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The Circle, April 13, 1978.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 20 No. 8 - Apirl 13, 1978

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,.
Extra
$"300,O00-needed for- aid
.
.
/}~?
.
With tuition skyrocketing and
room and board costs right
behind;
.
paying for a college
education is becoming in-
creasingly difficult
·
for
.
students
and their. parents.
·
·
Marist's new increases mean
$300,000 more in financial aid will
be needed by students. Where can
·
you get help?
·
Don't look
·
to
Marist.
of financial aid .
But Kelly says some help
will an upperclassman eligible for
up
be available from the state and • to $l,345 in aid, Kelly says.
federal governments. He says the
1be Basic Educational
OJ>-
Tuition Assistance Program port unity
Grant
(BOEG)
program has
·
also
raised its
.
(TAP)
·
for New York State levels, moving from $1,400 to
residents has increased its
.
$!,GOO
with
.
riew
.
eligibility
maximum
·
award by $300, of-
fering freshmen and sophomores requirements, says Kelly•
up to $1,800 in aid according to
.
Application
.
forms
.
for
.
the
awards are in the Financial Aid
n~~
juniors
and
seniors, TAP
Office, first floor Champagnat
has made a $45 increase, making Hall.
. ·
?tf
~
-
~:~
-~
~
-
-.
·
~
i
:
v
7

-~
~:::
·
~:~,
"We
.
don't have that money to
·
give," says
G~r:rY
Kelly, director
THE
__ -
CIRCLE
.
~
,.
.
Volume 20~Ntrtnber
Q
:.
·.
.
Marist College, Poughke~psie, N~w York
_:
12601
.
April 13, 1978
Juition,
-
inore
.
ase(l
•:
·
-agai
:
n,
·
·
.

..
~.::.:-
~
--
-
~--
.:t
·
By Maria Tro
_
lano
·
Other
_
plans (or revenue generated fr~m the
"
,
/:
.
.
_.
&
Larry Striegel '.
-
,
inc~~as~s .inclu
_
de
_
J~p.royem~~ts
·
.
!ri
..
main-
.
$100
:t:
_
..
ten~nc~, do~tory
_
furmshµig~
.
~
outside
.
walk-
-
·
:
"'.•>
.
For the
i;ixth
consecu!i~e
_
y~ar, tuition and
·.
;ays
_
anglighting; 8:rtd hon~a~adeinic
.
program,s~
: .
90
,..
·
·
-
room
·
and
.
board fees for Marist students have
-
oy sai money WI <!lso]:>e
j,
ised to upgrade
·
;:~:
.

_
_
be
·
en
·
m· crease
·
d.
-
.-
·
_.
some
.
p
·
r9gr~ Whi
_
ch
_
:
s~f~r~d
:
frOm
-
incidequ~te
t1.
--.::
-
funding in
·
past years.
-
-
.
-
,
i
.:
.
.
siJ'
':<
~
...,..
-
:
./
D111irig
tli:i1978-79 school year studenis\vill
_
be -
-
.
.
The decision to increase
.
the tuition
.
was made
.
J
-
'/
·
.
.
··.
·
charged $96 a
;
credit;
_
or
:
$7
:
more
·
than this year
:·.
-
)1:1st
Thursday
_
bytlle
'
CC>llege;
,
s l;>oard
_
of trustees.
-.
-
·.
o
·
}.
-
_.
.--
Room and
'
ooard
'
for
;
i'esidents
-
will cost ari ad-
:'
,
..
·
·<
._ .
-
·
,
-
.
70
-
i
·
·
w ,•

,
di::a1i:J!?:~ttlfr~:c::::
;
,th:
,,
,
-
c
·
:
_··
/-
:.
a
~
-
-
-
~
:
·
,
·
t
-
.:
;
·
··:;:\
('
:/:-=:.
;:
-
.
60
-
~
-

·.
~;
;
,
·
..
<
l~fg~st
:=
·
e,.,er
:
f<?f
-
.tli~
·:
CCls!
):
>~
r,ooin
:
a~d poard at~

__
:
_
:
..
·.
re
·
1ts
-
,-w
I
IJ
.-,
.- ·

.
.
·.
•.
.
.
·_,
.
c
·
.
fit.
:
t--
~~K~f
~-@
;~
~J.~~~~/41~
;
.
Ggt,~
~~,;
~.
;;~ ,:.;,:
6
1:
f
'
7
'.

'.f
·
F·~_
J
•·•.
_
i
·
·
•--
-
:- •
<_,.
?~~
_
_
--
-,-~· ..
,
-, .. ·.,

if'
··
·
•·
g!&,,"f""'
'
)F\~--"'

·
~_,
£.~
..

-1\1-
~
-
-
-.~
.
1:IP.
,
!~
.
~
'
"'·µtt:,..,
...
,,.
,
-.
~
~eJ-sf
,.,;
,
$
,
Q,~
...
~
,
a
-
P
,
fu
·,
-"<·

-
-..
-
~;,,,,,40.
.
~\/
}
'-
·;
_
,
_
:

_•
/
rJf~~1lwaiI~~~~f~~J:fi>~~~~tfi~i~!
?
'~?}
~
:t
:i
l
__
~
/t
'.%
'.
.-:·
1
:;,::
\:;
.
,
::
}/5f
:
:
i
';:
'i'}\
:§_?~!:
.t
?
·r--t.;t?
:::_ ·
·
.'
:
9f8.6 per:cent
~
higher
'
thah this:Vear:
_
wheri
0
com
:
,.
.
.
,.
. ..
-
-- ·


.
.
.
.
.
·
·. •
.
.
,

ao
·
.
'
mti_ters
:
paid
.
morettian
1$
2,600
>
-
0
'.:

:·:
,:
·
.
.
'
.
·. :.,,
:
The_'.figute
s'
.
wer:e\vithhe!g°untiLMoifcfay
so that
·
.
:>
'
Me
·
ariwhile,
.
aresiderit stiideritwill
_
be shelling
·.
·
s
_
even of
_
th
_
e
·
22 regular
.
trustees
-
who did not
,
ats
·
_
out a
.
t9tal
of nine percent
:
more than he paid this
.
ten~ th~ meeting could
_
~e
.
notified;
·
F.oy
_
said. Tiie
·
.
.
,_.
year for tuition, r9om
~
and board, and
·
fees
>
Tl1e
.
:
chauman of the
:trustee
·
-
finaitce
.
committee
·
was
'
-
total cost W,ill be $4,860
-
compared with the figure
·.
·
·
among those absent for the vote.
:
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
of ~;4?,5 f<>rthe
2
1977-78 school y~ar, an increase
.
According
-
to the figures,
:
a
·•:
resident
un-
-
of.$435.'
.
.
·-·
=,
·
.
.
.
>

.
'
·
·
_
·
·
·
dergra~u~te who ret
.
unis for his senior
_
year
will
·
In
releasing .the figures, Foy
·
termed the in-
-
be paying about a thousand dollars more to live
crease a compensatory move. Part of the reason
,
and be
·
educated at Maristthan he did a
·
s a fresh-
.
.
::
Graph sb~ws Matist
tuUi6n
·
'
/
.
increases
.
o~e"r
p;$t tei{y
_
e~rs
:
for
·
.
the large increase was to offset lower in-
man in the 1975-76 school year
;
.
.
.
.
.
·
creases in past years; Foy ~aid.
Next year's ~arist undergrad will be paying
·
The seven
-
percent
,
increase
·
in

the cost
·
per
240 percent more
.
for tuition
.
than
·
his coun-
.
credit waflhe1argest
·
hike since 1970 when the
.
terparts did 10 years ago when the cost per credit
price was
O
raised from $45
.
to $.55.
·
• ·..
·
.
was~$38, for a yearly full~time cost of$1,200;
.
·
Biscardi )Vins
µllopposed
-
·
In explaining the costly room
·
and
·
_
board
in-
-
·
.
In the past five years tuition has increased 66
.
.
·
crease,
,
Foy said several student services would
percent from $64
·
in i974-74 to $96 for next year.
.
be improved f<>r)978~79.
.

.
.
-_
.
.
<.
.
:
Foy -said the trustees predict that
·
future in-
:
"We havtfr
_
ea~ed
:
the need
to·
improve living
creases will nofbe of the same
_
proportion
. ~'.
We
condittcins
·
in
}he
do~
·
·
.-
~nd
.
to upgrade the
·
expect
·
future increases to remain either
:
at or
f~o.d,"
·
Foy said
.'
_
·
.'
.
.
·
.-
·
· .
.
.
.
-
-
belowinflatioriaty
:
standards,"
-
Foy·said
'.'
..
,_
.
.
·,
.
.
.
.
,
.
. ·
.
.
·
.
.
·
•·

·.
·
.
.
.
·
,.
-
.
.
...
By
Ken
Healy
.
·
Orily
100
of approximately 1500
_
Marist
·
students

·
voted
'
in
·
this
week's
· .
Studen(
'
Government
:
elections
'.
While
-
the voter turnout
-
was
-
"
low
·
the nllillber
.
of
·.
can~
:
·
didates ~~ekirig office was lower.
·
·
·
Three candidates
..
were on - the
.
M
.
a
in
te
:
n
. -
·
a
_
n
.
ce
:
ove r
·
w
h e
.
l
me
·
d
.
-
:
~~ ·
·ba#~~k
?
Biscardi
.
was elected
presidelif of
·
·
.
the
Student
by
;
cjll]pµ~
iao~ali~rn
·
'
~~~g~~~~~
t
· ~t
-
.
;
i_
JQe
new
:
president
of Inter-House
:
ByDavidPotter
.
.
.
<
dormitory corridor walls, twice
..
due
_
to vandalism. Repairs
-
~
·
Council (IHC) by a vote of 52-?.5.
-
·
Frank Biscardi
,
___
.
. >
.in
.
Chatnpagnat
:
and Leo H~ns;
·
Donnelly Hall and
·
.
=
the Campus
-~:
The
.
victors
·
in
:
all three elec-
.
.
.
. Vandalism
·
is
'
co~ing
,-
Niarist
:·:
and once in
-
Sheallan Hall .
.
_:.
·
••
, .
.
.
;
Center.:Yere
_
postpon~d
-
because }ions_ ran
.
un~ontested as did
the
..
·
said his first

pirority is to finish
.
Coll~e appro~tely
.
$4~

l:l
;:
:
Jantjs
saJ,d)ast y~ar,
·
main~ the mamtena~c~
.-
depart01ent
is
.candidat~
-
for the three Com~
.
his jo!>
/
as SG treasurer.
-Upon·
week and
:
is
.
delaymg
,
repairs
.
on
<
tenan:ce replaced 150 to 200 doo
_
rs understaffed, said Jan~;
.
-.
-
.
muter
-
Pmon (CU) offices.
·
assuming
the
presidency
campus buildings;
.
according to
:,i
in theresidencehalls,
·
costing
$35
Janus attributed_
..
drmkmg. as
··
Jo~n
.
Hughes was
:_
elect~d
'
Biscardi said he would look
,
into
Fred
'
J antis;
.
assistailf
l
main-
~
-
-
'
to $45
:
each. The door~ hung
-last
--
the ~a~se of va~dalism at Marist.
pr<:~11dent
_of
CU by _19-1
.
mar@Il,
_
ar:~as that
.
·
may
·
·
have been
tenance
-
di~ector.
·
-
·
',
·.
.
=. ?
'
year :wer,e hollow
:
c::ofe,

andJ~ss
·.
He sru,d he
-
?
sees ~en who do n~t:
.
wlµl~
Deborah Drop and Robert
.
neglected this
'
year.
·
He
said the
Janus s~id 4~to 50 wor~ hours
:;
expen,s\\;e tha.n
-
_
the $9
_
7 heavier
_
have an~
~
r~pect
-
·
for a.nyone s
.
·,,
Rodgers were
.
voted
.
in as vice
·
~
main areas of his concern would
perweek,
.:....
coi¢mg
_
approxunately
-:
doors
-
used
-
now.
- ·
:
-
··
-
:
.
·
-
.
prope~y,
,
on
_
campus~
_
-
_
-•
.
-
-
-
p,:esident
:
and
·
.
tre
_
asurer
··
betheBrilceTVsituatioriandthe
$!!
per Qour, ar_e
-
needed
to
_
re~µ-·
,
·
-_-
·
Ja11us said he ma~e
·
,
a
,
m~ke
.
'
..
Th~
.
·
mm,L
~~~
.-
vaqda~~
••
resp~ctively
.
-
.
?;here
·
,
were no

