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Part of The Circle: Vol. 18 No. 18 - March 31, 1977

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Volume
_
_
l8,
-
Number 18
.
MARIST COLLEGE; POUGHKEEPSIE,
.
NEW
·
YORK 12601
March 31, 1977
McCan11
·
Center
may
Open Sunday
By~Striege~
and to make sure the
,
building
is
-
--
_
.
. . .
..
fit
for occupancy.
·
.
After more than a
.
Year
·
and a
"We
have a good
·
chance that
.
haltof co~ruction, and even
:
a the place wiU open,"
:
said P~tro~
.
.
longer amount
-
:
of time in
_
the
.
He added that health officials had
.
-

·
_
-
works, the
$2.7
million James
-
J .
-
.
been
.
through
:
the building two
.
..
McCann
·
Recreati,on ~t~I:'
-
will
weeks ago to check plumbing and
--
open
.
_Sunday
-
J)E3nding
·
approva
L
f4"e regulations;
:
· ,

_
·
-

_
·
.
and. ~uance of
.
.
a temporary
\
'
"If
we
·
getthe ~hbit, basically
.
··
certiflca~ of occupancy from the we'll haye
_
an
-
open house
.
.
and
.
::
Dutchess County H~lth
.
Dept. open activitiest
·
'!be
building
_
. L
·
~Qn
_
-
·
Petro, athleti~
.
,
director_.
-
remains· ~unfinished
:
in
·-
certain--:c
said county
.
health
:
officials will
.
areas
which
will
·
be
worked on
.
be at the McCann Cente:r

Friday
,
even after the center opens
.
''The
t~ che
_
ck the p~l fUtering:.system
·
goa1 is to finish)yAprH
17
when
·
·
·
·
·
·

. :
:
the

-
bu
_
ilding
:
will be
i
formally
--··
dedicated," he said.
·
· .
.
.
.
.
. ·
.
.
.
·
c
·
pse11
i
n,i,,
·
'
~:rilf
i:~ti:!E~~
-

-
s
·
'"'
-
p
·
·
e
·
·
·
a
'
k
.
.
·
t
-
·
·
need
'
to
'
be
'
samfedand painted
.
·
-
<
. .
... _.
.
.
.
a
·
.
:
Petro said there will be "at least
-
·
··.
·
· ·
··
·
·
four
and
·
probably
six
~
'
:
baskets
:
dedication
-
~
0
:or
:
u~~:J~
-
~:·
-
~~::~
.t
}~~
. ·
recreational swµrtming
,
· -
..
·
~
Howard
·
Cosen,
th;
.
famous
:
·
··
"We welcome
·
everyone to see
televisf on sportscaster,
_
has
.
been
'and
use the facility
;''.
he
said
.
_
The
· ~- ··
asked to speak
_
at
.
the
.
formal building
will.
be operi from noon
·
to
C
.
.
dedication
.
of the
.
James
.
J. Mc
~
.
9
p.m. weekends; and from
9
a
.
m.
·
CaEU
Recr!)ation Center
'
on
·
·
April to
10
~.m
.
'
during
·
t11e
~e~~
i
::
·
-
-

.
17,
ac¢ording
to
Athletic
'
Director
·
p~nng t?e mont!J
.
o
f.,
:April~
_
the
Ron Petro
>
.
. ·_·
·
.
.
.
..
-:.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Jac;ip.ty
.
wiU
:
be
-
.
-
Ope?
.
,
,
_
on.Ir
c
for
-
: -
Petr9
~-
~
-
\d)le)ias
:
iiq(gotteii ~
:
: '.
M~rJ~
,
;~
:
st1=1d.e,r~
;
:
JS:<;ulo/
,t
;
~d~
,
.
~'.
·
. i
r
.
ep
·
ly
i,
fromCosell
-
and
-
said
T
he
,
-
IP;llll~I'~tol'~,
"
-
~g
.,:;
5!¥f.
:,:
J'her~
--
-
· ..
--
~
,.
·
-
· .
.
,
_
.-
;
Thenatatorium~eao
·
f~"'e
·
u
·
ew
.
-M
,
.
.
c
·
pannce
-
nter. (
.
pbotob
-
-
y
·
..
J
·
·
oe
·
·
.
·
.
G1;.u
_
·
o

