }:labitually uiisatj_sfactory? • vendetta : against _
_pr".
Xavier .
Students on this campus have once again forfeited their rights as Ma!iSf; College. The Academic Are students,·ready ,to see Ryan. Now, Dr. Ryan,is the one .
students of Marist College to be effective in securing a voice in this Affairs Committee, the Student themselves now ·pay these:~--
facultyniemberatMaristwlio in.~--
institution.
Academic . Committee;
·
the s a tis fa ct
o
·r y· , te a ch er s
the opinion
,
of severalhundred
·
This has_ been clearly exhibited by the fact that· only three students -~acuity · Policy Committee, (and,. -presun:ia bly more • than .· •75- · per students, alwmii, · and colleagues;
attended the recent meeting with President Foy regarding the tuition ·its ad .. hoc- Campus Llfe Com-, credit instead of the present$68,--· has been the single greatestforce .·
.
-_·
increases, only three students have submitted their names, for mittee); together with ad-, withoutan editorial yell? (Many
for
the
improvement>of
positions with the College Union Board, only 186 studentsvoted in the ministration and staff have
all
studerits, showing clear cause, · education,
·
intellectually and
recent constitutional election, only two students have submitted their been grappling with this enor- have received tuition remissions . residentially; atMarist College in
n~es for Student Government positions, and representation by
mous
problem since September.· in thepast.Maristisby no'means the pastthree years. This Vicious __
department reached its lowest level in submission 'of names for the The __ AAC, - in a- · preliminary profiteering.) Several _ of my, • editorjal
has
.indeed made _raany
Student Academic Committee.
_ ·
· ·
:
·
document dated January 10, 1975, colleagues ; and I are against:·, of : your -readers sincerely
-
Although it is late in the semester the CIRCIE edit9rs would r_eally ·· concluded that the major con~ automatic
across-the:board· question your ,¢ommitment to -
be interested in knowing why these practices occur, just what is going tributoi:- to financial viability _at· _increases, even for the cost-of-· .educational excellence at Marist; : .
on on this campus; what type of identity are Marist students searching . Marist College
is
toIKiuality living; We:believe increases of all · thereby also guestioning the .
for, and why aren't students interested_ in giving their time to become academics/Consequently, -the
kinds
should:.be predicated· on
validity ofa hard year's work by
involved in these very necessary and worthwhile activities? : · _
.
AAC with the ·_ SAC has ,been' merit. Nobody should
be
afraid of -·AAC, SAC, FPC, CFD, and ad-
It
cannot
be
that all the Marist. students are that much into. their devoting all- its time and energy ·• evaluation. This'. educational· ·ministration and staff, Is it these
.
work, that they do not have time for theseactivities, it cannot be· that tQ, the · study':· of _
those ·. avenues . ·cause.· and , financial' coricem;-it - grou~, ·.in._. fact; . · thaVbave
_
-been ...
~.~~,:,,,,.:,,,;,."~' ,,-c-,~~-qst
?ff~!_S
so
D,lU~
to.~£! st~<i,ents, in_~e~.~f
~9:~il,iµes;
w~am19t
¥ •
·
.. ·
!~ding
x:iiost
dir,ec,!l)',
_
Sur~!Y.dfnd /-app~~r~ :; to.,
._ip~ .. '.
shoul~ .
_b~: .
of" • misdir~t~g · time;• e11ergy,, and
>
·
·
tnat an tne
stude~~
are
sat1:511~d1"\-Vlth;~e·
con<I?-t1on .. of the college·m· p~rmanently •· to ,
_
a<;~dem1c-;;:~x- param'o.imt:
·
: unP,Orlance,_·-lo' ·
0
the . stude~t '.'. money::?:/
Qri~.·rr,WQnC;l£!r,;s
i ·
'.
" . '
·
terms. of academi~s ~nd social n_iteraction an~ 1t· certa~y cannot be .ce~lence:- -One·• of--.,~he
•
.· ~ajor •CIRC~_E\"editors_• arid•,to' :tlie ,··_·about llitent;anti"..in~Y.,e~t~lisJA;: ..
thefac~thatthere1Slittleornothingtobecomemvolvedm.
.·
-
avermes under consideration
K Student.: Government which·. on the-part.of the editors, or·at- ·-.
. _. While we do r~lize that there is a .c~rtain percentage of _students honest. student evaluations. of appoints them.· . . . .• .· · _
. - least ~f th~0 011e prin.i_arUy ;:
who have become mv9lved to make Mar1St a more workable place, we - courses . and
·
teachers, • and .,the. . One of the most knowledgeable --- responsible for the present·spat£!. -
argue mat these students are being spread too thin, because other SAC
is
currently working closely groupg _ on campus concerning
I suggest, Irene, that at least you,
. ·
st~dents are not carrying their own
weight.
In
nearly every editorial with . the Academic Dean to academic~ is the · Student
if
not both you and Greg, sign up,·
·
this year we have spoken of ·or at least mentioned the word com- guarantee valid evaluation. Such Academic Committee~ Con-
for one of Dr. Ryan's courses,
munity, and at this point we feel that there does not exist a real evaluations will enab1e the Dean, sequently,the.SAC should have a
jump into the intellectual swim,
community here at all.