_
uncertainty
.
s
_
urrounding
.
nexf
vanda~
-
damage
,
on
;
-
campus
;
,:
.
-
.
trying to save mon~y
_
;
.
buymg areas on
_
c~pus are, ~ccording
:e
c~d1dates. ~or the
.
two
:
chief
.
year's
-
food service.
..
,.
:
·.
~
-
;
_
He saJd fin9:ncial ~ecords
·"
\Vere
·
.
-
·
hoitow
:
_
core "doors
.
because tJu:ee
:
to
tan~,
ninth fioor
,
.
Champagnat
, :
jllStice ~sit1ons that
·
have
·
_
been
"
.
.
: :
Most
·
stu~ents don't rea
_
llze tlulf
kept for
.
the v~u1~lis:m. co~s.
,
~ut
\
quai:ters
_
9f
Jllem
J1a,v~.
air,E!ady
:
Ha , third ~d
.
fifth fioors in
.
Leo
:
•-
vacant ~mce th
,
~ be~ing
.
of the
.
we
,
~Y
·
lose
:
the
-
:
present-
·
food
.
the
_
·:
·
pro
.
blem
~
· 1s
·/
'~o
:
'
;\
over:~
/:<
been
:.
r~lc1c~d
::
1>ecause
;
of_yan-
.
m~n!.
and

all of Sh~ahan Hall.
:lie,
/
semester .
.
. · ..
.
,
.
-
·
·
·
·
·

._
.
servic_e;''. he
.
w.,d:
''I
thlnk
:
most
whelming,'.,'
,
thaf~.Tye gtyei:i,
)
up
/
da~>-'.
'
:'
~,
..
,
;·::,.
.
:
.::_:'
':
_;·
..
··
,
.
0
sa1~>the~e
:
~ littl~
:
..
or
p~
-
yan~ :,-
.
As
:_
the presld~t-el~- of .the
:
_
stµdents are
.
satisfied
-
with the
.
becau~e
.
tllere· doesn'
_
t
.
seem· w
_
bf
: '.
.
;
;
l3~aus~(C>f
,:.
tit~
.
·
pr.:oblem,
'
~pe_
/l
11
lisnt-
0
!1:m~
.
st
;
.
w~men
~
;',
~()Or~
,
. student body,
,
Biscardi ,t!Ssumes
'
food
·
_.
8:nd
::
we
·
.
•.
~ay organlie
the
.-
Sffl9unt of
\
concern'
\
among
:"
-
.
'.
maintenance departlll~t
;
ha!i
npt
___
:
e~ce1>!·
~9r
~eahan_Jla~'.
-.
··
. :
:
.
:: · ·
leadership
·
_
of ~he
:.
Council'-' of
,
something
if
.it looks
-
like we'll
:
.
students and residence advisors
/
,:
'
:
nad theJimeor
:;
rijqneyJ~
'.
repair
-
\
·
•·
.
J_!lll':15
,
bel~ey~s
0
~-
c
i:t1:U10l'.ity
-:
e>f:
{
Stutient
.::·
L~a
_
<lers
--

(CSL)
O:
)ls
,
Iose
'
it'.!'
'.
,:··
_:--
:
:-~~;·
·
._ : .
'
.
·.
'
,_
7
.
·
·
This year
/
a ~ r ~
-
~o
:
;
.Jarius
;'.:
.

oth~r
-
/
:
ca
'
mpus
·
'--:~
ey~~o_tes
'-i
.
or
/
tll~
·
~u~~~s
are
.
1:~nslbl~ for.
-
_- :
:
pi:esc~l!)ed
-. _
_
by
.
·
the
·
·
:
~ew
;
·
:
c:on-
:~
:
~
'
,
B~r.di
,,.
said