- )
.
·-_
_
_
·
··
.
-
·•
···
·
····
·
.
.
.
·,
.
.
. ,
·
'
willbea
"•
secuntyofficer·on

duw:
•.'·
·
'·'
-
-
...
_
~ou_
.
-
~,
:,;_¼;':.~
:":';
i
'i
'i:'.'f'
:
!
l
'
ii'~iii~lit-
fti
~
::~.~w;r~
1
~
t
~~t
1r
r:
·l
t
··
_:_
-/\i
...-.
;
:
:'.
t
,:,?.:;~:
~~
-
'_
--
-
~
.
,-
~
:
-
.
, .
.
.. .-
.
_
_
_
,
'
- .
. ::
.
:
'
·
'
,
/
.
,
:
.-:
:;
~•::i·w
'.
.
~
-
-
·
:
.
.
";·.
-
-
~/'
:
·
,:
.
·
~r~~~~=.!!t ..
i:
~;;!-~~ir~°";~
':::
o1
u:.
co11es.
~.,;;,
~~_i{
tj.h;
:
:''.
ilii.~Hai-iP~ii
/
~lfiiif
>
;, ·
--
.
-
Ford to come to
·
the
.:
ceremciriy PQOl
_
Will
,
-
~
r~~!fed
)
o
.
wear
~
- -
chance to use
.
the
:
Jacili~;'_:f!~
. .
-
·
·
.
·
·
.
·
·
-
.
·
·

·
.
·
.
·
because
·
he
.
willbe
.
_
inKingston
_
"proper s:w_i~g
-
~ttµ-e'
l
an~
-

a~d~dthatth_euseofth~b!,lilcliri.g
,·.
·
.
·
_
:
./
·
_
.·- ..
__
.
.
·
· ··
-
-.
·
.
·
. ·
:
·
·
.
·
~
:.
·
·
·
di.uing
_
tli
_
e day. However
;
F
.
ord must
·
take
-
A
:
'
sqap shower
will-
·
be striclel'.
'
·
beglDillDg
m
. .
·
,•n
/
,
he
_
·
c
.
:
.
·
.
t
...
i
.
e
.
-
.
.
-
.
elec
.
· ..
.
t,on
-
formally decliried,
·
Petro
.
said.
·
:
~forE! entering
-
t!Je
·
·
p~L
;
'Ib~se
-
Septm._iber
,
~cause people Jr_o
_
m
-
.
.
___ ,
·
.
The
committee
has
also asked ~th
·
shoulqer leng~
0
ha1r ?re
'th~
surrounding
:
ar~ and
·
more
-_ ·
,
_;-'
--
·
·._,
·
-'-
·
fainous
'
Olympian
·
Marty Liquori as~e<lto
:-
we~r a bathing ~ap,
.
he
·
pnys.
-
ed, classes
-
will be con-
.
.
.
,
:
-
.
to
speak at''th'eJormal opening.
'.
Said; Sn~akers or athletic foot-
·
duct~ .
.
·
=
· :
.
.
. ·
.
.. _
.cc

:
·
:
_~!
Michael Brennan_
:
·
-
.
Petro said the distance
.
rwiner, wear
--
Wl~
be
.
:mandator.r_
.
for
Durmg
-
tpe c~mmg ~onth
.
-
Je
.
ff
.
B
.
l
.
a
.
n
.
·
.
cha
.
r
.
ci,
'
·-.
a
...
sop
..
_h
·
omore
coach; and sportscaster, has been
-
anyone
~ g
the
WD!•
~
.
.
·
~leachers
wn
be installed
~
the
-
_
involved with
.
Marist's suriurier
Pe~ro said that e~cept for some • field house area, and
a
pair of
from
Penacook, New Hampshire,
·
rtinn
.
m
.
·
g
·
ca
.
mp a_rid sa
.
_
id he
.
.
w
.
ould phys1c~l egu~ab_<>n
:
·
·
c
.
.
lasse~,
.
.
basketball backboar~s called has won a_controversial·victory
scheduling for the month of April
over Brian Jantzen and Richard
be available to speak
·
at the
·
.
.
.
.
·
·
·
. .
·.
· ·
·
..
c
.
o
·
n•·•n
·
uc
·
d
·.
onp
·
a

