The Circle, April 20, 1978.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 20 No. 9 - April 20, 1978
content
Volume 20, Nu,r.zber 9
THE.CIRCLE
Marist College,.Poughkeepsie, Ne\Y York 12601
.
April 20, 1978
Chief unhappy
.
with
·
· __
tire
-
violatio
·
ns
..
.
By
Kathy Norton
.
.
priorities
.
and
·
'
ail
understaffed
_
_
. .
.
;
.
.
•.
.
.
;
• maintenance department
.
could
_
·
F'alI'Vl~W F~re.,; ChieL
.
Willi~ .
.
be re
.
sponsible for the
·
slowness in
··
.
Sutka said
.
he_ 1s
.
_not-happy With corre.c_ting the hazards; He added
th~
rate at '!hich fire ~azards ~nd
·
t~erf are other
.
problems
,
in-
·.
110n-com~,hances
·
~re
,
bemg volved but
-
said he
:
would rtot
._
correc:ted
-;
at;;_Marist Colleg~. discuss them.
.
·
·
·
_ ·
Sutka
'.
~aid,
.
:
.'The
.
~ll~ge
c...
!5
:
_Su~a
·
said
'
correcting mariy
-
res.po_!lsible for ever}'.'
·
;5tu9ents v10l~t1ons
•
.·
and non-compliances
C
safet}". They;a~~
n~~
liv~~
,
up to
.
hav~ to
_.
d_o. with
.
cost
:
However,
.
.
thatresponsibility.
.
.
·
.
~
Su~a said,
,
many are "poor
·
.
As of March; 9 ma_nY
.
?f
.
the f~re housE?k~eping
"
practi
.
ces{' and
·
hazards cit~ m a_ fire mspel.!tion should have beeri corrected right
·
_last
..
May st~
.:
~
exist., ~u~a ~id. a~ay
:
Any_
violation
-
is.
i,a
lot"
r
_
eport
.
s of ~rrected
·
viola~ons
.
said Sutka, but
.
each one niust
·
be
.a~e sent _t<>Jlim and tha~
·
::~gs eyal~at~individually:
·
-
,:
.
·
,
afe inovmgafo~g slo~IY:
_
..
·
.
.:
A<!~or<i~g to:Sutka,
a
·
fire in-
-
.
.
.•
Excep~ for
-
,_
en_i
,
~fgencies, the• sp_ecti
.
onis requited
~
e-very year.
:
:
..
amollilt,. ot. t
.
~~
-',
a,llolJed
'.
.
for H~ add~d that another.
.
inspection
.
_correct1~ns
.
IS
•
~e~uied
•
by
.
Sut~a
_
'iwould d¢finitely be done irUhe
.
.
_.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
_
c1.n1 M
_
an
_
st
.
,
He saidj0 months
·
is near future."
·
He also sai
.
d
·
t
.
hat
G
.
C
.
.
I hutn/(u•rr~ llr'lnlh
a
..
.
reasonable" amount'. of time ..
. . ,,
.
.
'
1
·.
.
.
'
overnor arev
•
speaking with reporters follo~ing dedication
'
of
-
the new
AV
. • -
-
.
.
-
for niost
:
torrections Sutk
.
·
"d
·
·
lllaJ_or
•
VI~
at~pns found in the
Friday
.
-
.
.
. · • center on
..
.:.
-
.
-
··
..
, < _
.
.
,
. ·
.
.
-
~
~i
last
,
mspection were corrected.
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
_
.
.
.
•
.
.
_
.
.
·
.
.
·.
.
:
?
·
the
..,
oilly sol~,tton 1s
;
O'correc_tm.g
.
Sutkasaid student cooperation
,
r
.
_
.
.
<-
·
.
.
,
.
.
··
.
.
_
·
.
.
.
.
.
-...·
·
,
:
,
.
.
..
.
_-
. .· .·
.·
:
.
.
.
--
tlle haz
.
ards, a~diadded,thlS
IS
.
is"poor'' atMarist.'Hesaidsome
.
·
~ Of'
.
CY
i
(fJlfllfJ
.
C>l~IJ<;
,
~~
.
c,
i
.
¢/
r
.•
·
p~(.J
,t,
·
up$~~
1
~~j~
I
~~th
.
~pdget,
.
~;~~~~
co~~;~1~e&1~~
1
~
.
:">
.
By
B0tb Weaver, D3vidP~tter,
state legislature. He
;,.,d
tb8)ill goais
we~.;.
ls
.~build
ii
better
::-
Re 11 wol
<It
n
-
a m
e d
·
.
ii(\:.
: .
...
,
,
"
,
_
:
J
>
_
a~1-~
~~
,
.
.
_·
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:-
, _
·
.
wa~ t~e
.
fir~
.
~f
.
1~
.
.
~md
·
.
m
:
the
--
and
.
.
.
st~onger
.-
ed_t,ic_ational
.
.
.
:
.
:
_
:.
•.-
.
.
,
·
_
.
_
: _
.
.
..
·
!(.
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.
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.
G~~~rn
.
or:
:-
I¾'.ugh
~-,
C~reY
..
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a
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n
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J~fiy
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.;:
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._
noill!C~d,;~1i;iday
,s
tw.o;:.tu~tion
·,.
aid
,:~,
§~
-
i!
F<
Jh¢
;
~sa.0@s
cf.
;1Ha1fi.
'
wi1i:
=::
~
our
:
:mvestmefit'
:
m
?
edu~a'tfon
·
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..
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·:,
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.
.
'"
·
:
pi:ograJl)S
:
·
;
providing
.:'·,
relief
-
.
for
.
:
-<~pecially
.
\
lielp
~\
fairt.ilies'"
?
wfffi
·
;'"
~~:-::
tiiius
,
Foy;-spresident
'·
gav6
'
the
.:
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.;
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st~te
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res~'tlenfs
\
.:seria~g'
-
.
,·
tlieir
..
·
more ·
:.
-
th
:
aii__
~:
:
two
::
_ciiilclr~~
\
fo
,
.
..:.
opeh~f
agdres~
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~
fr'hnf
:
o( aP:,
,
-
.
;
·C
•
••
_
..
•
•
•
•
• ,·:
•
.
_
children -or themselves -through colleg~:
.
.
-
.~
.
- :
: ·
·
.
>
•
·
:
.;
.
.
proxirn,ately 200
;
people
;
Foy"
.
sai~
C
..
_
college.
;
:· .
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
C~rey;
•
wh_o
..
·
a~~ved ,an
·ho
.
ur
i
-
.he
.
was
·
gratefulto both ~pellmaij
:
·.
·
.
Carey
.·,
s~~e
-
.~n
/
the _Ma1:1st l~te
·
.·
.
by
.
hehcopter
... •·
b.tJCause
.••
•
Of
.·
·:
arid
·
B,eirn~,
.
and also
·>
said
'-
'the
chcipel
.
during a _
_
d~dic~tio11_ ~rong_ head
-
\\'.Inds,
.
pl;'aised
.both.
audio center arid television sfodio
·
ceref!l~ny for
·
au~o-visu~l and
~
Yrancis
·
Cardinal
.
S.pellman and
·
.
.
.
would
..
nof have
,:
been
.
possible
television centers
·
mthe
,
hbra1:Y, · Jose~h ~thony·Be1me
_
fonheir withoui their suppi#L
· ·
:
.
,
<
,
·
·
..
OQe
.
pr1>gram allows _a family
-
contribut~ons to 1:duc~t1on.
.
_
Glenn Watts, presideilt of the
·
.
!lP
to
_
a_ $l,009tax ded
_
uction ~ased· ·
.
The Beirne Audio yislll:ll
_
g~n~er
.
Communications
.
Workers of ..
on tmUonco?1s ofa coll~ge m the and
.
th~ Spellm_an Tel_ev1s1o_n
America, and
·
.
.
Bishop
·
Joseph
state
:-
:
,
.·
.
.
.
.
.
•
.
.·
·
Studio were dedicated .
.
m their
Pemicone also spoke at the·
.
~e s~cond program
·
_a~ows a 11ames.
.
.
•
.
..
·.
·
.
.
.
·
·
·
.
-
.
. ·
ceremony .
.
·
•
.
·
·
·
.
, .
..
.
famHy
,
tosave upto$?5~~ a bank
·
.
~arer s~id
_
b~th
.
~p
.
ellm~n and
,
..
The
.
Joseph
_,
Anthony Beirne
.
account tax-free
,
.
until withdrawn
#
'3ei~e s hyes had,, been hved to
family attended the dedication as .
for colleg~ expenses:
.
.
.
.
enrid:1
all of <_>urs. .
.
;
.
. .
.
·
special
:
.
guests.
·
·
Carey signed the bill m Albany
In
mtroducmg his
.
tu!tton
·
aid
··
·
earlier, after it was
·
passed by the
•·
programs
;
.
Carey said ·•one of the
.
.
'
-~
·
.
·.·
,
'
.
.
'
.
'
.
;
.
.
.
.
.
'
..
c
.
0
m
.
..
.
·
p
u.te
r
C-h
.
a ()
aeo-ve
r '
_
·
.
ByJelfMcri~weii
·
.
m~!ya:,~1::'~:0i::·:..lrtt'ihe
.
0
Robert Rehwoidt, chairmanof sci~ce
:
department chairman
-
-A~--
-
•
•
natiifal sciences at M3rist,
·
has next
.
-
semester
iri
Rehwoldt's
•
.
year
,
for file space
:
and
'
two
·
-
capable
of
printing information
been chosen to direct
_
the absence.
.
.
_
-
computer terminals, Carolan
·
faster
·
than
.
the 1401,
·
the ter-
National Program for the Science
Rehwoldfand
·:
his
·
wife, Kathy,
.
Marist's . $80,000
-
IBM
•
1401 said
.
minals here cannot because
-
they
Educationforthe Handicapped, a
·
and three of his five children will
computer
.·
is
·
being repl~ced
The 1401' 'Yas purcha~ed by
,
·
lack a high speed printing
.
o~e year pr~gram designed to
·
move to Washington D.C
.
by
·
By
.
Ma~gie Schubert
because itJs
c:
~~rs
old and
.
Marist in
.
~974 in ordei:
.
to save mechanism. He added the college
give the handicapped a chance to
·
Au~ l, when the program
.
no longer reliable"
:
said
,;:.
Kevin money;
·
·
,
he said
,
· :
Marist was does hav~ a high speed printer in
get
\
involved
:'.
in
:
·
scientific begins.
·
•
.
·
•.
.
..
·
·
·
.
Carolan, director of computing paying $42,000 per year in rent, use6n the
.
140tbut.c~anging lt
research-
.
,
.
.
·
.
.
.
-
Rehwoldt came Jo Marist in
and institutional'research
.
·
..
Carolan
·
added,
''If
we had over to
.
the new system would be
The progrcU;Il
.:
grew
:
.
out
.
.
of 19~~
<
after teaching
\
as an
.
Toe 1401 is being replaced by
· ,
co
.
ntinued
·
to
:
rent the computer
··
expen_s~ve. "We_
,
have
·
~~e
:
CongressioriaI·conce~
:
a~o?t the
·
assistant professor
.
·
of cheIJlistry
an on-line
.
system;
·
rented
.
froin
•.
we
.
·
wQuld
.
have. paid
·
.
more
>
in
.
,
caJ>l!.bil1ty
.
of
.
hookmg
·
up a
·
high
~~ck of hand~capped
.
mdividuals
·
at Vassar College for five years.
CornE!ll M:edical C9llege,
·
.
which rental fees than in actual cost:'
:
'
/
speed print_er
..
to the riew com-
m research programs, says.Reh-
Rehw9ldt is director
'
ofthe Marist
costs approximately $31,2
.
IXLper
·
Althougli the
·
new
·
system. is put~r
·
but
.
it'~
a question of
woldt,
.
who was
'
stricken
·
with Research
·
Institute,
·
·
an
.,_...,. _ _ _
....,. ___
..;.....;. ______ ~_.;;-;_· --~-~~-..;.;.;..... finances right now,'
'. ·
Carolan
polio as a child.
.
.
· .
,
organization
.
comprised
of .
said;
·
·
·
·
·
:
Rehwoldt will t)e paid $30,000 to
-
faculty m~mbers who provide
·
Carolan said the lack of speed
help develop an evaluative scientific information for outside
iri
·
printing information affects
·
pr9cedure
to
.
determine which companies. Rehwoldt
.
says he
:
eff_l~iency, ''the times
it
hurts us
research programs involving the hopes to retain some of his
are for grad~s and the times we
·
handicapped will-~ funded by
·
director's duties by returning on
dothe
·
first
•
billing
-
" for students.
the
•
government.
·
weekends
.
.
•.
·
·
·
·
·
_.
.
.
.
·.
·
He
·
said Marist
·
did riot
:
.PUY a
•
Congress appropriated $7-50,000
He is on the board of the
Marijuana
· .
smokers
;
· are ~efoila~t, Paraquat, is b
·
eing sold
:
new system because
,
it "really for the
.
program; however. Reh
<
Hudson
:
giver
:
Envii-onmental ·
.
warned that _lethal contamµiated
.
m lhis
,
country but there have wasn 'tfeasible for us to purchase
:
·
woldt said,
/'
That's
.
not a lot of Society~'
·
·
·
·
·
pot may be_mputchess
_
County. been fewcases
-
reported in
•
the our
-
own
_
machine."
.
Carolan
·
,
·
CountyDlstnct Attorney John East..
.
·
·
·
·
...
:
·
>:
iadded that to
:
purchase a ~om"
r:--,-
.
-:--:---
.
----~--------.;;
.... ._:._~---..
~~y~
~:yabskeed1·11
'
pefrrosom
· ·
nsM
:
feeax
·
i~c
.
·ang
.
1
:
a
·
stA ~wo,ceaelkhib· ghut ~ncohooonlesthila<lse~tdkieded
·
.
puter
.
which \'~tisfli~s o$6ur rieed,s,
l'n
.
..
.
s
.
i
d
..
e. . .
.
.
·
·
:
•
-
.•
.
•·
·
,
-
.
.
.
·
·
·
·
.
·
·
w,
•
costs
.
approxµnate y
.
54;467:
.
m~ri111ana
c-
covered.
·
,
with
·
.·.
···
a
·
.
:
the
.
death to the toxic marijuana.-
.
'l!e":tsai_d
.
·
.
,
th(
.
college
·
wa
.
s not
r
, .
.
,
N
.
.
e
.
.
.
w
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.
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.
rs
_
.
.
..
pg
.
.
3
.·
..
.
.
,
.
poi~no~defoilantto contllct his
.
,
<.
King
·
said·
.
·the'y
:
are
:
in.'. 1>repared to make the investment
·
-
.
p9~fis~e;
·
ted
~.
r~~Y-
_
•
:
w.~ll
;
;
·
n<>t
·
.
<:
bfEf
·
ve~tligatiilgllpossibilit,fes other
.now
.
.
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<u~c~
.
;
1_or
/:
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.
n1uana
_.
A"'.
p_eop ~
•
are i f['.Olll the
·
bad pot.
.
..
:.
carofan
·
said
:
Cornell's
'·
com•
,
·
.
f~~~s91~
..
sa.~d;
:
·'
•
,
.?\
,:..
<.:.I
;. :;
,
~QJice ~nd- drug officials
;
are
·
piiter
i'isafarsupe1:ior
machine''
.
·
'
.
"
.
•
·,
·
.
.
P
..
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•
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.
testforcletecting.the marijuana
.
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.
et
·
marijua11a
:
tainted
::·
·
with
..
the
··
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_____
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·
Page2
THE CIRCLE
April 20, 1978
-
Weekend
Manzini ·escapes
THE OIOSEN/PEOPLE TIME
fORGOT-Hy~
Park Driwe-ln
Routt 9. Hyck P&rk. CACJ.2000
•
'
~
•wt•
al du,k.
•
CASEY'S SllADOW/YOU LIGHT
UP MY LIFE.-OYntook Drr\'Nlll.
R1t
.
44.uil Ot-Gumo. Rtt
.
$5
n.11
Offllook.
Pou&flkttpu:'.
CU•J4.fS. Sbow
staruar
dvsL
8LVE C'OLLAR-R001n'dl
• ·
llttatn
.
RL 9.
llyck Puk
.
CA9
•
l000.
SATURDA.Y :iri;IGHTFEVER-
f°uhUI Ori•~ln., RI. 9
0
Fishkill.
896-9790.
Bo,.,
orrlC'C' opNt.s
•t
7
:
00
p.m:.
Shu•
Sluts
al
d
1uk.
•·
DUTCHESS COMMUNITY
(.'OLLEGE.~1
.
Film
~
llestn
Strtti-. Main
Lou.,
8 p.rn.
•
Sun. BIKk C'ulNr.al Day ,p
o
n ~
try
Bbck Scudc
n
l U
n
k>A.
Spc:abu.
films.
ruhion show. dltuter. and
.
d»ltt.
4 7 l
◄ 500.
HYDE
PARK
T.radin
:
g Co.
Spring sale now
_
on:
-
LEATHER BOOTS
A
·: ~·
,
r
,,..llM!!fi.'..'
'
J
\
.
·
1Jl
.
·
,
:
CLOGS
:·
SANDALS
·
-
·
tttx't\\l\l
.
tOIX'tS
-
-
.
.
.
<"
JEWELRY
·
:.
··
:
_
.ii~
·
.
-
·!
,,
Adjacent to Barkers and ShopRite
.
FOR RENT
3 bedroom furnisljed}jhuse
;
Naragansett, Rhode Island
_
I block from hay; 3mi~utes
·
from
ocean
.
Available by week or month
Contact Dr. Rehwoldt
Extension 287 or 454-8267
Park
Di
·
scount
f
Beverage ~enter
__
_
Albany Post Road, Hyde Park 229-9000
•
4.99
-
.
•
..
··
-
'
By
Mary
Yuskevich
Though
-
Dina said no one
·
stunt
.
•
makes her more nervous than
~o
-
insurance
.
company
.
in the any others,
.
"you never know
·
world will insure him
,
his mother
·
when something is going to go
"still gets scared when he does wrong."
.
•
his stunts, but the wife of escape
.
Monday night at the Mccann
artist Mario Manzini
·
~ays it was Center, Manzini, wearing three
··born in him" ,to take chances. inch silver platform shoes and a
.
Manzini;
33,
never practices his
·
crash hebnet, hung
·
upside down
.
stunts
,
according to his wife, from a burning rope attached to
·
Dina Manzini, 27
;-
except for the the ceiling while
·
bound by- hand-
nightly hour in the bathtub when cuffs, a straight jacket and 50 feet
he practices holding his
_
breath. of rope .
.
Manzini escaped in one
Manzini said he has been minute and 13 seconds. He told
performing esc~pes since he was the audience
·
before the
,
stunt,
four years old
.
Thougb
··
Manzini ·
·
this st
i
.mtcould mean my death,
"
likes to please the audience,'' he
.
or something serious/'
said he never makes a stunt last
.
Manzini; for the first time ever,
longer than necessary
.
·;I
always al~ escaped ~rom two s~cks, anq
·
try
,
~
_
o get,o~t as fast as ppssible,"
,
a gia11t plas~ic ba
.
~ while hand-
he said
. . .
·
.·
·
·
·
..
cuffed,
~
m
~
s1x
--
mmutes
and
.
45
.
·
·.:
Vinc~
n
t
":
.
Taiierffo
/
6ne of se~nds
>
.
Volunteers from the
·
Manzini's assistants, said it is a~die~ce checked
.
the bags for
.
·
interesting working with Man-
gm:unick~ an~ holes.
.
.
.
.
zini. Talierdo said Manzini is
.
.
I<
or his fmal act, Manzm1
--sure of his capabilities." escape~ from a water filled milk
Taliercio said he wasn'tnervous can while handcuffed. The stunt,
when Manzini performs his which lasted f!ve minutes, ~as
stunts, adding
"
he told me
I unfortu_nately performe~ beh!J1d
would get paid whether or not
·
he a curt_al:11, t~e secret !)f his escape
gets out."
·
remammg mtact.
-
·
·
·.
,
Announcing
.
Marist
College
proudly
presents
.
.. Extra-Terrestrials
.
..
starring
.
F:-ashion '78 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; Marist students
$LOO.
·
Students wanted for Part-time
employment
~
If you are in-
terested in working up to 15 hours
a week and earning up to $3.00 an
ho~r providing aide or attendant
services
-
•
"
for Marist's han-
dicapped
·
students, stop by the
office of special services, ,room
105
Champagnat Hall, between
8:30 and 5
:
00 for further
in-
.
formation
:
Psychology
lecture
and
discussion
~
Father Aqunias
Thomas, Ph.D. will be lecturing
on ..
An
ExistentiaLApproach to
Human Development
·
" The
Importance of the NOW" f'.riday,
April 21, 2
.
p.m. in Fireside
Lounge, sponsored by
·
the Un-
dergraduate Psychology Club.
All are invited to attend. Coffee
and
·
doughnuts will be served.
The second payment for Senior
Week is Friday from
JO
a
.
m. to
4
p.m. at the switchboard in
Donnelly Hall
.