he(
·
was
disaP:,
main~
e
ii
a~c
El
:'.
']
:
m e
·
c h 8 n
'
i
_
c
s
·
?
:
pro ble$.,
_
aCCOI'.diilg
to,J_antJSi
ti;~
.
·
.
_
ya~da,lisiil,
:
:
whi~
:
lS
.·;
not fa1r
,
Jo '.i~it~t10i:1'.
-
,
Toe
-
gt
_
ner me_!Jlbers
:
of
,
_pointed
.
~th
.
the
·
tu
_
mout
·
in the
repla~d
:
100.:V~~da~t~ct
,
d<>Q!.S
_
'.
fu
l_'{.
~id
;
:Marist
'.
~uld
'.:
n~t
';;
affqrd
:
_
to
;,
~e.
:
peoJ
1.e,,~~
-?
~m,~
_
:
t0
.
,
g~t
-
-
~~
-
-
)
the CSt
_
are
_
the pre$ld~
~
~
~f,
·
the
.
_
__ ·
.
el~f9P:
;.
_
and
·:·
11
.
e
:
-=
:
y,olild
:
_
have
:
tbe
,
~omiftori~
.
~t"a
;.
~st
:
o
_
f m9~e
::
,
:
paint
'-
F:e>ntajn~
:
liaU
,
~t
;.
~
_
;
c~s_t
.
of
_
>
~~~
.
:
n
.
.
_
.
:
.
:
-
~:
.
·
·
·
.
·
c
-
-
~
''
.,
·
->
·
{
?
,
ther stu~ent
-
bodies.
~.._- -
-
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.
pr~ferre<Lto ha~e
,_
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:
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.
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:
$9; 700
:
and
~
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:;
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~
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.
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:
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.. :
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Page2
Weekend
ntEOJHf.M.SWEOFTI
I
E
NO\i!\TAL"lri. PUT
ll-llDO.io■
n.iaa.e--.
:so.
m1to-.1
,_,._l.c,repaic'
.
•s-t-10ao.
l
-.
7
:
)4,1.9:)().
Mmt.JSA T O ~
Ra»d
Bum>L..J-aTbea•
r
.
lta)'moad
A l ' t l l . a e l . ~ ,
l'oqhlttptit. 411-4114
.
7
:
J.S
,1.
,:
10
,
Sa.a.3
:
00.5
:
00.7
:I
ud
.,
,._
11\E COODIVE CUlL-IIIDpfflll
~=-'
t
:~9:20;
~:.~:t~~,.·5
.
ffyck
~
Drhe-fa.
Roll
ie
9

Hyde
Ptrt
,
CA.9-200Q.
Dow,ta,tl
••4••i
.
Abo
,
·
.
'De
LIiiie
a.o.
.
,Jt11t:"1~'.:i:~OF
.
CL\SS.
.
.
.
.
.
Mallzini
escapes
at
M
·
cCann
Mario
·
Manzhli,' a professional end of the pool
·
because of escape the cuffs. After struggling
daredevil, dove into the Mccann shooting pains in his head, he a few minutes Manzini freed
·
Center pool Friday while said.
himself from the cuffs.
shackled by
14
pairs of handcuffs
· Manzini finally agreed to be
·
Manzini
·
has
.
broken many of
:
and several chains
.
ae escape~ tied to a ladder railing at
::-
-the Houdini's records
;
and
is
mted in
the shackles and reached the seven foot mark so he would not the
·.
Guiness Book 'of World
surface of the pool in 45.04 slide ,down the pool's em:-
·
Records
.
seconds.
·
·
bankmenf into
.
the deeper end.
Manzini
.
will perform at the
·
The stunt was delayed a half
After he escaped from the pool, Mccann Center on April
17
at 8
.
hour because Manzini had
just
Manzini was handcuffed by a
·
p.m.
recovered from a
·
sinus attack
·
Poughkeepsie policeman, and
and could not dive into the 13 foot offered
him
$1,000
if
he could not
iCh~pe1· set
·
for
summerJenovation,
April 13,
1918
Inquiring
Photographer·
"What do you
tbiDk
of ,the tuition
.increase?"
Ken Sullivan
Ken Sullivan
;
sophomore, said
"l realize it's bard to keep the
cost down, however, such con-
.
tinued increases put pressure on
the students that have to pay
themselves.
·
Joyce Dujo.ur
By
Jeff
McDowell
Joyce Dujour, ''Ithinkit's a lot
.
of money, but then everything
is
.
~
.
-
going up. I think if we have to
,
walk completely around 1t. There
·
-
.
for
.
expe!lSes. ~e
·
rest
·
of
the
·
.
stay we'll have to
.
put up
with
it.,
,
-
will be two new side doors for
money will"be raJ.Sed by. a com-
.
.
.
·
-
The Marist chapel, heavily
-
·
access
.
and ventilation.

Sliding
·
.
mittee
_
which will seek donations
·
·
au
ll
sKUEMANAJ
O
H
N
.
DANO
U
R.U\'O-S~T
ow
11t
Crier
Cafr. oa
Bttkm.u1 R
o
ad
.
lkipc-wcD JWlcd
o
111. Rncrn.t
io
na
7J
t-
Jf ◄ T.
fAlonn,.b<la 22
.J..9
}15•
April
14.
TAIIUANTI
SS
UYO-TownCrin
c.at
e-
ApfilU
.
damaged
.
by fire
.
Jast year, is
··
windows around the '
,
'track,» the
·
·
.from
·
concerned· citizens in
·
the
.
scheduled for
repair-
·
and
,
,
walkway aro~ the perimeter of
i
-
coµimunity,
.
.
.
,
.
..
.
.
modernization
·
this summer.
·-
the
·
chapel, will
_
-
increase
.:
the
-
.
Father
.
-
LaMorte
-
looks
.
at
.
the
Father Richard LaMorte said the
·
amount of natural light and aid·in
.-.:
renovation as
,
very
-
important.
It.
changes will make the chapel ventilation; The chapel'will
..
~Iso
· •
.
con:ies at the 25th anniversary
of
"more functional."
be carpeted.
·
.
·
·
the chapel.
·
He
.
said
·
"it
.
says
Some
of the pews will be
'LaMorte said the fire "may something about
the
-c-
comrnunity,
.
removed and replaced by have been a blessing in disguise
~
-
people tend

to identify
im-
~moyable
~
~irs
.-
.thus.making_the
.
.
.
ManythingstI:iatw~iild llave
,
not
·
portarice
;
with

a
,
i,bice
:
.
The
cnapef more versatile: LaMorte
.
been·
chariged
·•
wilr riow b
·
e
-
·
renovation and repair of the
said it could then be
,
used for
replaced.»Anewlightingsystein chapel shows concern
,_
for
religious arid non-religious will replace the outdated one.
_
religion." He add~d the chapel i
.
s
·
functions.The altar will be on one
Much of the wiring
·
was fused
.
"ahead of its time"
·
in design.
level providing a better view for
.
during the fire and
.
it will be
Most churches do not have the
the audience. The sacristy, where
replaced
.
"Wfll
also be getting altar in the center.
·
vestments are stored, will be
new books and vessels," LaMorte
The work will be done by Clark
smaller than the old sacristy. The
said.
·
.
and Warren Inc; of Hyde Park.
extra space will be
·
used as a
LaMorte estimated the cost at LaMorte said the
'
firm was
meeting area. The wall behind $,50,000. He expects about half of chosen because a good per-
the Altar of Reservation, the the money will come from fire cei:itage of their work has been on
place where the blessed bread
.
insurance. A settlement is now
·
churches
.
·
used in the service, is kept,
will
being. negotiated. LaMorte said
be moved
.
back so people can
_
that $4,000-$5,000 is now avail~ble
A
·
NNOUNCEMENTS
APR.
14 lhru 20, Fri-Thurs
ACADEffiV AWARD
.
NOW PLAYING lhru Thull. Apr 20
Perfect Family Entertainment!
!JI
An
electric etcher is available
at the security office for students
to mark · personal
.
belongings.
Students can also regi~er the
make, model, and serial number
of their stereos, cameras, etc.
WINNER •
BEST
ACTOR
DREYFUSS
,
-.
.
.
. .
PG
G!HfYiriiiuJOI.K
-roomi
DOUGlAS
.
·
.
·
@ - -
DAVID CARRADINE
LY TOMLIN
THE LAT~ SHOW
.
.
6l~lr1fe-
_.,
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
BEST SDHG
~'tr'-
M.C.C.T.A.
is accepting original
manuscripts of plays
writt~n
by
Marist
students for possible
presentation in next
.
.
y~ar 's
:
season.
~
Send manuscripts to
.
WJ.C~C.T.A.
.
.
.
.
.
Dead~e April 21

Marist
College
proudly
·
presents .
.
. Extra-Terrestrials ...
starring Fashion
·•7s,
under the
·
direction of Professor David E.
Leigh, choreographed by Jim
Crum, to be held
·
April
·
20-22
at 8
p.m. in the Connelly
· .
Fashion
Theater. General admission -
·
$2.00;
Mar~ students $1.00
.
·
with the security department
.
Students will alsl:l be supplied
with anti-theft
·
stickers warning
burglars that student property is
registered and
·
identifiable. -
Continued on
Page Five
,
Alumni
Alum~i
Career CoUil$el~g
As
.
a par-t
.
of the services offered by the
Alumni
.
office - career counseling is
being offered to the
·
students of. Marist
~ollege.
.
·
·
·
.
--
.
-
·
The Alumni office has
·
on file alumni
·
,
from a.llprofessional areas. These a.l_umni
. wish
··
10
.
comniumcate
.
with students to
dis-cuss
.
your
·
career development.
hi
any
-,
.
·
·. .
way
they can help.
.
·
·
Contact Your .Alumni Office Soon!
Bob Daniele, Junior, said
"
It's
going to be very difficult for me
to come back because I'm paying
my own tuition
.
It's going to force
me to move off campus next
semester. I hope they can
.
upgrade the quality of teaching
with the increased money
.
"
·
Italo Ben.in
,
-
Italo Benin,
.
assistantprofessor
·
of philosophy said ."l
·
know
students
·
have a tendency to
blame the college. I must agree
the students
.
are overburdened
·
.
economically, but I don't think
·
you can understand if you look
just
within the college. It's really
a trend within the society .
.
Classified
Ads
Audio,
.
Even Book o' Tools
cCln't
fix your bod.
Love, Cfut1ter and Wllma
MacAdoo,
:
.
My six year old 1l1tor said th<rt she can
moko It Saturd
_
oy night
.
.
Concornocl
Klwor,
.
11
'
1 back to the lounge this weekend.
·
Henwy
_Attention Conohoad1: Reunion this Saturday
night, · ·
·
~
.
.
·
:

.
,
Your Leador
Woozlngton,
·
·
·
·
· •
··
;
:
Tho play ls ovor
.
,
.
you can tako off your
·
maslc.
·-
-
·
·
·
·
Lovo, Beldar
ToM.M.
·
·
·
..
.
.
Wo didn't think you
'
d finish all tho stories

.
·
·
Tho Chosen Fow
To all
OZ
ushoro'
.
Thanks.
-
..
- -
-
,
- -
--
-
-
-
_
_ BIii Dockon
..
,
l
i
,;


















































.
;
April 13, 1918
Waterfront property between Marist boathouse and Cornell University boathouse.
photo-Paul Nunzita
Wate_rfront almost completed
By Alan Jackson
boathouse - about 250 feet, has
been reconstructed .
. Reconstruction· to the water-
Other work being done is the
front of th_e
Marist
campus is demolition of the California
almo&t completed according to boathouse, the installation of a
· Gary.,Caldwell, the Marist crew boat ramp, and docks at the
c;oach.
Cornell boathouse.
The ~tire bulkheading,_from
The land by the.river has also
the Marist boathouse heading to · been graded and partially
the north end of the Co111ell seeded. Other land has been
cleared of heavy brush. Caldwell
said final work on the boathouse
should be done within three to
four weeks. Seeding should be
fini~ed by late spring.
Funds for the workers have
been provided by a federal job
program. Exact non-labor cost
figures were not known.
SOme Marist classes
Page3
Candidates night
gets poor showing
By
Lark
Landon
Only
two students attended
candidates night which was held
Sunday in the browsing library.
The four candidates running
for the presidential positions of
. student Government (SG),
In-
terhouse Council (IHC), Com-
muter Union and Student
Academic Committee (SAC),
attended. All candidates remain
unopposed and no one is running
for two judicial board positions.
Attributing the poor student
turnout to "lack of student in-
terest," · candidate
Frank
Biscardi for SG·President said he
would have appreciated com-
petition. His running unopposed
is "the fault of the students",
says Biscardi. "The election was
