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Part of The Circle: Vol. 14 No. 10 - April 24, 1975

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VOLUME
l 4~ NUM~I;:R 1 O
THE
I
J&S
·
MARISTCOLLEGE;_'.J>(?UGH~EEPSJE~ NEW YO~K 12~1
·
~P~I:, 24, 1975
9
-.
-
%
-
:
in
-
crease Seen
·
ForNeit
Yeir
-
, I
·
;
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f
r
r
.
r
PAGE2
Magazine Designed
To Help Grads
Where will 1975 graduates find market.
answers to the number of
"The State of Graduate
decisions confronting them after Education"
is
an
overview of
graduation
.
- expecially
·
during graduate studies, with sections
these economically
_
insecure on professional schools, women,
times? The Marist College minorities and financial
·
aid;
Alumni
Association
is
doing their while a
·
writer for Money

part
to help by providing a gift of magazine
.
looks
,
closer at
The
Graduate
magazine, financial realities
·
in "Present
currently being distributed on Shock."
·
.
campus as
part
of a young alumni
The
Graduate
magazine also
-
service program.
.
explores the practical aspects of
The Graduate,
A
Handbook for consumerism in "The Good Ear
··
·
Leaving
School,
/
was
.
written Guide" an introduction to high
expressly for seniors - to help fidelity sound
.
·
equipment, and
them make
.
the transition from '
.
'Wheels" a review of.'75 car& and
college into the "real world." The trucks. Other articles in the 96-
'75 issue is
a
special
)
'hard times page handbook include "Surviyal
edition" to help graduates cope So
_
u,rcebook," ." Job Hunting
with the economy and the job
-
Made Easier," and "Work as a
market. For example, articles Way ot Life
.
"
range from a 14-page career
.
Copies of The Graduate
·
section which reviews the magazine may be obtained by
·
-
financial
·
outlook of
·
over 90
·
seniors
.
at either the
Alumni
careers to "Job Forecast''75 '
.
' a Office in St
;
Peter's or in the
summa'ry
of
·
_
corpo;ate Career Placement Office in
recruiters' opinions of today's job
·
Champagnat Hall.
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 24, 1975
f
·
Nyquist
To
Speak
·
.
-
I
At Statewid~ Conference
·
New York State Commissioner credits before entering
.-
college Opportunities for High School
of Education Ewald
B.
Nyquist and the development
of
different Students: What
.
Program is Best
will be the keynote speaker at a
-
kinds of "time -variable" degree for Your Institution?";
.
"Ad·
statewide conference
.
on "High programs, such
as
five-year and
-
missions ,
Counseling ,
School - College Articulation" to three-year programs
.
.
·
·..
Placement•~
·
and "The Use of
·
be held at Marist College May 1-2.
On
the high
·
scl\ool level, l9cal Examinations in the Articulation
JoinUy sponsored by the State school district a3ministrators Process
.
"
·
·
·
.
Education Department,
·
-Marist have been urged
.
by the
·
State to
Marist
·
faculty invi_ted to lead
College and Syracuse University,
.
review their twelfth grade workshops
.
are Robert Lewis
;
the conference is the first called programs to eliminate the so-
assistant professor of English
.
by the Commissioner to focus on
,
called "senioritis" that occurs and Dr
.
Peter O'Keefe, director
increa_sed
.
co9peration
'
·
·
in
,
when students
are
not adequately of School:. College Prograips; Dr .
.
educational programming ~t-
challenged
.
-
·
-

·
O'Keefe is also actively involved
ween
-··
.
secondary and
.
·
post-
_
Recerit
findings
by
the in the planning
_
of the conference.
secondary schools.
.
.
- .
.
Education Oepartment show that
.
The day's activities will con-
Invitations have been sent to as many
·
as 15 percent of
·
high chide
·.
with
_-
·
a
reception, dinner
directors
.
of admission, coun- school
seniors
~
experience
-
and
a
panel discussion
01.1
«The
seling
_
and
·
testing, student ad
~
-
c:
•s~nioritis/ '
.
The
·
Department
i
,
Manag~ment
_
o( .\rticulatio
_
n :
.
·
visors,
· ~
financiar
·
aid
·
officers,
:
cited the combinatfon
of
early
'
Finances,
·
Personn~l,
,
Sharing
dea_ns
_
of students and their
-
maturity
:
and
,
more appropriate

.
Reso~ces
;',\
Robert
·
·
Hollo"'.ay
,
·
·
assistants, and secondary school elementary and secondary school associate
·
director for
·
ProJect
principalsth!'oughout New York._

experiencefas being responsible
·
Advance at Syracuse University,
_
Marist has
.
been
_
chosen to host

for the increasing number of high
·
.
wiH
,
serve
.
as.
>
moderator
.
the conference because of
I~ sch"ohlJ
shidents
-
now ·teady
·
for
'
Panelists will be Russell Lauper,
.
pioneer effort
i11
the high school -
···
college-level study
.
-

·
.
.
.
.
·
assistant vice
.
president
.
for
,
ads
.
.
college articu
_
latiorl area, as
,
Registration
_
for
··
the state
_
ministration,
c:w.
,
Post College
·
.
..
,,
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
A
.

aa
cl
exemplified
.
.
by
··
its two-ye~rold
_
.
conference
.
,
will
·
begm
··
at
.•

11:00
,
.
of
'
,
LongJsland
,
.
University,
·
and
.
. >
a
·
.
·
-
n
·
:
gu
·
a
·
ge
.
.
. :
_
·
e
·
.
·
''bridge
u
program.
,
!naugurated
,
a.m
:;
follow,ed by Hiricheon: in
"
the
~-
H~rry Farrell; c90rdiilatcir,
,
High
·
·
_,
_ _
·
..
-

·
_ .
_
_

·
_
·
·
.
in 1973 with Our
IA4Y
.
of.'Lourdes
.
Maiisbljnirig
.
room
:
Dr;. LiriusR School
·
- C:ollege Articub1tion,
·_· ·
. .
.
.
High School
;
,
Marist's
.
pr(?gram
_
Foy,
·•
president
:'
of Marist, will Hauppauge
.
School District
,

_
:
·
was
-
<
l!Xpanded
to include
.
welcome
·
delegates at 1 :30 p
.
m
:
in
._
.
-.
The
.
program
·
oh
.-,
May
,
2
·
\Vill
·
·
T D
·
··
·
_
-
-
·
.
Spackenkill
,
Higll School lastfall.
_.
the Cam
.
pus
'.
Center
"
theatre, b~gin
·.
with
-
a
.
pane
t
.
on
,;
:
''Ar
~
.
.
·.·
-:.
o
-...
.
.
e
·
.
.
.
-
P
·
..
a
·_ ·
·
rtm
·
__
·
e
.
_
.,
n
-
,
_
·
t
·
:
The
·
Mari13t
_
-
=
,
:.
Spackenkill
·
where
·
'.
Qornmissfoner
-
Nyquist
,
Jiculation

and
:.·
Pro
'
gram
·
..
.
:
agreeII1entis one
.
of!}le first of its will give his address: , -
•·
-
· .
, '
~
Re
_
search
;?
'./
·
moderated
.
by
..
·
kind
-
in
-
the

.
13tate between.
:.
a
_
"MajQr:Issues in High·School -
.
N,orman
:
l
$nyder,
'
professor
-
·
of
colle~~
'
8;~q
a
;
ppblic
_
scho~t (,
·
· College Afticu!ation" is the
'
topi~ sociolo~y
.
at
<
Russell
_
:
. ~ag~
·
_
field of. music
;
Many
.
orchestral
:r.fanst
.
s program e!}a
_
bles
·
high
·
.
·.
of a p,mel schedu,led for 2: 30
.
p.m.
· ···
College:
·
..
,
The
· .
. speaker-
_,
.Wlll
,
.
be
·
·
··
By Basil
Charlamow
instruments are endowed
.
with school seniors t~
,
.
c~mplete
,
iL
iri
·
:
the
.
'
'theatre
:
Panelists will
:'
Franklin
,
p. Wilbur,'associate in
.
_
Next semester, the Modern Italian names such as
.
the viola; freshman college year
_
whil
_
e still
.
include
.
Wa'rreri
_

McGregor, d~velopment
.
:
at
.,
Syracuse
'
Language Department will in- cello andthe piano. Likewise, the maintaining
:
the~r statm;
,
;
a
.
s prin~ipa,l
__
o
f
'
l'tianhasset High Uriiv
_
ersity
'.

. . .·
...
.
_
·
-

.
.
corporate stµI another
-
language mechanics of music is
-
annotated members
-
of
:
th~ir graguating

School;
: ·
Charles W
,
-
Meinert,
·
·
At
·
-
10:15
,
a.Ill
:>
ccjncurrent
.
into its sphere
,
Italian. J'his new in Italian: adagio, ~llegro; forte, classe~·
-:
Th~ '1Jlique featur~ of tl_l
.
e
'
a~oc
J
,te,: in
.,,
higher education
;
workshop
·
sessions will be lie!d ow
;
·
branch
wiff
be, headed
_
by Mrs. pianissimo, etc.
.
. _
.
.
.
pr~gram 1s
:
·
the
•·
s~armg
0
·-
of
,
N~w
,
·
:
y
ork
,
;,
~tate
/
Ed11catici_n
;_.
~•
<;;~rr
~
c~~u~
(
Art!¢ulati~n.
"
.,,_
-
.
Gioielli. The
:
curriculum will
The Italian courses will also campuses
·
and fa~lllties
;_
-
Each
,
Depa~~ellt;
:
·
and
.
a
.-
represen
s
Topics \Vll!,
:
,
mclude
.
'
:'
English,'
~
·
offer
-
four courses:
·
Elementary expose the studellt to the culture,
.
studenttakes three courses ~t t~e
.
tative
;
·
;
o! the
_--
Midd~
,
e States "S~ien~e;''.
·
u0ccupational'
'.
'
.
and
,
.
Ita~an I,
IL
and Intermediate which has richly contributed
-
to
.
:
college
;
ca~pus
,,
an~
;,
~o
,
at
ltl~
:
-
A~socia.;
.
tion•~
:-
~ta!l~mg C
_
o~-
:
"F
.
~_l'.eig~ La1wuage." 0.ther
.
·

.
,
.:>
.:'
---
:
-
.

