The Circle, April 10, 1975.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 14 No. 8 - April 10, 1975
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THE
VOLUME14,)lUMBER 8
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~'MA.RIST
COLLEGE. POUGHKEEPSIE;NEW YORK 12601
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PAGE2
Director of Counseling Services, Cagle Moore.
AJ)road Progi_.alll
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Provides For Growth
APRIL 10, 1975
1
Advisors 'Minimize
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i
Disa.dvantages
terested in becoming Student
Advisors should get in touch with
. Ii1.the past the Student Advisor Cagle Moore in the Counseling
Program has been tied to the Office.
Orientation Day Program. But
Orientation Day itself is still in
the Student Advisor is there to do
the planning stage, however it
By
Jo~_M. Reilly
1
more than just say hello to fresh-
will
be
different than last ·year.
men on. Orientation: Day.· The
Cagle Moore said they're still not
purpose of the Student Advisor is sure what form
·it
will take.
to make the Freshman aware of
Moore said many -schools are
what's going on here at Marist.
faced . with. the problem· of
Cagle Moore of the Counseling
Orientation . Day. He · said 'be, is
Office. sees the Student-Advisors constantly receiving·letters from
as•· being available to help . new other colleges about how they're
students "handle the system". changing the ·form of· their
They should be available to
i
in-
Orientation day and were won-
form the ·-students of deadlines, 'dering what kind of Orientation
and help the students with course we have here at Marist.;
·
· registration and similar matters.
· Moore
·
said he . · and ,Fred
Student. . Advisors . can help Lainb~rt have· thrown· around a
minimize the disadvantage of few. ideas about what type of
being a new student.
•
Orientation da---Y,to have this year.
Mr .. Moore feels that all fresh~ Different types . of Orientation .
. men.can use a.Student _Advisor to days suffer· from different
. • help learn
the:
ropes; Naturally .shortcomings. For example some
some students will need a Student Orientations feature mixers arid
··'Advisor more than· others.· This · parties. He said that in. thistype
by Genevieve Fitzgerald
discovered the visas •in the- one problem: Marist tries to p~st year the:re_ were. more
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than . of. setup ther~. maybe too much
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registrar's office. The Telegraph arrange a set-up where the MAP sixty . Student Advisors.:: Moore
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emphasis on '.the soc.ial side of
· «MAP exists for students,". · Company had - refused . to send student can come in contact with said thaFof this sixty about two.. college life. · ·
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MAP Director· Dr. Joseph them because the uniyersity natives, when the university·does · thirds kept in touch with their_
Last year ·the Orientation day
'Belange_r says, ''as an op- _,.owed them money._~
notprovidelodging,OnlyinSpain. students. The Stµdent Adyisor was. an attempt to expose new
portunity · for intellectual and'
Money is · becoming an in'-
do the students Uve with families, · Program seemed to work better students to Marist. It was set up
em~tional growth; to begin ~o creasingly important problem. though there
it
works out well, for resident students. than for to show the new students where
· understand and assimilate The dollar is worth less and less
· In Europe_; unlike America, .the : commuters. Cagle Moore felt this everything is,. and to introduce
another culture:_"
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in Europe and Africa, and {ewer etnphasi~ is on scholarship, n·ot . was: because_ it was· probably the students to the people who run
Americans -'are generally students are, going abroad next on t~aching, The students have to · easier
·for.
resident students to the. school: The. Orient;ition Day
regarded as tourists, and .un- year because it is harder to .af-
learn to do much·more work~oil · keep iri touch. ·
· , ·.
·for-
September 3; 1975 may be a
welcome Jn ·many universities ford. Only 18 students; 10 of them their own,to bemofe self-reliant,. . Student Advisors for t.hi~ year · day
to
challenge · the new
abroad. The Marist Abroad foreign language' majors, are and self-motivated. This "rite.of ·wilLbe asked
fo
play a greater stu_dent's idea of education. To
. Program "is not a travel agen- going to Europe, where 28 went passage,'
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as Director:. Joseph . role in assisting Freshmen.than help the student-become aware of
cy," Dr. Belanger says. Most abroad tbls .year.
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Belanger quoted, is painful and · ever before; Mr. Moore men- -what Marist is. This would' be
students that go to Europe and
There has also _been
a
shift
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awkward. at first, but is part of tionedthat they
·would
likefo look done in smaller group sessions ..
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Africa adjust to the different . plans of study towards a more t.he growing experience. Most into the·m,atter of perhaps giving · Cagle Moore said hopefully with
systems, and learn from· tnem. practical program; away from a studentir adj11st to the new .. cre_ditfor _
being a Student·Ad-
variety.· and substance . the
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Th,ere: ..... are, .• ·complications,. ·strict1iberal ~rts tradition ... Next: /systems·and the·newcuUure,wen;.· visor::
M)h'e.
present•-time ·the ... ,Qrientation .Day. will.•be·. a:wor-
however,
wheri de'aling with some .. year only-, cine. Literature _stildenf : . ·making the '.year:a, succe·ss, · . :·. ,·: Stud~nt ':Advisor'. Progriim--is all .. thwhile.·experienc'e:. : "":., ;, ;
of the universities abroad.
is going abroad .. Other . years
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Upp~1-i
Classnien in.: ,
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Communications, especially. in there were six· or seven: MAP
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Africa, was a problem this year. also lacks a good placement for
The visas for the .two students communications students who
, who wa~ted to go. to Lagos, · · vish to study abroad, though they
Nigeria,
never came; and in his are looking for new possibilities
meeting in January to,discuss the for '76.
.
coming year, Dr. Belanger
Residence still is the number
Displays
Explained
For Gallery
L~unge
By Susan Dunderdale
usually gives a short talk about
the paintings after the reception
·The Gallery Lounge_ art to acquaint the audience-with the
exhibitions _
are seen _by almost works of art.
everyone on. campus, but very
Artists who exhibit here, at
few people are aware of what Marist are encouraged to obtain
happens behind the scenes in insurance on their paintings in
. preparation for an e.xhibition. · case of damage or theft. If a
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Gallery Lounge was .originally 1i8inting is damaged or destroyed·
:set up/ in Donnelly Hall until Marist
is
usually not held liable,
Champagnat was -~ompleted in but in the past there have been
1965. After that time showings occasions when works were
were begun in the present damaged or· stolen and Marist
- '-location in the Campus Center. was forced ·to· give · some
· The artists who are exhibiting monetary · replacement which
in the Lounge are booked one amounted to several hundred
year
in.
advance come to Marist dollars on one partictilar oc-
through. various. channels. Some . casion,
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Graduation .Plans·
Set
With less than two months until evening., The •band for'· the affair The ceremony will begin at 2 p:m.
Graduation, the . Class of· 1975 is is still under consideration. . . _ Other activities still under
moving quickly in formulating
Friday's activities• include a consideration are the activities
"Senior Week 1975." Tne seqiors day of activities at the Villa for Wednesday evening and
will return to Marist College on .Bagliari. For a minimar cost of 5 Thursday, afternoon.
Wednesday, evening, May
14
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to · dollars ·a person, the se.n_iors will-
Seniors and' faculty ·members
kick. off. their activities. The have· the, use •. of the· Villa's who are planning to attend the
Office of_ Campus Life has agreed · facilities; inc!µding .
~
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.
pool,
as· senior formal are asked to . •sign
to let, the resident seniors use · well · as a , buffet lunch. Upon up and leave a deposit which is
their · former rooms •for
r
con-. returning in. the late afternoon, a. non-refundable. A table will be
venience sake, On. Thursday cocktail party has been· planned . setup in front of,the cafeteria on
evening, the senior~ wiJl hold for, the .s~nior~, faculty ari~ ad: Thursday; April 10 during the
their formal dinner dance at.the , µiinistration,· as wen· _·as . the · dinner. hour, on .Friday; April
11
Villa Bagliari in Highland. Th~ parents_ of those seniors y,rho during th~ lµrich hour, and on
cost.will
be
35 dollars a.couple,. might have arrived.
·Monday,·
April 14. during the
and will include a cocktail hour
Preceeding the graduation· lunch. and dinner. hour and on
with hot hors d'ouevres, a family ceremony; ·the seniors
a.re·
·wednesday( April '16 -during the
style dinner of lasagna and prime'. arranging:with Saga· for ·a · lunch a~d dinner.hour.' · \.
ribs, and an open- bar for the: 'graduate's ·champagne brunch:.
• hear .about · M&rist . and. contact·
•
According· to Mrs. Fisher it is
· Mrs.- FiMer,. while others. are -quite costly to the artist to exhibit
contacted l>y-Mrs. Fisher, and his or her .works because of the
Mrs. Plaut.
cost· ofmaterials,·insurance and
At :times students' work has trucking.
It .is therefore·· a
· ·· been shown for
a:
special-. reason privilege for us here at Marist
to
such
as
a graduation··showing. have an artist take on. the ex- ·
Aside.from the student work:all pense sowe may see his creation.
the artists are professional. , Because
.
of ·. some -· recent
Many of the artists 1:1re from this .exhibits ·several people.· have·
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area- including .Woodstock an(l quest~oned. ~e,;Crit~ri~ µsed_. in:
: other nearby. towns, while some choosing . which , a~twill . be
· are-• from.:New.-York ·. City and• allowe.d-cto show thell' works; The
::,Long Island;
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:'c~it~ri!l seeins'_tf be a s_u~Jecti,ve
· · .. '!be artisUs not ·paid, for- his
:
on~
Jilth the main · f~~em,ent .
· exhibit
but
is
given
a receptionJo. Qemg ;: a '\\'.o~k ?.that . .is.',_not ob-.· .
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whic.h<tlte_
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public
:,_-is>.
irivit~. _:jectiona~Ie,.:,,.:As·.head
~f the art
R_efr'eshments consisting·. of· and:JJ)u5!c:depaJ.ime~,t~eJip_~ ....
cookies are · served; The
artist
decision IS .left
to
M.rs, fISher •. , , .
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. -~ew.'paiiit~ngs
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~he
c,~n.tlJJDi~g
p-r.~sr,e~sio~:
Of:
t.~e
~ ~1.~~P_!de} ~~w on·
di~piay·.-thru Aprll
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APRIL 10, 1975
Sullivan To Give
Recital-
I
By-Basil Charlamow
natural
as
possible.
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Sophistication
is not sought after.
On
Sunday, April
13,
at 4 p.m., To
him,
music has a life of its
John Sullivan, Marist College owri, who's potential° can be
music teacher, will give an organ measured by the degree to which
recital in . the Vassar College the performer exerts his coaxing.
Chapel. This
will
be the first time "Let music
be
what it is.
Let
it
a teacher,,.. representing this speak through you, and not vice
college will perform at Vassar. versa." What he means can be·
John,Sullivan's repertoire will best understood through an
include various . chorales ·and analogy, the theatrical actor and
fugues by Bach,· Buxtehude, his role. The role ·should speak
Frank, Viene and hindemith. .
through the actor, and not the
Mr. Sullivan, a-Marist Gollege actor through the role.
alumn'us; originally majored · in
Being a wen rounded man of
English. He later intensified his the Arts, dabbling in painting and
concentration on music, an early, poetry, our niusic teacher still
childhood interest.
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finds time to practice three hours
Upon · graduating Marist he a day.
_.
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· attended se_veral prominent · Mr.· Sullivan looks upon . the
music
schools
including recital as a goal, a challenge.
It
. N.Y.M.C., Manhattanville,. and will
be
his first solo performance.
·N.Y.U.
The preparation involved, as
When conducting his classes, always, generates epormous
John Sullivan · believes that the gra~ication ·and. satisfaction.
student should be as free . and.
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
Musi<.·.
professor. John Sullivan.··
Representatives
To
MEB.A
Seeks
Discuss Opportunities
New
M
em b'e rs
Twenty sbde~:cal, slate, 16cal qualifying exams and cumnt The Town of Poughkeepsie Police
. . .
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and private. law enforcement openings. Interviews will not be
Department, the Bureau of
· By
John
M,-·
Reilly
the buildings. Ther~ are Just ~ot agencies will
be
participating in a conducted.
· · ·
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms,
:
.
enough people available tQ pick ""Criminal Justice and Law
Each agency will have a
the New York State Police and
The Marist. Environmental up the ~pers.
·
.
. Enforcement career Day" to be
display, either in the gallery the Federal Drug Enfqrcement
Better_mt1nt. and /Awarene_ss .. For the futµre MEBA plans a held at Marist., College on
lounge or in the adjacent fireside
Administration.
~~ttee, better Iviown by 1~ .. Marjst Arbor. Day. after t~e Tuesday, AprilJ5 from 10 a.m. _ 4 lounge. Lum;h is scheduled from
Thepublic is invited to attend.
mtb~ls, M.E.B·A:· (MEBA) is Easter break.
~
this day dif-
p.m., in the Call,lpus Center.
12 - 1
p.m.
Invitations have been sent to 25
looking for;n~~ membe~s.
ferent tr~es will
be
planted , Co-sponsored by the Office of
Jon Wicklund; director of area high schools and colleges.
Past_ acttv1ttes of this group around the campus by th.e group. Career Development and the placement and career ad~
Wayne Thatcher of Fishkill, a
have mcluded lectures, and a
MEBA ~egan last semester history and political science visement at John Jay College of senior majoring in criminal
work researc_h dc:!Y· The work ~der the .. mfluence of Dr._ ~al department, the program -is
Criminal Justice, New York City
justice, is serving as/ student
·· research day mclude~ work doue . Mic~elson and the group consists supported by a grantfrom the
s
&
will speak about opportunities in
coordinator .
. on>.Jhe Hudson River Sloop. o~ fifteen ~tudents.
H Foundation.
law enf~~cement at 2 p.m. in t~e
The. ·crJminal_ justice career
MEBA also co-sponsored the
The Co-Ch~rpersons
o! ·
the
According· to Marist Career, Campus Cent~r. theatre. Hts day should be of mterest not only
recent Poverty Meal· along with group are .
Jun_
.Vallarelli and Counselor . Lawrence Snyder, . appe~ranc~. 'Y111 conclude t_he
to those with criminal justice
:Free :University and the World ,Chr_ys<>ula Konus. Son1e
.
o_f _the . each.agency has been requested cnmmal 3ustice l_ecture. sen~s majors but to all those students
Hunger Awaren~ss Group; . ." ,,..,.· mem!J.ei:s of th~ gro~p are_})wight to send a-representative
-who
can ... sponsored by Manst durmg the who would benefit from exposure
At the.present time MEBA has Evans, Rich . Valmot~1,:: '.fom discuss the nature ·of career' past year and supported by the S .. to. the _ various agencies par~
started a· paper • recycling Lynch. a~d · Mary
Lo~
~a~t~rt. . opportunities in his respective
&
H F?~dation.. .
ticipating.
-program in· Gregory
and .Anyone interested m JOlnt!lg field, as well as to provide
Pat1;1cipants will mclude s~ch
Sheahan. They've had trouble MEBA ;~~ould contact Jim literature and information about
agencies as the Secret Service,
with . recycling in .Leo and Vallarelli m Sheahan
219..
,
Champagnat due to the sizes of
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C011centration Offered
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Students who ar-:i interested in · mutual ·appreciation of cultural
careers in an · urban . setting
differences.
should note that
the
Modern
Iri. addition to opportunities for
Language Department is offering
graduate study and employment
·a concentration/on Bilingual in several educational positions,
Education-TESL. These courses
college graduates with
a
prepare a. person to meet
1
the background
in
Bilingual
. needs of the Hispanic population; Education can seek employment
.
by instilling
i:l
greater ap-
in such fields as social work,
Rreciation and knowledge of their . travel,
commerce,
health,
·
cultural
contributions
and
·
foreign service, communication
·problems .. This is · an essential
and criminal justice. · ·
background for those who are
Next semester, Fall '75,
concerned with the future of our
"Spanish Speaking American in
schools, our cities and our nation.
the Urban School" will
be
offered
study the Spanish speakin·g
students in the contemporary
scene · by
analyzing · their
historical'• background
and
cultural contributions.
other courses that have been
offered already on campus have
been "Intr~duction to .Bilingual
Education" ·and "Civilization of
Puerto Rico."
In the spring of '76 "Materials
and Problems in · Bilinguat
.Education"
will be introduced:
Also, there will be a fieldwork
course, where the Marist student
will get involved in a Bilingual
classroom, observing teaching, ·
tutoring and counselling.
Basically, Bilingual Education
in the Sociology Department as
, . is
when two languages are used
part of the Bilingual Education
· as ·a means · of instruction
in
a·
Concentration. Thi~ course will
classroom. When
a
child first . - - - - - - - - - - - - • / - .
- - - - - - - - - - - - .
enters school · speaking only
Spanish, •English should be
. taught as a second language. But
- the native · language, · Spanish,
should
not be
neglect_ed.
Educators have realized that the
WHIZ M E ~ ~
,~u
THRff SESSIONS
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I. lune 16-luly 25 (6weeks)
II. lune 30-luly 25 (4 weeks)
1
Ill. luly 28-Aug. 21 (4 weeks)
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
U,1dergraduate ond
graduate
courses
fo_r men
and
women of
oll ages
Arts, Music, Sciences
, Master of Arts in-Teaching
Master of ~rts in Humanities
_.. ·child has five or six years of
knowledge . and experience froin ·
the home: By building upon the
child's background, . schools will.
encourage · a . positive · self-image, .
as well.· as. a higher academic
IS SAGA'S--VERSION OF THE FRIZ-BEE
FREE
WITH ANY $2.QO
PURCHASE
IN
THE RAT.
· STARTiNG MONDAY 4/14/75
, Teacher's ~ertification Courses
Theme Studies: Generations
Humanities and the Professions
Jose Limon Dance Company Residency
Writer's Workshop
Learning Disabilities
Women's Sports-Track and field
record ... ··
·
In
1968, the Bilingual Education
Act
.
was passed which reversea
. :the fifty year old policy of only
· one language··. instruction. Now
the -.. federal . . government
. UNBREAKABLE PLASTIC, TOURNAMENT SIZE
i
WEIGHT .
FLIES
MORE
THAN 300'
IF PURctiAs_ED SINGLY w'ITHOUT $2.00 QRDER
THEY COsT·.so ·oR'.2 PTS:
recognizes the ne_ed for Bilingual
· Education
>
pi;ograms where
English dominant students. can.
learn: Spanish· : and·•·· Spa¢.sh-:
speaking studentslearn English:·
START FLINGING
_, ·1Thiskind"ofeducationalsystem
. , ;
produces
l~llrr,!gual.
people.·~~•._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__.
..:..,
.,
.
··,
. Club Management Program
~
.
The Monte·ssori Method
The New Readiug
.
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PAGE4
• CIRCLE
.VOLUME 14 Marlst College, Poughkeei,sle,
N.Y.
oft~~~
iiollege .CJ!tCLE
~
the weekly newspaper of the students
.
o ege
and
JS
published throughout the
school
year ex-
g,USlv~ of: vacation periods· by the Southern Dutchess News Agency
na~pmgers, New York.
. •
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•
Co-Editors
Photography Editor
Sports Editor -
Layout
Staff
Business Manager
Adver:tising Manager
.Gregory Conocchioli and Irene
Ross
. AiAdolfi
.