Make checks
payable to Marist College class of
1978. May 5
will
be
the final
payment day
.
NominaHon
deadline
.
for
Studenf Academic
.
Committee
Representative is Friday
;
April
21.Subinit nominations to Box C-
:1:14, or to the commuter union box
in the commuter lounge
:'
-
Elec-
tions will be held April 27 and
28
in Donnelly Hall.
'
Gerontology lecture series -
River
Day planned
.
.
,
,
·,
.
,
.
·-
'
:,
:
,
·
·
:
"Social Security or Insecurity"
1
Lecture_ by Greg Kilgarlff of the
business
and- · ,
,
economics
department on Friday, April 23 at ·
:l
p.m. in the reserve reading
room of the library. Refresh-
·
.
::
ments
··
will be served
>
.
·
:
-
j '
By Beth Weaver
there
are
..
quite
a
few
possibilities, and we should know
.
_Tickets for the
.
April 22
A
band, free beer, arid ham-
by Thursday or Friday.''
_
.
..
Yankees vs. Milwaukee Brewers
burgers and hotdogs for
,·
slight
The campus-wide
·
.
River
,
Day
-•
game on sale now, Tickets
-$6.60.
cost
.
will highlight the campus-
started
:
·to di~courage the
·
im-
·
!<'or information see Kathy Pinto,
•
.
wide
:
River Day, scheduled for
·
prcimptu .I_Uver
:
Days thaf oc
-'
room
·
C-727
-.
•,
·
Tue~day, A_prU 25, according to curred in Uie past,,.said Troiano.
·
·
·
'
\
Maria Troiano, College Union
"
It
is an effort to create
a
day of
.
.
Members of the Cross Country
Board ( CUBJ president-elect.
It celebration, but a peaceful day of
·200• Club who have paid the
~ll be
-
a traditional River Day, celebration without getting
.
into
-
entire $20 of their,ticket
•
win be
with the band outside,
.
either the
·
ugly things that happened in
eligible for
.
four grand prize
against Adrian Hall or the
.
old
·
the past." She also said Dean
drawings of $500 - $250
-
$100 and
gym.
·
Zucarrello is a
"
little
·
concerned
$25 tomorrow at
3
p.m. in front of
Tr~iano said the band has not as to whether or not this is a way
the cross country display case in
been chosen yet, but there is "no
·
to fight the problem."
·
Donnelly Hall.
problem in getting one
."
She said•
All people who have n~ paid
\
·
Entrance around corner
•
,
•
I
·
•
•
their full $20 must do so before 2
p
.
m. Friday to Coach Rich
Stevens; c-o
.
box 814 or pay
_
their
cross country team member who
collects .money for them before
tomorrow.
.
,
Ther:e will be a meeting for all
interested in-joining the
X-C team
on Tuesday at
8:30
p.m
.
in tne
McCann Center
·
classroom.
Anyone who can't come to the
meeting should contact Coach
Rich Stevens before
,
Tuesday .
.
/
.
An electric etcher
is available
at the security office for students
to ·-mark personal belongings.
Students can also register
the
make, model, and serial number ·
of their stereos,- cameras, etc.'
with
·
_
_
the security department.
Students
•
will also
.
be
supplied
with
anti-theft
stickers warning
.
burglars that student property
is
registered and identifiable
/
..
'
.
·,.
.
_-
.
,
··
.
.
:.·
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·
·
·
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:
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·
·
·
·
· ; -
:
,-
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-·
:
-
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·
·
·
·
·
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·
·
·
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·
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·
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··•
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April 20, 1978
THE CIRCLE
Page3
New
leaders outline
priorities
Student
·
Government
.
By
Lar1'_Landon
Frank Biscardi, president elect
of the student body,
will
assume
leadership next semester of the
Council of student Leaders (CSL)
as written in the new constitution.
Biscardi said
his
first
·
priority
·
as
president
will
be
to "open lines
of communications" through
regular meetings with President
Biscardi says he
will
be "at-
tempting to get voting power on
the Board of Trustees" over the
summer
for
a
student
representative,
as
other colleges
have. Now, students may attend
meetings of the Board of Trustees
and voice opinions, but do not
have any voting privileges.
Viewing student apathy as a
major problem
·
on campus,
Biscardi hopes to persuade the
presidents of student club.s and
organizations to motivate their
members to participate in college
activities.
·
Student
·
Academic
~
Committee
by Joe
Ford
.
Newly-elected president of the
student Academic Committee,
Liz McRae said she hopes to
'
Frank Biscardi
··
increase student involvement in
Foy
and
other
•
key
ad- the committee next year.
"
We
ministrators,
·
such as Fred want~ get a lot of people on
·
the
Lambert, assistant dean
·
of committee who a,~e interested
lltudent life
.
One
.
example cited and want to work, she said
.
by Biscardi, would be to invite
·
The ~AC now a member of the
Anthony Campilli
business Co
_
uncil of
.
Student Leaders,
manager, to stude~t financial exist~ ''t~ provide better
_
com.:
board meetings
iri
order to munication betwe_e~ students,
discuss the student budget. facultf ,
.
and
·
administrators,''
"Stude~ts will have the op- accordplg to_ _McRae; The SAC,
po~~mty to express their 5!1e said, elicited
_
student reac-
opimons to administrators tions to the proposal of the cpurse
through me," said Biscardi, and schedule change
Jast
semester
.
added that "the CSL will take in
every dimension of the college."
Biscardi hopes to improve
.
the
allocation of
.
students
·
funds;
making it ''more
·
efficient than
.
_
.
this year.'' Biscardi was aided in
·
alliicating studetit ftindslhis year
by the
.·
business
:
office. Although
·
funding this year was delayed,
Biscardi says
·
allocating funds
next year "will
be
more ef-
.
ficient" and
will
be "closely
audited."
·
CORRF.CilON
.
The article "Maintenance overwhelmed by campus vandalism
·
quoting Fred Janus, assistant maintenance director saying "I've
,/
given up because there doesn't seem to be the amount of concern
·
among students and residence advisors" was incorrect. It should have
read "there doesn't .seem
to
be
the amount of concern" among
students. and residence
-
advisors are overworked.
·
.INTER"SHI_P in
·
HIGHER EDUCATION
SIX CREDITS
Applications are now
being accepted for
cu~rent juniQrs who
want to he considered
for
_
a~missions
-
internships
-
next
fall.
·
.
:
All inquiries should he
.
directed to the
.
·
Office
of
Ad~ssions
'
·
Greystone
McRae ,
a
junior,
sata
however, the SAC is not well-
known on campus. "No one
knows what the S.A.C
.
is, and,
even
if
they do, they don't know
what it does
.
" The new com-
mittee president said she plans to
change
·
that through election
publicity
.
·
"
The SAC is made up of three
students from each major," she
explained, "and two students
from each non-major, such
as
philosophy." The members are
chosen through student elections.
McRae wants to put up signs and
publicize the election
as
well
as
the committee itself. "At least
it
will make people wonder what
the SAC is," said
McRae
his
floor meet.Ing. Then the floor
representative brings it up at a
house meeting, the two
IHC
"'1embers
at
that meeting make a
note of it and mention it at an
IHC
meeting where
it
is
discussed
ana
possibly some action
is taken.
All
of these meetings are sometimes
poorly attended, many times by
no IHC members.
The
grievance
Chris Faille
Part
of the
·
committee's
member's
duties
include
discussing
proposals
from
faculty chairmen on new or
changed courses as well as· at-
committee would bypass that
tending departmental meetings
.
long chain and allow people to get
McRae , presently
student their complaints much more
government secretary, said the directly to the level.,,
·
SAC ~111_1° lon~er be a sep!lrate
Faille said the committee
orgaruzat1on as 1t has been m tl_le which he hopes will
be
formed by
past.
.
the end of next semester will
lnterhouse
Council
.
By
Jenny Higgons
• have five people on
it.
Faille said
two of the committee members
will be from the IHC with the
.
other three being non-IHC people,
picked by the other two IHC
members with approval of the
full
council.
·
.
!<'aille
·
said another of his
01>-
Christopher Faille, elected jectives is to change distribution
lnterhouse Council president last
,
procedures of th~ Stude~t
week,
in
an unopposed election, 9ovt:~ent budget because it
said his first priority is to form
an
i~ distributed somewhat lop
-
lnterhouse Council grievance side?Iy,. where the value
.
of
committee in which chosen service lS overrated
.
"
meinber.s "actively seek out
_"When the Exe~utive,, Boa~d
grievances and
.
submit a report d1s~usse~,- allocat1o~s,
said
at every IHC meeting."
F_a11le,.
1t takes into co~-
. Faille said he wants to form the
.
sideration how many people 1t
grievance committee because
.
_
serves,
.
for
example, WMCR can
·
'
the present system of
bringing
:.
be
heard
·
by
-
~ny
peop\e;
-
ln-
grievances to IHC is awkward." stead; I wo~d l~e
to see clubs
"If
a person wants to have
~
and orgamza,t1~ns allocated
•.
gripe, for example excess dorm money on the baslS o~ how
_
mu~
noise, known to
.
the IHC, said e~ch mem~er benefits from it
Faille, "he has to bring it up at himself! with the
.
number of
.
people it serves conung second._"
Commuter
Union
by
Vic Small
-
John Hughes, newly elected
president of the Commuter
Union, said
his
first priority
is to
publicize the union. "We can do it
with the help of the Circle, by
word of mouth
,
and by posters,"
he said.
Hughes, who ran unopposed
and won an election in which
20
people voted, said commuters
must be
made
aware of the union
.
Many, he said, don't even know it
exists.
...
Commuters
,
said Hughes, are
different from residents because
it is difficult to reach them and
get them involved. "To residents,
the campus
is
their life. Many
commuters have jabs after
.
school. To them, Marist is just a
place to go to school." He said he
has to make the Commuter Union
more appealing
.
.
Hughes said only
20
people
voted in the election because it
wasn't well publicized.
Hughes said. this semester will
be
used to build for the future. He
said commuters have shown
more interest this semester than
before. Volleyball and softball
teams, comprised entirely of
commuters, competed tn in-
tramural events this year:
Hughes intends to form an
advisory council of
·
union
members who regularly attended
meetings. Hughes said he
is
not
sure what his responsibilities are
as president. However, he said he
doesn't intend
to
do everything by
himself. To accomplish anything,
he said, he has to work
with
others,
.
.
.
.
..
. .
. _
.
Hughes sa\d
:
ne
:
ran
:_
-
lot"
:
president because he
:
wanted
,
to
be more involved.
"Last
year I
just went to classes and went
home; that's it
..
. I don't feel I'm
wasting my time. I have a
challenge."
·
WEDNESDAY:
½
PRICE
NIGHT
( except bottle beer)
THURSDAY: LADIES NIGHT
MUSIC BY
.
MANZANITA
I
I
'
.
LUNCH AND DINNER MENU DAILY
..
!
'
..
.
.
,.
~..,
Page4
THE CIRCLE
April 20, 1978
. THE
lETTERS
CIRCLE
The Circle is the weekly newspaper Of the students of Maris! College and is published weekly during the school year exclusive
of vacation periOdS by the Southern Dutchess News Agency, Wappingers, N.Y.
G
M N lt
co-editors
erry c u
Y
Ken Healy
Dave Potter
. associate editors
Dave Ng
Regina Clarkin
sports editor
Beth Weaver
layout ea.itor
Paul Nunziata
photography editor
Jim Birdas
business manager
Mark Rudolph
advertising manager
Rob Ryan
distribuijon manager
Staff: Joe Ford, Kathy Norton, Mike McCciurt, Jimmy Perez, Margaret Schubert, Lark Landon,
Carmen Rivera, Judy Norman, Victor Small, Susan Stepper, Maria Troiano, Mary Yusk'!vich.
Jo~ Ma_yer, Ra!ph C~pone,-Jini Dasher, Alan.Jackson, Jenny Higgons, Gerard 1Biehner.
Chr1siflogan, 8tf!ve Freeman, Tom _J~urke, Mik:e" B~~-_Clare Amico. D_on Purdy
·
·
Priorities.
pus, and as long as fire hazards remain ·on the·
1::ampus •. he. is not performing his job
adequately. Budget -constraints.
an
un-
. derstaffed maintenance departm~nt and
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 preferred. We reserve the right 10_
· edit all letters, and letters must be signed, but names may
be
withheld uPon request. Letters
will
be
published depending ui5on availability of space.
Art stolen
To the Editor:
Sometime during the weekend
of April 8-10, again a photograph
was stolen from my exhibit which
is hanging in the Tunnel Gallery
of the Library. The first week
that· my work was on · display, ·
someone removed one of my
pieces: . a photograph of a cell
door inside Green Haven Prison.
!Lis irreplaceable. The second
· WfiS
a·night scene, a l~dy crossing
a snowy New York City street. It
seems to me that, if a person likes
. my work this much, . there are
other ways of obtaining them.
As
I
prepare for the second
seclion of my· show, I find. my.
selections are influenced by these .
losses, and choice~ are made. to
exclude singular works that
cannot be replaced. ~e problem
of theft sets up barriers for the
availability of work not only in
this intimate gallery but also in
the Campus Center Gallery:-
Naturally, many artists are.
reluctant to exhibit at a -school
which has a reputation for theft
and destruction of art .works.
Reports of these two incidents,
and one which occured in the_
Campus Center Gallery . last
weekend have been filed with the
Town of Poughkeepsie Police.
Both the. artist of the· Campus
Center works and myself. are
prepared to pursue this with the
police as far as necessa~y. :
·.
We .. urge that the. works be·
returned volillltarily ·so. that· we
can consider thefacidents dosed. ·
.
Richard Barbara ..
. Marist is not meeting its responsibility to
correct fire hazards on campus, according.to·
Fairview Fire Chie_f William Sutka,·though
the college is responsible for "every student's
· otJ1er prioi:iiies· are riot acceptable excuses for .
devaluing human life/
.
: .
.
.
.
·A.
·p·"
·o·
.10·.
g·
.·y·_· · . .
owed.-. .
·
8:30
p.m,,
(a half, hour late). .
Hmvever, Waters is not'solely to blame for
__
Second,·
hy
being short·on help,·.
the college's negligence. Other administrat<irs
·most oftl11? nigh~ there-were oruy
safety." ·
.
. .
Su!ka said Marist's other "priorities"
could be slowing down the correction of.these
hazards. He also said the correction ofsuch
hazards is upto college officiaJs.".' .
.in
charge of budgeting and policy should b('
To the Editor:
two bartenders. Third, these lone
ri1ade ac~!mntabl~ for ignoring the campw/s
. I would like to extend my . bartenders saidh ·!hey •'Yer¢ ... in-.
fire hazards:
. .
. .
than~· to. Dolly_, Bodick, Paul
structed by t e1r. supervisor,
· · If
w· · · · · ·
b ·
·11
d..
· f
. .
.
, . .
(Mr. Abromovich) to pour·1_ess
,' ... _aters
IS
not: emg a owe to per orm-
_Conway,an_d .all other
c_y.B.'
thanorieoiiriceofliquorintcie_ach·--·•
.his
duties as securitv director becai1se of the·-
· ~em_bers 1nv~lve~- m. ,coor- . ~drink;
La_
st, .but· not le_ast,
Mr.
short-sightedneis o(his sujleriors. he cannot
~atmg the Sprmg Dinner Dance
Abromovich 'closed the .bar,
be held t<itally responsible for the dangers · this past- ;weekend ..
_
l t
gave
twenty-five minutes short.oftl:1e
presente(i. by the hazards. B~1t, if this is th('_ ... students a ~-ff~rentway to spend
five hour open barthathad been
· Any excuses of priorities other than the .
safety and · well -being of the ·Marist coin- .
munity; is disgraceful. Human li".es do not
run second on a~y list of priorities, however;·
those in charge · of. correcting fire hazards,
which ."threaten the life· of everyone on cam- .
pm~; seem to have a different list of priorities.
· cast>. it ,is W ater·s duty· to inform th~ campus •· , a ~aturday m~t.· ~ven th_o,ugh
promised. Any student spending
ofhi.-; problems - and more impgrtantly~- the · _ everyone ~as drmkm~, tile night· thirtv·dollars for one night should
liazards which exist for the comm11nity; .
·
we11to1_1 withouUmy disturbanc~s
expect fair and courteous· ser.:
occurrmi:
It·
wa~, a .sha~e-that -·: vice, not-abuse aild .. trickefy. I
the ev1:nmg had .~o h~ve .~ dilmper
think that Mr: Abromo~ch owes
put on 1~
by
our thr~y. birnq.uet
the · Mai:ist
.
community an
aditorial
. Irresponsibility in ni_;itters involving public
safety cannot be tolerated. Anyone shirking ..
his duty in providing for the security of the
_c11mpus should be dealt with immediately. . .
It
is very tragic somP people can. at iimi•s; . s~pervisor, . J\l · Al>ro~ovich._
apology for his actions.
confusi• issues and , their impact on
,their
O
first, . h_e annoy~_d , the• people~
·
· . · Sincerely,
; But with whom does the responsibility lie?
The blame must fall on the person in charge
of providing . security for ·students, faculty,
administrators and staff, Director of Security
f1;1low man. The· importance of, Imm an life. · attending by ~l)en_mg th
:j()()f.S
at'
Charles Bender.
and safety should ·,1ev('r b~ forgoth•n.-
~mcl
A.b · d. · -·
these people; Then the, ad-"
' s_1_10u~c_l 1,1ewr- br eq~iate~I
:~"i~h
~lOIH'ta~~:
.....
'
s u'r · .. '
.
__
minist~ation tries to change that
, .1hu
s. Some of the .idmm~strato::-; on tins : · ·.
· :
-., -
...
·
. by.hav1I1g the floors·inhabited by ,
.J~seph Waters. Water's job is to supervi~e
the safe:t~ · ~nd' prot~ction ~f~}~r_on~:;?.11 ·c~rr
.
rnmpus should .~ei:nembe_r tlns.~for thPt~t•t>m
Dea_r Ed1t~rs;
. , · -
: ·.
p~ple· with·the_same·interests ... ·
-~ty
h.a".~~,m.01!1t'!1tan\y fo~got~t'.:t!t· .... ·,, .- . _ _·
~~ghty-~~ne dollars: a~--;-cr~<llt·_,_:Lu~~~y; _tnat was·shoCdown·
by -
·
Y;.i'WpOlilt'
·, .'·' .. t'"
·
::..''
·
'~--
•·
-p--,
11
•
1
• ., . . . . . ••
"I,,., • .,. ·· ':
·dunn& the:1977_~1978,,s_ch_o~l year-•· the·students:1,
1
1"~·!'·1<1' ·:-. crr,:'•'1·•:~
,·,:'H~-:.,. ,.·•: .. , ·_ ...
·· ····.··
·
·
anda.Jumpton~nety-sixdollarsa·_
Now, the administration
is··
.
. ·
- ·
-
.
•
. credit during the 1978-1979 schoo}
goirig to raise . our tuition:· I
·
•
ye~:! At. this :_rate,' _during· my · realize that i:ates are going up all
,
·-..
semoryear, <lamafreshinanJ,I · overbutaraISeofsevendollarsa
·
could be pay~
$110.00
a credit I
credit is absurd. lam going to
be
.
.
,
came to
.
Mar1st College. because
faced to take summer courses at
.T'. he -
G·_os·p_e
I a
c.co
rd,1"
n
g·_ _
to·
·c·
a m_u
S
-
of the reputation tha~ th~school
another institution tci help me -
had .for its commurucat10n arts defray the costs .of college. I
department .. With proper. grades
would much rather see_a gradual
I have the chance to study abroad · increase in tuition. ·
by Bro. Joseph L. Belanger
which, as Eliot had put it in The Wasteland,
"It
can . connect - nothing with nothing." The
. and_ p_ossib_ly g_ain an internship
~f . Marist is . supposedly a
dunng ,my semor year.
"hvmg and
learning
ex-
In the Greek myths Prometheus is eternally
problem is clear. Now the sol!ltion. Is the answer
punished by the gods because he stole from them .
to cop out? To commit suicide? Camus answers
what was supposedly.Qnly theirs, fire.~St!eing
no; no type.of suicide is justifiable. Physical
humans deprived ofthis fire and _
thereby suf-
suicide · is cowardice, but equally so is
fering on earth, Prometheus went .. to·· Mount
metaphysical suicide which evades the problem
Olympus and succeeded
in
bringing-backfire to
with philosophical thinking, and more so is
humans, but he w~is consequently pinned eter-
religious suicide which attributes this · world
t
to.
nally to a mountain side·where vultures forever
God and humbly·,waits for the_ world to come ..
eat away his liver. This myth animated the life
Camus maintains that evH must' be resisted,
and thought of Albert Camus
(1913-1960).