advertised as best as possible by
Election Commissioner, Bob
Kozakiewi~."
Of
the Jack of response to
candidate's night, Sue Breen, SG
President said, "students are
dissatisfied, but aren't willing to
take the first step towards
change. I don't think they realize
what the new constitution can do
for them."
Llz McRae, candidate for SAC
said,
"If
people had cared, they
would've shown up to hear what
we had to say."
However, IHC candidate Chris
Faille said, "There is a lot of
student concern here, but it
doesn't know where to direct
itself." Mentioning the "com-
mittee of 21's failure" to rectify
student grievances last year,
Faille said .students do not
believe they can affect change.
Chicago company
may check Foy
By Kathy Norton -
Maggie Schubert
evaluations because of personal
view points.
·
The firm will also define the
President . Llnus Foy said he
duties of the president, and
and . possibly five top ad-
possibly five top administrators,
ministrators and the board of
and the board of trustees
·
. The
~rustees will be evaluated by an
administrators
are
Vice
mdependent firm. Marist is
President Edward Waters,
negotiating
with
Johnson
Business Manager Anthony
• · · ·
G
h
Associates of Chicago to conduct
Campilii, Academic Dean Louis
g
I
Ve·n a
f
re·
en a
.
the evaluation at a cost between
Zuccarello,
Director
of
. -· , ,
·
. .
Ven
$3,000
t~
$10,_000. .
.
Development Thomas "'.ade, and .
- -
--
·, - --- .,..
·-
· :--
:. ,,
-.
.....
.. -.·· ·
.·., · ·
· . . __ ··.
.
,.
·The_f!lJll_ls bemg considered_ Dean of Students Antomo Perez.
:".·'. '·.
. by·Vic
Small····
,
..
..
.: .
. -··' ·
·
· ·
··
· · ...
:'·'because the -board-wants·"an·•::.:...::~Tne-Coti.sultiin.t!fvn\\me~t:vi\\n--- -----·-·•'--'
Scileppi, assistant professor of guards. c~nnot. Scileppi said
~utsider ~ho is not personally
the president, adm~istrator~,
Ninety Marist students do not psychology who has been Marist originally offered courses
1gyolve~
Wlth the_
col~ege and
who
and trustees to ~e~~rymne if t~eir
go to classes, the classes go to teaching at Greenhaven for four
to the staff but they refused.
would gi~; a~ obJectlve report as
pres~nt responsibilities
a!e
bemg
them. The students are inmates years.
Scileppi claims he is oc.,. a result, sa_1d Foy. In the past
carz:ied ou~. '!'.hey wil~ · ~lso
at' the Greenhaven Correctional
John
Bree~,
associate
casiorially harassed by guards. _ only the_pr~~dent was evaluated
possibly defme Job d_escr1ptions
Facility in Stonnville, N.Y.
professor of sociology, who al~
"The guards are saying in effect
b~ ~n mdividual trustee com-_ for fu~ure ~valuations. The
The Greenhaven inmates are teaches at. Gre~nhaven said
'I'd rather not let you in, thes~ m~ss1oned by t~e board, but Foy
evaluation wi_ll
~
conduct_ed
taught college courses by. Marist althou~ student-mmates have.
inmates are getting the education said the college s $rowth made it
thro~gh questionnaires and m-
teachers at the facility. The no .r~admg problems, they have
I can't get."
1;1ecessary t~ defme a trustee's
te~views. St~dents ~nd teachers
Marist-Greenhaven
Program, . writI?g ~eakn_esses.
Scileppi, who has not visited Job. Accor~ng to Foy, board
will . be
m_terviewed
~nd
started in 1973,
is ·
currently
Sc_lleppi said t~e men are
the entire prison, works ohly in members m~ght . not h~ve been
questioned dunng the evaluation.
upgrading itself, according to ?.1otivated
~y
self~unprovement,
the educational blocks and said totally
obJective
m
past
Larry· Gibson, the program's
they _realize with0ut change they are like regular classrooms.
academic counselor. Marist they will go
,fack
to what they
According to Gibson, from 1973
hopes to start a-bachelor's degree were before:
. .
to 1976, 278 inmates have at-
program in political science, . _
He also s~id he
IS
~pressed the
tended at least one semester of
psychology, and business, he mmat~s discuss their personal the program. Since 1973, 15 r .• en
said.
·
experiences each week, and have attended Marist after
Director John Leahy said the add~d it is more t~an teach_ing
leaving Greenhaven and eight
program is a beneifical function abstract . psrchological theories.
have graduated. Others have
for the college. "It's a com-
Breen said p~ople make an . continued their education in New
munity service. It provides op- effort to make him feel at home
York City colleges.
port unities for new experiences... there.
Gibson said the men pay tuition
It'-s
a two-way street, goodforthe . However,
.so_me . st1;1dent-
'for their courses through state or
inmates; good for the college." mmates ha~e dif!icul~ies with the
federal financial aid. He added
'~Before I went there I had a ~ards, . Scll.eppi said, an? at-
the courses do not cost the men
tremendous fear. Now there is a tributes it to Jea!o.usy. He ~aid the any "out-of-pocket money "
sense of respect " said John guards are sensitive that irunates Marist pays the instructor.'s
·
' · ·
· get their education there while salaries.
~Payroll
errors
cost cafe
By David Potter
··'
service would not collect money use of an adding machine or
owed because .. the amount calculator. LaRose said a
Because of over 75 errors in
"wasn't significant enough."
. calculator has been purchased by
payments to ~afeteria workers
The errors were caused when the cafeteria to correct , the
since September, which cost the _the student who figures the problem.
Dining Service approximately payroll, Rubin Lopez; used in-
. · The_ new cafeteria . payroll
$160,
a new system of checking correct hourly pay rates for . checkmg system, which has three
for· payroll . errors was· instituted cafeteria student workers, ac-
check points, has reduced payroll
April 3, according ; to Frank cording t_o LaRose. Many student er~ors, according to Lopez. He
LaRose, bursar.
cafeteria workers have two or said last week there were "only
LaRose said the mistakes, more jobs which pay different four mistakes" in the payroll. ·
which included both over and hourly rates.
. . ·
According to LaRose, the first
underpaying students, were . Lopez said his biggest problem check point in the system is
discovered when some· students was he often figured the payroll performed by Lopez when ·he
complained their paychecks were, for Financial Aid Director Gerald figures out .the payroll, Lurenz
wrong;
·
Kelly sooner than the business then checks for errors and sends
Joe Lurenz, · dining service . office's ~onday deadline because the payroll to the business office
director, said all students who he sometunes·wanted the payroll where students make "spot
.were underpaJd were reim-
information delivered at noon on·· checks;" hopefully finding errors
bursed, though some students Sunday.
.
.
.
before paychecks are issued.
still owe money to the . dining
. Also, Lopez said he sometunes
·
service. LaR~se s~i~. the dining · fig1fre<;J. the payroll without the
MEETAT
MIIIB 'S TA VERN
Always a nightly
special
VODKA
RUM/BEER
RYE
MON.
TUES.
WED.
THURS.
FRI.
SAT.
GIN
TEQUILA
SCOTCH
happy
h:our
4-7 ..
DRAFT15c
FRI. SPECIAL Bottled Beer-12 oz.
.50
.50
.50
.50
.50
.75
Bud, Miller, Lite, Genny. all
soc
All imported 12 Bottle Beer.· . ..... 75c
3: 30 P.M. Till 7: 00 P.M.
25 MAIN STREET-
























































































Page.ff
THE CIRCLE
THE
CI.RCLE
The Circle is the weekly newspaper Of the students of Marist College and is published weekly du~ing the school year exclusive
of vacation periOdS by the Southern Dutchess News Agency, Wappingers. N.Y.
· G
M N
It
co-editors
erry c u
Y
Ken Healy
Dave Potter
associate editors ·
Dave !'Jg
Regina Clarkin
sports editor
Beth Weaver
layout editor
Paul Nunziata
photography editor
Jim Birdas
business manager
Mark Rudolph
advertising manager
Rob Ryan
distribution manager
Staff:
Joe_ Ford, Kathy Norton, Mike Mccourt, Jimmy Perez, Margaret Schubert, Lark Landon,
Carmen Rivera, Judy Norman, Victor Small, Susan Stepper, Maria Troiano, Mary .Yuskevich.
John Mayer, Ralph Capone,
.Jim
Dasher, Alan Jackson, Jenny Higgons, :Gerard Biehner.
ChrisjHogan, Steve Freeman. Tom Burke, Mike· Ball.Clare Amico. Don Purdy
;
Tuition justified?
Next vear, resident l\1arist students
will
have
t~·
pay $4,860
for
tuition, room and
board, and
fees,
an increase of
$435
per ··
year. While these costs may
he
justified, ·
· students must seriously reevaluate their
.. educational goals at Marist; and consider ·
· whether the quality · . of these goals
justifies their cost. Students must weigh
the
cost.
of attending Marist against the
quality of academics, . living conditions
and
services
provided by the college.
Another question which must be asked
is·
whether
or
not l\1arist
is
pricing itself
outof
its
market.
If
costs continue to
rise.-
will
there be a future for Marist, or
wiJI
Marist .eventually· have.
to
close its doors
as
manv other small
colleges
have"!
·
· Administrators said cutbacks would
he
made
to
hold down
costs,
but have .cut-
backs
!wen
made in the right
places:'
Also.
most
cothacks are thought of in
ter-
ms ·
of
student
service•s
and campus
upkeei>, hut . how many administrators
have cut hack on per~onal spending arid
benefits:'
·
Because students' futures have a direct
relationship with the future of the
· college, students should he informed
about the direction the college is taking.
However. -the board of trustees do not
seem to realize-this since they waited until
it was too late for students to transfer
hef ore informing them of cost increases.
This' is
a
clear
reflection· of
mismanage1i1ent and lack o·f concern on
the college's part.
·
Now is the tim.e for future planning and
good management, not ten years -from
now when Marist ceases to exist. Nobodv
wants to say in ten years. they have
a .
Editori-,1
d<;gree,Jrmn Marist College which is
now
a used car dcalershif> or parking lot._ ·· ·
Considering these factors. students
should ask themselves is Marisfs "lcar~ ·
ning and Jiving·· experience worth the
. pri<•e,
gr·shouJd
they
go dsewherc ·whe_re
tuili<m does not raise ''indd~ntaJly't:·
·
·
April 13, 1978
LETTERS
All letters must be typed triple spaced with a 60 space margin, and submitted to the .circle
office no later than 6
p.m. Monday night. Short letters are pre1e:red. We reserve the right t!)
edit
all
letters,
and letters must be signed, but names may be w,thheld upon request. Letters
will be published depending upon <!vailability of space.
Thanks
which included the same spring
break practice traveling op-
portunity afforded to the men's