...
• ,,
.'., ..
}tali9:n
I,II.
:.
_.
·•
,
.
\
_
.
·
, ,: .
..
..
.
.
'
.
the Fine
Arts
great ~inters
:
imd own
.
s~h~ol
.
:, ·
::
J<
.
::
-
...
, ,
,
lllltt~
,::
o~
,
·
~
J:1I<!ulati,o_n._,
>: ,
';
_ .
topics
_
w.ill
~
~e
::::
arranged;
.
'l'he
,•
:
·
"'
1"'"'"'"'''"'
·
·'•

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'
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sl'!ul-pto:r1{
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sµtn
.t

.
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:
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.
,
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Mapst
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,
pr~~i:-~
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:
oiily,
cn:w
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..
?:
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r
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..
.
.
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.
-
"'.1ll
·.
C!
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onclude
:
at
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bring
.
the
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11
:.
1-~llguage
,
~nd
,c:,
and''Titfa*
~:
Iii
/
t}\
'e
;
~~~l_<:J.
_
of
,
·
ar:: '
:
~ ?Oopera on
:
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e_r13
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1t1

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e.
~~
_e
:
:
.
mp~s
-
'-="':nter:
~p~~s''Wl
:m-
u,,,
_
cussion ~n recommendations
'
,,
,
,
'''.
'~i}
~
t
·
·
·

culture closer
.
to those of descent
.-
chetecture;
:
Berrum
·
is
,
m

the
·
mvolvethe awarding of advanced
-
elude Basic Skills,
·
Collegiate and conclusions;
::,
.,,
....
.

c:"·
.
..
'.:/1
.;:t
!_.,
·
,
and non-Italians
::
Tiie
'
purpose
'
·
of foregro~nd.
As
m~ntioned b~fore,
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
,
,
,
-
.
,
,
..__
,
.
.
. .
,
.
,.
VH
.
'
this endeavor is to
·
show that Italian influence in
·
music has
Athletic facility, contmued from p
.
1

-
.
.
.
.
··
.
.
:, .
.
. .
-
..
..
.
,
.
.
·
;
f,i'
~ere
:
is'
~fre
,
fo
:
I~~an tham
.
been ph~
_
nomenal
.· ..
t~~ough facHity
rn~y
me°iin
,.
the in-
..
com~unity
:
College
.
However .
,
relations
;
the new facility coul~
-
j}
si~ply
,
,
_

..
Mangia!
pizza, C?~posei:-s
_
~uC~
)
lS Ver~, Pu~~ tr()guction
...
of
-
new sports to there is no guarantee of.use of ~e
.
be a central aren~for area
_
play •
.
:r::-
.
spag~e_tti ?r La Mafia.
. ·
.
.
-
.

c~m,. l,)omzettl
;
and
_
Vivaldi.
·.
Mari st,'

Activities
_
tha
_
L
:
are
:
Dutchess gym bec~llSe
()f
_
th~1r
-
_
o!f
-.
gam~~;
·
~n~
..
_
tourna~e
_
nts
.
·
,,~
Or1gmatmg from the mother of Cin~ma goers can witness
·
t~e
.
presently
·.
not
,
now
•·
available
i
on
~
own
·
sch~dule
_
._
In tlie
_
pas~
·
h9me
· '.'
·
Smee
.
·
Mar1st
..
1S
.
.
.
lJlvolved
.
·
m_
tpe
'
f')
most all mo~ern E~ropean gell!us
.
of m~sters such as yit-
campus, such as
.
swimming and
·
games were
·
also played at Jomrriunity perhaps
·
p!'ograms of
:.•.
·
.
;•~.~-~-
;_
'.·f
.
·
,,,,


~
..
.
:
; ,
languages
_
(Latin);
.
ItaHan _as a tori? . d~ Sica and Federico diving, handball, squash and Lourdes High School but many
recreational instruction c:ould be
""
'
lang~age has play«:d
A
do~mnant Fellini.
. .
.
.
.
. . paddleball will
.
be available.
schools have
_
~equested not to
proyided
.
. for
.
_local ~itizens in
.
jI
_
role _m Wes~ern C1v~ation. In
pue
t?
the ri~hness and ~-
-The new gym will
be
used by play
:
atLourdes
. ·
.
..
.
·
are
_
as
·
of mterest'to. them,
.
-
~.t. \·
_
the_ field of literature such great
,
dividuality of Italian culture, this the Marist Basketball team for
,,
Basketb~ll Coach Ron Petro
.

Dr
.
.
Goldman said that the fn1al
u~
-
wrrters ~s Dant~, Petnirch a~d field will b_e a welcomed a~dition all home games
:,
Right now the f~e.ls that
.
with the home co~rt
c:ost
· ..
of-
_
th~ new facility; is

,i.l
Boccac
_
c10 have impressed their to the Manst College Curric
_
ulum team has no real home court of its
·
right

on campus more Manst
-. .
unknown
;
Smee they
.
have Just
·
'
1
t
mai:k upon Wes~ern
.
Thought: both throu~h language and own.
·
This past season
;
~ome students
;
wJ.ll
-
attend'..t~e)arii~~
-;
started ta~ing bids fr~m different
Italian has also influence~
.
.
the cultural studies.
games were
-
played at Dutchess ~so h~vl.Il~ t_he
.
new f~cili~y will
,
~ons_truct!_o~ compa~es
_
who
:
are
\
THE ADVENTORE:S
OFT
was
-
buC l0r
:
:
·
.
be
_
an mcentive for' high school
.
interested
'
m
·
building
)
:
the new

.
,,
basketball players
.
to come
to
. .
structure
i
Some of the cost of the
.
Maris(
.-
1,'he
)
1e~
;
gyni car
(
alsobe
·,
)
11aintenance of the J~cili~y wi
_
ll
utilize.d for
·
ba~ketball
·
'
in~
'-
.
be defrayed by income
·
earned by
·
tramilrals
'.
:
.
·
. ·
'
·
::
.
.
:
·
.
tl}e
',
f~cility
;
;However
-
.
the
.
Since .Marist is
,'
the
·
.college
_
'
of · fieldhouse
-
will
.
probably
·
not be
the
'.
Mid .
.
?
-~udson ; area
.
·
fo
·
·
self ~
,i
;upporting.
·:
.
.
.
_.
1',thl~tics
;"
:'
and
·
,
·_
co~m_unity
·
·
· ·
· '
·
.·:
'
'
\
~
~
·
'
::
·,
·
s.A:C'.
elections are 'Coming up next
,
week. :The Stud~nt
.
·
_
A~~de~c
,.
~om
_
mittee
-
is looking-for stud
.
ents to
.
represent
·
theµ-
_
. ·
,
(
·
ma1or- field:for
,
1975
=::
76.-
;
·
:: _
·
,
·,
·
·
·
.
·
_ .
:
..
·.
.
.....

.
.
.
~r
_
o~e .~te
_
rested
_
in
~av4tg
_
an
_
input into.,the happenings
-
·
of.
.
'
tlteir
-
maJo
r-
-
and
-
-working-
-
for improvements, contact Bob
·

Sammon
,
.
Gregory
,
House, soon
:.
:
.
·
>
.
.
~

·
>
·
-
·
.
-
·· . ' · -
.



'- . . ,
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.
-
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·

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.



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~te,ling
_
; Inc.:
:
._ ·
.
.
·
..
:
·
·
·

.
·
·
.
.
.
.
··.
·
.
.
_
·
.
,
.
111
·
,?
:-·
.
:.
-
.
.
.
:_.














































































APRIL 24. 1975
Students
:
performing for the Modern Language Festival.
L~nguage Festival Presented
By joan Stegenga
-the Seven .Drawfs),
_
highlighted provided with a glimpse of
dif-
the_ir
_
show. Vito Aprigliane ferent cultures through the show.
TI.trough
_
a cooperaµve effort surprised the audience when he
,
Last year· a slide show on the
-
between
.'
students; teachers, and
·
galloped on stage as a confused Impressionist
_
Period of Europe
local
:
performers;
-
a Modern prince who thought
-
Snow White was prese[!ted by a student
·.
Language

Festival is presented w~s Cinderella. Whoever worked group
.
Dances and the traditions
__
annually at Marist.
"
The three
-
the ropes on the
_
curtain that night
·
behind them are portrayed to the
evenings of
·
eritertainmeri
f
in
-
..
surprised them all when he didn't
_
onlookers .
.
Often
·
a professional
elude a combination of for:eign
_
_
close it.
_
.
dance group or a choreographer
dances
,
poetry
;
songs, skits and
· .
The
_
third
·
evening of the wiUbe brought in
.
The costwnes
plays
:
.
_ _
_
__
_
_ ·
.
festival took place o~ April
22.
It
.
·
worn for the dances are usually

The first evening
,
of the was the
"
International
,
Eyening
.
made by students.
Festival
.
was
·
on March
24
·
.
this coordinated
.
by. those
in
Spanish,
,
The Festi".al als? sen:es to
·
year.It was held in a cafe style French,
~
German, and Russian
.
enhance public relations with the
atmosphere
-
in the New Dining studies;
:
A German dance
:
area coIDmunity. Shows
_
are
.
Room
;
.
T
_
wo professional singers organization, the
.
_
Schuhflatt advertised·in the local paper and
:
were hired for the night, Ms. Group, was brought in for the
·
formal invitations are serit to
Emilie George arid Mr.
:
Gorizola show.
_
.
_
·
.
·
nearby high schools
.
Over
-
200
.
Quintara
.'
Ms.
,
George
'
ac-
l\_iadame Gregg explains what
.
o~tslde people, many
·
of them
·
companied herself ori the banjo
;
.
the
-
affair offers besides
-
en-
,
high
_
school students, attended
-
recorder, arid guitar
.
Her terta'inment.
-
Participatin
·
g
.
th~
Sp'anish Festival night this
selections
·
were
d
ri
Fre
·
nch, students
,
receive
.
"
excellent- year.
·
·
'
Russiari, Spanish, German
,
and practice'' in their language by
.
-
Part_o~lastyear's p
'
erionnance
PAGE3
Files Available
Under New Act
(CPS)
-
-
In
the past, the FBI, specific exemptions.
the CIA, and the IRS have spent
To find out if the FBI has kept a
~housan~ of dollars collecting
.
file on you, write to the Deputy
~o~tio~ on ~?re than 6 Atto!"lley General, Department of
million private citizens. Now, Justice, Washington
DC. Mark
under
the
newly-revised your envelope and
letter
Freedom of Infoffllation Act "Freedom
of
Information·
these agencies must spend Request." To check CIA files
thousands to give that in-
write to the Freedom of
In-
formation
.
back to individuals. formation Coordinator, CIA,
. ~ccor~g to government of-
Washington DC
.
~icials, smce the new law went
The law permits agencies to
mto e
_
ffect last March, federal charge for the direct costs of
a~encies have be_e~ swam~d searching for and copying
with requests by citizens askmg documents. To avoid large
t~ see thei~ files and by en-
unexpected costs ask that any
vironmentalists and conswner charges be directly related to the
_
watchdogs requesting federal
.
costs of providing the documents,
documents and results of and state in your letter that you
government tests
.
will pay any costs up to a stated
.
There is one catch, howe_ver.
amount but want
to
be promptly
The FBI, a spokesman said, advised of costs in excess of that
opens a file on each letter writer, amount.
if a file doesn't already exist.
If your initial request is denied
. The spokesman said the new an appeal within the department
files are opened to keep a record is necessary
.
An appeal letter
of the bureau's response arid to should be addressed to the head
ensure that one person's file
of the department and should
doesn't go to someone else with detail the request, the denial, and
the same name
.
·
state that you are now filing an
_
Under the new amendments, if appeal. The
·
government had
.
20
}'.OU
suspect that
;
a_ ~ureau has a
working days to reply to an ap-
fde on your activities, you can peal. (see sample letters printed
make
_
a
formal
request below.)
reasonably
describing
the
For further details, send a
records saught
,
Within ten stamped self
-
addressed envelope
working days the bureau must to the Freedom of Information
grant access
_
to this material Clearinghouse, P.O. Box
19367
unless it
falls
into
_
one of nine Washington,
DC 20036.
'
Speakers Listed
Italian.
_
_
_
-
.
.
learning the lines to a
·
play or to was vidio ~ped and shown to
·
"Spanish students were very
.
recite a poeID in a foreign tongue. another outside group, parents of
Mid-Hudson voters will hold
a
Albany for the
·
NYCLU statewide
_
ambitious
:
this
.
-
•-
· year''
·:
says
!!
Singing songi; is
,
one
:
ofthe best
_·.
Marist students; Uwas preseµted Citizens Lobby Night Friday, membership of
40 000
will also be
-
'
~
~~~apie
,
(}regg,·/~h~!rWoniaI1_
.,
9f:.
·
)
va~s
..
tC>
.
tfiaster .. J?rpnwiciatiCJ
,
!).:
}
;_
:
_!it
:
,'.
~{esh,aj.e~
,
·
-
91>~~~-tise
.
·
!~~t
:_,
,
.I\PE_i! _. 18
~
,
~t,\J
; .
~~o
:
.JteY
,
..
~~~~
,, 1:m
tl}~
_
pr~gra.~
:
.
'
.
_
. ,
.
:.
_·_ .. _
, __
.
. _
_

_
_ _
the
.
'.
festival:

Ah
'
entire
?
evenui~
:•
she
:•
adds;
?
Skill'
-
:1~
J~ht;r
i-
:
un~
:
J:upe .
.
~e
:
tilpe
-
~
gaye them
_.---
an
,
.
Asseml.)lymen,
·
:B~11)a~
·
:
:1'-~-.-,-o
,
'
!<
1.~
::-
a~?~nc1.nw.
~
':ne
,:
,--.:n..:~"'""'"&;
•'- ••
_
_ ,

,
_,.;.
.
.. ,
..:..,._':".:'
was
:
devoted to
.
tl}em;
A
skit proved by performmg m front of oppor:tUD1ty to
.
~ee a
-
part of
.
~he Beacon, an~ Maurice Hmchey,
P~ll1ps cited so!lle of the _ISsu~s
,
~
·
erititled
;-
·
.
"Blarica
·
Nieves y
-
Los an audience.
·
.
-
.
·
-
·
.
_ ,
.
·.
le~rnmg experience
~
at
·
Marist Jr., Saugerties:
.
.
_
.
'
w~ch NYC:LU
_
15
support> ..
1g
1n
..
,
Siete Enanitos" (Snow White and
.
Both audience and acters are
The open forum ts sponsored by
this session of the state
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
the Mid-Hudson Chapter of th.e
legislature, including:
-
New
·
York Civil Llberties Union
- Greater protection of the right
·
Cllreer
_
Day
.
To
Be Held
and will be at
7:45
p
.
:m. at the
to privacy, restrictions on the use
Unitarian Fellowship Building,
67
-
-
of
·.
arrest records, and on pre-
s.
Randolph Ave
.
, Poughkeepsie,
-
employment lie detector tests,
New York.
abolition of wire-tapping.
"All
citizens concerned about
- Decriminalization of such
"Your Llfe; Your Future, Your
The following topics
·
will
·
be
Choice" is the
'
theme of Career
.
addressed: "How To
--
Pick a
Day:
_
'75
·
to be held at Marist Career," John Elsoffer, director
College on Tuesday, April
29
from of
.
placement
·
and
career
10
:
30
a.m. -
3:00
p.m. in the development,
_
Dutchess Com-
Campus Center.
.
·
munity College; "How
·
To Get a
Six topics
wiU
be discussed
l?Y
Job," Gertrude Hernstadt, senior
guest
-
speakers in a morning supervisor, New York State
session
.
The afternoon program Employment Bureau; "How To
will feature
.
individual ad-
.
Get Rematriculated, Accredited
visement on the topics by and Licensed," Dr. Stephen
representatives
·
from local in-
_
Panko, director of Continuing
.
dustry, business,
'
social services
_
Education, Marist College.
_
and educational institutions.
Also, "How To Pay for School,"
,
"Futur
_
e Unlimited" · is the Gerald Kelly,
director
.
of
theme
-
of the keynote address to financial
·
aid, Marist College;
.
be given by Marguerite Nixon, "How To Set· Up Your Own
assistarit director ofCommu.nity
.
·
Business,>' Jeronie Berman,
Resources,
.
.
Brooklyn
.
·
_
Model
·
Small Business Administration,
.'.
Cities
Program, at
10:30
a
.
m. in pub~c
··
relations division; and
th~ Campus Center theater
:-
, <'
How To Survive Without a Job,''
.
.
Mar!st ID
STREAKING, FROSTING
-
· -
·
&
·
PERMANENT WAVING
_
·
-
_
_
~
CALL 454-9239 for yqur
appointment nQw
.
/
.
'.,
.
.

. . .
ON
TH■
MAIN MALL
3.Ll■■RTY STR■■T
'.
·· .
(Above Capitol
,
Ba~eiy)
Eritranc,{AfQl.!.!lg
.
~qrner
.:

,
...
"'
..
·
William J. Eagen, Jr., Com-
missioner of Social Services,
Dutchess- County.
Lunch will be held at noon.
Participants are welcome in the
college dining hall. A child care
service will
.
be
available
throughout the day for
a
small
fee.
>
The
afternoon
career
-
workshops are designed to
Continued on p. 6
how Albany effects their lives are victimless
activities
as
urged to attend," said James alcoholism,
Phillips, Legislative chairman of
- Strict preservation of rights
the Chapter.
of a criminal defendant to a
Various
special
guests prompt and fair trial by an im-
repre~enting community and partial judge and jury, an end to
county interests will
be
among the money bail system of pretrial
the audience, Phillips said, release, and
.
repeal of
-
the
assuring an exchange of views on inhumane and unworkable
drug
critical questions confronting la~ passed in
1973
.
Dutchess and Ulster county
- Immediate action to establish
residents.
Ken Norwick, chief lobbyist in
Continued on page
6
College Students
Citibank
·
is offering college students checking
accounts with n~ service scharges or minimum
balance requirements.
.
Our Poughkeepsie Plaza office is open 9 - 5
Mp~day thru Friday~ Come in and vist with us.
( M/D-H~DSON} N.A.
MEMBER F.D.J.C.
..
..
.....
...
.
.
.
..
.
·
·
=
--=~
-
-
-
-
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__
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_
_:
~~~-~:.~~:
;::v
.....
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-.
,
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PAGE4
. ·voLUME 14
Marlst Collega, Poughkeepsie,
N. V;
'lbe ?darist College
·
cmcLE
is
the weekly newspaper of the students
of Marist College
and
is
published throughout the school
·
year ex.;
'-
clusive of vacation
·
periods by the Southern Dutchess News Agency,
Wappingers, New York.
.
.