This
·even
if
seen as emanating from God. The second
Nobel Prize winner was born but not raised a
stage in building the earth is set forth
in
his 'next
Christian. However. his message to· the world
novel, The Plague. This nqvel travesties the
was quite the same a:.. -:ttnt of Christ, "Love one
supposed Christian·answer to evil in the world in
another." To _do this, though, one has to first
the first sermon of the Jesuit priest Paneloux:
recognize a problem in doing so, then posit a
"My brothers, you are miserable; my brothers,
solution, and finally give oneself totally to the
. you deserve if. ... Ponder tpat and fall oii your
task. Camus spent his life doing just this and
knees .. · ... ;Behold, my brothers,. the immense
trying to get others to do the same. He wa·s born
consolation
.I
wanted to bring you,,, The wo_rst
in Algeria of very poor pa,rents, and he
grew
up
cop out possible: blame
it
on God, and therefore
in the.· slums of Algiers where his everyday
don't do a thing but wait for eternal life her after!. __
friends were :barefoot Arabs. There he learnt'
Rather, affirms Camus, let's band together and
that all men are equal. Despite dire poverty, he
fight this thing. That is the 'Christian' message .
. was enabled to pursue his education and obtain a
of Camus in The Plague-: all humans of good will,
·Licentiate in Philosophy.' Early on,. Camus
in all walks of life and of all persuasions,, are to ...
learned that there are problems·iil life.Asemi-
form community, to relate, and to fight evil·
pro soccer player at age 16, he was then struck..
together. _Even Paneloux joins the brigades later .
by an ahnost ·
fatal
attack of tuberculosis/This
and fights side by side with laity; theistic and .
left him with a clear realization that life is indeed
atheistic; to better human life: And in the end,
·,. short and not to
be
wasted. He plunged tern-
the plague
is
conquered. But . community. is
porarily into hedonism, revelling in the
composed \ of . individuals .. · Camus caps · his
Mediterranean, sun and. surf. But . hedonism
message· by a direct appeal· to each person's .
cannot satisfy the thinking person's lust for life.
conscience. "Where do I -fit in this scheme?"
Camus had to share his perceptions with other
.
''Am
0
I honestly trying to:help people have life
hwnans, steal fire from the gods, .and combat
··
and have it more abundantly?!' These questions
suffering at all limes and in all places, even
are pondered in Camus' third and last novel; The .
. though such suffering is seen by some, especially ·· ,Fall. "Who ainl?" "What am I?" "Ami-for real·
Christians, as coming from God and therefore to . · or phony?" This third and final stage is indeed
be borne in silence and. submission. Such an
where all re-creation of the world must start and ··
attitude revolted.' Camus,. and he set about
end: let it begin with me, honestly:
<. · . ·
mapping his re-creation of the wor~d.
. .•
In
all his other essays and short stories 'as well
.
. · I really anticipated having a
perierice," · they .
.
are certainly
good four Y,ear_s . here .when_ · I making it.awful hard for me to
entered, school
m
Spete~ber.
l
contm.ue my \'learning.and living
wa_s the only-~freshman.
Ol,l
the experience" becaus·e of increases
floor, but was ·accepted and made in tuition and room and board I
to,
fit
in. by
.
the· rest. of the people . ask you, is the administration dut
on the f!oor with mostly juniors -for themselves or the students?
and • seniors. I got the . chance to . ·
•
Sincerely
grow through, interaction with :
· Jim Towns~nd
FRANKLY
SPEAKIN(3
.... by
phil-frank
: The plan comprises, three . stages gf · con-
Cm,nus stl'.~ses tlte ltey i>oint'that r~reating.the> :
.sciousness. First, humans must recogoize that
--world·is'not up to':the .'established' civiLand · ·.
there is indeed .. a problem. Without.this, .dear .
religiolis dealerships; Rather, each one of us '.is .
sight; nothing. can
be
don~. Camus_ f~rcefully
truly a priest, a 'pontifex;' a builder,of bridges. .·
, shows us·the root problem of human alienatior.i,
·
On
January ~;, 1960, this -.~'conscience of our· - ·
.non-relatedness,'inhisshatteringTheStranger. • times!'t-~s extinguished-.· in .. air•- 'absurd'•
1hls bri~f novel depicts .. an ~•absurd'.·worldJn
· automobile ~ccident_-,Age 47. Ufe completei: ..
~~
..
,;;..;...
'
____....
-
.
April 20, 1978
THE CIRCLE
PageS
Lambert-couldn't make 8: 30's
Doing Job Well
Editors note:
1his is
the
Administrators believe
Lambert is doing his job well; but
·
fourth in a series of
students voice various opinions.
• administrative evaluation'i.
Antonio Perez, dean of students
and Lambert's supervisor, said
Lambert
.
is
•
"doing his job well,
but of course we all have room for
·
By Bet~ Weaver
..
improvement. He's working
·
on
·
and
VtcSmall
,
.
_
.
his (improvements), as
I
am on
·
·
·
-
mine."
F
.
red L8fiibert,t'ho
.
·.:::
·
.
P~r~ and Lambert meet once
was
e
irst
-
a week on· a· forinal basis, with
.·
.
Champagnat
other administrators, and
·
meet
.
:
hous~n.iaster
.
a
_
nd almost daily
.
00
.
an
:
infonnaL
-
.
·
~
.
-.
rehgious st~dies basis. Perez said
'·
We'v1:i'had ciui
.
.
instructor, said
_
he mirior disa
·
greements"
,-
and
.
.
-.
.
·
.
gave
_
_ up teachmg
.
believes
·
Lambert
is
concerried
~ause bem~ housemaster _
_-~vas
with student needs. He thinks
time ~nsum~g . and ~e
Just
.
Lambert is "very accessible" to
couldn t make his
8:30
s
.
students.
·
.
·
,
·
·
Lambert,
37,
came to Marist in
·
Lambert is evaluated by Perez
·
1969
;
•
after teach,ing for two yea~
·
and six
_
peers; three of whom
at
SL
.·
Joseph s -A~ademy
m
Perez
;
. names and three who
Tex~s, and ~hen f~ur years ~t
··
Lambeif names.
·
In
September
Christ the K~g High school m
the goals· and objectives for the
·
Lo11g Island City:
.
_ '
-
.
·
year are discussed between the
Lambert,
.
a
:
.
1?63
Man~t two, arid are reviewed in January
graduate,
_
became mt~
i:
ested
-
m
and June.
:
·
.
housi
_
rig
:
after _-two years
.
of
.
Two
.
of
.
Lambert
'
s
.
.
resp'ciri"
~
i
te~chmg_ l:lnd
_
bemg
,
9oll,:lemaster
.
,
sibilities,
-
working
.
.
with
·
campus
.
a~ ~an~
·
:
At. the
tlIIl~
i
-
the
.
. ·
ministry and student government
director .
.
of
·
residence
··.
~esig~ed,
·
were
·
:ctro
·
pped
···
this
.
year
:
They
_
and Lambert resumed hisJlut1es.
:
..
were
.
taken over
·
by Father
He has been assistant dean of
Richard La.Morte
.
arid -Dean
students since
1976. •
·
·
-
Perez, respe~tively
,
Lambert
said this was because he took on
·
·
·
.
--
R~sponsibilities
the added responsibility
.
of the
-
'
director of- residences,
.
after
'
H
·
is
;
·
res'iwnsibilities indu
_
de P
_
et
.
er
A m
_
ato
·
ac
.
cepted
_
a
·
position
· ·
·
· ·
·
f
h
.
·
Fred Lamber.t
su~r
:v
1s1bn
ci
t e campus center,
·
at another college.
·
student' activities; discipline and
·
Other adniinistrators
·
and staff
·
appeals· processes
,
health ser-
-
members ~lieve Lambert was dition."
·
Students had various opinions
vices
;'
and the food service
.
·
·
doing
,
his job
_
within
.
the
Andrew Pavelko, maintenance on the way Lambert is doing his
·
L
amb
·
ert
supervises
the guidelines set by the
•·
ad
-
director
,
said
"
We've
·
had our job
.
One student said, "I feel that
housemasters
·
and
;
student
·
ministrative manual.
conflicts, but we get along very Fred Lambert is not responsive
·
•
residence staff,
·
the
,
coordinator
Dolly Bodick, coordinator
.
of weir We've come to
.
an un- to the students' needs and wants.
_
o~
..:_~
o_llege activities, and
:
·
the
_
campus activities, said Lambert derstandi,~g of ~ach one's He has made so m~ny promises
coordmator of _health s_ervic~s
.
,
is ulti_mately responsible for problems.
He
_
said Lambert - to the st_udents which hav~ n~t
·
~e
,,
W!)tks
,
do~~-lf
,
~it!t
.
. ~he everything that goes through her
·
"will
assert himself wh~n he feels bee!! _fulfill~. For
a
person m his
dir~C!
_
or of counse~mg
-c
seryices;
:,
office:
·
'Tho\lgh
.. :
she
"
'
does
'
'
'
DO(
there
_
should
be
an a~1011
,;-
.•
~
· •
pos1t1on, he_ 1S
~~t
very open
.
and
·
_
the disector of ma1;11t~nam:e,
,
the
-
-
always
·
agree
·
with
·
Lambert's
Jos~pp \\'.aters,
.
.
direc~or of understanding.
_
_
associ~te
_
a<:!ademic
.
dean,
'
the
,
policies, she said "I don't think
'
secu!"ltY, said
·
Lal!lbert 1s sup-
.
Lambe':1
.
said ~e wanted t,o
.
coordmator of
,
the comp~ter there has
·
ever been a time when portive. "He has cooperated
·
kpow which promises he hasn t
center, th
_
e director
·
of seciiri\Y we can
'f
argue and discuss until
·
won~erfully well with _security,
:
kept.
~~
added that · 'people who
an~ safety, and the bursars
.
we come to an agreement. That
is
and _m turn we have tried .~o do wor~ ,,wtth me found me to be
office.
the nature of _our working con- our Job as well as we can.
.open.
.
.
.
.
.
Although some students voice
dissatisfaction with Lambert,
other students say he
is
easy to
get along with. "I've found
him
to
be very reasonable and un-
derstanding
,
" said one student.
"He's a disciplinarian during the
day, but after work, he's a lot of
fun."
Lambert said many students
hear about
him
through friends,
and
form
opinions without ever
meeting him personally. He feels
that part of his job is not to be
liked .
.
"
I
don't think any
disciplinarian is liked.
I
make too
many crucial decisions con-
.
cerning
people's
lives
.
"
Examples of his decisions which
have been found unfavorable by
some
·
students are: the in-
stallation of the new alcohol
policy, the elimination of singles
in the fall semester, the room
proposal, and the decision on the
removal of all personal items
from a room during Christmas
break.
Lambert
,
a former Marist
brother, said he does his job well
because he works with ex-
ceptional people. Nthough there
are times when parts of his
policies need compromising
,
such as the residential ob-
jectives
,
Lambert said he
"doesn't ever recall having any
of my concepts or policies totally
disliked by my administrators."
He added, "I'm willing to take a
second look at my decisions
.
"
Lambert
,
who resides in
.
Hyde
Park "overlooking the foothills of
the Catskills" with his wife, Julie
,
said
_
he misses the opportunity of
sitting and talking to groups of
students.
A
gourmet cook, who admits to
making
"
a mean egg
foo
yung,"
cooks and plays the piano to
unwind.
.
·
His
dream
'
is that
one
qay
Marist can be one place in the
·
world where the living
·
- learning
concept really works
,
adding
'"I've spent eight years trying to
accomplish this
."
LipJzzans
leap
to
delight
fans
r
,
.
~/.GERRY.McNUL'IY:
..
,__
The Royal Lipizzan Stallions from Vien-
na,
Austria
performed before over 4000
people this past weeke~d
at
the McCann
Center.
,
..
··
"
.
.
-
•
:
·:,
FRI thru THURS, APR. 21-27
I
.. ,
.
(aJ\'!);1-.,
r - '
··
7
' L ~ J
..
~
-
,;.;,/
R
RICHARD PRYOR
HARVEY
KEITEL
SUPER SAVINGS ON ALL YOUR
LIQUOR NEEDS
~~
!
4.19
·-==
BLEN
.
D
.
•.•.•
.
•••
Jli;br Jark
Gin 80'
GIN 80° .
.
•..
.
.
•...
VODKA
80°.
·
• •..
•
. ·
:;::.:.__ GIN
90° •••.•••.
I~ BOURBON
8.6° ..
6yr. old
SCOTCH
&0°
·
• •.•
SCOTCH
86°.
■
• •
4.49
4.19
'
4,19-
4.89
.
4.99
4.99
:
5.59.
"'....,,._....-
-
-
-.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
.
-
.
THE CIRCLE
April 20, 1918
Students to dance for charity
ByJ.Perez
Tony Salvia and Elizabeth
McRae will tie
thinking
of a $400
trip to Bermuda during the
Marist
College Dance
.
Marathon,
·
April 21-23. "We hope to make it
48hours" said Salvia "but we will
dance as long as we can."
The dance contest starts on
Friday at 9 p.m.
in the old
gym
and continues until Sunday at 9
p.m .
.
Contestants will dance for
four
·
hours, resting for one, and
continue at those intervals for 48
hours or whoever holds out the
.
longest. Second
·
prize is $200.00
and third is $100.00 with a trophy
for the top three couples
.
"I
.
plan to get alot of rest and
start out slow" said Edwina
Kelly
.
"I'll have to keep a slow
steady
·
pace, not go too fast, and
maybe get
_
a ~it to _eat or
something to
.
drmk durmg the
breaks.'' Kelly
.
is
.
entering, with
. Oliver Jones, both· of which are
Marat students.
Kathy Comish believes
-
that if Dining Services.
she stays excited enough, she will
Thus far, 20 couples have
stay awake.
"I'll
probably take signed up to enter. The cost of
showers during breaks, this will sponsoring a coupte
·
is $25.00. The
help keep me awake" she said
,
sponsors include Casablanca,
Her partner, Christopluar Faille, McDonald's, Fitchett Bros
.
.
and
said he plans to jog a few days the Caboose.
In
addition,
·
the
before the contest in order to couple has to provide $25.00 worth
build stamina. "I also plan to of pledges.
drink alot of coffee during the
Al Abramovich, chairman of
dance, it can keep me going for the dance marathon and food
.
hours
"
said Faille.
services manager said the dance
The
Budweiser
Brewing contest will be like a regular
Company is sponsoring the event, mixer, while the contestants
estimated at a cost of $1,000. This dance in a separate area.
covers priie money, trophies, T-
Cable television, channel
12
shirts and radio advertising .
.
·
will provide hourly reports on the
Money for the bands will come contest and will Oash a phone
from door receipts. There is a number to call pledges on
·
.
the
cover charge of $2
a
day.or $5 for weekend
;
The proceeds from the
a three
·
day pass for non-Marist
.
.
event
.
will go to St. Francis
people. Marist students must pay Hospital in Poughkeepsie and
-
$1.50
per day or $3.00 for a three contest organizers are counting
day pass
.
Drinks and food will be . on
·
pledges to reach their $3,000
sold on a cash basis by the Marist goal.
·
·
~
~
Future
--
-
sh
.
ock
··-
affects
·
.
stt1d
.
ents
·
S~san
,
Stepper
.
Toffler, author of
Fu~re
Shock," married at least twice within
.
the
·
said Norton"is that we make 100
·
next ten years;
-
and that by the
:
College students are the sad-
tunes more decisions in one day year 2000 we will
_
be
_
a~ked if we
h
Id
da
tha
·
n our grandparen
_
ts made in
_
want to use
.
euthanasia fof our
dest people
in
.
t e wor
to
Y
•
·
'lb"
ch nging
because of the "future shock"
·
one month
;
"
·
·
·
·
parents. "
mgs are
a
h
If
that fast," he said.
.
.
they are experiencing, according
·
"There are two and a
·
a
.
Norton believes our values are
. to Joe Norton, History professor
applicants for every job," said constantly
.
beil)g forced _to
at Marist .College.
.
Norton. "Future shock is when
d
Norton spoke to Mar.ist
someone
.
is trained for
-·
a change.
"In
1969,"
he
sai .•
"abortion was illegal. By
1973
1t
students
·
wed.nesday; April
12
in
professional job,
-
goes to 300 in-
.
had become legaL" Accordingto
House I of Champagnat Hall on
terviews, and is told no."
·
·
No_rton, all our ideas and values
what "future shock
"
is.
Norton believes that the world about life had to change.
.
.
.
.
,
According to Nortori everyo~e
is
changing too fast for people to
.
"Every age
·
has had a future
de,velops-expectations about what
·.
.
rely on the past to govern the shock,,. said Norton,
"
so,:ne age
_
s
they're going to be doing the rest future. "The world now has have had more time to adJust to 1t
of their lives
.
"No one expects,"
·
approximately
il.3
billion tha
·
n
·
others." He bel
_
ieves the
he said, "to be digging ditches or people;" said No~un, "by the
working in
a
factory ~he rest of Year 2000 that is expected to
·
problems we experience becaus
,
d
their lives." He beheves that double
.
We have to learn to deal
·
of
.
future shock habilit c~us~
· when these expectations are not
.
with things differently in order to
people."~ lose th
f
a rl/"
0
·
e
- met;
,.
people
':
experience
·
''future deal with them."
·
·
·
.
·
·
·
part
oft e presen wo
·
·
shock."
:
'
·
·
" .
·
.
·
According to Norton 40 percent
.
· "One of the concepts
1
of Alvin
_
of college students will
·
be
t
y
J
;
~
Somewhere in the'Third World. your family is waiting .
.
Your b,others .
.
your-
·
neighbors. men
.
women arid children very much in
_
l}eed of
,
your love.
,,
'
Imagine h~w much you can do ior them. You can share God with them. g!ve
them hope and peace and dignity. You can counsel and educate them. give
·
them food. clothing and medicine. Even in their world of grinding oppression.
you can help set them free
.
·
.
·
It will take a lifetime. but
-
after all. they are your family. In God
'
s eyes. every-
one is your family
.
:.
·
·
·
,
I.et us tell you more about life as a Maryknoll Missioner
.
Send us the coupon or
·
call (914) 94
·
1
~
7590
.
Ask for Father' Wurth.
it
could be your ticket home.
I
·
-
.
- -
·
·
· .
·
- - -
'
---------M3i
, Maryknoll
-
Missioners
·
·
,
I
·
,
peopl
_
e who give their lives ~or people
I
·
I
DIRECTOR OF
AD~ISSIONS
_
.
• Maryknoll Missioners• Marykrioll, N.Y. 10545
I
I
Dear Father:
•
·
•
I
Please send me information aboul becoming a Maryknoll
I
I
·
Priest
Brother
Sister
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Name ...
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_
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--
·
- - - -
-
-
--
-
-
-
--
:I
! ~'.,~"•
:·
:
. -,
·-
.
_s,.,. __
__
·
_ZipCode
_ _
•
_
I
I
Age
_
_
;-
·
.
•
..
PhCJile
__
_
_
.::.;_
_
.
_
.
___
__
_
Class
.
.
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I
I
College
...
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.
..
-
,
_
·
- ...
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-
:
--
·
-
-
- - -
·
- - - - Y~ar~~Gradual
i
on _
_
·
· - -
.
I
-----
·
------------------
April 20, 1978
THE CIRCLE
Netters record now 1-4
By
David
Ng
John
Brittis
and
Walt
Brickowski are planning to enter
the NCAA Division III . tennis
doubles tournament in May at
Rochester. Although · the Red
Foxes are
1-4,
Brickowski says
Brittis and he play well together.
The netters dropped a. 7½ and
. 1
1
11!
decision to New Paltz Monday
at home. They visit Vassar
Friday.
Joe Coogan, in his first year as
coach of the team, says "Brittis
is an excellent doubles player,
he's a steady player. Brickowski
is
a power hitter. They com-
pliment each other," he says.
The Brittis-Brickowski duo are
2-1.
.
In
their second home match,
the · Red Foxes managed one
singles victory against New Paltz
when Larry Simmons downed
Pete Wilson 7-6, 2-6, 6-1.
· Brittis and Chris Curran split
two sets 3-6, 7-6, and the third set
was cancelled because of
darkness.
Curran lost his singles match
earlier
6-4,
6-3. Brittis cropped a
decision 6-3, · 2-6, 6~:l. Scott
Rosmam topped Brickowski 7-5,
6-4.
Gary Seymour, of New Paltz,
defeated Tony Mario
6-0,
6-3.
Arthur._Hawkins bested Red
Foxes' Frank Mayerhofer 6-3, 6-
1.
· Pete Wilson and Rosmarn
downed steve Gilbert and Sim-
mons 10-3, and the Seymor-
Hawkins combination were
victorious over Steve Porath and
Mario, 6-1, 6-4.
Marist 7, Dowling 2
In
a match against Dowling the
Red Foxes captured five of six
singles matches to rout the Long
Island school 7-2.
·
Coogan said it
is
basically a
good team but lacks one out-
standing player, and depth. He
also said because of scheduling
problems among the players, the
team has never played with its
top five or six players.
The Red Foxes dropped a 6-3 ·
match to Kings College at
Briarcliff Manor April 12.
Trackmen set . records
By_Scott Carlton
The Marist. College Track
Team set a
·
school record for the
sprint medley Saturday during
the Monmouth College Relays.
The team, made up of freshman
Rich Duff, sophoµiore · John
Hamilton~ junior .anchorman
Keith Millspaugh and senior Rich
Crump combined for
a
time of
. :i:32.3. The team placed third in
· the college division and will
travel to Westfield for a meet
Saturday.