team, and we requested practice
time during prime time on the
Hudson. On March 17, the
women's team· along· with the
To the Editor.
men's teams, traveled to
On February
16, 1978,
The Melbourne, . Florida for eight
Circle published a letter from the days. of intensive training
· Marist Women's Crew Team,
unavailable on the then-still
concerning the future of the team frozen Hudson River. Since our
and requesting, that a better return·
to
Poughkeepsie,
. attempt be made at furnishing
arrangements haye been made to
the women's team with the borrow an extra shell. each
necessary requirements of crew. morning
so
that all five· Marist
Although our . letter was never crews may practice on calm
publicly acknowledged nor an-
water at six a.m.
·
swered by the Marist officials to
Fourthly, , we
requested·
whom it was specifically ad-
rowable equipll}ent suitable .for
dressed, the women's te~m women's. use. We have been
wishes to commend the efforts provided with our own set of oars,
that have been · made in our . and our own shelJ-for practices.
behaH since the publication of our For races we must share the shell
letter.
with the · freshmen · lightweight
Our first request was for team, but _ since they are . a
qualified coaching. Due to the . lightweight crew,
th.e:
boat's
· fact that the pre-racing season
·
riggingis·st_Iitable for a women's
was already two weeks old when team.
.
· . .
. ·
our letter was published, we were
-
Our last request was for
told that it would .be difficult to recruiting fo(the wom~n•s team .
find a coach in time for the spring As of now, w.e do not know.of any
1978
season. For that rea~oh, · steps taken in thisdirection, but· -
Athletic Director Ron Petro and with. the introduction of women's
Head Crew Coach Gary Caldwell crew .at .Poughkeepsie High
offered·. senior·. ·oarswoman' School, we are hopeful that
·
this
Sharon Mallet the post of -new possibility ..:for. 'local
women's crew coach. Sharon recruiting will provide a basisfor
Mallet agreed ·to forego her last a strong recruiting program; ·
semester as
a
varsity oarswoman · There are still problems facing
and to volunteer as coach, so the the·. ·woinen
's
'crew . -team;
women's team now has a primarily, .the lack of funding
qualified coach. We are . hopeful .. shared.by the entire team; ,but \Ve ·
that some thohght is being given are.certain th~t
.
with continuing
to next .year's coach. ·
support and. ~9operatiori we· c_an
· Our second request was for the build a women's crew team that
availability of~ working launch. will be
a
major· f~ctor
in
.the
We have beeri.-provided with· a developlll.ent ofa .good women's
launch lvhich has a good, working ·.
·
athletic program here
at
Marist .
•• : .. --··
c

<,•··.
,t~!JJ:.:it,.~:~~:~4nnc . .-~9.r;,rJ~h~J.nl.Y,.J:i,{:1fop11l~•:
,.'.·tT:~JfJti\
{~tfr'~;;;~t~~jf~i;.7':j;
/
-
;_\,}·i~
-
.fo_y.ta~!~:Et~fri-i ·
~,
.
-
.
A···.--..
··p'.
-
.·.··•a·.·
· · t ·
·

.•
.\_h
.
.
.
·

··.·Y·.
~
:-,.~·
·
·
a···
··g"'~
.. ·: .... ·.·a:"•'+•1
'
·'n,;
.. , ..
,
..... ,
.
•;
votmg.l_!tther \Jay.
C
-
••
-
••

• ·
adequate ·.pre:..racmg season
-Marist Women s.CrewTeaIIl \
.
- -Everyone screams . that they're not
.
b~ing heard, ye.t
·no
on.e is speaking up.
ff
You'~e Damn right it's a.threat .
·
\OU
don
·1
have a legitimate gripe i.f you
Ripped
_O .
.
to. the DL11ing Service Business .
.. <l<mt
·
)>ccoine a part of the decision
Toe enormous
,
profits made~ by
Once again the CIRCLE will .()resent
one of its hard hitting editorials on
APATHY.
No one cares! There was only
one candidate for each Student Govern-
ment office. Exactly
iOO
people voted iri
1i1a.king process. Part of this is the fault of
the Dining Service· in the. RAT, ..
the student leaders but· most of the blame
To the Editor:
the newly_ formed DELI'S,. and
lies with the students. The only way you
Why can't the Marist Students their various ~•specials," is
will. sec a change at 1'1arist is to become
run a non
7
profit food stand such.
·
. ·•supposed"
tQ
go back into this
involved.
as the former "Leo Deli;"
College, for the benefit of the
The· students saw their po~ver when
Think of 'it; profit_s would be
students.
,.-
· the 'c!lection. That's less than one fifteenth
- of the undergraduate enrollment.
In
last
month"'s
CUB
election
163
people voted
and when the new constitution was adop- · .
they defeated the proposed room. rcser-
used to pay employees, and get
Why are we forced to put "our
vation plan. The same ·positive results wiU
better activities.· Candy bars 15
money" back into this College to
be seen every time our voice is heard.
cents; Cigarettes 50 cents; Subs
be unaware of where it's going?
Remember, it ·s our school.
,
for $1.00 or less.
A
hot dog for 25
Give. us an alternative! .
·
:
Yiewpoln•tri-------------::>--·-
.
... -.
·
-.-.-.~~
·
· ·~·
; : : : : : : ~ ...
_;w:~e~:
·
Loneliness
BY Laurence
J.
Sullivan
one's relations to others. This state we call
loneliness rather than aloneness because it in-
A person fashions a self with an eye to
his
volves an · element of sadness· and · often
psychological needs. One's psychological needs.
helplessness.
.
·-- are important in developing relationships .with
Lonelil}ess can be a creative religious · ex-
cithers .. The character of the relationships
perience, and as Eugene Kennedy asserts "it
1
is
depends on one's inner desires .. Jt is much the
the experience of those who have tast~d love,"
same with religion. A person develops or uses
his
and without loneliness "religion would have little
· religion according to his psychological needs.
significance." . . ·
. ·- . . ·
··
·
If
needs are
childish,
infantile, immature, his
Unfortunately, there are so many
~
our aay
· religion will reflect these qualities. If, on· the
who are lost in the personal fog of loneliness ~nd ·
contrary, one achieves a level of psychological
are unaware· of its religious dimensions. Pier-
growth nourished by· a developed intellect,
his
clng the fog o( existential loneliness helps_one to
religion will reflect
this
acquired maturity. In
focus on the fundamental questions: What anil?
other words, the dependent person tends to use
-Why am . I? Who· am I? This.incapacity oft~n
religion as the proverbial "crutch" rather
than
leads to anger, hostility and aggression. . .·
.
as a creative experience.
·
,
We need others to survive. We need to
be
ac-
The · creative llie involves an integrative
cepted by others,and we need
to
accept others
if
concern with llie a.sea .whole, in which un-
-.
.
life is to have· any meahirig or significance. In.
derstanding.emerges from
·
growing experiences
. order for one to love, one must love hiµlself.U
based on . ethical and moral ,value .. The· creative .
love consists• of ·
giving
·self .. to others, we · must
:life is,always based on·self".'values, and not the
place somevalueorworthon·ourselves. N<> lover
values ofthe system.
.-_-, .
.
·
·
gives a w9rthless°gifttotheoneloved. Therefore,
• ·As
a. person grows toward maturity he
will
there is a .need of self love before we can love
become increasingly · aware of
his·
aloneness,
others. Self worth is important in piercing the fog
interests, hopes,- desires,. and sentiments. Such
of loneliness. ·
·
.. . .
· ., . . ·
.
conditions
oi
·being,
alone. do not necessarily
"Insisting thatQ_iµy a religious interpretation
Imply that he
is
lonely.-In fact, he is
in
good
~compasses theyalues and meanings that.are
company
-when
he'
is
.
free-
to
draw. upon·
his
adequate to the.universal and abiding loneliness
.
·
resources .and has
the
'courage
to be
himself.: .
present inbuman_life, Eugene Kennedy believes ..
·.
~
niat'·state of being· .alone·.
is
different:
when
.
it·
. that the. 59lution·
to
the. problem of loneliness ~is .
arises because·there is·a
rift
within
oneself
or.
not only the story Qf men working out their llv¢s.
· · because there
is
something strange
and
-aµ~
in·•.·· -
.
_.·
~~t,g~
.~~ w~tking i>~t
theµ-~
salv~tio~. · , . . .
.<-.·
:
·#;
,
"'•_.~ :
.
·
·
-··;· ::-· : .. ,:·::, ....
_,:~-->~·-.· ':···· .. '.· ,.
ACCORD/~
10''.YOOR·
RESUME .
. Yob.
usr.·
YouR·
MAJOR:
A5-'Pf<UM'._
•.
·
,
....
:•·
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
.··
' .
;,·:
.
.
~
.
:A41.













































































April 13, 1978
THE CIRCLE
Pages
Perez: seeking greater trust
Editors noteg This story
is
the
third
in a
series of
administra-,
tor evaluations
By
J?avid Potter
Dean of Students Antonio Perez said
there
is
a
''greater
degree of trust" ~t-
ween himself and the
.
student body
because of a "better channel of com-
munication with students this year."
Perez, whose· office
is
.
responsible for
athletics, student life and·special services,
said he maintains communication with the
campus through weekly meetings with
Assistant Deans of Students Fred Lambert
.
and Gerald
_
Kelly, and Ron Petro,
-athletic
director.
·.
·
.
Perez al&> meets with
·.
Academic Dean

Dean of Student Life Antonio Perez
Louis
.
Zuccarello, and
-Gerard
Cox,
associate a&demic dean:
'
Perez said he find him (Perez) well attuned to the
ramifications of decisions
if
he were a
stops in
:
the r~iderice
halls once a
week,
·
·
st
udents or campus life," because Perez
little slower." He said "most up-
and fre_quently.
visits
the cafeteria and was new
.
to the dean's office.
·
·
perclassmen are turned off by Perez's
Rathskellar to
,
talk
to
students.
Crilley said Perez did not have a channet" overzealousness."
,
He
also teaches class and requires his of communication last year. Perez agreed
Tuer~
..
are fewer upperclassmen living
.
staff to
;
attend campus events
.once
a and said last year issues such as the
·
Leo
on campus now than before
.
because Perez
th
Deli, key deposit and
_
refrigerator ban
.
ch
ed M ·st• lifest
1 t
d
ast· 11
mon .
_
,
.
.
ang
an s
y e oo r
ica y,

Perez said he tried to use student
.
placed him at an "adversary relationship too fast, according to Crilley.
goverilinent as a means of communicating with students
·
,"
.
causing communication
Lambert said "students should have
with students~ but said SG "has not been
problems
.'
.
-
been consulted" on changes made con-
my
-
most successful
_
vehicle,''
·
for com-
Perez
.
closed the Leo Deli because it did cerning key deposits, the closing of the Leo
munication.
..
·
not meet board
•of
health .regulations. He Deli and the refrigerator ban. Lambert
.
Perez said
-
he twice scheduled meetings
.

also banned
·
refrigerators over
48