·
Co~ Editors ·
_
.
Photography Editor
Sports Editor
Layout
staff
.
Business Manager
.
·
Advertising Manager
.
.
Gregory Conocchioli and Irene Ross
·
Al"Adolfi
RichBurke
Linda Franco and Mary Beth Pfeiffer
.
-
Greg Welsh
Toin McDonald
· Staff: Peter Allen? Jani.cf Colleran, flhoda Crispell
,
Susan
Dunderdale, Genevieve Fitzgerald, Fatlier'Leo Gallant, Charles
Garret, Joe Gigliotti, Tommy Kelly;
.
David Livshin
·
Paul
Mangieri, Thomas McTernan,' John Reilly
r
·:
Cathie
.
Russo,
Richard Schneider; Julie Schott,-Reid Scott; Joe Sexton, Karen
Tully,
-.
RickWhitsell.
.
·
Tuition
InCr.ease
THECIRCLE
·
APRIL 24, 1975
Letters
To
The
Editors
.
Re~ctions
To
River
Day
Day" activtties on April 15, 1975,
.
considered it an ethical mandate
is any
.
indication of
,
accepted to help repail'
·
in some way
·
the
realities, I am forced to convince devastation which
.
took place;
·.
myself that some Marist students
If was a
.
devastation,
·
rather
. To: The Marist Commuruty
are existplg in pure abstrations of than a
·
destruction; because
·
Marist Colleg~ often appears to an unreal ~orld.
_
_
.
. ·
.
gevestation
:
is.
more
:
co_rilpl~~e
be
amodelof the "real" world.
I was appalled, ~argined at
:
than destruction; destruction
·
·
Attributing to Ute realness which the behavior
.
of my fellow implies
:_
;
a1_1 :
.
ability to repair,
it manifest it falls under Ute
·
students. I am almost ashamed to
,
(levastatiorus absQtute.
.
..
.
. .
conception ~f a system.
consider
·
_!_llyself a part ~f
this
..
: ··
,
'fhe
ca~strophy _exists as
.
a
A _system implies a system of system:
..
·.
.
. . · .
·
.
·
.
~eva~tabon because
,
of,:
::-'
~he
concepts, persuati9ns, objects
.
And y~t

the fault does
:
_n~t reference
:
set through;which

.
words and the like. The more appear to
.
be everyone's; but ~tis ~os~ who partook must _\'.ie:w: our
.
serfous a person takes
this
model not.
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
· . .
_
_ .
...
.
_
world:
•·
.
'°:'
..
. .
·
,
.
~
the
more
real-to-them Oit
After the travesty at dinner
. ·
Reference
sets
-..
of
:
·
that
becomes.
.
.
.