g
·
c
.
3
·
·
Cr
..
·
f
.
th
·
ffi
f·~·d
·
t
·
·
·
·
··
· ·
·
will
be flexible S<f'that members
· ump
.
or
e
o
.
ce o
~
... u en
.,_iioiiiiiii-----~------
·
·
..
.
.
.
.
Governnieiit
.
Pr.esident .
.
In
other
.,
results; Suzanne
·
Breen defeated
'
~
:
:
c
_
us
·
electlons
·~
·
_:
3
.
PO~ition
·
s
.
.
ul10pp_()$~c,lf
·
.
··
·
·
·
-niktil1g]11gr~Onlf
·
r8¢t!
.
·
·
·
.
. ·
·
Cllarles
>
Spratt for the Vice-
Presidential
-
·
post, Dave- Ng
·
defeated Glen Malaspina for the
.
Secretary
·
position
,
~
and
-
Pat
;_-_
Whelton
bea
·
t
b~th Keith
Hollman
·
.
and Martha Trabulsi in the race
for treasurer
:
.
. ,
. .
.
.
.
.
The
·
: '
eleC.tioris, held · 1ast
: .• Thursday and Friday in Donnelly
.
.
~ .
:
·
featured
.
.
.
several 9is})utes
between
.
the candidates .and the
By
Clar.kin
B;Dd Healy
.
;-
a
.
free ride,
.
it's
'
ridi~Wous.,, who is a junior
wants
to
,
publish a
;
election . committee
over
ff
h
·
-.-
,
·
·
·
.··
.
·
·
, -
•.
·
·
·
.
·
Gardner
,
thinks
its "pretty
.
sad
.
weekly or
-
monthly CUB activities procedure arid interpretation of
.
, ·
·
.
.
le
Blanc
ard
·
-
_
T~~ee
.
of the
·
four . elec~ed
,
~t only
.
one out of four
.
offices
is
.
~f!dout in agdi~on
-
~o the Cubicle
.
secti~
,:
o'f
;
f:be,
·
~udent
0
90vern
-:
·
.
supporter~ ~~plied .
..
Although
.
_
pOSltions of . the College
.
J]ruon
.
·
f?ei,ng
:....®ntested, _the other
,
.
~ee
_
·
givmg ~
.
dyance notice of
:
E:ve_nts.
,
,
ment
,
q<>rist1tution relevant

.
to
·
.
the
• :
Constitution
·
.
does not
.
:
Board
"::
(~
.
U.B
;
)
-
,
wi!
,
L
g?
>-
u~-
~e just
,
·
-
wal.k_iilg
·
in
:
on. a
:
free
:
:
'
:
~rtmo,
:
~
-
Co~~~tions
--
~ection procedw.:es:
.
.
·
..
·
,
·
sp~ci~ically
·_
pro~ibit
.
cam-
.
_
cont~ed mtoda,'s aric:I Fndats
.
ride.":
_
.
.
..
:
·
.
·
..
·
.
.
..
·
:
,
~aJorf~ls~e
..
1:5
qualiJie<lJor ~e
,
,
.
·
The first conflict
~
.
UlTed
on pa~~ on
..
election day
.
(no
.
..
elect1
_
0~
~
-
-
~e
·
off1ce
:
of marketing
,:
''.I ; f
_
e~l
.,
.J
un,der:~ta~d . the
.
-
J~b ~C~'!8e
,
h~
.
was
.
involved
.
1:11
.
Thursday,
·
when Bl,nc~ar~,- N,'g,
.
~li~ting
.
can
·
take place
.
within
..
,
ma.nager
,:
IS
,
,
,
the
-.:
m.IY
.
,
.::
CO°-_test
:o
wor.king otfu.e
~
a~.· if give11 his high ~hool government. He
lS
Breell ~d
-
~
'l'rabu~
.
dist_nbuted
-
-
.
Sl~ht of the
~lling
·
place),
·
Smith
.
·
wlli
_
ch has two candidates r~•
·::,
tl,le
,
opporturuty to
.
carry out
,
the
··
-
a,
.
Leo
_
J10~0~
:r,nember,
.
ca~pa
_
ign
_ ,
m~ter!als
-
m~
.
the said
.
she believe~_SG
'
Treasurer
\
Ding
Jor
.
._it._ ,Running Jmopp
_
osed

•duties_
.
.
of :·pr¢sident
,
;r.
ca~
-.
~ve
·
-WMC~ ~tion
:
,
~.na~er. .
and _Champ~gnat
.•
,
ana
··
l;Sh~ehan
·
Johll. Dayern and herself made it
.
.
·
for
·
president;
·
is
.
.::-Junior
.
>
Pete
i
students a program of-activities · stage
:
manager
·
of
,
Wmrue the parking lots. JJpon
-
learning
·
of
-
-
clear to the candidates that there
. ·
Baildouin.·Resident students,
·
which. will~:meet their
:
needs,"
.
. Pooh," HeJwr also
beerLgiV~!l
·this, Sherrf Smith,·
.
election