inches said Perez did not consult the student body
with .Student Government President Sue
.
from the donnitories last year when rooms because he
"wanted
to begin with a new
Breen
.
arid Treasurer Frank Biscardi. ~ere damaged
·
by students moving the
·
system right from the front."
·
:Ho
.
Wever,

both SG
.
offic~rs
inissed the two refrigerators;
~
-

-
Perez
·
said he was
"overly
eager to see
meetings.
·
.
.
.
-
· .
.
A
$5
deposit for dormitory room keys Marist reach its greatness too soon."
,
Biscardi said he did not meet with Perez was charged to students and later
Perez said he has
"unselfish
genuine
the first time because his pr()blem
·
:was refwided by Perez- because of student concern for students" and is "hereto serve
solved before the meeting.
·
protests.
·
.
the students, though students don't always
Biscardi said Breeri did riot tell him
During the last two years, Perez said he perceive that because of hard_ decisions."
about the
·
·
second
.
meeting. However, has attempted to reorganize
_
_the student
Tom Hammond, who resigned as food
Biscardi
.··.
believes communication lines affairs staff.
.
.
_
committee chairman, believes Perez is
betweei:'(Perez arig SG were open.
H~
_reorga~zed !ina
_
~cial 1:1i~
~Y
ceri-
"genuinely sincere" and "in his point of
.: Breen said she remembered the . trahzmg
.
all financial aid services under view he is doing the best for the Marist
meetings but cfid n()t rem~mber why' she
·
~eral? Kelly. However,
.
Perez s~id ~e community," though Hammond said he
missed them. She· said there were no open
possibly should have takell-Illore tune·m disagrees with Perez's
·
··
methods of
lines of communication between Perez and making changes," such as the key
_
deposit operation.
.
·
SG
:
.
·
·
·
..
·
..
-
.
·
·
.
.
-
~
·
•·
iss~e; Perez
.
said he
.
could have waited
.
-Hammond said "before he (Perez)
_f¢rez
said_:_he ·•~asn't totally integrated
·
untll ~udents. cal?e .back frolll summer makes a decision that affects students he
withtfie
,
stafflasfyear/'
.-
a problemwhich
0
'
V~<:~t1on
:•
~o m.st1tute
·-
the change;
.
c
but .·should consult students:''·
·

·
.
1ii'a§
:
·
ha
v
.
e

'
:
~ciitised
?/
coinmunicatit>IF beheved his mam concern was the security
Crilley also said Perez was sincere and
problems
:
·•

_
-
·
:.
· :
·
.-
.
.
-..
oft.~e stud~ts.
·
.·· .
,
,
.,-·
:
.
.
was "willing to do things for the st~dent
Mel.Crilley, former chief.Justice of the
C!i!}ey

.
said
_Perez
wa.~ overzealous m
.

body, which is more than
.
what"! can say
-
JudiciarBoard, said last year he
"did
not decision
.
makmg" and could "see the
·
for a lot of administrators:"

·
However, Crilley believes Perez "has a
hard time recognizing his mistakes."
Perez is
"not
willing to back down on
issues when he feels a challenge to his
authority," said Crilley. Hammond said
Perez was
"close
minded -
when he
makes a decision it's law, no matter
what." Hammond cited Perez's un-
changing stance on the key deposits issue
as
an
example of this. Perez said he is
"willing
to change my mind and com-
promise with · students'' and
.
makes
decisions with a
"positive
intent for
students." Kelly said Perez was
"willing
to make decisions and live with them,"
and believes this is one of Perez's strong
points.
Perez "found it amazing that we found
exceptions," at Marist and
"still
has
amazement about Marist's flexibility"
according to Lambert. Perez said it was
easier to make changes in a private
university than in a state university
because state universities are governed by
policies uniformly enforced throughout the
system, making internal change difficult.
Lambert said Perez has a "strong
emphasis on the budget." Kelly agreed
saying the
"budget
is
a major concern of
Dean Perez." Kelly said Marist was
"operating hand
.
to mouth"
because
tuition is the college's major source of
income. Perez is ''.constantly hammering
away - hold the line" on the budget, he
said. Perez agreed with Kelly and Lam-
bert's assessments and said
,
most
problems he handles "unfortunately" deal
with
·
the budget.
Though Perez has total responsibility for
Marist's student life, he delegates power,
according to Lambert
.
Perez said he is
responsible for two areas; student life
regulated by Lambert, and special service
supervised by Kelly. Ron Petro is in
charge
·
of athletics. Kelly and Lambert
said they have responsibility for their
areas and also said Perez asks them for
advice.
Perez said he was proud of the new
freshman advisory program,
.
which he
created, and is coordinated by Father
Richard LaMorte. The program, which
.
was designed to
.
nelp
freshmen
.adjust
academically, environmentally
and
socially to college life, received mixed
reactions in its first year from the fresh-
men
.
F.oOd serVices to bid for Marist
By David Potter
Bids to
~
replace the
·
Marist
.
~!lege Dining Services are being
accepted from four food
·
service
companies, according
fo
··
Fred
Lambert, assistant dean of
~u~ents. He said Marist accepts
bids from food services every two
yeai:s to "keep the (Marist) food
only generate
$U0,OO0
to
$115,000
of the
$185,000
Marist requires
from it to operate .
·
Lambert said Marist would
·
consider hiring an outside. food
service
if
-
they could provide
better
·
finances with the same
quality of service the dining
service provides.
sure the dollars we get from
board
'
are sufficient for the
service we give."
Marist's dining service will be
evaluated by the National
Association for Food Service
Directors, said Lambert. Lurenz
said the
·
evaluation would take
place between April
21
to the 28,
and added
if
the dining service
was fairly evaluated,"
"we
can't
Applications for
director of Children's Theatre
for
1978-79
are heing-
accepted. Send name
services on their toes."
·
·
Companies
bidding
are
Marriott, SA(M, the Custom
Food Service and ARA Slater.
Joe
.
Lureni, Dining Service
·•
Director, said Marist is "more
than pleased," with the dining
service, though,
·
according to
_.
Lambert, the dining service
·
will
,
Announcements
continued from Page Two
.
.
"
'
Students wanted for
.
part-ti.me
.
_
employment. If you are in-
·
terested in working up to
15
hours
a
.
wee~ and earning up
to
$3.QO an
hour providing aide or attendant
services for
.
Marist's
.
han-
dicapped stiidents,
:..
stqp
'
by the
'
.
Office of Special Services, room
·•
105 Champagnat Hall,
.
between
8:30
.
and
5:00
for further in-
formatioii:' .
-~·
On
Wednesday evening, April
.
19,
at 7
:30
in room 24~A in the
·
Campus Center, Mrs.
·
Yvette
Poli, director of clinical services,
Veterans
.
Administration
.
One outside company, SAGA,
provided services for Marist two
years ago, and while SAGA could
generate more money for Marist,
Lambert
admitted
''their
.
program was not as good as
ours."
-
·
·
. .
Lambert said Marist's dining
ser'vice i~
an
"expensive
program," and said
.
he was "not
lose;"
·
·
Lambert
.
said if an outside
company
serviced
Marist,
students would not be able to vote
for menu changes because the
menus would be standardized.
FOR
RENT
-
;
Hospital:'at qastle
_
I>oint, will
be
·
·
..
speak_ing
,
_on
p~raplegia; and
·
quadriplegia; ThlS
_
event will
be
.
. opento
,
the college coinmuriity.Jf
~
-
-you are in~erested, please contact
.
. ,th~_Office
;
of_Specia~
.
$~rvices.
:'
3
hedroomfurnished house
Naragansett, Rhode Island
lhlock from 1:>ay,
3
minutes
fromo
_
cean
Available by week or month
.
Contact
Dr.
Rehwoldt
.
·
Ext~nsion
287
or
454-8267
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
'
.
. .
.
.
.
·.
·
.
.
.
.
.
,
·
~
.
'
.
and mailing address for
information.
Deadline
.
for Applications - April 21
3 Mi. N.
Of
Marist Campus-Next to The Barkers Plaza
':...C.ft
• -
•·
-
• •
• • •
w

-
W
••
- - - • P


-
• • · - ·
., ..
· •
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'
t
.
l
Page6
THE CIRCLE
April 13, 1978
Dear
Dorothy
&
other thank
you's
asked, "How come the real
0
17
-/'
Dorothy
·
got sick?" The "loin"
t)
Apr,
,1,
1q7
I
ByBethWeaver
"Dear tinman
was asked, "are you a cowar-
e,..•rc
W ~ \
1

n
I
dly?" One little girl asked,
"If
the
"""
O
Y
I
O
J
"Dear Dorothy, I think you
bad witch was just pretend, why
.,
. you
We-rs unv• -
-
.
.
were
just
great!!! I ~e the pa~ •••
even
if
you was not in
did she melt?"
Y
ou
o.Cowllrd\vl
ion
'
~en yo~ found the lion and hit
Vinnie Capozzi, producer of the
_u_
'/

bun.
I
think
you are cute.
I t· I t"II l"k
"
play said that all the people who
.
- I
ne
\.Jo:~VO
U-Sa,'d,::I.
•<£+
Got
-
per-rnonPnl- .
And
_
I like it when pie_
.
wizard
rea
In
S
I
I
e
JOU...
work on the play enjoy the let-
/"\ f\ \ /
\. ,
/_
1
J

°'
...,.
*
hghtthied up. and
1
like the
ters, since they all enjoy kids.
"If
·
'-" Cl\
OV vv
€.Y--
800a.•
musicians.

·
her for letting them come to the you're going to do all this work
The prityest was Glinda. She show to "I like when you
,
per-
and put in the time, and don'tlike
was buttyfull. I think She was so formed your self it was so pretty kids, you're · in the wrong
pri~y ~ie would have a millyun my brother started to cry ... "
business," he
said.
Capozzi and
Boyfriends. Thank you Love
Other comments included
.
other members of the cast
Aliso "

,, ".' .
.
You were pretty you were
a
related stories of the childrens
ThlS and many other letters,
r
good actris as the good witch and involvement
·
after the show.
posters and

cards have been I liked your white dress was
Many childrm pulled hair out
r8':eived by the
Marist _College pretty and your crown was prett of the lion's mane and collected
Children's ~eater _for its per,-
and I liked your blue cirlc
.
From straw from the scarecrow
.
formance of '.The Wizard of
en ·
·
your friend Shonda.''
.
One child was
.
reported to have

Over 6,000 children came to see
Tinman received aletter from gone up to
·
the lion,
:
taken his
the play, whi~ ran 15 ~ows from Martin saying "Even
If
you was
·
hand, and said that he had a
Monday mol'll;ll1g, April 3 t~ough not in real tin I still like you. You station wagon with enough room,
S1:1lld~y, Apri!
·
9. According to have a funny walk. You was in a so the lion was going home
.
with
.
Vmme Capozzi, prod_ucer, over 40 silver suit. I like your ax. The him.
letters and two giant posters Wizard of
en
is the best show 'I
During one performance,
were received by press t~~. and ever seen. You and the scarecrow someone
·
too
.
k Toto, Dorothy's
he expects many
_
more
within
the and the loin are a
_
good team. I dog, out of his basket and had to
G
next few days
.
·
.
.