. ·Rich Burke.
· Linda Franco and Mary Beth Pfeiffer
Greg Welsh
Tom McDonald
staff: Peter Allen? Jani_ce Colleran, ~hoda Crispell, . Susan -
Dunderdale, Genevieve Fitzgerald, F'attier 'Leo Gallant Charles
Garre_t, _Joe Gigliotti, TQmmy Kelly, David Livshlri, Paul .
M_angieri, Th~mas M~Ternan, John Reilly, ·Cathie. Russo,
Richard :Schnei~er, Julie Schott, Rei~ Scott, Joe Sexton, Karen.
Tully, Rick ~Vhitsell.
.
. - ·
·
THE CIRCLE
APRIL IO, 1975
I
. I
- I
, <,.
letters.
Io
the
Edito·,s•
I -
- •
~
Re~c-tion_s:-;to ·· Editorial::
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·-~-;-,-
·initt~s:i:v,
OU.'
pf
odu~edian: eight . :·
~6eca1.1S~:
Without ··
lfthe -
reid~r•§
.
.. page. edition of_ the_ Gi!<;Ie:,~~-27 :co~fideri~_e
.
Jn : thLacc;uracy,- ..
.
.
. .
. ·
~
:: .. ··• . _ . ; Marfh;:where.m t~9se._pages:do.
i
tru~ulri~sst~sin.ceritf
.
~f :
~e •
. _Dea-1.: Edit_ors:• .,,
:· .... · ,;_ yo11::pres1:n~
:J~~ ..
evicl_en~e,._to :·paper'.s~· producers~ is: seriously -·- _
B
. .
0
. ,
•
~ow- e~itor1al, . M8:mpulation . 1end . credibility
,
,to ,.the ,• c,harges · • eroded.
~•Good faith . with· the
·
•· e •
· :·
y,lµch: appe.a~ed
~
;tlie. 27 March . you :made .. directl~>aga~s.t
_-
the. _ reader.i. is;. the 'foundation< of ·,au
' -
e
·
.
lSSue o!th~ CirGle, is. an example pa~!cular, facul~y:·member
0
~cl
·
;jOUrJ!~li.sjn~'!Oi-thy .onhe=name:<
. ,, ·
:.°f .. editom~l ~omn1ent . of , th_e ;.md1rectly a_gamst: the
·
-Int.er- · By· every: consiaeratiori. ofgood
M
.. ·
·-'t'' ,•, · ,._
.
,P09t~t1;:_aHb1"e.;N?t
0
,nlydoes:1t;_:ttouse~_o~cll? ,_,•_
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faith'anewspaperfaconstrained.
,, . a:
n···,,
·
1p•
u• ·a· · .
.
.
·t.•1•0· .•· -'
.
.
fly m, ~e face_ of th.e,ca~ons ~f.c J,believ
.
e ~e editorial
staff
of ··to·:be·•truthful.lt: is riot to be
- . ' .· . ' . . .·. ·.
.-.. '. . . . ' .. ·
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' ··' ·.··.·. ·-.··.·.n.,
.• _
·.·. ..
professional Journali_sm but lt"
i
llle: Circle _ha:s:an \Ob!ig~tion}o. excusecHorJack ofthoroug!fuess ..
'
,
...
.
.. _ .
•
}~sults
·
the
.read~r.ship, o,kthe
0
preseIJtev1dence·to:support:1ts •,oraccuracywithinitsconkol,or•.;.;.;,c
~
_
, Ci~cle . by .· assuming tf!at. such 'charges.· lf)hls cannot be dorie~ - -
.
failure ,to : obtain . commaniF of
_.
. , _
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.
. , . . .
.
. . .
dnvel. ·can masquerad~ ,as
th~·
th~ staff · should >publish an •these essential qualities/~:.(Code: .
Th
.. I
ba·.,
.·
•
•
.·
•
· .. •.
,
.
•.
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pursui~_of truth. _; . .:-;,,
,
•- . editorial; apology.to· the faculty
of Ethics,, American Society:
. . · e~~,IS a . arge . lll!er- hanging in the. Dean, of Students ?ffJCf:.WJl!~h
Particularly_
offensive
are ·
(1) · .member and
:
to
•the,Jnter-House_. ; of News a er;Edifors ); · · .
t~
.
-
. r~a~; In a_con~1c~ it
~
~sually µte stronger.force which gives me-the unfoun_ded·f~ck on a f~gulty:,-,Council/and'the _writer(s)
.
of the ., ... ;;•
,
; :.':,-~
f:.c< ::
;,~Si· cer ( '•
, flr~t.
;An~ withthism ~lild.tll~ editors:would:like,to comm~nton tl!e·\men.iber.: and
'
(2).:Jhe
,
'equally ,<broadside '!Mani ulatiori'.Uihould:. · · . ,\, _'\; .:
,:;;:>L
.
,ct···
.P ·-s:e
y, .· ..
editona! of_th~ last edition e1_1tit11:d
Ma~pw11tion.,_ ; .· ·. ~: · .·
··
., "''. ··.unsupp'oi-te'd ':i''asserUon':,;c.of;:::resign'i:froin i'th~
'
'staff
.
of:'.the:~,··,
~~·/_,:';{::'cJ·~':':
J::-ElJ,]~.r.<!.A•~Co-~?
•, An eµitor1al m the qRCLE deallitgmµi the, dec1S1_on°.·of the Inter -.: ; "c. o.rruption
,,'an.
cl
de_ ·.c
.. eit w.·. iii.·c. h. ·..-a·r·c:1e ':':.
:
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1
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1' "t ·,::,l'dH. ~t:Jl9Elcr-,o_ttQile·.:
1
Hous
Co
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f
c
·tt'•
th.
·11
ti .. f·B·' · H .. · ·
··· · · · ·· ·
· ··
·
· · ·
······ ✓,,--•
-
,
,
.
•
, . , . .
.
• . • . , ,
.
ner- ouse ounc
.
.. e , unci e ec 19n> Omtm ~e Oil
e_a OC8 On~
enoi! ouse· ·exist·
in some ·campus·,·coin~.:
·'
.·I
i(sk
for•.'tfus rfillignatlon(s).,' '.·· · ·
'
'
r -.
-
')v
'
··:/f:'
·
'.' '' ··
has crea~d somewhat_ of a stoqn on .campus. .
·
> , . , ,
.
· , ·
,
·
· · •' ...
,.
,·.· ,
··,
· · ·
·
· " · · ·
· · · · · · ·
; The editori~l dealt with tlie factthat a planned appeal of the decisio]l
·
.
did not take place and what we were told were the reasons for
this
·
· ·
· · ·
· ,
decision notto appeal.
. .
. . .
. '
.
.
-
. ,· stuaents would be the' ·closing
of.:
so. concerned with tiie principles
.
We thought the·decision should have been appealed and we still think ,_
·
, •·: .. Fra. nk's bar,: ac
.. r. oss th. e ..
§t
reet .. ,.·. of ...
fr.
eedom
.. · · .. o. f_ th¢" .pr. ess at this ..
so. For no other reason t'-an
it
would have brought out and revealeilall
··
·.
·
, · But the excitement woulcf most pomt;
'L
believe the · faculty
the facts of the decisio,!.
,
.·
,
· .. · , Dear Editors: . :
. . , .
.
likely be short-lived' as other bars memo er can dear his name· by .
News sources, and there were more than one, told us that the
J.tead,withgrea~ ,intere~t
.tlj~
in PoughkeElpsie would pie~ ·up. ~a.v~g an
.
open. ,fo~tiin on_ the
decision not to appeal came after: what they called intimidation and, ~~i~l~;· and ,p~rticularly, ·the ·th~ slack. li_owever,• this •is issue-rat:J:ier than·gomg to:court·
manipulation by the faculty member serving on· that committee,-- ~ditorial C!)lumn:in:thEl•l\farc~ ~7 • neither here. nor there_. . , : • . For makmg .such accusations, I
Brother Xavier Ryan. These news sources have sinced changed their issu!: of. u.ie · 9ircl~~
•.·!Jl•,
inany
Mr
lett~r· co.ncerns ·your; s~pect that ~he r~ignations. of
story and they
.
no longer,
,
claim that threats intimidation
or '
previous issuesof the Circle_, one _e d 1 t o r i a 1 · · e n t i t 1 e· d · the three main editors might be
manipulation took place. we:apologize to Brother Ryan. • . •
• . · wou!d :~ave t_o decipher or •read . "1'1anip~tion'0:
As n:_iany people called for. These • resignations
· There have peen threats of lawsuits against the CIRCLE. and its be!:\\'.ee11 the µne~..,.to ~ek the true ,:kriow, this editorial was directed should. I!Ot be
.
given; nor should ·
editors as a· result of·the editorial, and demands that we resign. we opimon
·
of th~·-·_editors •·of ~e · ·to'Yard the group of students who any•, retraction' be· ·made
·if· the
have no intention of resigning: We are convinced that there.is no basis newspaper. - ~ce January,, ·I_ appli~:for Benoit_ House for the , editors sincerely believe • what
for a lawsuit.
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h~ve ~ot
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!18d tc;>_.do so fo.r any:of ·· 1975-76 years in.its.opefilP.g. It
is
they printed.iri the ''Newsmen's
The issue of ho'w Benoit House was allocated is'certifuily within the the editoria~ printed. I_ ~m hap~y _ the second :part ~of'theoeditorial Credo'\ or in their,editorial policy
rights of the student body.to know and the.comments in our·editorial ~ t the edi!<>rs haye made·their · .with'whi~h.Iaril concerned, that pr
_
int~.,:~t the beginning of ~ach
. vvere dealing with a public issue.
.
. .
. views kn.own for _a change.~
>-
b~mg·a direct attack on a;Marist year. .
·
<-
•
. • ,.,
· There would have been no chance for misunderstanding on
this.
I have also noticed. that'few,_
if CoHege facu}ty , member. This
Falso ask· that
~IL
students,
:
important campus issue
if the committee had,dfsclosed how it reached , a~y me1:11-bers · of. ·the. Manst · · ·renowned ,,.faculty.· member -~has., . regardl~.Qf their positiorrciri the
its decision and what the discussion had included.
· .:
. , /
Co~nrx~umty ever :respond to. an - done much to
.
improve. the. decisions 11'.iaqe during the last
W~ t~.our efforts in pr"?ting the.story andJ?dit?ri:81 were
part
of editonatm ~e• Circle .. ·
Ce~WY ... ·.
·
c~pu;, life at Marist ~trr.IDS'my. ·
.
.
· few . weeks, :at
.I~~· uphold , the
.
our J~b to keep ~e campus informed of what is going on. We would: the last,few 1SSues of ~e.Gfr~le fouryea_r stay,at M~nst; Ihaye principle of freedom cif the press.
· also like to make 1t perfecUy clear thatin no\Vay were we denouncing~mu_st haye ~enha~ced dis~ussi~n .· had 'this' ~rofes~or,~,~or
-
J~.o A daffil:'ged · reputaticii· can . be .
Brother
.
Ryan-as an immo~al or unethical ,man .. We. did not· say that. of 1ssu~ •· a_t _Marist.• ~, write. this.,_ co~_es, :~e.
lS ,
a
person -whoiµ_I
'
.. rep~ire..1, !tafd feellilgs';·egarding
and that should notbe·read mto
it. ·.
. •
.
, . ·
letter r~lizing
I
rmg~t be the hold.m. high esteem. · . .· ·~ : decis!<>ns_ can
be
rec_onciled,\ but
- Wearewellawareofhisim:portantworthonthis'campus.
.
.
only" mE;mber _,:of· .the
~:14arist~•" ,:~
sillc_erefy· beli~e that. the the--loss of one!s.:
,
freedom:•of
· - _Today':3 CIRCI~ contains ~Qre reports'on
this
important issue:We Commumty ~king ~he time to let·· oo.itors; of
Jhe
~
Girc~t? ·:lac~ed speechi(should~it.-come 'to that)
will continue to prmt news and .editorials regarding the issue aswe , YO\½ know m~ reac_tion. I strongly profe§sionalism m
_
t~eir attack should: not be tolerated. · aet off
see !t: The Le~er~ to·u.ie Editors <:olumns are open for replie~ to our., ~elieve a~ times t~at ,the .only-:and/_afe·:•pq,b~bly ~der,:mii~ your bat stools and'reactJ: .- ·.··
.storiesandeditonalsandwewelcome your comments ... ;_
. .
.
, issue whi_sb,.w~uld:.cause. ar)Y
·
:"duress'.'.;Jor · making: such< a
·
< : '.~ :' \
Sincereiy,
WewouldatthistimealsoliketothankthestudentGovernment-for c9n~ern among .the Marist· statement:.However;
Lam'm.ore
,
'.:. ,~
BobSammon
their help, eyen though we
may-
not have agreed with their recom::
·
, ,
>< · .:. · · , .,
·
·•
·
·
.,. :/
mendations, Dean Thom.as Wade, Mr. Robert Norman; Richard .
. Wager, Managing Editor of the.:.Poughkeepsie Journal and _James
Coombe, Attorney· at Law.
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APRIL 10, 1975 .
THE CIRCLE
Letters; continued
decided that
if
the goals that I
fort.
I feel that my decision was that impression, I would like to .
intended _, achieve through the an objective one and well thought offer now, in public, my humble
appeal could not, in fact, be out, and I do not feel that I was in apologies.
ac~ved, ·then the attempt at any way manipulated . into
Thank you,
such · an appeal would not be making that decisionr And
if
I in
Bob Griffin
worth either the time_or ·the ef-
any way gave ~he Circle editors_
where act~ally it does not
exist.
back it up.
If
however, you do feel
.· Dear Editors:
_/ · -
I wou!d ~e to know: where you you've , a base · from which you
· . This is-written in reply to your get off Judgmg a manw~om ·you spoke of, I dare you
to
defend
editorial entitled_ Manipulation. perso!}ally do 1_1ot know ~nd base~ your position publicly, with
. Journalism should~ based upon
_lll)<!O
information from so!-ll°ces studentsand faculty_ present and
facts and ·yes· should:. uncover . which we the readers don t even then let us see where deceit
·••corruptionand deceit which know really exist!
. .
exists. Remember, the truth
_exists on some .cai:npus com-
You speak of purpose, May)· prevails and as you yourself say,
mitt~s••·_but.µot plant seeds of. ask what real purpose you have we've·"nothing to fear·but fear
. deceit . and , op·en ;- sland.~~,: in. slander? To ~ttempt
to
ruin a itself" or do we.
·
·
· J;)r~tendfui!,to uncover corruption,_,aman's reputation with n:othing t~: ·_
Lenny Fedyniak
appeal.
In
_no way, ho'!e,;;r, dci~s< ''.
}f
neither are forthcoming, I
'Dear Editors: -
.
th.atfact g1ye you the r1ghtto lash will support Xavier Ryan in
. · Relative
.
to your editorial, ·out unjustly against the person of seeking a redress of this matter.
' "Manipulation" in the 3-27-75 Xavier Ryan and the Science of
Sincerely,
•
.
-i~ile.of th_e.qrc1e; !~sympathize .·Man course offel'.ed by him; , .
.. Ge·rald E. Kelly
· :- ,. with y()u
011:
f!le factthat you were
.
·· I call·uponyou for aretraction ·
·
· Sheahan Housernaster
The Childn•n's Theat!c production of•• Alice in Wonderland"
from now til Sunday.
'.'::;iert,Myllilg !ll~;!>31g.'.;'-whent~e. ofyoufunNstallegations or your
- Director of Financial Aid
_ >' '.
~eahan
Gr()Up · ~oppe~-~eir.~
resignation/'? - .,·
.
· -B_ook Review:
.,,
_.,-
< ... :~_--
the matter::.: .
·.,
>
•
'
. , -
-~hole_ group, due to. e~tenuating
Ame·
r,· can
· '.fhe
-
application for_~ ~ppeal of . c1rcuniStan~es. . '. ._
_ . . .
.
. To
-
Whon{tt·may Conc_ern:·
the Inter.- House .Council -decision · . 'ENO OF STATEMENT
,-<
Since the so called "Sheahan 0il Benoit,
_
and request/for. in.o'
=
..
-No
other :-statements -are
Seven experts, writing for the stirred controversy <!Ven before
Life
Exaniined
-Group;':has_officfally l)eet( forn:iation.germane:to·said:ap--·_authorized
by the so:called layman, have put together a
publication, Stephanie Coontz,·
_ · dissolved;
!;.
am·
no,~ foriger'· 'peal was:officiaµy \vithdrawn bY:_.:/!She~hari.;(}roup'' since it has thought-provoking· and per- . co-editor of this volume and
- .. author~ctto act in any capa~ity ~· . me.· ·as~ legaL representative, fori
'
i,.~ b¢en· · officjally ·· dissolved .. on ceptive analysis of what has gone author of three of its essays, has
-· ·Igal:~or · .. otherwise, as::-a Ma:rch25;1975atapproximately: March-'25/1975.
-- -~ ·
wrongwithArnericansocietyand seen her appointmenrto the·
.~. representativ~ _of:the group'. ·I,
:rn
p.m.;.nie reason for the with- . ·
·
-
. Thank you. how it can be changed. In Lile in faculty of Evergreen State
.'therefor.e; can· pnly' ·rna~e _the dr~wl was·simply~e ~ppeal no- ,
0 -::
-
- ; ,
Ernest Puglisi Capitalist America·; Private College in Washington attacked
_ foJlo.wirig~ 'statement conce~ing longer had the full support
.
of the:
✓
·
ProfJt and Social Decay (New on the basis of this book. Seattle's -
·. : ·
.
· : .. ···• ·, · ·
·
• ·.
·
· .·
· -• ,
·
· . . . -
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, .
. .·.
. . ,.
.
.
.
. Yor~, Pathfinder Press) a school KIRO
TV,
for
instance,
·,·
. • .. · .· .>.
<: . •· ,:_ ·, ..
administrator, a welfare worker, editorialized against her ap-
. · 'question concel,'Iling Dr.Ryan's question.of his possible unetliicaL an. attorney, a professor, a
pointment, saying that "she is
; possible
·
uiiethical . behavior in behavior
relating . to
the_ journalist, a forinerprisoner, and editor ofa new book called
Life
jn
-
,relationtothes~called.'!Sheahan· "Sheahan . Group'.' proposal a city. planner examine the_ Capitalist America: Privat•·
.
.
To the ·Eclitors oHhe Circle: · ·_. Gtoup''. proposal; Dr. Ryan has; should be investigated by the workings of our profit-oriented Profit and Soclal<Decay. Wha,
' -~
· ·
Dr:
Xavier ·Ryan should cori- ·in ,· my_i opinion,·
·
created proper college judicial body, or . social system and.,find in ·it the kinq of political philosophies do
·:
sider. resig~ir, his position at disillusionment, . contempt; and . the professional organization of causes of the deterioration of the you think her students are going
Maryst Qollege;,By-his'tbreats.of mistrust arnqng
1
niany:rnembers college professors, so that the quality of American life.
to learn?