that night; several stlidents,
-
_.
:
magnatude
scare
me
·
_
.
:
~o
.
If
behavior
·
which
.
was myself ~elude~; went down to
. _
obliteration.
-
··
·
demonstrated at
·
the "River
.
the riverfront party area;
_
and
:
-
•·
D:M
i
Morreale
,
·
l
1
.
I
I


















































































































































































































APRIL 24. 1975
THE CIRCLE
Letters, Continued
Tuition Increase
either, because I am among that the student body. I have been
number which receives no, or.at impressed at Marist by the
best
~ I .
parental financial existence of students from
support. I detect that the college various

.
socio-economic
Editor's riote:
tends to overestimate the backgrounds. A large tuition
c'll1e
·
{ollowing is a letter which parent's contribution to a increase could well destroy this.
was sent to. the college
·
ad~
.
student's education. Since my Might Marist become in the not
ministrators from the Student freshman year I have received too far off future a place for
Government, while
::
they"
.
were year by year reductions in my minority students with govern-
deciding on the tuition increase· financial aid. This year, if it was ment aid and students of the
for next year: It was
,
_
also sub-
.
not for an unexpected EOG grant, wealthier sort. Surely the middle
_
rmtted to. the C~CLE, be~ause
··
I would be
'.
in debt to Marist for
.
class student and
·
the middle
·-
S.G; President Brian Moms
·
felt. 300 dollars. Each of the past two class parent will
be
the ones to
that
,
the
.--
student
·
body ·should summers, my first pay .check suffer most should Marist suc-
know.~J they were rep~esented
. •
went to the Maf!st business office cumb. to
.
the temptation to take
on this issue.
>
to cl~r my account I ow~ money !he easy route of
·a
large tuition
.
·
,....
· .
.


. .
.
.
to
·
friends of my family, and mcrease.
·
.
:
··
.
..
~
-
.
___
Dea~
-
--
M~mbe
~
rs
.
o~
·
the College
_
·
.-
bec~use
·
of
~
Nation
·
aJ Defense
- ·
Faculty
·
-
-
members and
Staff
·

Coordinating C?uncil, th
_
e Colle~e Loans
_
I will be obliged to
.,
the
·
members are absolutely right in
Bud~et ~!)i:_mruttee, an_d Manst
·
government to the tune of nearly demanding
·.
salary
.
increases:
Top
_
Administrators:
:
·.
.
·
$ ~
.
when
~
_graduate. I write Indeed, because
·-
of the
·
strong
.
I , w:ould be, negligent
.
m
my U_lis
.
not-to ehc1t flov.ers or heavy case for such increases,
.
I have
duti~s. as ~r~sident of th~ ~~uden
_
t sighs: Others
-
sh_are ~Y position,
.
been put in the untenable position
-
B
.
~~yjfl did 110Uake this
.
ttmeJo
_
and yo~ could
.
not
-
afford the oL
,
sitting before the Ad-
The cast of "George M" prepares for this week's performance.
fonnally
.
present
:
~1l~
~
~a~e
Jor
·
a
.
flower bill or survive breathing in
·
ministration
.
. -
as
·
a
student
mor:e
_:
~odest·twtiO':)
i .
mcrease tha! unnat~ral
,
manner_ for the
.
re p re s e n t at i v e
.
a n d
A
·
.
l
-
untn1·
C
once
.
rned
th~n, t~e
-
one on _the lips
~f
most
·
peno
_
d
,
of ttme
c.:
that fairness to acknowledging the need
,
for a
:
. ·.
partlflP,ants
.
·?f
.•
la~L
:
Tuesday's ev~ryo
,
n_e · would demand.

The
_··
·
tuition. increase in the
..
neigh-
.. _
·
:
m~et~g,/The tss~e ts;
:
otcour_s~,
:
pomt
.!s
that_
: -
students are
·
.
borhood of" 2()9
_
dollars. My per.:
w
h
.
·
:

_,
qwte
.:
serious.It mvo~ves
·
nothmg e~onomic~lly pmchedtoo!
·
Just
.
sonalopiiliori is that if I were
.
·
,
·•
1•t
·
.
.
·
.
·
1
·
inpro
·
velllent
...
h~ss
.
·:
tha~
:··
the
_-
,
s~ryiv~_l-- of
.
the as
.
the
·
faculty
,
is, as the
sta,ff
is,
.
·
·
given the Midas touch I could not
.
.
__
col!eg~
<:c
1.
T~e
';
-
n
,
ecess~ty
_--
of-and as
.
the adinif)istratii:m is;
-
>
·

adequately reward the Marist
.
,_ . _
sati
,
sfy.lllgthe fair a11~ r
_
easonable
.
.
.t\11
cif
.
what
:
I have said so far
_
.
faculty
_
~nd
.
the
...
college's

ad-
.-:~
·
deman~
•.
for salary,
_
lllcr:eases,by
·
hl!s
·
.
_
overlooked
.
·
another ministrators for the tremendous
.
by
RHODA
CRISPELL
Mr. Emery thought that it is
·.
·
.
-
-
: ·
·
.
.
· s!3ff
;
,;1n:9 f&GultY:Ill.~m~ers

is an.·
.
.
paramount poiht
111
c_a~s where
.
job they do and for the dedic.atiojJ
beneficial that we don't have "big
.
_
,;
,
urgent_o_n,1:.
·
•¥Q~e~ver;
_
_
the
:
need
_.
tpe st~dentis notfootmg the cost they so well exhibit. But I wish to
The President of the Marist
wheels" to develop the goals.
·
-:
·
for ~hysiciil adm.bon~~ mc~ease_d of his education,
'.
hi
.
s parents are,

.::
vigorously
,
assert that
.
an
.
in-
Alumni;
.
Louis Emery, said that
"We can formulate policy to form
·
:
:
se~1ces! a11d
,
o~h~rrenovationsJs
t.
and you ~a11 bet ~at the':current
.
crease in the neighborhood of
300
the Association is concerned not
situations."
· ·
C>liyio_11s
if
th~
colleg~
_
isto grow
!J)
~conolll.y
_is
:
squeeZlllg thenfln the-'" dollars is
so
repugnant
-
fo
·
the only with maintaining Marist
It's a significant factor that
_
a·mearungful
,
way;
:
On~
.
:
cannot- samEf
,
suffocating manne-r
:
in
·
iriterests
'
of.the students whom! itself, but improving it.
·
__
these young alumni are con-
"
·
help
_
:
.~ut
:-
}?
_
e conscious
(!f-
:
an~
-
which Marist faculty
·
and staff represent tliatl cannot, now or
Mr. Emery expressed that,
tributing to the school. "The
.
.
.
.
·.·
SE:nsitiv~ to
:
the~e
-
needs,
_
~~9-
!t
,
m~I_IlbE:rs_ are being squeezed.
If
_
later, support it or put a good face "the purpose of the Association is
alumni are middle income
::: ~
:
wiµ
n9t :t~e
-.~tie_
:
purpose oLtllis
.'
twt1
.
C>nis ¥1~reased_by
~~
,
dolla_rs, on itin any way. Ujs mY strong to supportthe college in any way
people. It's a landmark factor
·
.
, ·>
.
.
.
:
s~tem~nt
!<>.
<listr~~tyou
.
from
,
the
p~~~n~
of
cl
_
resid~n!
.
i.s
takmg
_
colltention that faculty and staff thatit can." The Association has
_
that these people are giving
th~El yitalc;onre
,
l'Ils.
,
:
:
. ;-'.'
;
~

·
·
·
on
~
:
~n 8
·
p~rcent mcrease
_.
in
·
·
members mis-perceivetheir own m
.
embers on
<
the Board of
·
money at a time when they can't
.· ''
Ho~ey,Elr,
~
I s~rongl:rJeEl~ that;: edu
·
c::atio!i cosfs.
,
'11le pareilt
·
oh( best interest
in
urging that kind Trustees; it has vohmteers who
afford to," Mr. Emery noted .
.
.
_
ther~;1s
_
a

~~ger
,
~f.,becoming so c~nuµuter;-t~~es _on atj
,
e:vim
:
ofiricrease;
· . .
.
.
·
:
donate time to the school
.
and has
Mr. Emery discussed the
,:coniillflled;,with
:
thesEl
.
~oals th~t J1igher percentage mcrease.
:
Arid
<
My pJea is that we not. decide beentrying
t!l
raise funds for the
·
possibility of Marist Alumni

\VE: ~gh_t~gn~re
:
~the~
;
tmpor:tant
:
~ht~
~
W.i
_
ll qot b~
:
tlle/ir~t tim~_that
:
. '
bE)tween
·
facultY
'
and staff. and Capital Campaign to help the
Association, more or less
·
.
.
.
p~c1ples which
_
.
m the l~11g
run
~
parents have received
'
notu;:e
'of
-
:
students .
.
;
Such
• .
a
·
decision school.
·
It's raising funds
.
by
bec;oming a national association.
'
/
::
s
,
erve
,
to ~~rru.ite:th~ ~olle~e
;
in
•a
!iri
:
iilcrease.
;
Last
.
i
y
_
e~i
(Ani,I-
.
betokens disaster
.
Ior all;
:
L wish approaching anyone_
.
W~O
h~s
.
piere ~re already three
·
chapters
...
.
•.
,
..
·:
>
very
,
spef~al;,
<
s1gruJ1~
_
,nt
:
/
~ay.
: ,
~ro
.
~gn ~l)er:
:.
were
·
trect~efto
·
·
a
'
tha(we posse~sed aeommunity
.
gr~duated from
-
1.\iarist eith~r m
m
·
~x_i~tence today, a~d a
.
·
·
:
·
;
... ··
·>
='
st~ge
_
nts,
,
.
J
,
,
c;on~~11di
~
~r~
-
;.,~e.
,
s~~i:i1~!~~11:t::1r1c
_
re13se· m
;
_bot,~
,
spirit that
.
Would-
-,
make
:
all
.
this person,
_
by phon~, or by
,
mail., . possibillty of four more
~
~he
·

