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Part of The Circle: Vol. 22 No. 9 - April 26, 1979

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/
Page2
THE CIRCLE
J
April 26, 1919
"A FILMOF GREAT COURAGE
AND OVERWHELMING
EMOTIONAL POWER.
A FIERCELY LOVING EMBRACE
OF LIFE."



































April
26, 1979.
THE CIRCLE
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Page3
includes:
London
Broil
Stuf(e,l
.<:Iains
· ·· Lasagnll· ..
Sea{oodCr~pe
Potato·
Relish~·Tray•
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-Fe.,,lly.
P11Ce$ .
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Page 4
THECIRCLE
.
w
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The Ci_rcle is the weekly newspaper
ot the students
of
Marlst Coliege and Is pubilshed weekly during the school %,'ear excl~si~e

Of
vacat,on
perlOds
by the Southern Dutchess News Agency. Wappingers, N.
y
.
_
.
.
_
_
_ _
_ .
Lark
Landon
rerry Moore
-
-
Chris
Hogan
Larry Striegel
Beth
Weaver
,
.
·
B.obWhibnore
Tom Crane
editors
·
associate editors
sports
editors
-
contributing editors
Mike
McGoorty.
..
/

.
.
..

Rob
Ryan
.
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·
:
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·•
.
• ·
Photographers:
_
Toni
~u~e. Pat
-
Larkin
Kathy
Norton
--
-~pberBogan
·
DavePo~r
-
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·
.
cartoonist
.
,
businessmanager
·
.
-
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adve~~g manager
distribution manager
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Staff:
,
Jane Neighbors, Valeri
·
Poleri,
·
Patti Morrison, Ro; Stuts,
Debbie
.Adamowicz
Chris
B~i:nE:S, Joan
~ergy, Don
Pui:cJ.r
;
Chris
Egan, Jim Jo~nd. B
,
oJ>
Whitmore,
J,m
Koclili;
,
Lina
Cmghano, D1ann~
_
Jones, ~a1:1anne
Beyer,
Jack ~cCutcheon, Eileen
.
Ryan, Rich So~nchyk.
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April 26, 1979
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All letters must
be
fy~
triples~•
w
i
;h
Cl
~
spoci,
.
~rgln
,
~
submitied to t h o ~
.
office no Jot er thon
.
6
p.m.
M~oy
,
Short
letten are pref~trred.
We
reoerve the righl to ~ii
·
.
oil letters
.
Letters must
be
signed. but names may
be
withheld upon request
.
·
Letters w,II
be
published depend
i
ng upon OVQilClbility o spoc • .-
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Farewell
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April 26, 1979
-
THE CIRCLE
PageS
Lee Miri~g-off: poUtics
of a red baseball cap
by
Robert Whitmore
four years.
"If
Marist sees you have
talent, then they're going to give you the
Lee
.
Miringoff, never without his red responsibility." Miring off compared
baseball cap since he was eight - years old, Mari§t to larger much more rigid schools
even sported it in
his
back pocket on
his
where you have to "put in five years before
wedding day.
"I
guess I'm
just
a creature they give anything responsible to do."
of
habit", says the twenty-six year old
.
Miringoff is also interested in movies,
Marist College political science professor. especially Woody Allen flicks. He had this
·
Another habit of Miringoff's
is
being an to say about disaster films: "It's a curious
.
avid sports fan, especially when it comes phenomenon that the next civilization will
to
,
the New · York Yankees. "I'm· a find out that our civilization watched
traditionalist", says Miringoff,
"I
like
the movies like "Tidal Wave," and "Ear-
Yankees; I like· the Giants, I like the thquake" and the ''Late Great Planet
Knicks and I like the Rangers." Miringoff Earth," which prophesized our own
adds "I haven't quite adjusted to the fact destruction; and called it entertainment."
that
there's the Mets the Jets the Nets
Miringoff, born in Poughkeepsie, has
and
'
the Islanders." '
'
lived here most of his life. Although he
'
s
·
Miringoff's interest in politics began at _ not one of those "local guys" who hates
an early age, w~en influenced by
his
change,
~e says he has_ seen "~ormous
politically active parents.
His
interest lies change"
m
Poughkeepsie.
.
·
.
.
mainly in the "behind the scenes"
as
"a
A
"
graduate of Clark Uruvers1ty
m
participant observer." "I enj~y the horse Jlw?.assachus~tts,
a_
~hool about th_e same
race
_
of
.
politics, who
wins
who loses," he s1Ze as Manst, Mmngoff says he l!}tes
the
says.
·
.
·
·
concept of a small ~ch~l because it offers
.
Miringoff's personal
.
interest in local a personal touch
·
which_ larger s~hools
·
politics
and knowing a lot
of
the
people ca~ot. He also ~ys
_
he en~oys teaching at
involved,
is
a factor which helps
him
Manst because it gives
him
a chance to
organize various intemsJlips at Marist. inte
_
ract with the students on a one to one

«Marist is a good place for someone like basis.
·
me," says Miringoff who's been here for
:
Knock Knock
<
@Orm
Room searches
and
your rights
students
·
By::ibnKochis~ElleenRyan
·
-
property.
0
..
.
.
right of inspection is necessary to the
·
·
'
·

·
··
· ·
·
·
'The courts have ruled that it
·
is entirely
-
institution's performance of that duty even
_
·
_
,:
Youimswet-theknockatyourdoormthe appropriate that
.
a college routinely in-
.
though it
may
infringe
·
on the outer
·
·
dormitory,
and
:
·
·
tlle
,
Resid~nt
, '.
Director spect
its
dopnitory rooms for orderliness boundaries of
.
a dormitory student's
·
infornis:yoidhat"he
J
,
f
conducting "walk- and
,
safety
;
and the
-
a,uthorify
.
to do this Fourth Amendment rights
.
.
·
m"
:
rootn ins~ticins.
-
Do
·
you
·
have to
=
let
:
does
110t
_
compromise a student's right
to
A
police officer must, when he enters
·
him
-
in, and if so, whalis the legal status of prot~tion optie Fourth Amendment.

private premises to conduct a search, give

what
-
he may find
-
there?
_
·.
'
·
_
!"A~reov~~
~
the studen~ acknowled~es . notice of his identity and purpose exce1,>t
·
:
.
'These
·
and other
·
questions gained new this
m writing when he signs the housrng when an emergency precludes this
relevance to
· :'
Marist
;
'
resident
:
students .. agreement and accepts the room on th~e requirement. 'The
·
importance of this
is
·:
when
i
they
.
i::etum
·