like when Dorothy said the house be coaxed to give it back
·
so the
·
J
,
~tters were addressed to the began to twitch. I
.
like
.
when show cot45,i go on .
.
Two little boys
-~-

.-
.
·
.
·
vGalm~iodusa
.
tmheemgoboedrswi~tfcht~!ce~!~ tinmh an
_
stai~ustl neestd arthedart
1
~ I liklik: e wekr~ seen fighting over who got
··
_
,
.
.
.
w
en
·
1
J
a
.
e .
·
e to lSS
-
Glinda first
;
and six boys
·
One of more than 40 letters from children who saw the Wizard of Oz
most of
·
the fan mail from Glinda "
·
pinned the tinman
-
during the
.
last week.
·
F~anklin School in Poughkeep~ie.
·
The · children were full of
·
fight with the Witch's castle
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Comments ranged from thankmg questions also. Leigh
·
.
Carney gua~ds.
'
·
/
Two
frosh bus_ted
Breen accomplished objective
in
'barn'
burgl-ary
.
ByDavidNg
machines, according to Director
of Security Joseph Waters.
Two Marist College freshmen
Security officer Christine
will
appear
·
today
before Cooper
.
discovered the two men
Poughkeepsie Town
·
Justice and was knocked down as
.
they
Court on charges of
.
burglary, allegedly
.
ran from
.
,the game
according to tovm,
.
police .
..
.
.
.
·
, ,
:
,
.
room, .. said
'
Waters
;
.
....
,
,,
.
.
,
,
Ralph
A.
Cosenza,
.
of
.
Suffern,
He said Cosenza and McDevitt,
N.Y., and Kevin J. McDevitt, of both 18, were detained in their
Collingdale, Pa., were
.
·
arrested rooms by
.
security officers
Sunday and charged with third-
Cooper and Don Fitzgerald untij
degree burglary,
a
felony
,
police police arrived.
·
said.
.
·
Waters
.
said
they
were
·
By
Joe Ford
together to resolve issu
·
es from
Breen said her other problem
.
student Government President one central source."
was she really did not want to be
Sue
.
Breen
;-
said she "ac-
Breen said the new constitution student-government president.
"
I
complished her main objective" will give
·
t
he student body -ran for vice
~
president which had
as J?X:~ident
,
which was the president "more
,
direct contact a totally different function,
"
she
.
rewntmg
of
the student govern-
with campus clubs" as well as said.
"
It
intrigued rrie because I
ment constitution.
·
improving
.
communication learned
.
all about
.
the clubs on
Breen,
.
who
is
transferring between student leaders.
·
campus. If Jeff Blanchard was
from Marist at the end of this
Another
.
achievement Breen
,
still here, I wouldn't have run
·
.for
seJ:Il~er,
.
saY.s
in
.
.
h~r
,
~~n:n .. a~
·
said
,t
is
.
in her
<
meetings',_with
·
presigent.'\
,
. ··
,,.,

.
.
.
president, "the const1tut1on took
·
College President "Linus
.
Foy this
: .
13r
_
een's successor,
0
\\'ho will be
. priority, arid now communication semester
.
"I've met with Foy a president of the student body, has
between
.
the administration and number of times, and as far as I yet to be named.
.
.
,
the student government is im-
know, this has riever happened in
·
~o~ever, Frank Biscardi is
proved
.
"
student government before," she runmng unopposed for the
.
The new constitution changes said
.
.
.
· -
·
·
position in this week's CSL
Cosenza and
·
McDevitt, both arraigned before Town Justice
freshmen residing in Leo Hall, Judith Hillery where they en-
allegedly entered the Barn game tered pleas of innocent. Uriable to
room in the
Champagnat produce the $2,500 bail each, they
basement and removed $25 in were remanded to the county jail
change from the
·
vending until their release Monday.
the structure of the present
Breen, a first-semester junior elections
.
If elected, Biscardi
student government into the said she started her term as would be
.
"excellent" for the job,
·
Council of Student Leaders president with two handicaps
.
according to
·
-Breen.
"
He's a
.
.(CSL). The new student govern-
One, was that when she was vice- political science major
;
and very
ment
·
president, who
·
will
be
president
under
former politically oriented," she said
.
called president of the student president,
Jeff Blanchard,
"
He's very interested
i,n
politics
. body, will join together. with Blanchard, who resigned in
'
and in the students and you need
1
presidents of the College Union
December
,
she said, without that combination."
Board, the Commuter Union,
leaving behind mtich information
Breen said that there may have
SUPER SAVINGS ON ALL
YOUR
LIQUOR NEEDS
BLEND








I
11i;br Ja;k
.GIN
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VODKA 80° • .••.
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SCOTCH 86°.
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4.19
4.19.
4.89
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.
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.
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L

DISC
NT-
fqUOf8m8
L1au0As
HYDE PARK MALL - RT. 9
(HHI
lo Shoprile)
HYDE PARK
229-8177
Interhouse Council
;
and the for
.
Breen to work with.
been times when she didn't pay
Student Academic Committee.
.
"Jeff'left telling me nothing," enough
.
attention to the small
.
According to Student Govern-
she said
.
"As his vice-president, I gripes of the students when she
ment Treasurer Frank Biscardi
,
should have been told what he was caught up in her work with
·
the council will bring together
was working on, where he
·
was the constitution. She said that this
"leaders from
all
facets

of going with
_
it, and what he had was one area in ~hich she could
campus
lif~.
We're putting them
achieved."
·
·
have done a better job
.
Werenko
/
to ''Wait
CJnd. see
·
'-'
By Kathy Norton and
.
talk to David Le~gh, director of . going to use other routes to solve
·
Gerry McNulty
that program.
.
.
their problems what am I going
"I have not had
.
a .~ash1~n
.
to do.,,
-~
·
.
Because he has received no student, come to m~,
.
sa~d
.
He said he was willing to help
formal complaints from students Werenlfo. He ex~lamed
_
his
·
students and
.
discuss any
.
John Werenko, chairman of the problE:ffi as alack of information
.
problems they had,
"
we've got
art
.
department, said he can take
·
He s~ud he wa~ aware of 5?me,.af
channels to deal with this" he
no action regarding the fashion
·
the issues
.
raised b1;1t said,
·
,If
added. werenko said he would
design progr~; but said he will

people ~ave determined they re
discuss the problems with
.
Leigh
Cancer day planned
but he did not say when
;
.•
.
"My attitude right now
is
sort
ofa .wait and see kind
·
of thing
.
"
By Mary Yuskevich
Academic Dean Louis
·
Zuc-
carello said the problem should
divided into four
·
sections whi~h
be dealt with at the departmental

will include oral cancer, research
·
.
level.
.
"I am not
·
really ih
.
a
.
The American Cancer Society
·
discussion
;
breast
self
position at this moment to ml:lke a
will hold a Cancer Jnfoi'mation
·
examination, and pap testing.
judgement
.
on the accim1cy or
Day at Marist Wednesday, April
·
Mahan said Dr. Malcom
inaccuracy of the compla
:
nts by
19 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Idelson,directorofobstetricsand

reading the paper
.
" He added
·
This is the first of its kind of gynecology at
.
Vassar Brothers
that
~
"student satisfaction and
day to be held at any college.
Hospital, will speak in Fireside
criticism with many majors
·
,
is
.. Susan
.
Mahan,
research Lounge from 11-11
:30
.
a;m.
nothing unique."
· assistant at Mari
.
st
.
and a
·
concerning the pap tests.
.
.,..,._
~renko disagreed with
.
some
,mem_ber of the 9aricer So~iet;y'.s
She also said pap tests will
·
b
_
e
statements· the students made
Pubhc Information Committee 1s
·
conducted in the nurses clinic
.
regarding the number of teache~s
organ~zing th_e. e~ent.
_
1:he
O
.
from
U:30
.
a.m. until 2 p)n.
servicing them. He said there are
.
committee publicize information
.
Mahan added
·
students
·
should
"
two
.
specific teachers of
about _cancer an~ early
·
cancer pre-register for
.
the test in the
fashion
,
"
"
Leigh, and Shirley
detection! accor~g

to
,
_
M~h~n
.
.
.
nurses
.
clinic
.
daily from
-
10
·.
a.m.
'
Kopple, an instructor in graphics
· She said th~ program will
~
·
·
until 3
P
,:
!Yl
t

·
·
;
·
.
· ·
·
·
·
and design
,
_,


























































































































Aprii 13, i978
THE CIRCLE
Eighth Floor Ermine
Eleanor Gray against Joe
Fallis in a floor hockey
game, Monday oJght. The
Eighth Floor Ermines are
the only girls floor hockey
team. They put together
a
roster hoping to play other
girls teams but when none
signed up they decided to
play against the men's
teams. photo by Pat Larkin
Page
1
lntermural finals
in
handbQII tonight
By
Pat Larkin
Kevin Kelly will meet Ron
Clarke for the intramural hand-
ball championship tonight in the
Mccann Center at
7
p.m.
.
Both players advanced their
way into the finals by defeating
Bruce O'Donnel in the round
robin competition between the
three players. Kelly defeated
O'Donnel
21-18, 19-21,
and
21-11
while Clarke beat the opponent
.
il-9, 19-21,
and
21-11.
Hockey
Roundup
The Lost Planet Airmen con-
tinued their attempt for an un-
·
defeated season as they won two
games
.
this past week. They
defeated the Ace Heads and the
Boltonaires by scores of
1-0
and 2-
0 respectively. They led
'
the
Boltonaires in the eastern
·
division by a half game.
The Sheahan Raiders remained
atop the western division by one
half game over S Crew. The
Raiders record stands at
2-0-1
while the S Crew are
1-0-1.
.
Jappers Last stand are in a very
close third as their record stands
at
3-1.
Badminton Begins
Six of the first eight games in
the badminton tournament have
been forfeited.
Eddie Williams, Kim Simons,
and Charlie
Blwn
are tied for
first place
with
records of
2-0
each.
Williams has received his two
victories by forfeits, while Blwn
beat Joe Vaughn 15-5 and 15:{j_
Simons defeated J.:.orna Walker
11-3, 5-11, and 11-7.
Netmen open seaSon with losses
S
,
tandings
.
By
David
Ng
couillier started the streak with a
' 7-6, 6-1 win over John Brittas in
The Marist College men's the first
~_
singles match.
'
Kevin
-
-
tennis team lost its first two Prentice downed Chris Curran 7-
matches of the season.
5,
.
6-2. Greg Garvey defeated
,
The Red Foxes travelled to
·
.
LaITy Simmons 6-1, 6-2. Marist's
Kin
'
gs

college iri
:
Briarcliff-
.
Walt- Brickowski
split
:
the
·
,
first
Manor, N.Y: yesterday and
0
will two sets
.
6-4,
·
·
3-6,
wtth Gary
..
face
·0o,wling
at
'
home
•:
saturday

K
_
amu~irbut-lost the tiebr~ke~ in
__
looking
-
·
for their first match the third set 7-6 .
.
Benue
·
Zim
a
victory
:
.
·
.
·
· merman
·

·beat-. ·
·
.
Francis
The University of New Haven Mayerohofer· 6-1;
.
6-0.
·

wonthe
i
firi"five si.rigle
:
matches
•.•
Felix
:
Bastian
:
had the

one
Tuesday to defeat the
:
Red Foxes . :
_
:Marist·
win
in singles and doubles
·
7-2. The netters lost their
-
season · play against· New Haven
;
Bastian
-
opener
·
·
against
·
Quinnipiac
,
defeated Colin
:
Chisolm 7-6,
.
6-7, 7-
.
Saturday.
·
5 and later teamed up with
New Haven's John Mar-
Mayerhoferto down Chisolm and
· ·
, ·
.
-
,
.
>
Th_i
-
s
·:,
·wEfeK
:
·
,
i
rt
i
'
M
a:r
·
ist
-
spo
·
tts·
··
..
.
.
.
Saturday, April 15 CREW,
.
.
Satur~ay, TRACK
&
FIELD,
Ithaca College, Away
·
Monmouth Relays, Away
-
Saturday,
LACROSSE,
Monday
,
LACROSSE, Mont-
Farleigh Dickinson, 2 p.in. Home clair, 3:30 P·~· Home
Saturday, TENNIS, Dowling, 1
Tuesday, LACROSSE,
p.m. Away
·


..
Maritime, Away
--
-
PLAYING
SOFTBALL
TODA
y
McCann Field at
4
p.m. Mongo's Bunch vs. Smegma Phi.
·
St. Pctcr·s Field at 4 p.m. Fifth Floor Leo
vs.
FuH House
·
Gang.
" T H E CA.BOOSE".
'("\
JiiW
t
.
I
[l..llU
.l
:
~ - ' T
.
.
r
-
-.,
. "TAVER_N,AND GATHERING PLACE"

POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y.
23
DUANE STREET
PHONE
454-9278
PARKING OFF
VF.RRAZZAN □
BLVD,
_
s·unday: Vineyard Night
Every Wine 5~¢
(Reg.$ l.00)
_
Monday: Half Price.Night
Tuesday:Cannonball Express
$3.50 all you can
drink
o·raft and Bar Stock ·
-
Wednesday to Satur~ay
7-11
Special
·_
·
.

.
, /
·,
Shots-Tequila-
Schnapp~-Jelly Be
.
an-65¢
.
.
. . /
Sour Hour Daily
_
:
4-6
p.m.
open
daily 11-3
Sandwiches
til
·
closing
Pat Ryan 8-6.
Softball
tas
of opening day, April 11)
The Marist
.
team of Brittas-
Brickowski lost to Marcuiller-
Kamuda 8-7 in doubles. CuITan-
Simmons lost to Prentice-Garvey
·
.
6-3, 6-3.
··
Against
:
Quinnipiac, the
.
team
split the
six
singles matches but
won one of three
·
doubles
.
mat-
ches.
·
·
AMF.HICAl'i LEAGUE
'
lllork
~:ai,(.-,.
\l
"
.itka."
·
ayi-
~j!~:~~::}B~n<"h
.
Snu-,:mal'hi
.
EASURN DIVISION
lost
Planet
_Airmen
Boltonaii"es'
The three Marist
wins
came
.
when Brittas defeated
.
.
Andy
Bluestone 6-l, 7-5, Curran downed
.
Mark· Lapensky
·
. 6-2
.
and
.
.
Morigo
Bunch
Brickowski beat Mike Allen 6-1, 6-
.
sth
Floor Chomp
J.
:
_.
·
-
·
·
eih
Floor Ermines
.
~
·
Ace
·
Heods
Poughkeepsie Penquins
w
I
I
0
(I
0
I.
l'iATIO:-;Al. l.F.AGUE
0
Slwahanllall
II
Ar••IJrachii.
I
MufCDin·r.o
I
Fifth Floor l.eo
0
Full House Gani:
·
FLOOR HOCKEY
3-0
.
3-1
.
. ·-
2.'1
.1-1
1
-
2
0
-
2
0-3
·WESTIRN
DIVISION
~heahorl Raiders
screw
Japp
e
rs
Last Storid
Amba
.
v Dukes
Dark Horses
BodAs:-es
Kamikazes
Would
OU
w
1
1
·
O
0
0
I,·
0
0
2.0:1
l•O•l
3-1
1-1-1
1-2
0
-
2-1
0-2
I
1
(I
sign up for a ifetime
course in applied
Christianity?
Our
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will take you deep into the Third World, to some of the most depressed and
.
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,
To God's Country.
As a Maryknoll Missioner, you can share the love of God
·
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·
You will practice some very practical Christianity, too
.
You might set up adult education
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.
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You
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I
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Maryknoll
Missioners
I
l
·
·
people who give their lives for people
I
'
I
DIRECTOR OF
ADMISSIONS • Maryknolf Missioners • Maryknolf, N.Y. 10545
f
I
Dear Father;
I
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Please send me information about becoming a Maryknoll
O
Priest
D
Brother
I
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'
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Name
.
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Stickmen
to
-
face
tough
·
·
wee
THE CIRCLE
April~_l3, 1978
Although the football squad is now
i.
teams.
Th~Red Foxes wiUstillplay"Siena, students
who
_ .
are
:
well-rounded
:
necticut state a'nd has coached the junior
National Collegiate
·
Athletic Association
··
Manhattan and Ni.agara clubs said the academically and athletically
_
. "The varsity ba'iiketball squad there.
·
·
Division
IIHeam
.
the
·
program is essen-
head coach.-
·
·
·
_
_ ...

·
,
1
students we are talking to are well rigid on
.
Malet feels all his coaches are dedicated
tially
.
the same as when
.
the Red Foxes
· .
-
After talking with the head coach Qf studies/' said M
_
alet
:
.
·
·
to the &>llege, and that they enjoy
were a club.
·
·
.
Albany state, Malet thinks he eliminated
~
·
"We have set grade standards which are coaching football. "They have · spent
But ne:w
_
head coach Mike Malet; who
some
·
of the scheduling problems
.
ihaL equal to or abovethose of
·
the .admissions money out of their own pockets to visit
replaced 13 y~ar veteran Ron Levine has
!
Albany encountered when they made the department We intend to have
a
two nighr future athletes; this
all
takes a great deal
every reason to
·
be optimistic; about the trl!D5ition to
·
a ~arsity level sport.
·

.
:
~
week st~dy ~a,!l for freshmen
.
who are
·
of dedication to
.
promoting a
-
good product
future. "lthink
.
the college was realistic
"We don't want to jump in full scale with mterested mbemg on the team and for any which I think the public is not aware of,"
·
when it made
a
decision to go Division
III,
.
a
programthat would allow us to fail in the ~pperclassmen who have difficulty_ with said Malet;
.
.
.
·
·
There is a11excellent brand of football in
.
beginning. We're looking to build a solid academics,''
-
said Malet.
.
.
.
"
The coacliing staff
:
mt?ets once a
.
month
- -
theleagueandtheamountofclubteamsis foundation,!'saidMaletinreferencetothe'
'
Coordinating the program with
-
Malet and has at least
·
one member on the
_
diminishing. Ag~od
·
division
III
team
will
'
schedule
·
. Th.e
·
team
>
is surviving
0
with
.
arefour as~istan~ coaches, Tony Celenza, campus daily.
.
-
·•
'.
<
.
•·
.
.
enhance
.
t}!e name
,
and reputation
·
of
basically no
·
more financialcommitriierit Steve Helhnann; Gec;,rge
.
Frick and LE?s
.
·
.
One area that Malet is unhappy about is
Marist College.".
.
..
_
>
·
·
·

·
-
~
·
·
·
..
. .
.
.
from the college
-
than whenthey were a McMillen.
·
·
.
.
.
.
·-
:
_
.
· ...
.
-
"
..
fhatforiner-
·
head coach Rori
Levine
isn't
t,<A
·
lot o~
-
the pr~en~
:
players have a
·
club sport.
_H
approved the
-
budget wiUnow
.
CelE:Itza will
.
begiJ:t
·.
his fifth
__
Yef!r at here.
"It
was his dream that we'd become
:
·
DUSCOnc~ptlon
.
.
that
.
:we
are pl~g ~n
incltidethf $40 incurance fee each player coach~g t_he R~d Foxes by
·
s~tchmg to
a Division III school. Without his drive and
_
goirig with all nE:w people. The coachirig
-_
!JSed to pay
>
·
.
·
·
·
· _: _'
_· · · :
.
.
.
.·'
.
-'
O!fensive coor@.lator after being defen-
enthusiasm we wouldn't
be
ready to
·
go
·
·•
staff isn(?t COIDDlltted to a one ortwo year
';
:
"Next
·
year's schedule is basically the siveJ>~ck coach for the last three
.
years.
with a varsity schedule."
'
Alot ofwhat
_
he
·.
·
·
program, we
:
are co~tted
:
to a solid
. _
same, people will
·
see
a
change in t~o of
A resident of LaGrange
;
Celenza is· a has done is overlooked by the younger
program," said Malet; "We are interest~d ·
·
three years when
.
we play Cortland'.'
,
said
._
·
graduate
.
of
·
Fordham
..
U:niversity and
·
players.Through him \Ve
;
became the most
:"
in
people who -~give us a strong 11ucleus
:
M~et who "can't honestly see
_
the team pr~ently teaches math at Arlington High
_
successful
:
team in club f90tball. We
.
whentheybecomejuniorsandseniors,•
~
.
he
_.
:
going
past
_
Division
III:"
-
--
:
·
.
_
:.;
.
·
··
· School.
-
.-
.
weren'f
.
undefeated bufvery
.
few teams
.
said.
·
·
-
·
.

·
·
.

.
AthleticDirecfor
.
RonPetrosaidhe
·
can't
--
A'resident of Hyde Park, Hellmann
-
is
-
·
beat Marist College. Manyteanis worked
-
·
·
"How:wedonext
·
yearwilldependonthe
_
_
see
.
the
:
team
·
goµig
·
any
-
further than beginninghiuecondyearasoffensiveline
·
all season longjustfo beat us
.
"
.
The first
rise
and fa:ll of our pres~t pltlye_rs.
'!
Malet
-,
~
-
Division
.
m
~
because there are too
-
many
·
.
.
coach after five
.
years
)
ts
.
junior varsity
four
.
years he
_
:worked
.
here he
·.
didn)
.
,.
ftf<'
is pleased
.
with
_
these
.
.
players,- most
.
of rules
.
and
.
1'.egula,tions
.
for
.
a
·
Division
-:-
1r
-
coach at Arlington Higlr
:
School.
·
·
. _
.
··
·
.
-
'
receive any pay,
·
Malet
·
said of
.
-hlS
,
\Vhom
~ave beffl,
conditioning on their 1eaiJi;
t
•1n
·
ordertohave
_
agoodDivislon
:

,
·;
_
AgraduateofNewJ?altzhealsoteaches
·
~
predecessor:
·:
·,

_
,
·
.
-
;
--
·
.
'
••,
. :
own. He said, he
Is.
looking to Jeff Hackett,
· ..
team
:
we'd
·
have to give - sch~larships
>
;I
.
in the ~lington 'Scho9l ~rict
·.
. .
·
Malet also feels that ~he tun~ a_nd
;
ef~ort
, ·
-,
Jim l?ierca,-Pat
Lanott~
and Chris Charter.
.
don't
:
see
..
the need for that
·
here.

The
A native of Hudson is newcomer Frick
director Steve Van Buren puts m is ~-
. :
.
•·
.
.
.
:_
.
)
)
_
in
·
.
the: :offt!ll.Siye
:-
ar~
.
~~
-
Mike
·
Ragusa:
.
·
:
cc,lleg~ is, rio(in
,
the
·
. fin~cial
/
sit~Uon
"
{9
_
::
__
who
:
~11 ·be: coiclrlng
.
~<!e
/
receivei:~ and
.
.
men~e ..
. _
,
"He
;
,
w~rks. · p~ying
i
~nd
,
r~on-
"
.
·
.
·· ·
· •
.-
·:
!3,
_
rad
~~8:Jld
,
qu,~;DaJe1;for defense,
::
,
~ke
·
·.
that
:c
_cornm~~ent .
.. _
Our

progrm,n
·
...
defen~ive
.'
_
bac~'.

.
,
He
:
has
;_
p)J.lyed
,
:
s~i-
i
ditioning equip~ent and selling ~ds f~rthe.
1
_
,,,>
:C.
\
,
.•
·
.
.
p
~tl:loµgh}\farist
.
110~-;has
.
a
_:
_P-ivision
_-
m
:
•)
Pl'Qvid~
-
some placeJor good)ligh
_<
scll
.
<>ol
·
p~ofe~si~naL
;
~f?ot~aH
·
_
-witJl
,
Columbi~
.
-
:
p~gram
;":
~ll ~thout ·:which we wouldn
:
_
t
.
·
·
·
!i
t
:
·
:
.
.
. _,
··.
·
·
,.
:
f~~b@Ju,m
,
they
.
'"1stlll
,
~pla)'!ng
_
tt,i~
.
.
·
\
PlaYers
:.
to
.
:
come/
.
'
·
said Pet~
_
;
.
.
•<
·
..
...
·

:
:
·
·
County.:Viking~.
,;
;
>
·
;
_
;
'
·
'
.
,
:
. ·
:,
.
>··
.
;
-.
('
-
-
_
surviye.•!
-
For
:
the
i
two

years
_.
that
.
Van
.
.
l
· _:
·.
-
-
·
·
.
-
. ·,
·
_
-
:
same
,H
1cbools;
:,;
St
;
-
:
-:·
JQbn's
,-
.
;-
IQ118;
:t
P.ace,
?.
·
.;,·:
It
is
illegal
for a NCAA Division -Ill t ~
.
Coaching
.
the defensive
·
linemen for the
-
·
.
Buren
·
has
_::
been
.
director
·
the
:
team
.
·
.
has
,.
~
~_
'.:
-~~~~
~
'
·.
',;:
:-
·1
f
::;t/
.-:'
L.
;JI>
,,
'
t~
,;
.l)
.
~
·?·
~·-
~
·
'
-
:
~
.
::
.
..
'
.
'


20.8.1
20.8.2
20.8.3
20.8.4
20.8.5
20.8.6
20.8.7
20.8.8