Cub softball
The Red Foxes other entries
included Jerry Scholder running
the 5,000 meters, with a time of
15:22.4. He placed seventh.
This
was Scholders' first race· in more
than a year.
The Red Foxes also entered
a
mile relay team of Crump,
Millspaugh,
Hamilton · and
Scholder. The team placed
seventh ·"ith a time of 3:29.8.
Scholder replaced Duff in the
race because Duff pulled a leg
muscle during the sprint medley.
Entering this Saturday's meet
will be Crump and Millspaugh
who will run the 880 trying to
qualify for future championship
meets.
·
Scholder will . run the 5,000
meters and Hamilton will run the
440 dash. Peter Velez will pole
vault, and Matt Cole will
run
the
3,000 meter steeple chase.'
Because the team did ·not ·apply
for the Penn Relays before the
deadline they will enter a meet in
Hartwick, where the runners
have· a chance to qualify
for
the
1C4A's an~ the NCAA meets.
Players of week named
~" ..... , .. By,fat4r_ltj~ ·'"·• ..
Champions
Kevin Kelly defeated · Ron
Clarke 21-6, 10-21, 22-20 Thursday
for the in'trainural· handball
championship.
Dave Soucey . defeated Bob
Kozakiewicz . for .. the wrist
wrestling championship.
Floor Hockey
The Lost Planet Airmen vs.
Sheahan Raiders in Floor Hockey
plaroffs today.
. Coed Softball
In
coed softball the Walkaways
forfeited to Smegmari Phi and
The Bosys-defeated Leo House 8-
5.
SwimMeet
Ann
Luber outswam Walter
Matuszek and John Shannon with
a
time of 32A seconds in the 50
yard backstroke entry at the first
intramural swim meet Tuesday
night ... ·
,,,
In
another close race John
D'Alessandro beat John Mayer
with a time of 39.1 seconds
compared to Mayer's time of 39.2
seconds:
Barbara
Krozser
finished with, a time· of 44.1
seconds in th~ 50 yard breast-
stroke.
A male intramural record was
established in the 200 yard
medley relay,
by
backstroke
Stand.ings
Standing as
of
Tuesday,
April
18
AMERICAN LEAGUE W L
Black Eagles
3
O 1.000
Walkaways
2
1
.667
Sprockeyes
2
2
.500
Smegma Phi
1
2 .333
'Mongo's Bunch
o.
4 ·
.000
NATIONAL LEAGUE .
· Sheahan
3 O 1.000 .
Ace Heads
3 1 .
750
FullHouseGang
1 2
.333.
Muff Divers ·
0 2 .000
Fifth Flooi:-Leo
. 0 •2 .000
Matuszek, bf east ,stroke· Mayer;
....
CUB Softball.
butterfly, Dan· Benoit and·
freestyle, Kozakiewicz for
a
time
The CUB Spring Softball
of 2:14.6.
League finished its first week of
In
other events Shannon placed action Friday.
Of
the 150 men
. first in the free style with a time· participating in the league two•·
of 27 .5 seconds with Kozakiewicz were picked as player of the week
( 28.8 sec.) and Kevin Vianna by the ten team ~aptains; A six
( 30.1 sec,) taking second and pack of Heinekin was split by
third respe<;tively.
. .
Brian Schmidt and Gordon Kast
In the butterfly .event ·· Benoit of Sheahan for their outstanding
placed ·first with 33.30 seconds hitting_in their wins over the Ace
over Luber who· had a time of · Heads, Muff Divers and the
Full .
33.37_seconds.
House Gang.
Want to Land.
a.Good
SulltmerJob?
There are more than 200,000 openings
this year! Paying summer jobs of every
description, for p~ople of varied
interests-jobs in the U.S., Canada, Great
/ Britain, Europe~ and Asia.
REF
371.425
s
Here's where·you'll find them ...
hoto/Paul '\"unzinta
Chris Curran preparing for a shot in Monday's tennis match
against New Paltz which Marist lost, 7½ to I½.
This Week in Marist Sports,-
Friday, TENNIS at Vassar, 3 p.m.
Saturday, CREW Temple, home, 8:30 a.m.
Saturday, LACROSSE, Dowling, home 2 p.m.
Saturday, TENNIS at CW Post, 1 p.m.
Sunday, CREW Connecticut, home, 8:30 a.m.
Tuesday, TENNIS Ramapo, home, 3 p.m.
Wednesday, LACROSSE Stevens Techn, home, 3 p.m.
Wlllld..-&
~
.__. -u ....::.. .
~
..... , ..
h.~
7~Unisexliaircutting
·. ·
For Guys - Gals . ··
Super New York Cuts
Shampoo, Cut, Blow Style
·prom
·5.00 .. · . :.
His
& Her Body Perm
Curly or Soft with· Cut
.From 15.00.
I
17 So. Hamilton St., Poughkeepsie
(½
Block south of Main Mall)
·
471-4383 ·
M-S 9:30-6:00
-
ilii"
~ - •
- ~ - c ~
'
1
1
TAVERN AND GATHERING PLACE"
POUGHKEEPSIE, N, Y.
. 23 DUANE STREET
PHONE
454-9278
PARKING
□ FF VERRAZZAN □
BLVD.
Sunday: Vineyard Night
Every Wine 50
4
(Reg. ·$1.00)
Monday: Half Price Night ·
Tuesday:Cannonball
Expa
~ss
$3.50 all you can drink
Draft and Bar Stock
Wednesday to Saturday
1~11
Special
·
shots-Tequila-
Sc_hnapps-Jerty Bean-65
4
Sour Hour. Daily 4~
p.m. _
open daily .11-3.
Sandwiches
til
closing
I
.
!
I
i
I.
THE CIRCLE
April
20,
1978
Carew hits net often-
CreWS lose
at_ Ithaca
Billy Carew, a sophomore from
Deer Park, L.I. has been named
athlete of the week· for the week
ending April 17. A lacrosse
player , Carew scored three
goals against Farleigh Dickenson
University Saturday and_ two
goals against Montclair State
Monday.
. ByDave Shaw
Jim Palatucci, Bo Mason, and Marty Smith, along_ with
Charles .Joseph,.
Bill
Graham, -coxswain Mary Ellen Minze, the
The Marist crews found it hard Rich· Neal, Bob Missert, and Red Foxes finished with a time of
to make waves this past weekend Frank Hildenbrand at the bow. · 7:52, compared to Ithaca's first
in the waters in Ithaca. The .The CO"XSwain was Mike Davis. ·place finish of 7:45.
Athlete of.
varsity, junior varsity,. fresh-
The junior varsity heavyweight
Coach--Joe Eckelman's ·other
· man, and women's teams- all boat found the competition very freshman
team,
the
h W k
found the.water rough as Ithaca rough, as Ithaca's junior varsity heavyweights~ ran into .,;ome
t
'3
ee
outstroked all of the Red Fox .heavyweight boat sailed past the · rough water, and were· out-
Carew, who lived in the Bronx
teams, and St. ·Joseph's varsity Foxes, although the lightweight • stroked by over 30 seconds.
for two years . never played
won,_·_ too. This Saturday, the team fell short of Marist by one Stroke Joe Neal, Jim Kerrs, Ken
lacrosse until this season. "A lot
· Marist crews will hold their first· . second.·
· .·: . · ·
Wohl, Brian Morrissey, Jerry
of my friends in high school were
borne meet of the, season facing
In
a race that found Marist Mayerhaufer, Bob Murray, Fred
good players and went to colleges
Connecticut College at 8:30 a.m. behiilcL:from, the· start, C:oach Lothior, and b·owman Jim
that had good lacrosse teams.
Billy Carew
This past Saturd!iithere wasa Caldwell's 'team . made
a Raimo, and coxswain Sara
They taught me, plus a few ~ys
_tough varsity heavyweight ra_ce;
comeback try ~t the·end that was . Sowinski make up the freshman: on this year's team; co:captams, . said he knewthere were only five
as · Sf. Joseph's, Ithaca, and· too little;=too· late .. Strokes Dave heavyweights who just ~o_uld not
Kerry Ripp, Phil Cotennec. and returning team members and "I
Marist were about even after the. Fe1·n,- ·Joe· For· d,·· "'on· ·y. Lynch, ·combine· to_ •give Ithaca ':a_ ra
__ ce_ ._
Lo ·
M
lin. ·. "
·
·d·
c
re·w ·
·
·
1 ·
·r
.1,•
we
er o, . sai •· a
•
had a good_ -chance ofp aymg 1 I
first J_OOO meters. They· all c
__ ame Ralph" Des·1•derl,"' ·Dave Davern, -
The sour luck of ,the Red Foxes
· Ab. ·
··
c
·w wants
·
usmessmaJor, are ..
.
kepfat it.''
·
.
- ·
off strong,- at about 42-43_ strokes Mike Ball, Mike Lonza, and was compounded during the
fomvn
his own business someday.
He also scor~d a goal with one
per minute. At- 500 meters, St. bowman - Wayne Schmidt, with: -women's race, as with 500 meters · He ran cross-country andtrack in second left in tne game against
Joes pulled• out to a
.
half-length Sue Dubatowka . · as ... • coxswain, into the meet a full crab, ( oar out
hign school-in addition
to
playing Keene-State and he had an assist
lead over Ithaca, who in turn had .·found-.. themselv_ es· •--_21_seco_rids_ ofse_ quen
__ ce)_ stopp_ed t_ he-boat_ for
• ·-
·
·t ,_ ___ - b
n
·
·
d
M ·st·
·
·
h
·
Juruor varsi
Y
UdSe a · •
.
aga_ irist City College
o_f
New York
a'half-l_en_. gth le_a ·over•
arl . be_ h_ ind,- Ithaca's··1·uru_
·or· varsity ·25
·
secori __
ds:
The_ team, w o is_·
Th
e·co d mi·df1•e·ld p·layer 1·s
•
ls
800
11
e s
n ..
.
. ·
·
to:gi•v· _e· hi•m·· _
-
a total of-six ·goa
··Marist made.
a
·move at
h_eavy_weigh_ t __ -'s_
,
·tim_e, of
__ -'-.7_ :27,_ -coached·_by_ Sha_ ron __ Ma et_, ·was
-··.
. - d
-th
-thr - -
i:..:..
· t s . b l
k
optimjsticaboutthisyear'steam. ~h_ us fa_··r ... - ·
meters, ah ·
e .-
ee. uva .. ·a1th9tigh. they • ended . up _ one t°-fally .. lina _ e fo
ma
e
~
any
.. We should never have won as
evened ·out -. at · the _- 1000 meter ·second ahead of Ithaca's light-
comebac){s. after.· that, . and felt 'many games as we did, not with a
-Honorable Mention
mark, But, the steam seemed
fo
weights, .
_ ._ _ _ _ .
._
short of lthac;Bc by 4_6 _seconds. ~e , team that has this little ex-
·run . out of the_. ·pa· ddles,
SL
,Joes
.· _The fr· eshm_ an·· lightwei_gh_ t_ te_ am_
._.w_
omen
__ 's_
.
b_ oa_t consist_ ed_ .. _of K
__ -ay
· ·· ,, w·
·
· · ' 100
·
·
·
·
.
penenc~ .. • e are tmP,rovmg .
._.Vinny_ Barone, ··a 1·u_nio_r f_irst
came oil strong.to finish with a
ca_
me_ the.cl_ osest_ .· of ._any .. of the Sh_ aw, Sue
__ Vmall,_,
.
Allson ~len_ d-
·
-t ··th··
c·
e
·
f ·
·r· ··
h d
·
·
·
· p
percen wt
every game: ar w .year ·goali_e is mentioned
f_
or the
tune o 7:04. Ithaca· ws e ten· r_a:ces_; a_ s the_ y came within seven· sho_ j, Vicki_Bailey_, Patti ow_ers,
"dh ·
· c t ·
r·
·t·1
·
· t f
· ·
d · b .. h · d
d · M · t
o
Al.
H d
·
sat
e is ·· e
lID
e
Y
gomg ou or f1·ne·performances given to date.
secon s . _ e m , .. an · ·.
aris ·_ secon_d_s_ o
__ fJt_ ha_ca_'_s __ 1ightwe_igh_t._·• -De_bbie_._. r_o_ p
__ .,.· Mar_y_ ... 1_ce
.
a_r
_
,
th ·
t
,,
·
f. · ·h d
'i:.:
'ct·
·th · 7 2· 6
·
Ann
-
e team nex year.
·
In th_ e season opener against
. mis e __ tiu_
r
wi __ a_ : _•
With.To_mM
___ ast_ e_rson_,JoeFolhs
__ ,· Li_.zB_orell, and coxswain-Jo
··c
•··h · 1· · ·
, ftba.
n
· · ·
~
··ght. b t
·
·
·
·
-
arew, w o·p ays
10
a so
York he was ·awarded the game
Tue.varsity heavywei . •·• oa
Everett. Brown, Dave. Rowan; England.
·· 'league in the summer at_home · ball.
consisted 0of stroke· Pat Brown, Mike ,Orenstein; John Cifare.lfi:,
L..-----------;.;.....;.._.. ..... ...;;.;;;;;;;...;, _________ __.
Stickmen
flnisb
tough week
with
loss
,
~~~
·- ·
1oto
a,, .. '"'"
. Midfielder-Chris Walion
(91
who later scored w_ith a few minutes left during Monday's
game ·against FDU,.
..
.
. ·
·
·
....._
1--~
HIGH ON SPORTS
..
_
.
...........
by Regina Clarkin
·:_:ByGerard_Biehner
·
on the field with no reserves,"
.
explained Cervoni. ;:we won but
· :Coming
off
the
toughest,
week_
ie,_i:e· t;mt hustled and I felt the
Cofthe season/the ·siicknien' lost
team's 'attitude going down.'.'
three games after·operiing '!i,th· a · J\fter his talk, the Fled.Fox
7
s lost
victory over CCNY; The Red , the ,next two, ~ut Cervom sees-
. -F'oxes now with
a
record -of two · their play and attitude as greatly,
wins 'and .. four; losses, face
improved'. ··Both
FD\!-
-a"i'id
Dowling, the, division champion -~ Montclair ~re far more ex-
last year, Sat~rday at 2 p.m, imd
perienced t!ian us, as ~ost of o_ur
··· Stevens· 1.'ech W~dnesday . at · 3 , opponents have bee11,. ·_ ~e said,
p.m ..
Both games are at honie, ·
··but we played very physical and
The fled Foxes dropped three
out hustled both teams.'.' "~ feel
games foFarleigh Dickinson 11-
the-morale of.the team 1s higher
5· Montclair 11-5 and Maritime
now than it has ever been,'' he
24-6.
. . '
. .
added. . . _
_ .
Following the lacrosse team's
Cervoni ·sees.the. offensive
4-1 defeat oLCCNY last· Wed-
team's biggest drawback is lack
nesday, Red ·Fox coach Tom
ofaggression: "We've lost games
Cervoni sat down and · '.had a
on shots," he said, · "the players
talk" with his team,· heing
uri-
get the ball in close but look to;
satisfied, with their:. play. The
pass instead ?fgoing to the net."
resulr was losses by identicat
Sophomore Bil who never played
scores of 11-5 to the far ·more
lacrosse until this"year, had a
experienced· Farliegh Dickinson · , spectacular -week with three of
·University and Montclafr, games
Marist's ~ive
-
goals.against FDU,
which Cervnoi.calls "by•far our· and adding .. two .. more Monday .
· best performances of the year.~'
against· Montclair.
:•CCNY had only t~n men on the
squad, only enough to put a team .
When head crew <!oach Gary Caldwell
·
Another .aspect of his job was directing while," he s~id. ~e has no. family-· there will be changes in the job description··
leaves June 15three positions will. be left
·
and.organizing s ~ e r sports camps. He responsibilities and the transition from giving the college a chance to be flexible
· unfilled. The positions Caldwell-holds are said financially the sports camps proved to one place to another is. a bit-easier.
.
with their needs and priorities.
· ·
head crew_ coach, sports information
be succe_ssful.Ylt's difficult to say
if
they
Athletic Director Ron Petro feels it was
The result of the resignation of Caldwell
director and part.time physical education ·were successful only because of McCann. ·a difficult -job for '.Caldwell with his . should be just that, a chance-to r_eevaluate ·
instructor. _
Of·
cours~ the -improvement· of the swim-
background,. (history major at Yale)
to
do the job of head crew coach which iri<!ludes
Caldwell said,he is resigning because he ming camp is because of the pool." He a~o . all three jobs. -Petro said he might've . the duties of sports information· director.
has, an opportunity· to get into· a private __ worked with: managing· a budget for the emp~asized one job more thanthe others
·sports Information is an hnportant
: business venture in Connecticut and he ·• center,.
. _
• ..
.
therefore, causing a conflict:, _
,
' aspect of any college trying to put itself on
.a~ ~as ~ch~nce to teach soc~al sciences.
_'.:~e
1ol}_,~ll adds upto a J>C!Sition th~t
The per~n was~det~fitthethree jobs ,the. athleti~ m?P· for.
-
the .• future that
on 'aJwµor)ugh school level
m
the Man-
reqmres a, great -amount _of tune;'' 'Sa1d .. and now the three, Jobs Will be made to fit should be kept m_ mmd.-. ·
· chester School:System in.Conn.
· Cald\\'elt .
_
.
. .
.
· the person said Petro in reference
'
to the · Ideally a sport._s information director
.: :-'lber
·
e inay.be.;Inore than meets the eye
"The only reason I came, to-Marist was hiring procedure for the rie;ict crew-coach. should.be a full~tiirie job but since that isn't
_with the· t~ignation :or Gag_- Caldwell. fo.rJhe: rowi~g:prograin:l:took the other
lf-~~ld\Vell .forced _the athlet_ic_ ~epart-
~~~omic~lly feasible_ ~t the pres
7
nt time
· AccQrding to Cald~el!.t?e position_~fhead · parts of thejo~ as nece~sartparts of the_ _me~t· _into· ,reevalua~mg _the -po~1t1on
~y: ·
1tm1~t be be~ter
~~ P311'. up SID with some
crew coach wllen,-or1gmally describ¢d-to
:
contract to run the rowing program/t :_, , resigning than that
_IS
the:good:'that has _of.,the:other Jobs mst~ad of 'Crew- coach
·h@ :didn'('?PP.~rdo in_volve as;i:xu~~ll _ ... · __ 8-ired in M.?~1976; Cald\V~ll ~yshe g!ive
come out"of t~e-situati~n ~id)~e~r~. .
s~ch ·as ni~ht manager, •. int~µiural ·
'-work. ·/-The/·~ount~ ;
_
(}_f ·
•
.
emphas~s.
~ 9n ' t~s. job \wo :years because tw.o years 1~ a - p1ildwell ~a1~ J1e hopes._ his ·resi~at1on . d1r~ctor ,. ass1stl!nt basket~~-, ~oach, ·. or
.promoting, ba~_ket~,..!tand,football d1dn't--}air
.
time.-··-both .to himself;:,and- ~he.-_m-
Will allo\\'._.th~. Ct?llege_to
_
recogruze the busmess manager oJ McC~Il!1-·
~
:a·~~~~-K~~--~~:f!lJJ
,
}~
;
l;~~~-Pr fs. __ .i. ,\' --~~i~~-t~~?i 'T:1
·.
~ee.~:-~~~in~,~bo~t~t _for a. needsoftn.e M~pann ~~ter.~nd,hopesthat ·
,
,,.,~ •· ·::.::, ~-.<
~
:.·.:'>·\~· '
;
·
.. ,
'
:
- ·., ,. ' --
. .
.
.·
::~--.
.·
·;
..
:.-
'
--
-
.....
,:·
.
20.9.1
20.9.2
20.9.3
20.9.4
20.9.5
20.9.6
20.9.7
20.9.8
THE.CIRCLE
Marist College,.Poughkeepsie, Ne\Y York 12601
.
April 20, 1978
Chief unhappy
.
with
·
· __
tire
-
violatio
·
ns
..
.
By
Kathy Norton
.
.
priorities
.
and
·
'
ail
understaffed
_
_
. .
.
;
.
.
•.
.
.
;
• maintenance department
.
could
_
·
F'alI'Vl~W F~re.,; ChieL
.
Willi~ .
.
be re
.
sponsible for the
·
slowness in
··
.
Sutka said
.
he_ 1s
.
_not-happy With corre.c_ting the hazards; He added
th~
rate at '!hich fire ~azards ~nd
·
t~erf are other
.
problems
,
in-
·.
110n-com~,hances
·
~re
,
bemg volved but
-
said he
:
would rtot
._
correc:ted
-;
at;;_Marist Colleg~. discuss them.
.
·
·
·
_ ·
Sutka
'.
~aid,
.
:
.'The
.
~ll~ge
c...
!5
:
_Su~a
·
said
'
correcting mariy
-
res.po_!lsible for ever}'.'
·
;5tu9ents v10l~t1ons
•
.·
and non-compliances
C
safet}". They;a~~
n~~
liv~~
,
up to
.
hav~ to
_.
d_o. with
.
cost
:
However,
.