·
·
':-
:
:
':
':
·
·
.
·:
I?~rY;
:
,;,
st':l!f_:;'fr,oi;p
,
;:
)Y_h!fll ,_, .. a
";
J~t!'?n and roorn
~
~.t'l!lboard cos~
::':
·
grubbing"irl'the
_
.financial
market
;
,1;,~~n~
_
,t,'1~
..
:t:Wi:1~!..
:
~e.
:e
~\urp.m
"':
~ext
.,
J'W(t;.:-Y:e.~r
.
li,
,
:.ITh1:.,
.e~~tll}~
.
. .
'/
\
)
.;~
co,Ueg~
_
:
lS
,
_
formed:
;
J.,~~
.
n.otll?:ea·n
:
-:
~m.e
::
Pclf~n~
,
'
~H?
'
}
_
ti.id
_
~nts
\\'.jll
'

:
p~a~ectmp¢c¢ssary/i
J:iope
:
that
,
Association co_ntntiuted to are the
.
chapters
.
are
·.
a
,
'
Mid-Hudson
..
>:
,
:
~
·;
}()
,
q~ru.~ra~e fa~tµ~rO?-e~b~r~
0~
no
_
:
,
d~ubt
.
,;
£as~
i/
l!l
'
C
th~ii:
::
SlliPS
·
_
the
_
se·
;
<_
QbS~rv.aHons
s
:::
:
.
:::
:
and
.:
basketba~
,
·
teaI_I1,
~.
t?e
football
c~apter, a Potomac chapter, and
.
,
..
:,:,
. a~1strators ~Y
,
)llis
Je~a~lt,
should
~er~
-
~~
another inci:ease
.
. ·
.
suggestion~ Jall
.
·
on
-
resp!>nsiye
. _
club,
.
·
the Presiden! s
.
Regatta,
a Ne_w York area ch~pter. Other
.
.
>
bµ,t
·
stlU, tllesoul-_ofa
,
~ollegeJs its
_
Economics is mdeec!
_
the "dispial
·
ears;J will be glad to discussthis and the
_
Theat~e Guilde;
possible ch~pte~s mclude Los
<:
students; Pe"!l:it
.
me;.
-;
then, to science/' Could :we be driving out matter with all~concerrieiL
.
.
.
,
,
The_ _ President
-
of
.
the Angeles, Miami, Boston, and
relate very bnefly some of
-
t~e
'
more
_
money than
-
W.~
~ake
~?
.
·
Thank you,
~
f am
·
. , .
,- ·
·
·
Association feels that the bulk _of
Albany chapters.
.
probl~rns th_at ;s~~d~11ts have m-
We
-
should ~ot lose s1g~t m all
.
·
·
.
,:
Sincerely yours,
.
peqple who graduate fromManst
.
In order to_ keep th_e alumru
meetmg
·
their tmtion
.
costs
: .
·
.
:.
o
_
tm c~lculations about tuition
·
Brian
J.
Morris, President
?~",
t forget ~bout the school. Th~
u~ ter~st~d
rn
Marist,
_
the
._
I
~a11not_
·
~x~ctly
-
.be levels of the damage
.
that might
·
·
.
·.
MaristCollege m1bal reaction of the Alumm
Assoc1_at1on puts out a newspaper
clispassionate m
this
presentation also occur t<> the demography
<
of
.
.
StudentGovernnient when_they are asked fo~ money,
four t':11:les a year to keep the
.
..
exp!amed Mr. Emery,
.
is that I
alurnru mformed of the changes
paid
·
for my education, why
that take place here. Mr. Emery
should
l
give them more money
feels that
if
the Alumni see that
now, but after a while you come
these changes are for good, a
·
·
·
-
-
.
-
to the conclusion that you got a lot degree from Marist will mean
Gall~ wines.
·
:
.
.
. .
. ·
·
·
Williams; Chrysoula Komis and more than you paid for.
more, and therefore, the alwnni
·
I suppose
'
.this
would be a fine ~BA; and
'
Brian Morris, Brian
Marist alumni are young, will be willing to pay
.
to improve
opportunity
··
.
tQ
-
voice reaction Morgan and the Student Gov't., according to Mr. Emery, because
the school. "Employers don't see
.
agairi~t
·
.. st
ti
den~

.
apathy". all who assisted in_ paying the the bulk of them graduated since
what Marist was like in 1965 when
Dear Editors,
: '
However, I feel tl)at'the conte11t
.
numeroustolls and several tanks
1964.
He expressed that this is a person graduated, they see
-
-;- .J'his pasf week
.
end saw the of this letter tefutesthe presence
·
o( gas. Many Thanks.
·
·
-
.
good because we can build the
what it is like in 1975, so they are
p
_
articipatio
_
n
,
of eight students
oCthis
diseas¢ Jn _view of the
·
·
·
.
: ,
.
BOYCO!f GALLO! programs around the graduates helping themselves by helping
-
.
from Gregory Ho~e
i_n
.
the First
·
.t,\CTIONS of soi:n,e people.
·
·
·
.
.
·
·
J1µ1 Kennedy instead of
.
being tied to old
.
.
-
East
Coast Mobilization for Farin
.
>
It
is
in
this
·
vein
,
thatlwish to
.
~
Continued on p
;
7
.
.
Workers in Washington, D.C.The
.
thank
:
the
:
'
following people
-
·
a11d , - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - -
·
•p•r.og_r_a_ms_. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
-
·
. weeltend consisted of
.
workshops the
·
organiiatio~s
:
they are
C!9D.·
aimed
:.
·
at
'
the organization. of neC!ted with: Kathy Manning
'
and
.
.
.
.
·.
:
·
suppo~ <;!P,mrrlittee~ on CaI_I1ptises
.
th_e
·
·
cUB:{or. pi~king up the
ta6
on
_
;
..
-
for ~e
-
purpose o_f e9ucating
1
the
·
the van we
·
rented; Cathy Russo
.
.
:
·
C!ons~er
'
:'
of-- the boycott
.
on
. :
and
<
the
'
Campus
'
Community
grape
·
s
:
,
:
Jceberg
lettuce, and Action Program;
_
Rev .. Rhys
.
.
,..
.
~
.
.
.
'.
.
.
-
.
.
.
-
'
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
'.
.
.
.
-
.
.
·
..
,
·
.
.
,•
..
.
·~
.
..
..
. _.
.
rices
,
-
::
.
'
tEASY~STREB
, "
~
'
'.:-i
'
i~lik~t
.
.
,
Park Discount- Beverage, Inc.
-
·
·
.-
i
Albany Post Road, Hyde
Park,
N.
Y.
12538
Telephone: (~14)229-9000
·,
-:
·
T
:
ry
.
So
.
mething Different
'
••
,
.
.
.
-
- -
Brawmieste-r Beer
~
:
CO
,
MPARABLE
ro sup
6 pak ~e
·
ss ~han $1.20
·
coke
Qt. -
~ow -
2 for 89¢
_
_
~<>ck
.
Beer
·Still
Available
> ·
:
·
_.-
<
Prices
.
Good
Ti II Apri_l 29,
_
l
975
,_.
..
-
,._-
..
.
·.
-
}
.
'
.
·
'
'
Houl':s:
Mon
~
Thurs 10am to 9pm
·
-_F:fi
,}
.
~
s~i_:9~ry1to
9pm
.
Sun
12
noon to 5 pm
-~\
·:.-:,· _- .. :· ;-
-..
-
~
_.-
•"
'
,
_
.

:
,, •
7

. ,

.
'
.
(
'
......

'
.,:.
...
'

• • • I • •


.