·
was
to
be none· at all on the
. :'
.
b~ve
:
.
A}ardllei-
:::
.~~<:I
-
'
:.·
·
.
'
Gino
'
:
said accolll1ting'maJoi'. B~tidouin
.
.
.
' .
the
ppsition

.
of
,
a resi~ent advJsor
:~
con:imission~~,
.
called
'
.
'!lembers
:
.
:
election
.
dars.
.
.
. .
.
.
. . .
. .
·
.
c
:
DiMartmo are
.
com~~mgfo:r-the
.
·
Hefllsosayshe will~
-
topush for the ,an
;
of
·
1~~1-
O:
:
:
·
.-
..
.
.
..
.
of
·
:
the
;
Blanchiu-d
·
.
.
group
,
and
~
'I thought their actions were
..
"'
.
·
office
·
J>f
;
Inar~!ting

·
:
ma)U!ger.
: :
fopnore
'
im:,11ey
·
for the
_
puB
and
.
.
.
Gardner
,
~ the
.
o~e~
':
C?ndidate
:
requested
.
'
that
,
:
\11~
.
.
flyers :
·
.
be
:
-.
:
wrong;'' said
·
:.
Miss Smith, "in
·
:
1
.Also running
:
unopposed .for
.
A
be
.
:
·
spen~it effectively.
:
<
·
-
.-
;:
\_
for
.
/
marketmg
.
:
manager;
·,
The
,
removed
.
due to
-
tlie
.
fact
·
_:
that it
,
yiew of th~ fact
·
thatl
.
told them
, ·
<
:
offices
<
.:
·
of
-
.
.
~reasur.e
(
.
;
and
.
:
/
l'he job

of
_
:
preside!lt
,'
is
.
to juni~r- ¢r~al
·
.
j~i<:e
.
~jor
.
.
ha
_
d apparently be~Il establishe_d

:
not to campaign and because of
.
/
secretary,
respect~yely
/:
areJoh!)
.
/
over~
the
.
various
~JllD.littees,
~eels
0
.J~
:
~
;-
the ~r1~ce
.
that
-
no
.
~pai~
~S.
to
·
be
.
:
past
customs.".
_ .
. ·
'
·.
.
-
.
:
:
Mc~ri~y
apd
.
J)1~es ~~Jl~ghe,r,
-
off~
~
~.
1~eas
3
,
and he.lp
:;
out
;
the
:::
necesim,ry
to
-
~Id th~ .positioII .done
.
on
:
tJ!e.
..
eiect_1on
,
days.
:
~on
__
_
B~nchard claims
he
knew
· .
.
. ·
both
-
res1dent
,
studen
_
~;

,;
;
: ·'·

,
·
,
:
:
chan-per~n.

.
of
,
eaclt
_
.
,
conµmttee;

,_
beca~-
-
·
of
:
tlie
.
:
t??o
.
.
~~
·

.
lle
·
~.
~er
.
hElr
..
request,t},e mateJ:'.ials
-
-
nothing
.
..
of such
_ -
an
.
un-
'
.;
: ,
DiMartino,-is
_
~PP.~inte~f.that
· ·
. ,:
:
.
T_wo
.
years~

~ ~ember _of the
-
'.
_
served

~ -a
,
d~~ate to Natt,ona!
,.
'.
wer
,
e
;
·
.
re.JJJOY~d.
·
: ·
,.
:
from
.'
.
·
t~e derstandirig; while Jantzen says
:
there wasnft
:
JD.OI'e, m,terest,
.
i.n the
.
.
.
so~al comnuttee,
·,
and
.
chalfflUln
.
.
(
Entertau.ime~t
..
.
-
~!>~fere!}ce,.
_.
-
remairu.ng
f
cars.
:
;
.
Later.
--
that
::
~-
.
heJ-vas
.
told of the pollcy
.
«over a
.
.
.
,:
'
.
CVB
'.
eI~tions;:!,'Poo,Ple.
·
shQ1µd
be
.
.
:pf
·.
that ,co~~
J
n