In
a commuriity we feel that those who can, do the AAC, the SAC, the FPC; arid guaranteed column ih . each _and find out firsthand what the
and that others do what they can, ~ut there still exists that common the CFD (Committee on Faculty CIRCIE edition in which to bring . man isreally likerather_ than rest
denominator that everyone does ~omething. And that is clearly not the Development} to then decide and to the attention· of the readers all .. your · opinions on. misinterpreted
case here at Marist. .
- _
·
.
.establish_ better policies for ex- matters of educational
import.
sources.
· ..
· ·
What leaders we do have have spread themselves so thin that they. cellence at Marist and, cori~ The editorials, . furthermore,
·-.,
.
Fraternally,
no longer have
enough
hours in the day to do the things that they want ·sequently perrnanent financial should add .. their weight ·to. the .
·-Dr. JosephL. Belanger
~o do, what wi~. meetings overlapping meeting after meating.
When viability. Reperts on the work of . SAC positions .. Faculty meetings
-..
-
·
Jobs get done, it
IS
because of fi!ework of these few peopl". nv~ because
·
·
'
many students gather to help. However; it is ironic that whenever
.criticism occurs - and it very ·often. does - it is usually. from those·
·. --
-students who bad the opportunity to do something but didn't.
Reflections
.
would ~e to . leave you with a admitted no private sphere;. not ·.·
If students want changes, they have· to work for them. We urge
passage that I think will be
ini-
even- inside a man's skull. we .
students to get involved through such activities as Student Govern-
p_ortant to·. all of _us at qne tun· e· 0· r _ Ii -;.,~
d
th ·
--
uls
t Th Coll
U
·
B ·· d
d th St d t
..
V,:u·
un er
e -comp
ion of
men ,
e
ege ruon
oar , -an
e
u en Academic Com-
·another· .. ,:_. ·- · ·
·
kin
thin
mittee to name J"ust f
The CffiCIE ·
1
h
th t st d t
·
. wor
g
. gs out to' their final
.
, .
.
a e~..
-.
su_icere
Y
OJ>E:S
a _ u ens Dear Editors,
._
_
,"Wehave.learnedJtlstorymore conclusions. Our-minds were so . ..:,
will begmtoactively:participatemtheMaristCommumty. · · ·
- · One year ago last February, a - ~oroughly'
,
than the othe~s: We tensely chargedthat_the slightest
.
_
Thank-You
good ~riend of mine and myself differ from all others m our · collision caused a mortal short- ·
sat ·down and talked about· logicalconsistency;·WeknowthaL · circuit.-'lbus' we were faded,-to·-
writing a proposal for a house _virtue qoesn't matter,to history; .· mutual destruction. ...
-~-
··
that would allow science: majors and · that crimes remain '. un- :
:J ..
was one of those.
L
have
-to have a placeto Uve and work. I punished;
·
but that every:
:
error ·• thoughf and acted asl had to· I -
wrote some ideas down and last had. ~ts.·: consequences _·._and .. its - destroyed the people.whomT.,;as
_
..
_
.
: smnmer_lsperitagoodpartofmy vengets_ onto the generation. -.fond.of,andgavepowertoothei-s
-· This is the last issue of the CIRCIE for 1974-75 and there are many ~pare . tune. formulating: those Therefore ,we concen~ated all_ I did· not like. History put· me
thankyousandcongratulationstobesaidtomanypeople.
'. • ·
_
. _ id~as .mto
a
proposal as an ap- .. our efforts _on-pr~venting err9r · wher~ I ~ood;_I·have exhausted
--The CIRCLE would like to extend-best wishes: to Dean Richard . plication to • one · _of ~e
-,_smaµ ·
~nd destr~ym~ the very seeds _of. the. ~edit .w~ch she accor~ed
LaPietra who will soon leave his position of Academic Dean arid to Dr.. hou~e~,
·
not
Jus~
>
Benoit ,
1
.t .. Nev.~r m history ~as so much. · me;if lwas _right I have:nothing ·
Louis
Zuccarello who will replace
him.
We..:would also like-' to specifically. !gave it to Fr~d power._ over· cthe·
:
ofuture; of to repent of; ifwr.ong~I will pay.'~
congratulate all newly appointed departmental heads; the ri:ew· Lambert. and he app~oved it, humarutybeen_concentratedms~
- · ·
• FromArthurK~estler•
.
s~
residence staff, and those faculty members·who will
be
on sabbatical however, .no o~e else did. ~any few ha~ds as m our Cf:lse_. ~acli
·• -·-- Dar~ess atNocm
next year. . ·.
._.
: ... ·
·.·
· ,
. -- ,_
..,_
peoplethought!t~as a ~~tldea wr;on~ idea ~at we fo~ow is. a . ¥J_h9:ven't learne<tanything ·
There are a number of thank yous in order for a great many people: but few.were :willing_t~ Jom.
That ..
crime .· commi~ed · agllmst · · o~ · · fro.m ·._.
this! ; ·
and . I
have, .··
I'ye
We. thank the peopl~
in
the Introduction to ·Jourrialisnr class. for· their _
was laSt s~eSter, This ~emester ·. future gener~tiollS;Ther~fore_ w~ , ·• learned thi_s · much. . . _, . . .
contributions to the CffiCIE, and
Mr.