.
fo

..
tne
·
·
~
-
mpils
-
after . conditions:
::·
. . .
.
that college Qfficials
'
nw,y
not ~el~~~te to
.
.
..
:
--
.
,~
Christmas vacation ancfwere
·
gi:~eted
,
by a , Stu~ent
:
~ghts and respons1bil1ties are
.
law
·
enforcement personnel their nght to
· .
\
;
_;;;,}t,
mem9
;{
~cfrn,1ing
'.~ii
thepi
/
~
~;
.
~~~te~
?
er~
. ,:
spelled
_
pufm ~~
'_
yollege ~udent an~ the
. ·•
r~~on~pl~ searches
.
:
Jor
.
·
·
puiy~es of
·
_ ':
·
.r
forcemenVof
:
fresidence
.
-.
,
hall
::
norms
:
/
'm
:
,
.
Courts;a
.
coUe.<:t1onof~ebnefsof
_
se!e~~ed
T
,
:-
mamtammg
·
:
order
:
and disciplme on
'
;:
iight
:
ot
{
certaµ't
(
,iajlppropnate
·:
be~vi!)I'S
:
~o
_
ti~
k
~ases
:
'
involymg;thl: );tu~en
_
t~
.
.
campus
;
Y
·
·
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and undesirable conditions tliat develo~
:
,
1nsbtut1011al
·
rel.ahonship m
·

higher
If
the search had been directed by police
.

in

the
i
resideilce
halls
.
·
during
·
the
.
fall
·
education;
.
>

.
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_ .
.
or if police had participated
in
the search,
-
.
;. '
semester
.
"
<
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,
,
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·
.
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,:·
C9llege students
.
who
-
~side irt dor
.
-
·
then
the
evidence would not be admissable
."
>
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Students were
~
notified that
.
the Resident mitories have a special relationship with
wiless a warrant had been obtained.

Director
/
would
·
cortduct
-
·
at
'
least
.
two ad~
.
the
.
college.
-
The student is

subject only to However;while it
is
··
true that

a
.
student
· :
ditional
:
·
illspectfons
·
.
of
'
a
general natµre;
·
r~asonable ru~es and
.
regulations, but
his
does not lose his constitutional rights a_t the
·
Emphasis
of!hese
inspec:tlons w:oulcl lle on
·
ngllts
.
D?-ust yield
.
to_ the exte~t ~ t
~~Y
entrance _to tpe college campus,. neither
th~
.
general condition
_.
~nd
·
apJ?e3railce ~f would . interfere
.
w~th the ms~tution s does he receive grea~ protection than
. I
.
the
·.·
room

·••i.e.-
,
cleanlin~, illegal
··
con- .fundamental duty to operate.the school as any non-student who
1S
the subject of .a
·
traband and blatant
·
abuse
·
of
·
Marist an educational institution. A reasonable
seizure by a private citizen, which
is
what
a college official is.
The purpose of room inspections is not
supposed to be to collect evidence for
criminal proceedings but to insure that
the
room
is
used
·
and maintained in ac-
cordance with college regulations.
If
,
once
lawfully inside the room, illegal con-
traband or drugs are in plain view and not
the result of a
search,
a resident director
is
justified in giving entry to college and law
enforcement authorities.
Lou Lewis, a J>oughkeepsie attorney who
serves
·
on the Marist Board of Trustees
comment"ed that he
'
was
·
sure the Marisi
admihistration
1
is in
close
touch
.
with
the
school
·
1:1ttorneys on this matter. Lewis
noted that the rooms belong to the college
and students are permitted to use them
only as long as they
,
go by
·
the rules of the
college. He
.
said
!
students could be
suspended or put on probation for refusing
to cooperate with the room searches.
·
'
'
' .
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,
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.
.
·
sasketbalt
prOgram·
rnay move
.
up to
Division
I ...
from
page
1
·
..
·
ao;ev~r,
'
-
the figures
-
piecl~d~
,
that
·.
assistant
-
·
basket~ll
:
coach;
the
.
other
.
colleges within a 60-mile radius
that
have
.
·
·. •·
Marist wjll have
a
number of
.
borne
·
games
.
would
·
act
.
as
.
a
·
recruiter
-
and .Prc:imoter,
.
the
caliber of basketball that can be played
,-
against
:
Di~~ilTschools. Next_y~r the ~ri~
_
has
·
ah'.eady
-
begu~ s~hciting
~P-
at Marist."
,
_
·
.
Red
;
F'oxes
/
will
\
play
.
three
;
OiV1S1on
.
I plicationsfor
.
the manager s Job,
.
<>ffermg
Saying Division I schools can attract
·
_
·
.
schools
Y
(F.airfield
/
:'
Boston
::'.
University, $14~000
to
$16,000
:
yearly.
.
·
more crowds than the
:
best of Division II
.
'
Siena}"-
:
but
'
all
avvay.
i
.:
,
c(
, ·
.
. :
.
P;resently Petro
is
director of the
·
Mc-
colleges, Petro added
;
that the McCann
·-
-.

-
·.
:
To support·hi~"idea, P~µ-o cited figures Cann Center
arid
has ha?full charge of
.
the
.
Center
''is
a good Division I facility." He
.
,
from two
.
McCann
.
Center
gariies
in 1977-78
·
basketball team, save aid from a part-time
said
.
i'publicity for

the college would· be
,
whefr
.
Marist
:
gleaned
·
$2,422
::
by ~osting assistaµt.
··
.
.
,
.
.
·
.
developed" drawing attention of potential
.
Manhattan,
.
and
$1,522
_
when
/
it
:'
played
-
.
To CO~P~Y with Title ~, a gove~ent students.
-
,
_ · .
_
.
,,
Siena:
;_
:,
T9~L
-
receipts
~
that' season
,
were
··
rule requmng eq1,1al funding for men sand
.:
$4,629.
,>\
.
.
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:
.
.
.
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/

:
:
~
·
·
,
·. ·
·
, .
women's
.
coll~ge sports,. Petro sa_id
.
.
.
_
He

said
.
.
the
final
·
1973-79 receipts were
·
another
·
coach
-
would

be
hired
to
·
assist
·;-
:
s:t48i
('.'. ,
,,
:
::
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.
.
• ·/
:; ..
head ~omen's ~
_
ketball c~ch.
_.,
_
Co
-
~ed -
page
--
1
:
. ·
-
:
Under
:
the
.
proposal,
.
two
extra person:s
- ;
Listing reasons for
the
move;
·
Petro said,
{
would
.
be
.
_
hired
/-
One
-
w~uld
be
faciliti~
.
.
,
"'The
:
Mid-Huds()
_
n area
is
ripe for
a:
.
good
,
affect the
·
outcome of
.
,
the
hearing and
,
l'.[iailager of~ M~~m.i (;:enter plus
ad
as
·
basket~1:} program.
,
There are no other possibly
link
the
·
occul'l'ences. But, the
·:'
/'.",
-
· .. ·
· ':
,
t
>
· :
·
·
·,
:
·,
·· ..
..
·
·
,
· ·
.
-
~
·:
.
.
.
.
detective says
.
he did not inform the
.

p
.
~
,
-
a
·
·
nJ
,
:w
·
-
o

· .
...
u
··
.:
.
l
.
d-
r'-'a·
'.n
·
-
ge
\
·
o
··
t
··
-
h
·
:
.
e
,-
r
.
s
·
p·orts
·
·
: r i ~ !
tth
~:i}ii\~o~i~tailsbefore
th
e
_
.
:
.
. •
.
, ..

.
_,
.
.
.
>
~
I
t .
.
.
·
<
_ ,
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· .
·
Meanwhile, Ann says she thinks Marist
·
.
:
_
, · .
,
.
,

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;
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.

·
·
··
.
·
· .
.
. ,,
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.
·
·
·
_ ,.____.
·
·
security should have pressed the police to
.
-
Should Ma_rist basketball go Division I
in
it
-
.
gh
th
investigate any links between
·
the two
1982-83~ all other Marist sp
,
orts but footba'1
,
Petro said, however•
that
he th0u t e
..
incidents. But, Security Director Joseph J.
-
..
_
would
_
be
-
-
requir~
.
to
·
move
_
to
-
the
.
same t~m ha~ r~~ed.
~
~evel where it.~ould
.
Waters says, "I as a security officer do not
.
I
1
-
,
.
..-
,
.
· ..
,
.
_
:
;-
.
,
,
,
._
,
__
_
compete with DiVJSion I schools. He tell th
,.
h
t
d
ct
ff'· 1
.
eye :
--
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
,
:
,-
.
:
ti
.
ed
that scholarships could be an
e
po11ce
ow o con u an o icia
_.
According ~o Ma~
-
.
~e&:d
.
l:>asketball ~en
00•
.
,
gh
investigatiQn.
·
,
~ch
.
Ron
..
P~tro,
.
the
:
pro.,l>l~
_
would
be
amwer
if
the soccer t~m gets
8
tou er ·
.
Ann fears retaliation. She says she has
. ·
·
with
soccer
, ·
and
.
cross
:
country
·.
which he
·
schedule. GoldmanJ1as
0
!ten
·
mentic:ined already been verbally harassed by friends
·
·
·
· ·
· · ·
-
·
ed
•i:.
ooo

ch
;
in
·
d
·
·that his success
has
been without the aid of
,
.
projecls
-.
may
~-
ne
·
..,,
..
-
.•
~
_
.
a -

.
la
.
-
h larship aitribu•i..,, it
to
the. of
the
arrested man because she reported
ditionan~;
:

:.
-
·
.
_
-._
::
:
·-:_:.,.
:, ..
-
- ·.
_ P yerson
.
~ o

.
"'"'~-
.
the
.
.
incident. Waters says that giving
·
;
'
P~~~
'-
~id ._ cross
co~
..
coach
.
-
Rich
'!,
0
r~ ~f_Jµs
,1
t~im.
·
.
-
. .
-
_
pictures or physical descriptions of the
.
:..
St~ens
t:
~lcom~ :
:
t~
_.-,
idea •
. :
;
How~v~r,.
P~tro
.
.
sai~
the
move to DiVJSion 1
-
men to student security guards
is
not an
··.,
Qpposition
has been
voiced
by
head socc~r . ba,sket~ll
-
~ould
_
~ot greatly affect tenniS,
·
effective
way
,
to
insure Ann's
·
safety ..
,
·
.
'_:
·
coach
·
-
~
Howard
-
;
~•Doc" Gol~n;
:.
~e~
·
s ~ ,
lacrosse, crew or track. Some
1
"I think
-.
the· first man has
-
a serious
.
_: .·

sald

>
S
::
-
·
:
::
/:.:
·
·
.
:-_:
.
-
_-
,
:
:

:
:;_,··
::'._"
-··>:-
-.
·
:
could~~p
-
~sche~~1~ they.nowhave,o~- problem,butMaiisfhasn'thelpedbimor
.
-
.,
.
.
.
<-
J
~ol~n
,
has
.
built
·
the
.
:
most succ~,ul
;_
.
.
:
:
adeq~~Y
'
·
harxll~ higher quality
~~
-
_
m~,
~
victim." She also says she
_
~ upset
·
·
·. -
~
,
-
;
t~~ ~
-
any sp~rt
tha
_
t
Marist}lll~ seen
~
--✓
-
:
~titi
_
on,
:
Petro
_
said
:
.
.
.
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be
:
because
the
arr~ted man was not expe'1ed
;-
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last
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play~
be~-
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Division I ranking in the
-
Association for
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e taken out of
1
sch~l,
.
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"'The students and the college need
something to rally behind. Spirit at the
college is non-existent. Basketball could .
provide the espirit de corps that is
needed," the proposals
said •
Asked to predict the program's progress
in
10
years, Petro said, "I would"like to see
us get an ECAC berth and an NIT
(National Invitational Tournament)
berth
.
"
For
t~e students,
By
the students,
thel978-79
issue of the
MOSAIC
(Marist ~College
Literary
Magazine)
.
is
.
-
a~~lableJn C-617
·
·
.or
by mail C-611
Inchide return box please
..
·
-
,
.
.
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.
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t
I
f '
Letters .. .from
pg
4
Is this another "political" appointment
made by a Marist administrator in order
to circumvent still another pos'sible
problem?
It
is ~lso quietly
known
that
..,.
...
-
THE CIRCLE
.
The week
in
review
April 26,
1919
,_
.
Inquiring
.
.
.
Photographer
. there
will be
the
awarding 9f
rings
to five
juniors who have contributed the most to
Marist College in the fields of service,
athletics, and academics. What.
is the
process for awarding these . rings? What
criteria
will
be
used to rate these students?·
Who makes the decision? We know that the
junior class was·nev:er notified concerning
this matter. Are the select few of the Ring
Committee given
this
task? Are they at all
Around
ihe
world,.,,,
. ;

Question: Bow do you picture
Marlst
ln
· . China
is
~
several appro~ch~ to eligible for the same amount of housing as 25
years?
; capable of
this
momentous task? We are
, afraid of the fact that they probably
are
·
not and that proper recognition
will once
again not be given at Marist College. ·
. Still. further, there are more questions.
Who will pay for these. "free" rings? Who
will
compensate all the juniors who
deserve awards arid are not going to get
them? We demand answers - for the class
of
:19ao
and for· the rest of Marist com_.
munity so that a. problem like this will not
have to be faced again-and at such a late
tune.
·
Respectfully submitted,
Pete McFadden
Dave Powers
Jack Oehm
JohnShanJ?OD
Unfair
To
the editors:
In the Thursday, 'April
12
issue of the
Circle an article was written
in
reference
birth co~trol
m.
an. effort ~o ~t its birth a family_ of four and their child would .
lc!-t~ as its population rapidly nears one · receive· preferential treatment in ad- ·
billion.
. .-
. . .
.
mission to school and in job assignment.
One of the methods
1S
·publicly.
namtng · ·
The size. of- China's population has long·· .
men who have. had v~sectoIDles and been hotly <lebated among
specialists~
women ~ho an: ?n-the pill. An_ot~er ap- Foreign estima~ generally- range from
proac~
IS
~rov1ding cash subsidies
and
870
rilillion to
950
million, but a·U.S. census
other ~centives to ~f!3nts who have. only bureau. demographer has· calculated that
one child. The families would also.
be
China broke the ·one billion
mark
last May;
Around
the
nation ...
A study conducted by the Princeton you've been at Prince.ton; Thirty-four
University newspaper, the Daily
Prin-
percent answered, "Yes." ·
cetonian, .show that mor~ than a
third
of
Seventy-one percent indicated that they
the school's undergra~uates cheated on an felt' the honor, system would be "inef-
examination at. least once during their fective" if more than 30 percent of the·
college ~reers.
· student body cheated.
.
· The , survey's methodology was ·
im- -
The solution of
10
strangler murders in•
mediately attacked by ~dministrato!s and the Hillside area of
Los
Angeles was
an-.
the ·student body president when 1t was nounced by law-enforcement officials,·who·
released Tuesday.
. . .
·· . named
a
27'-year-old native
of
Rochester, .. ·
The Princetonian surveyed 519 ran-· N:Y., who professes to have. a "multiple
domly chose~ under~raduates,during the personality" as one of the possibly two or
week of Apnl
5, askmg ''Have-s.ou ever · more meri allegedly involved in the deaths.·
cheated on an in-class examination while .
· ·
,
:
· ·
.
-t·
1
.

.
-
.
. . Around
the
t.own .
Smoke billowed in the sky across the buildings;
,
.
Hudson River Tuesday, as Highland fire
The blaze was reported atl0
:45
a.m. and
officials reported a blaze that gutted four
wa~
still
_
being fought late into the- night._
.
~ .
Cherello, _junior: :"I(jhey don't
get 1t together,
Marist
.won't be
here."
· to the financial standing of the Black
Student Union (BSU). The. article stated
that,the organization was in the red. The
information• presented.
in·
this article was+------------------....,;.~..;.....;._,.;...-.--...;.._...;_ ____
~➔
nothing more than ari invalid a5$umption.
,
·
. ~=~
0
t:su~~~ie~~i~~:J~~~
1
!ri~
F'inan_cial· Aid\available
sponsors,andmuch of those revenues have
· already ;been paid b~ck to us, · - ·
·
from· several
sources·
.Your·;article was unnecessary and. it
presented.
a ·
biased opinion. The -act .
of
digging'· for some kind of negative in-
formation to present· about the Black
Student· Union has ··resulted .. in inisin-
- \--:
. .formation and this is' notthefirst tune that
i
By Valerie Poled
wheri they did come.they would not
find
this
has
occurred.
·
· · , . · .·· .·. , \
- \
· . . ··
. - · .•
.
. . .·
anything,"
.
said Fraher:.'"The:·cost.of the
.•.. ·Th~
·
.club has. made some, positive pa'st
.
A.· M'~~
student wit~· FreP:~~ •lluge~oti . ·vol~~
\V&S
high'~nd \V(st~P~.<>r.~~ring .
-Tom
Hammond,
ju1tior: "It
will
probably . be part of . a Mid-Hudson.
University; along with Vassar and Bard~-in
order to survive/'
·
. achiev~me11ts and
.
many students and
.
bloo.d,~ragra~~teb.\lSIDess.<>recoqonncs:. t~_etp._,.
<.
- . _-,,; .. /:·: ..
. . faculty jnembers here·, at.•
-
Manst
·
,.are. maJor
1
who wa.nts,Jo,~udy
m
Bar~lona/·
_
/l'wo b09ks m.,the financial aid _office
curious as to why your organization does
Spain,
I
could.
be
elig!~ 'fcndinancial aid·; were; The
Grants
lleglster,
and
Scholar- · _
·
not report these things. Could itibe that . awards they are not aware of.
·
ships, Fellowshlps,·and Loans . .
According
your paper is attempting to degrade the
Assistant Director of. Financial· Aid, to Fraher uodated.volumes of these books
Black
Student Union?
: · . \
Micha~l Fraher said, "Besides the major ·can be found
hi
public.libraries·,.for-.in-' ·
If
your paper were to present in-
source~ of financial aid, there
is
a lot of terested students. .
- -.. • '. ·.
-
foi:mation that is necessary, factuara4d
mo~ey available through smaller
,t,·raher said moststudents are aware of -
~idn't happen to put the BSU in the best pf · programs." .
. . .
.
the. major sources of. financial aid which
hght, we would accept that for that would ·. According to Fraher, the problem with include. awards;_student loans, ana work
be good journalism but this
is
not wllat. most of the smaller awards
is that you studyprograms.l'Ifastudentisnotaware
your paper does. In the future, ,could you
have to
be
in .a certain field, or your ._it
.is
not because ·the information
is not
please respect yourself a.nd us;
If
you must
parents must . ,belong to ·· a particular there,". said Fraher., "The student
is
not
print negative information about our club,
organization to qualify for the aid. "Many ,
taking
advantage of the information."
. see that it is informative and factual. Isn't
of.. the awards . are available
only. at the - · Fraher said since most students receive
that what' journalism is all about?
· graduate level,": said Fraher. ·
·
·
·
financial aid, a big problem
is
students
are
Sincerely,
Fraher.said that the financial aid office ·. not aware of. the responsibilities involved
\ Eddie Williams · u~ed to purchase updated volumes
.
orittile with the aid. "A lot of'students have
\PresidentofBSU
knownavailablefinancialald.C'Wedidnot problems with the Tuition Assistance -
get an awfullot of students coming in, and Program," said: Fraher. "The student
is
.
_
· · · · ' ·
·
· · · · -
·: responsible for payment of the bill until the
Be
.; ·
...
··e··
'•
·1·
·h··a··." - -
i
·e·
· n
·
· ···. -, .
m;~~;~~T:i:~i~:=~~;hose
·.
.
_
.
.
family situation changes should go:
im-
'.
•·.

.
·..
.
.
.
mediately t~
the
fintmcial aid office to see ·
.
·
about additional a~d.
ati ,•llest.
~
~~.\ · LOS ANGELES
,
; ·::.·\ PHILHARMONIC
~~?:~r-.. __ . ·
~
.Cark?t&!riaGiulini,
~
- · · · · '·~ .. [:. ·MusacD1rector ·
in an an:seethoven program. ·
. Egrriont Overture Symphony