·
a . l~ws~~ aQd other-
·
:actions
of✓the.,,Marist·
Community. Dr.-. facts of the .matter can be
In essays entitled "Cities
in
On the other hand, Professor
a~~in_~f ~r,,e ~_tydent ~5lj_tors of.the JtY:a~•s ~_:cur;ent , ~c!ion~, .in ':~r·;;brciught: out, And tlie wh9l_e issue · .~ecay," "Yo~ Can't Afford to get Mi!ton Lesnik of Antioch College
; C~sJe,J}e~ape~,-.~~ a .r~suU of :OJ>]!!ion;: are.•no~ -m, the,•best:·•m" '.; ,br~~gp~,to:a,1u~t~com;lll.!:l!OI!-~:.,,;, .. s11:;k", "Growing Old:: Insult and described Life in Capitalist
a~_.
:
eclit<>I"1al_:::Yaliilly"ra1Smg- the terests~,of:'Manst College. Th·e• .
'.
·
<
•
:
.1-
·
:ErnestPuglisi--'-InJury;»,'.'The Rea1·:welfare . ·Alllerlca
·
as made ·UP
.
of.-
.
· .. _. ... ,..
·
.•,• ·· · ·
·
' · ·, ... ····-:
·
•:
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-.
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Scandal,""ThePrison:Revolt," "sparkling intelligent ~ssays,"
' F
_
·ol. lo_
w.< · ..•.
u_--·p,
-
"The Failure of . American and Charles Berger, Principal of
-
Education;" "Pollution: Who Is Public School 188 in New York
D~i-Eclitors:
_ . __
.
<>!
~his or(i~at, a.od_ that ~n in-. meetings, . or . discussions and Responsible?" and "Energy City's embattled ghetto School
tam writing to fo]!ow· up on_.the d1v1dual
m ,
the community .. at have small ;numbers attend or Crisis: A Bonanza for the Oil District One, stated that •~s.
letter,mailedtci-your home during" large !-!al! not _c~use ch~nge or _at none at aU:. ·
Giants," the ·authors amuP. that -
Coontz is obviously a skilled and
Spring recess< anct subsequent
:
b~s~ 1t rs ,difficult.for. an m-
A community_ <achieves . the neither busir.ess nor government talented. writer .and possesses a
meetings held on campus after dmdu~l _to cause change. .. .
quality oflife it wants through th~ as now constituted can st~m the wealth of knowledge and
in-
;. " the. recess. Although .attendance'
Admwstrators need feedback . interactiorii. .of people:µying\vith -- gro~g deterioration of living formation about the dilemma of
· -
, · . . - . · . · .
from the people they, serve •to_ it. Excellence comes from people conditions and they outline the · the urban poor."
0~
the-~h~le was P!)0r, __ we w~re know. how they are affecting the _
carjng, · working; and evaluating · drasUc political and economic
Life
in
Capitalist America:
~et
~!h~
go?d mtereSt .· and lives of others . .SOrne.of-this is the outcomes: A Marist student has measures needed to turn the Private Profit and Social Decay
. . discu~ion on_ .he . part ; of th?se administrators responsibility. but_ always . been a person, oriented situatio~ around. ·
288 pp. $10, paper $2.95, ~Cf'"). 74-
- attencling. Most of the di~cussion those - served, also have , a individual who is · concerned
Written by Marxists and em-
26234 Publication date May ·,975_
· _ ~entered on rna~ers .of. _campus responsibility .
to .
become in- •· about and receptive to others.
p 1 o yin g
author it a ti v e Cloth ISBN o-87348-416-9; paper
mte_rest. · Particularly, . \Vho. fbnned. Students should learn the
For those who· are interested, a decurnentation, the book has lSBN o-87348-417-7.
causes change on. campus aod g·overning structures . of. their list of college faculty and staff
how-on~. ~an affect the ~y~tern. · college; , where decisions , al'.e who are either personally or
- . I_~s somewh~t surpr
15
ed .hr,· made
'
that ·affect. either -their-
educationally involved or in-
an. attitude ~at· someone else
.
education. or • personal ,lives.
·
terested in issues of our society is
~hould solve pr9blerns? take care Nothing is mor:¢ ,frustrating
tQ
available at the switchboard.
-Minor Approv~d
little. or no ,r,esponse, .to
go
to mail- lette~s, surveys, and have
· · ·
Thomas W. Wade
The Academic Affairs Corn-
"American-Jewish
Novelists,"
mittee has approved the in-
"The Politics - of the Middle
led
us
daily 'to' overlook·that in-
congratulate you editors for the troduction of a minor in Jewish
East," "Topics
in Jewish
justice, No other building would _stands.you have.taken
in
the last Studies beginning in the Fall History,"
"Contemporary
treatm.ent .·
Totbe;Editors:·
. .
.
.
have hadthe'.heatshiltoff;.·r.issueoftheCircle.Ittakesalot ~ermt ,d1975.Thternmt· o
1
rwillffbe_an
Judaism,"
and
"Anti-
!
·t M ·
1m
t d il · th
·
·
u· ·. · ·'
•t · · "d
f gu· ts
d th
th ·t·
th _.m er- epar men a
o ermg Sem1'tisrn."
_
c
go o . ass a
os a y m e guess"re g1on
_
isn
cons1 ered. o ·
. a~ · e · au or1 1es,
e
·ch'apeLand Lam most shocked -tllat important here, • .
o · · .
powers, will get back at you, you involving faculty in English,
_ These courses are open
to
all
· that the college should shut off
I
ani
asking for you to_withhold· . can be ~ure. Whatever you do, History, Political Science
and
students, but the student seeking
.the.heatover-,three:weeks_ago my_narne. l?knowits
a
bit of don'tres1gn(astherurnorssay). Religious Studies.
It
will be
togive coherencetohiselectives
. because,of the construction in cowardice but_lknowthat power Don't,Jor·our sake. ·
coordinated · by Dr.
Rhys · can now plan a program of''
Fontaine;·The chapel was an ice -corrupts and there are powerfuf
.
Name withheld Williams of the Department of related courses wrucn can re:swL
·box ·and ,Fr. Gallarit j~a.Uantly' "':i>eople here who' could hurt me .. 1 . _ - a member o( the community · Religious Studies and Dr. Milton· - in a minor.
.
-
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•
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--· •·"·
Teichman of the Department of
Students who want
to
learn
.
·
-
·:,.
·
·
English.
.
.
rnore--about the minor
in
Jewish
help
_
out'; t'1roligh ,their ·i;---g, ·
us
tak~
for grantea .too often.
The Illinor in Jewish Studies
is
Studies should see Dr. Rhys
. those who-· are not.. fortunate . Hats off to John·VanDervoort, an outgrowth of present student
Williams or Dr. Milton Teichman
:_ ·Praise·<.
. .
,enough·to run - the handicapped. the sole organizer and creator of interest in courses
in
Judaism
during the registration period,
: T,:,.the'Maris~ comrntmity:
.~tudents:nere·at Marist. They thisgreatendeavor.Iamhopeful and Jewish literature and is a
April 7-11.
>
I am sure t~atrµany of you are i~re:<:Ioirig tile
:rriost
purposeful·
that next year this project
will
be further
expansion
of · the
Dr. Williams and Dr. Teich-
'fapiiliar
.
with the facHhat eight ruru;ungthat ~!1yone._co~d;do:
Pi..·
met by even more enthusiastic academic . study of', ·. the
man, who will serve as advisor's
rum,ier~ 9ver the weekend sought . couple oftheII_l aev9loped inJunes
.
l'.esponsefroin the entire Marist · phenomenon
of religion at, to students in"the minor, believe
to run a 4&hour marathon; Due
to-:·
through the,process and may· be community and more money can Marist.
,
.
that a planned sequence of
,: unbelieyab1e·>· weatller.
i>,(20
Jos!·
for,a tfack ~~et or:tw,Q;. but : be raised forthe nee_ded facilities
Courses to be offered next
courses drawn from current and
degr~es : ·' and, high .'winos· · lo_smg a meet or two 1s much _less on: campus here for the han-
semester which are relative to
future offerings at the college can
. ·:--.)na!Cing;the··ternperatui:e- more··_'me~uyngfµl than '!hat they were. dicapped,, Last. weekend Ji>h:11
the ~il.!or include «Religion in
deepen the siudents' knowledge
·
. ·_:like_
o
d~_grees), they: were torced,.
~
trymg to_ a~cornp~h and what I ; Va~~rvoort,· Jim Honan, Chris ~er1ca:•: (REST 90~), ''Yid•lish
_ o~ Judaism, help him see its
-··.
to·:_s~op-;~!,l~J:a~er_18,llow.-s{o_f/•~~elthey,~~ <;le1Aons~rate ... :;.-
_
.. ·Paccione, D~ve ~h~ols 3!1d Walt Writers m Transla?on" . (~NG
relation to other world religions
.
·/, cont1J!llOU~l:;l'11Dl)lDg.~;.These::f1v~ ·: ·•,~en Mlirty,·Liquor1}~al."!1ed m ~eµry s1lo~ed how, runnmg can 726), · "A,pocalypt1c B1bhcal
and its impact on western
. . ; Matjst:.. men ·-:~th -, ~eir
,-~e,e .
the_ ear:!Y PB!i ?fJ~72 t~atfn_:3 -~o?g -. rea~y · be p1:1t to _use: I hope ~e Lite~ature" (REST 913), "The
culture.
·
-.•.
: · "-.J)utchess~Comrnunity. Collegef·dreamofrunnmgm the Olyn1p1cs
~
Manst .cornmuruty is proud· of :.:.,Ancient East" (HIST 294) -- and
·
A :s~r1es
ot
pubuc 1ectures
iS
<'.
.,\:c9i;:ni>i!)lion~:;we_r.~_i:r.io~~just;)run~/:
~f!l:l~/)V~~-,
·-y1~_9:
,;~uC:_hYti~ (foot <It~~!r. ·: c;achievem~nts . · .• ar:id "The ~tory · of : Modern' · Ger-
being planned in conjunction with
.. .:: .,,_ .. ~~g~:~row:i.~.::'~8. .~~
.
riipus_;;,/fll~y;::mJurr,.11~, ~~pl~m~.!l}o thir_Pl'.~~-~ .:dedi~tio~:.J kriow theirpoa~h 1s.~ · :many" : {HIST 32.?), ; Cours~s
the minor. The possibility
of" .
·
··,.·_·'.
yw~r:~-~l}.o.~11g:~8c}~~:-?r~mati.c_:,that~~,-wl:ls:not-a1.tiinl~fJtYIM~,:
.
·::. .. ···
;';
.:(>····.:.
.Smcerely,_
.
planned for the Sprmg-s~mester
surnmer·or semester study at the
. .:. .. '·:\~•~y,µiat,r~g;call:15e. both fun}:::h,ut~.~:;:v~ry, .. ~!,lckY;,,••l()n~,.'.h~: w~.s
.:
.
·, , .· -,~.chard Stevells . of ~97~ and beyond mclude 'Hebrew University in Jerusalem
.. - : - .. , _afld mearµngftil._Jbey~sought:to· ,.~bJe,to
~ye~
3-J;ift.th~~ many,~(' ,
• . Mal'l~t Track Coach : •~Prmc1ples·, '. of~: :~ndaism".
is also being considered .
.-.
. ~---• .. , .... : ·:~,.;;~::}"<:/~}\.~/',(.:·~~i:, )/:~··:
-
-::::.:.
'.
.~,<:.>c:-:: ., -.:
~? ... ,.,
..
: · .
.
-
, \; ... -.
:
:
--::.
:~::,.
'·'
I
I
I
-
---
_
I
,,._
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•
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...-
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-·-
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'
PAGE6
THE CIRCLE
'
APRIL 10, 1975
Code
99
.
Potpourri:· News Briefs
By Fr. Leo Gallant
tears: Isn't
.
all this stupid?
Assistant professor of political. and Lehigh. He plans to continue
Maggie was
just
a dog, and a fat
science carolyn Landau recently
his
studies in chemistry.
~
I wept twice last week,
almost
one at that!
participat~
_
in
a Career Day
uncontrollably. I hate to cry;
'lbe other occasion was a few
,sponsored
by Spackenkill High
·
Mrs. Barbara Short of the
sometimes
I
feel it's a sign of days before (why
am
I
telling you
School. Coordinator of the new Business Office staff is home
emotional
unbalance;
this?).
'lbere wer~ some students
paralegal studies program,
Mrs.
_
recuperating from a recent in-
sometimes the male
.
chauvinist in the house, reading newspapers
·
Landau spoke about
·
paralegal jury. Get Well cards can be sent
in me tells me that men shouldn't and magazines. I was reading an
opportunities with. 50 students to her home at 6 Spratt Avenue,
ween. And there were
.
students
article about. Nestor Paz who
and adults. Dr. D;A. Drennan, Poughkeepsie, 12603.
·
..
in
my
house
_
at the time, to my joined
the Bolivian National
professor of philosophy, just
-.
greater embarrassment.-
Liberation Anny, leaving his
returned
from
the 49th annual
Mrs. Patricia Bucala
·
has
One time
was
-
last Saturday.
1
wife to fight the government. He
meeting
of
the
Catholic joined the clerical staff in the
My dog Maggie died because of died of starvation at the age of 25
Phifosophival Association held in Business
_
Office on a part time
' diabetes. She was the sweetest while surrounded, by govern-
Cincinatti. He served as chair-
basis,
an .
_
associate
.
degree
dog a guy could ever have. She ment soldiers.
,
The article is
.:
man
of
the
metaphysics candidate
from
Dutchess
knewonethirlgwell:Howtogive'
madeup ofhisletters,especially evercomes,Marist College will
,
program.
_
.
··
Com,!Jlunity
_
Coll~ge,
·
·
she
love always. She loved me
so to his wife. The last letter was be a pleasant memory.
_
. The
-
auth_or_ of numerous ar-
_
previously . worked
_-
m
the ac-
mtich,
was so faithful, so written by
_
a fellow•
.
Guerilla
-
This slJ!llmer I'll
be
helping out b_cles and re~!ews, Dr. Dre!1Ilans
-
.
counts receivable department for
obedient.
She was
the best describing Nestor Paz's death. at
!l
New York inner city parish
.
e1~hth b?,O~• Culture>-Log1c and
_.
Effron Bak,ery supply .
.
trained dog I ever knew (though
Ordinarily such emotionally for a month. You can be sure I'll Science,
1S
scheduled for a fall
,
_
_ _
,
_
she
_
was
·
the only dog I ever charged articles don't shake me
·
have iny eyes open for
_
the 1975 publication by Philosophical
:
The
-
Philosophy Department
had.) She understood so many upthatmuch. Butlhadjustbeen apostolate of
:
-
my dreams. (The Resources, Mount Ve_rnon, N.Y .
.
will host a lec!ure by Dr. Ren~e
things.
I think
_
she eveh knew conversing with a student about' movie "Why We Boycott" shown ~
-
-
13th annual President's Cup
-·
Weber; associate professor
·
of
when
I was sad. They talk about leaving my comfortable life at by Jim Kennedy last week
_
did R~g~tta
_
will !ake place Saturday,
.
_
philosophy at Rutgers a
_
11d
.
·
a
"dumb anin1als", but Maggie Marist to work uncoinfortably not help to cai..A this urge to be
a
Apr~
-
26,>
with t~e . 5th
~
annual
·
memb_er of the ~nter
,
for I~-
.
taught me more about life, about with the poor, the exploited, the "real priest" somewhere.) I'm p~~su;tent's,Cup,dinner scheduled
·
tegrattve ~ducatio11:
.
Her
_:
top1c
dedicated
.
love and loyalty than minorities. The only reason I lookirig for students or faculiy
.
for the
.
_
prec~eding:evening:
:
see
:
·
win b~
_
"the Pz:ill,la~y
:
of t~e Non-,
-
most human beings. Mayb'e most haven't _left is because I don't or staff to ten
me
where to
.
go .
.
•
·
Mr'. ~rank LaRos_e,.for
.
complete Material I_dealism
in
In~1an t:ind
people at Marist would prefer a want to go back in the classroom. Some of youcould answer this
fu
details.
•
Greek
,
P~llosophy a11d
_
__
m
gom-
.
chaplain who is less human, but I I'm most happy atMarist, but it's two seconas. But that's not
-
the-
·
-
- - - -
parativtf Science/' The
·:
_
in-
_
-
had to Share this with you, still in a second choice
.
If
the right call answer
-
I want:
-
-
_
Senior Chemistry
-
major Joe
:
te
·
rdisciplinary lecture
·
is
-
.
-
·
.
'
\
·
·
·
·
·
_
.
_
_
_
_ _
Abys, who is currently
-
studying :SchedulefforW~dnesdayApril16
'
l
lnip
.
o rtan
t
,
Anno
_
U
_
Ii
cefiien-t
_
s
<
:
·
:
!!io~i:at~f!s:n
_
~;~
_
cre;e
_
~:e~
0
~~!~ :~~;
3
~·~t1e~fu~ie~r
.:~g
· •
.-·
-
-
1
·
·
.
•
,
-
-
.
_
_
-
-
-
-
.
-
-
ceptances and
·
fmanc1al awards
.
coor9inated
:·
by Kevin Donohulr,
.
-
.
/
·
·· ·
•
:' _
·
_
.
.
-
, ,
.
:
from ;Bi-own,
·
Rutgers; Purdue
:
·
department chaiml.an;
.
.
.
Thursday, April 10th, the Free Spanish classes will
-
include
.
_
There will be
·
a
·
film
,
an~
:--
·
-
University will sponsor a le_cture singing, dancing, skits and poetry
·
_discussion
.
on CQrisumer Fraud
entitled "The Parental Role:
A
reciting. Tuesday
8
p.m; in the . at 8' p.m. in
.
stone. Lounge.
_
·
...,
___
:,
_
.
_-_·
·
·
r
_
_
•
.
e
._:_·
·_
w
_'_·:·.· ...
_
~s_·
-:1.e·
·t
__
,
·
t
'
.
··
_
e
_
·
.
_,
_
'.
r
·
.
·._
-_
•.
_·.
_
·_-
B
·
-_
.
·.
_.
e
-
·.
·g·'
._z· __
.:n·-s--
Futuristic View." All members of · theatre.
Oil
Tuesday, -April 22, Robert Buchner,
.
Asst. Attorney
L'tJ
_
_
the Marist Community are in- there will be an
·
international General will be
,_
on hand
.
to
vited to· attend this leCture
in
eve~g prese
.
nted
by the rrench;
·
✓
answer
questionll.S.
·
.
-:.
Gregory House at8 p.m. ton~ght. Ita
1
lian, G
8
ennan
:
a_nd
·
~uss!a°"' DTuesday April
15,
_
Psycho~
_
.
.
.
__
-
,-
,
_
-
.
··
-
·
·
c asses.
·
p.m.
m
Fireside
rama
'..
·
workshop
·:
in Stone
_
By
Reid
Scott
:
_
·
the p~per. This
-
~~icle
_
attacks
.
Seniors are reminded to hand Lounge; Refreshments will be Lounge, subject Dreamsand and
.
_
.
_ _
__
~
the college administration for
in their deposit for the Senior serv~
_
a!t~r each
_
perfonnance, F.anta
_
sy
;
8
p.m.
·
·
.
_
A new print
·
media has
'
:
been
_
deciding to_closethe house. Jts
Class Formal at the Villa admission 1s free.