Robert Norman who taught ~e whole idea_ was ~evise~ and · have to P~sh '1'ong, ideas as -
·
Iw.ould like to close this whole
theni. Tom McDonald, Advertising Manager, Greg Welsh, Business mcl_ud8? I?~r~ than Just S!!ience 0thers_ purush cp.Illes. -We were ord~l, on my> end_ anyway,:- by _
Manager, and Al Adolphi,-Photographer,are also to
be thanked for maJors'. it was open _to 0ther held · madmen, becaus~ ,we sayin:g th~nk~. (something,
I---: .
their time and effort In addition, we \\jsh to thank all people_.;; faculty · ma,1o~s . as .well: The idea.·• was ·
!
0llo~ed, every,thoug~_t: down to : -•· have~ 't'll_ear~
in
a_. year!, foi:_ all
: and students - for, their contributfons, especially Father
Leo
Gallant, . good,- the appi:9va,l
'WBS
there and
O
its, :_f~l:!l: consequence ·and
-
ac,ted . _
the .time· eve_ryon~ · gave•; to .. the
. Tom McTernan, and
Linda
Franco. ..· :
-
.
.
; . : . ;.. . ·
.. . · .. · . we had the pe9ple "now.
We.
then
,
_ a~cor~gly; ~e. ~ere compared ·· prQposal. And special
thinks to .
. , .·•: .To ·the seniors leaving us we would like
to
wish
the very. best
in
the -proc_eed~ to·. apply for the hous_e _
to .
:
the-· ~quisiti[!n_;: because,.• ~e -· ·Danriy,: Charlie~·•·
-
· ·JiJiuny, ....
Tim; ,. .
future. - .·
_
.
;
; _·. ·.·.·
.:.. •. ·.
<. ·. . .: .. -.-.·:
:and tile-outcome need:not·/oo··theI!,l, we;:constantly~Jelt
-
:in ··Rich; Marie,-.'Jim;;.Bob;~Ernie, .
. _. ,: At
this
time'
l\'.e
would
like
to
.thank
all.
tliose
people who contr_ibuted :: retol~< Every~ne.J~no\VS /fairly·•- · o~elv~-_the
·
. -w}!~l?
..
we_ight .:of
·
•: Greg/ ~nd, Steve .· fo~
;
,
p~tti:D.g
.(in,
, to·the
Marist
community,at large .. :. ·
> - . . ·. ··-. __
,
>: .
.
well,Just;\Vliathappe~ed,,:and if-,,.~esp~n!1bi~i!Y ~or:)he ~uper:- • their:•tune_, an~~putting ,up,;_with ..
·
. ,7""Finally, to all studerits,
we
extend
best
wisbesfor good luck and good•· ~ey _· don t
~e.:t,:·
pr~~.~l_r }l:on't_/ ~dividmd :·
·~e: ....
~
~
•
9ome: ;
We. :-•~~;
:/?-' :_- :· .·. :: .'
:
.:
> - , ..
·.·> ... ;, __
· ·•· ·grades··9n.final--exams.
Enjoy yotµ-•.vacation!
·
·
·
·
~are ilnywa!·: ; · : · \' •:: · ,:::: : _.!'.~!!ib1~>tlle
:
greatc inqws,itors,.
·,·:-
·
i
:- •· : ··; ._.-·.
-:MikeD'E!ia · •.
__ .,, .;,
., ..
., - ·
· ·
.... _ , , .· - · ·
- ~e Jear
1
of: ~rd: work ,~d;,·_mtliitwe.pe,:-!38Cuted tl)ese~of: ' ..
:
·:,· .. :Amemberofthe.:perverbu~t
, : :
:IQanf .,d~ep
~
~gltts;yvent mto:" •
~yll
nott1111,.~ IJ?,en'.s ~eeds,:but _,:
•>·
.·
,·
:·--
·SheaJ18nGroup~-- ..
. ,
_ . · .
tllatidea.It'sallovernow{but.l. m:.thell'
~
~thoughts:·as·welli We-
-,--:
.
:,. ·
- :
•
'
I
•
; , : , · . · ·
__
.::,·
,
;
'.
~
: . : : _ : : . • · . '
...
· '
.
· ~
:..·~~:·
•
. : · · ~
,·l·,1!._::····.
''~-:
' .
.'
.· :
;
·:-,
:·.
.
,
·
'
:.:.
.
..
·-
.
.
,
..
'
...
"
•
•
.•
',,
...
,
.
•.•··
......... .
.
.
.
.
.
.
··•
' . '
.
..
'
.
MAY 1, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
Code
99.
Sabbatical Given
.-
-
. By
Fr.
Leo Gallant
· · became man he made you and
me ·and the rest of us pretty
Man occupies planet No. 3 of a important people. He not only
quite obscµre_ star which is redeemed us. He saved us from
located sonie 30,000 light years the terrible burden of infinity. My .
from the center of .the galaxy.
In
hands, my feet, my poor little
·. our galaxy, some 10 billion stars . brain, my eyes, my ears all
.exist while one hundred thousand matter more than the sweep of and suffered and died, even as
million billion appears to•.
be
a these constellations. God himself, you and
I.
Blah for the immensity
conservative -estimate· for the the God to whom this whole of space! Blah for those who
· number of the· stars in the .whole universe. speckled display
is
as would have me a microcosm in
universe .... Some · scientists nothing, God himself had hands the meaningless tangle of an
estimate the age of the·earth as 5 like mine and eyes and brain and endless evolution! I'm no
··billion years,·the sun 10 billion, . ears. Without Christ we would be microcosm! I too am a son of
-- the· universe 27 billion. Man's little niore than bacteria living on God!"
position in the universe- equals . a pebble in space. Because · of
My . whole life at· Marist is
nothing.