- .. ~. No. 9with Faye Robinson,
~ . '. soprano, Gwendolyn KiUebfeic:', .
I .
.
.
mezzo-soprano, Robert Tearotenor
, ,
,
&
Simdn Estes, bass:baritone;Presented
· "by the .Hudson Valley Philharmonic .. '
, : Orchestra.
&
the McCann Foundation · ,
-:,. in co~peration 'lllith N.Y.Telephone Co.
· y: ·: ··· .

· - . :-,
<\i;;ii1llli,;.L;;;,;;1lllh,;;,,. .
MID~ HUDSON.
CIVIC CENTER•.
.
. . :
:
. .·
·-
T~!!lll!m!,Jf'~-
1
111
11
1?". ;
Wed~.
Mij2im9
1
8~N,r"'"";
... _ . . , . . .· , .... -... .
',-..
;
./_R~.m~.
Coine·aack·
·
to.-Work
Next
Yea·r.
·
·
.
.
.
,. ·aoss· ..
.
.
Mike Iantosca, Sophomore: "Hopefully
Marist
will
acknowledge the arts by that
timeY

·.
,
,.
~:,
..
,.
,;.,
.
.
.
.
.
_,•
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:
.····
. .
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. Terry·Pete~;
freshman:
"I.think
fewer
students
will .
be .
interested:
becaw .
they
i
realize
.
they're not:getting what.they paid
for.".
.. · · •
· ..
>.
.:'.:,
<.> ·. . ·
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April 26,1979
THE CIRCLE
Page 1
Journalism instructor Will recall Marist friendships
By Dianna Jones
Long
lasting friendships have been
established under deadline pressures for
journal~m teacher Mimi McAndrew
because
of
time she has spent with her.
students.
.:
·
· · '!My.students became my friends," says
'McAndrew who
-will
be leaving Marist
after four years of teacliing
to
return to
newspaper reporting.
·
McAndrew, reporter for 11 years prior to
coining
to
Marist says,
"As
much as
I
love
reporting, the nicest things that happened .
to me, happened to me here.
''I
wouldn't have missed it for the whole
world." .
Mimi
MeAndrew
Spring lnt~rnshlps
for
79
McAndrew who never taught before Advance; one
is
the assistant to ~e
coming to Marist; says students taught her editorial writer at WCBS, four oth~r
toteach;"They (students) taught me a lot students work at the Poughkeepsie
about courage.
It
takes a lot
of
courage to Journal. one of those four was the Jour-
be a campus reporter because what they nal's first woman sports writer, says
renor't
effects them directly," she says.
McAndrew.
Teachi~g _ her students that, "A
The main probl~m~ M~And,i;ew says she
newspaper
is
there to report wnartiappens has f~ced at Ma!"lst
JS
_tllatt people ~ve
and
what effects people because the public ques~oned my mtegntr. They beli~ve
has a right to know," McAndrew adds. thatl_ms~ehowt~ching_somemysti~l
"It's _
a sacred trust being a newspaper nega~ve view of JOU~alisl!l when
I
m
person."
·
t ~ ~ g
the
most routine kmd of repor-
"It's a tremendous pride for me to t~. _
.
.
.
. -
contribute a little bit to students who are
McAndrew hves
m
Rhinebeck with her
now a credit to my profession," she says. husband, T~m, the sports editor !or the
Two students now. work at the Associated PoughkeepS1e Journal, and their two
Press: one works for the Staten Island daughters, Sioba~ ~nd Molly.
i

-
..
though Norman says the best students do teacher education program for secondary during registration for the next semester's
not always make.the best interns.
schools should contact her when ·c1asses.
By
Jim
Townsend
Internships in communication arts; . · Some of the interns receive job offers sophomores.
,
The Psychology internship, called a
political science, psychology, and teacher f1om ¼heir internships, but Norman added
Nolan said the intern program
has
work-study program, started in
1968
and
education are providing job experience for their, worltexperience
is
more important decreased in
size
in the
past
five years, but was one of the first in the country to have
· 79
Marist students this semester.
than being hired. Many of the· internship . in
1977,
11 out of the
19
teacher education· students work full-time. .
-
.... ,, ·. ; The · communication arts intemships
prograrm are now in doubt, according to students later found jobs teaching.
·
Sixteen students are in the work-study
· started
in
1969
and according
.to
program Norman, because there aren't enough
Nineteen Political Science students are program which, includes rehabilitation
· director
·
.. Bob Norman has
grown
·and students interested.·
obtaining job experience' in law, programs, drug abuse programs, working
·
••_exceededmyexpectations,"hesaid.'lllis
In the teacher education department 11
legislative,_ and executive ,offices in with emotionally disturbed children, and
semester, 33 interns, ten who work·
full-
students have taught" in area high schools.
Dutchess County in the internship testing in Poughkeepsie High School.
time,·are eamingl5 credits~ Norman said
Elizabeth Nolan, director of the program. The agenc.ies in which these
Students are given interviews by the
• some . in~erns ·. get· paid.· for
.
working;·• but program said many· of. the students who . students work in the.· offices of the Public agency before they take the internship and
Norman.does not like interns because they teach are supervised by former. Marist · Defender, the District .Attorney, the they hold a monthly seminar to talk with
I1lllY
~ome.loyal
to
the facility and not to graduates. The program started with the
Probation Department, and the County the other interns and . discuss their
. the. program.;Each intern keeps .a
·
rec<>rd . Marist brothers according to Nolan, but Executive office according to Lee problems with each other according to
1
· ·
·ofwhattheydoonthejobandNormansa_id · received state certification in the early Miringoff, director of the program. Christine McLean, director of the
. · he'. tries to contact them once· every two sixties.
· . ·
. • ·
Besides the internship work papers and program.
· · · weeks: · • ... _
·
. . · ..
· · . · . · •
Interning education students observe
readings are required said Miringoff.
The work-study program is only open to
· · • . Norinari said students. who want in-
classes for seven weeks before taking full
Three students are interning full-time in second semester seniors who have com-
. ternBhips should contact
.him.
by; their responsibility of teaching five classes.
the New YQrk state· senate in Albany and pleted all of their requirements said
sophoiI:lore ·year: in order
·.to
set them up.
'Ibis includes-planning,
instructing, testing
are working with senators and doing jobs McLean.
·. Non:nan said the students. are expected to and grading of· over
100
students said usually done by. their staff.,
.
-, have ail overall cumulative average of.2.5. Nolan.
Miringoff !!~id that students interested in
·
'
'and.:an)average in tlleir __ .major_ of·.2.8,
Nolan said students·· interested· in the ·internsh!ps--should've ·contacted him
RTISEMENT
ADV'ERT!SEMENT_
ADV.'ERT!SEMENT
AN
OPEN
APPEAL,
to
the
ADVERTISEMENT
A D V E R T ·, S E M E N T
ADVERTISEMENT
John, laul, George and ~ingo,
l·lease don'.t. turn the page. ~e know similar appeals
have be.en made to ~•ou in this manner askin6 that you
reunite. You have tieen offered millions, yet continue
to stay separated.
However, here is an offer you cann·ot refuse. i'ie in the
alumni assmciation of the I/est :;/appiconetta School of
;)entistry, Sexual' ;.·Clsi tions and Au to i;ody ,~epair
want. ta ·put forth a proposal.
i
..
.
t
He will praviae each of you, the Fab i'our, with a free
.
.
.
.
· introductory corresponde,nce course r.hat can be taken
advantag~ of at your convenience, Choose any topic.
'fhink
of
the fun ·you could haye exarnining each other's
teeth. carbureato~s and etc. (sic)_- ,le are
s1ul. \
we can'°'-
.,
type real well) sure you could find much for your
music. You know; ·like "Ain't got nothin' ·to hide 'cept
.
,
for me and my monkey." And what aqout the guy on renny
Lane with the queen in his pocket and his clean machine?
F.ut that's not all. Accept our offer. play for us, and
·we'·ll throw in ar. extra
-~5 --
each! ·l1e'll every carry
your instruments· (drumsticks included). C_ome on guys.
·:he time has come. We'll even hold your ham!. You can
even do disco.
Sincerely,
P./.?IIJ~·
!'.
L .....
Strei telar::. n
;

ADVERTIS
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••~,,•
'Page 8
THE CIRCLE
April 26, 1979
BlJREAUCRACY
Gov't grants have a
.
·
positive impaCJ
./
.
.
.
.
.
, •
_.
-
..
·
-
.
-
.
.
·
.
.
.
-
-
...
By Jane Neigbbors .
.
-
\
Poughke~psie's
largest Motor
Inn
.
'
,
'Specia
_
l R
_
ates for Mari st Students
-
-
arid Atu-mni
:
"
·
·
.
·
·
·
Located
·
on
~
·
Rt. 9 ( South Rd.}
.
-
-
.
.
·
J_ust
South _ollBM
··
·
3 Miles
·
South
·
of Mari
.
st
-
-
.. ·
-
-
Now
Featuri~g:
·
-.
A
·
nthonys
Plaqe
:.
LO.llnge
:
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How
"to
find
'.
.
:

·
.
·
~su"mm-
.
.lf>,b.
-
;
·
·
··
·
Talk
"
to Manpowe
r.
·
:
-

We
'
_ve got summer job
•.
.
.
.
.
.
opportunities for t~mporary
·
:
·
"
: .-' .·
workers,: In factories
:
·
ware--
·
·
·
· ·
houses.-siores' .• ,ir1doors
and ciutdoors
,•: ·
.
.
'
.
>.:
. -
.
-
'.
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Work as much
·
as
·
yc:>u
.
·
i
'.
·
want
:
Or as
liule
;
'
lt's
·
up
.
to
you
;;
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>'
,
-
.
. .
·
.
There
's
a ManpoJer office
.
.
almost anywhere
:
you·re '
:
.
·
i
spending
the
·
summer
:
'
Stop
i
n and
we'll
plaOa
job
.
.
~chedulefor
y9u_,
:
_
.
·
.·.·
.·,
.
?\
-
-~·
.~·-
·
.
·
An
equal oppo(lunily employer
..
. .-
,
·.
·
;··
,
.
:
·
,
·
.
.
:::
.:..,
.
_:.:
·
-
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.
.
.
·
·
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·
i
tfc
.
.
ir
:.
,
_,
.
THE CIRCLE
Page9
.
.
_
·
.
.
s
·
orrentin
·
o
college-
looks back
,:
'
.
·
As he pours beer and jokes with the
.
customers at the bar, Frank Sorrentino,
- owner of Frank's
·
Bar and Grill,
reminisces about the Marist students he
has seen come and go for 15 years.
.

A native of Poughkeepsie, Sorrentino
has
also
seen
·
Marist change and develop
over
.
the years. "At first the boys didn't
like
it when the
,
girls first came in,"
said
·.
Sorrentino, "they had to change a lot of
'
their activities." , After a while though,
Sorteritino said they
·
began
to
Uke it.
·
Sorrentino remembers the days when
the Marist· Brothers were
still here and as
he
·
says, ''the students were very serio~
·
then." Sorrentino said he sees a pattern m
the changing attitudes of the students.
Fifteen years ago, the
_
students were
serious,
·
said Sorrentino; but then they
seemed·to go a little wild and in the last
couple of years they ha_ve seemed to
become more serious aga~.
Many Marist students have
_
worked at
Frank's
1
.
throughout- the

years and
Sorrentino said that some alumni drop in
·
and sonie
"even
bring their children. Some
of the kids who worked for me now have
big jobs and it feels_ good because I t ~
I've helped them
_
m some way," said
Sorrentino.
·
.
.
.
~
-_
Sorrentino enjoys
haVing
the stude~ts
--~
.
..
.
around and he says, "Marist has Qeen very
·
good for the community" and the students
"are all good people. They are all very

sociable
.
and have never given me any
trouble;" said Sorrentino. Frank's has a

varied clientele during the day, but at
night,
.
"Marist is the main
.
source of
business," said Sorrentino.
---
·
-
-

·
.
·
· .
Sorrentino,
.
father of four children, two
sons andtwo
:
daughters. One soil, Robert,
has
been a tiartender there for 7 years.
·
"My
;
wife even worked here for a while,"
Sorrentino said.
.
·
·
You've
P.11.several
·
thoumnd
dollars
-
,
-
~
. _
and
4
yean
into~
degree .
.
Here\
-
hoW
to
make
,
it
~y
off.
,
\
'
,
,
l
'
.
.
As
an officer in·the Coast Guard.
·
-
·
.
.
.
d h
·
.
·
'f
·
·
.
·
.
Ri hf now
,
thi
.
Coast
:
cuard
.
is
_
looking for men and wom_en to f1U 1mport~nt le_a ers 1P pos, !ons '"
sever~! fields/computer ma"nageinent, engineering, op_erations research, ec?nom1cs~ and. chemistry to
.
nameafew
_
.
,
.
·
.
:
.
-


:-
we have
a
tot/4{ jobs to fill, and w~
.
ne~d to fill !he!TI now.

.
.
.
·
-
·
11
-
·
..
:'
,
With the coast.Gua_rd
/
your work
_
begins the day you get o
.
ut of 0U1cer
.
ca~d1~.'te school. And you
.
get a
.
the'joti
'
you
·
can
"
handle.
'
·-·
:
·
'
---
'
·
,
.
.
.
.
bT
.
.
th
r
II the time Our main
· .
..
:
:
:
:..
As atoastGuaid officer, you put your training and leadership_
a
11ty on
..
~
me a
.
11
·v
.
k
.
·
btisiness
'
is saving iives : not just'marine
:
rs ill distress, but the hfe of our environment as we . our w
_
or
r
.
~ill
_
be
·
~hailenging andfef_xceiti:g~ver
$11'
000 a year
-
During your first three years with the Coast Guard,
:
·
·starting
pay as an
°
ic r

·
-
b
.
~
40
t
M
d·cal and dental
.
·
riormal
pro~otfon and ~en
.
iority rai~es will
_
increase that salary y over
percen

e 1
_
_
--
~r~
\:e=~~t ~o c~ntinue you~ college studies after working hour
_
s, we offer tui~io_n assistanc~. And if
. .
..
.
1
~
:

he Coast Guard becomes a career, you may apply for
_
post-graduate trammg'. The
_
~oast ~uaJd
·

your 1ob '" t
,
t
'
•t·
.
d keep
·
-
vou on
·
full salary while attending graduate school. Another
-
benefit for
will pay your u1 10n an
,
-
·
.
·-
h" ·
·
-
,
•t
f
d

.
career officers is a generoy_s •~~ir~ment.
1
opti~n
·
~ttef only ,?O years ?f
-
ser_v1ce. Somet mg you won
in
.
\
otheremployers offering while you re still in your 40 s.
.
.
.
.
.
!11
3
~!
don't'pretend to offer the perfect job for e~eryone. Quite fran~ly, w~•~e p!etty selective
-.
~bout tile
. .
·d
omen
·
we choose to join our officer corps. But if a l~adersh1p position m the Coast ~uard soun•
.
men an w
.
.
.
.
::
cts like your thing,"
_
we;d li~e
_Jo
·
n_,eet with you.
.

,
·
.
·
.
.
<
. :
·
t'
·
.•
.
Ofiicer Candidate School
~
classes convene October 79 and January
_
1980. 90
mm~te
:
_
op~n
.
tes_!!lg,
/
M\,nday 3
o
·
Ap}i!,
.
9:00
~:ni·
to
.
3:0G
p;m.
Room 270,:,Campus Cente~. Se~ pla~ement ~1
:
r~
,
~t?,r
·
!~r.,t,urther
:
informauo
·
n.
'
'
.
'
.
.
.
.
I
.
.
.
...
.
. .
I
,
I
.
.
·
/
,,
.
.....
.,,.

























































































,._!.
'
~.-
,
.~-
.
.
.
'
.
.
'
..
\
.
·
-
THECJRCLE
·
.
-
April 26, 1?19
.
· .
News
in
/
brief~~~on't
·
. .
/
~:.-:
..
;
·
.
.
'
.
.
-
·
f.
'
'
.:
'.
'

·-a

·.
'm
:
l;:o;
s
•:
:1·
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I
~

=,
"';_
I
:
[
.,
;
.
.
·
..
.
;
-
-
,
.
.
.
,
. .
.
_
,-:
·
.
.
·
·
.
.
,
-
,
.
·
to
tl:e,
-t}las
s
,
of·
"'
~11
:Ac,
:- ,
·
-•
_
,,.
·
.
\
\
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~
,
'
.
,


















































































































































































































































































































































, .
f
l-
1
""pril 26, 1979
.
THE CIRCLE
·
Page 11
-
This
Week
Sports
.
)
Striegel, •Mike -"Andy" Lanza, and
.
bow
·
The toP teams in each division
will
make
Athlete
of
the Week
-
Wayne Schmidt.'
,
.
the
playoffs.
In
the 3:30 p.m. game on May
Thirty-six
members of
the
Marist crew
'l;be
first
freshmen eight carries cox Jim ·2,
the
top team in the East Division
will
·
have been named
athletes
o~
the
Week,
for Parisen, stroke Eric
DuPont,
Joe Fox, Jim play
the
top team
in
the North Division and
.
the week ending April 22, for
their
vie-
Foley,
'
John Dyer, Dom Caslabro, Jim _at4:30p.rn. it will be
,
me West against the
tories Saturday in--,Wasbington when
the Spratt,
Scott Bennett and bowman
Dennis
South Division. The finals
will
be
on May
3::-
.
·Red Foxes won
all
of four
races.
(See
White.
·
.
.
·
·
· •
·
,
~
·
·
·
Inco-edracquetball,theonlyundefeated
story.)
·

.
·
·
. .
.
·
:
.
:
.
·.

.
-
Intramural
ROWidup
team
is
Joe WaJsh and Joan O~eara with
In
.
tbe
·
vars1ty heavywetght_eigbt are:
.
.,
:
·a record
of.5 - 0.
/
.
co:it'Sue
~batowka,
stroke Dail
Gualtie~.
.
·
.
6
·
rti
'
:
·
Hnd
in
the
-
-
.
Netmen Win
Two consecutive victories against
Ramapo (7-2) and Dowling
(8-1)
lifted
the
Marist
tennis
team record
to
2-4
this
past
week.
.
'.
On
Tuesday,
the
Red Foxes defeated
· Ramapo 7-2
with
·
five individual victo.r
;
'ies
am
two double
wins.
The doubles
~
by
·
Frank Hildenbrand Joe· Ford ·
-
.
Bill There are
1
~eams pa Cipa-,,
'
~
-
-
-
- ·
Graham'
-'
J
O'N
m~
B •
·
,
M
rrisse
.
floor hockey mtramurals which
.
are
-

-
-
. .
_A
·
. .

_
·

_

_
ptam'
·
_oe_
J
:.
.
.
Pe
_
&Utllatu
ri~
·
n d
·
_
0
b o
-
·
_
B Y0~
·
scllediiled for

May 2 and
3. 'lbe
_
re are
__
four
CUB
Playoffs
Soon
.
Chris

Curran and
-
Bill
De
Winne and
Francis
Mayerhofer and
Lan-y
Simmons
were the Red Foxes first doubles scores
.
~
~ e :
/
>
..
un
_
\r
ff\a
'.
~
'
~
.
divisions
·
~f ..
four teams, each.
~
the ~~
0
!?:iJ:
0
fo/~13
s::i~
11
wt~:t:

Members
·
of
the
women's eight are
·
coxE~em.
·
Diymon, tbe Lost
·
Planet
Auman
·
second place finisher of each
division
will
EditlLVasqu~
/
stroke
·
Sue
·
.Vinall,
·
:pebbie
·
_
l~~
'-1
th
a ~
0rd
-
.
0
f
2
arid ~'.
1!1
the
·
West
play
the
first place division winner
in
each
·
.
.
Dro1f,
,
Eileeil
·
M ~ . Vicki B~iley
,M~rr
DivJS1on
-
th~r~
is
a
_
three
-
~Y,
tie
betweeM
league, says
.
CUB softball
direc.-tor Ken
Frunzi
'
B~th
:
Ross1,
·
Nancy
.
Coljigro~i

and
the
:
Hans,on; Brotb_!~!
Bossys B~ys
~
.
_
Sullivan.
·
.
.
. .
·
.
.
.
.
_
how
_
~It,111
_
~
:
l!ar~L
·
.
··
.
·
·
<.
<
'
.
_
:
\
:
~~han
_
Raide~ for f!rst p~ce~~e~!.18 :
:
Sullivan
urges
·
all team
captains to
h;and
;
_.
:
,
~;~~
.:
~~~~
-
~~~~:
11
0:*.~~T~i~;~~fr~g~~~-~~:
-
-
-
::.~:sirp~;r;=~
~~~8JP
I;~~
.
-.
· •
,
,
~~n;
·
.;,
P?:ul
,
_
_
Pl~
~
.
·
-Tiro
:.
KllrZ~
_
qe~
.
~o~~
while
111:
~
~~
th
.
_
1).
.
-
games were cancell~ aue ~o the campus
'
...:.
Mayer!J
.
o~~,;,
,
:
;:
·
,
;:f~m
/
~,~~ersoµ;
:
L~
.
~rY
~
-
~~
top.
·
.
.
·
:.
-
·
:

.
·
.
··
wide picnic;
.
:-/
.
·
,
/
."
}
:~.--:
::.·
.
:
-
..
..
. :
:
::::~
~
~:
;
;
:~'~
·
-
·
.
:
.
~
-
~
.
'
.
i
-
.
:[
f1iH
!
f
~
J
J
'\&or~J
.
~
:
~
.
\fi/'
0

rn
.
~h.
-

.
.
·
Regatta
·
.
·
on
.
_
:../
for
the
season.
.
·
·
·
Red Foxes Dan Denny, Dan Kucera,
Francis Mayerhofer,
Chris
Cu1Tan and
Keith Davidson recorded victories
in
singles
.
matches.
·
The tennis team is "coming into form"
says·
headteniuc coach Joseph Coogan.
The Red Foxes will play Sieria at
Loudenville, N.Y., Bridgeport
.
on May
1
and
Bard
College on May
3
in
home
matches.
·
·
I
· After
.
five'j~rs
'
t>
(
five
j
~.in. :Wor}I~u~
.
~~
;
faU
:
W?f-kout
.
progr~m
'
lias
,
~ri
put
for women's crew sometimes rowmg m mto effect.

·.
.
.
.
_
·
·
.
·
_
-


.
.
The Madst
.
crew
will
attempt
_
to regain successful this year. "They have a superb
bitter cold
;
~u
{
and
srii!:w
/
t,fie't~m
finally
,
:
.
.
_
:
WJteii
~,
w<>me~'s ~rew
:
first
_
sJa~ed-~t
.
the championship it lost la$t year to Kings
-.
program,"
·
Meyn added:

won their
/
first
race
,
ApriL
>
14
·
agllinst
·
bad ~ e qQats~
}
!3ust because
of
cunOS1ty
.
__ ;Poµit and Holy
_
Cross on Saturday when
it
The number of schools involved will
F<irdhan'i'
'
weiitonto'1Vintbeifriextraceon,..more
j
t;lian

anything
·
else,"
·
.
explained
/
hosts the President's Cup Regatta, billed r~uire ~eats to
-
~ held in the varsity
,
.
ApnlJ~
:
Jgaim
(
\V~gtor,i
'

eon.eg~,
.
ana
.'
~
_
llett
/
1
'Afte~
,
,
~
O-
C!iriosity
aied
;
'
~:"~e
·
as the largest one-<iay regatta
in
the state.
heavyweight
fours
·
and eights events,
.
then W0JLtheif,
<
~ t
\t
regatta
\•
:
April 2l
·_
h~ve been
boa,
_
~,11
m,Jht and ~om,~t¥es
'
.
.
. ·.
·
,,
marking a
first.
The competition kicks off
·:
··
againsf.1Nashirigt<li
·
;
'
~lleg~
'i
a~
:
,
G~orge
.
w.ith a follr
,
~Jl.
:
bQal,.
:
she said
.
It
_
s a
,
:
'-
-
Almost 500 oarsmen from 15 schools will with the freshmen eight event at 8 a.m. on
,
.
·.
W
_
·
.;.1.:.;;;nt
ri
-
U
·
·
· ·
_
..
•t
· ·
_

:,
,
_
-
-,,-; ..
-
<>.
_'·
.::
·
::
,·: _·
·
.
:--
very demarid
_
mg sport
ID
tenns of physical
·
·
·
pa
·
rt
_
1
·
·
c
·
_ 1·pa
__
t e
.
·.
,
·_
ma
·
km' g the
·
19
_
79Preside
··
n
·
t's the
·
Hudson.
.
·
·
a.:1.1w1
6
..,,n
.,
ruvers1
y .
...
·
.
.
.
,
.
......
.
_
.
.
.
..
·
..
.
.
,
._.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
_:.·
'!They'i'e
>
il
\
group
.
;~
o
(
.
ljan:l
i:;
:
-w,orking endui:a,nce a~
.
~e<ii~ti5>~
i
'and
:
we h:ave
Cup the biggest in the regatta's history,
·.
·
.
The feature event, the varsity
:
:
:
wonienwMare
.
riow
i
deteriniried.toJvin;'' pnicti~s at
_
f1y~
;
or six m
,
~ _morrung
:
accoi:ding
":
to Marist head coach Andre:w heavyweight eight race,
is
set for
·
10:30
say~
Shai1ln'Malle~
r
wQJJi'e#~fc.refcoa<:h;
_
Thes1:
·
dete~
-
P,eop~!
--:

fr~
'.
Joim.ng,n she
Meyn;
·
::
·
·
-
'
.
a.m., M~yn
said.
?Jtr::x~~~jrt~~lJmJl:tt:~~
::
:
~~~~-~
;
s
:
~~
'.
llihi~~cj~
:
·
~
-
~t they
'is
~i~reJ~~:~!·~~~~e:h~~~~i~
·
.
Mirist
will
have boats in
six
of the
10
·
·
a·t·
·
,,.
.. ·_·.
·
·· ·
•·
-·-
...
·
_
··"Th
···

...
··
·
~"t
'·c
·
·
·
··
1s
,
are shanng their
.
equipment with the
Rhode Island
·'·
(UR
_
I)
·
.
__
, ,
·
• _
· events. Ot.her
-
colleges entered
.
are
·
St.
.
con
1
ion,ug
,
.program.
,,
e
·
ei6 .. ·
gir
.
·
·

,

·
·
·
·.·
-
·
·
·
-
·

·
·
· ·
Jos
··
eph's
St
Jo
·
hn's
·
Km
·
gs Po1
·
nt Iona
h

..
j
16
-
.::•--
·
:...:i
·
.,--
<
half
·
> -
· ··
-
·
·
.'
·
·
f
·?
..
·
·
·
·
·, ·
·
·
.;.
--.
men's liglitwe1ght.
·
'.
,
~
•our-
:
·
..
practices
.
are
"I
·
._
•'-;-'Ir
_
.
w
·
e
_
·
_
-
wi·u

defuu· ·tely
·
be m·
_
the
·
_
top
,
·
,
-
,
,
.
av
,
e
.
_
a,au
:.
3
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.
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y~rs
,
0
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ex
.;
,
· •
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
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,,
·
· · ··
·
·.•
·
wwu.
Holy
Cr
ss F
rdha
Villa ova LaS
·
Ile
pene11ce
;'
'
,'
accordirig:
'
to
1
M,~lleWatid
:.
a(l-Jimjtef)>ecause
0£_~~•
· ..
:MaD.ett
-
~-
three (inJeam standings),'.' Meyn said.
-
·
0
'
0
m,
n

~

qea
;
:
~
J
Thi
f
is
the
;
firsf
,
yea_r
J
haf a
j
vititel'
._
]:>l~~ed
:
'.
..
. -
. ·
.
. .
.
.
"Of course, we will be shooting for the No.
·
~~~~tio1t~tf
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J:/ ·
)of
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tt:~d
,L
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___________________ ..... _
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~
\~~~;~he
UJlder~toodthatlJRlhas been
.
SUNY
Maritime
.
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·
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9
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e~rk
,
·'
229:.;:9l13
.
_
..:
27J°'Moin-Mall
-
)>~;u~h~~e-psie
·
t
452~3~0-
·:
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.

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I
Ractllletticlll!
Racqu~tball
·
is the fastest-growing s~ort in
the country and ALLSPORT is
.
the biggest
additi6n to the sport and recreation scene
in Outthess County.
:
come see
_
Racquetball
in
.
action ...
.
it's easy-to learn; it's.
·
great
..
recreo
.
tion, it's supe,:b exercise. And it can
be
played
by
euer!one.
·
ALLSPORT.J~
a
.
·
<tJruplete
Health
and
·
R.~creatio1iCluh
Offering
-
:
• 9
Racquetboll/Handb~ll
Courts
• Nautilus
Fitness
and
,
He~lth
.·,
·
,
Conditioning Club
.
·
·
·
_
·
•Luxurious
L~'tmge
I
.
:
aridVerandQ
,
·
• Con'lplet~
Men's
·., .
.
.
.
.

/:
.
ond\Noinen's t,ock~r~
~
..
-~

Pio
-
Sh
·
c>'p
.
~
.
..
.
.
.
·
.:' .
. ~·

-
-···~
·
Racket-Ball $70
per year
Nautilu . .-. $195
·
.
per year. special
,
Jan,Ux
r{IJes
.
available
,
.
,:
·
..
..
• Air
Conditioning
. .
.
:
i•F~~
-
ci~ridBeverageBar

~
.,
year-round
:'
.
·•
·
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.
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.
...
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·.

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,~\I_
ALLSPORT
.
·
\if
J
~
· .
. .
,
..
.
f
llnesS
aiid
ratiiuethll
club
.
.
,
.
, .
·
, ~
:
·
--
~
-
~AWas~on
St~t,Poupkeepaie, NY 1~1
.,·
.
.
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.
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.











I.
a
4
=
z
-
Page 12_
THECIRCLE ;,-
April 2__6, .1979
'
'··~
~sweep.
·
o.c.
ro:Ges_
























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_
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King Kong Invades·
·
.
,
the
MatiSt
·
·
CampUS
centerfold























































































































































































































































































































;
Circle looks at··Student Reps
.
-
.
.
,.
..
,
.
~
.
.
Community unaware of CSL work
By
Dave Shaw
8J}d
and Jack McCutcheon
For budgeting,
the
student government
·
express their
opinions;
He said
·
that
it
~

set a
list
of guidelines
-
~or
the
Financial student gevernment's fault that there
ism~
.
Although Frank Biscardi, president of Board concerning the f ~
of
the
clubs) student input.
.
.
.
..
·. .
·
· ·
:
the Council of Student Leaders, says the according to the
clubs
needs, service to
·
Gerry
White,
assistant
.
professor of
student government
bas
been
"very
the
community,
and
development of its
.
history, says
he
was
.
impressed
with
~e
;
successful"
"
this year,
.
he

says
.
many
member~ ..
·
s ·
·
"
. .
·
·

·
.
. .
·
.
'
·
'
· .
.
·
.
,
-
.
,
introductory ~eeting_a
.
t the
year.s
'
students and faculty are n
·
o
.
t aware of the-
.
B.iscardis
.
aid,
:
·
Both
,
the
admj.nistra
.
.
tion
.
\
.
beginning
which
expla
.
ined
t~ facul
.
.
ty and
.
organization's work.
.
.
-
am! faculty are
m
~tlo11 to recogl)ize the
:
students the pr~edures and
gOllls
·
of
the
During the
1978-79
schooll year, the
·leg1tirilacyof
_
thestu9entgovernm~tinits
:
CSL;·
However,
.
he say_s he was
·
disap-
student government was
·
resiructured
to
·
..
~epr~entation of
_
.
student_s and
~~
,
support
:
pointed in the low turnout of
his
coll~gues
the Council
·
of Student Leaders
(CSL).
It
m having
its students bacldng
it.
..
·
,
:
.- :
and
studen~ ..
·
;
,
.
:
.
·
·
.
·
.
.
.
:
·
_
includes the Student Activities
.
Committee
Assistant Dean of Students Gerry KeUy
'
· ...
other
.
people~ are
.
uncertain· of. ~ud~nt
(SAC), the Commuter Union
.
(Ctn.
the
.
~cks
this year's
>
stud~nf govemnient,
.,
government•~ accomplishments
tllis
y
_
ear.
·
College
:
Union
Board {CUB),
and the
In·:
saying it
~•has
represented the students a
_
t
,
q>ncerning
if
stud~nt government
:
ac-