·

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. . .
'
.
~
I
1

,

,


• ,

,
' · , "
..
'
. . . .
' '
..
.
·-.;,•
.
. .
'
.
·
-
.
.
...........
...... ~ ...
'
~
-
-
~~~~~~·..,;.!,
.
.:,,,.
.....
..
,
:
,
..
~
.
-::-1


































































































































































































































PAGE6
Code
99
By Fr.
Leo
Gallant
Students tell me that. How I'd
like to
see
more
things
available
·
Andrew Greeley wrote an to more people which would
article entitled "Must Organized enricheil their lives. That's why
Religion Be Creepy?" He quotes we have, next year, an expanded
St. Teresa'sprayer"Deliverus, o Campus
Ministry
team made up
Lord, from
·
silly devotions and of three Chaplains (Catholic,
sour-faced saints." Religious Protestant, Jewish), a faculty
founders
·
and reformers are member, a
staff
member and two
exciting, enthusiastic
-
persons. students (one a commuter)
· But
in
short order everything picked by the Student Govern-
turns
dull; somber and
.
turgid. ment.
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 24, 1975
.
Announcements
Any one interested
in
running
for the position of President, Vice
President,
'rreasurer
or
Secretary of the Marist College
Chapter
.
of
.
the American
Marketing Association, please
submit your name to P.O. Box
C852 .
.
Please
·
be
·
sure to
.
include
:
·· .
your major field of study and why
you are interested iri n.inniilg for
·
the position.
need of student help during the
week of May 12 and on
.
Graduation Day May 17. Please
see Mr. Dwyer for further
.
details .
.
.
Priests' conventions are a perfect
We hope to
see all faiths
example. Yet God sent
his
Son to represented
.
Rev. Rhys Williains
of
the
people, the service they
preach joy and life.
wrote this rational:
.
provide for others
s
Therefore, a
On
Wednesday, April 30 the
-
Spririg Choral C9ncert will be
held .
.
·
8:00
p.m. campus Center
Theatre .
.
Students are reminded that
failure to return
all
reference
materials and overdue books
.
to
·
the library before leaving for the
semester will result
·
in
·
the
Business
·
()ffice>s holding of
grades until
·
all· accounts are
cleared
.
up. They are also
reminded to clear up any tickets
or tuition payments for the same
reason.
_
_
Look at., the
·
clerical garb!
.
"The primary purpose of a
campus ministry must find ways
Creepy! Bishops have the right campus ministry
is
the creation
·
·
to minister to the need of its
idea:
multi-htied
.
purples, of community. Its function can be members and to provide avenues
-
The CIRCLE editors would like
·
crimsons and whites.
-
But let summed up in one word, service. for the campus community
.
to
Theatre Guild's annual Spring to request that any student who
them meet a priest in a colored
.
But
this
-
word has two inter-
-
serve the
.
needs
'
of the world production will begin this evening has
·
borrowed
reference
suit!
·
·
related meanings.
·
·
·
·
·
around it.
A
community thatlives and
.
will run from now
.
through materials from
·
local
·
libraries to
I dream of a campus ministry
"First of
..
all, service means only
-
for itself will eventuaUy die Sunday
~

Performances
will
be return before
·
the semester ends.
·
that
would
be
vibrant.
It
seems
.
liturgy,
.
worship. So a campus by itself.
,
·
held at the
.
.
following time
_
s. Please think of the next person!
thatit could
be
easy with so many ministry mtist provide a variety
"Ideally, then, · a campus
·
Thursday 4-24
8
p,m., Friday 4-25
·
·
·
.· ·
:
1
·
young, young people. Even our of opportunities for
as
many as ministry can best be structured
~
p.m., Saturday
4-26 8
p.m. and
. .
.
three quiet daily Masses (noon in possible in the college to
:
share
.
and performed by a
.
team which Sunday 4-27
,
2 p.m.
All
per-
.
The
CIRCLE
is
in
need of
-
the chapel, 5
:
10 in my house, the awareness of God's presence is.truly
.
representati
v
e both of the
,
fonnances
will
be held in the
·
students to fill the positions of
10:30 in my house) give that and renew the vision
,
of their-
various groups in the college and theatre. Tickets are free to all
:
BiJ~iness Manager arid Ad-
feeling of being peaceful, restful.
· .
destiny.
the
.
ditf
erent religious traditions
·
Marist students.
..
·
.
._;ernsing manager for the coming
·
inspirin8 but very much alive
.
"Secondly, liturgy is the work represented on the campus."
.
.
year. Business majors
·
;_
.1re
,
·
·
.
«So You
wa~tt~
Begin Plan~
·
especially requested to fill
·
these
P
.
.

·
.
o
tp
.
·
.
o urri
New
.
s
B
_
..
i-
.
i
_

_
.
e
.

.
-
.
·
.•·
.
ts
·
r:r.!~"~u:~;~Tu~r;
[i~;~(lf~.~:~
.
April 29; sponsored
.
by the
'
McDonald Leo rm
>
514
.
or Greg
/
Counseling Department
.
the
w
1
h
Ch
·
t
· · ·
·
718
·
Al
:
Hats off to all who worked and tinue
in
political science
-
with a
.
FACULTY NEWS
:
Dr
.
William
-
series willrurifromloa::m.
-
-
;'
2:30
es
.
ampagna
.
rm
:
·
.
·
.
so,
contributed to
·
this
important
·
specialty in African studies; He
is
C.
Olson of th~ History and p
,
m
'.
Child care will
be
prqvide4
;
any student, who is interested in
.
college program.
,
Contributiops cur_rently a political science Political Science
-
Department
· ·
··
.
. ·
·
.
'
·
.,
.
·
·
wi:iting or taking pictures for
.
the .
are still
being
received.
H
you
·
maJor.
.
0
will
·
moderate a panel on
,
< _
.
.
campus weekly
,
is
requested to
have not
·
given yet
;
you can still
In ~d~tlon to th~ Lehman "Culture Conflict in the United
The proposed
:
:
trip to Mexico please see
.
Gregory
·
conocchioli
do so by calling the following F~~owship
}
-
Bob
_-
received a f~
·
States
·
during the
_
l920's and scheduled for the
_
end of May 1975
for
further details
.
Any
·
faculty
.
College Family department. twt1on fellowship
to Columbia 1930's" at the eighth annual has been re _ scheduled for

early inember
; ·
student organization
chairm
..
en: David Flynn
·
,. A
.
d-
an_d a ~tipend of $2,000 per :>:ear; B!ooms
.
burg
State
·
._
College
.
January,
·
. 1976_ Studen.
ts_
·· .
w
.
·
ho
·
·
an<l departmentwho
·
is interested
this
11
be
d
d
din I
Hist
Con£
t be h Id
in
writirig
·
a
.
w
.
~ekly.col
.
umn
. · .
.
iii
the
:,
ministration (ext.
226);
John
_
WI
re uce accor
.
g
Y
-
ory
;
erence o
....
.
·
e
are inte_rest~d in visiting Mexico
~:
t
1
t th
Lehma
M
1
2
Bl
b
g p
D
Circle
'
pleas1f see
.
one · of. the
~
.
.
0K
Kelly, Factilty ( ext.
225);
Harriet
o com
P
emen
e
-
·
·
. .
..
n
.
ay - m
ooms ur ,
:
a. - .
r · City and
.
investigating both
.
the editors before the eiid
·
_
,
of
~
the
.
tt,f
.
st. Germaine
· ·
Secretarial-
Award.
·
Bob has
·
also been
.
ac- George Sommer of the English Indian
·
cultures and the Colonial
-
!{
·
Clerical (ext.
·
295)
;-
and Vicky
,:
cep~ed ~t

the
,
.
University
-
of
,
Depar
.
tri:tent
!fncr
·
Dr. Roscoe

·
Periodwould
'
gteatly profiffrom
·
semester;
·

·..
·
· ·· ·
-
· ·
-'ii
Platania, Maintenance Service Ca!ifori:ua at
·
~erkeley,
.
the
_
Balc?
:
of the ~ory pepai:tment
,_
this trip
;
::
The rn
---
day trip is ex~
.
..
.
··
.
.
.
..
.
.
..
. ..
,,.
. .
..
.
.
( ext 215 )'.
.
Or you
.
call contact the
.
· .
vmvers_ity
..
o!
;
9tic~g()
.
~nd
..
Cor,-
·
. pai:ti?I~ted
.
In
.
Jlje
:,. ,
8th
.
JllUl,llal
.•
J>e~ted
.
to cost aQ9~t
~0,.0~90
)
for
;.
:
··.
Next
)
veek's
)
edition
'
::
of
.
:
:the
,
~
t:;:-
;;;,
"'~-~mpaign'/Qf.iice
,,
in
e-,
St;/,,Pet,er!~
,~i,
t\~\l
,
P,m-~
.
ers
!
t'Y.
<
\
.
9N.Cl!g~
..
9!!~f.,!,d
<;
,Irl,~~!µig
?
t
\h~--~<?~P:~~tM~ern
::
additional
·

.
infotjriation
·
., con~ct
:
.
·
CIRCLE
,
will
be
·
the last one
'.
for
.
l"
·
·
.
Building
··
ext;
.
283:
·
.
·
:
.
:
•...
him
·
a-full tlilt1on.fellowship
·
anck·Lang~age
':·r.
Association Con-
_
.
M
··
·
•·
·
e· Bi·be
·
a
··
·
0
·
·
..
0
·
r
'
the ·M..:.J
·
·
·
~
thi-·
·
.
•·
....
d
..
,
.
... ·
.
. -
--~
·- ·
.
·
.

-'
'
-'-
"·,
st

·'·
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- ·--
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·
·
~•
··
·
~
.
•.
,
':
r
.
_;
,
J
·':
.
,
•·'
, . .
.
·
·•.
.
.
.
>
Corrieµ
_
~ffered
.
him
'
~full ~tioh ve_ntioiiheld
iri Montreal earlier i:n1~~ge Departµi~nt' or
·
~ri~
.
:,
or
1~it1t;m~i;7:a.~cfulc1
li1e1~t~
:
.
P~ESTIGIOUS
,
AWA'lt]):
.
fellowship
.
~d ~
-
~.ooo
st_i~nd. this mont~. Dr. So~er 1s
,
~ Qua~rocio~chi or
\
..
Mary !{0101
\
publicize an
:
~vent
·
or
· .
activity
·'
,
F.
r
~en_iorRobert Nelson is
among
30
.
~
Columbia
IS
his first choice, he member

of the executive co~cil
· -
· -

·
·
·
please
•.
submit
_
.
your
· .
..
·
an
,;;;
-
recipients throughout the State of
.
.
.
will
·
enter a doctoral
·
·
program of ~EMLA
,
and serve~ as act~g
nouncement before Monday April
·
NewYorktoreceiveaHerbertH
.
there next faUto prepare
.
for
.
a chairman of the Medieval Latin
The Registrar's
:
office is in
.
28
·
·
·
·
·
_,./
Lehman Graduate Fellowship in
.
career in f?reign service or Lite~ature
.
Section. At th~ con-
.
social sciences or public or in-
college teaching
;
venbon, he read a paper m the
c
·
·
.
:
·
-
·
1
·
·t ·
-
-
·
c
·
-
·
1
--
1
·
temational affairs. The Lehman
.
Fantasy
and
Science section
..
·
·
oa
·
z
ZO
n
·
·
a
'
S
Fellowship Award
is
a fixed
NEWS NOTE: Brother Gerard entitled "The Micl'.ocosmic
· -
·
·
··
·
:1:a1t~t·:i~t:
!~l~~~a!
i:!~~:!:
:~d~~e1::I';U:J.~
·
:;I:rty
9
~u:~~so2':!~~h
·
.
F
·
·
o
·
· .
.
r
·
·
._
·
L
:
:
.
.
-
·
o
·
...
_
w
·..
.
··
T
.
.
·
·u
··.
~
-



t
·
z
·
· o
·
...
:
n
.
·
.
year for each succeeding year
.
drawn from the Marist Brothers took part in the Oldand Middle

Bob's fellowship will cover four and returned to secular status.
In
English section and read a paper
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
-
·
·
·
·
years of study at Colwnbia doing so he will assume his legal entitled "In Defense of Grendel's
(CPS) - calling themselves the
opposed the "alarming trend to
University, where he will con-
name of Raymond F. Weiss
'.
Mother."
National Coalition for Lower
higher t.rition
-
levels'' as well as
- - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ ; . _ . ; . . .
_ _ _ _ _ _
.
Tuition in Higher Education,
.
:
a
"proposals which would force
~reer
Day,
cont'
d
.
from
p.
3
·
group
.
of
26
organizations
·
has
--
most
·
students
·
to take
·
out ex-
called for
0
low
.
or no tuition" at pensiv~; long-te~ loans t<~
.
pay
provide participants with
.
the who will discuss the types of
-
jobs. Accredited and. Licensed"
.
will universities
·
and colleges . iri the
.
foz- therr
.
education."
.
·
·
chance to meet individually with available
in
their various fields,
_
involv~
.
representatives
"
from U
.
S.
.
At the sam~
:
time
.
the group
agency
representatives
to as well as the backgrounds colleges that have programs for
Noteworthy more for _its broad~ call~ for
.
"adequate financial
discuss
.
various aspects of the needed to enter these panicular the "non - traditional" students, based support than its concrete
·
support for higher education
·
in
topics introduced
in
the morning. fields.
as welfas people who can discuss proposals
·
the coatition includes order to make
.
Jow
·
tuition
There will be no formal
"How To Get a Job" will center professional certification and all three faculty unions -
:..
the
·
possible . .,
·
.


·
·
'.
·
presentat_lons, so participants on what is
-
necessary to prepare accreditation procedures:
American
Association
· "
of
'.'Insuring· equal access
-
.
to
will be
:
free
.
to investigate . all and apply for certain types of
"How To Pay For Sc4ool'' will University Professors, the
.
higher education
is
a matter
·
of
workshops at their own pace.
jobs. Representatives from local focus on financing higher National Educa~on Association
. ·
highest
:
-
.
priority
.
·
for
·
all
"How To Pick a Career"
will
-
·
business, industry, social service education
and
manpower and the American Federation of'. Americans," said the
·
coalition's
.
involve representatives from agencies and employment ser
~
training. A
.
local bank, the ~eachers-asweUaslaborunions sta~111ent. '
.'
The progress of otir
colleges, health agencies, local vices
.
will be participating.
·
vet~ran~ ad!Ilin~stration :
:
and like the AJi'kCIO and the United natio!) as
a:
whole depends
011
a
indust
and the armed services
"How To Get Rematriculated, r;oll~ge fmancial aid
staff
will be ~utoWorke~s and stud~nt groups
·
growmg pool

of well~ducated
ACE
'.
LIQUOR
The
·
Narrow -5
.
tor~
W
-
ith
The WIDE
..
.
Rl=PUTAT
.
ION
available.
.
.
·
like the NationatStudent Lobby,
.
and
productive men
<
and
"How To Set
.
Up your
Own
the
·
Student NEA and the women.'?
·
·
-..

·
··
·
Business"
will

·
involve National Student Association .
.
.
.
·
'
The new
:
coalition
·
called for
all
.
represe_ntativ
.
es
'
of seve:al
.
Other
.
~ss organizations
in
.
state
_,
and local
_
affiliates
of its
.
··
profe~slof!al
.
.
:
and
.
plannu~g
·
th~ co~1:ttion repr~ent
·
W!,)Inen, organi~ations
>
to
...
wage
,
an
agencies

m
·
the Poughkeepsie ~morit1es, older
.
Americans, ag~ess1ve
;
ca!lipaign at

the
area.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
. -.
Vie~ veter~~
-
and. co~ege national
.
level and in all fift
·
y
"Surv1vmg Without a Job"
wil_l
administrators
;'
·.
··
·
:
..
·
.
. -
.
states."
·
-im·olve representatives from
.
·
·
The coalition
\:
linno:µnced
.
it
·
agencies that offer. c_ommunit:; ~ - - - - - : - ~ - - ~ - - - - - - ~ - - - - - -..... - - - ; . . . - ~
·
!~~~ctd fari:tilyand f~ancial
·
·
:
7
peak~
-
r~
-
~
J.
~
~~~ii~:
d
,.
J
!?m
:
_
p~~e
_
J