.
.
. .
him, I. can stand here under this dedicated to instill in everybody a
Buy Myles·Connolly in his book cold immensityand kriow. that sense of greatness, of self-
"Mr. Blue", has · the main my pulse beats arid acts and confidence, discovering joy . in
character on a roof top looking up thoughts are of niore importance self, not needing to go further
· in
.
the sky and saying: . ·
· _than this whole show of the than self to find everything. In
· ""l_think my heart would·break ·universe. Only for him I would-be ·. this last column I give thanks to
with allthis immensity
if I did not crushed beneath the weighL of all everyone who made life beautiful
• kriowthat God himself once stood · these worlds. ·0n1y for him, I for me at Marist, my Jewish
beneath it, a young man, as ·small . would
·
.· tumble dazed into
·
the friends, my Christian friends, all
as
I.
Did it ever occur to you that gaping chasms of space and time. my people. I say "my people"
it was Christ who humanized.- But Behold! ·Behold! God wept because I dare to consi~er myself
· infinitude, so
to
speak? When .God·- and laughed arid dined and wined your shepherd: ··
--
An.nQuncein.ents.
-
,.
. . .
To Norkeliunas
by Julie Schott
thesis, which · is on Myth and
Symbol in the Poetry. of Jury
Casimir Norkeliunas, Gennan Baltrushaits, a member of the
and Russian teacher, and head of Russian Symbolists Movement,
the Modem Language Depart-
he will enrich his courses, since
ment, has been. granted a sab-
the topic is directly related to
batical leave for the spring Russian
literature.
Mr.
semester of 1976, during which Norkeliunas will work on
his
time he plans to work on a thesis in England where his wife
translator training program for will be teaching on a teachers
the college, and complete the exchange program.
thesis for his Doctorate.
Also during his sabbatical
Mr~ Norkeliunas, who began leave, which he defines as
teaching German and Russian "academic refreshment," Mr.
language at Marist in 1963, has Norkeliunas plans to· travel
· since introduced history and through Europe with his family
literature
courses
in
the and will return to Marist in July
department.
of '76.
He feels that by completing his .
Reflections On
"George
M ''
Attention Juniors! The. In-
Final Notice
to
AU
Seniors!!!
The
offict'.
of. Career
stitute of International Education · Tilete 1s still time to sign up for Development will be open for
1
has announced the opening of the the dinner dance. -Payments in regular business during the · ·
197~77-coIIlpetition for grants for full $35.00 per couple must: be __ summer hours. Graduating
• graduate•_ stu_dy,ior · resea!"Ch paid by Wednesday May 7. Those seniors are welcome to continue
abroad.in academic fields and for with a · l,)alance of $25.00 -per using the office. Also, according
By
Dav!d
B.
Livshln
production
with
the
self-
confidence and assuredness of a
The Marist College Theatre thoroughbred. In the Saturday
· professional training in the couple must a1s·o be paid by this to Larry Snyder the summer .
_creative and·pedorming arts.
It time;
.
·
·
:__ ... .
months would be an· excellent
is expected that approximately· - Seniors partaking. the Senior time for underclassmen to drop
550 awards to fifty countries will W~ek Festivities are requested to · by the office to familiadze
be available for the 1976-77 fill out the coupon appearing in themselves with
him ·
and the
academic· year. Applicants must this week's CIRCLE. Please facilities. ·
be United;States .citizens. at the return all coupons by. friday May
time:of thl;! application who will 9.
gerietally•-·hold. a bachelor.'s
·
.
.
__
. .·.
There will be a Senior Class
·.gi1ffee·~~~r~;·-~eTu~~El:1~ ·
re~~~~~:.
·
wbr:~~-furieW&~:~i~, ..
~i1:tt}1fdtP:a~~1-Pr~:\·
willbe proficient in the language local college and_public libraries p.m. - 11
.
p.m. ~.
·
of- the host country. Selection is before leaving for the semester. ·
Guild brought a bit of_Broadway night performance· he nearly
to campus with their highly brought the house down with his
entertaining. presentation of heel clicking and fancy dance
GEORGE M.
steps.
The production moved rapidly
Not enough can be said about
through the two hours thanks to this production, with its simple;
· expert· direction by Suzanne but effective staging, excellent
Deak, and superb choreography musical direction, the rapid
by Maureen Brey, Chris Seman, pacing of the dance numbers, and
Moira Coffey, Garey Waters and its most effective costume
Carol Emmel. As George M. design.
·
.
Cohall, F'red}.shley, a. Ilewcoroe.~
_
With George .
M . .
the Theatre
to _the stage, was nothing less Gtiilil lias truly outdone
itself:
that). fantastic. Ashley danced,
based on the academic and-or. Think of the next person! ··
professional record· of the ap-
Distribution of- the · 1975
I•-----------------------•
plicant,
the . validity ·· and
_
·.
. ,
Reynard will begin tomorrow,
feasability of his or _her proposed
~e .College Bookstore mll be _Friday, May 2.
If
you have not
study plan, his or her language. buyi!1g bacl,t used textbooks· paid in full,
too
balance must be
preparation ·.