.
thatresponsibility.
.
.
·
.
~
Su~a said,
,
many are "poor
·
.
As of March; 9 ma_nY
.
?f
.
the f~re housE?k~eping
"
practi
.
ces{' and
·
hazards cit~ m a_ fire mspel.!tion should have beeri corrected right
·
_last
..
May st~
.:
~
exist., ~u~a ~id. a~ay
:
Any_
violation
-
is.
i,a
lot"
r
_
eport
.
s of ~rrected
·
viola~ons
.
said Sutka, but
.
each one niust
·
be
.a~e sent _t<>Jlim and tha~
·
::~gs eyal~at~individually:
·
-
,:
.
·
,
afe inovmgafo~g slo~IY:
_
..
·
.
.:
A<!~or<i~g to:Sutka,
a
·
fire in-
-
.
.
.•
Excep~ for
-
,_
en_i
,
~fgencies, the• sp_ecti
.
onis requited
~
e-very year.
:
:
..
amollilt,. ot. t
.
~~
-',
a,llolJed
'.
.
for H~ add~d that another.
.
inspection
.
_correct1~ns
.
IS
•
~e~uied
•
by
.
Sut~a
_
'iwould d¢finitely be done irUhe
.
.
_.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
_
c1.n1 M
_
an
_
st
.
,
He saidj0 months
·
is near future."
·
He also sai
.
d
·
t
.
hat
G
.
C
.
.
I hutn/(u•rr~ llr'lnlh
a
..
.
reasonable" amount'. of time ..
. . ,,
.
.
'
1
·.
.
.
'
overnor arev
•
speaking with reporters follo~ing dedication
'
of
-
the new
AV
. • -
-
.
.
-
for niost
:
torrections Sutk
.
·
"d
·
·
lllaJ_or
•
VI~
at~pns found in the
Friday
.
-
.
.
. · • center on
..
.:.
-
.
-
··
..
, < _
.
.
,
. ·
.
.
-
~
~i
last
,
mspection were corrected.
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
_
.
.
.
•
.
.
_
.
.
·
.
.
·.
.
:
?
·
the
..,
oilly sol~,tton 1s
;
O'correc_tm.g
.
Sutkasaid student cooperation
,
r
.
_
.
.
<-
·
.
.
,
.
.
··
.
.
_
·
.
.
.
.
.
-...·
·
,
:
,
.
.
..
.
_-
. .· .·
.·
:
.
.
.
--
tlle haz
.
ards, a~diadded,thlS
IS
.
is"poor'' atMarist.'Hesaidsome
.
·
~ Of'
.
CY
i
(fJlfllfJ
.
C>l~IJ<;
,
~~
.
c,
i
.
¢/
r
.•
·
p~(.J
,t,
·
up$~~
1
~~j~
I
~~th
.
~pdget,
.
~;~~~~
co~~;~1~e&1~~
1
~
.
:">
.
By
B0tb Weaver, D3vidP~tter,
state legislature. He
;,.,d
tb8)ill goais
we~.;.
ls
.~build
ii
better
::-
Re 11 wol
<It
n
-
a m
e d
·
.
ii(\:.
: .
...
,
,
"
,
_
:
J
>
_
a~1-~
~~
,
.
.
_·
: ·:
:-
, _
·
.
wa~ t~e
.
fir~
.
~f
.
1~
.
.
~md
·
.
m
:
the
--
and
.
.
.
st~onger
.-
ed_t,ic_ational
.
.
.
:
.
:
_
:.
•.-
.
.
,
·
_
.
_
: _
.
.
..
·
!(.
::·
·;.
.
-:~
.
G~~~rn
.
or:
:-
I¾'.ugh
~-,
C~reY
..
,
~
a
·
n
;.,,::i~
J~fiy
;~_
~
;
~
·,
~e~le~ti~~
~·
:
;~
·
~.-.
~2~
~0t~-~~:r::i
~
::ie:~;~~~~~
-
-
~~/
...
.
ft
.
:-:,
.1
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,
~n
'
p,l.
":<
--
11
··-.
,fft
:
g
',
lfa
"
~m·
...
·.
·
· .
·.
.
.
. :
::...
;
.;:
.. '
:
._
noill!C~d,;~1i;iday
,s
tw.o;:.tu~tion
·,.
aid
,:~,
§~
-
i!
F<
Jh¢
;
~sa.0@s
cf.
;1Ha1fi.
'
wi1i:
=::
~
our
:
:mvestmefit'
:
m
?
edu~a'tfon
·
~
•
~.::.&.r-~,:-.i
L:q
;.~·j,(:·
U
:
~
-h ....
~~l
~}
.
,
,
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.
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~
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-
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,
~_
,
; .-.: ; •
-
•
••
:
..
•
,. -
·:,
/
.
.
'"
·
:
pi:ograJl)S
:
·
;
providing
.:'·,
relief
-
.
for
.
:
-<~pecially
.
\
lielp
~\
fairt.ilies'"
?
wfffi
·
;'"
~~:-::
tiiius
,
Foy;-spresident
'·
gav6
'
the
.:
:.-·
.-~,~
~,.,
:
•
.;
,'
1
-'
_
, ;
;._.
c;
·
:
;
,.
l:L
,
;:,
:
:
::!f-:-
_
/
.
:.
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..
;
:--
, /:
'
·
·
.
.:
·~.
,;
,-;:_
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:
.
_.
l
,,
,.
,
<<:
_\''.
:;.-"?-'~
·-:
,
~
: :;
-~
;:
·
,<
:,
:
:
•
'
·
.
-·
·
>:;...
st~te
~:•(
res~'tlenfs
\
.:seria~g'
-
.
,·
tlieir
..
·
more ·
:.
-
th
:
aii__
~:
:
two
::
_ciiilclr~~
\
fo
,
.
..:.
opeh~f
agdres~
:··
_m
~
fr'hnf
:
o( aP:,
,
-
.
;
·C
•
••
_
..
•
•
•
•
• ,·:
•
.
_
children -or themselves -through colleg~:
.
.
-
.~
.
- :
: ·
·
.
>
•
·
:
.;
.
.
proxirn,ately 200
;
people
;
Foy"
.
sai~
C
..
_
college.
;
:· .
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
C~rey;
•
wh_o
..
·
a~~ved ,an
·ho
.
ur
i
-
.he
.
was
·
gratefulto both ~pellmaij
:
·.
·
.
Carey
.·,
s~~e
-
.~n
/
the _Ma1:1st l~te
·
.·
.
by
.
hehcopter
... •·
b.tJCause
.••
•
Of
.·
·:
arid
·
B,eirn~,
.
and also
·>
said
'-
'the
chcipel
.
during a _
_
d~dic~tio11_ ~rong_ head
-
\\'.Inds,
.
pl;'aised
.both.
audio center arid television sfodio
·
ceref!l~ny for
·
au~o-visu~l and
~
Yrancis
·
Cardinal
.
S.pellman and
·
.
.
.
would
..
nof have
,:
been
.
possible
television centers
·
mthe
,
hbra1:Y, · Jose~h ~thony·Be1me
_
fonheir withoui their suppi#L
· ·
:
.
,
<
,
·
·
..
OQe
.
pr1>gram allows _a family
-
contribut~ons to 1:duc~t1on.
.
_
Glenn Watts, presideilt of the
·
.
!lP
to
_
a_ $l,009tax ded
_
uction ~ased· ·
.
The Beirne Audio yislll:ll
_
g~n~er
.
Communications
.
Workers of ..
on tmUonco?1s ofa coll~ge m the and
.
th~ Spellm_an Tel_ev1s1o_n
America, and
·
.
.
Bishop
·
Joseph
state
:-
:
,
.·
.
.
.
.
.
•
.
.·
·
Studio were dedicated .
.
m their
Pemicone also spoke at the·
.
~e s~cond program
·
_a~ows a 11ames.
.
.
•
.
..
·.
·
.
.
.
·
·
·
.
-
.
. ·
ceremony .
.
·
•
.
·
·
·
.
, .
..
.
famHy
,
tosave upto$?5~~ a bank
·
.
~arer s~id
_
b~th
.
~p
.
ellm~n and
,
..
The
.
Joseph
_,
Anthony Beirne
.
account tax-free
,
.
until withdrawn
#
'3ei~e s hyes had,, been hved to
family attended the dedication as .
for colleg~ expenses:
.
.
.
.
enrid:1
all of <_>urs. .
.
;
.
. .
.
·
special
:
.
guests.
·
·
Carey signed the bill m Albany
In
mtroducmg his
.
tu!tton
·
aid
··
·
earlier, after it was
·
passed by the
•·
programs
;
.
Carey said ·•one of the
.
.
'
-~
·
.
·.·
,
'
.
.
'
.
'
.
;
.
.
.
.
.
'
..
c
.
0
m
.
..
.
·
p
u.te
r
C-h
.
a ()
aeo-ve
r '
_
·
.
ByJelfMcri~weii
·
.
m~!ya:,~1::'~:0i::·:..lrtt'ihe
.
0
Robert Rehwoidt, chairmanof sci~ce
:
department chairman
-
-A~--
-
•
•
natiifal sciences at M3rist,
·
has next
.
-
semester
iri
Rehwoldt's
•
.
year
,
for file space
:
and
'
two
·
-
capable
of
printing information
been chosen to direct
_
the absence.
.
.
_
-
computer terminals, Carolan
·
faster
·
than
.
the 1401,
·
the ter-
National Program for the Science
Rehwoldfand
·:
his
·
wife, Kathy,
.
Marist's . $80,000
-
IBM
•
1401 said
.
minals here cannot because
-
they
Educationforthe Handicapped, a
·
and three of his five children will
computer
.·
is
·
being repl~ced
The 1401' 'Yas purcha~ed by
,
·
lack a high speed printing
.
o~e year pr~gram designed to
·
move to Washington D.C
.
by
·
By
.
Ma~gie Schubert
because itJs
c:
~~rs
old and
.
Marist in
.
~974 in ordei:
.
to save mechanism. He added the college
give the handicapped a chance to
·
Au~ l, when the program
.
no longer reliable"
:
said
,;:.
Kevin money;
·
·
,
he said
,
· :
Marist was does hav~ a high speed printer in
get
\
involved
:'.
in
:
·
scientific begins.
·
•
.
·
•.
.
..
·
·
·
.
Carolan, director of computing paying $42,000 per year in rent, use6n the
.
140tbut.c~anging lt
research-
.
,
.
.
·
.
.
.
-
Rehwoldt came Jo Marist in
and institutional'research
.
·
..
Carolan
·
added,
''If
we had over to
.
the new system would be
The progrcU;Il
.:
grew
:
.
out
.
.
of 19~~
<
after teaching
\
as an
.
Toe 1401 is being replaced by
· ,
co
.
ntinued
·
to
:
rent the computer
··
expen_s~ve. "We_
,
have
·
~~e
:
CongressioriaI·conce~
:
a~o?t the
·
assistant professor
.
·
of cheIJlistry
an on-line
.
system;
·
rented
.
froin
•.
we
.
·
wQuld
.
have. paid
·
.
more
>
in
.
,
caJ>l!.bil1ty
.
of
.
hookmg
·
up a
·
high
~~ck of hand~capped
.
mdividuals
·
at Vassar College for five years.
CornE!ll M:edical C9llege,
·
.
which rental fees than in actual cost:'
:
'
/
speed print_er
..
to the riew com-
m research programs, says.Reh-
Rehw9ldt is director
'
ofthe Marist
costs approximately $31,2
.
IXLper
·
Althougli the
·
new
·
system. is put~r
·
but
.
it'~
a question of
woldt,
.
who was
'
stricken
·
with Research
·
Institute,
·
·
an
.,_...,. _ _ _
....,. ___
..;.....;. ______ ~_.;;-;_· --~-~~-..;.;.;..... finances right now,'
'. ·
Carolan
polio as a child.
.
.
· .
,
organization
.
comprised
of .
said;
·
·
·
·
·
:
Rehwoldt will t)e paid $30,000 to
-
faculty m~mbers who provide
·
Carolan said the lack of speed
help develop an evaluative scientific information for outside
iri
·
printing information affects
·
pr9cedure
to
.
determine which companies. Rehwoldt
.
says he
:
eff_l~iency, ''the times
it
hurts us
research programs involving the hopes to retain some of his
are for grad~s and the times we
·
handicapped will-~ funded by
·
director's duties by returning on
dothe
·
first
•
billing
-
" for students.
the
•
government.
·
weekends
.
.
•.
·
·
·
·
·
_.
.
.
.
·.
·
He
·
said Marist
·
did riot
:
.PUY a
•
Congress appropriated $7-50,000
He is on the board of the
Marijuana
· .
smokers
;
· are ~efoila~t, Paraquat, is b
·
eing sold
:
new system because
,
it "really for the
.
program; however. Reh
<
Hudson
:
giver
:
Envii-onmental ·
.
warned that _lethal contamµiated
.
m lhis
,
country but there have wasn 'tfeasible for us to purchase
:
·
woldt said,
/'
That's
.
not a lot of Society~'
·
·
·
·
·
pot may be_mputchess
_
County. been fewcases
-
reported in
•
the our
-
own
_
machine."
.
Carolan
·
,
·
CountyDlstnct Attorney John East..
.
·
·
·
·
...
:
·
>:
iadded that to
:
purchase a ~om"
r:--,-
.
-:--:---
.
----~--------.;;
.... ._:._~---..
~~y~
~:yabskeed1·11
'
pefrrosom
· ·
nsM
:
feeax
·
i~c
.
·ang
.
1
:
a
·
stA ~wo,ceaelkhib· ghut ~ncohooonlesthila<lse~tdkieded
·
.
puter
.
which \'~tisfli~s o$6ur rieed,s,
l'n
.
..
.
s
.
i
d
..
e. . .
.
.
·
·
:
•
-
.•
.
•·
·
,
-
.
.
.
·
·
·
·
.
·
·
w,
•
costs
.
approxµnate y
.
54;467:
.
m~ri111ana
c-
covered.
·
,
with
·
.·.
···
a
·
.
:
the
.
death to the toxic marijuana.-
.
'l!e":tsai_d
.
·
.
,
th(
.
college
·
wa
.
s not
r
, .
.
,
N
.
.
e
.
.
.
w
.
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e
.
.
·
.
rs
_
.
.
..
pg
.
.
3
.·
..
.
.
,
.
poi~no~defoilantto contllct his
.
,
<.
King
·
said·
.
·the'y
:
are
:
in.'. 1>repared to make the investment
·
-
.
p9~fis~e;
·
ted
~.
r~~Y-
_
•
:
w.~ll
;
;
·
n<>t
·
.
<:
bfEf
·
ve~tligatiilgllpossibilit,fes other
.now
.
.
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-·
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:
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.
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.
.
.
·
.
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.·
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·
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•
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5
·
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·
.
·
•.
<u~c~
.
;
1_or
/:
~
.
n1uana
_.
A"'.
p_eop ~
•
are i f['.Olll the
·
bad pot.
.
..
:.
carofan
·
said
:
Cornell's
'·
com•
,
·
.
f~~~s91~
..
sa.~d;
:
·'
•
,
.?\
,:..
<.:.I
;. :;
,
~QJice ~nd- drug officials
;
are
·
piiter
i'isafarsupe1:ior
machine''
.
·
'
.
"
.
•
·,
·
.
.
P
..
·12
·
.
za
·
.n
.
·
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;'
.
ta
·
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._
··_
·
··
·
.
·
.
.
.
~
. .
.
,
J\Cc<>~tli.1-ig
,
:J
o
·
_repotis;
:
drug
reportedly attempting
.to
find a
·
· d
·n
·
n
·
·
th
u
t
-
L
.
author1ti~s
.
:;
_
cl,a.
.
1~n
·
.
th~t .
•
.
the
.
testforcletecting.the marijuana
.
;~c6r1\i~ttrri;ti6n
:
~o~~e
.
et
·
marijua11a
:
tainted
::·
·
with
..
the
··
v;,,~
.
'
•
.•
.
.
...
-
.
·
·
ficiently
;
.,.
,
''.'°~'.
',
-
<·
=:
~;?i·
C:-~
ManzJnL.~pg
i
2'
..
,
..
,
,.
.
-
~
~
..
~ · ·
·
·
- -
;.
_
_ _ _
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-
.
•
,
•
·,
.::
_
1
_
_
_
.
:
.
·
·
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_
_
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-
•
·
·
-
::.
::..:... _
_____
•
_ _
_
_ . .
: _
___ ;___:__
·
Page2
THE CIRCLE
April 20, 1978
-
Weekend
Manzini ·escapes
THE OIOSEN/PEOPLE TIME
fORGOT-Hy~
Park Driwe-ln
Routt 9. Hyck P&rk. CACJ.2000
•
'
~
•wt•
al du,k.
•
CASEY'S SllADOW/YOU LIGHT
UP MY LIFE.-OYntook Drr\'Nlll.
R1t
.
44.uil Ot-Gumo. Rtt
.
$5
n.11
Offllook.
Pou&flkttpu:'.
CU•J4.fS. Sbow
staruar
dvsL
8LVE C'OLLAR-R001n'dl
• ·
llttatn
.
RL 9.
llyck Puk
.
CA9
•
l000.
SATURDA.Y :iri;IGHTFEVER-
f°uhUI Ori•~ln., RI. 9
0
Fishkill.
896-9790.
Bo,.,
orrlC'C' opNt.s
•t
7
:
00
p.m:.
Shu•
Sluts
al
d
1uk.
•·
DUTCHESS COMMUNITY
(.'OLLEGE.~1
.
Film
~
llestn
Strtti-. Main
Lou.,
8 p.rn.
•
Sun. BIKk C'ulNr.al Day ,p
o
n ~
try
Bbck Scudc
n
l U
n
k>A.
Spc:abu.
films.
ruhion show. dltuter. and
.
d»ltt.
4 7 l
◄ 500.
HYDE
PARK
T.radin
:
g Co.
Spring sale now
_
on:
-
LEATHER BOOTS
A
·: ~·
,
r
,,..llM!!fi.'..'
'
J
\
.
·
1Jl
.
·
,
:
CLOGS
:·
SANDALS
·
-
·
tttx't\\l\l
.
tOIX'tS
-
-
.
.
.
<"
JEWELRY
·
:.
··
:
_
.ii~
·
.
-
·!
,,
Adjacent to Barkers and ShopRite
.
FOR RENT
3 bedroom furnisljed}jhuse
;
Naragansett, Rhode Island
_
I block from hay; 3mi~utes
·
from
ocean
.
Available by week or month
Contact Dr. Rehwoldt
Extension 287 or 454-8267
Park
Di
·
scount
f
Beverage ~enter
__
_
Albany Post Road, Hyde Park 229-9000
•
4.99
-
.
•
..
··
-
'
By
Mary
Yuskevich
Though
-
Dina said no one
·
stunt
.
•
makes her more nervous than
~o
-
insurance
.
company
.
in the any others,
.
"you never know
·
world will insure him
,
his mother
·
when something is going to go
"still gets scared when he does wrong."
.
•
his stunts, but the wife of escape
.
Monday night at the Mccann
artist Mario Manzini
·
~ays it was Center, Manzini, wearing three
··born in him" ,to take chances. inch silver platform shoes and a
.
Manzini;
33,
never practices his
·
crash hebnet, hung
·
upside down
.
stunts
,
according to his wife, from a burning rope attached to
·
Dina Manzini, 27
;-
except for the the ceiling while
·
bound by- hand-
nightly hour in the bathtub when cuffs, a straight jacket and 50 feet
he practices holding his
_
breath. of rope .
.
Manzini escaped in one
Manzini said he has been minute and 13 seconds. He told
performing esc~pes since he was the audience
·
before the
,
stunt,
four years old
.
Thougb
··
Manzini ·
·
this st
i
.mtcould mean my death,
"
likes to please the audience,'' he
.
or something serious/'
said he never makes a stunt last
.
Manzini; for the first time ever,
longer than necessary
.
·;I
always al~ escaped ~rom two s~cks, anq
·
try
,
~
_
o get,o~t as fast as ppssible,"
,
a gia11t plas~ic ba
.
~ while hand-
he said
. . .
·
.·
·
·
·
..
cuffed,
~
m
~
s1x
--
mmutes
and
.
45
.
·
·.:
Vinc~
n
t
":
.
Taiierffo
/
6ne of se~nds
>
.
Volunteers from the
·
Manzini's assistants, said it is a~die~ce checked
.
the bags for
.
·
interesting working with Man-
gm:unick~ an~ holes.
.
.
.
.
zini. Talierdo said Manzini is
.
.
I<
or his fmal act, Manzm1
--sure of his capabilities." escape~ from a water filled milk
Taliercio said he wasn'tnervous can while handcuffed. The stunt,
when Manzini performs his which lasted f!ve minutes, ~as
stunts, adding
"
he told me
I unfortu_nately performe~ beh!J1d
would get paid whether or not
·
he a curt_al:11, t~e secret !)f his escape
gets out."
·
remammg mtact.
-
·
·
·.
,
Announcing
.
Marist
College
proudly
presents
.