.
terhouse Council
(IBC).
·
.
.
.
·
.
.
·
.
I
the highest l~e} of the
,
operation of the
·•
compllshed much
this
yearsentorCharll!
The C.SL's main goal this year was to get college - that
is
the
trustee
level/
.
'
-,,
.
.
·
B~UDl.:.said, "riot that_.
·
~ ve heard
.,:_
of:;
·.
new structure tt? ope~ate successfully•
.
_
Sollle
of
the
'
:
faculty expressed IDlXed.
·
Junior Matthe~
_
.
Sc
_
~~:111
,
~i~~rJ
According to B1SCardi,
'"fie
did ac- feelings. History
_
professor Dr.
Roscoe
·.
diJn~t
know
~
.I~re
j
no idea.
:
pr.
Ri
.
. ·
.
.
complish what we wanted
m
_
the stnir
.
Baish
_
compllm~ted
·
the
·
.
student
:
go-vem-
..
P~.~tt,
.
.
commun1catio,~s
<
.·.
professor,_

···•
- h
·
,
·
-' ..
-
.
:
.
.
.
·
.
•>.·
.
.
·
ture."
.
.
.
'
.
. '
mentortapprovmgtheAlt,ematlvecluf?, an
>
~ponded; ''N~tJeally .
.
.
~e ~eshman
"
··t·
·
.
··
e
··
.
. ·s·
t
····
·
o
··
Mm
'
.
·.
Other accomplishrilents of the
CS~,
.
organization o( about
30
_
mem~rs;
mostly.
:
said, !'I
_
didn't ev~n
.
know :we
~
-
~
a
_
~d~t:it

.
·
·
.
:

.
.
·
.
·
.
1
.
,
.
.
:
?
according
~
·
to
'
Biscardi
-
a~ ~terllouse women,
that
d~Js
w,ith)igb?
,
to
·
_
llf~
;-.
in-
_
1
goveriunent,."
:.
·:-
):
.
·
·.

_
·
_:
·
.
··
..
_
-
~
. :
Council presi~ent
Chris
Faillet lncl~de
:
a eluding
topics
.
~µch
as
a9~1on ~¥
·
'.
~ld
>·-
;
Of
the
2.5
stud~ts
\
~terytew~di
H
kriew
.
new student repr~sentative on tli.e abuse.
:
·
. ..
.
•-
.
~
•J
,
<
~
·.
.
.-
,
that
.
F'rank::,.~BlSC8i:d!
__
.lS
tAe student
_
·•
;
i,y
'
krk
)~iut~li
:)
Presidential
Search
,
Comlllltt~e;
·
,
.
:
·
.
.
:
·
,
.
_
·
.
·
··
.....
_
.
·
governm,ent pres!den~;
-
:'. ;
<
~:: ;
, :
-
-
.
.
·
• .
...
,
·

·
·
-
.
-
·
.
.-.
·
.
·
. ,
..
.
restructuring the Studen~ Life ColIUlii~,
:

However,
-
.
,,o
Balsh
_
says
.
.
Ulsh
al~ough
.
.
)~
Most people said stud~t gQV~nunent
Js
.
.
College Union
Board (~)
:
PI'esideht:
<
:
.
.
·
=~~~~~:::.~·~;~~
=;.':':
~
•!ti,:ir...:;;
~..i:
::.Tut~~?-
·
el· : :
.;;~~is~i~~~"!J%l;
·
.
·
the individual orgaruzations
m
the
.
QS~
ment
:
don't really ..influence
.
studen~
to
..
·
.. _
.,_.
.
_
·.
.
.
..
-

-
·
sponsored some:1oo
·
cplfevei;its·this y~ar,
.
--
accomplish
_
a
_
dditional things through the
·
·
.
.
_
·
.
·
·

·
\-
,
_.
.
Troiano
:
says ~e's leame~
·
-
to
,
ke_ep
_
~alm
-
.
assistance of
the
CSL.He
said~~ example
.
·.
·
-
·

"
:
·
'
·
.
·
.
·
during
a
qisis.
;
·
..
·
,
;
<
_)
-,"':;
Y
.

,::
.
.
t~i
1
~~~-=~&"g~
'
C
-t
;._
r -
,
no
·
t
.
··
••
1
-
..
·-~u
.
.
s

.
.
.
t
.
·_··
·_
-
_

.
..

.
a
.
·
.
-

·_
-
.
.
·
.
:


C
:
::
.
:
.
l
.
u
.
:
.
··
.
.
,
·.
·
·
·
.
r l
.
·
'
.
,
.
~
.
:
.
' .

.
·
. .
~~=-
1
~!~J.ff
.
·
.
The C.SL
1
has.Qne
,
stud~t on
.
the
COJD·
.

·
CJ-;,
·
.
'
·
·
Mceann
·
Center
,
.
.
_
four
..
.
~~;
-
·
F ~
..
1t
: .
mittee.
Afiedm interview
.
wlth
-
~e
~L, _
·
·
·
,_
/
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
':'embarrassing".as
~
audience
.
sa
_
tm_~e
_
·
_
-
Jeff Bla9c~rd_
wa~
.
~icked ~s ~e 'stu~ent
.
.
7-.
.
-
.
_. _
.
.
_
da~ aJK!
.''the
bi!1<f
·
t~~cla:fi_
~c~~
_
.
representative.
-, .
.
·
.
·
1
: ·
·
.
politi
ll .
the
sch
-
1
,,
·
and
.
yelling
-
and
Jtunpmg
__
up_and down,
._
.
The
.l
CSL has
.
been
responsible1for
_
_
ByDe~rabAdamowicz
.
.
·
·
·
·
A
·
·
·
ca Y
-
1.bulletirib·nl
·
...
. _
·
i

1n
.
-
Troiano.'1?8YS
:
,
_
\'it
0
wasdust
,_-
one
,
of
_:
~se
.
.
devel6ping and restructuring the
:
student
·
·
.
·
:

.
car
poo
-
08
~s se
up
-
\
nights,-one
·.
or the
.
"
ones
·
you'd
:
·
Jike_
:
to
Life Committee: This_ committee
is.
a . Commuter
·
car
pools,
a
-
newsl~tter
,and
,.
the co~uter lounge this .. se1pester. \forget."
:,
.:
_
_
..
--
·
_--
-
~
:
__
. :.
•, ·:
:· ;;
·
1
._
,
/
direct'channelto_
the
B~rd of
Trust~
_
on intramu~l teams
ai:e
_
B<:>COmplisbm~ts
-
: u ~
-
w::.Jb:/~r
._
.
~:W
_
·
de~~d
_
on
,
But u~ors~en
:
I?roblems ai:e
,
~
routiJ?e
.

.
:.
i
matters concerrung the life of a student
on
this
semest~ of
the
_
Co~uter
,
.
Umon
,
_
· l~rdlng
.
tov Hughes·
,
the
.
tri
to
.
New
.
part
..
(!f
:'
.
the
,,.Job,,,
_
S!lys
-
.
~91~
-:-_. :-
.
w~o
_
,~
'.
.
-
,
-.
\
campus.
.
.
·
-~_
..
.. -----:--.
.
(CU),
accor,dingtoJo~Hu~es, p~l~ent Yorkto
·
see
the
play
·
"Sarava'!
En
Aprif8
·
Jearq~
-
to
-
laugh
:
-
~~r¥1
:,
f~!]. ... a1:1
~
-.
"
·
~~fa
<
--
-
.'.
·.,
-
:
IJ
···
.
of
CU.
.
..
.
_.
.,_
.
.',
·
·---:
i.·
:-
.
·
.
.
ed
bee·

·"
:,
:
didn't'
·
ha
·.
:.'.'l'm
.
like,the
;
_ljairspi;-a~
.:
~o~e1\,~~,·,"!
1
~
t""J
..
• .
.
·•·
.
JI
.
.,,--·
,
· .
.
,.,_
,
\.
__ .
~•we
.,,
13ee
;
9ursely~
·
::)~!J
·,a
.
,,
seryf~
:,
·
_
~s
f!Jl~ll
.
.
i: _
_
~ ~ ~
-;-
~
:-

·-,

.
:
·
v:e
._. -.
~dded,J'ner:'.l~ir.held
:
~P;.Qu_ff
_
~µ~
,
~i#i~~i;{
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.----
·
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,
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·
·
z
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.
:
.
.
.
..
-
.'
ia
--
.
or~anizati011and
_
n~t,-just~
.,
~ub,~
.
H~~
;:
,-
eb
_
:fiO~
_
~u~~.J.V:t~:~,if
,
t_o"t'~t
~
tht~
.'~
·
:;
·
Calling.
·
herself
:
an
}jt_
eD~~J~
:
~~~~
fo•
i
.
"
"
>
'
J
at
,· ·
e
·"
·
-
w0

-
·
,
said.
~•We
.
tey
;
and g~t,~u~r;
,
5W:d~~·
·>
us,
....
~
-
-~
-
o
Y
:_
..
•~
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.:,
o~
.
_
,
·
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u
rs
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fine
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arts
·
and
:
,·coffeehouse
committees
:
.
interested
·.
ID
.
'
was
,.
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,
.. D!~bie
.
before
·
becoming pr~ident. .. .
..
.
.
<
:
.
·
·_

.
Drop, second vice president
!Ml~d.
.
·
Th~
·
The
15
office houl'S
,
ancL
time
.
i;pent at
.
probl~ '!fth soft~ll
this
year
.
-
~
;
that
.
1t
_
.
"the twofo
tm:ee'.'.
w
_
eekly
QtJB eyen~
has
·
was split
~t9
m~
~
1
811d
.
won:ie:n s
.
teams.
changed.Tr
.
oiano's care~r
,
gOllls,
':
~he
·
say~;.
,
.
·
.
\Yhen ther,
.
re
co~,
1t.s
,
E!ll~i~;lr. !o
,.
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P
7
<>ple
-
.
Graduatirig
;·,
~~
-:
a
:
B.~ch~lor:'
:
of
:
Ai:ts ·
m
.- / ...
~volved, she _add~'. .
,
.
.
. ,
..
:
.