•
and
personal startmg on Tuesday, May 6, paid before picking up your copy.
qualifications .. For more in- through Th~sday May 8· ~e
If
you have not yet reserved a
formation~-
,
contact Maurice bookst0re Will be open for this copy Y-.ou still have time to buy
Bibeau, the. Fulbright program purpose f~om · 4 p.m. • 8 p.m. one. You must have your receipt
advisor at Marist in rm. D209;
It
Boo~s will be bought back when picking up. your copy.
· is strongly suggested this be done regard1ess. of whether they were Please . see Mike Maloney,
before the end of the semester used on this campl.ls or not.
Reynard Editor for further
since the applications mu~t ·be
details.
submitted by mid-October.
Students are once again
.
· .
reminded by the editors of the ·
Studen~ are on~e. agam asked CIRCLE.to return all books and .
to. ~ubrrut. papers ~to ~he next. library materials to the library
edition of the Ac~de me _Q~ar- before leaving for the semester.
terly. Please submit
8:
!paper~ to Failure to do so will result in the
.Dr. Georgl;! Sommer m Fontame Business Offices holding of
:~t:,r
:Mary Snrder, ~regory Spring grades.
.
.
Final Exam Week begins this
Monday 5, The CIRCLE editors
wish everyone Good Luck \Vith
their finals and extend our best
wish~s for a pleasant summer.
'> ; "·.
(;roup Returns,
, With
Honors
various. commtttees so as to was assigned to the Population
By
Bob Nelson
maximize tne strengths of the Commission.·Fred_Eberlein and
.. . .
. delegation. · Fred Eberlein, Julius. Hajas were . ~lected
The Marist. College delegation delegation co-chairman, · was.- spokesmen of th~ Afr<r.Asia!l bloc
to· the National Model .United· assigned to the Political and in ~eir respecbve ~ommitte~s,
Nations conference returned last Securitv
Committee .. in while the resolution on m-
Saturday with a third place ·the General Assembly (G.A.). ternational development
honorable mention award. This Wayne Kezirian represented assistance sponso!ed by Bob
means that.the delegation placed Marist in the Legal Committee, ·Nelson was passed m the plenary
in the
·
top
.
fiftee.n colleges, of while Joe Gigliotti handled the. session of-Ecosoc.
.
I
.approximately a, hundred.·and
.
Social·•· and : . Humanitarian
~
_the tl}ree years th~t the
1
fifty collcg~s represen~ed.
The
Committee:· . In the General . Politic8:l Science Club has i;ent a
· awards were .determmed by Assembly conferences, Bob delegation to the Model U.N., at
secret ; ballot;:' with .. ;
s
eacb\·Baulch; was . assigned • to no time has it been so su~cessful
. .
delegation ._giyerf one·: .vo~e,. ~on-. Mu.ltinatiorial · Corporati?ns, both
:in
the passage of_ bills_, the
. . / .sisting opive .. recommend~tioqs :~ulius, Hajas to World DlSar-:·- el8<:t!on of st}ldents to unpo~nt
· · ·. for,.best college in ,the ·Economic:" ; mament, and Rod L&non to
Raw.
posit~ons; or m overall de~egation.
.
and- Social ·Council.> (Ecoso¢)~ Mate~ials.Jn the ·Econo_mic and.: ranking.
~Y
represen~~ the
\\\6
Leave ·Your Head to
iJs(
GUTTERY
UNI-SEX
F ~ O
HAIRCUTi\NGG
$
6.
w1·th
BLOW ORVIN
STREAKING, FROSTING
&
PERMANENT WAVING
.Marist ID
CALL
454-9239
for your appointmen~ nc;,w
ON
TH ■
MAIN MALL
3
LIB■RTY STR■■T
(Above Capitol Bakery)
Entrance Arqund Gqrner.
Get extra
six-packs for the
.
weekend.
6PACKS
~
when
you're
having
more than one.
Marist·thus.ranked close
to
such :·Social Council, Bob'. .Nelson,
.
African nation of Zam_bia, it was
delegatioris\as
U.S;L;A.;
1
Indiana,:-,deI~gation co-ch~n, wa~ the . felt that.· ~e .. del_egation -had a
University~
and
Georgetown who·:representative
to
the C:Olpmittee. hea~ sblrt:m the !!wards se.J,ec~
·<
were rt1ted
in
the
to1>
ten
colleges.: ··on:a New Economic Order;•
Basil_
·Uon,-due to the a~ye leader~p
>·-- : .. '
The Marist~; students who< Charlemow. was -• on . the . Food of the real Zambia m the Uruted
, ~
; -
•
•
•
•
•
I
·partldpated
·;were\assigned
i
to
/Co~~~,
and
Kathy
Brennan Nations.
.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..._
.:,_.:;,·:.
. -
~
·.
'··•·•·•··;,;,;'·\/_
;
.··::
',.
·
;
.
·
•
·,,.•'.·
.
.
. ~- ,
·
... ~·>/:-'. :·::: .'' -
.
'.
~
;
..
::··,
,,
:
'
.-.~
1 · · · . , ; : ; · · ' • · •
;
: •. ·.:
,
: · ·
:~.---,.
,
•'/:;:;,._:;
t;:,:;
' '
.
........ .
.
..
'
.
..
..,
-
/
Ernie J\r
.
ico
on
the
courts.
High
-
On
.
-
Sport~
.