.. Extra-Terrestrials
.
..
starring
.
F:-ashion '78 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; Marist students
$LOO.
·
Students wanted for Part-time
employment
~
If you are in-
terested in working up to 15 hours
a week and earning up to $3.00 an
ho~r providing aide or attendant
services
-
•
"
for Marist's han-
dicapped
·
students, stop by the
office of special services, ,room
105
Champagnat Hall, between
8:30 and 5
:
00 for further
in-
.
formation
:
Psychology
lecture
and
discussion
~
Father Aqunias
Thomas, Ph.D. will be lecturing
on ..
An
ExistentiaLApproach to
Human Development
·
" The
Importance of the NOW" f'.riday,
April 21, 2
.
p.m. in Fireside
Lounge, sponsored by
·
the Un-
dergraduate Psychology Club.
All are invited to attend. Coffee
and
·
doughnuts will be served.
The second payment for Senior
Week is Friday from
JO
a
.
m. to
4
p.m. at the switchboard in
Donnelly Hall
.
Make checks
payable to Marist College class of
1978. May 5
will
be
the final
payment day
.
NominaHon
deadline
.
for
Studenf Academic
.
Committee
Representative is Friday
;
April
21.Subinit nominations to Box C-
:1:14, or to the commuter union box
in the commuter lounge
:'
-
Elec-
tions will be held April 27 and
28
in Donnelly Hall.
'
Gerontology lecture series -
River
Day planned
.
.
,
,
·,
.
,
.
·-
'
:,
:
,
·
·
:
"Social Security or Insecurity"
1
Lecture_ by Greg Kilgarlff of the
business
and- · ,
,
economics
department on Friday, April 23 at ·
:l
p.m. in the reserve reading
room of the library. Refresh-
·
.
::
ments
··
will be served
>
.
·
:
-
j '
By Beth Weaver
there
are
..
quite
a
few
possibilities, and we should know
.
_Tickets for the
.
April 22
A
band, free beer, arid ham-
by Thursday or Friday.''
_
.
..
Yankees vs. Milwaukee Brewers
burgers and hotdogs for
,·
slight
The campus-wide
·
.
River
,
Day
-•
game on sale now, Tickets
-$6.60.
cost
.
will highlight the campus-
started
:
·to di~courage the
·
im-
·
!<'or information see Kathy Pinto,
•
.
wide
:
River Day, scheduled for
·
prcimptu .I_Uver
:
Days thaf oc
-'
room
·
C-727
-.
•,
·
Tue~day, A_prU 25, according to curred in Uie past,,.said Troiano.
·
·
·
'
\
Maria Troiano, College Union
"
It
is an effort to create
a
day of
.
.
Members of the Cross Country
Board ( CUBJ president-elect.
It celebration, but a peaceful day of
·200• Club who have paid the
~ll be
-
a traditional River Day, celebration without getting
.
into
-
entire $20 of their,ticket
•
win be
with the band outside,
.
either the
·
ugly things that happened in
eligible for
.
four grand prize
against Adrian Hall or the
.
old
·
the past." She also said Dean
drawings of $500 - $250
-
$100 and
gym.
·
Zucarrello is a
"
little
·
concerned
$25 tomorrow at
3
p.m. in front of
Tr~iano said the band has not as to whether or not this is a way
the cross country display case in
been chosen yet, but there is "no
·
to fight the problem."
·
Donnelly Hall.
problem in getting one
."
She said•
All people who have n~ paid
\
·
Entrance around corner
•
,
•
I
·
•
•
their full $20 must do so before 2
p
.
m. Friday to Coach Rich
Stevens; c-o
.
box 814 or pay
_
their
cross country team member who
collects .money for them before
tomorrow.
.
,
Ther:e will be a meeting for all
interested in-joining the
X-C team
on Tuesday at
8:30
p.m
.
in tne
McCann Center
·
classroom.
Anyone who can't come to the
meeting should contact Coach
Rich Stevens before
,
Tuesday .
.
/
.
An electric etcher
is available
at the security office for students
to ·-mark personal belongings.
Students can also register
the
make, model, and serial number ·
of their stereos,- cameras, etc.'
with
·
_
_
the security department.
Students
•
will also
.
be
supplied
with
anti-theft
stickers warning
.
burglars that student property
is
registered and identifiable
/
..
'
.
·,.
.
_-
.
,
··
.
.
:.·
'.;:
·
·
·
~
·
. :
:
: :
~
;
;
:
~
·
; .:. : ;
;
:
.
~
·
:
;
:.
;
:
:
: :
:
:
~
;
-
~
:
:
:
~
~
:
:
:
"
·
:
:
~
~
·
·
·
·
·
· ; -
:
,-
,
-·
:
-
..
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
· ,.
' ·
·
· ,
·
· ·
·
-
;
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,;
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i" :
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.
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:>:·
'!!::•.
·
.
.
··•
~
~~
April 20, 1978
THE CIRCLE
Page3
New
leaders outline
priorities
Student
·
Government
.
By
Lar1'_Landon
Frank Biscardi, president elect
of the student body,
will
assume
leadership next semester of the
Council of student Leaders (CSL)
as written in the new constitution.
Biscardi said
his
first
·
priority
·
as
president
will
be
to "open lines
of communications" through
regular meetings with President
Biscardi says he
will
be "at-
tempting to get voting power on
the Board of Trustees" over the
summer
for
a
student
representative,
as
other colleges
have. Now, students may attend
meetings of the Board of Trustees
and voice opinions, but do not
have any voting privileges.
Viewing student apathy as a
major problem
·
on campus,
Biscardi hopes to persuade the
presidents of student club.s and
organizations to motivate their
members to participate in college
activities.
·
Student
·
Academic
~
Committee
by Joe
Ford
.
Newly-elected president of the
student Academic Committee,
Liz McRae said she hopes to
'
Frank Biscardi
··
increase student involvement in
Foy
and
other
•
key
ad- the committee next year.
"
We
ministrators,
·
such as Fred want~ get a lot of people on
·
the
Lambert, assistant dean
·
of committee who a,~e interested
lltudent life
.
One
.
example cited and want to work, she said
.
by Biscardi, would be to invite
·
The ~AC now a member of the
Anthony Campilli
business Co
_
uncil of
.
Student Leaders,
manager, to stude~t financial exist~ ''t~ provide better
_
com.:
board meetings
iri
order to munication betwe_e~ students,
discuss the student budget. facultf ,
.
and
·
administrators,''
"Stude~ts will have the op- accordplg to_ _McRae; The SAC,
po~~mty to express their 5!1e said, elicited
_
student reac-
opimons to administrators tions to the proposal of the cpurse
through me," said Biscardi, and schedule change
Jast
semester
.
added that "the CSL will take in
every dimension of the college."
Biscardi hopes to improve
.
the
allocation of
.
students
·
funds;
making it ''more
·
efficient than
.
_
.
this year.'' Biscardi was aided in
·
alliicating studetit ftindslhis year
by the
.·
business
:
office. Although
·
funding this year was delayed,
Biscardi says
·
allocating funds
next year "will
be
more ef-
.
ficient" and
will
be "closely
audited."
·
CORRF.CilON
.
The article "Maintenance overwhelmed by campus vandalism
·
quoting Fred Janus, assistant maintenance director saying "I've
,/
given up because there doesn't seem to be the amount of concern
·
among students and residence advisors" was incorrect. It should have
read "there doesn't .seem
to
be
the amount of concern" among
students. and residence
-
advisors are overworked.
·
.INTER"SHI_P in
·
HIGHER EDUCATION
SIX CREDITS
Applications are now
being accepted for
cu~rent juniQrs who
want to he considered
for
_
a~missions
-
internships
-
next
fall.
·
.
:
All inquiries should he
.
directed to the
.
·
Office
of
Ad~ssions
'
·
Greystone
McRae ,
a
junior,
sata
however, the SAC is not well-
known on campus. "No one
knows what the S.A.C
.
is, and,
even
if
they do, they don't know
what it does
.
" The new com-
mittee president said she plans to
change
·
that through election
publicity
.
·
"
The SAC is made up of three
students from each major," she
explained, "and two students
from each non-major, such
as
philosophy." The members are
chosen through student elections.
McRae wants to put up signs and
publicize the election
as
well
as
the committee itself. "At least
it
will make people wonder what
the SAC is," said
McRae
his
floor meet.Ing. Then the floor
representative brings it up at a
house meeting, the two
IHC
"'1embers
at
that meeting make a
note of it and mention it at an
IHC
meeting where
it
is
discussed
ana
possibly some action
is taken.
All
of these meetings are sometimes
poorly attended, many times by
no IHC members.
The
grievance
Chris Faille
Part
of the
·
committee's
member's
duties
include
discussing
proposals
from
faculty chairmen on new or
changed courses as well as· at-
committee would bypass that
tending departmental meetings
.
long chain and allow people to get
McRae , presently
student their complaints much more
government secretary, said the directly to the level.,,
·
SAC ~111_1° lon~er be a sep!lrate
Faille said the committee
orgaruzat1on as 1t has been m tl_le which he hopes will
be
formed by
past.
.
the end of next semester will
lnterhouse
Council
.
By
Jenny Higgons
• have five people on
it.
Faille said
two of the committee members
will be from the IHC with the
.
other three being non-IHC people,
picked by the other two IHC
members with approval of the
full
council.
·
.
!<'aille
·
said another of his
01>-
Christopher Faille, elected jectives is to change distribution
lnterhouse Council president last
,
procedures of th~ Stude~t
week,
in
an unopposed election, 9ovt:~ent budget because it
said his first priority is to form
an
i~ distributed somewhat lop
-
lnterhouse Council grievance side?Iy,. where the value
.
of
committee in which chosen service lS overrated
.
"
meinber.s "actively seek out
_"When the Exe~utive,, Boa~d
grievances and
.
submit a report d1s~usse~,- allocat1o~s,
said
at every IHC meeting."
F_a11le,.
1t takes into co~-
. Faille said he wants to form the
.
sideration how many people 1t
grievance committee because
.
_
serves,
.
for
example, WMCR can
·
'
the present system of
bringing
:.
be
heard
·
by
-
~ny
peop\e;
-
ln-
grievances to IHC is awkward." stead; I wo~d l~e
to see clubs
"If
a person wants to have
~
and orgamza,t1~ns allocated
•.
gripe, for example excess dorm money on the baslS o~ how
_
mu~
noise, known to
.
the IHC, said e~ch mem~er benefits from it
Faille, "he has to bring it up at himself! with the
.
number of
.
people it serves conung second._"
Commuter
Union
by
Vic Small
-
John Hughes, newly elected
president of the Commuter
Union, said
his
first priority
is to
publicize the union. "We can do it
with the help of the Circle, by
word of mouth
,
and by posters,"
he said.
Hughes, who ran unopposed
and won an election in which
20
people voted, said commuters
must be
made
aware of the union
.
Many, he said, don't even know it
exists.
...
Commuters
,
said Hughes, are
different from residents because
it is difficult to reach them and
get them involved. "To residents,
the campus
is
their life. Many
commuters have jabs after
.
school. To them, Marist is just a
place to go to school." He said he
has to make the Commuter Union
more appealing
.
.
Hughes said only
20
people
voted in the election because it
wasn't well publicized.
Hughes said. this semester will
be
used to build for the future. He
said commuters have shown
more interest this semester than
before. Volleyball and softball
teams, comprised entirely of
commuters, competed tn in-
tramural events this year:
Hughes intends to form an
advisory council of
·
union
members who regularly attended
meetings. Hughes said he
is
not
sure what his responsibilities are
as president. However, he said he
doesn't intend
to
do everything by
himself. To accomplish anything,
he said, he has to work
with
others,
.
.
.
.
..
. .
. _
.
Hughes sa\d
:
ne
:
ran
:_
-
lot"
:
president because he
:
wanted
,
to
be more involved.
"Last
year I
just went to classes and went
home; that's it
..
. I don't feel I'm
wasting my time. I have a
challenge."
·
WEDNESDAY:
½
PRICE
NIGHT
( except bottle beer)
THURSDAY: LADIES NIGHT
MUSIC BY
.
MANZANITA
I
I
'
.
LUNCH AND DINNER MENU DAILY
..
!
'
..
.
.
,.
~..,
Page4
THE CIRCLE
April 20, 1978
. THE
lETTERS
CIRCLE
The Circle is the weekly newspaper Of the students of Maris! College and is published weekly during the school year exclusive
of vacation periOdS by the Southern Dutchess News Agency, Wappingers, N.Y.
G
M N lt
co-editors
erry c u
Y
Ken Healy
Dave Potter
. associate editors
Dave Ng
Regina Clarkin
sports editor
Beth Weaver
layout ea.itor
Paul Nunziata
photography editor
Jim Birdas
business manager
Mark Rudolph
advertising manager
Rob Ryan
distribuijon manager
Staff: Joe Ford, Kathy Norton, Mike McCciurt, Jimmy Perez, Margaret Schubert, Lark Landon,
Carmen Rivera, Judy Norman, Victor Small, Susan Stepper, Maria Troiano, Mary Yusk'!vich.
Jo~ Ma_yer, Ra!ph C~pone,-Jini Dasher, Alan.Jackson, Jenny Higgons, Gerard 1Biehner.
Chr1siflogan, 8tf!ve Freeman, Tom _J~urke, Mik:e" B~~-_Clare Amico. D_on Purdy
·
·
Priorities.
pus, and as long as fire hazards remain ·on the·
1::ampus •. he. is not performing his job
adequately. Budget -constraints.
an
un-
. derstaffed maintenance departm~nt and
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 preferred. We reserve the right 10_
· edit all letters, and letters must be signed, but names may
be
withheld uPon request. Letters
will
be
published depending ui5on availability of space.
Art stolen
To the Editor:
Sometime during the weekend
of April 8-10, again a photograph
was stolen from my exhibit which
is hanging in the Tunnel Gallery
of the Library. The first week
that· my work was on · display, ·
someone removed one of my
pieces: . a photograph of a cell
door inside Green Haven Prison.
!Lis irreplaceable. The second
· WfiS
a·night scene, a l~dy crossing
a snowy New York City street. It
seems to me that, if a person likes
. my work this much, . there are
other ways of obtaining them.
As
I
prepare for the second
seclion of my· show, I find. my.
selections are influenced by these .
losses, and choice~ are made. to
exclude singular works that
cannot be replaced. ~e problem
of theft sets up barriers for the
availability of work not only in
this intimate gallery but also in
the Campus Center Gallery:-
Naturally, many artists are.
reluctant to exhibit at a -school
which has a reputation for theft
and destruction of art .works.
Reports of these two incidents,
and one which occured in the_
Campus Center Gallery . last
weekend have been filed with the
Town of Poughkeepsie Police.
Both the. artist of the· Campus
Center works and myself. are
prepared to pursue this with the
police as far as necessa~y. :
·.
We .. urge that the. works be·
returned volillltarily ·so. that· we
can consider thefacidents dosed. ·
.
Richard Barbara ..
. Marist is not meeting its responsibility to
correct fire hazards on campus, according.to·
Fairview Fire Chie_f William Sutka,·though
the college is responsible for "every student's
· otJ1er prioi:iiies· are riot acceptable excuses for .
devaluing human life/
.
: .
.
.
.
·A.
·p·"
·o·
.10·.
g·
.·y·_· · . .
owed.-. .
·
8:30
p.m,,
(a half, hour late). .
Hmvever, Waters is not'solely to blame for
__
Second,·
hy
being short·on help,·.
the college's negligence. Other administrat<irs
·most oftl11? nigh~ there-were oruy
safety." ·
.
. .
Su!ka said Marist's other "priorities"
could be slowing down the correction of.these
hazards. He also said the correction ofsuch
hazards is upto college officiaJs.".' .
.in
charge of budgeting and policy should b('
To the Editor:
two bartenders. Third, these lone
ri1ade ac~!mntabl~ for ignoring the campw/s
. I would like to extend my . bartenders saidh ·!hey •'Yer¢ ... in-.
fire hazards:
. .
. .
than~· to. Dolly_, Bodick, Paul
structed by t e1r. supervisor,
· · If
w· · · · · ·
b ·
·11
d..
· f
. .
.
, . .
(Mr. Abromovich) to pour·1_ess
,' ... _aters
IS
not: emg a owe to per orm-
_Conway,an_d .all other
c_y.B.'
thanorieoiiriceofliquorintcie_ach·--·•
.his
duties as securitv director becai1se of the·-
· ~em_bers 1nv~lve~- m. ,coor- . ~drink;
La_
st, .but· not le_ast,
Mr.
short-sightedneis o(his sujleriors. he cannot
~atmg the Sprmg Dinner Dance
Abromovich 'closed the .bar,
be held t<itally responsible for the dangers · this past- ;weekend ..
_
l t
gave
twenty-five minutes short.oftl:1e
presente(i. by the hazards. B~1t, if this is th('_ ... students a ~-ff~rentway to spend
five hour open barthathad been
· Any excuses of priorities other than the .
safety and · well -being of the ·Marist coin- .
munity; is disgraceful. Human li".es do not
run second on a~y list of priorities, however;·
those in charge · of. correcting fire hazards,
which ."threaten the life· of everyone on cam- .
pm~; seem to have a different list of priorities.
· cast>. it ,is W ater·s duty· to inform th~ campus •· , a ~aturday m~t.· ~ven th_o,ugh
promised. Any student spending
ofhi.-; problems - and more impgrtantly~- the · _ everyone ~as drmkm~, tile night· thirtv·dollars for one night should
liazards which exist for the comm11nity; .
·
we11to1_1 withouUmy disturbanc~s
expect fair and courteous· ser.:
occurrmi:
It·
wa~, a .sha~e-that -·: vice, not-abuse aild .. trickefy. I
the ev1:nmg had .~o h~ve .~ dilmper
think that Mr: Abromo~ch owes
put on 1~
by
our thr~y. birnq.uet
the · Mai:ist
.
community an
aditorial
. Irresponsibility in ni_;itters involving public
safety cannot be tolerated. Anyone shirking ..
his duty in providing for the security of the
_c11mpus should be dealt with immediately. . .
It
is very tragic somP people can. at iimi•s; . s~pervisor, . J\l · Al>ro~ovich._
apology for his actions.
confusi• issues and , their impact on
,their
O
first, . h_e annoy~_d , the• people~
·
· . · Sincerely,
; But with whom does the responsibility lie?
The blame must fall on the person in charge
of providing . security for ·students, faculty,
administrators and staff, Director of Security
f1;1low man. The· importance of, Imm an life. · attending by ~l)en_mg th
:j()()f.S
at'
Charles Bender.
and safety should ·,1ev('r b~ forgoth•n.-
~mcl
A.b · d. · -·
these people; Then the, ad-"
' s_1_10u~c_l 1,1ewr- br eq~iate~I
:~"i~h
~lOIH'ta~~:
.....
'
s u'r · .. '
.
__
minist~ation tries to change that
, .1hu
s. Some of the .idmm~strato::-; on tins : · ·.
· :
-., -
...
·
. by.hav1I1g the floors·inhabited by ,
.J~seph Waters. Water's job is to supervi~e
the safe:t~ · ~nd' prot~ction ~f~}~r_on~:;?.11 ·c~rr
.
rnmpus should .~ei:nembe_r tlns.~for thPt~t•t>m
Dea_r Ed1t~rs;
. , · -
: ·.
p~ple· with·the_same·interests ... ·
-~ty
h.a".~~,m.01!1t'!1tan\y fo~got~t'.:t!t· .... ·,, .- . _ _·
~~ghty-~~ne dollars: a~--;-cr~<llt·_,_:Lu~~~y; _tnat was·shoCdown·
by -
·
Y;.i'WpOlilt'
·, .'·' .. t'"
·
::..''
·
'~--
•·
-p--,
11
•
1
• ., . . . . . ••
"I,,., • .,. ·· ':
·dunn& the:1977_~1978,,s_ch_o~l year-•· the·students:1,
1
1"~·!'·1<1' ·:-. crr,:'•'1·•:~
,·,:'H~-:.,. ,.·•: .. , ·_ ...
·· ····.··
·
·
anda.Jumpton~nety-sixdollarsa·_
Now, the administration
is··
.
. ·
- ·
-
.
•
. credit during the 1978-1979 schoo}
goirig to raise . our tuition:· I
·
•
ye~:! At. this :_rate,' _during· my · realize that i:ates are going up all
,
·-..
semoryear, <lamafreshinanJ,I · overbutaraISeofsevendollarsa
·
could be pay~
$110.00
a credit I
credit is absurd. lam going to
be
.
.
,
came to
.
Mar1st College. because
faced to take summer courses at
.T'. he -
G·_os·p_e
I a
c.co
rd,1"
n
g·_ _
to·
·c·
a m_u
S
-
of the reputation tha~ th~school
another institution tci help me -
had .for its commurucat10n arts defray the costs .of college. I
department .. With proper. grades
would much rather see_a gradual
I have the chance to study abroad · increase in tuition. ·
by Bro. Joseph L. Belanger
which, as Eliot had put it in The Wasteland,
"It
can . connect - nothing with nothing." The
. and_ p_ossib_ly g_ain an internship
~f . Marist is . supposedly a
dunng ,my semor year.