.
.
his
.:
third.
:
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PAGE2
THE CIRCLE
.MARCH 31, 1977
8
Burglaries in dorms·
'2l'
committee
band radio was also taken
from
Door. A $100
eight-track
tape
to
meet
Monday
ByDavidNg
his room.
·
player and
$25
portable
radio
In eight separate burglaries,
A senior, who wished to remain belonging to the students,
over $1000 of student property anonymous, said two speakers respectively,
have
been
was stolen from the thre~ major worth
$75
each were taken from recovered.
dormitories during the mid-tenn his ·room. The stereo itself was
A complete stereo system
recess. In
Leo
there were· four left behind.
valued at
$400
was taken out of
incidents, three in Champagnat,
Peter Pisani,. a Dutchess Bernie DelBello's room on the
and one in Sheahan Hall.
Community College student, fourth floor.
A suspect was aITested. and ,went home the Saturday after the
. John McCarthy, first floor
charged with two counts of third- Marist recess begun _ and resident advisor, in Sheehan
degree bu~lary which occun-ed returned to campus ori Mon<l:ay to Hall, reported a stereo system
in Champagnat. The suspect, a find his black and white portable woth $150 missing from his room.
non-Marist student, has been television set, and $20 in cash The speakers were left behind.
released on
$500
bail. Because of missing. The set is valued at
$85.
·Apparen~ly, in McCarthy's
the suspect's "youthful offender"
Kenton Morrison, a. freshman, case, the suspects entered the
~tatus, police did not disclose his reported his $30 electronic room through the -windows
name.
calculator was missing.
· leaving .. behind. fingerprints_ ._on
All four burglaries in Leo took
In Champagnat Hall there were the- wall beneath the window.
place, on the ·third floor.
three. burglaries. The suspect, Police told McCarthy, because of
Joseph Caan, a freshman,
_
arrested
by
Town
of the texture of the wall, the prints
repor.:ted a $150 cassette
.
deck Poughkeepsie
police,
was were unclear.
missing. Although a - record cha·rged with two burglarie~
Marist · Security, according· to'
turntable and amplifier were in involving senior Tom ·Nugent's , Joseph Waters, director, is
plain view; those items were left room on _the second floor and of conducting investigations with
untouched. Last month, a citizens\ Terry Scollens room on· the fifth town police.
-
-
.
Coll8ge
-Union
Board
sets big Spring Weekend
More than a month after they
last met, the so-called committee
of '21' is planning to get together
,to
discuss
issues Sunday night.
Many members of the com-
mittee
said their progress was
slowed
by
mid-term
examinations,
a
week-long spring
break, and last week's student
government elections.
The group
last
met on Sunday
night, Feb.
'l:l
when President
Linus R. Foy. spoke to students in
the auditorium ..
-
The_ group of
students and members of the
. administration
had
made
agreements concerning the
breakdown in communication
between the two bodies which had
occurred on campus.
Since, that meeting some
progress has been made. Hours
have been extended in the library
and thegym, social policies have
. been discussed, and a television
set
will
be placed in the browsing
library to offer an extra · on-
campus activity to students.
.
-
-
'----.
' '
Early registration
today
an·d
.
Friday
••