.
by
Thomas l\lcTernan
.
McGRAW NAMED ATHLETE
.
OF
THEWEEK
THE CIRCLE
MAY
1.
1975
Marist Tennis Outplays
_
Bard And_
Kings
by
Thomas McTernan
loss came
.
when Gary Hartz
·
playing
·
well now."
:
rallied for a
3-6, 6-4, 6-4
decision
He added, "We never came this
There was a lot hanging
oh
the over Larry Stenger
.
.
close to Vassar (6-3) and abnost
net when the Marist tennis team
·
·
On
Friday Carberry blanked beat New Paltz
(5-:4)
for the first
faced Concordia here yesterday. Dan Josephs
6--0, 6--0
to lead the time ever. We lost 8-1 to New
f
ed F
· th
er Haven but all matches were
At stake was the championship o
R
oxes m
e
.
sweep oy
.
clos
·
e. I'm
.
only disappointed
in
the Central Atlantic Collegiate Bard.
It
was the most
un-
Conference, a title that Marist pressive performance
of
_
th,e the losses to Siena (8-1) and Kean
has won the past two years. Both season by Carberry, the teams state
(5-4).;,
·
.
teams entered the match with
3-0
n~ber_ 1 player,
W?O
ha~ ~en a
Losing
·•
only Carberry to
·teague records.
·
.
disappomtinent
.
this sprmg. He graduation, Petro has high hopes
The match would also deter-
now stands
5-5
in singles play.
for next year's team but feels
.
mine whether the Red Foxes can
·
In other singles match~, Fred that they need a strong nwnber
end
this
season with
.
a winning
·
Kolthay won
_
over Alan Bigelow~
·
one player who can win; Juniors
record
.
after a 5-5
·
finish in 1974.
4,
6-2; Metzger edged H~nk Re~m Kolthay arid Arico will be back
Last w~ek they routed Kings (8-1)
_
6-4,
6-3 for his fifth str~ight wm;
but neither player with much
and Bard
(9--0)
to boost
·
t\}eir Arico ripped
&,y
He_~n 6-1, 6-
.
consistency this year. ~etzge~, a
currentniarkio5-5. Maristcloses 3;
.
McGraw ~last~
Al
~ e l
6-
sophomore;
·
has been- unprovmg
·
out the 1975 season at home
·
.
o,
6-1 for
his
ninth
wm
m ten constantly
·
and could move
..
up
.
Saturday agairist Quinnipiac.
,
·
o~tings; ·and Stenger
.
outplayed next season. McGraw, wliom
,
Taking
·
five of
·
six singles and
·
Rich ~lackshaw
.
6-2, 6-2.
,
,
Petro referred to as "the spark-
all
three
doubles, the Red Foxes
After the shutout, ~e teams plug" enjoyed ~
-
most s11.ccessful
had little trouble with Kings last second of the
.
campaign, coach spring
in
his first season
..
as
·
a
Wednesday. In singles, Steve Ron Petro remarked, "rm
·
regular
.
Petro also· feels that
,.
·
Bl ·
h 6-
·
·
· d
B
d has had strong several newcomers could break
,
Garberry topple~
·
Bruce
eic.
.
surpris
.
e .
.
-
ar
.
.
.
11
.
m· to the top
·
six·
..
n
_
ext spring.
•
.
o;
·
6-4;
Jay Metzger defeated Rick teams m the
·
past,. bu~ we ,;ea
Y
Stotz 6-2 6-2·
-
Ernie Arico held off outplayed them
this
time
'.
·
Saturday's finale
.
with
·
Qum-
Rick
·
Tho~s
·
6-4
,
·
.
7-5;
·
John
.
.
·
Looking back over the season,
.
nipiac begins at 1 p.m
,
on
·
the
-
McGraw beat Steve Miller 6-1; 6-4
Petr~ said, "It's a shame that we
Marist
•
courts:
and Mike Fcirn
·
aci downed Steve had
_
all our tough opponen~ so
.
·
J~hn McGraw,
_
a ~ophomore froni
.
Isla~d Trees!
·
has b
.
een named Kohler 6-2, 6-4. The oruy
·
Marist early in the season. Wear~ really
,
.
.
MaristCollegeAthleteoftheVfeekfor.t.!teweeke.nding_April26.
·
··
·
·
·
·
·
:
·
· ·
.
·
·.
E
..
.
·
·
.
->
d
. ·
·
-
.
..
.
·
s
.
·
·
·
tbr"!f,:~~·.~~n:;:::J.~,r..:·t;:i;,t~i:,~J•~;t:"~~
La
C
-
rO
sse
n
,
S
.
eas<>;
n
prove his season record to 9-1.
·
·
··
,.
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
·
NOTES
·
FROM
THE
SPORTS
DES&:
.
.
byThomasMcTeman
.
.
wer~ ready
.
for
.
hiin," coach Jeff
·
The Red Foxes took
a
4-4
.
Joe Cirasella, a senior wllo
.
:
was player - coach
·
of.the golf team, was
Behnke declared after the game
.
record
·
into yesterday's final
named'Marist Athlete of the Year Tuesday hight
.
Cirasella alsp was a
·
It was supposed to be a con-
.
FQUjumped off to a 6-0 lead in home match with York
,
They will
·
,
standout-forward on the Red Fox basketbaUteam:..
frontation between
,
the
·
top two the first period and increased the then close out_ ·their' most sue-
.