__
,
Psychology
~
irr
May,
>
Tro1an9
1
has
-
l>een
·
,
.
The
.
monthlyil.lforma~o~lp~~~et~~~
:
~
.
:
·
accepted m
·
co~eµ Uiliv~rsity'~ grad~te
·
·
.
put tog~ther
,bYifl8~bie
~p.
;
·
.
-
.
.
.
;
school of· rpa~gement m
~
the
,
Ind}lstnal
.
_
.
.
au~e$~1d: ,"1,is
.
year's
_,
offjcers~t an
·
-
. -Labor
:
Relation.s
:
depa~ent.·
~~~
i
-1:S:
~lso
-
·
.
()rga111Z8~op
·
ba_s~J9r,
-
the fu~re
:
officers._.
_
·.
waiting
to
,.
heal'
:
fl'.Oin \'ale
·
1Jruy~rs1ty .
:,
'
.
We ma~e
:
too.
.~
stµd~nts
.;.
alVB~
-
.
of tbe
.
,
-
~oiano
says
:
het
-
greatest
:
:rewar:<1
·
as
.-
Conuput~ Uruon anc!
_
1ts role
.
on
,
campus,}
•..
·
CUB

·
presid~nt'
is
'.'~erypin~
\
you_ see
::
~
·
·
.
think:the cu
.
of~ce~~ did
a
_
g<>0d
.
job
.
this<
.
bunch
'
of- people
·
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a
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The Department of
-
Speelal Services
ls
a
federally
funded·
program
aiding
handicapped students •
..
There are
eurrell1ly 66
Marlst
students
beneftttfng
from
the_progi'am.
.
.
.
.
, . It empioys '70
students
ai
atctes; at-
tendents,
and
.
tutors,
who
get
.
salaries
from the Departm~nt of
Yocatfonal
~habll!tatfon.
-
. ·
-
.
·
·
·_
Director
~f
Special Services
is
DJanne
. _·
Perreira •
.
Dan
.
Dropka
1s
·
a
•_
full
·
time
.
cowelor.
Testing Jn
the
.
program
·
is
done
by. Jtoberta
·
Staples.
By
1980,
all
public pla~es
must,
-
.
by
·
·
Jaw
.:
number
·
504,
.
be
..
: accessibl~
.
to
.
the
·
handicapped •
.
This
·
includes
ramps
_
at
main
entrances
and
exits, as:id
spechilly
outfitted rest~room
'
facilities;
.'
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13
·
take
·
·
part in sensitivity exercise
ByMarlaDneBeyer
have to reammge my office· because
l
here" said Byrne, unaware of
the theatre
couldn't even get to my
desk,"
he
said.
door entrance used by wheelchair
Resident Director Fred Gaine~ squeezed
Despite
difficulty
getting around
his
students.
throu~ the Housing office door
in
a office, Security Director Joseph Waters
Besides
the
"sensitivity exercise," a
wheelchair Tuesday.
"I never knew how said his experience
was
·
"very in- presentation by members
_
of
the
National
.
·
.
narrow that doorway was;"
·
said Gainer
;
teresting." "I thank
God
Ibave
two
good Theatre for
the
Deaf and a panel
-
oneofl4participantsin''AwarenessDay"
,
legs,"
·
hesaid .


.
·
.
.
·
disc~ion by disabled Marist students
spoosored by
the
Office of Special Services
.
Two students participated
m
the ~er- took place in
the
Fireside Lounge .
.
and
the
Easter Seals Society.
.
·
.
cise
by becoming blind and deaf. Equipped
·•
Eleven .faculty and
staff
.
members and with eye patches, senior Kathy Norton said
Theatre for the
Deaf
·
-
two
~dents
.
volunteered
.
to
.
spend
·
their being blind was "awf uL I
.
di«;n't know
.
day
:
m
;
:vt:heelcha~ as
'
pait
of
~
day's
.
where
I
was_~
1
felt so disonented
.
:'
Lines from Shakespeare, dialogue from

~
sensitivity exercJ.Se
/
'
- ,
·
:
_
.
:
• •

·
·
_
.
Some participants "cheated,.by getting a R~ian play, and
haiku
style Japanese
::
:
'Beiiig

in
.
_
_
·
a
:
Wheelcha.ir
'.
was
.
"terrible" out
·
of wheelchairs
·
during the seven~hour poetry was translated into
.-
''language for
:"
according
:
to
'
Physical
Plant
:.
Director
-
experiment.- Father Richard LaMorte was the eye" by Robert Blumenfeld
and
:
:
Andre
w,'
-
Pavelko,
.
·
who added his
.
arms
<
seen
walking around the College Activities '!!1,ceahatrrde ~oerndathlle, mDemeafb,erasn~fothrgeaNru~zatioti~oanl
were
·
''sore ...
,
.
.

.
.
,
.
.:-
• .
. ,.
·
..
·
..
.
office, and Dining Services Director Bill
.lU
11
.
Business
Officer'
.
. ,.
Anthony
.
ca
_
mpilli
.
Byrne climbed the
stairs
into the campus
.
C
-
0
-
nt .
·
.
on
,.
p
'
g.
·
11
a
found
his
day
in a chair "inconvenient I'd
.
Center. "I
didn't know how else to get up
.
,
~
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,
.
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i
.
'
'ARTWORK'
Students decry
it,
. .
I
.
.

but preschool,ers · disagree
By Chris Bames
"When I
first found out that the art was
not fuilctional,l wondei:ed who _would
be
One student said it was furniture for called
in
to clean:
it 'up;'' said Mike
pigeons, another said 1t was early con- 0'M.eara ... ·-.
.
>
"= , · ·
.
.
:
__ · ·
struction for the communications art,· studen~ enrolled
in .
the
Marist
pre-
center and preschoolers.use
the campus school--.disagree•
·
that,· the: art.'is non-· ..
outdoor. art. as a playground.·
.
·: · functional. saying'. they • love ·to: play. on
In
a recent Circle survey, Tara O'Reilly . much of it. -Parallels .were:
drawn·
by the ·
said, "It,doesn't mean_anything to me, but, pre-schoolers between the'.art
and
jU11gle.
I'm sure it must've meant ·something to: gyms. • . •
•·
+ ·:
·
' ·.' . -:'
> ·; · ; • ,:-:-:
.
~
<-, ·
. whoever puOt up.".. : .. ~-
. _ ... ' A- conimunication arts :major)iaid/'.I.
:
·. "It .
certainly looks . better than the · thought it was the first attempt at
building-
peeling
walls
on
the
back
of the library,'_'. the communications _center.''
i
< _ __._ ·
said Dave MacMannis, calllng the.
Another stude~t said;-·.:.•1(l'Ae · word
sculpture "a secondary eyesore."
· __ -·
'eyesore' was coined Jo .d~ribe -:the
Another student said,
<'If those things sculptures at Marist.", •· , . · .. _
·
..
>
w,ere lying arolirid a construction site; they<
,
Chris Faillefpresident
of
th(In.~rhouse
wouldn't
be
art. Why are they are at·' Council,' said ''!'~'it's funutureJor
Marist?" ...
.
. .
.··_
. • . .
.
. pigeons." _· . .
.
. ·· ·• :
! . ·::-.
.
·.
_?
A
common complaint among surveyed.
A studentjvho·
was.
4skec1::what
the.
·studen~,was thatthe sculptures look
like
outdoor art at'Marisfmeantto'lilfu:said.,
they should do'something besides
just
•sit · ''what
art?"
.

..
: there.
·· · · · · · ·. · ·
· · · ·
· · · ·
· ·
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By
_
Marlanne Beyer
,
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COLLEGE THROUGHOUT THE YEARS
'
I
-
' ,
The
·
·
'
1920's
Life was so programmed
there
was little
lei.sure
tune.
Entertainment
might
be
a
walk,
a drive
for those
lucky enough
to
own
a
car,
or
a trolley trip downtown
to
see a
movie
or have an fee
cream
soda.
Dances
~
·
were
a
rare
treat
calling
for long dresae.$
.
"'E
·
By
Jane Neighbors
.
for wcmen
and
tuxedoes or
tans
for men.
i;3
·
Math, Science,
-
and
History.,
Class

cuts
.
Members of
the
opposite sex were seld<m
~
·
College
in
the
19?JYs was
an
orderly life
~ .
~ere limited, with
extra
penalties
:
before allowed
Jn
even
the
living
room
of houses,
~
:
of simple
.
p l ~ ,
strict
regulations, vacations
or weekends.
:
At scm~
schools,
and only when
a
chaperone was present. A
required
daily chasi!l
and
formal ,;neals, two y~rs
_
of
·
Rese
_
rve ~cer
Tr~~
·
-:
fraternity
at
the
University of
Alabama
where students
'
were
1nsula~
from
,
the:
_.
Corp was compulsory for
_
men, but
~d
n~t
:
solved
the problem
when
it
built a new
outmde world.
··
..
.
.
.
_ ..
··
·-. ;
,,
.
·
Jead
·
to
req~
mlllt,u:V, service.
.
·

·
house wblcb was the
first
on campus to
~
: -
~
1nrt11ose

days before
.
College
Board
_
·
Do.~tol'ies
_
.-
,
and
:
~ternlty
houses of
·have
.
provisions for
_
a
reslde~t
exams;
admls&on was not
,
difficult: for
.
the
.
-~
s
were
_
hayens
of
.
gracious living
;
housemother.
.
.
·
·
those
.
:who
could
"
afford
;
it,
but-.littl~
.
where gr~ce
._
was said
-
befol1!
·
s1t~own
A fraternity-
at
··
Leblgh University
'
financlalai~wasa~ble~B~useofthe. ~ealsseryedby:uruformedma~qsorho~ pledged·
the
doctor who was its favorite
·
career advantages;
fauillles
.
sacrificett
_
to boys W'ho also
cleaned
t!le student's
rooms.,
.
(least
strict) chaperone,
to
guarantee
tlley
.
:
·
se
_
nd
_
so
_
ns
_
to
_:_·_
con
_
ege: B
_
_
11,tfe
_
w
_
:
w
-
~
0
~ - :
;
_.
,

.-;
.-,.cc
__
ordlngtoHelenBe
_
.
nne
_
tt,76,
_
a
Vassar
could _
_
g
·
1
et
.
h!m for
their
house parti
_
es,
said
-

··
pected
_
u(work,
so
for
thelli
a
degree
was
~(Juate,
_
girls
.
brought
·
their own
;
tea sets
.
-
Poughkeepsie resident
stephen
Becker .
.
.
.;
merely

an
;,
advantage that
':
a.
wealthy a~IDade coff~
(!!"tea~
kitchenettes~
:
Since
'Prohibition
was in effect,
drinking
~
family proylded:
..
-.
.,
.
-
._
:
the
C9~idor. &,>mettmes they also
fried
wasforbldden, but some students could get
If
a girl became pregnant, she left school
,
:
-
:
~ e n
-~
year--'COurses
·,
were mostly
-
onions to
:
cover
:
the smell
_
of
smoke from
,
·
bathtub
'
gin or
locally
made wine in town .
.
and it was
hush~
up.

·
.
requµ:eiri8!lts
:
._
su~
\
as
-
~ ~ .
Latin/
:
forb,ld~en cigarettes.
,<
.
.
.
Freshmell
often
had
to_ wear beanies and
.
'lbe college
·
·
year ran from mid-
.
·
·
·
'
~
·
·.-
:
·
.
·
.
' ..
.
, ·
·
._
.
_·:·
.
.

·
,,
;
::,
were subject
to
hazing
by upperclassmen. September to mid midiune with aboutten
·
·
··
~
---
--
·
·
·
.
.
-
··:•
·
·
AU
.
students
had to
be
in
their
_
houses ~Y ten days
_
off at Christmas and a week at Easter
T:he
1).!)J(J's
·
~:.~*.:=,~~:p.::sg1~
:u:~.~7F':T'~·~
·
..
:\-

•'
-
•.
t

·-
_
-
,
,
;
,

-
~~
<
-.
-.
.
'.::
·>
,
_
_
~;i~~t~;foeJ8C1i~!~:e°'\:t~
::~a:~~
cras::ewe~e°:!1J e!en
;,,
·
·'..:·
.
--
bow
we
_
were
'
b:tought
·up,tf
says one
·
that was difficult. Collegestudentsllv~
in
,. ;::.,
:ayD~bo
_,_
~Ada~;,wi~
:
-._.·
_
:.
,
~::~~°fuitu~~~=~~r=
·
:e!su:!i!~s
1
:~p~o:..r,ba~re:c,~~~-
-
---
_
·
·. ·
i
:
.
1
••.
, ·

,
~
fraternity wblch was punishable by~- _generall~ were
·
not concerned with what
.--
Walk;.1n
·
;
·
room
·
,
inspections;
·.-
:
bans
, ..
on ·
)
.r
... ,.
,
--
,
i,
_
ulsion;
or
signing
in late in
a
girls' donn. went on
in
the outside world.,
:
. .
·
alcohol
and
bleak
job pros~ts were faced
·
·
,.,::-:
by
;
coll~e
·
students
-
of the

1930~s.
:·-
:
_ '-
·
-~ ·
.
.
.
,
:
.
·:Alcohof,ori

the
:
.
cairipus'
~
of
t
Middlebury
:
.
,
.
¢o11egei1i;;vermont:;-was!.-urihearcfo£~
t
in
,_ ·
,~
.
,
)
the
;•
ao•s;
;_
accorcllng;to•Mts
:
:,
Russell
·
Had~
?
·
,
~
.
.
,
~•-
deri,'a
:
1938 sociology
graau~te
.-
.
'
-
''lbis
'
jas
.-,.
l
~
TheJ940's
--_
·
:'..:
:.
·
.
·
<-~
a New
;
Epgland school,'-'
.
slie
said

Puhijsh-
.
:
-
,...
•-
'/)·\:
·
•.
)
)ri'ent'for;foughhousingor,hayiryfllquoron
.·_:

t{~
;
1
·
;9if~
l f
lllA1
c
·
·.
m~~~~!;~;;u1ii~:~-
-
:€~~1,~1~;;'-
"
• -
·
.
diriner/
~
Mrs;
·
Haadensa1d:.!'Walkm
·
r®m
-
i
-
:
"did not think about social issues'-' and whole campus
_
when
.I
was there," said
/f
~;
)
{f
i!ii1
J
1i
~t~f
i-
'
~
Sliop
';
u\ eoi1~:e;.

~•~••
·
tf
iP!ied•~~~
.
.
:ri;;~
J:
~ct~vil
~t~,l•~F~°!
··
_
_
·
.

~'\'
·
·\._.
~
:_
::,'~
J;
~
~\}
~
~
~~
-
~t
{
E~~~
!
Satµ;~rP;
\
~~
·
a
.
~
-
!~~
-
2
-:
li:!~\l~te
·
_:
~h~f-~
-
:
~~
'
-~
.
u~~~J~y.
~~
~
-
-
ts~
:
pOpo!ers.
_
·
;.
~
·
.:_
-
Br~n,
who
_
we~t to
.
Xal~
a(t~~
-
f1ghtmg
~n
_
Marist,

which
is
very
involved
in
the
.
<.-,
l
f
'-t
,
.'.:,
of
-:
City
'
Nox:marScn90}.inJlochester;
<
Ne:w
.
·,_.
;, ;·
Vassar students
in
,
the
30's
·
coilld
smoke
••••
World
Warn sa1dpeoplecame
.
back and
_
community,
·
vale at that time was
,
not.
..
.
.
>
7.
'
'
'
•\
-y~rlt
f-•~'.
nif):>epf~siop

mf~ted, the
Job
.
:.
~ut.side of'.ht'srriall special sqioklng
rooms
.
forgot about it: ''No one
.
qlii_?stioned being "Yale, which is in New Haven, Conn. was
·
:
.
<
rnarket;
_
':therl! wer~ 30
_
m th,e
,
class but only
~
:
m the
,
dorm_s
.
•~\Vhich, were so
.
teeny
;'
and
--
·
in
the
waJ;",'1
sa1d'Breen. "It.was not talked located-in
a
black community, and we did
-
~
~
twohadjo~
:
whentheygot 9ilt,'
,!
sh~ ~d.
·
smoke filled you
_
couldn'fsee your
.
friend-
about.around the campus."
not b
.
other them and they did not bother
:
•:
_
.
.
.
;_--
•.·
yassar
.
.College_inpiect9~ts
:
had.\lV8~eps s.tt
'.
··

:
..
.
,,','
·•-
:

·
·
· •·
Breen
-
said he
'
also remembered
,
an us,"saidBreen.Breensaidthatsincethen
·
.
,
Jrr.ea«fl
;'.
do"tm;
;
aui~
;_r
~idf~r~ch
(
ill,nn
_
er
./'
A)cohol wasri't
:
-
allowed on cainpus.
~~rience with the racial_prejudice_that Yale
·
has become involved in the coni-
.
•_:
·
table?,
:.:
/:'.·,\:
':~;i•:,;
;/'t
,··,,
•·
·•.

,
;::;
:
=-·.•
:
/
:
O'~veri wpen we ateattlle College
Inn
next dlVlded the country at the tune. He sa1dhe niunity.
·
:-''
_;
_
:!
-
Bciwevei:
(
durjng
:
the
/
Depr~
.
onof
,
th~
~
to the.Juliet Theater,
,
they didn't serve
.
was traveling with the_basket~ll team

Breen said fraternities were very
.
· _·:
30's
/
''the'inaidservice
;.
W':i1t;'
.
'
,
according
•-
;<
~oll~e,girls
any·
·
al<:9hollc
'

bey~rages."
.
.
and had stopped a~ a restaurant m Texas popular and sponsored a lot of soc~al ac-
_
.
~
-'-'
fo
'
,
Mrs:
-
Marcia
:
Greene
;:-
·
a
)-
193l
'
Vassar
;
F:ashionsofthe
day
afVassarwere
silk
·
·
tivities. He added that
drinking
wa~ very
.
"
grai:lhate.
:
·,
,-,:,;
>.:
c
.>:
, :· '
( ..
-
,·:
.-:
.
·
dresses for
,
Sundays and sweaters
···
and
popular, but drugs w~re not eve!1 thou~t
·
:
''We weritout to diriner on ~tes, and,if
,
skirts for clB5:Ses. "Girls
·
didn't
-
·
wear
.
- - - ,
of. "Fraternities were not my
thing,"
sa1d
·
.
.
}'.Oti
didn't:
hav._~
·
a
;
~te.
-
on
·
~tu1'!¥lY
·
you
._::_
sla~, but those in dramatic produ~ions
Breen.
·

'
·
.
~ent_to th~_r110\'iElS
_;
inJ~Qughkeeps1e.
_
After
:
WC?~e
·.
~tn.t-spla~ed
-
·
jeans. Girls
·
wore
Yale at that time was all male and Breen
,
the
-
niovi~,
,-
yo1,r
·
~e~t
;
to
:
'.:'.f~s .Hot"
.'
the~
,
ha
.
1:f ma bU:Jl~ but,tlley began cutting
.
,✓--oc=:::,,,.,,_
said there were no formal restrictions at
·
restllurant
,
f~r- hot
.
d~
:.
ail<L
_:
dO!}uts."·
:
thell'
-
hall' short m my:
.
~nior year," said
the dorms. "Girls were allowed in the
An~her
,
•;·.
~pular
:
.
_
remaurant
:
'9V8~
/
tJie
.
Mrs. Gree~e'.
·
.
.
.
dorms, but there were unwritten rules
.

,
.
:.
·
cc
_
. . .
, "
' •
.

.
.
·
·
.
'. ·,
·
.-
:
:,.,-
· •
about
_
wlien they should leave," said
· :
"
Breen. ·
.
i
.
,,,•
m,;;.,

(l
:
,
n , -
Breen also said there
.
was a lot more
·_')

:
1
_
-
_
·
_j
:
(Je
'.~-~
·
·
7:_p
v
~
'.
-
_
S_
-
'-"""'=?'I
:d~!~_iP.l1::~rUl~np~:S:o~~:;0i:
di.ning
'
hall, and
that
gave us a chance to
talk with them more,,. said Breen.
,
/
Breen, who graauated from Yale inl950,
said the first social issue he remembers
·
was
·
when
·
Joseph
·
McCarthy came into
_power
-:
-
.
..
e~sie
MGitoR
#OTE
/
/
(914)
-
4~2~5453
'
,
.
~
/
.
.
:
3
·
M
·
ILES SOUTH
.
OF
-
MARI ST
:
.

.
.-
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.
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..
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.
.
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>4\8
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:
$011.[H
.
ftO~D (RQU_I~9)
_
,
.
·
-
f'OUGtlKEEP:SIE{
N.Y.

:12&01
.
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.
,-
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.
-
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C U C
a
s
&
a
a
a as
a
a
as
2
a
so
as
COLLEGE THROUGH THE YEARS ...
continued
The 1970
1
s
47l-9§33
Milanese
.
,
Res.
.
ta
-
urant
·
-
ITALIAN CUISINE'
.
.
'
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I

..
115 MAIN STREET
--:--
.
.
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY
.
1260.l
'
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The Journal
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Greenhaven: A personal glimpse
·
·
There
is
an
UD"llStakeable feeling of
·
where we were going, and
why.
total control at
Greenbaven
that
is
de-
.
Inside, much
·.
of · Gree~y~n looks
personalizing
ana
r~uring
to a
visitor. I was told that
even
the inmates
Editor's note:
,
This
is
the personal
feel safer
when
_
security
iS
strong
reaction
of Circle reporter Jane Neighbors
because they
:
are protected from each
who was granted to tour prison cells In
other.
·
.
·
·
.~.
:
·
.
~~~~haven
.
Correctional Facility, a
·· •
Even to visit a
·
staff
member,'1 had to
~ u m
security
.
prison
In
Stormville,
receive previous
clearance~
.
have a
.
N.Y
a
.
, .
.
.
··
·