.
_
,
_
.
A!}n Haggerty
;
a . stud~nt . !llo/e_humane and fair co~ditjo~.
'
.
and. !'doption of
,
disability
co11!18
.
e~or ~nd the afflf!ll3ti~e
.
m prisons - assuring prISoners'
.
-
benefits
under · workmen's
,
actio~
.
o~f1cer
.
at Mar1st, ~s
-
rights to uncensored
-
mail, compensation for pregnancy a
·
d
,
coordinating Career
:
Day. She ts
.
·
humane visiting
·
privileges,
·.
:,
childbirth
..
:
related disability
Jl
·
-
·_
being
·
·
.
_
assistecf
hX
'.
Lawr~nce
·
~edical c~re and
.
·
right
~
to ·
,
/
B~ to fufther
,
prot_ect
'the
Snyder,
.
_
ca1:'_eer
_.
_
counselo:,
.
J.
co~l, among other goals.
·
:
nghts of minors mental patients
~~
Ulanoy, l?ro~ram ass1s~n!,
- ugislation to free
·
-
women
·
stl,idents
.
and t~chers.
.
'
Office ~( _
Contimung
•.
~ciuc~ti~n;
.
_
from discrimina~on
!n
educati~n,
-. -Opposition
-
to "fair
'
cam-
Emes~~
.
~apmaf!, programs
-
•:_
~
.
m
.
Pl(?yment,
_:J
iousmg,·
·
credit,
.
paign'! laws that infringe on Fir t
.
coor411~at~r,-
.
Speci
_
al ~~l!e~e
_-_ .
msuraQC~
.
:
:
coverage,
-
pq~lic
r,
~c-
·
AI!!endment Rights.
<·
.
·
..
_
s
_
-
·
.rrogr,ams,,osephJiin~;
.
special
:
comodation
:
and
:.
athletics
;
·
::
op-
.
·
_
• ..:

.
Simplifying
·
f
·
:
·
t

·
s~~1ces
-.
couns~lor,
-
d1sa~led
·
position
:
to
·
.
restrictions
-
·
·
on
·
·
iegistratioii
·
-
a
·
niJ.°
·
Y!
er

stude~
.
~
_
com~nent; and Fra~
.
abortion,
pa~ge
oFthe
-
.Eq~l
.-
enrollm~ntlaws
in
order to
~J!~.
,
,
__
_.
.
.•
:,.
~
>
...
~f~~iJeJ~f~f?~!~r'..·.
:,:
::.
,
Rights•·:
Amendlll~Ilk
-

greater
:.
politic:al
·
participation.
· ·
··
:
·
·
•--------------------------•··

·'

.
,,
:···.'.
''·
j'
-'-
···
·
,-<•··
··
· .
..
:
J/
'
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ga~~rotec_tio~lor5apevicliri:ts,.
;
·
·
,
;:
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·_


.,
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·
·

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:























































































APRIL 24, 1975
THE CIRCLE
PAGE7
Track Wins Triangular Meet
The Marist spring track tea:m surprise weight man John . meet scoring nine points as he
put its record at
5-3 on the season VanDervoort placed fourth
in
the
placed second
in
the 440
in
52.4,
by defeating Fairfield University javelin in his first appearance in
just being nosed out by Van-
and the University of New Haven the event with a
toss
of
'128'8".
I>ervoort, second in the in-
Saturday at Fairfield in a VanDervoort scored a total
of
12
tennediate hurdles in 1:00.1, and
triangular meet. The final score points in the meet himself in
fo~ in the high jump, while
was Marist 113, Fairfield 59, New seven different events. He was a
bemg a member fo both the 440
Haven 18. Fairfield had defeated member of Marist's 440 relay
and mile relay teams.
Marist the last two years and was team and winning mile relay
''The times and marks were not
considered to be another strong team, he won the 440 dash in 52.3,
as good as the previous meet,"
opponent this year.
.
placed fourth
in--
the 440 in-
said Marist Coach Rich stevens,
d
t
.
,L


Freshman Phil Cotennec had a termediate hurdles, fourth in the
"due to the poor condition of the
-
The following
is
a revision of
the academic
,
calendar for the
·.
year 1975
·
which appeared in an
-
earlie
_
r edition of the Circle.
anf cdouraftse sthi~ iodnst,
T"'
twtion great meet scoring 20¾ points to javelin, fourth in the long jump,
track as compared to the other
· re un
er
~ a
e.
·
lead the team.
This
wa
·
s the
d thi d · th t · 1 ·
ks
26 Monday _ Deadline for
In-
an
r m
e np e Jump.
two trac we ran on and also due
.
.
,
.
·
FALL SEMESTER
.
completes and grade changes for seco!Jd highest pou.it total for any
Will Morrison· lead the Marist
to the weathe1 of onditions." The
Fall 1975.
_
M~~st track man m a ~eet, only distance corps to an impressive
m~et was helCJ primarily in the
February 9
.
Monday
~
No
_
be1~g surpassed by Tim ~1ur-
day in the rain which saw the
D-
ram. "We are very pleased with
tuition refurid
·
after-this date.
phy
s
1973
.
record of 27 pomts.
.
men win all three events and pick our results and look for continued
1975
20 Friday _ Service charges Cote!1fl~C was a
·
member of up 23 of the 33 available points.
progress by all of our trackmen.
September 3 Wednesday
.
_ are assessed on unpaid tuition Manst s s~cond place
~o
relay, Morrison won the mile with a
Barring any unforeseen bad luck
Opening Day. Evening classes balances as of this date.
won the high hur~es m a new 4:25.5 nosing out Fairfield or injuries we could win our
_
begin.
·
27
.
Friday _ Last date for school
.
r~cord
·
t!i:µe. of 16.2 standout Mike Collins. Fred remaining meets and have our
4_
Thursday -
Day classes reporting Pass~No Credit option seconds, ti_ed for first m the 100 Kolthay was third with a 4:30.
best season ever. Siena and York
begin.
'.
.

·
·
· .
·
and for dropping
-
courses without yard
_
d~~h
m
10.5 s~conds, placed Then
Morrison
surprised in our final meet offer the
10
Wedn~day
·
...: Last date for penalty of failure .
.
·
.

. ·
·
_
_
second
.
~n the 2~0 i~ 24.5, pla~~~ everyone by coming back very toughest challenges, but with
l~_te registration, change
:
of .
.
March 15-19
-
- Spring recess.
.
second
~ th~ high Jum_p at 5 ~
-
, strong after a half-hour rest to
everyone's support, we should be
-~
courses and
-
course sections,
'
½ · 16 Tuesday - Mid-term grades pl~ced third m the long Jump with win the half mile in a 2:01.1. Jay able to take these two teams
. tuition refund after this date.
are due.
,
·
_
.
aJump of 19', and placed second Doyle was second in 2:01.5 and also."
.
24 Wednesday ;... No tuition
19 Friday
.
.,. Last date for
·
in ,the tr!ple j':1111p with a jump of Steve VanKeuren placed fourth
.
The Marist trackmen were
refund after this date.
_
.
/
payment offees.
.
,