J

By
Mike
Teitlebaum
takes a lot off their minds. Then
they won't have to stand in lines
Early registration for next· and possibly get closed out of a
semester _began Wednesday course. _
. '"
March - 30 and will continue
"The second reason is for me to
through Friday, April I.students plan ahead for spring.
I
look at -
may submit their schedules to the what sections, are_ being used the
registrar's office in Adrian Hall most and .can make proper ad-
anytime. Freshmen must. have justments Sor the fµture."Ac-
their. advisor's signature while an . cording~to DwYer, each depart-
advisor isn't necessary for up- · ment submits a ·schedule which
By Pat Larkin
perclassmen's schedules.
includes the time of the course,,
Th'e opening act for the concert non-residents. Ms. Bodick said
John H. DwYer, registrar.,, said itstitle and the instructor.
"I
get
will be Spariky Brown; .
there . were approximately
JOO
there are two basic reasons for this about the end of ·January,"
The College Union Board
Dolly Bodick, coordinator of tickets sold as of Monday af-
early registration. "The first · DwYer said, '_'I compile the-in-
(CUB)
will sponsor a spring college act~vities, said she was ternoon.
reason is for the students con- _formation and review it during
weekend on April 1~3 featuring a disappbi.Ated with the amount of
on Sunday, AprH3, there will venience," DwYer said. "Tp.ey February. During the first week
major concert, a· spring · dinner tickets sold .as · of Monday
af-
be the opening celebration of the _ can get registration_ settled for
of March, the schedule
is·
/sent
dance,
and
the
opening ternoon. CUB h~d. s~ld ap-
McCann Recreation Center the fall semester before they over to the printer:''
celebration of the -- Mccann proximately 120 _bck~ts as of pending health -inspection .. Ms. leave for summer vacation. This
Recrea~on Cent1:r. _
_
Monday. Ms. Bodick said she had Bodick said there should· be no
On F~1day, Apnl 1 at 8 p.m. the estimated . that Marist students . hold up because of the health
·
·
N~w R1d~rs of.t!J~ Purple
S~ge
woidd ~~y500-000 t!ckets.
.
inspection_: .. ·
.
N.
_.O ..
s•h
.. ·ows -_on
,·s·
·s·
ue
·
s.-.
will pla:y
m
the Civic Center. ~e . -. On S~turday, Apnl 2,
~
Wlll
Throughout the weekend there _ "-'
_New Riders are a pr?gr~s1ve __ hay~.
-I~;.
~co~g IAterna~_on~l:;, wilL be a Mid-Hudson Sunshine:
. COUJltI;Y
rocJr. ~net
.Jrn.m ·San,
r
SpnngDmnel'.'Dance·starting
at8>
"erafts'
Fair.·
·
Exhiliitions will be :
. . -· •. ,:
:c::
.: •• .
.,. ·. · •'
·-
:a:,
;·Franc1~co. Tickets are:l>emg
sold;:_
Arn.
Th_ere
will
re
an·open.
liar
all "· oil Friday from
_3-7
p.rn.
Saturday , ·. , ...
.
: .. ··