.
.
·
.
.
_
_
_
.
.
:
established with the creation of
-
argl,Ullent 1s
_
presente~
.
openly
·
Bagliari.
'All
final payments will
·
---,.;..
Students
·
are reminded that the HEOP newsletter. The Letter
·
-
and suggests that the decision is a
be due by Friday, May 2nd.-
.
The 1975 Suinmer Session tomorrow;Fdd~y, April
11
isthe will
·
attemptto· develop
a
COIi).·
radstcme;~articl~coul~not~e
schedule is now available. For last day
·
to register for courses municatfon with the Marist
:
presented
m
the Circle
m
this
_
Any student interested in information please contacLthe for the
_
Fall 75 semester.
.
·
community
.
and other
/
area in~
>
fo~.
-
-
Therefore
.
HEO:f'
,
feels
membership
_
on
.
the Student office of. Continuing Education,
.
_ ..
. _ _
stitutions
·
siich,:as Dutchess, thereJs a rieed f<>r, .the
_
News
,
·
.-
Academic Committee should . Donnelly Hall.
·
_
Apy~ne
:
wis~g
.
-
..
t,o apply for
.\
Vassar;
.
New
:·
Paltz, . Bennett;
.
.
Lette_r
oh;
!he ,m!a c:aIIlp
_
u~es.,
.
,
_
'
submit a
letter of intentiollto Bob
.
;
.
.
. _
· ·.
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
res1dency
,
m Gregory Hou~~ for Bard
;-
:
Gretmhaven,
.
and the
·
_
·
Raul Qumtima. staF.ted
\VOi'.~
on
.
Sammon, Box C-912 by Friday,
Copies o!, the "Job R_esear~h the 1~7?
-
~
?~
sch!)Ol _sear ~ust
Culipacy
.
Institute:
'
'I'hey will
_
the
•
N,ews
_-~tter;
·
~a~. year/but
•
Aprirl8th.
'
·
Baromt:ter are now available m submitthei~ ~PP.licabon to Vmny attempt
to
build a publicati9n)n c~>llld not fmd the backm~ ne~ded
the office of_ Career, Develop-
Leddy~ chainna'n of the sear<:h
'
whi~h th~
_
writer can
_
fre~ly_ ex.;,
_
to prod~ce the commurucabpns;
The office of Veterans Affairs ment. There
1S
also a supply of committee by Sunday at
6
p.m. press
his
feelings on a given
:
He
.
received the needed support
'
is sponsoring a fund drlve for Viet CoU~g_e P_lacelhef!t Ann
_
uals No app~cation wi~
_
~e
·
accepted
.
·
_
subject:
-
without
,_
the,m
·
.
being !his year; fro'!l
_-Joseph
Molinar
_
o
_
_
Nam refugees. Cash donations ;>ro"'.i!,ling
_
informa~on on the afterth!s~
_
te. Alirili~ed.n~ber
;_
edited
.
or !_lisregarded
-·
.
as and Jackie Cuntus of
HEOP
and
will
be
accepted through Friday positions customarily.. offered to of applications are still available
·
irrev'elant
_
_
_ .
✓
fellow
.
_
students.
.-
.
April 11th
·
at the following college
·
graduates. Copies are in Gregory House.
They feei the Circle cannot
'
-
.
·
Tue
staff
of the paper include:
-
location. Champagnat Hi
:l
from free for the. asking.
·
·
·
·
serve tlie student in this nature.
Editors:
Raul
Quintana,
-
9-5.
The Academic Quarterly-is now
-
Therefore
·
the Letter and the Micheala Wilks and
.
Ernest
.
A.
A Free University Lecture accepting papers for the Fall 1975
Circle would not be compet~g.
·_
:
Royal; Layout: Erne~t A.-Royal.
Students and Faculty ar~
reminded of the Organ
·
Recital by
John Sullivan at the Vassar
College-Chapel on Sunday, April
entitled "The Parental--Ro!P.:
A
issue. Please
.
send all papers to
.
This is shown .by an article Research: Raul Qumtana and
Ii'uturistic View"
will
be Dr: George Sommer,
·
campus
written
in
the News Letter titled Micheala
·
Wilks.
.
Typists:
presented this evening at
8
p.m. Mail, or 1st floor Fontaine.
.
_
"Is Benoit House
.
Dying",
,
by Modesto Rivera
and Victor
in Gregory House, all are invited
Ernest Royal, layout editor for
Olivera.
13 at
4
p.m.
·
to
·
attend.
Applications are ~till be~g There is still time
.
to see .
this
acc_epted
:
for chairmanship years
Children's
Theatre
_
positions m the ~reas ?f ~offee production of
"Alice
in
Won-
house, concert,
!ilin,
fme
·
at?, derland" performances will be
lecturE:, perfonnmg arts, social held on Friday 4-11 at g: 15 a.m.
and v1deo~ape for ·next y~rs and 8 p.m. Saturday
-
4-12 at 2
College ~~on ~oa~d. All full tune p.m. and 8 p.m
;
Sunday 4-13 2
students
.
are mvited to apply .. p.m. All performances will 'be
Please see Kathy
.
Man_nmg, held in the theatre,
Gregory Hse. Gene Henners
,
.-
-
C309, or Sheila McKay,
·
S302
before April l~;
·
'
'
On
Monday April 14
.the
Red
Cross Blood Bank will be on
.
campus from
_
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in
.
The
_
annual
·
Modem Language Fireside
·
Loung;e
·
·
for
-
those
will
begin
on Tuesday Arpil 15;
A
students
_
wishing
.
to
·
don
_
ate
Spanish Fiesta present~d
,
by the blood.
ARLINGTON
44 Plaza
::_·
.
.
4?1°
_
6100
.
-
Insurance from
.
Marshail G.
oterl
_
ing,
_
I~~-
-
-
-
11
·
.
.
; lilJ
j ~
•
·
. ·
.
\
POUGHKEEPSI~
'
V\'AP.Pit-,JGERS FALLS·;
75Washington
St.
.
.
i.
Imperial Plaza
..
··
· .
·
.d
s4~osoo
-
-:
.
.
.
·
297~;3101
·
·
·
.
.
·
.\
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:
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•
.,
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\
THE CIRCLE
PAGE?
Mileathon Closes
Amidst Problems
figure of
$240
should be realized.
by Tom McTernan and
Rich Schneider
Sponsors inclmjed Third World
Alliance, Sheahan House Council,
By the time most ~f the Marist
Leo House Council, The Caboose,
community ventured out into the
Frank's, Father Gallant, Rita
. cold oflast Saturday, the tent had
Starpoli, C. U .B., Third Year
disappeared, the runners no
Abroad, Ace liquor Stores, Helen
where in sight.
.O'Connor (scliool nurse), Beta
Wasn't this supposed to be a
48-
•
Chi Society, Louis Graziano, The
hour mileathon that was to last
Circle, and Champagnat House
until Sunday afternoon? .
III.
It was. But by the time Walter
However, Vandervoort was
I[
-.
·
Henry completed his 19th rnile at
surpthrist:d rtat thf ethlacMk of_ stupport
.
9:46
a.m. the eight runners had
on
e pa
o
e
ans com-
already decided to cancel the
munity. "Only two
.
or three
1
--
.
--
_
-
.
·
.
.
Dr.
George•H
0
ciop~r;chairm
.
ari onhe Divi_sion
·
or
Na)ural
Science
at
the tesri,;,onial ~inner held .in his honor
remainder of the run. After
19
handicapped
-
persons showed up
·
·
·
·
hours,
13 minutes and 160 miles,
for the start. Sure, it was cold,
I
·
tf
e's
tiD1o nial. Dinner
-
He Id
:~~.~vio~~
'"f~ ••
~~i~:~~
t{!a14sl~J~i.~!~~;:~·~~:
·
.
·.
.
,
·cc-;,
.
.
~
.
-
·
.
hovered around
30 degrees with
and some even ran with us."
.
-
_
-
.
.
_
On
Ftiday evening April
4,
a genetics
is
·
Dr .
.
Hooper s
·
.
Phllhps,_ Pet~r ~!e~s! Mane
.
winds up to
45
mph. John Van-
Along
with
Vandervoort,
"surprise"
:
Testimonial
·
Dinner
.
specialty)
ghosted
·
in
the Quatroc10~c~1, ~1rg~1a Sher- dervoort, organizer and leadoff
Henry, Schools, and Honan was
was held
in
honor of Dr. George background.
.
.
.
Jll!lD,
Patricia
;
Tillou, De
_
borah runner of the event, had a dif-
Will
Morrison and three Dutchess
i
B. Hooper. J)r. Hooper,
.
who is·
-
The dinner attended
.
by more V~Hano. 1'.hre_e-Year Degree
,•
rerent story.
students _
,
Gil
Anderson, Torn
1
-
•
•
presentlythe
.,
chainnan
_
of. Jhe than 70 students and
-
faculty_was B~ology MaJors: Renee_ Bernard,
"It.
was injuries. Walter
Bennett and Jim Iori - who
-
!_-
· ·
·
Division ofNatural Sciences;-will high-lighted by the installation of R;1c~ard
_
V~lano!tI-
En-
(Henry) twisted his ankle run-
volunteered after Jim Gillen. ,Jay
,
betenninating his seC!ondthree-
the National Science
·
f{onorary viro°:ffient~l Science._ Chrysoula
c
riing near the Champagnat Doyle and Brian Costine changed
t
.year
_
ch;µrmartship at the end of Society
7
Sigma Zeta. Dr. Marvin Kom1S, Michael Labickas, Beth parking lot after the lights had
their minds about rum,ing.
(
this semester.
·
or. Hoope.r will Stephens;
.
National
Vice-
Mars~;
Mar~ar~t. Petruny. gone out at
5
a:m. Dave Schools
Coach Rich Stevens
,
originally
continue as
:
a professor of President of Sigma
.
Zeta from Chemistry: V1rgmia Albano, also hurt his foot but vowed to
opposed to the idea
,
pledged his
"
Biology.-
. .
. _
.
·
. ·
Malone College, Cariton; Ohio, Barbara l3ergin, Thomas Cor-
.
ke.ep running until the others
s~pport with
$25
worth of B11rg1..·r
Dr. RobertRehwoldt, presently was the installing officer along . nish,,
..
Louis Graziano, Mary
·
quit.
Jim
,
Honan dropped out
Kmgs. Unable to eat the burgers,
the director of the Environmental
-
with
.
Marist student; Chrysoula Kolor, Martin Soyka. Three-Year shortly before
2
.
a.m. after
-
the runners settled for ~ranges
Science Program will
-
be
.
sue-
·Komis'.
The following juniors and Degree in Chemistry: MaryLou complaining of seeing things.
·
We
and hot chocolate provided by
ceeding Dr
.
Hooper as divisional seniors in the science division
'
Gantert,
Thomas
.
Lynch
:
just couldn't continue. Injuries,
Saga.
'
chairman of
.
the
-.
Natural were inducted into Sigma Zeta:
.
Phys
_
ics:
.
John
.
·Anderson,
·.
the c6ld, cramps; ... " his voice
Afterwards, Vandervoort
Sciences. Dr.
,
Rehwoldt spoke Biol~gy
Majo_rs: . Ant~ony ~rrence
Hin:IeY,, Robert _Levin, trailed off.
pointed out, "People think we
•·
and commended
,Dr.
Hooper on' Basc1ano; Mathew Bntt,
.
Olm
v.
Mic~ael
.
Sass~tte,
Richard
The purpose of the run was to
failed, but I consider it a succ~ss
his dedicated service t" the Burkhart, Salvatore Caradonna, Saxtin, John Wright.
raise money for the handicapped
because our goal ~as to raise
students and -faculty of Marist Ja~es Cassaro, Carrol Emmel,
·
~
index of 3.0 in ?attir~l students at Marist. Funds raised money for the handicapped, not
College
:
· :
:
.
·
.,
•
,
·
-
D'Ylght Ev~ns, Thomas H~n- scie?~e
,
a nd ~tbem1;1tic~, m are to be used in the construction
to break a world record."
Junior;
·
James
.
•
Vallarelli,
·
drikson, Marre ~e_lly, Ruth Klem,
·
additwn to a cummula~i~e mdex of ramps and bannisters in the
Are there plans for another ·
presented
Dr.
Hooper with an
'
.
Karl
.
Kreuger, Frank Kudlo, of
:
2.75
.
a~e . prtreqms1tes for new Fontaine library.
.
mileathon? "Next year we will
honorary plaque;. The plaquii Edwax:d
.
McKenna,
•
·
~arbara membership
m
~igma Zeta.'
Each runner had hoped to
run for 24 hours for another
., "
included an
-
in~cription
.
with a Murphy,
_-
.
Barbara Nucc.io, Janet
.·
complete
48
miles for a total of
worthy cause. Maybe we'll get
.
.
"Drosophila!'
:
·
:
·
· (.DrosophHa
...
Orlowsk_i,:}~hn.f>avlakis,. Brue~
.
.
•
.
,
.
.
.
.
384.
Sponsors were asked to
ten or eleven runners this time."
--
'"CC
'
<
·
~
-"iif?iln
i!t
'·
CoUrt
:cprz-ces;
·
~~ll~:1•::~~:~•::~r~:~;;
~~.~iifu:~Y,
needs
.
is •
good
Full-Time Marist Students
$25.00
.
(family);
.
•
t\1/o hours - $10.00.
.
.
.
.·
$LOO.
·. .
Outside Memberships
~
$30.00
:
Matches
·
(COACH MUST BE
· ·
Faculty, Staff and Employees -
(individual). $50.00 (family)
,
.
PRESENT)
_
per match
-
$25.00.
Year
.
Round
.
Membership
Guests of Members:; weekdays
-
.
All memberships expire the
.,., -(Calendar Year)
·
-- $10.00'
(in~: -
$1.00
Saturdays and
·
Sundays first class day of the Fall
·
dividual) $20.00 · (family).
$2.00.
· _
Semester except for Faculty and
·,
(For· those
'
Faculty, Staff and
Non-Members (per hour, per Staff, which are for the
·calendar
Employees who already have court) - $5.00.
·
'
year.
.
.
.
membership cards, they will pay
_
Use of Ball Thrower (per hour
.
Three courts_may be reserved
only the difference in
·
fees)
w-own
_
tennis balls -
$LOO
.
(per up to one week m advance. Three
Summer
and
Part-Time hour w-Marist tennis balls $2.00. courts will be
·
open, play limited
Students .: $10.00.
·
High School Teams - per to one hour
.
when
people are
Alumni
::
$15.00
(individual) practice session - three courts for
-
waiting.
I
.
1.
C(unposers Enc~uraged
.
--
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
ByT0111myK~vy
. ·
.ticipant
a
copy
of
.
.
the copyrights and
·
publishing laws,
, "Songwriter's Han~book".
.
The and is probably worth the entry
.
·
Amateur
,
\vriiers·
now have a
'#8Y
ofgetting
·
t~efr songs beard
·
.
.
by some of the top people
in
the
recording
·-
industry
by
.
simply
.
,
sending in a cassette taP,e
:
Entry
.
/
forms are a:vailable at .the Radio
:
·
·
:Shack store in Poughkeepsie, arid
-
.
the
,
counter opposite
·
Fireside
·
.
·
Lounge·
n:i
Champagnat ijall
;
.
·
Ari
__
iinportant
·-
aspect of
,
the
festival is that it awards prizes in
.
·.
·
several categories;
:
and
.
is
.
·
in-.
terested
in-
tqe originality of die
.
·
,
.
'
song andthelyricalGonterit,;; not
·
.
:
in
.
elabQrate
.i
vocal
'
and
.
mu!lical
.
. .
arrangements:
.
. .
·
..
.
· :
The
.
song
-
·
categories are as
·
follows:
.
Rock,: Country,· Folk;
: ;.
'
:
Easy_ listening
.
-~
Middle of
·
the
.
\
Road;
·Rhythm
and Blues, and a
.
·,
-
l'Judges
.
·
I)~ci
_
sio
_
n
.
•
Optlon.~•
(Mani
:
•
l!
.
ongs
.
.
:
)ire
--
hard
;.
to
categorize
;
)
.·.
:
::•: /: =·.
·
= .
.
. .
.
.
The
.
'.
tCltaL
.
priz~
.
money
.
=-
is
.
.
_$1~,776spi:ead,:<>yer
finalists and
·.
0O
semi-:finalists
.•
in
:
:each· c·ategory; _
.. :
::4
5
g{fl:,ir.~t,~~
?
:-,
;.!~~~~?
handbook provides
.
valuable
.
fee,
·
·
·
information
pertaining
to
·
.
•
Getextra·
·
_
si*pgcks
forthe
·
-
.
weekend.
-
·
. ·,
An
..
eritry
;'
fee
··
of
·
$10:85 is
.
required
;:-,
~u(
.that
sµm_
:
could
,·
.
easilybe
·
used
-
upwttJwutr~ults
·
AVAILABLE:
.
AT F
.
RANK'S REST.AUR
.
ANT
&·~
:
·
.
if
,
you
;
trf,ed
;
,
to.· g~t)•o1µ
\
so~g~~
·
·
·
·
.·
,
-•..
,
. .
•
.
.
.
.
,-
.
.
. ,
,.
..
. .
.
.
.
•
·
=
heard:Also,Jhe America_p Song·
,
;
:
·
MARIST. RATHSKELLER
, ,
Fesuvar·
,,
w111
'-:~
se11d
'.
each
':
par~
·
------------------..... ---------------
.:
-
~;._
·
;_
;
-~
-
:
/•·;
-
:.·
,
:,:
_
:
:
·
:
·
.
.:
.
.
'
:
·
-
:.,-'
>
·
~
:
~
·:?
;
>
'
:"
·:
.
·-:
'.
;
~
.
•
'
\
.:.
..
I.
\\\6
Leave Your Head io Us!
~!!s'!~~j
\ HAIRCUTTING
' BLOW DRYING
S
6 with
STREAKING, FROSTING.
&
PERMANENT WAVING
.
Marist ID
CALL 454-9239 for your
·
appointment now
ON THE MAIN MALL
3 LIBERTY STREET
(Above Capitol•Bakery)
Entrance Around Corner
Frank
·
's Restauran't
Draft Beer
8oz. glass
25~
Pitcher·
s2.oo
•
•
0
0
◄
·
.,..
/
l
\. /
·C,
I
i
I
i.
j
l
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l ' .
\:
! . . -~.
~·~
i
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1,_ {.,}'
PAGE 8 .
THE CIRCLE
.
APRIL 10, 1974
14.8.1
14.8.2
14.8.3
14.8.4
14.8.5
14.8.6
14.8.7
14.8.8
-·
··
~
·
,
•
• •
'
r
• • • ·
;
...
.
. /
;
_
.
.
'.
THE
VOLUME14,)lUMBER 8
.
· .-
.
·
··
--
'.
~'MA.RIST
COLLEGE. POUGHKEEPSIE;NEW YORK 12601
.
'
.
.
' '
.
.
.
.
,.
.
,
•
•
,
'
-
.
' , ·
,
·
.-
·
.
, • , , , ' a .
•
,.