.
The
i
w_ome~•s tenni~ t~am shut out Bard
4--0
Tuesday. The
_
w~~~n,
.
pointmakers in
,
the Knicker- margin to
·
9-1 by the half. "This cessful season ever Saturday at
who were ramed out with Vassar
,
last week, close out their mitial hocker Lacrosse Conference. But was the best team we've seer. all
·
Fairfield.
.
season at home against Ulster Community College
_
todal:'
.
.. Mike Hart Bruce Neville turned it into a.rout season,"
·
said
.
Behnke, "they
_
It
will
b~
.
the final game for
·
..
(37 points)
.
and Earl Holmes (33) sparked
.
the Marist b~sketball and FDU-Teaneck followed suit were big and
·
strong- and used seniors Doug Hampel,
.
Jim
·
·
players in
'
Sunday's
.
95-8~
.
win
:
9ver
.
Danbury
_
State
_
·
Correctiomd In- with a
.
12-6 victory over
-
Marist their weight effectively."
.
·
·
-
. ·
Cassaro, John
·
Tracy and Mike
stitution
.
..
.
.
·
· ,
_
.·
.
·.
·
.
·
.
··
.
·
:
-
.
·
Saturday.
.
·
·
Attackm.an Jim McCue Jed Gentile. Hampel and Cassaro
,
co-
.
·
The track team: <!efeateq
".
York, Siena and Kings at
_
New
.
Pa)tz
Neville, a
_
6'5", 250-pounder Marist
.
.
with three goals while captains along with McCue,
.
have
Tues9~y to compl~te the bestsea~on
with
an~ record. Fr~ Kolthay who was
·
drafted
-.
by the
.
N.
y_
.
Gregg
.
Stent
.
tallied twice and started
.
every game
·
in the f9ur-
set a
·
new; record
m
.
the two-mile
.
(9: 4.1), 'placmg
.
se<;:9nd
.
Fir~
:
place Giants football club
,
scored five
·
midfielder
.
I)oug Hampel
·
added year history
.
of Marist lacrosse .
.
.
)inishers.!,Ilcludeg
_
Johnyand~ryo9rt m the
·
~40; J?av~
,
Sch90Is
_
m the
.
·goals
;.
and assisteq
.
.
on
_
an9.th_er. the other.
·...
.
.,,.
.
·
.
Hampel is
:'
the all
0
tiine
·
lea~g'
i
•<':
·1
,;
,,~
.
1
,
1:,i,,."
.
.
/;};,c
mt~~~<iiate
;
hurdl~s
.
an<:1.~e
,
Jlli!~
relay, of
Jun Gillen,
S
p
hools,
·
~e"."e ·
.
·
Kevin
•
McGhee, second m
~
scormg
.
_
Sophomore
·
·
defensemen Jim scorer for the team while Cassaro
; ··
· ·
·
:
.
..
Van Kuren a~d Vanclervoort
:~;
-
·
.
.
..
·
"
·
.
·
..
·
.
.
·
:
.
·
:
·
\
·-
.
.
·
.
.
in
tlie
.
conference
r
·
.
was
,
played Boliren
·
and Tom Quinn both qid a
·
has been the "core"
·
of
·•
the
.
The w~rpen's crew lpst to Rhode Island ?unng the ~reside
_
nt
_
§. ~up
·
very tight throughoutthe games
~
good job of checking the powerful defens~
.
·
·
·
regatta ':'ver th~ weekend
;
H~weyer, men
s
,
coach Bill A~tm p
_
omts and was
.
held pointless. "They
.
FD.!.!
3
tta~k
.
·
.
. ·
·
·
.
out, '
,'
They had so many new girls
(!n
the team tha~ they were fo
_
rced to
.
.
·
•
·
·
~:~e~~~.slo~er rate in order
·
to give the newcomers a ch~J)Ce to
w
·
1·
•
n
· .··
·
d·
·
s
.
,
··
·
W
·
ate
.
r
F-
_
Orce
·
·
.
A FINAL NOTE: Any sportswriter
will
tell you the value of people
..
who provide information and ideas for colwnns and articles
.
With
this
in mind I would like to thank
t!>~
following people for their help in
R
.
·
·
p
·
·
.
t
.·
t
keepingmeabreastofthelatestinMaristsports:Georg~l)YicCutcheon;
·
··.·
eg
_
at
·
.
t
·
.
a
.
os
·
po
.
n
·
.
-
e
.
.
me
_
n
.
Vito Aprigliano, Ron Petro; Ed Conlin, Rich Stevens, Bill Austin, Jeff
Behnke, Mike Secone, Jim Cassaro, Vinnie Caruso, Tom McDonald,
John Vandervoort, Lorraine Conklin, Doc Goldman, John Tkach.
GI-:-~
by Thomas McTeman
for those who wer~ competing
ip
The only official Marist win
Malaspina, Al Adolfi
-
and Marie Kelly. The contribution~~ i.hese and
their last home race," said was in the freshman fours.
others to the Marist snorts scene is greatly aooreciated.
·.
'
·
Strong wings and rough waters varsity coach Bill Austin,
The other senior on the team is
'TID
.
S
-WEEK
IN
MARIST SPORTS (May 1-11)
·•
· ·
·
forced
the
I.3th
annual referring
.
to
seniors
Jim Kevin O'Connell who paired with
·•.