38
3

Se~or ~m M1:1fPhY
-
~cored in 2:05. Fred Kolthay
·
nosed out scheduled to meet Kings of New
.
· ... ··
October
.
3
.
.
Friday
-
:<
Service
April 5-9 _ Advisement and
.
16
¼
pomts mcluding bemg a teammate Brian Costine in the
York and Nyack with Dutchess
charges are
_
·
assessed on
·
wipaid
.
registration for
.
Faµ 1976.
.
m
_
em_ber of t~e
~o
relay, ~~am, two-mile with times of 9:56 and Community College at New Paltz
balances:}
1
s of-this date.
,
·
·
·
-
Approval
-
for
-
Special Topics Wl!1111~gth_elligh1wnp~~56 ~nd 9:56.3 respectively.· George yesterday; Marist will send a
.
13 Monday ..::. Holiday.
_
courses
··
or
Non-Scheduled the triple Jump at 38 11 , placmg Mccutcheon showed strong good mile relay team to the Penn
17 J<'riday_
·
--
~
µist
_
date
'
for courses must be obtained during seco?d in tl)e lo~g jump-at 20'1", improvement as he ran all three Relays tomorrow. The team will
reporting J>ass;Iio Credit
.
option this week;
,
.
·
• ·
·
.
-
·· ·
·
placmg fourth m the 100, and
.
distance events and gained consist of Tim Murphy, Steve
and for
"
drc:ipping
·
courses
_
without
·
.
16 Fr~day ~Holiday.
placing .third in
-
the 220 at 25+
str~ngth .from his injury.
'
He VanKeuren, Dave Schools and
penalty of (allure.
·;
·
· .
-
·
·,
19 Monday - Holiday.
.
~ete Va
.
nAken led_ the Ma:rist should be ready to help the team
·
John Va
_
nDervoort, with Brian
29-Wednesday -- Mid-term
... -
May 7 Friday~
.
Spring semester
·
~eigh~ corps
?Y
s~ormg 1
_
2 points in the remaining two weeks now.
Costine acting
·
as an alternate if
grades are due. .
.
.
.
.
eq_ds;
' .
.
_
·

-
·
·
.
.
·
mcludin~ a first m the tia1?Jller
VanKeuren also placed second any injury results .
.
_
La~~
datffor paypent
;
_()f f~es.
_
..
·
10Monday :-Senior final grades throw wit~ 108'3", a sec?nd m the in the pole vault by clearing 10'
Marist's final home meet of the
.
November 10-14
·
.;.. Adv1Sement
.
are due
.
_
.
_
·
shot put with a toss of 41 , and two while Dan Wakeley placed third
.
season will be held this Tuesday,
~d
registration
·
for
·
spring
'
l976
!
·
:.
.15
_
,
~aturday -~
Thirtieth
.
thirds _in the javelin aU44'7" a!ld Wakeley also placed third
in
the April 29 at New Paltz at 3:30 p.m.
_
Appr
·
oval fol'. Special
·
,
Topics Comme~cement.
.
·
.
·
the
·
discus at ]02'11". Marist intermediate hurdles and third in against York
_
College, Siena
.

courses
. ,
·
or
N.onaS¢heduled
_
)7
Monday - Final grades are sw~pt the haznmer throw as Paul the high hurdles. Marist's time in College, and Kings of New York.
<;ourses mqst be ·ob~ined
'
during due
:
.
·

..

.
. .
,
·
... .
.
.
·.
Stemborn_ place9 second,
.
Steve the 440 relay was 45.8 while the A good Marist crowd is expected
this week.
·
.•
-
,
.
·
·
"; .
·
.
. ..
June 11
·
Friday - Deadline for Blend third and Al Washburn winning
.
mile relay time was for the season finale at New Paltz
·:
is
Wei:Jri
7
sday·-:: Thariksgiving
\
Incomp}etes and
_
graiie chang!!s
.
fourth. Capt3:in
·
Phil D'Amato 3:35.2.
on the 29th.
r:ece$S begins aft~r last
d~y
clas~;
J<lr Sprmg
,
1~76.
.
·
,
.
.
.
.
placed fourth m the shot. put and
Dave Schools had another fine
_
_
December 1 Monday -
.
Classes
.
22-24 - Freshman registration
:
.
·
·
.
· •
·
_
·
.
·
·
.;,
__
_ ,
_1~i
~
:_:•!
:_
~~~•~r
.•
.
.
·
·•
·
.
s~RSESSION
·.
Program
Offers
Opportunities
t
:
.
··
.
·
.
.
.
Jttr~~~~r
:-:-r
~~
1
':
~~~~~:-~re·--:
;:~
1~/;~1
~~:f
Itt?gi~-;iiiciif'
I~t
:
"7f-:?:
,?Cr-f,~y

~~ierAUen
,,r
~:,
_
~,
,,
,~
,-
~
;,,
ti~u~r
:
s;eminar
--
~
.
1".i~~~
-

:
allows

.
.
seeking
'
aut1'or\zjltion
,
Jr9m
;._
the
:
.
.
; .
.
.

·.
·
.
,.
---.;.
.
·-·
.
,.
.
'
·.'
:
-"
' ~:
.<"
:
_
1
,
;.;ci
_
assesbegm:
·
:
·· ,-_
·.
·
-
.
--
The
·:
c~~tin~ing
·
.
-
-
~
-
·
-
-
busm~ssme,ntomeet1,:itheearly Sta~e of New
·
York to
·
·
offer
·
SPRING
SEMESTER
:
·
·
·
:
-i
July.16 .;.; Classes end.
-
_
.
Education mornmg hours and discuss the registered nurses the opportunity
·
·
•. ·
·
·
·
·
·
·

·
·
19•23
·
Exams:
:
-
· .
program at
·
Ma:nst College af- present state of National and to study for their Bachelor of
fords those
, .·.
residents of the
.
World business affairs. Guest SciencedegreeinNursing. Panko
1976
1976
_
. Day - mini sessions
-
Dutchess county area, who
-
are speakers and successful business pointed out that when he an-
.
January 19 Monday
·
._
·
Classes
June 7 .. 19 First session.
intereSt.ed
in
furthering. their executives often give
:
~ectures nounced the proposal it was met
begin.
.
.
·


..
:
..
·

_
.•,
.
Jwie
~:
21
_
_ Jilly
·
3 _
.
Second
,
edu'=a~10n the
.
.
_opp~rtumty
_
of over coffee and d_oughnuts.
_
The with a great response. Another
23 F'riday -
Last
date for late session:
'
·:
:c
. ..
-
·. ·
·
receivi_ng
_aJ
1
1arist
~ploma.
:
· .
Week~nd Co
_
llege 1s relatively a
such special interest group that
registration change
·
of courses.
·
July 5-17 ..; Third session.
·
~ontl!lumg Education focuses new
.
idea m Educatio!} and met through the Continuing
·
'
· ·
-
··
·
·
.
pnmarily on those people
-
who altho_u~h t~e nu~ber of studeIJts Education office was an eight
Alumni,
'
~ontiriued from
,
p. 5
.
are generally above the age of 22 partic1pat_mg m the Mar1st week study
of
flying. Another
and have been
-
out of school-for program 1s smaller than ex-
course dealt with the study of the
the
;
school," maintained Mr. Association include
.
travel ser-
sevei::al years, The program runs pected, j;here is much optomism Ascent of Man on television in
Emery .
.
·
·
·
,
·
·
·
.
·
·
.
.
.
·
.
vices for
.
alum";i with
.
·
group Evening classes,
·
the new about future enrollment. The which students took midterms
·
In
.
i~irµtial year 600 out of 3000
.
r.3tes
,
and_
_
special group
.
in-
Weekend College, and a number Weekend
.
College operates on and discussed the program.
active alumni have
.
volunteered surance poltcies. Mr
,
Emery said
.
uf swnmer classes and seminars. Saturdays between 9: 00 and 3 :00
At the moment the Weekend
to
• <
courisel
.
·
students about that
.
he .would investigate ideas An interesting addition to
·
p.m. for six weeks of classes and College is closed to the resident
careers:Mr. Emery believes that that will help the alumni, and that summer programs is a _class of three weeks o_f independent day students attending Marist
·
_
this number
:
is significant the ·college administration has co~centrated -study lastmg only study, after which the student but there is a strong possibility
.
be.cause the program has just
.
given the Association
.
-
the two weeks and ear_ning students
_
receives three credits.
..
.
that in a sh~rt while, depending
:
been
·
._
developed this
.
ye~r
.
He nt:c~ssary coopera.tion to
·
niake 1t
.
three college credits. The Con-
.
.
Next year the
.
Contmumg on the contmued success of the
said, !'this shows the alumni are an effective organization.
·.
·
_
·
tinu~g Education also~ holds Education Office is planning to
-
Program, that it will be opened
·
interested in the school and the
~
.
Mr
.
Emery declared that he is Mar.1st sponso~ed. classes at offer. f_our weekend sessions up to resident students. Dr .
.
people who
·
go here."
·
:
·
,
--
,
, ·
.not
·
even
·
taking
··
into·· con-
Ulster Commumty College, and enabling the Weekend student to Panko also stressed the
im-
. nie ~unini _Association ca~e si~eration trya:t ~arist will ~ot
.
the Middletown J:figh School. earn up_ to 24 cr~dits during the portance of non - credit courses
-
.i~to
existence m the early 196_0 s
_
exISt,
_
and that, '.'~ the ~ext
few
In~tead of
.
commutmg to Marist academic vear.
·
.
.
as a m~ans for aU students
to
when
·
non-brothers
-
started bemg years Jhe Association \:Vlll w
_
ork,
.
C~llege the faculty commutes to
.
.
D_r. Steven Panko
.
and his
become mcreasingly aware of the
. .
.
adirµtted.
It
is a
-
way of
_
getting and ~orlthard, to make ~ure that the
· ·
~tudents.
Continuing assistant J. Anne Ulanov are
.
advanced society around
.
them
.
:
·
.
·
peqple
.
together who have Manst grows."-
· . -
:
.
·
..
·
.
Educat10n also runs some special
-
.
__
something
:
in common; Jhey
·
·
·
·
'
·
riQ:_
~-
~
credit semip,ars, one par-
.
·
.
graduat_ed
· ..
from .
.
Marist. M.r.
Emery pointed out that a goal of
·
<
the
.
Association· is to let the
,
.
alumni
.
keep
·
the status
.
of
.
..
students
.
to
_
a
.
limited
.
degree)uid
feel part of the Marist com-
.
·
munity.
:
,
The ,aluinni can
take.
advantage of the Marist library
facility and
·
receives
·
a special
..
,
·
r~te Jor

the
.
use
.
of the tennis
{o;~~~e
,
pla~s • for
the
.
Fr/Jrtk
'S Restaurant
-

I3>raft
<
Beei
-.
s.q~.
_
giass _
25.f
.•
..
: .
·
,
·
.
.
...
.....
'
.
.
..
.......
_
.
,.
,
. .
;•-
·
•:~l>·~~~
·
:,
·
;
Gef
1
extra
six-packs forthe
weekend.













I,
.
I
I
1. - .
1.
I\,
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
Defense· Sparks
·
Stickmen
By THOMAS MCTERNAN


14.10.1
14.10.2
14.10.3
14.10.4
14.10.5
14.10.6
14.10.7
14.10.8