"hvmg and
learning
ex-
In the Greek myths Prometheus is eternally
problem is clear. Now the sol!ltion. Is the answer
punished by the gods because he stole from them .
to cop out? To commit suicide? Camus answers
what was supposedly.Qnly theirs, fire.~St!eing
no; no type.of suicide is justifiable. Physical
humans deprived ofthis fire and _
thereby suf-
suicide · is cowardice, but equally so is
fering on earth, Prometheus went .. to·· Mount
metaphysical suicide which evades the problem
Olympus and succeeded
in
bringing-backfire to
with philosophical thinking, and more so is
humans, but he w~is consequently pinned eter-
religious suicide which attributes this · world
t
to.
nally to a mountain side·where vultures forever
God and humbly·,waits for the_ world to come ..
eat away his liver. This myth animated the life
Camus maintains that evH must' be resisted,
and thought of Albert Camus
(1913-1960).
This
·even
if
seen as emanating from God. The second
Nobel Prize winner was born but not raised a
stage in building the earth is set forth
in
his 'next
Christian. However. his message to· the world
novel, The Plague. This nqvel travesties the
was quite the same a:.. -:ttnt of Christ, "Love one
supposed Christian·answer to evil in the world in
another." To _do this, though, one has to first
the first sermon of the Jesuit priest Paneloux:
recognize a problem in doing so, then posit a
"My brothers, you are miserable; my brothers,
solution, and finally give oneself totally to the
. you deserve if. ... Ponder tpat and fall oii your
task. Camus spent his life doing just this and
knees .. · ... ;Behold, my brothers,. the immense
trying to get others to do the same. He wa·s born
consolation
.I
wanted to bring you,,, The wo_rst
in Algeria of very poor pa,rents, and he
grew
up
cop out possible: blame
it
on God, and therefore
in the.· slums of Algiers where his everyday
don't do a thing but wait for eternal life her after!. __
friends were :barefoot Arabs. There he learnt'
Rather, affirms Camus, let's band together and
that all men are equal. Despite dire poverty, he
fight this thing. That is the 'Christian' message .
. was enabled to pursue his education and obtain a
of Camus in The Plague-: all humans of good will,
·Licentiate in Philosophy.' Early on,. Camus
in all walks of life and of all persuasions,, are to ...
learned that there are problems·iil life.Asemi-
form community, to relate, and to fight evil·
pro soccer player at age 16, he was then struck..
together. _Even Paneloux joins the brigades later .
by an ahnost ·
fatal
attack of tuberculosis/This
and fights side by side with laity; theistic and .
left him with a clear realization that life is indeed
atheistic; to better human life: And in the end,
·,. short and not to
be
wasted. He plunged tern-
the plague
is
conquered. But . community. is
porarily into hedonism, revelling in the
composed \ of . individuals .. · Camus caps · his
Mediterranean, sun and. surf. But . hedonism
message· by a direct appeal· to each person's .
cannot satisfy the thinking person's lust for life.
conscience. "Where do I -fit in this scheme?"
Camus had to share his perceptions with other
.
''Am
0
I honestly trying to:help people have life
hwnans, steal fire from the gods, .and combat
··
and have it more abundantly?!' These questions
suffering at all limes and in all places, even
are pondered in Camus' third and last novel; The .
. though such suffering is seen by some, especially ·· ,Fall. "Who ainl?" "What am I?" "Ami-for real·
Christians, as coming from God and therefore to . · or phony?" This third and final stage is indeed
be borne in silence and. submission. Such an
where all re-creation of the world must start and ··
attitude revolted.' Camus,. and he set about
end: let it begin with me, honestly:
<. · . ·
mapping his re-creation of the wor~d.
. .•
In
all his other essays and short stories 'as well
.
. · I really anticipated having a
perierice," · they .
.
are certainly
good four Y,ear_s . here .when_ · I making it.awful hard for me to
entered, school
m
Spete~ber.
l
contm.ue my \'learning.and living
wa_s the only-~freshman.
Ol,l
the experience" becaus·e of increases
floor, but was ·accepted and made in tuition and room and board I
to,
fit
in. by
.
the· rest. of the people . ask you, is the administration dut
on the f!oor with mostly juniors -for themselves or the students?
and • seniors. I got the . chance to . ·
•
Sincerely
grow through, interaction with :
· Jim Towns~nd
FRANKLY
SPEAKIN(3
.... by
phil-frank
: The plan comprises, three . stages gf · con-
Cm,nus stl'.~ses tlte ltey i>oint'that r~reating.the> :
.sciousness. First, humans must recogoize that
--world·is'not up to':the .'established' civiLand · ·.
there is indeed .. a problem. Without.this, .dear .
religiolis dealerships; Rather, each one of us '.is .
sight; nothing. can
be
don~. Camus_ f~rcefully
truly a priest, a 'pontifex;' a builder,of bridges. .·
, shows us·the root problem of human alienatior.i,
·
On
January ~;, 1960, this -.~'conscience of our· - ·
.non-relatedness,'inhisshatteringTheStranger. • times!'t-~s extinguished-.· in .. air•- 'absurd'•
1hls bri~f novel depicts .. an ~•absurd'.·worldJn
· automobile ~ccident_-,Age 47. Ufe completei: ..
~~
..
,;;..;...
'
____....
-
.
April 20, 1978
THE CIRCLE
PageS
Lambert-couldn't make 8: 30's
Doing Job Well
Editors note:
1his is
the
Administrators believe
Lambert is doing his job well; but
·
fourth in a series of
students voice various opinions.
• administrative evaluation'i.
Antonio Perez, dean of students
and Lambert's supervisor, said
Lambert
.
is
•
"doing his job well,
but of course we all have room for
·
By Bet~ Weaver
..
improvement. He's working
·
on
·
and
VtcSmall
,
.
_
.
his (improvements), as
I
am on
·
·
·
-
mine."
F
.
red L8fiibert,t'ho
.
·.:::
·
.
P~r~ and Lambert meet once
was
e
irst
-
a week on· a· forinal basis, with
.·
.
Champagnat
other administrators, and
·
meet
.
:
hous~n.iaster
.
a
_
nd almost daily
.
00
.
an
:
infonnaL
-
.
·
~
.
-.
rehgious st~dies basis. Perez said
'·
We'v1:i'had ciui
.
.
instructor, said
_
he mirior disa
·
greements"
,-
and
.
.
-.
.
·
.
gave
_
_ up teachmg
.
believes
·
Lambert
is
concerried
~ause bem~ housemaster _
_-~vas
with student needs. He thinks
time ~nsum~g . and ~e
Just
.
Lambert is "very accessible" to
couldn t make his
8:30
s
.
students.
·
.
·
,
·
·
Lambert,
37,
came to Marist in
·
Lambert is evaluated by Perez
·
1969
;
•
after teach,ing for two yea~
·
and six
_
peers; three of whom
at
SL
.·
Joseph s -A~ademy
m
Perez
;
. names and three who
Tex~s, and ~hen f~ur years ~t
··
Lambeif names.
·
In
September
Christ the K~g High school m
the goals· and objectives for the
·
Lo11g Island City:
.
_ '
-
.
·
year are discussed between the
Lambert,
.
a
:
.
1?63
Man~t two, arid are reviewed in January
graduate,
_
became mt~
i:
ested
-
m
and June.
:
·
.
housi
_
rig
:
after _-two years
.
of
.
Two
.
of
.
Lambert
'
s
.
.
resp'ciri"
~
i
te~chmg_ l:lnd
_
bemg
,
9oll,:lemaster
.
,
sibilities,
-
working
.
.
with
·
campus
.
a~ ~an~
·
:
At. the
tlIIl~
i
-
the
.
. ·
ministry and student government
director .
.
of
·
residence
··.
~esig~ed,
·
were
·
:ctro
·
pped
···
this
.
year
:
They
_
and Lambert resumed hisJlut1es.
:
..
were
.
taken over
·
by Father
He has been assistant dean of
Richard La.Morte
.
arid -Dean
students since
1976. •
·
·
-
Perez, respe~tively
,
Lambert
said this was because he took on
·
·
·
.
--
R~sponsibilities
the added responsibility
.
of the
-
'
director of- residences,
.
after
'
H
·
is
;
·
res'iwnsibilities indu
_
de P
_
et
.
er
A m
_
ato
·
ac
.
cepted
_
a
·
position
· ·
·
· ·
·
f
h
.
·
Fred Lamber.t
su~r
:v
1s1bn
ci
t e campus center,
·
at another college.
·
student' activities; discipline and
·
Other adniinistrators
·
and staff
·
appeals· processes
,
health ser-
-
members ~lieve Lambert was dition."
·
Students had various opinions
vices
;'
and the food service
.
·
·
doing
,
his job
_
within
.
the
Andrew Pavelko, maintenance on the way Lambert is doing his
·
L
amb
·
ert
supervises
the guidelines set by the
•·
ad
-
director
,
said
"
We've
·
had our job
.
One student said, "I feel that
housemasters
·
and
;
student
·
ministrative manual.
conflicts, but we get along very Fred Lambert is not responsive
·
•
residence staff,
·
the
,
coordinator
Dolly Bodick, coordinator
.
of weir We've come to
.
an un- to the students' needs and wants.
_
o~
..:_~
o_llege activities, and
:
·
the
_
campus activities, said Lambert derstandi,~g of ~ach one's He has made so m~ny promises
coordmator of _health s_ervic~s
.
,
is ulti_mately responsible for problems.
He
_
said Lambert - to the st_udents which hav~ n~t
·
~e
,,
W!)tks
,
do~~-lf
,
~it!t
.
. ~he everything that goes through her
·
"will
assert himself wh~n he feels bee!! _fulfill~. For
a
person m his
dir~C!
_
or of counse~mg
-c
seryices;
:,
office:
·
'Tho\lgh
.. :
she
"
'
does
'
'
'
DO(
there
_
should
be
an a~1011
,;-
.•
~
· •
pos1t1on, he_ 1S
~~t
very open
.
and
·
_
the disector of ma1;11t~nam:e,
,
the
-
-
always
·
agree
·
with
·
Lambert's
Jos~pp \\'.aters,
.
.
direc~or of understanding.
_
_
associ~te
_
a<:!ademic
.
dean,
'
the
,
policies, she said "I don't think
'
secu!"ltY, said
·
Lal!lbert 1s sup-
.
Lambe':1
.
said ~e wanted t,o
.
coordmator of
,
the comp~ter there has
·
ever been a time when portive. "He has cooperated
·
kpow which promises he hasn t
center, th
_
e director
·
of seciiri\Y we can
'f
argue and discuss until
·
won~erfully well with _security,
:
kept.
~~
added that · 'people who
an~ safety, and the bursars
.
we come to an agreement. That
is
and _m turn we have tried .~o do wor~ ,,wtth me found me to be
office.
the nature of _our working con- our Job as well as we can.
.open.
.
.
.
.
.
Although some students voice
dissatisfaction with Lambert,
other students say he
is
easy to
get along with. "I've found
him
to
be very reasonable and un-
derstanding
,
" said one student.
"He's a disciplinarian during the
day, but after work, he's a lot of
fun."
Lambert said many students
hear about
him
through friends,
and
form
opinions without ever
meeting him personally. He feels
that part of his job is not to be
liked .
.
"
I
don't think any
disciplinarian is liked.
I
make too
many crucial decisions con-
.
cerning
people's
lives
.
"
Examples of his decisions which
have been found unfavorable by
some
·
students are: the in-
stallation of the new alcohol
policy, the elimination of singles
in the fall semester, the room
proposal, and the decision on the
removal of all personal items
from a room during Christmas
break.
Lambert
,
a former Marist
brother, said he does his job well
because he works with ex-
ceptional people. Nthough there
are times when parts of his
policies need compromising
,
such as the residential ob-
jectives
,
Lambert said he
"doesn't ever recall having any
of my concepts or policies totally
disliked by my administrators."
He added, "I'm willing to take a
second look at my decisions
.
"
Lambert
,
who resides in
.
Hyde
Park "overlooking the foothills of
the Catskills" with his wife, Julie
,
said
_
he misses the opportunity of
sitting and talking to groups of
students.
A
gourmet cook, who admits to
making
"
a mean egg
foo
yung,"
cooks and plays the piano to
unwind.
.
·
His
dream
'
is that
one
qay
Marist can be one place in the
·
world where the living
·
- learning
concept really works
,
adding
'"I've spent eight years trying to
accomplish this
."
LipJzzans
leap
to
delight
fans
r
,
.
~/.GERRY.McNUL'IY:
..
,__
The Royal Lipizzan Stallions from Vien-
na,
Austria
performed before over 4000
people this past weeke~d
at
the McCann
Center.
,
..
··
"
.
.
-
•
:
·:,
FRI thru THURS, APR. 21-27
I
.. ,
.
(aJ\'!);1-.,
r - '
··
7
' L ~ J
..
~
-
,;.;,/
R
RICHARD PRYOR
HARVEY
KEITEL
SUPER SAVINGS ON ALL YOUR
LIQUOR NEEDS
~~
!
4.19
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BLEN
.
D
.
•.•.•
.
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Gin 80'
GIN 80° .
.
•..
.
.
•...
VODKA
80°.
·
• •..
•
. ·
:;::.:.__ GIN
90° •••.•••.
I~ BOURBON
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6yr. old
SCOTCH
&0°
·
• •.•
SCOTCH
86°.
■
• •
4.49
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'
4,19-
4.89
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4.99
4.99
:
5.59.
"'....,,._....-
-
-
-.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
.
-
.
THE CIRCLE
April 20, 1918
Students to dance for charity
ByJ.Perez
Tony Salvia and Elizabeth
McRae will tie
thinking
of a $400
trip to Bermuda during the
Marist
College Dance
.
Marathon,
·
April 21-23. "We hope to make it
48hours" said Salvia "but we will
dance as long as we can."
The dance contest starts on
Friday at 9 p.m.
in the old
gym
and continues until Sunday at 9
p.m .
.
Contestants will dance for
four
·
hours, resting for one, and
continue at those intervals for 48
hours or whoever holds out the
.
longest. Second
·
prize is $200.00
and third is $100.00 with a trophy
for the top three couples
.
"I
.
plan to get alot of rest and
start out slow" said Edwina
Kelly
.
"I'll have to keep a slow
steady
·
pace, not go too fast, and
maybe get
_
a ~it to _eat or
something to
.
drmk durmg the
breaks.'' Kelly
.
is
.
entering, with
. Oliver Jones, both· of which are
Marat students.
Kathy Comish believes
-
that if Dining Services.
she stays excited enough, she will
Thus far, 20 couples have
stay awake.
"I'll
probably take signed up to enter. The cost of
showers during breaks, this will sponsoring a coupte
·
is $25.00. The
help keep me awake" she said
,
sponsors include Casablanca,
Her partner, Christopluar Faille, McDonald's, Fitchett Bros
.
.
and
said he plans to jog a few days the Caboose.
In
addition,
·
the
before the contest in order to couple has to provide $25.00 worth
build stamina. "I also plan to of pledges.
drink alot of coffee during the
Al Abramovich, chairman of
dance, it can keep me going for the dance marathon and food
.
hours
"
said Faille.
services manager said the dance
The
Budweiser
Brewing contest will be like a regular
Company is sponsoring the event, mixer, while the contestants
estimated at a cost of $1,000. This dance in a separate area.
covers priie money, trophies, T-
Cable television, channel
12
shirts and radio advertising .
.
·
will provide hourly reports on the
Money for the bands will come contest and will Oash a phone
from door receipts. There is a number to call pledges on
·
.
the
cover charge of $2
a
day.or $5 for weekend
;
The proceeds from the
a three
·
day pass for non-Marist
.
.
event
.
will go to St. Francis
people. Marist students must pay Hospital in Poughkeepsie and
-
$1.50
per day or $3.00 for a three contest organizers are counting
day pass
.
Drinks and food will be . on
·
pledges to reach their $3,000
sold on a cash basis by the Marist goal.
·
·
~
~
Future
--
-
sh
.
ock
··-
affects
·
.
stt1d
.
ents
·
S~san
,
Stepper
.
Toffler, author of
Fu~re
Shock," married at least twice within
.
the
·
said Norton"is that we make 100
·
next ten years;
-
and that by the
:
College students are the sad-
tunes more decisions in one day year 2000 we will
_
be
_
a~ked if we
h
Id
da
tha
·
n our grandparen
_
ts made in
_
want to use
.
euthanasia fof our
dest people
in
.
t e wor
to
Y
•
·
'lb"
ch nging
because of the "future shock"
·
one month
;
"
·
·
·
·
parents. "
mgs are
a
h
If
that fast," he said.
.
.
they are experiencing, according
·
"There are two and a
·
a
.
Norton believes our values are
. to Joe Norton, History professor
applicants for every job," said constantly
.
beil)g forced _to
at Marist .College.
.
Norton. "Future shock is when
d
Norton spoke to Mar.ist
someone
.
is trained for
-·
a change.
"In
1969,"
he
sai .•
"abortion was illegal. By
1973
1t
students
·
wed.nesday; April
12
in
professional job,
-
goes to 300 in-
.
had become legaL" Accordingto
House I of Champagnat Hall on
terviews, and is told no."
·
·
No_rton, all our ideas and values
what "future shock
"
is.
Norton believes that the world about life had to change.
.
.
.
.
,
According to Nortori everyo~e
is
changing too fast for people to
.
"Every age
·
has had a future
de,velops-expectations about what
·.
.
rely on the past to govern the shock,,. said Norton,
"
so,:ne age
_
s
they're going to be doing the rest future. "The world now has have had more time to adJust to 1t
of their lives
.
"No one expects,"
·
approximately
il.3
billion tha
·
n
·
others." He bel
_
ieves the
he said, "to be digging ditches or people;" said No~un, "by the
working in
a
factory ~he rest of Year 2000 that is expected to
·
problems we experience becaus
,
d
their lives." He beheves that double
.
We have to learn to deal
·
of
.
future shock habilit c~us~
· when these expectations are not
.
with things differently in order to
people."~ lose th
f
a rl/"
0
·
e
- met;
,.
people
':
experience
·
''future deal with them."
·
·
·
.
·
·
·
part
oft e presen wo
·
·
shock."
:
'
·
·
" .
·
.
·
According to Norton 40 percent
.
· "One of the concepts
1
of Alvin
_
of college students will
·
be
t
y
J
;
~
Somewhere in the'Third World. your family is waiting .
.
Your b,others .
.
your-
·
neighbors. men
.
women arid children very much in
_
l}eed of
,
your love.
,,
'
Imagine h~w much you can do ior them. You can share God with them. g!ve
them hope and peace and dignity. You can counsel and educate them. give
·
them food. clothing and medicine. Even in their world of grinding oppression.
you can help set them free
.
·
.
·
It will take a lifetime. but
-
after all. they are your family. In God
'
s eyes. every-
one is your family
.
:.
·
·
·
,
I.et us tell you more about life as a Maryknoll Missioner
.
Send us the coupon or
·
call (914) 94
·
1
~
7590
.
Ask for Father' Wurth.
it
could be your ticket home.
I
·
-
.
- -
·
·
· .
·
- - -
'
---------M3i
, Maryknoll
-
Missioners
·
·
,
I
·
,
peopl
_
e who give their lives ~or people
I
·
I
DIRECTOR OF
AD~ISSIONS
_
.
• Maryknoll Missioners• Marykrioll, N.Y. 10545
I
I
Dear Father:
•
·
•
I
Please send me information aboul becoming a Maryknoll
I
I
·
Priest
Brother
Sister
I
Name ...
.
.
.
. . . .
.
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·
·
.
. \
_
_
_
__
·
-
----- -·· -
--
·
- - - -
-
-
--
-
-
-
--
:I
! ~'.,~"•
:·
:
. -,
·-
.
_s,.,. __
__
·
_ZipCode
_ _
•
_
I
I
Age
_
_
;-
·
.
•
..
PhCJile
__
_
_
.::.;_
_
.
_
.
___
__
_
Class
.
.
.
.
I
I
College
...
.
.
..
-
,
_
·
- ...
,
-
:
--
·
-
-
- - -
·
- - - - Y~ar~~Gradual
i
on _
_
·
· - -
.
I
-----
·
------------------
April 20, 1978
THE CIRCLE
Netters record now 1-4
By
David
Ng
John
Brittis
and
Walt
Brickowski are planning to enter
the NCAA Division III . tennis
doubles tournament in May at
Rochester. Although · the Red
Foxes are
1-4,
Brickowski says
Brittis and he play well together.
The netters dropped a. 7½ and
. 1
1
11!
decision to New Paltz Monday
at home. They visit Vassar
Friday.
Joe Coogan, in his first year as
coach of the team, says "Brittis
is an excellent doubles player,
he's a steady player. Brickowski
is
a power hitter. They com-
pliment each other," he says.
The Brittis-Brickowski duo are
2-1.
.
In
their second home match,
the · Red Foxes managed one
singles victory against New Paltz
when Larry Simmons downed
Pete Wilson 7-6, 2-6, 6-1.