·
.i
_I:Jy_Allson Hickey'. ; . ·
the
m~t1ni
•because.
wiiliout .•
a
- fo_r $5
m
the
C~.
office. There
mght
witp.
a
top bandJr~m Lon[:
_
and Sunday exhibitions will be.: ,,
>
<
·. •.
_.
< _
quorum
they
could riot vote on -
will
be
free
admission
to
tl!e Last Island, Timberlake; playmg until held from 12: 30- 6: 30 p.m. The . The Inter-house Council
did
not
any legislation. Leo Housemaster
Chan_ce afte~ th~ concert to those 1 ~.m. Tickets c;ost $11.50 for fair
will
be held in the Campus hold· a meeting . last_ Friday Father Richard LaMorte arrived
showmg their ticket at the door.
resident students and $12.75 for
Center.
because not enough members
late because he gotthe time of the
·SG Elections Con't
- were present. In order . for the
meeting mixed up. Student Jeff ··
Inter-house Council to vote. on
Blanchard also arrived lale.
any issue they - must have a . Even if· LaMorte • and- Blanchard
of. campaign literature.
schedule, believing that it had no
course of the election days, the · quorum present. ··
,
were on time for the meeting
As
for Miss Smith's contention real effect on the election.
Judicial Board decided to im-
In order to have a quorum,
there still would not have been
that the candidates were suf-
Crump also claimed that he pound the votes upon the closing three-fourths of. the total me~-
enough people to make up a
'ficiently _warned aga,inst such and several other students had of the voting machine. Originally, bers of the- Inter-house Council
majority. At least nine members
·· practices by Daverri's remarks difficulties raising the _lever the individuals raising protests must be prese~t. At two p.m., · would have·had to be present to
during
last
Wednesday's corresponding to his name. This, wer_e to prepare their_ arguments
I
when the meetmg ~s sup~osed
make a majority. Associate Dean
· - ''Candidates Night" Blanchard he feels, may have discouraged for a·he~ring at a_Monday"night t~ start, only counc~l preSident
of Student- Academic Affairs
. holds he didn't hear them.
other students from voting for meetingofthe-BoardatDonnelly Jm>: Shannon, Director of
GeraldCox andvicepresidentof
"Nevertheless," said Blanchard, · him. Moreover, Crump believes Hall.
Residence Peter Amato, and - the council, Mike Matrazano,
"he wasn't addressing the that difficulties with the voting
The results of the election were st~dents · .Pete
McFadden, · were previously excused from
candidates if he indeed made the apparatus may have· enabled announced and it was decided _Slurlane _Ferante and George
the- meeting because of' other
statements. He was speaking. to students to vote twice, in that a that all protests made to that Gambeskz !~re p~esent. . ·
commitments. The council will
. the ·audience.". Jantzen and student could vote and then ·come point would . be disregarded. .
Mer waitmg f!fteen minutes meet this Friday in the campus
Crump, while stating they in fact out and ask election workers for Anyone wishing to raise _ac~ . the members dec1dedto cancel center at two p.m. .
heard . Davern's statements, aid in working the~_µiachine. "A cusations could be done within 72
agree with Blanchard that he was student," he said, could then hours of the meeting. At the time
speaking to those in attendance. enter the booth and vote again. · of this writing, no formal ac-
other than the candidates. .
According to -the Election cusations concerning
the
elec-
According to Miss Smith, she Committee, the voting macliine - tions have been raised.
CUB Election$.:Con~t
_met with the candidates after the registered 485 votes but the of-
Still, several defeated can-
polls closed _Thurs9.iy in order to ficial school roster used at the · didates ·. were . unhappy with Community College. ·
publish periodic reports of
CUB
"clear the
air
of any conflicts." polling 'place shows orily 430 several election procedures arid
li
elected Gardner said he finances, approve all CUB ex-
The candidates raised no protests · crossed out names.· There are at told
stories,
though
un~ would ·try to
"raise
the level· of - penditui"es · and help. 'with the
over the day's events and agreed least 30 votes unaccounted for. At substantiated, of voting fraud.
activiti~ · at Marist •by·. utijizing · financial planning· activities.
.
to proceed with the election as least one person or groups of Members of the· "Leo Ticket"
organizations such as· , the , · The_ ·only _candidate
for •
scheduled.
·.
persons voted more than once. were particularly. disturbed.
National Entertainment:· Con-
secretary of CUB
is
James.
On · Friday, Rich Crump rm not saying these votes Charles Spratt, the defeated vice-
ference."
·
Kelleher; a freshman history
questioned the fact that the polls necessarily went to other can-
presidential candidate said: O'We
The marketing manager ofthe major. Kelleher's qualifications
·were to
be
open until 5:00 p.m .. didates. Maybe they helped me. seemed to be the
·1ast
to be
CUB
is in charge of· puqlic· include service on the -Student
that evening.-Said Crump later: The fact is, there was a definite • notified about anything per-
relations. He is 'responsible 'for Academic Committee and the
"The last
class
on Friday·ends at· ~ripincy in the voting record-
taining to the election. We didn't
publicizing_· CUB- events and Steering Committee Gregory
· 2:00,
but the constitution states s."
kno_w about· Candidates Night
keeping the CUB bulletin board House.
.
.
. that voting may
I
go on _when
While .. not excluding the until· three hours before it took
up to date.
·
·
-
li
elected
to
office. Kelleher
classes· are in session.
I
went to possibility of students voting place." .
· .
.
Treasurer , candidate. John said he would like to see the ClJB
Sherry and reminded her of this. more than once,
Miss
Smith feels
Brian Jantzen felt that due to
McCarthy sees increasing the
·
broaden in such areas as the
She pointed out that the Cori-
that the machine ~s closely the short -time. allowed for
quality of student lictivities. activities;_ "Most importantly
·
stitution:does not allow for the watched for•any.poSS1ble fraud. campaigning;
his
ticket_did not
rather than the quantity, in-
though' T-would work so that
procedure "orily" during classes. Furthermore, Miss Smith said have sufficient time to reach the
creasing ._ efficiency of dollars Marist· might enjoy more
Therefore, the constitution the machine did not register 485 commuters. · The . only
in-
allocated and continued ac-· frequently shows and concerts.
·doesn't necessarily preclude Jlle votes, but
"485
entries into the -•formation
concerning
the
countability of
·
allocated com-
such as the upcoming New Riders
polls being o~n after classes are booth.
l .
kriow there ·werl! positions of the candidates
mittee · furids as major
.
issues.
of the
·
Purple-Sage concert.
11
over." Still,
Miss
Smith· went to problems_~th-the'.machine. The 'available
to
them· was contained
The .junior accounting major
The secretaries ·..:job
·
entails
· Mel, Crilley, head of the ·Judici~l ·discrepincy. ·was·· the··
result ·
of
·in
tne
Circle, _ _which endorsed.the._
se~
the ·poten~ial· for ach.i,eving _being
respomdble "for
·
an .
•. Board, for a ruling'. on· ·the - ~udents who had to -leave. the. Bla~chard ticket
\\'.ith
_the. ex-• · needed positive changes and correspondence
.
between CUB
quest!on,_in o~d~_r to ''insur~ the· booth::an~- ask·
_
f~r assistance._ f;P~o11:·ofthe office of.treasurer.
would like to. have. ahand:.in · ·and_: other·-·. organizations. The
, constitutionality of the election.,.
When.)~~Y
-!~~ente~ed, ·the : Th~s>. endorsement•. •
was -
working to accomplish them. He. secretary also·keeps
:
all-mihutes ~-
''.Crilley. decid.ed_i on a . com- . machme ·registered an
_
othe_r · Pr~J11diC1al.-to our ~paign,"
has bookkeeping ~rie_nce andS of theiCUB: ·
.
.
,;~>,:
··• >. ·;-:
proinise,cfosingtheP.:()llingplace ,e11try,,-butnotaoo,thery~teJora sa1d·Jantzen;
· _ ·. ,.