.
r'
••
•
,
,
,·,
•
·,
;
, '
• ' •
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·,-
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··
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·:
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~'::::'==
===::::====:::::•::
·
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,
.,.:.
....
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=====::::::==::::~~~--..... ...;;.;;_...;,.;.__...,.._..., .. ~.:.... ...
,
....
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-
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·
;
,:,_,;,.
·
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.
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..
- - - - - - - ~ ~ _ . ; , . ,
.
•
·_:.
·
.
,
"
.
•
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f '
PAGE2
Director of Counseling Services, Cagle Moore.
AJ)road Progi_.alll
.
.
-
.
'
.
.
Provides For Growth
APRIL 10, 1975
1
Advisors 'Minimize
,
i
Disa.dvantages
terested in becoming Student
Advisors should get in touch with
. Ii1.the past the Student Advisor Cagle Moore in the Counseling
Program has been tied to the Office.
Orientation Day Program. But
Orientation Day itself is still in
the Student Advisor is there to do
the planning stage, however it
By
Jo~_M. Reilly
1
more than just say hello to fresh-
will
be
different than last ·year.
men on. Orientation: Day.· The
Cagle Moore said they're still not
purpose of the Student Advisor is sure what form
·it
will take.
to make the Freshman aware of
Moore said many -schools are
what's going on here at Marist.
faced . with. the problem· of
Cagle Moore of the Counseling
Orientation . Day. He · said 'be, is
Office. sees the Student-Advisors constantly receiving·letters from
as•· being available to help . new other colleges about how they're
students "handle the system". changing the ·form of· their
They should be available to
i
in-
Orientation day and were won-
form the ·-students of deadlines, 'dering what kind of Orientation
and help the students with course we have here at Marist.;
·
· registration and similar matters.
· Moore
·
said he . · and ,Fred
Student. . Advisors . can help Lainb~rt have· thrown· around a
minimize the disadvantage of few. ideas about what type of
being a new student.
•
Orientation da---Y,to have this year.
Mr .. Moore feels that all fresh~ Different types . of Orientation .
. men.can use a.Student _Advisor to days suffer· from different
. • help learn
the:
ropes; Naturally .shortcomings. For example some
some students will need a Student Orientations feature mixers arid
··'Advisor more than· others.· This · parties. He said that in. thistype
by Genevieve Fitzgerald
discovered the visas •in the- one problem: Marist tries to p~st year the:re_ were. more
.
than . of. setup ther~. maybe too much
/
registrar's office. The Telegraph arrange a set-up where the MAP sixty . Student Advisors.:: Moore
_,
emphasis on '.the soc.ial side of
· «MAP exists for students,". · Company had - refused . to send student can come in contact with said thaFof this sixty about two.. college life. · ·
·
·
·
. .
MAP Director· Dr. Joseph them because the uniyersity natives, when the university·does · thirds kept in touch with their_
Last year ·the Orientation day
'Belange_r says, ''as an op- _,.owed them money._~
notprovidelodging,OnlyinSpain. students. The Stµdent Adyisor was. an attempt to expose new
portunity · for intellectual and'
Money is · becoming an in'-
do the students Uve with families, · Program seemed to work better students to Marist. It was set up
em~tional growth; to begin ~o creasingly important problem. though there
it
works out well, for resident students. than for to show the new students where
· understand and assimilate The dollar is worth less and less
· In Europe_; unlike America, .the : commuters. Cagle Moore felt this everything is,. and to introduce
another culture:_"
_
in Europe and Africa, and {ewer etnphasi~ is on scholarship, n·ot . was: because_ it was· probably the students to the people who run
Americans -'are generally students are, going abroad next on t~aching, The students have to · easier
·for.
resident students to the. school: The. Orient;ition Day
regarded as tourists, and .un- year because it is harder to .af-
learn to do much·more work~oil · keep iri touch. ·
· , ·.
·for-
September 3; 1975 may be a
welcome Jn ·many universities ford. Only 18 students; 10 of them their own,to bemofe self-reliant,. . Student Advisors for t.hi~ year · day
to
challenge · the new
abroad. The Marist Abroad foreign language' majors, are and self-motivated. This "rite.of ·wilLbe asked
fo
play a greater stu_dent's idea of education. To
. Program "is not a travel agen- going to Europe, where 28 went passage,'
1
as Director:. Joseph . role in assisting Freshmen.than help the student-become aware of
cy," Dr. Belanger says. Most abroad tbls .year.
..
.
Belanger quoted, is painful and · ever before; Mr. Moore men- -what Marist is. This would' be
students that go to Europe and
There has also _been
a
shift
.
ih
awkward. at first, but is part of tionedthat they
·would
likefo look done in smaller group sessions ..
..
Africa adjust to the different . plans of study towards a more t.he growing experience. Most into the·m,atter of perhaps giving · Cagle Moore said hopefully with
systems, and learn from· tnem. practical program; away from a studentir adj11st to the new .. cre_ditfor _
being a Student·Ad-
variety.· and substance . the
·
.
.. ·
·
Th,ere: ..... are, .• ·complications,. ·strict1iberal ~rts tradition ... Next: /systems·and the·newcuUure,wen;.· visor::
M)h'e.
present•-time ·the ... ,Qrientation .Day. will.•be·. a:wor-
however,
wheri de'aling with some .. year only-, cine. Literature _stildenf : . ·making the '.year:a, succe·ss, · . :·. ,·: Stud~nt ':Advisor'. Progriim--is all .. thwhile.·experienc'e:. : "":., ;, ;
of the universities abroad.
is going abroad .. Other . years
·
·
·
, •
: · · V(?ltinteei:.'
Upp~1-i
Classnien in.: ,
·
-;
< .• --
·
Communications, especially. in there were six· or seven: MAP
· .. '
·
'
· ' ·; •·
· · ·
· · ·
Africa, was a problem this year. also lacks a good placement for
The visas for the .two students communications students who
, who wa~ted to go. to Lagos, · · vish to study abroad, though they
Nigeria,
never came; and in his are looking for new possibilities
meeting in January to,discuss the for '76.
.
coming year, Dr. Belanger
Residence still is the number
Displays
Explained
For Gallery
L~unge
By Susan Dunderdale
usually gives a short talk about
the paintings after the reception
·The Gallery Lounge_ art to acquaint the audience-with the
exhibitions _
are seen _by almost works of art.
everyone on. campus, but very
Artists who exhibit here, at
few people are aware of what Marist are encouraged to obtain
happens behind the scenes in insurance on their paintings in
. preparation for an e.xhibition. · case of damage or theft. If a
'·
Gallery Lounge was .originally 1i8inting is damaged or destroyed·
:set up/ in Donnelly Hall until Marist
is
usually not held liable,
Champagnat was -~ompleted in but in the past there have been
1965. After that time showings occasions when works were
were begun in the present damaged or· stolen and Marist
- '-location in the Campus Center. was forced ·to· give · some
· The artists who are exhibiting monetary · replacement which
in the Lounge are booked one amounted to several hundred
year
in.
advance come to Marist dollars on one partictilar oc-
through. various. channels. Some . casion,
·./
-
Graduation .Plans·
Set
With less than two months until evening., The •band for'· the affair The ceremony will begin at 2 p:m.
Graduation, the . Class of· 1975 is is still under consideration. . . _ Other activities still under
moving quickly in formulating
Friday's activities• include a consideration are the activities
"Senior Week 1975." Tne seqiors day of activities at the Villa for Wednesday evening and
will return to Marist College on .Bagliari. For a minimar cost of 5 Thursday, afternoon.
Wednesday, evening, May
14
1
to · dollars ·a person, the se.n_iors will-
Seniors and' faculty ·members
kick. off. their activities. The have· the, use •. of the· Villa's who are planning to attend the
Office of_ Campus Life has agreed · facilities; inc!µding .
~
·
.
pool,
as· senior formal are asked to . •sign
to let, the resident seniors use · well · as a , buffet lunch. Upon up and leave a deposit which is
their · former rooms •for
r
con-. returning in. the late afternoon, a. non-refundable. A table will be
venience sake, On. Thursday cocktail party has been· planned . setup in front of,the cafeteria on
evening, the senior~ wiJl hold for, the .s~nior~, faculty ari~ ad: Thursday; April 10 during the
their formal dinner dance at.the , µiinistration,· as wen· _·as . the · dinner. hour, on .Friday; April
11
Villa Bagliari in Highland. Th~ parents_ of those seniors y,rho during th~ lµrich hour, and on
cost.will
be
35 dollars a.couple,. might have arrived.
·Monday,·
April 14. during the
and will include a cocktail hour
Preceeding the graduation· lunch. and dinner. hour and on
with hot hors d'ouevres, a family ceremony; ·the seniors
a.re·
·wednesday( April '16 -during the
style dinner of lasagna and prime'. arranging:with Saga· for ·a · lunch a~d dinner.hour.' · \.
ribs, and an open- bar for the: 'graduate's ·champagne brunch:.
• hear .about · M&rist . and. contact·
•
According· to Mrs. Fisher it is
· Mrs.- FiMer,. while others. are -quite costly to the artist to exhibit
contacted l>y-Mrs. Fisher, and his or her .works because of the
Mrs. Plaut.
cost· ofmaterials,·insurance and
At :times students' work has trucking.
It .is therefore·· a
· ·· been shown for
a:
special-. reason privilege for us here at Marist
to
such
as
a graduation··showing. have an artist take on. the ex- ·
Aside.from the student work:all pense sowe may see his creation.
the artists are professional. , Because
.
of ·. some -· recent
Many of the artists 1:1re from this .exhibits ·several people.· have·
__
area- including .Woodstock an(l quest~oned. ~e,;Crit~ri~ µsed_. in:
: other nearby. towns, while some choosing . which , a~twill . be
· are-• from.:New.-York ·. City and• allowe.d-cto show thell' works; The
::,Long Island;
·'
•· ;,/ · · ·
·.,ii.: ,
: ..
-; ;:
:'c~it~ri!l seeins'_tf be a s_u~Jecti,ve
· · .. '!be artisUs not ·paid, for- his
:
on~
Jilth the main · f~~em,ent .
· exhibit
but
is
given
a receptionJo. Qemg ;: a '\\'.o~k ?.that . .is.',_not ob-.· .
·
whic.h<tlte_
·
public
:,_-is>.
irivit~. _:jectiona~Ie,.:,,.:As·.head
~f the art
R_efr'eshments consisting·. of· and:JJ)u5!c:depaJ.ime~,t~eJip_~ ....
cookies are · served; The
artist
decision IS .left
to
M.rs, fISher •. , , .
'
'~
~
·:,,: ~.:··\<·.
•
.·· .. :'_,
·
·._·
\r·'
~-_:·::u·:'. ;'.•
..
r~-~··.>--~:-'·-
. -~ew.'paiiit~ngs
~
~he
c,~n.tlJJDi~g
p-r.~sr,e~sio~:
Of:
t.~e
~ ~1.~~P_!de} ~~w on·
di~piay·.-thru Aprll
.39: ;
•
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APRIL 10, 1975
Sullivan To Give
Recital-
I
By-Basil Charlamow
natural
as
possible.
• .,
Sophistication
is not sought after.
On
Sunday, April
13,
at 4 p.m., To
him,
music has a life of its
John Sullivan, Marist College owri, who's potential° can be
music teacher, will give an organ measured by the degree to which
recital in . the Vassar College the performer exerts his coaxing.
Chapel. This
will
be the first time "Let music
be
what it is.
Let
it
a teacher,,.. representing this speak through you, and not vice
college will perform at Vassar. versa." What he means can be·
John,Sullivan's repertoire will best understood through an
include various . chorales ·and analogy, the theatrical actor and
fugues by Bach,· Buxtehude, his role. The role ·should speak
Frank, Viene and hindemith. .
through the actor, and not the
Mr. Sullivan, a-Marist Gollege actor through the role.
alumn'us; originally majored · in
Being a wen rounded man of
English. He later intensified his the Arts, dabbling in painting and
concentration on music, an early, poetry, our niusic teacher still
childhood interest.
·
·
·
finds time to practice three hours
Upon · graduating Marist he a day.
_.
·
· attended se_veral prominent · Mr.· Sullivan looks upon . the
music
schools
including recital as a goal, a challenge.
It
. N.Y.M.C., Manhattanville,. and will
be
his first solo performance.
·N.Y.U.
The preparation involved, as
When conducting his classes, always, generates epormous
John Sullivan · believes that the gra~ication ·and. satisfaction.
student should be as free . and.
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
Musi<.·.
professor. John Sullivan.··
Representatives
To
MEB.A
Seeks
Discuss Opportunities
New
M
em b'e rs
Twenty sbde~:cal, slate, 16cal qualifying exams and cumnt The Town of Poughkeepsie Police
. . .
. .
and private. law enforcement openings. Interviews will not be
Department, the Bureau of
· By
John
M,-·
Reilly
the buildings. Ther~ are Just ~ot agencies will
be
participating in a conducted.
· · ·
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms,
:
.
enough people available tQ pick ""Criminal Justice and Law
Each agency will have a
the New York State Police and
The Marist. Environmental up the ~pers.
·
.
. Enforcement career Day" to be
display, either in the gallery the Federal Drug Enfqrcement
Better_mt1nt. and /Awarene_ss .. For the futµre MEBA plans a held at Marist., College on
lounge or in the adjacent fireside
Administration.
~~ttee, better Iviown by 1~ .. Marjst Arbor. Day. after t~e Tuesday, AprilJ5 from 10 a.m. _ 4 lounge. Lum;h is scheduled from
Thepublic is invited to attend.
mtb~ls, M.E.B·A:· (MEBA) is Easter break.
~
this day dif-
p.m., in the Call,lpus Center.
12 - 1
p.m.
Invitations have been sent to 25
looking for;n~~ membe~s.
ferent tr~es will
be
planted , Co-sponsored by the Office of
Jon Wicklund; director of area high schools and colleges.
Past_ acttv1ttes of this group around the campus by th.e group. Career Development and the placement and career ad~
Wayne Thatcher of Fishkill, a
have mcluded lectures, and a
MEBA ~egan last semester history and political science visement at John Jay College of senior majoring in criminal
work researc_h dc:!Y· The work ~der the .. mfluence of Dr._ ~al department, the program -is
Criminal Justice, New York City
justice, is serving as/ student
·· research day mclude~ work doue . Mic~elson and the group consists supported by a grantfrom the
s
&
will speak about opportunities in
coordinator .
. on>.Jhe Hudson River Sloop. o~ fifteen ~tudents.
H Foundation.
law enf~~cement at 2 p.m. in t~e
The. ·crJminal_ justice career
MEBA also co-sponsored the
The Co-Ch~rpersons
o! ·
the
According· to Marist Career, Campus Cent~r. theatre. Hts day should be of mterest not only
recent Poverty Meal· along with group are .
Jun_
.Vallarelli and Counselor . Lawrence Snyder, . appe~ranc~. 'Y111 conclude t_he
to those with criminal justice
:Free :University and the World ,Chr_ys<>ula Konus. Son1e
.
o_f _the . each.agency has been requested cnmmal 3ustice l_ecture. sen~s majors but to all those students
Hunger Awaren~ss Group; . ." ,,..,.· mem!J.ei:s of th~ gro~p are_})wight to send a-representative
-who
can ... sponsored by Manst durmg the who would benefit from exposure
At the.present time MEBA has Evans, Rich . Valmot~1,:: '.fom discuss the nature ·of career' past year and supported by the S .. to. the _ various agencies par~
started a· paper • recycling Lynch. a~d · Mary
Lo~
~a~t~rt. . opportunities in his respective
&
H F?~dation.. .
ticipating.
-program in· Gregory
and .Anyone interested m JOlnt!lg field, as well as to provide
Pat1;1cipants will mclude s~ch
Sheahan. They've had trouble MEBA ;~~ould contact Jim literature and information about
agencies as the Secret Service,
with . recycling in .Leo and Vallarelli m Sheahan
219..
,
Champagnat due to the sizes of
/
1
· - -
•1
C011centration Offered
.
·-
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.
,
Students who ar-:i interested in · mutual ·appreciation of cultural
careers in an · urban . setting
differences.
should note that
the
Modern
Iri. addition to opportunities for
Language Department is offering
graduate study and employment
·a concentration/on Bilingual in several educational positions,
Education-TESL. These courses
college graduates with
a
prepare a. person to meet
1
the background
in
Bilingual
. needs of the Hispanic population; Education can seek employment
.
by instilling
i:l
greater ap-
in such fields as social work,
Rreciation and knowledge of their . travel,
commerce,
health,
·
cultural
contributions
and
·
foreign service, communication
·problems .. This is · an essential
and criminal justice. · ·
background for those who are
Next semester, Fall '75,
concerned with the future of our
"Spanish Speaking American in
schools, our cities and our nation.
the Urban School" will
be
offered
study the Spanish speakin·g
students in the contemporary
scene · by
analyzing · their
historical'• background
and
cultural contributions.
other courses that have been
offered already on campus have
been "Intr~duction to .Bilingual
Education" ·and "Civilization of
Puerto Rico."
In the spring of '76 "Materials
and Problems in · Bilinguat
.Education"
will be introduced:
Also, there will be a fieldwork
course, where the Marist student
will get involved in a Bilingual
classroom, observing teaching, ·
tutoring and counselling.
Basically, Bilingual Education
in the Sociology Department as
, . is
when two languages are used
part of the Bilingual Education
· as ·a means · of instruction
in
a·
Concentration. Thi~ course will
classroom. When
a
child first . - - - - - - - - - - - - • / - .
- - - - - - - - - - - - .
enters school · speaking only
Spanish, •English should be
. taught as a second language. But
- the native · language, · Spanish,
should
not be
neglect_ed.
Educators have realized that the
WHIZ M E ~ ~
,~u
THRff SESSIONS
~
/
■..
I. lune 16-luly 25 (6weeks)
II. lune 30-luly 25 (4 weeks)
1
Ill. luly 28-Aug. 21 (4 weeks)
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
U,1dergraduate ond
graduate
courses
fo_r men
and
women of
oll ages
Arts, Music, Sciences
, Master of Arts in-Teaching
Master of ~rts in Humanities
_.. ·child has five or six years of
knowledge . and experience froin ·
the home: By building upon the
child's background, . schools will.
encourage · a . positive · self-image, .
as well.· as. a higher academic
IS SAGA'S--VERSION OF THE FRIZ-BEE
FREE
WITH ANY $2.QO
PURCHASE
IN
THE RAT.
· STARTiNG MONDAY 4/14/75
, Teacher's ~ertification Courses
Theme Studies: Generations
Humanities and the Professions
Jose Limon Dance Company Residency
Writer's Workshop
Learning Disabilities
Women's Sports-Track and field
record ... ··
·
In
1968, the Bilingual Education
Act
.
was passed which reversea
. :the fifty year old policy of only
· one language··. instruction. Now
the -.. federal . . government
. UNBREAKABLE PLASTIC, TOURNAMENT SIZE
i
WEIGHT .
FLIES
MORE
THAN 300'
IF PURctiAs_ED SINGLY w'ITHOUT $2.00 QRDER
THEY COsT·.so ·oR'.2 PTS:
recognizes the ne_ed for Bilingual
· Education
>
pi;ograms where
English dominant students. can.
learn: Spanish· : and·•·· Spa¢.sh-:
speaking studentslearn English:·
START FLINGING
_, ·1Thiskind"ofeducationalsystem
. , ;
produces
l~llrr,!gual.
people.·~~•._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__.