·•
·
·.
:
. ·.
·
·
corrections
·
officer
.
(c.o~) go Jhrough·
·
just
slightly
drearier
t1uu1
most in
everything in my
purse,
·.
tberf
walk
·
stitutions; The
·
casually
uresseu
men
in
. through a
-
metal detecior .Jt went off,
.
the
.
corridors could almost have been
...
although
I had
followed instructions not
M
rtst
·
stu
·
d
·
...
·
·
t
·
the
·
n

·
~
to
\.
we
.
ar
;
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3

ew
.
elry
·
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:
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'lb
.,
e
.
·
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·
p
·
ro
.
·
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b
_
l
.
em
.
.
·
.
.
w
,
as
.
a
en\a>
excep
·
.
Ya
wore
~
uniform
·
green pants and each
·
group
. ~
•·
·
found.'W
be
a
small
metal
.:
snap
:

on my
was escorted bya c.o.
·
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One constant reminder of con-
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.
was
..
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a
·
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finementis the
num
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'There
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arid
.
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is
a
feellng
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of
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being
.
trapped
.
in one
.
J
eaving
'.:
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washMmy
·
rumds w~le
sedion at·a tiine whiclt
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made
. ·
me

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a r~h~le!
·
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.
what
.
would Jf~~~n in

case
·
of
.
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V
F.inally~
I
.
mis
givei
{
a
Visit~r•s badge
,
·
I became aware that the
·
restrictions
W.hich
statedtinust
always be
_
escorted
,

were for my safety when~· at
.
the erid
.
of
,
'·,
In
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prec.·
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au
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.
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the
.
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· ·
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one
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corridor;
.
an unescortcu
·
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ur
y
m-
·.
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bee~r
J
ny gi.tide
.
w?r~ ~E:nt
:
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.
~ause
.
·
illate grabbed
-
my
;
five-:.tnd-a-half
.
foot
-
someone wanted to krlow
·
whoJ
·
·
was,

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asked
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"
··
.
!
.
:
me, ''How would you like to
see
me beat
up a civilian
in
the corridor?" I made a
joke of it and he laughed and let go. But
I
wondered what
a
female hostage
would
be
worth,
if
he
had grabbed me.
The same thought occurred when a
c.o. who took me into
a
cell block
thought it necessary to say, "Don't
worry about these men. They're all
honor inmates."
I
was acutely aware of the complete
lack of privacy for the men as I passed
the row of cells. One
inmate
was using
his
toilet When another invited me into
his
·
cell, I was embarrassed to
be
taking
notes
·
about the only piece of the world
over which
·.
he
·
had
.
any
control.
· .·
After
a
two arid a half hour tour,
I
was
anxious to return to the free world.
As
I
stepped
out
:
the door~ I was
·
stopped
short by
'-
the
:
beautiful
view ahead of
tolling
hills
and
:
farm
·
land. No one
inside the
gray
walls
would even know
it
.
was there.
·
The past .. from 5a
are big dealers,
but
many
of them are so
mild I
couldn't
imagine
them doing
this."
The
courses are
based
on
the
CWTiculum
needs of
the
100
students
ln
the
program,
and
the
limited
amount
of
space and time
to
teach
ln
.
Therefore
the
program must
be
flexible,
according to
Salomon.
Out
of
the 107 students
last
semester
13
are
on the
Marist
Dean's
Llst.
Every year several
inmates
are
allowed to study on
campus.
''When they
first
come
to
Marlst,
they
group together,
then
they break apart,
because
they
want
to make
it
on their
own,"
Waters said.
A
major problem
which
arises
with
the
students on
campus
is
when anything goes wrong, they are
often the first person
·
to be ·
accused.
"People
don't all at
once
become angels,
they've got other problems
.
" Waters said,
but there have
been
no major
.
incidents
yet.
Twelve inmates have graduated from
the
.
program.
·
Some have
been
employed
by the college,
another
is
a
salesman for a
major company, and another has gone on
to graduate school.
"It is
an opporturiity
for them
to
beeome
the
people they want to
become," Waters said .
-
.
·





















































McDonald:
'·. ~,~-•-,~,•
.
V,;'<,M~ ..
U,1~~":~7~._~~.:
.
:."°'.t;,..,;..;:.,..~:-i,,
4:~~
._
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• •
·-
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.
.-,_:
Athlete of
the
.
/
Year
.......
. t
~
l3y
JhII
Townsend
-
'll -
-
:
-
-
..
·.-
-
.
.
.
-
-
-
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.-
-
.· . .
•.·
-
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.
The Circle has named)res.~an women
-
~- loye with.: _tlie . ~~ml. 9entef'h and: ~· -.
· basketballplayer!Kris_McDonald_·athlete,.;·.--•1>ecause-of thelocation_:to_her.: home/in:·•:>.•·_ -
,
_
-,
· -of the year for the-197S.:79
.
academfc.year. -· Cortland;·N.Y. At Jirst·she-
;
felt: thahit:; •
-.. _:_
!
-
- :
--
.:· . . ···-'·.: .
. ·.
_ wouldbelufrdtoadjustt<(ariewteambut .·
. Being considered a gomf'athlete and not. ·:after:a while she said the-whole teain ·got
>
just a good woman athlete:is'invaluable to:,'.along
great::>,-_:'.?t:
·
.~/•~·::fi-<.::
t.f :~-~ :.: •·.·;-
1
,any/ woman, ··says-__ ·Kris , , McDonald.
t i:
Mcl;>\)nald ,-::sees'.;
_
w9inen'~>
•bask~tbaU :~
... '. / · · -
-
: : \·:;,: >
>cf:
0
"
:
<:_:~c: '. •:_
:·:<
;
growing ~thfnext
.
couple'ofy~rs·as'.tl!~y: :,:/:
, --· McDoriald-. aver,ged
·-J~.2 ·
'
poirits · ___ , pert'.- begin t<fplay
:
m_of~ :competitive t~ins
'.S~d; :-, --
·game/as~':
a
•guard.\for':
·.
-.the{women's.
:
\moye: into.·.Divisioµ';L;!rh( only,
J>l'9.bl.@is'-
. basketbaU,team.~
She·.was
chosenJto;·the".
:
she·sees·are]hatthewomen's·teamneeds'.
' Eastenf
:Associatio11
/of
'
Intercollegiate·: \an~
assistanf
co.ach.\a!id?
'tij~.; vaii/9ft:s)to
i-,, . , . ,
-
.,AtJ;ll_eti~J~r,WQiileh,(.E:t4'~I:A
0
.W:-)·~~a1\./g'O/'.
'
··B~th;_tp~/
.
ni~il.<,~iK.l]'Lth.~'}:wtlID,El~•--->'.
•-team for:
small.
coUeges'as;weU as~to the .,-; basketball
teams
travel:m ,a:van to a-way, ,
r'iii"~Ji~it~}e~r.~~~Ji~fllil
):. , McDortajd.'cohsid~rs)f
lr~ornplimen(to
-~·Arnerican'gaines;'McDoriald
'says the
1984 ·
-
1.~.tesp~teo,as
a
player-:by,other·.coaches-..
{:··01)?lipics'are
irithe:
.
''hlfolfol(Jier:
,
roind'' -:·..
-
·
1
·:a~ct)j~~~esi~~i~.Irie~;;:;'Sh,t,conside_rs·.it}ibut~t·~F';::~.;foilg
,
)va.r:·~tt!''.,:,~e·C'~y~,:sij~
:
' -~•-
'.-fiattenng\to·'.;;~: .cons1d~roo
:
:_as
:a
_
good
·
·._doubtsthatshe:will:play·oasketbaU:after< ... _ .- _
... i~f
~tiu~\~~~!~~~1\~!~t~i.;~\;~\if
{fill~~Jff~tfctr:?~}:ifl~{:S~~,t::,_,·
,
\ ·
:
:-_,:·.-_·· ·
·
tr~C!D.on~ld(llas.' };een-
.
pfayirig;
basketbaUs;;:
'.
•.'\M¢PpnaJd•sai~:'.tne; biggest,highlight'.of ,, . ;; : .- . -·
: sm¢e.i_s~e:~~·s ,
ni,rle
0
y~-~
<O!d~:
Ati91a,~keff
the.:
s~~S<>~,}W~S}Vliel};J~e,
wo~~·s:t~~ (':. ,:
:
,. ;,-
·
•'~;St',m/\Ve~t~ury;·t~~~"'~YoJ:"k,ysll~~:;w-,sr\Jnade.,:the<~ss~i~ti~n,"of?Inter~gll.~g1~~~i,- ,-:,

·-·
.
:chosen:,to the•All Nassatl'.County
·
team:m,:".'.:Athleticsifor.tWomen;(A,LA·.W:hplayoffs;';!: ·,,. -
,
, .
, her-::,
junior/:,year;
i,.McDon~ld~{atiendegi{
Other'
highlightii,weie"vihenlhe\J!e<f
Foxes ,-
.
. -': ,: ·.-. -
-.. Heridri,k::Hudson·,H.S}R.Montrose,.:,N.iWJn~(beat:Iona,.College_<-a·nd~3Yhen
she,scored
'.
26:···
.. · hei.:
seilior:year'. and
wa~~al~#nC1sen
:fo ~the
,'./points
:
against
'Wester#:.
Co~ecticiitFState
::
=
: . - •
JUl:llP~i_~ga , . ·, .·. _ -.. -...
--
lt:;t:tt:;;~:C:
1
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.-i;~,:rt. ·:\:·,.
·
·.-
-
•~y PJlristooher
Hogan , :·
Ron Gadzlala ·
. !







































































































































































































Petro intimidated
.
.
-
·
·
.
by
Thurmond
By John Mayer
..
Intimidation
is
a big
part
of a basketball junior year he got the opport~ty to
start
game as head Marist basketball coach Ron
I
and took
full
advanta~e of
.
11t. _He scored
Petro
·
learned
.
firsthand
in
1964
while
,
21.5
points a gam~. which D_ut
lµm
an;oniz
playing against
,
ex-NBA
star
.
Nate Thur- the top 50 players m the
~~~n-~
~~Qr~g_,_
mond
in
·
a game between Petro's ahna and also helped
his
t~m to
a
14-11
record.
mater
·
Manhattari and Bowling Green.
·
After Petro scored
13
points in the
first
Highlighting
his
junior year season were
half,
he was told by the form~r N.B.A.
two
38
point performances, one agai.nSl.
standout that he wasn't going to be able to
·
Fordham and the
.
other which led his team_
score anymore, and needless to say he was
to
a
defeat
of
Northwestern University
at
well contained the rest
:
of the
.
way.
Chicae:o Stadium.
This
is
just
one
.
highlight of Petro's
-i~
·
his
senior year,
_
Petro averaR~
1s
:
athletic career while
attending
Manhattan
pomtS
a game, which helped
him
enter the
College from
196lMU
on,scholarship. He
lOOO
point club, and graduated as the third
had turned down
.
Other offers from leading scorer in the college's history. In
Columbia,
·
Maryland,
and
·
Brown upon
his
last
,
season he was also named to the
graduating
.
from
.
Gorton
·
High School in All-Metropolitan team by the Metropolitan
Yonkers, N.Y.
in
1959.

-
Sportswriters Association.
r
~~~---:=----';""~~-=~.:;.:.:;..~.:;..-,;---~----.....
.
At Gorton, Petro was
.
named to the
All-
Other
'
well kown opponents
in
Petro's
S
t
.
.
·
-
R
·
..
cl
.
Westchester County teain
aa
.
a:
forward
in
career
·
include Happy Hairston when he
Por
S
.
•.
.
·
.
o
·
u
..
.
..
·.-
n
·
··