· Brittis and Chris Curran split
two sets 3-6, 7-6, and the third set
was cancelled because of
darkness.
Curran lost his singles match
earlier
6-4,
6-3. Brittis cropped a
decision 6-3, · 2-6, 6~:l. Scott
Rosmam topped Brickowski 7-5,
6-4.
Gary Seymour, of New Paltz,
defeated Tony Mario
6-0,
6-3.
Arthur._Hawkins bested Red
Foxes' Frank Mayerhofer 6-3, 6-
1.
· Pete Wilson and Rosmarn
downed steve Gilbert and Sim-
mons 10-3, and the Seymor-
Hawkins combination were
victorious over Steve Porath and
Mario, 6-1, 6-4.
Marist 7, Dowling 2
In
a match against Dowling the
Red Foxes captured five of six
singles matches to rout the Long
Island school 7-2.
·
Coogan said it
is
basically a
good team but lacks one out-
standing player, and depth. He
also said because of scheduling
problems among the players, the
team has never played with its
top five or six players.
The Red Foxes dropped a 6-3 ·
match to Kings College at
Briarcliff Manor April 12.
Trackmen set . records
By_Scott Carlton
The Marist. College Track
Team set a
·
school record for the
sprint medley Saturday during
the Monmouth College Relays.
The team, made up of freshman
Rich Duff, sophoµiore · John
Hamilton~ junior .anchorman
Keith Millspaugh and senior Rich
Crump combined for
a
time of
. :i:32.3. The team placed third in
· the college division and will
travel to Westfield for a meet
Saturday.
Cub softball
The Red Foxes other entries
included Jerry Scholder running
the 5,000 meters, with a time of
15:22.4. He placed seventh.
This
was Scholders' first race· in more
than a year.
The Red Foxes also entered
a
mile relay team of Crump,
Millspaugh,
Hamilton · and
Scholder. The team placed
seventh ·"ith a time of 3:29.8.
Scholder replaced Duff in the
race because Duff pulled a leg
muscle during the sprint medley.
Entering this Saturday's meet
will be Crump and Millspaugh
who will run the 880 trying to
qualify for future championship
meets.
·
Scholder will . run the 5,000
meters and Hamilton will run the
440 dash. Peter Velez will pole
vault, and Matt Cole will
run
the
3,000 meter steeple chase.'
Because the team did ·not ·apply
for the Penn Relays before the
deadline they will enter a meet in
Hartwick, where the runners
have· a chance to qualify
for
the
1C4A's an~ the NCAA meets.
Players of week named
~" ..... , .. By,fat4r_ltj~ ·'"·• ..
Champions
Kevin Kelly defeated · Ron
Clarke 21-6, 10-21, 22-20 Thursday
for the in'trainural· handball
championship.
Dave Soucey . defeated Bob
Kozakiewicz . for .. the wrist
wrestling championship.
Floor Hockey
The Lost Planet Airmen vs.
Sheahan Raiders in Floor Hockey
plaroffs today.
. Coed Softball
In
coed softball the Walkaways
forfeited to Smegmari Phi and
The Bosys-defeated Leo House 8-
5.
SwimMeet
Ann
Luber outswam Walter
Matuszek and John Shannon with
a
time of 32A seconds in the 50
yard backstroke entry at the first
intramural swim meet Tuesday
night ... ·
,,,
In
another close race John
D'Alessandro beat John Mayer
with a time of 39.1 seconds
compared to Mayer's time of 39.2
seconds:
Barbara
Krozser
finished with, a time· of 44.1
seconds in th~ 50 yard breast-
stroke.
A male intramural record was
established in the 200 yard
medley relay,
by
backstroke
Stand.ings
Standing as
of
Tuesday,
April
18
AMERICAN LEAGUE W L
Black Eagles
3
O 1.000
Walkaways
2
1
.667
Sprockeyes
2
2
.500
Smegma Phi
1
2 .333
'Mongo's Bunch
o.
4 ·
.000
NATIONAL LEAGUE .
· Sheahan
3 O 1.000 .
Ace Heads
3 1 .
750
FullHouseGang
1 2
.333.
Muff Divers ·
0 2 .000
Fifth Flooi:-Leo
. 0 •2 .000
Matuszek, bf east ,stroke· Mayer;
....
CUB Softball.
butterfly, Dan· Benoit and·
freestyle, Kozakiewicz for
a
time
The CUB Spring Softball
of 2:14.6.
League finished its first week of
In
other events Shannon placed action Friday.
Of
the 150 men
. first in the free style with a time· participating in the league two•·
of 27 .5 seconds with Kozakiewicz were picked as player of the week
( 28.8 sec.) and Kevin Vianna by the ten team ~aptains; A six
( 30.1 sec,) taking second and pack of Heinekin was split by
third respe<;tively.
. .
Brian Schmidt and Gordon Kast
In the butterfly .event ·· Benoit of Sheahan for their outstanding
placed ·first with 33.30 seconds hitting_in their wins over the Ace
over Luber who· had a time of · Heads, Muff Divers and the
Full .
33.37_seconds.
House Gang.
Want to Land.
a.Good
SulltmerJob?
There are more than 200,000 openings
this year! Paying summer jobs of every
description, for p~ople of varied
interests-jobs in the U.S., Canada, Great
/ Britain, Europe~ and Asia.
REF
371.425
s
Here's where·you'll find them ...
hoto/Paul '\"unzinta
Chris Curran preparing for a shot in Monday's tennis match
against New Paltz which Marist lost, 7½ to I½.
This Week in Marist Sports,-
Friday, TENNIS at Vassar, 3 p.m.
Saturday, CREW Temple, home, 8:30 a.m.
Saturday, LACROSSE, Dowling, home 2 p.m.
Saturday, TENNIS at CW Post, 1 p.m.
Sunday, CREW Connecticut, home, 8:30 a.m.
Tuesday, TENNIS Ramapo, home, 3 p.m.
Wednesday, LACROSSE Stevens Techn, home, 3 p.m.
Wlllld..-&
~
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~
..... , ..
h.~
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·. ·
For Guys - Gals . ··
Super New York Cuts
Shampoo, Cut, Blow Style
·prom
·5.00 .. · . :.
His
& Her Body Perm
Curly or Soft with· Cut
.From 15.00.
I
17 So. Hamilton St., Poughkeepsie
(½
Block south of Main Mall)
·
471-4383 ·
M-S 9:30-6:00
-
ilii"
~ - •
- ~ - c ~
'
1
1
TAVERN AND GATHERING PLACE"
POUGHKEEPSIE, N, Y.
. 23 DUANE STREET
PHONE
454-9278
PARKING
□ FF VERRAZZAN □
BLVD.
Sunday: Vineyard Night
Every Wine 50
4
(Reg. ·$1.00)
Monday: Half Price Night ·
Tuesday:Cannonball
Expa
~ss
$3.50 all you can drink
Draft and Bar Stock
Wednesday to Saturday
1~11
Special
·
shots-Tequila-
Sc_hnapps-Jerty Bean-65
4
Sour Hour. Daily 4~
p.m. _
open daily .11-3.
Sandwiches
til
closing
I
.
!
I
i
I.
THE CIRCLE
April
20,
1978
Carew hits net often-
CreWS lose
at_ Ithaca
Billy Carew, a sophomore from
Deer Park, L.I. has been named
athlete of the week· for the week
ending April 17. A lacrosse
player , Carew scored three
goals against Farleigh Dickenson
University Saturday and_ two
goals against Montclair State
Monday.
. ByDave Shaw
Jim Palatucci, Bo Mason, and Marty Smith, along_ with
Charles .Joseph,.
Bill
Graham, -coxswain Mary Ellen Minze, the
The Marist crews found it hard Rich· Neal, Bob Missert, and Red Foxes finished with a time of
to make waves this past weekend Frank Hildenbrand at the bow. · 7:52, compared to Ithaca's first
in the waters in Ithaca. The .The CO"XSwain was Mike Davis. ·place finish of 7:45.
Athlete of.
varsity, junior varsity,. fresh-
The junior varsity heavyweight
Coach--Joe Eckelman's ·other
· man, and women's teams- all boat found the competition very freshman
team,
the
h W k
found the.water rough as Ithaca rough, as Ithaca's junior varsity heavyweights~ ran into .,;ome
t
'3
ee
outstroked all of the Red Fox .heavyweight boat sailed past the · rough water, and were· out-
Carew, who lived in the Bronx
teams, and St. ·Joseph's varsity Foxes, although the lightweight • stroked by over 30 seconds.
for two years . never played
won,_·_ too. This Saturday, the team fell short of Marist by one Stroke Joe Neal, Jim Kerrs, Ken
lacrosse until this season. "A lot
· Marist crews will hold their first· . second.·
· .·: . · ·
Wohl, Brian Morrissey, Jerry
of my friends in high school were
borne meet of the, season facing
In
a race that found Marist Mayerhaufer, Bob Murray, Fred
good players and went to colleges
Connecticut College at 8:30 a.m. behiilcL:from, the· start, C:oach Lothior, and b·owman Jim
that had good lacrosse teams.
Billy Carew
This past Saturd!iithere wasa Caldwell's 'team . made
a Raimo, and coxswain Sara
They taught me, plus a few ~ys
_tough varsity heavyweight ra_ce;
comeback try ~t the·end that was . Sowinski make up the freshman: on this year's team; co:captams, . said he knewthere were only five
as · Sf. Joseph's, Ithaca, and· too little;=too· late .. Strokes Dave heavyweights who just ~o_uld not
Kerry Ripp, Phil Cotennec. and returning team members and "I
Marist were about even after the. Fe1·n,- ·Joe· For· d,·· "'on· ·y. Lynch, ·combine· to_ •give Ithaca ':a_ ra
__ ce_ ._
Lo ·
M
lin. ·. "
·
·d·
c
re·w ·
·
·
1 ·
·r
.1,•
we
er o, . sai •· a
•
had a good_ -chance ofp aymg 1 I
first J_OOO meters. They· all c
__ ame Ralph" Des·1•derl,"' ·Dave Davern, -
The sour luck of ,the Red Foxes
· Ab. ·
··
c
·w wants
·
usmessmaJor, are ..
.
kepfat it.''
·
.
- ·
off strong,- at about 42-43_ strokes Mike Ball, Mike Lonza, and was compounded during the
fomvn
his own business someday.
He also scor~d a goal with one
per minute. At- 500 meters, St. bowman - Wayne Schmidt, with: -women's race, as with 500 meters · He ran cross-country andtrack in second left in tne game against
Joes pulled• out to a
.
half-length Sue Dubatowka . · as ... • coxswain, into the meet a full crab, ( oar out
hign school-in addition
to
playing Keene-State and he had an assist
lead over Ithaca, who in turn had .·found-.. themselv_ es· •--_21_seco_rids_ ofse_ quen
__ ce)_ stopp_ed t_ he-boat_ for
• ·-
·
·t ,_ ___ - b
n
·
·
d
M ·st·
·
·
h
·
Juruor varsi
Y
UdSe a · •
.
aga_ irist City College
o_f
New York
a'half-l_en_. gth le_a ·over•
arl . be_ h_ ind,- Ithaca's··1·uru_
·or· varsity ·25
·
secori __
ds:
The_ team, w o is_·
Th
e·co d mi·df1•e·ld p·layer 1·s
•
ls
800
11
e s
n ..
.
. ·
·
to:gi•v· _e· hi•m·· _
-
a total of-six ·goa
··Marist made.
a
·move at
h_eavy_weigh_ t __ -'s_
,
·tim_e, of
__ -'-.7_ :27,_ -coached·_by_ Sha_ ron __ Ma et_, ·was
-··.
. - d
-th
-thr - -
i:..:..
· t s . b l
k
optimjsticaboutthisyear'steam. ~h_ us fa_··r ... - ·
meters, ah ·
e .-
ee. uva .. ·a1th9tigh. they • ended . up _ one t°-fally .. lina _ e fo
ma
e
~
any
.. We should never have won as
evened ·out -. at · the _- 1000 meter ·second ahead of Ithaca's light-
comebac){s. after.· that, . and felt 'many games as we did, not with a
-Honorable Mention
mark, But, the steam seemed
fo
weights, .
_ ._ _ _ _ .
._
short of lthac;Bc by 4_6 _seconds. ~e , team that has this little ex-
·run . out of the_. ·pa· ddles,
SL
,Joes
.· _The fr· eshm_ an·· lightwei_gh_ t_ te_ am_
._.w_
omen
__ 's_
.
b_ oa_t consist_ ed_ .. _of K
__ -ay
· ·· ,, w·
·
· · ' 100
·
·
·
·
.
penenc~ .. • e are tmP,rovmg .
._.Vinny_ Barone, ··a 1·u_nio_r f_irst
came oil strong.to finish with a
ca_
me_ the.cl_ osest_ .· of ._any .. of the Sh_ aw, Sue
__ Vmall,_,
.
Allson ~len_ d-
·
-t ··th··
c·
e
·
f ·
·r· ··
h d
·
·
·
· p
percen wt
every game: ar w .year ·goali_e is mentioned
f_
or the
tune o 7:04. Ithaca· ws e ten· r_a:ces_; a_ s the_ y came within seven· sho_ j, Vicki_Bailey_, Patti ow_ers,
"dh ·
· c t ·
r·
·t·1
·
· t f
· ·
d · b .. h · d
d · M · t
o
Al.
H d
·
sat
e is ·· e
lID
e
Y
gomg ou or f1·ne·performances given to date.
secon s . _ e m , .. an · ·.
aris ·_ secon_d_s_ o
__ fJt_ ha_ca_'_s __ 1ightwe_igh_t._·• -De_bbie_._. r_o_ p
__ .,.· Mar_y_ ... 1_ce
.
a_r
_
,
th ·
t
,,
·
f. · ·h d
'i:.:
'ct·
·th · 7 2· 6
·
Ann
-
e team nex year.
·
In th_ e season opener against
. mis e __ tiu_
r
wi __ a_ : _•
With.To_mM
___ ast_ e_rson_,JoeFolhs
__ ,· Li_.zB_orell, and coxswain-Jo
··c
•··h · 1· · ·
, ftba.
n
· · ·
~
··ght. b t
·
·
·
·
-
arew, w o·p ays
10
a so
York he was ·awarded the game
Tue.varsity heavywei . •·• oa
Everett. Brown, Dave. Rowan; England.
·· 'league in the summer at_home · ball.
consisted 0of stroke· Pat Brown, Mike ,Orenstein; John Cifare.lfi:,
L..-----------;.;.....;.._.. ..... ...;;.;;;;;;;...;, _________ __.
Stickmen
flnisb
tough week
with
loss
,
~~~
·- ·
1oto
a,, .. '"'"
. Midfielder-Chris Walion
(91
who later scored w_ith a few minutes left during Monday's
game ·against FDU,.
..
.
. ·
·
·
....._
1--~
HIGH ON SPORTS
..
_
.
...........
by Regina Clarkin
·:_:ByGerard_Biehner
·
on the field with no reserves,"
.
explained Cervoni. ;:we won but
· :Coming
off
the
toughest,
week_
ie,_i:e· t;mt hustled and I felt the
Cofthe season/the ·siicknien' lost
team's 'attitude going down.'.'
three games after·operiing '!i,th· a · J\fter his talk, the Fled.Fox
7
s lost
victory over CCNY; The Red , the ,next two, ~ut Cervom sees-
. -F'oxes now with
a
record -of two · their play and attitude as greatly,
wins 'and .. four; losses, face
improved'. ··Both
FD\!-
-a"i'id
Dowling, the, division champion -~ Montclair ~re far more ex-
last year, Sat~rday at 2 p.m, imd
perienced t!ian us, as ~ost of o_ur
··· Stevens· 1.'ech W~dnesday . at · 3 , opponents have bee11,. ·_ ~e said,
p.m ..
Both games are at honie, ·
··but we played very physical and
The fled Foxes dropped three
out hustled both teams.'.' "~ feel
games foFarleigh Dickinson 11-
the-morale of.the team 1s higher
5· Montclair 11-5 and Maritime
now than it has ever been,'' he
24-6.
. . '
. .
added. . . _
_ .
Following the lacrosse team's
Cervoni ·sees.the. offensive
4-1 defeat oLCCNY last· Wed-
team's biggest drawback is lack
nesday, Red ·Fox coach Tom
ofaggression: "We've lost games
Cervoni sat down and · '.had a
on shots," he said, · "the players
talk" with his team,· heing
uri-
get the ball in close but look to;
satisfied, with their:. play. The
pass instead ?fgoing to the net."
resulr was losses by identicat
Sophomore Bil who never played
scores of 11-5 to the far ·more
lacrosse until this"year, had a
experienced· Farliegh Dickinson · , spectacular -week with three of
·University and Montclafr, games
Marist's ~ive
-
goals.against FDU,
which Cervnoi.calls "by•far our· and adding .. two .. more Monday .
· best performances of the year.~'
against· Montclair.
:•CCNY had only t~n men on the
squad, only enough to put a team .
When head crew <!oach Gary Caldwell
·
Another .aspect of his job was directing while," he s~id. ~e has no. family-· there will be changes in the job description··
leaves June 15three positions will. be left
·
and.organizing s ~ e r sports camps. He responsibilities and the transition from giving the college a chance to be flexible
· unfilled. The positions Caldwell-holds are said financially the sports camps proved to one place to another is. a bit-easier.
.
with their needs and priorities.
· ·
head crew_ coach, sports information
be succe_ssful.Ylt's difficult to say
if
they
Athletic Director Ron Petro feels it was
The result of the resignation of Caldwell
director and part.time physical education ·were successful only because of McCann. ·a difficult -job for '.Caldwell with his . should be just that, a chance-to r_eevaluate ·
instructor. _
Of·
cours~ the -improvement· of the swim-
background,. (history major at Yale)
to
do the job of head crew coach which iri<!ludes
Caldwell said,he is resigning because he ming camp is because of the pool." He a~o . all three jobs. -Petro said he might've . the duties of sports information· director.
has, an opportunity· to get into· a private __ worked with: managing· a budget for the emp~asized one job more thanthe others
·sports Information is an hnportant
: business venture in Connecticut and he ·• center,.
. _
• ..
.
therefore, causing a conflict:, _
,
' aspect of any college trying to put itself on
.a~ ~as ~ch~nce to teach soc~al sciences.
_'.:~e
1ol}_,~ll adds upto a J>C!Sition th~t
The per~n was~det~fitthethree jobs ,the. athleti~ m?P· for.
-
the .• future that
on 'aJwµor)ugh school level
m
the Man-
reqmres a, great -amount _of tune;'' 'Sa1d .. and now the three, Jobs Will be made to fit should be kept m_ mmd.-. ·
· chester School:System in.Conn.
· Cald\\'elt .
_
.
. .
.
· the person said Petro in reference
'
to the · Ideally a sport._s information director
.: :-'lber
·
e inay.be.;Inore than meets the eye
"The only reason I came, to-Marist was hiring procedure for the rie;ict crew-coach. should.be a full~tiirie job but since that isn't
_with the· t~ignation :or Gag_- Caldwell. fo.rJhe: rowi~g:prograin:l:took the other
lf-~~ld\Vell .forced _the athlet_ic_ ~epart-
~~~omic~lly feasible_ ~t the pres
7
nt time
· AccQrding to Cald~el!.t?e position_~fhead · parts of thejo~ as nece~sartparts of the_ _me~t· _into· ,reevalua~mg _the -po~1t1on
~y: ·
1tm1~t be be~ter
~~ P311'. up SID with some
crew coach wllen,-or1gmally describ¢d-to
:
contract to run the rowing program/t :_, , resigning than that
_IS
the:good:'that has _of.,the:other Jobs mst~ad of 'Crew- coach
·h@ :didn'('?PP.~rdo in_volve as;i:xu~~ll _ ... · __ 8-ired in M.?~1976; Cald\V~ll ~yshe g!ive
come out"of t~e-situati~n ~id)~e~r~. .
s~ch ·as ni~ht manager, •. int~µiural ·
'-work. ·/-The/·~ount~ ;
_
(}_f ·
•
.
emphas~s.
~ 9n ' t~s. job \wo :years because tw.o years 1~ a - p1ildwell ~a1~ J1e hopes._ his ·resi~at1on . d1r~ctor ,. ass1stl!nt basket~~-, ~oach, ·. or
.promoting, ba~_ket~,..!tand,football d1dn't--}air
.
time.-··-both .to himself;:,and- ~he.-_m-
Will allo\\'._.th~. Ct?llege_to
_
recogruze the busmess manager oJ McC~Il!1-·
~
:a·~~~~-K~~--~~:f!lJJ
,
}~
;
l;~~~-Pr fs. __ .i. ,\' --~~i~~-t~~?i 'T:1
·.
~ee.~:-~~~in~,~bo~t~t _for a. needsoftn.e M~pann ~~ter.~nd,hopesthat ·
,
,,.,~ •· ·::.::, ~-.<
~
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;
·
.. ,
'
:
- ·., ,. ' --
. .
.
.·
::~--.
.·
·;
..
:.-
'
--
-
.....
,:·
.
20.9.1
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20.9.5
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20.9.8