..:..,
.,
.
··,
. Club Management Program
~
.
The Monte·ssori Method
The New Readiug
.
i
PAGE4
• CIRCLE
.VOLUME 14 Marlst College, Poughkeei,sle,
N.Y.
oft~~~
iiollege .CJ!tCLE
~
the weekly newspaper of the students
.
o ege
and
JS
published throughout the
school
year ex-
g,USlv~ of: vacation periods· by the Southern Dutchess News Agency
na~pmgers, New York.
. •
-
•
Co-Editors
Photography Editor
Sports Editor -
Layout
Staff
Business Manager
Adver:tising Manager
.Gregory Conocchioli and Irene
Ross
. AiAdolfi
.
. ·Rich Burke.
· Linda Franco and Mary Beth Pfeiffer
Greg Welsh
Tom McDonald
staff: Peter Allen? Jani_ce Colleran, ~hoda Crispell, . Susan -
Dunderdale, Genevieve Fitzgerald, F'attier 'Leo Gallant Charles
Garre_t, _Joe Gigliotti, TQmmy Kelly, David Livshlri, Paul .
M_angieri, Th~mas M~Ternan, John Reilly, ·Cathie. Russo,
Richard :Schnei~er, Julie Schott, Rei~ Scott, Joe Sexton, Karen.
Tully, Rick ~Vhitsell.
.
. - ·
·
THE CIRCLE
APRIL IO, 1975
I
. I
- I
, <,.
letters.
Io
the
Edito·,s•
I -
- •
~
Re~c-tion_s:-;to ·· Editorial::
..
-.....
'.
_
-
/'.
·-~-;-,-
·initt~s:i:v,
OU.'
pf
odu~edian: eight . :·
~6eca1.1S~:
Without ··
lfthe -
reid~r•§
.
.. page. edition of_ the_ Gi!<;Ie:,~~-27 :co~fideri~_e
.
Jn : thLacc;uracy,- ..
.
.
. .
. ·
~
:: .. ··• . _ . ; Marfh;:where.m t~9se._pages:do.
i
tru~ulri~sst~sin.ceritf
.
~f :
~e •
. _Dea-1.: Edit_ors:• .,,
:· .... · ,;_ yo11::pres1:n~
:J~~ ..
evicl_en~e,._to :·paper'.s~· producers~ is: seriously -·- _
B
. .
0
. ,
•
~ow- e~itor1al, . M8:mpulation . 1end . credibility
,
,to ,.the ,• c,harges · • eroded.
~•Good faith . with· the
·
•· e •
· :·
y,lµch: appe.a~ed
~
;tlie. 27 March . you :made .. directl~>aga~s.t
_-
the. _ reader.i. is;. the 'foundation< of ·,au
' -
e
·
.
lSSue o!th~ CirGle, is. an example pa~!cular, facul~y:·member
0
~cl
·
;jOUrJ!~li.sjn~'!Oi-thy .onhe=name:<
. ,, ·
:.°f .. editom~l ~omn1ent . of , th_e ;.md1rectly a_gamst: the
·
-Int.er- · By· every: consiaeratiori. ofgood
M
.. ·
·-'t'' ,•, · ,._
.
,P09t~t1;:_aHb1"e.;N?t
0
,nlydoes:1t;_:ttouse~_o~cll? ,_,•_
::-~'
faith'anewspaperfaconstrained.
,, . a:
n···,,
·
1p•
u• ·a· · .
.
.
·t.•1•0· .•· -'
.
.
fly m, ~e face_ of th.e,ca~ons ~f.c J,believ
.
e ~e editorial
staff
of ··to·:be·•truthful.lt: is riot to be
- . ' .· . ' . . .·. ·.
.-.. '. . . . ' .. ·
.
.
' ··' ·.··.·. ·-.··.·.n.,
.• _
·.·. ..
professional Journali_sm but lt"
i
llle: Circle _ha:s:an \Ob!ig~tion}o. excusecHorJack ofthoroug!fuess ..
'
,
...
.
.. _ .
•
}~sults
·
the
.read~r.ship, o,kthe
0
preseIJtev1dence·to:support:1ts •,oraccuracywithinitsconkol,or•.;.;.;,c
~
_
, Ci~cle . by .· assuming tf!at. such 'charges.· lf)hls cannot be dorie~ - -
.
failure ,to : obtain . commaniF of
_.
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. , . . .
.
. . .
dnvel. ·can masquerad~ ,as
th~·
th~ staff · should >publish an •these essential qualities/~:.(Code: .
Th
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•
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pursui~_of truth. _; . .:-;,,
,
•- . editorial; apology.to· the faculty
of Ethics,, American Society:
. . · e~~,IS a . arge . lll!er- hanging in the. Dean, of Students ?ffJCf:.WJl!~h
Particularly_
offensive
are ·
(1) · .member and
:
to
•the,Jnter-House_. ; of News a er;Edifors ); · · .
t~
.
-
. r~a~; In a_con~1c~ it
~
~sually µte stronger.force which gives me-the unfoun_ded·f~ck on a f~gulty:,-,Council/and'the _writer(s)
.
of the ., ... ;;•
,
; :.':,-~
f:.c< ::
;,~Si· cer ( '•
, flr~t.
;An~ withthism ~lild.tll~ editors:would:like,to comm~nton tl!e·\men.iber.: and
'
(2).:Jhe
,
'equally ,<broadside '!Mani ulatiori'.Uihould:. · · . ,\, _'\; .:
,:;;:>L
.
,ct···
.P ·-s:e
y, .· ..
editona! of_th~ last edition e1_1tit11:d
Ma~pw11tion.,_ ; .· ·. ~: · .·
··
., "''. ··.unsupp'oi-te'd ':i''asserUon':,;c.of;:::resign'i:froin i'th~
'
'staff
.
of:'.the:~,··,
~~·/_,:';{::'cJ·~':':
J::-ElJ,]~.r.<!.A•~Co-~?
•, An eµitor1al m the qRCLE deallitgmµi the, dec1S1_on°.·of the Inter -.: ; "c. o.rruption
,,'an.
cl
de_ ·.c
.. eit w.·. iii.·c. h. ·..-a·r·c:1e ':':.
:
~•.· .,. ;,"'
t:• ·
,.•
c
'/
<-.:
:,
!'.•,'.! ··. ,,;
·
- , .;'
1
:.:rt, ... '"·~--::,, •
1' "t ·,::,l'dH. ~t:Jl9Elcr-,o_ttQile·.:
1
Hous
Co
·1s1
f
c
·tt'•
th.
·11
ti .. f·B·' · H .. · ·
··· · · · ·· ·
· ··
·
· · ·
······ ✓,,--•
-
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,
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•
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.
• . • . , ,
.
ner- ouse ounc
.
.. e , unci e ec 19n> Omtm ~e Oil
e_a OC8 On~
enoi! ouse· ·exist·
in some ·campus·,·coin~.:
·'
.·I
i(sk
for•.'tfus rfillignatlon(s).,' '.·· · ·
'
'
r -.
-
')v
'
··:/f:'
·
'.' '' ··
has crea~d somewhat_ of a stoqn on .campus. .
·
> , . , ,
.
· , ·
,
·
· · •' ...
,.
,·.· ,
··,
· · ·
·
· " · · ·
· · · · · · ·
; The editori~l dealt with tlie factthat a planned appeal of the decisio]l
·
.
did not take place and what we were told were the reasons for
this
·
· ·
· · ·
· ,
decision notto appeal.
. .
. . .
. '
.
.
-
. ,· stuaents would be the' ·closing
of.:
so. concerned with tiie principles
.
We thought the·decision should have been appealed and we still think ,_
·
, •·: .. Fra. nk's bar,: ac
.. r. oss th. e ..
§t
reet .. ,.·. of ...
fr.
eedom
.. · · .. o. f_ th¢" .pr. ess at this ..
so. For no other reason t'-an
it
would have brought out and revealeilall
··
·.
·
, · But the excitement woulcf most pomt;
'L
believe the · faculty
the facts of the decisio,!.
,
.·
,
· .. · , Dear Editors: . :
. . , .
.
likely be short-lived' as other bars memo er can dear his name· by .
News sources, and there were more than one, told us that the
J.tead,withgrea~ ,intere~t
.tlj~
in PoughkeElpsie would pie~ ·up. ~a.v~g an
.
open. ,fo~tiin on_ the
decision not to appeal came after: what they called intimidation and, ~~i~l~;· and ,p~rticularly, ·the ·th~ slack. li_owever,• this •is issue-rat:J:ier than·gomg to:court·
manipulation by the faculty member serving on· that committee,-- ~ditorial C!)lumn:in:thEl•l\farc~ ~7 • neither here. nor there_. . , : • . For makmg .such accusations, I
Brother Xavier Ryan. These news sources have sinced changed their issu!: of. u.ie · 9ircl~~
•.·!Jl•,
inany
Mr
lett~r· co.ncerns ·your; s~pect that ~he r~ignations. of
story and they
.
no longer,
,
claim that threats intimidation
or '
previous issuesof the Circle_, one _e d 1 t o r i a 1 · · e n t i t 1 e· d · the three main editors might be
manipulation took place. we:apologize to Brother Ryan. • . •
• . · wou!d :~ave t_o decipher or •read . "1'1anip~tion'0:
As n:_iany people called for. These • resignations
· There have peen threats of lawsuits against the CIRCLE. and its be!:\\'.ee11 the µne~..,.to ~ek the true ,:kriow, this editorial was directed should. I!Ot be
.
given; nor should ·
editors as a· result of·the editorial, and demands that we resign. we opimon
·
of th~·-·_editors •·of ~e · ·to'Yard the group of students who any•, retraction' be· ·made
·if· the
have no intention of resigning: We are convinced that there.is no basis newspaper. - ~ce January,, ·I_ appli~:for Benoit_ House for the , editors sincerely believe • what
for a lawsuit.
.
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h~ve ~ot
.
!18d tc;>_.do so fo.r any:of ·· 1975-76 years in.its.opefilP.g. It
is
they printed.iri the ''Newsmen's
The issue of ho'w Benoit House was allocated is'certifuily within the the editoria~ printed. I_ ~m hap~y _ the second :part ~of'theoeditorial Credo'\ or in their,editorial policy
rights of the student body.to know and the.comments in our·editorial ~ t the edi!<>rs haye made·their · .with'whi~h.Iaril concerned, that pr
_
int~.,:~t the beginning of ~ach
. vvere dealing with a public issue.
.
. .
. views kn.own for _a change.~
>-
b~mg·a direct attack on a;Marist year. .
·
<-
•
. • ,.,
· There would have been no chance for misunderstanding on
this.
I have also noticed. that'few,_
if CoHege facu}ty , member. This
Falso ask· that
~IL
students,
:
important campus issue
if the committee had,dfsclosed how it reached , a~y me1:11-bers · of. ·the. Manst · · ·renowned ,,.faculty.· member -~has., . regardl~.Qf their positiorrciri the
its decision and what the discussion had included.
· .:
. , /
Co~nrx~umty ever :respond to. an - done much to
.
improve. the. decisions 11'.iaqe during the last
W~ t~.our efforts in pr"?ting the.story andJ?dit?ri:81 were
part
of editonatm ~e• Circle .. ·
Ce~WY ... ·.
·
c~pu;, life at Marist ~trr.IDS'my. ·
.
.
· few . weeks, :at
.I~~· uphold , the
.
our J~b to keep ~e campus informed of what is going on. We would: the last,few 1SSues of ~e.Gfr~le fouryea_r stay,at M~nst; Ihaye principle of freedom cif the press.
· also like to make 1t perfecUy clear thatin no\Vay were we denouncing~mu_st haye ~enha~ced dis~ussi~n .· had 'this' ~rofes~or,~,~or
-
J~.o A daffil:'ged · reputaticii· can . be .
Brother
.
Ryan-as an immo~al or unethical ,man .. We. did not· say that. of 1ssu~ •· a_t _Marist.• ~, write. this.,_ co~_es, :~e.
lS ,
a
person -whoiµ_I
'
.. rep~ire..1, !tafd feellilgs';·egarding
and that should notbe·read mto
it. ·.
. •
.
, . ·
letter r~lizing
I
rmg~t be the hold.m. high esteem. · . .· ·~ : decis!<>ns_ can
be
rec_onciled,\ but
- Wearewellawareofhisim:portantworthonthis'campus.
.
.
only" mE;mber _,:of· .the
~:14arist~•" ,:~
sillc_erefy· beli~e that. the the--loss of one!s.:
,
freedom:•of
· - _Today':3 CIRCI~ contains ~Qre reports'on
this
important issue:We Commumty ~king ~he time to let·· oo.itors; of
Jhe
~
Girc~t? ·:lac~ed speechi(should~it.-come 'to that)
will continue to prmt news and .editorials regarding the issue aswe , YO\½ know m~ reac_tion. I strongly profe§sionalism m
_
t~eir attack should: not be tolerated. · aet off
see !t: The Le~er~ to·u.ie Editors <:olumns are open for replie~ to our., ~elieve a~ times t~at ,the .only-:and/_afe·:•pq,b~bly ~der,:mii~ your bat stools and'reactJ: .- ·.··
.storiesandeditonalsandwewelcome your comments ... ;_
. .
.
, issue whi_sb,.w~uld:.cause. ar)Y
·
:"duress'.'.;Jor · making: such< a
·
< : '.~ :' \
Sincereiy,
WewouldatthistimealsoliketothankthestudentGovernment-for c9n~ern among .the Marist· statement:.However;
Lam'm.ore
,
'.:. ,~
BobSammon
their help, eyen though we
may-
not have agreed with their recom::
·
, ,
>< · .:. · · , .,
·
·•
·
·
.,. :/
mendations, Dean Thom.as Wade, Mr. Robert Norman; Richard .
. Wager, Managing Editor of the.:.Poughkeepsie Journal and _James
Coombe, Attorney· at Law.
--
·
·
.
,
~
'
:
.·~,--
.
,,
.
; /
APRIL 10, 1975 .
THE CIRCLE
Letters; continued
decided that
if
the goals that I
fort.
I feel that my decision was that impression, I would like to .
intended _, achieve through the an objective one and well thought offer now, in public, my humble
appeal could not, in fact, be out, and I do not feel that I was in apologies.
ac~ved, ·then the attempt at any way manipulated . into
Thank you,
such · an appeal would not be making that decisionr And
if
I in
Bob Griffin
worth either the time_or ·the ef-
any way gave ~he Circle editors_
where act~ally it does not
exist.
back it up.
If
however, you do feel
.· Dear Editors:
_/ · -
I wou!d ~e to know: where you you've , a base · from which you
· . This is-written in reply to your get off Judgmg a manw~om ·you spoke of, I dare you
to
defend
editorial entitled_ Manipulation. perso!}ally do 1_1ot know ~nd base~ your position publicly, with
. Journalism should~ based upon
_lll)<!O
information from so!-ll°ces studentsand faculty_ present and
facts and ·yes· should:. uncover . which we the readers don t even then let us see where deceit
·••corruptionand deceit which know really exist!
. .
exists. Remember, the truth
_exists on some .cai:npus com-
You speak of purpose, May)· prevails and as you yourself say,
mitt~s••·_but.µot plant seeds of. ask what real purpose you have we've·"nothing to fear·but fear
. deceit . and , op·en ;- sland.~~,: in. slander? To ~ttempt
to
ruin a itself" or do we.
·
·
· J;)r~tendfui!,to uncover corruption,_,aman's reputation with n:othing t~: ·_
Lenny Fedyniak
appeal.
In
_no way, ho'!e,;;r, dci~s< ''.
}f
neither are forthcoming, I
'Dear Editors: -
.
th.atfact g1ye you the r1ghtto lash will support Xavier Ryan in
. · Relative
.
to your editorial, ·out unjustly against the person of seeking a redress of this matter.
' "Manipulation" in the 3-27-75 Xavier Ryan and the Science of
Sincerely,
•
.
-i~ile.of th_e.qrc1e; !~sympathize .·Man course offel'.ed by him; , .
.. Ge·rald E. Kelly
· :- ,. with y()u
011:
f!le factthat you were
.
·· I call·uponyou for aretraction ·
·
· Sheahan Housernaster
The Childn•n's Theat!c production of•• Alice in Wonderland"
from now til Sunday.
'.'::;iert,Myllilg !ll~;!>31g.'.;'-whent~e. ofyoufunNstallegations or your
- Director of Financial Aid
_ >' '.
~eahan
Gr()Up · ~oppe~-~eir.~
resignation/'? - .,·
.
· -B_ook Review:
.,,
_.,-
< ... :~_--
the matter::.: .
·.,
>
•
'
. , -
-~hole_ group, due to. e~tenuating
Ame·
r,· can
· '.fhe
-
application for_~ ~ppeal of . c1rcuniStan~es. . '. ._
_ . . .
.
. To
-
Whon{tt·may Conc_ern:·
the Inter.- House .Council -decision · . 'ENO OF STATEMENT
,-<
Since the so called "Sheahan 0il Benoit,
_
and request/for. in.o'
=
..
-No
other :-statements -are
Seven experts, writing for the stirred controversy <!Ven before
Life
Exaniined
-Group;':has_officfally l)eet( forn:iation.germane:to·said:ap--·_authorized
by the so:called layman, have put together a
publication, Stephanie Coontz,·
_ · dissolved;
!;.
am·
no,~ foriger'· 'peal was:officiaµy \vithdrawn bY:_.:/!She~hari.;(}roup'' since it has thought-provoking· and per- . co-editor of this volume and
- .. author~ctto act in any capa~ity ~· . me.· ·as~ legaL representative, fori
'
i,.~ b¢en· · officjally ·· dissolved .. on ceptive analysis of what has gone author of three of its essays, has
-· ·Igal:~or · .. otherwise, as::-a Ma:rch25;1975atapproximately: March-'25/1975.
-- -~ ·
wrongwithArnericansocietyand seen her appointmenrto the·
.~. representativ~ _of:the group'. ·I,
:rn
p.m.;.nie reason for the with- . ·
·
-
. Thank you. how it can be changed. In Lile in faculty of Evergreen State
.'therefor.e; can· pnly' ·rna~e _the dr~wl was·simply~e ~ppeal no- ,
0 -::
-
- ; ,
Ernest Puglisi Capitalist America·; Private College in Washington attacked
_ foJlo.wirig~ 'statement conce~ing longer had the full support
.
of the:
✓
·
ProfJt and Social Decay (New on the basis of this book. Seattle's -
·. : ·
.
· : .. ···• ·, · ·
·
• ·.
·
· .·
· -• ,
·
· . . . -
.
, .
. .·.
. . ,.
.
.
.
. Yor~, Pathfinder Press) a school KIRO
TV,
for
instance,
·,·
. • .. · .· .>.