_
.
·

.
·
·
:
·
·
up
·
,
basketball and a pitcher in baseball
;
both wasplayingforNewYorkUniversity, and
in
his
senior year. He,was
also
named Con-
then went on to
play
for the
Los
Angeles
Edison Athlete of the Week of Westchester
Laker1:1,
and
Kevin Loughery,
who
played
County for his basketball performance the
for
St.
John's
,
Universlty at the time, and is
'f'7'~""'.
.
~
_
_.
""'1"".
.
--1-----~ ...... -....;._-.
.
_~-,_;.;._;..;.;., ___
~_;...,;....;.;.~--l,
.
sa~~seaC:':m
.
:
ued to
_
play
beth
s
.
ports in
·
now coach of the New Jersey Nets.
·
-.·
.
·
.
i
·
.
··

' h
_
e
.
Hoaies
'79
·
. ·
:~~~~r:=e:J~ty:ns~~
6
1
spent
as
·
:
a
,
substitute; however,
'
fn
Jils
·
:
,
Tel~isf.011
.
has
the,
Elllm;s
)
singershave courag~jo
.
adrni~ that they
.
will·try to
d~
t~ Graiilplys
.-
actors have the Oscars, and better next year.
·
"
-
·
_
· ·
..
.
·
Stars eye hooters
By Stephen Fowler
:
1,ie
Cin;l~~S
'
the
.
:
Hogi
_
es
.-c
·
/
· ;·

·
, ·
.
.
· :
The
,
.
:
No~Name Offense
Award -
->
Tht
f
:teo
·
DurocherAwanr
.::·
presented to
·
,
presented to
.
the lacrosse team for their
:tlie
:
c~ch
V.!
'ije<:~~)iice gtiy:3 , ~
·
last" )1eglect
~
Pl!t numbers on their
'
jerseys to
is
:
giv:..en
to
'.
RortPetro for his
:..
~lerance to
,
identify themselves during games;
.
Marj.st
'
.hecklers arid
,
the
.
team's
'
season
.
·
.
The
,
''proofJs
in
.
the
pudding'~ Award
·
-
.
record (1f
.
8:-l6
~:
:
.-·• ..
.
, '.
.
,

·
: ..
:
'
:
.
··
·
·,
.
..
·. ·
'
, .
presented
.
to
the
women's basketball team
:
'
)
T~
e.:,
~urvtf.al
e>r'the
:
:
Fltt~i
:
Aw_ani
~
~
fortheirabi!itytoprove
.
tha~a.bas~etball
.
Two Norweigians,.a White
flains
All-
the ball
in
the net." He felt that possibly
_
pr~
-
~~~';d)O
:'
}~
Ma~
foo~ball team
·
teamatMarzstcan~vea wmru.ngseason; • Leagueplayer
.
andRobertCooper, brother Tommy Homola could do the job. He
~
,
l>a~
J
or thezr
,
sury1va~
·:
.
.
of
·
~~
/

Th
.
e ~rg~t
·
Team
'
Award- ~resE?nted
.
to
·
of
.
Marist
·
halfback
Gill, are among the credited the team
witll
having
a good
:
e~~
;
~~n
..

.
w,!th
,
<>
.
tt~
;
.
fa~
J,
1:1,1J,~es
(
~11,f
~
.'.
~e
w~
·
~
:
t~~
,
warn
_
~?r
.
ihe}r rost
i
r
-
·
,
9f
:
:'.
~i!)le
_
neWCOIXlers to next fa!\'s
:Marist
_
·
a~itu~e.
:,
·
,
,
·
f~~
:
fro,m
,
lack
,
_
9f
,
M
t

~ff~~1v~
;
lp_le.
>
~
·
.
,=
~b<>u
.
t
~
~yen
,
oi:
.
!~ght people'.
.
',
,
·
..
·
;
"
.
~
·
·
~.
soc~er team
.
'ffie team will l ~
,:
the
,
ser
.,
_,.
·
·
,.
· .
.,.
_
..
,
.
0
. •
,
:;,
n~
c'
Henry ~singer
,,
J\"'.ard
-'

presented
·
.
·
· ·
\
The.
r
~
Bat:Dia;1l
·-:-
an~ , Robin

·
·
Award
•·
-
.
vices
,
of
,;
seniors, Zenone · and
.
.
Firmino
,
. Return~ players for the
1979
team will
,
,
tq
:
h~d socc~i:
.
coach
}
'Doc'
.
'J}
_
ol~n.for present~ to
Rich
~evens !,ecause he
.
acts
Naiu.a, Russ :Q
.
eckely, and Joe Curthoys include Junmy powns,
~tt
Loveccl!lo;
·
.
<·
hi~
.
cliJ>l?~atic
.
tale11.
t
a(ter acquinng two as guardian
;
to
a
:
ba~
of cross cquntry b
.
oy
.
next-
season
;
.
,
.
·
·
·
·
.
Tommy Homola, Kevin
·
Black,
Rich
·
N?r~
:
eg1a11
:
freshm~n

:,
i!>


C?in~te. for wonders.
-
..
·.
·
..
.
"
··
.·.
._
·
-.
·
·
.
·
· · •
·
coach "Doc" Goldman pointed out that, Heffernan,
!3ill
Cooper and Ed
Isaacso!1·
the\~es o(
·
2.epone ana
:
F1rmmo Na1tza.
,
The
.
Mccann
·
Dem.oUtfon
.
Award -
next year's schedule
will
be tougher than
Th~
team will have
a
tough act to follow
in
·
.
The
Rodney
<
D~ngerfield ~ward - presentedt~theblacklJ1rdsandcrowsthat 1ast
·
year's but said; "We should
be
com-
·
trymg ,to Improve on th~
.
record of last
prese!lt~ to.
:
the
women's
,
crew team pecked
.
their way through the McCann
petitive." Specifically
he
added, "We season steam which lostm
the
~-finals
because
the_v
:
'don't
get
ni> res_oec;
~
"
·
Center roof.
should
:
be aU right defensively but we
o_f
_the NCAA
_
Division
n
regionals
:
and
.
·
.
1:11e
.
Lifesaver
A."!3rd -
·
pr~e11ted
.
to
the
badly need
a striker ... someone who canput f1mshed the season at
9-6.
s\Vlm
·
team fo_r
,
the1r
,
:-
O-tt r
.
~or~
~n_d
the
·
· ·
·
·
·
.
:
B
.
Chris
Bai'lles·

.
'
-

.
.
Y,
,
.
-
.
.
. · •.
,
.
·.
.
.
the
Mid-Hudson Valley with facllitles for
-· ·.
both men and women. The campus cannot,
Witli
the
r~tum
:.
of
spring
and the armual
..
·
.
however,
·
boast
of a
.
baseball 4iamond.
.
:
inquiries about
.:
the
.
absence of an in".
The question of a baseball team
is
raised
tercolleglate
,
·
baseball team at Marist,
·
annually at Marist, but Petro noted a
·
.
Dinic:tor
.
of"Athletics
Ron Petro explained
u-~..,
number
of
problems which prevent' such a
<
what is
:
irivolved
in
:
tbe
.
establishment of
team in the near future
.
.
ne'i\
<
·
fotercollegiate
·
·
.
sports,
,
citing the
"~e biggest problem
is
finding a fte1a,"
forination
·;
of
·
a
·
club, the
·
acquisitl.
.
011 Qfa
!
he said. "You
try
and put in a big field and

coach
~
who
,
__
would
be
:.
willing ·
fo
work
.

;
.
it
just
doesn't
fit."
'
·
;
teams were ultimately discontinued
2
years ago when the budget
was
reduced.
Swimming had
·
utt1e difficulty in
establishing itself
;
said Petro, because the
pool was already built.
It
was just
a
matter
of recruiting talent, he added.
1
Chances
of
new
.
spring field sports are
slim
·
because all available fields already
see constant use.
·
·
.
without
'
pay
for
a year
G.<i
sincer
.
e
·
student
·
·
i
:
··
·
·
Even off campus fields carmot r~dlly
be
'
intei:_est
·
iii
t11e
··
sport
aa
a
prerequisite;
·
a;,.
- -
acquired. said Petro~ because the few that _ _ _ _
A_o_v_e_R_T_i_s_e_M_e _N_T _ _
...,..
._

Petro
·
<
outllned
'
the
\
procedure
,
which
'CU-..:
~·-
exist are· already
being
used
by teams or
·
·
uikesJhree
y~rs;It
all
sta~
_
with
clearly
_
organizations. Furthennore, a home field
.
:'·
exhibited.-
;
student
>
interest
·
·
and
~
the
·
for-
off campus would involve
·
the
added ex-
·
·
:
·
mation
.
ofa
'.
club
:
whiclj'operates infpnnally

pense of transportation to home
.
games

. ,
fr
~i~!~~~·~'
·
~=:ti7!~1dy:;::;::
.
. ./
. :
If
·
:
ill{
:
club
·
·
shows
j
1
,
>
continued
::
·
student
.
.
most expensive college sports; I would be
'
. interesti
'.
tt
,
cai(gain f\'mding
<
fro~
stud~nt
second
·
only to basketball and crew. He
·
._(
goyenup~t,.
;(
~
Jtf
::
sec~rid
i.
)'~ar
:
?
and
.
rioted
the costs of insurance; uniforms,
·
.
:
~
nn.cz.ciibly arra~e a small number
.
of games
..
·
·
-
equipment; and
umpires,
as well
·
as the
·
.
,/
~
·
'
ot11eiscboolS:
:
I,theclubissucc~
--
'
-
:"""'r,n,...._
·
cost of housing team
.
members after the
.
·
·· ·•
1
in
'
terms
/
ot
;
oi"ga~tfon
'
anc;l
:
interest{:it

Olt..i~Hft.,.,,.,
school year has ended to allow NCAA play
,
caidiim
to-'.tlie
·
.
college
:_f
o
_
r
·_
fui1ding
iiflui
·.
which continues beyond the close of the
.
tbird

vp.ar
:
he
·
:S1dded.
,.
· ,-
, .-
:
;
:.
:
.'·
>
:
.::..;
.
spring
semester.
.. .
·
.
.

·
.
·
·.
,
Marist
,
·
.
currently
·
offers·
-.
an
·;
'
in-
"I ~ould rather see additional
funding
. .- / :
\.
terc
·
ollegiat
.
e
?
progra
.
m
_
co~sis
.
ting
:
~(' slowly, but now-we're on an equal ~eyel
.
for swimming and volleyball before we
try
. · ·.
-:
·;thirteen :':varsity

BP()rts
including
~
'.
Ct"ew,
,
.
.
-
with other.: colleges."
.

,
--
,
to
start
something new," said Petro .
.
· -;,:
.
'-'
:
,
so~~e
.
r;
:.f
lacrosse,
_-f·
baskettialt;
·:/
cross
::
/:
:
·
Petro
'
:
saw racquetball
-
as
·
a
.
new
·
com-
,
-

Pe~ro
.
estijnated
.
the
initial cost of
·
;
:
,,
.
>
·
:/:
~Witi-Y
t~)
f~~
/\
~~;
\:;
~!er~1J
.
~ ~
-
'
)
~tltl~
:
sport
.
iil
(
th~
:wor~
,
~~
·
M!l~
'
~t·
·;:
e:,taJ>~
a basebau
·.
te11m
.
at
$8,000.
·
,
5
_;
;
.,-. ._:,
footban.
,:
arid.
:
vollettiall
:
~
-
:;\
.
;
,'
.
·j(·
',:::,:
·
,
::
::
:
(
'.
'
,
;
/
,
noted thattnere
:
are
·
currently
not
.
enough
:>.
<
As
,
anotlier
..
future
.
program at
,
Marist, .
.
_
:
.
{
:\
;
:
<:
.
!)
i':wo
'
f,'
·
'
ears
'i:~
a
-
o
)::'-
wcmen,s.
~~
::
,volleyball
~
\
other
,
n'OU
'
·
es
\
wtth
·
::
teams
;-,
to

; ~ e
:
'.
t
a ;·
'
f>etro
:
·mentioned
~
girl's soccer,
·
but
again
·
, :, :
,
:,:
b;ejin
:
J
;::
~
,
~iibi
-
~µist
'
:
:Ye11
_
t ~
':
~µ.bjvaef
?
(
r~~~~~~~m
:
,
w~rtJiwblle
,
,;.
,.
:?
·
;;
:
,
>
;
?
\
-
noted
'.
the
·
problem
of
locating fields.
.
·
;· :
·.
,
.
<•:
"'
fimdec:l'
{
thrc>ugtCtbe
··
student
;,
g6\t~nµnent;
.
<
<
:
Fields
".·
and facllities
:
·
at
:
Marist'
tn~l.!l:d~
,
.
P~tro
:
~id
that
the
colleg~
used
to
have
i\>~,
)'.t
t1~~~~~
~
~~~~tr
:
a
!~~UJ~~~~~U~°u!o~~k=
~
'.
~~8:a~ti:a~~~~~~~!
·.
:
.
:
,:3
;
;
,
;t
:,
:
1ftf:~i~
~~
t
f
~~~
'.
\t.1~
:.'.
:
~~
:
~
1
}
~ti:~
,
J:I~~~~:;
:.
\
:
~~~::
-
r:~=~~::i:u.,
.
.
.
·
·
.:
,
:
-:
:
-:
volleyball
/
'-
~
satcf

1,
fetro
:
:

'
,
'We
:.
pi'c>Ceeded
·
.
:
is
the largest
collegiate
.
sp«ta
_
complex
1n
-
·
interest
problems
·
from
its
start.
·
'lbe
fr
~
-
,t:ltttt~i
·~
:10:;
it
:f
f
.
c;;'
'if,,i
J
-
'Jt
:
.;'.
'
i;
')
_
;
.
:rt
·
<c

.
·
•.
·•
·
.
.
.
.
-
·
·
·
·•
•·
Happy
.
]Jirthd;Jy
.
:
,
Beth·
-
·
,
.
,




























































































'
.l
_i
,
1
;
-
-
·
~
J
-
..
) j
.

·
.
,;
' .
..-.!(
.

•<
.
,
,,_:
.
'
:
:
~
.
I
'

...
,
:
,
:
,
·
,,
..
;
,
/
,
Co,igra
tul11:tions
·
'
.
.
I
'
.
.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
arzst
·
·
&
·
·
.
.
.
-
.,
_
__
G-oodLUck
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
'
.
.
·
.
.
·
.
.
.

··
.
.
·
.
•·.
--
..
.
:
•.
:
·.
.
'
.
\
·
.
.
.
..
·/
.
.
·
.
,
.
.
.
.
..
·,.
.
/
:.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
·.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
·From
·
··_
.
.
,
J

..
.
.,,
·
·
.
.


22.9.1
22.9.2
22.9.3
22.9.4
22.9.5
22.9.6
22.9.7
22.9.9
22.9.10
22.9.11
22.9.12
22.9.13
22.9.14
22.9.15
22.9.16
22.9.17
22.9.18
22.9.19
22.9.20
22.9.21
22.9.22
22.9.23
22.9.24
22.9.25
22.9.26
22.9.27
22.9.28
22.9.29