Thursday,Mayl-Women'sl'ennis-vs. UlsterCC-home-3:30p.m. President's
Cup
.
regatta, Browning and Bob Sneeden. He
Kevin
,
Sommar for a second
-
Saturday,
-
May3-Lacrosse-atFairfield.:2p.m.
scheduled for Saturday, to be did
.
add,
"It
could have been
place behind Manhattan.
:
Tennis-vs. Quinnipiac-:liome~lp.m.
·
.
postponed until Sunday at 6:30 worse; there might not have been
This
·
·
saturday the Marist
- Crew-vs. Trinity, Wesleyan, Williams at \Villiam's-1 p.m.
a.m. But for both heavyweight a race at all, the conditions .were oarsmen travel
to
Williamstown,
·
- Sailing -
.
Hartley Cup - home
.·.·
crews, it was virtually a cari-
so bad."
· .
..
·
·
·
.
.
.
Mass .
.
to meet Trinity, Wesleyan
-Track~
CTC
Championships
.;
at
King:;
Point -10 a.m.
cellation.
·
The most exciting of
.
the
·
races and
-
Williams.
·
Trinity is
·
the
- Women's Crew-vs
,
William's, Wesleyan- at William's- 2 p.m;
Holy cross and Washingto!l,
'
t~at wer.e held
~a~ ~
the varsity strongest of the three,. hav~g
Swtday,May4-Salling-HartleyCup,-home
·
_
.
·
the only other schools entel'e~ m lightweight divis10n: where def~ated
U.
Mass ea~her this
.
Friday; May 9-Crew - Dad Vall Championships- at Philadelphia -
the varsity and
·
J.V. heavyweight
_
Rhode Island upset Manst by two spring .
.
The
:·-
Dad Vall
.
cham-
heats
-
.
·
.
·
·
·
,
.
races were unable to stay until feet.
It
marked the first time R.I
.
·
pionships will be held
.
next
Saturday,MaylO-Crew-DadVailCl,lampionships-atPhiladelphia Sund~y .
.
So
both
,
Marist
·
crews has ever beaten a Marist crew
.
weekend in
.
Philadelphia and
-
,
finals
·
·
·
·
·
.
had to
•
race
·
as unofficial entries
.
It
was also the crew's firstJoss
Aust~
.
.
remarked,
"I
think we
.
.
Sunday,
May
11
'
-
Women's Crew -
E;A WRC
Sprints -
·
at Middlefield,
·
in other races which they
·
easily of the season. "They've
.
done an should
:
make
.
the finals in all
Conn.
•.
·
·
·
won
·
:
. ·
·
.
. .
·
outstanding job considering they races
·
we
--·
enter. A good
:
race
Until.September 1975 "
'.
·
.
<
"Itwas unfortunate;
·
especially had to re~uild
.
the whole
·
boat," against Trinity should help
us
---••111!111•
·
•
•
·
•
·
-•iiiiililia-~•---••-•--•
·
-
·
•
Austin
:
poin\ed
,
out. Only Jim attain our
-
pre-season goal of
·-
------------"'II
·
·
·
·
·,
Hoyle and Frank Hoover are
.'
qualifying
the
.
varsity
..
Attention! .
·
SENIOR WEEK ACTIVI'qES
•
.
,
,
NAME
.
ADDRE~SS
Clambake - Wed.
May
14
/
7-12
p
.
m.
No~ in
•
party
.
,
·
.
-
·
~
.
.
.
Cocktail
Party-Fri.
May
16, 9:3~
.
12
p.m.
'.
(~~ts
.
and ~ends
invited)
.
No.
m
party
.
·
aia~pagne
Brunch -
Sat. May
i7
;
.
.
)1:30-:L
p.m;
''.(
parents
and
friends
.
invited) $4;()1)
.
per
person.
·
~;~,::.
.
~
i~}
R
.
f
.
.
-
.
.
-
.
·
Frank
·
·
s
,
Restauran:t
,
.
.
. .
.
.
.
-
'
.
.
..
" '
.
_
8oz.
glass
·
25
-
'-
:
·
·
.Pitche(
.- 12
;
~00
~
-
.
·
:
.
.
.
.
~.
""
~
-
..
.
.
.
. .
-
.
.
.
'
'
. .
.
,
'
.
.
,
,.,
·
,
'
,
,
,
,
.
•
'•
•
.
.
·
•
·
•
·
·
.·
..
·
.
•
·
.·:·.:
.,
·
•
-
.
·
•
_
\."
-:.',',
'
,
.
seniors
on
the
.
f?oat that includes
.
heavyweigµt for
·
the
·
first time."
:
s~
freshmen.
··
.
1
-
Insurance from
MOf
~hall
G.
ote,ling, Inc.
,
•
11
\\'.(~
Spl'dalizc i~l
,-
tOll~l)rrow'
.
·
,
.
.
..
.
. ' '
':
.
.
.
.
~
;
.
ARLINGTON
·.
44 Plaza
·
·
.
-~
171
:
6100
.
.
..
~OUGH'<EEPSIE
75Washingtc,ri
st:
.
454~0800 .
,
.
.
·.;.
_-
.
.
.
.
WAPPINGERS FALLS
·
·
·.
lniperialPlaza
297
~
3701
14.11.1
14.11.2
14.11.3
14.11.4