<: . •· ,:_ ·, ..
administrator, a welfare worker, editorialized against her ap-
. · 'question concel,'Iling Dr.Ryan's question.of his possible unetliicaL an. attorney, a professor, a
pointment, saying that "she is
; possible
·
uiiethical . behavior in behavior
relating . to
the_ journalist, a forinerprisoner, and editor ofa new book called
Life
jn
-
,relationtothes~called.'!Sheahan· "Sheahan . Group'.' proposal a city. planner examine the_ Capitalist America: Privat•·
.
.
To the ·Eclitors oHhe Circle: · ·_. Gtoup''. proposal; Dr. Ryan has; should be investigated by the workings of our profit-oriented Profit and Soclal<Decay. Wha,
' -~
· ·
Dr:
Xavier ·Ryan should cori- ·in ,· my_i opinion,·
·
created proper college judicial body, or . social system and.,find in ·it the kinq of political philosophies do
·:
sider. resig~ir, his position at disillusionment, . contempt; and . the professional organization of causes of the deterioration of the you think her students are going
Maryst Qollege;,By-his'tbreats.of mistrust arnqng
1
niany:rnembers college professors, so that the quality of American life.
to learn?
·
a . l~ws~~ aQd other-
·
:actions
of✓the.,,Marist·
Community. Dr.-. facts of the .matter can be
In essays entitled "Cities
in
On the other hand, Professor
a~~in_~f ~r,,e ~_tydent ~5lj_tors of.the JtY:a~•s ~_:cur;ent , ~c!ion~, .in ':~r·;;brciught: out, And tlie wh9l_e issue · .~ecay," "Yo~ Can't Afford to get Mi!ton Lesnik of Antioch College
; C~sJe,J}e~ape~,-.~~ a .r~suU of :OJ>]!!ion;: are.•no~ -m, the,•best:·•m" '.; ,br~~gp~,to:a,1u~t~com;lll.!:l!OI!-~:.,,;, .. s11:;k", "Growing Old:: Insult and described Life in Capitalist
a~_.
:
eclit<>I"1al_:::Yaliilly"ra1Smg- the terests~,of:'Manst College. Th·e• .
'.
·
<
•
:
.1-
·
:ErnestPuglisi--'-InJury;»,'.'The Rea1·:welfare . ·Alllerlca
·
as made ·UP
.
of.-
.
· .. _. ... ,..
·
.•,• ·· · ·
·
' · ·, ... ····-:
·
•:
.
-.
· -
Scandal,""ThePrison:Revolt," "sparkling intelligent ~ssays,"
' F
_
·ol. lo_
w.< · ..•.
u_--·p,
-
"The Failure of . American and Charles Berger, Principal of
-
Education;" "Pollution: Who Is Public School 188 in New York
D~i-Eclitors:
_ . __
.
<>!
~his or(i~at, a.od_ that ~n in-. meetings, . or . discussions and Responsible?" and "Energy City's embattled ghetto School
tam writing to fo]!ow· up on_.the d1v1dual
m ,
the community .. at have small ;numbers attend or Crisis: A Bonanza for the Oil District One, stated that •~s.
letter,mailedtci-your home during" large !-!al! not _c~use ch~nge or _at none at aU:. ·
Giants," the ·authors amuP. that -
Coontz is obviously a skilled and
Spring recess< anct subsequent
:
b~s~ 1t rs ,difficult.for. an m-
A community_ <achieves . the neither busir.ess nor government talented. writer .and possesses a
meetings held on campus after dmdu~l _to cause change. .. .
quality oflife it wants through th~ as now constituted can st~m the wealth of knowledge and
in-
;. " the. recess. Although .attendance'
Admwstrators need feedback . interactiorii. .of people:µying\vith -- gro~g deterioration of living formation about the dilemma of
· -
, · . . - . · . · .
from the people they, serve •to_ it. Excellence comes from people conditions and they outline the · the urban poor."
0~
the-~h~le was P!)0r, __ we w~re know. how they are affecting the _
carjng, · working; and evaluating · drasUc political and economic
Life
in
Capitalist America:
~et
~!h~
go?d mtereSt .· and lives of others . .SOrne.of-this is the outcomes: A Marist student has measures needed to turn the Private Profit and Social Decay
. . discu~ion on_ .he . part ; of th?se administrators responsibility. but_ always . been a person, oriented situatio~ around. ·
288 pp. $10, paper $2.95, ~Cf'"). 74-
- attencling. Most of the di~cussion those - served, also have , a individual who is · concerned
Written by Marxists and em-
26234 Publication date May ·,975_
· _ ~entered on rna~ers .of. _campus responsibility .
to .
become in- •· about and receptive to others.
p 1 o yin g
author it a ti v e Cloth ISBN o-87348-416-9; paper
mte_rest. · Particularly, . \Vho. fbnned. Students should learn the
For those who· are interested, a decurnentation, the book has lSBN o-87348-417-7.
causes change on. campus aod g·overning structures . of. their list of college faculty and staff
how-on~. ~an affect the ~y~tern. · college; , where decisions , al'.e who are either personally or
- . I_~s somewh~t surpr
15
ed .hr,· made
'
that ·affect. either -their-
educationally involved or in-
an. attitude ~at· someone else
.
education. or • personal ,lives.
·
terested in issues of our society is
~hould solve pr9blerns? take care Nothing is mor:¢ ,frustrating
tQ
available at the switchboard.
-Minor Approv~d
little. or no ,r,esponse, .to
go
to mail- lette~s, surveys, and have
· · ·
Thomas W. Wade
The Academic Affairs Corn-
"American-Jewish
Novelists,"
mittee has approved the in-
"The Politics - of the Middle
led
us
daily 'to' overlook·that in-
congratulate you editors for the troduction of a minor in Jewish
East," "Topics
in Jewish
justice, No other building would _stands.you have.taken
in
the last Studies beginning in the Fall History,"
"Contemporary
treatm.ent .·
Totbe;Editors:·
. .
.
.
have hadthe'.heatshiltoff;.·r.issueoftheCircle.Ittakesalot ~ermt ,d1975.Thternmt· o
1
rwillffbe_an
Judaism,"
and
"Anti-
!
·t M ·
1m
t d il · th
·
·
u· ·. · ·'
•t · · "d
f gu· ts
d th
th ·t·
th _.m er- epar men a
o ermg Sem1'tisrn."
_
c
go o . ass a
os a y m e guess"re g1on
_
isn
cons1 ered. o ·
. a~ · e · au or1 1es,
e
·ch'apeLand Lam most shocked -tllat important here, • .
o · · .
powers, will get back at you, you involving faculty in English,
_ These courses are open
to
all
· that the college should shut off
I
ani
asking for you to_withhold· . can be ~ure. Whatever you do, History, Political Science
and
students, but the student seeking
.the.heatover-,three:weeks_ago my_narne. l?knowits
a
bit of don'tres1gn(astherurnorssay). Religious Studies.
It
will be
togive coherencetohiselectives
. because,of the construction in cowardice but_lknowthat power Don't,Jor·our sake. ·
coordinated · by Dr.
Rhys · can now plan a program of''
Fontaine;·The chapel was an ice -corrupts and there are powerfuf
.
Name withheld Williams of the Department of related courses wrucn can re:swL
·box ·and ,Fr. Gallarit j~a.Uantly' "':i>eople here who' could hurt me .. 1 . _ - a member o( the community · Religious Studies and Dr. Milton· - in a minor.
.
-
- ·
·
. •
. ·
-
·.·
•
·
·
·
--· •·"·
Teichman of the Department of
Students who want
to
learn
.
·
-
·:,.
·
·
English.
.
.
rnore--about the minor
in
Jewish
help
_
out'; t'1roligh ,their ·i;---g, ·
us
tak~
for grantea .too often.
The Illinor in Jewish Studies
is
Studies should see Dr. Rhys
. those who-· are not.. fortunate . Hats off to John·VanDervoort, an outgrowth of present student
Williams or Dr. Milton Teichman
:_ ·Praise·<.
. .
,enough·to run - the handicapped. the sole organizer and creator of interest in courses
in
Judaism
during the registration period,
: T,:,.the'Maris~ comrntmity:
.~tudents:nere·at Marist. They thisgreatendeavor.Iamhopeful and Jewish literature and is a
April 7-11.
>
I am sure t~atrµany of you are i~re:<:Ioirig tile
:rriost
purposeful·
that next year this project
will
be further
expansion
of · the
Dr. Williams and Dr. Teich-
'fapiiliar
.
with the facHhat eight ruru;ungthat ~!1yone._co~d;do:
Pi..·
met by even more enthusiastic academic . study of', ·. the
man, who will serve as advisor's
rum,ier~ 9ver the weekend sought . couple oftheII_l aev9loped inJunes
.
l'.esponsefroin the entire Marist · phenomenon
of religion at, to students in"the minor, believe
to run a 4&hour marathon; Due
to-:·
through the,process and may· be community and more money can Marist.
,
.
that a planned sequence of
,: unbelieyab1e·>· weatller.
i>,(20
Jos!·
for,a tfack ~~et or:tw,Q;. but : be raised forthe nee_ded facilities
Courses to be offered next
courses drawn from current and
degr~es : ·' and, high .'winos· · lo_smg a meet or two 1s much _less on: campus here for the han-
semester which are relative to
future offerings at the college can
. ·:--.)na!Cing;the··ternperatui:e- more··_'me~uyngfµl than '!hat they were. dicapped,, Last. weekend Ji>h:11
the ~il.!or include «Religion in
deepen the siudents' knowledge
·
. ·_:like_
o
d~_grees), they: were torced,.
~
trymg to_ a~cornp~h and what I ; Va~~rvoort,· Jim Honan, Chris ~er1ca:•: (REST 90~), ''Yid•lish
_ o~ Judaism, help him see its
-··.
to·:_s~op-;~!,l~J:a~er_18,llow.-s{o_f/•~~elthey,~~ <;le1Aons~rate ... :;.-
_
.. ·Paccione, D~ve ~h~ols 3!1d Walt Writers m Transla?on" . (~NG
relation to other world religions
.
·/, cont1J!llOU~l:;l'11Dl)lDg.~;.These::f1v~ ·: ·•,~en Mlirty,·Liquor1}~al."!1ed m ~eµry s1lo~ed how, runnmg can 726), · "A,pocalypt1c B1bhcal
and its impact on western
. . ; Matjst:.. men ·-:~th -, ~eir
,-~e,e .
the_ ear:!Y PB!i ?fJ~72 t~atfn_:3 -~o?g -. rea~y · be p1:1t to _use: I hope ~e Lite~ature" (REST 913), "The
culture.
·
-.•.
: · "-.J)utchess~Comrnunity. Collegef·dreamofrunnmgm the Olyn1p1cs
~
Manst .cornmuruty is proud· of :.:.,Ancient East" (HIST 294) -- and
·
A :s~r1es
ot
pubuc 1ectures
iS
<'.
.,\:c9i;:ni>i!)lion~:;we_r.~_i:r.io~~just;)run~/:
~f!l:l~/)V~~-,
·-y1~_9:
,;~uC:_hYti~ (foot <It~~!r. ·: c;achievem~nts . · .• ar:id "The ~tory · of : Modern' · Ger-
being planned in conjunction with
.. .:: .,,_ .. ~~g~:~row:i.~.::'~8. .~~
.
riipus_;;,/fll~y;::mJurr,.11~, ~~pl~m~.!l}o thir_Pl'.~~-~ .:dedi~tio~:.J kriow theirpoa~h 1s.~ · :many" : {HIST 32.?), ; Cours~s
the minor. The possibility
of" .
·
··,.·_·'.
yw~r:~-~l}.o.~11g:~8c}~~:-?r~mati.c_:,that~~,-wl:ls:not-a1.tiinl~fJtYIM~,:
.
·::. .. ···
;';
.:(>····.:.
.Smcerely,_
.
planned for the Sprmg-s~mester
surnmer·or semester study at the
. .:. .. '·:\~•~y,µiat,r~g;call:15e. both fun}:::h,ut~.~:;:v~ry, .. ~!,lckY;,,••l()n~,.'.h~: w~.s
.:
.
·, , .· -,~.chard Stevells . of ~97~ and beyond mclude 'Hebrew University in Jerusalem
.. - : - .. , _afld mearµngftil._Jbey~sought:to· ,.~bJe,to
~ye~
3-J;ift.th~~ many,~(' ,
• . Mal'l~t Track Coach : •~Prmc1ples·, '. of~: :~ndaism".
is also being considered .
.-.
. ~---• .. , .... : ·:~,.;;~::}"<:/~}\.~/',(.:·~~i:, )/:~··:
-
-::::.:.
'.
.~,<:.>c:-:: ., -.:
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..
: · .
.
-
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:
:
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:~::,.
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I
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I
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---
_
I
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•
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...-
-
-
-
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'
PAGE6
THE CIRCLE
'
APRIL 10, 1975
Code
99
.
Potpourri:· News Briefs
By Fr. Leo Gallant
tears: Isn't
.
all this stupid?
Assistant professor of political. and Lehigh. He plans to continue
Maggie was
just
a dog, and a fat
science carolyn Landau recently
his
studies in chemistry.
~
I wept twice last week,
almost
one at that!
participat~
_
in
a Career Day
uncontrollably. I hate to cry;
'lbe other occasion was a few
,sponsored
by Spackenkill High
·
Mrs. Barbara Short of the
sometimes
I
feel it's a sign of days before (why
am
I
telling you
School. Coordinator of the new Business Office staff is home
emotional
unbalance;
this?).
'lbere wer~ some students
paralegal studies program,
Mrs.
_
recuperating from a recent in-
sometimes the male
.
chauvinist in the house, reading newspapers
·
Landau spoke about
·
paralegal jury. Get Well cards can be sent
in me tells me that men shouldn't and magazines. I was reading an
opportunities with. 50 students to her home at 6 Spratt Avenue,
ween. And there were
.
students
article about. Nestor Paz who
and adults. Dr. D;A. Drennan, Poughkeepsie, 12603.
·
..
in
my
house
_
at the time, to my joined
the Bolivian National
professor of philosophy, just
-.
greater embarrassment.-
Liberation Anny, leaving his
returned
from
the 49th annual
Mrs. Patricia Bucala
·
has
One time
was
-
last Saturday.
1
wife to fight the government. He
meeting
of
the
Catholic joined the clerical staff in the
My dog Maggie died because of died of starvation at the age of 25
Phifosophival Association held in Business
_
Office on a part time
' diabetes. She was the sweetest while surrounded, by govern-
Cincinatti. He served as chair-
basis,
an .
_
associate
.
degree
dog a guy could ever have. She ment soldiers.
,
The article is
.:
man
of
the
metaphysics candidate
from
Dutchess
knewonethirlgwell:Howtogive'
madeup ofhisletters,especially evercomes,Marist College will
,
program.
_
.
··
Com,!Jlunity
_
Coll~ge,
·
·
she
love always. She loved me
so to his wife. The last letter was be a pleasant memory.
_
. The
-
auth_or_ of numerous ar-
_
previously . worked
_-
m
the ac-
mtich,
was so faithful, so written by
_
a fellow•
.
Guerilla
-
This slJ!llmer I'll
be
helping out b_cles and re~!ews, Dr. Dre!1Ilans
-
.
counts receivable department for
obedient.
She was
the best describing Nestor Paz's death. at
!l
New York inner city parish
.
e1~hth b?,O~• Culture>-Log1c and
_.
Effron Bak,ery supply .
.
trained dog I ever knew (though
Ordinarily such emotionally for a month. You can be sure I'll Science,
1S
scheduled for a fall
,
_
_ _
,
_
she
_
was
·
the only dog I ever charged articles don't shake me
·
have iny eyes open for
_
the 1975 publication by Philosophical
:
The
-
Philosophy Department
had.) She understood so many upthatmuch. Butlhadjustbeen apostolate of
:
-
my dreams. (The Resources, Mount Ve_rnon, N.Y .
.
will host a lec!ure by Dr. Ren~e
things.
I think
_
she eveh knew conversing with a student about' movie "Why We Boycott" shown ~
-
-
13th annual President's Cup
-·
Weber; associate professor
·
of
when
I was sad. They talk about leaving my comfortable life at by Jim Kennedy last week
_
did R~g~tta
_
will !ake place Saturday,
.
_
philosophy at Rutgers a
_
11d
.
·
a
"dumb anin1als", but Maggie Marist to work uncoinfortably not help to cai..A this urge to be
a
Apr~
-
26,>
with t~e . 5th
~
annual
·
memb_er of the ~nter
,
for I~-
.
taught me more about life, about with the poor, the exploited, the "real priest" somewhere.) I'm p~~su;tent's,Cup,dinner scheduled
·
tegrattve ~ducatio11:
.
Her
_:
top1c
dedicated
.
love and loyalty than minorities. The only reason I lookirig for students or faculiy
.
for the
.
_
prec~eding:evening:
:
see
:
·
win b~
_
"the Pz:ill,la~y
:
of t~e Non-,
-
most human beings. Mayb'e most haven't _left is because I don't or staff to ten
me
where to
.
go .
.
•
·
Mr'. ~rank LaRos_e,.for
.
complete Material I_dealism
in
In~1an t:ind
people at Marist would prefer a want to go back in the classroom. Some of youcould answer this
fu
details.
•
Greek
,
P~llosophy a11d
_
__
m
gom-
.
chaplain who is less human, but I I'm most happy atMarist, but it's two seconas. But that's not
-
the-
·
-
- - - -
parativtf Science/' The
·:
_
in-
_
-
had to Share this with you, still in a second choice
.
If
the right call answer
-
I want:
-
-
_
Senior Chemistry
-
major Joe
:
te
·
rdisciplinary lecture
·
is
-
.
-
·
.
'
\
·
·
·
·
·
_
.
_
_
_
_ _
Abys, who is currently
-
studying :SchedulefforW~dnesdayApril16
'
l
lnip
.
o rtan
t
,
Anno
_
U
_
Ii
cefiien-t
_
s
<
:
·
:
!!io~i:at~f!s:n
_
~;~
_
cre;e
_
~:e~
0
~~!~ :~~;
3
~·~t1e~fu~ie~r
.:~g
· •
.-·
-
-
1
·
·
.
•
,
-
-
.
_
_
-
-
-
-
.
-
-
ceptances and
·
fmanc1al awards
.
coor9inated
:·
by Kevin Donohulr,
.
-
.
/
·
·· ·
•
:' _
·
_
.
.
-
, ,
.
:
from ;Bi-own,
·
Rutgers; Purdue
:
·
department chaiml.an;
.
.
.
Thursday, April 10th, the Free Spanish classes will
-
include
.
_
There will be
·
a
·
film
,
an~
:--
·
-
University will sponsor a le_cture singing, dancing, skits and poetry
·
_discussion
.
on CQrisumer Fraud
entitled "The Parental Role:
A
reciting. Tuesday
8
p.m; in the . at 8' p.m. in
.
stone. Lounge.
_
·
...,
___
:,
_
.
_-_·
·
·
r
_
_
•
.
e
._:_·
·_
w
_'_·:·.· ...
_
~s_·
-:1.e·
·t
__
,
·
t
'
.
··
_
e
_
·
.
_,
_
'.
r
·
.
·._
-_
•.
_·.
_
·_-
B
·
-_
.
·.
_.
e
-
·.
·g·'
._z· __
.:n·-s--
Futuristic View." All members of · theatre.
Oil
Tuesday, -April 22, Robert Buchner,
.
Asst. Attorney
L'tJ
_
_
the Marist Community are in- there will be an
·
international General will be
,_
on hand
.
to
vited to· attend this leCture
in
eve~g prese
.
nted
by the rrench;
·
✓
answer
questionll.S.
·
.
-:.
Gregory House at8 p.m. ton~ght. Ita
1
lian, G
8
ennan
:
a_nd
·
~uss!a°"' DTuesday April
15,
_
Psycho~
_
.
.
.
__
-
,-
,
_
-
.
··
-
·
·
c asses.
·
p.m.
m
Fireside
rama
'..
·
workshop
·:
in Stone
_
By
Reid
Scott
:
_
·
the p~per. This
-
~~icle
_
attacks
.
Seniors are reminded to hand Lounge; Refreshments will be Lounge, subject Dreamsand and
.
_
.
_ _
__
~
the college administration for
in their deposit for the Senior serv~
_
a!t~r each
_
perfonnance, F.anta
_
sy
;
8
p.m.
·
·
.
_
A new print
·
media has
'
:
been
_
deciding to_closethe house. Jts
Class Formal at the Villa admission 1s free.
.
.
·
.
.
_
_
_
.
.
:
established with the creation of
-
argl,Ullent 1s
_
presente~
.
openly
·
Bagliari.
'All
final payments will
·
---,.;..
Students
·
are reminded that the HEOP newsletter. The Letter
·
-
and suggests that the decision is a
be due by Friday, May 2nd.-
.
The 1975 Suinmer Session tomorrow;Fdd~y, April
11
isthe will
·
attemptto· develop
a
COIi).·
radstcme;~articl~coul~not~e
schedule is now available. For last day
·
to register for courses municatfon with the Marist
:
presented
m
the Circle
m
this
_
Any student interested in information please contacLthe for the
_
Fall 75 semester.
.
·
community
.
and other
/
area in~
>
fo~.
-
-
Therefore
.
HEO:f'
,
feels
membership
_
on
.
the Student office of. Continuing Education,
.
_ ..
. _ _
stitutions
·
siich,:as Dutchess, thereJs a rieed f<>r, .the
_
News
,
·
.-
Academic Committee should . Donnelly Hall.
·
_
Apy~ne
:
wis~g
.
-
..
t,o apply for
.\
Vassar;
.
New
:·
Paltz, . Bennett;
.
.
Lette_r
oh;
!he ,m!a c:aIIlp
_
u~es.,
.
,
_
'
submit a
letter of intentiollto Bob
.
;
.
.
. _
· ·.
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
res1dency
,
m Gregory Hou~~ for Bard
;-
:
Gretmhaven,
.
and the
·
_
·
Raul Qumtima. staF.ted
\VOi'.~
on
.
Sammon, Box C-912 by Friday,
Copies o!, the "Job R_esear~h the 1~7?
-
~
?~
sch!)Ol _sear ~ust
Culipacy
.
Institute:
'
'I'hey will
_
the
•
N,ews
_-~tter;
·
~a~. year/but
•
Aprirl8th.
'
·
Baromt:ter are now available m submitthei~ ~PP.licabon to Vmny attempt
to
build a publicati9n)n c~>llld not fmd the backm~ ne~ded
the office of_ Career, Develop-
Leddy~ chainna'n of the sear<:h
'
whi~h th~
_
writer can
_
fre~ly_ ex.;,
_
to prod~ce the commurucabpns;
The office of Veterans Affairs ment. There
1S
also a supply of committee by Sunday at
6
p.m. press
his
feelings on a given
:
He
.
received the needed support
'
is sponsoring a fund drlve for Viet CoU~g_e P_lacelhef!t Ann
_
uals No app~cation wi~
_
~e
·
accepted
.
·
_
subject:
-
without
,_
the,m
·
.
being !his year; fro'!l
_-Joseph
Molinar
_
o
_
_
Nam refugees. Cash donations ;>ro"'.i!,ling
_
informa~on on the afterth!s~
_
te. Alirili~ed.n~ber
;_
edited
.
or !_lisregarded
-·
.
as and Jackie Cuntus of
HEOP
and
will
be
accepted through Friday positions customarily.. offered to of applications are still available
·
irrev'elant
_
_
_ .
✓
fellow
.
_
students.
.-
.
April 11th
·
at the following college
·
graduates. Copies are in Gregory House.
They feei the Circle cannot
'
-
.
·
Tue
staff
of the paper include:
-
location. Champagnat Hi
:l
from free for the. asking.
·
·
·
·
serve tlie student in this nature.
Editors:
Raul
Quintana,
-
9-5.
The Academic Quarterly-is now
-
Therefore
·
the Letter and the Micheala Wilks and
.
Ernest
.
A.
A Free University Lecture accepting papers for the Fall 1975
Circle would not be compet~g.
·_
:
Royal; Layout: Erne~t A.-Royal.
Students and Faculty ar~
reminded of the Organ
·
Recital by
John Sullivan at the Vassar
College-Chapel on Sunday, April
entitled "The Parental--Ro!P.:
A
issue. Please
.
send all papers to
.
This is shown .by an article Research: Raul Qumtana and
Ii'uturistic View"
will
be Dr: George Sommer,
·
campus
written
in
the News Letter titled Micheala
·
Wilks.
.
Typists:
presented this evening at
8
p.m. Mail, or 1st floor Fontaine.
.
_
"Is Benoit House
.
Dying",
,
by Modesto Rivera
and Victor
in Gregory House, all are invited
Ernest Royal, layout editor for
Olivera.
13 at
4
p.m.
·
to
·
attend.
Applications are ~till be~g There is still time
.
to see .
this
acc_epted
:
for chairmanship years
Children's
Theatre
_
positions m the ~reas ?f ~offee production of
"Alice
in
Won-
house, concert,
!ilin,
fme
·
at?, derland" performances will be
lecturE:, perfonnmg arts, social held on Friday 4-11 at g: 15 a.m.
and v1deo~ape for ·next y~rs and 8 p.m. Saturday
-
4-12 at 2
College ~~on ~oa~d. All full tune p.m. and 8 p.m
;
Sunday 4-13 2
students
.
are mvited to apply .. p.m. All performances will 'be
Please see Kathy
.
Man_nmg, held in the theatre,
Gregory Hse. Gene Henners
,
.-
-
C309, or Sheila McKay,
·
S302
before April l~;
·
'
'
On
Monday April 14
.the
Red
Cross Blood Bank will be on
.
campus from
_
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in
.
The
_
annual
·
Modem Language Fireside
·
Loung;e
·
·
for
-
those
will
begin
on Tuesday Arpil 15;
A
students
_
wishing
.
to
·
don
_
ate
Spanish Fiesta present~d
,
by the blood.
ARLINGTON
44 Plaza
::_·
.
.
4?1°
_
6100
.
-
Insurance from
.
Marshail G.
oterl
_
ing,
_
I~~-
-
-
-
11
·
.
.
; lilJ
j ~
•
·
. ·
.
\
POUGHKEEPSI~
'
V\'AP.Pit-,JGERS FALLS·;
75Washington
St.
.
.
i.
Imperial Plaza
..
··
· .
·
.d
s4~osoo
-
-:
.
.
.
·
297~;3101
·
·
·
.
.
·
.\
_
:
.
•
.,
.
\
THE CIRCLE
PAGE?
Mileathon Closes
Amidst Problems
figure of
$240
should be realized.
by Tom McTernan and
Rich Schneider
Sponsors inclmjed Third World
Alliance, Sheahan House Council,
By the time most ~f the Marist
Leo House Council, The Caboose,
community ventured out into the
Frank's, Father Gallant, Rita
. cold oflast Saturday, the tent had
Starpoli, C. U .B., Third Year
disappeared, the runners no
Abroad, Ace liquor Stores, Helen
where in sight.
.O'Connor (scliool nurse), Beta
Wasn't this supposed to be a
48-
•
Chi Society, Louis Graziano, The
hour mileathon that was to last
Circle, and Champagnat House
until Sunday afternoon? .
III.
It was. But by the time Walter
However, Vandervoort was
I[
-.
·
Henry completed his 19th rnile at
surpthrist:d rtat thf ethlacMk of_ stupport
.
9:46
a.m. the eight runners had
on
e pa
o
e
ans com-
already decided to cancel the
munity. "Only two
.
or three
1
--
.
--
_
-
.
·
.
.
Dr.
George•H
0
ciop~r;chairm
.
ari onhe Divi_sion
·
or
Na)ural
Science
at
the tesri,;,onial ~inner held .in his honor
remainder of the run. After
19
handicapped
-
persons showed up
·
·
·
·
hours,
13 minutes and 160 miles,
for the start. Sure, it was cold,
I
·
tf
e's
tiD1o nial. Dinner
-
He Id
:~~.~vio~~
'"f~ ••
~~i~:~~
t{!a14sl~J~i.~!~~;:~·~~:
·
.
·.
.
,
·cc-;,
.
.
~
.
-
·
.
hovered around
30 degrees with
and some even ran with us."
.
-
_
-
.
.
_
On
Ftiday evening April
4,
a genetics
is
·
Dr .
.
Hooper s
·
.
Phllhps,_ Pet~r ~!e~s! Mane
.
winds up to
45
mph. John Van-
Along
with
Vandervoort,
"surprise"
:
Testimonial
·
Dinner
.
specialty)
ghosted
·
in
the Quatroc10~c~1, ~1rg~1a Sher- dervoort, organizer and leadoff
Henry, Schools, and Honan was
was held
in
honor of Dr. George background.
.
.
.
Jll!lD,
Patricia
;
Tillou, De
_
borah runner of the event, had a dif-
Will
Morrison and three Dutchess
i
B. Hooper. J)r. Hooper,
.
who is·
-
The dinner attended
.
by more V~Hano. 1'.hre_e-Year Degree
,•
rerent story.
students _
,
Gil
Anderson, Torn
1
-
•
•
presentlythe
.,
chainnan
_
of. Jhe than 70 students and
-
faculty_was B~ology MaJors: Renee_ Bernard,
"It.
was injuries. Walter
Bennett and Jim Iori - who
-
!_-
· ·
·
Division ofNatural Sciences;-will high-lighted by the installation of R;1c~ard
_
V~lano!tI-
En-
(Henry) twisted his ankle run-
volunteered after Jim Gillen. ,Jay
,
betenninating his seC!ondthree-
the National Science
·
f{onorary viro°:ffient~l Science._ Chrysoula
c
riing near the Champagnat Doyle and Brian Costine changed
t
.year
_
ch;µrmartship at the end of Society
7
Sigma Zeta. Dr. Marvin Kom1S, Michael Labickas, Beth parking lot after the lights had
their minds about rum,ing.
(
this semester.
·
or. Hoope.r will Stephens;
.
National
Vice-
Mars~;
Mar~ar~t. Petruny. gone out at
5
a:m. Dave Schools
Coach Rich Stevens
,
originally
continue as
:
a professor of President of Sigma
.
Zeta from Chemistry: V1rgmia Albano, also hurt his foot but vowed to
opposed to the idea
,
pledged his
"
Biology.-
. .
. _
.
·
. ·
Malone College, Cariton; Ohio, Barbara l3ergin, Thomas Cor-
.
ke.ep running until the others
s~pport with
$25
worth of B11rg1..·r
Dr. RobertRehwoldt, presently was the installing officer along . nish,,
..
Louis Graziano, Mary
·
quit.
Jim
,
Honan dropped out
Kmgs. Unable to eat the burgers,
the director of the Environmental
-
with
.
Marist student; Chrysoula Kolor, Martin Soyka. Three-Year shortly before
2
.
a.m. after
-
the runners settled for ~ranges
Science Program will
-
be
.
sue-
·Komis'.
The following juniors and Degree in Chemistry: MaryLou complaining of seeing things.
·
We
and hot chocolate provided by
ceeding Dr
.
Hooper as divisional seniors in the science division
'
Gantert,
Thomas
.
Lynch
:
just couldn't continue. Injuries,
Saga.
'
chairman of
.
the
-.
Natural were inducted into Sigma Zeta:
.
Phys
_
ics:
.
John
.
·Anderson,
·.
the c6ld, cramps; ... " his voice
Afterwards, Vandervoort
Sciences. Dr.
,
Rehwoldt spoke Biol~gy
Majo_rs: . Ant~ony ~rrence
Hin:IeY,, Robert _Levin, trailed off.
pointed out, "People think we
•·
and commended
,Dr.
Hooper on' Basc1ano; Mathew Bntt,
.
Olm
v.
Mic~ael
.
Sass~tte,
Richard
The purpose of the run was to
failed, but I consider it a succ~ss
his dedicated service t" the Burkhart, Salvatore Caradonna, Saxtin, John Wright.
raise money for the handicapped
because our goal ~as to raise
students and -faculty of Marist Ja~es Cassaro, Carrol Emmel,
·
~
index of 3.0 in ?attir~l students at Marist. Funds raised money for the handicapped, not
College
:
· :
:
.
·
.,
•
,
·
-
D'Ylght Ev~ns, Thomas H~n- scie?~e
,
a nd ~tbem1;1tic~, m are to be used in the construction
to break a world record."
Junior;
·
James
.
•
Vallarelli,
·
drikson, Marre ~e_lly, Ruth Klem,
·
additwn to a cummula~i~e mdex of ramps and bannisters in the
Are there plans for another ·
presented
Dr.
Hooper with an
'
.
Karl
.
Kreuger, Frank Kudlo, of
:
2.75
.
a~e . prtreqms1tes for new Fontaine library.
.
mileathon? "Next year we will
honorary plaque;. The plaquii Edwax:d
.
McKenna,
•
·
~arbara membership
m
~igma Zeta.'
Each runner had hoped to
run for 24 hours for another
., "
included an
-
in~cription
.
with a Murphy,
_-
.
Barbara Nucc.io, Janet
.·
complete
48
miles for a total of
worthy cause. Maybe we'll get
.
.
"Drosophila!'
:
·
:
·
· (.DrosophHa
...
Orlowsk_i,:}~hn.f>avlakis,. Brue~
.
.
•
.
,
.
.
.
.
384.
Sponsors were asked to
ten or eleven runners this time."
--
'"CC
'
<
·
~
-"iif?iln
i!t
'·
CoUrt
:cprz-ces;
·
~~ll~:1•::~~:~•::~r~:~;;
~~.~iifu:~Y,
needs
.
is •
good
Full-Time Marist Students
$25.00
.
(family);
.
•
t\1/o hours - $10.00.
.
.
.
.·
$LOO.
·. .
Outside Memberships
~
$30.00
:
Matches
·
(COACH MUST BE
· ·
Faculty, Staff and Employees -
(individual). $50.00 (family)
,
.
PRESENT)
_
per match
-
$25.00.
Year
.
Round
.
Membership
Guests of Members:; weekdays
-
.
All memberships expire the
.,., -(Calendar Year)
·
-- $10.00'
(in~: -
$1.00
Saturdays and
·
Sundays first class day of the Fall
·
dividual) $20.00 · (family).
$2.00.
· _
Semester except for Faculty and
·,
(For· those
'
Faculty, Staff and
Non-Members (per hour, per Staff, which are for the
·calendar
Employees who already have court) - $5.00.
·
'
year.
.
.
.
membership cards, they will pay
_
Use of Ball Thrower (per hour
.
Three courts_may be reserved
only the difference in
·
fees)
w-own
_
tennis balls -
$LOO
.
(per up to one week m advance. Three
Summer
and
Part-Time hour w-Marist tennis balls $2.00. courts will be
·
open, play limited
Students .: $10.00.
·
High School Teams - per to one hour
.
when
people are
Alumni
::
$15.00
(individual) practice session - three courts for
-
waiting.
I
.
1.
C(unposers Enc~uraged
.
--
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
ByT0111myK~vy
. ·
.ticipant
a
copy
of
.
.
the copyrights and
·
publishing laws,
, "Songwriter's Han~book".
.
The and is probably worth the entry
.
·
Amateur
,
\vriiers·
now have a
'#8Y
ofgetting
·
t~efr songs beard
·
.
.
by some of the top people
in
the
recording
·-
industry
by
.
simply
.
,
sending in a cassette taP,e
:
Entry
.
/
forms are a:vailable at .the Radio
:
·
·
:Shack store in Poughkeepsie, arid
-
.
the
,
counter opposite
·
Fireside
·
.
·
Lounge·
n:i
Champagnat ijall
;
.
·
Ari
__
iinportant
·-
aspect of
,
the
festival is that it awards prizes in
.
·.
·
several categories;
:
and
.
is
.
·
in-.
terested
in-
tqe originality of die
.
·
,
.
'
song andthelyricalGonterit,;; not
·
.
:
in
.
elabQrate
.i
vocal
'
and
.
mu!lical
.
. .
arrangements:
.
. .
·
..
.
· :
The
.
song
-
·
categories are as
·
follows:
.
Rock,: Country,· Folk;
: ;.
'
:
Easy_ listening
.
-~
Middle of
·
the
.
\
Road;
·Rhythm
and Blues, and a
.
·,
-
l'Judges
.
·
I)~ci
_
sio
_
n
.
•
Optlon.~•
(Mani
:
•
l!
.
ongs
.
.
:
)ire
--
hard
;.
to
categorize
;
)
.·.
:
::•: /: =·.
·
= .
.
. .
.
.
The
.
'.
tCltaL
.
priz~
.
money
.
=-
is
.
.
_$1~,776spi:ead,:<>yer
finalists and
·.
0O
semi-:finalists
.•
in
:
:each· c·ategory; _
.. :
::4
5
g{fl:,ir.~t,~~
?
:-,
;.!~~~~?
handbook provides
.
valuable
.
fee,
·
·
·
information
pertaining
to
·
.
•
Getextra·
·
_
si*pgcks
forthe
·
-
.
weekend.
-
·
. ·,
An
..
eritry
;'
fee
··
of
·
$10:85 is
.
required
;:-,
~u(
.that
sµm_
:
could
,·
.
easilybe
·
used
-
upwttJwutr~ults
·
AVAILABLE:
.
AT F
.
RANK'S REST.AUR
.
ANT
&·~
:
·
.
if
,
you
;
trf,ed
;
,
to.· g~t)•o1µ
\
so~g~~
·
·
·
·
.·
,
-•..
,
. .
•
.
.
.
.
,-
.
.
. ,
,.
..
. .
.
.
.
•
·
=
heard:Also,Jhe America_p Song·
,
;
:
·
MARIST. RATHSKELLER
, ,
Fesuvar·
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Leave Your Head io Us!
~!!s'!~~j
\ HAIRCUTTING
' BLOW DRYING
S
6 with
STREAKING, FROSTING.
&
PERMANENT WAVING
.
Marist ID
CALL 454-9239 for your
·
appointment now
ON THE MAIN MALL
3 LIBERTY STREET
(Above Capitol•Bakery)
Entrance Around Corner
Frank
·
's Restauran't
Draft Beer
8oz. glass
25~
Pitcher·
s2.oo
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PAGE 8 .
THE CIRCLE
.
APRIL 10, 1974
14.8.1
14.8.2
14.8.3
14.8.4
14.8.5
14.8.6
14.8.7
14.8.8