has~wor.ked>~th the'>present
_;Elections will.·be held in
at2:59
p.m .. 'Ibe
~rididates dia
-caIKlida~."': ·· ,-, ·
·

i · .
-treasurer..
.
. · . •.
;- · • ·'.Donnelly Hall.: .
not protest the revision
of
the ·'.D~~-to
'
the· dispu~·over the·
· ·
_'lbe_ ~ob:·ofr treasurer,i is·-to-
·
· '·
.
•'·
.
:
,
.
,.
' .
.
.
.
:.
'
'
.......
11






















..,.
MARCH 31, 1977
Pooh
scores
With
kids
·
By Elaine Brusoe
very
well
performed ·
6''y"
the
.
chorus who. also contributed
to
Winnie Saitta has written and -the visual effects of enchantment
.
directed a play that she, the
cast ·
throughout most <if the produc-i
and crew of the Marist College •tion:
.
·
children's theater can be proud
The music was catchy and the
of.
·
.
flute accompaniment played by
The dialogue in "Christopher Tom Ballinger. added a lot,
Robin's Memories of Winnie-th~ especially
to
the
dream
Pooh and the One Hundred Acre sequertce,where the Heffalumps,
Wood"
is
very well written cQld played by Mary Foster, Sue
Billy Dunn's narration helps keep Smith and Patti Tarantelli
the play mov4tg. · 'The scenery, terrified· Piglet
and
the
especially "Rabbit's'' house, · screaming audience.
helps'.make the adaptation of ~Make up was very good
A.A. Milne's classic really come especially on Tigger and Piglet.
alive . before. the· eyes · of . the
Except for a couple of technical
children• it was meant. to please. difficulties· such as lowering -the
Shouts · of delight from the stage lights instead of those
,in
children greeted "Tigg_er" "Piglet's" house and a rather
p}ayed by/ Dena Kenny who unneces~ry film at the very
. remained. "bouncy, bouncy" beginning of the play, "Winnie
throughout the entire production, the Pooh" was an . excellent
never seeming to lose her breath. production with several very nice
"Piglet" played by Pat surprises ,such_ as the last, glit-
O'Leary, was also a very con-
tery scene.
.
. .
-
· _vincing character always _holding
If is· a play that delights the
the children's attention;·
. young and may make some of
"Pooh",played by Henry Ross,' their elders-wish for-those days
although lovable, seem~ to lack they used to enjoy a few years
some energy.
. ago.
·
The so~gs and dances were ·
·
Eeyore (Jim Kenney) relates a tale to Christopher
Robin (Barbara Kelly). photo by J~c Gigliotti .
Leo ticket says ./
.
.
j
Cll:lCLE •biased
THE CIRCLE
By David Ng
What is yellow, looks like a ·
Volkswagen Rabbit with half its
body missing, and uses no gas.
No, its not another Japanese
import.
·
The
Cushman
Executive
Electric Model 322 is a four-
. wheeled, rechargeable .battery
powered vehicle, presently being
tested by Marist Security..
.
A'
Cushman salesman left the
demonstration model with Joe
Waters, director of security, last
Tuesday.
.
.
H.
Marist decides to purchase ·
the cart, Waters hopes
it
will give
campus security a "certain
amount of mobility." As an
example, Waters said, it would
cut the travel time· between the
boat house and the Mccann
complex, two of the most distant
locations on-campus.
, By Bill McLa\Jghlin .
effected the large voting block of ·
Waters said Marist is testing
• 1
and
Pat Larkin .
commuters. Circle opinions were the vehicle simply because a
--.
the main influence of their voting salesman asked him to, and
Members of the so called "Leo without really meeting . the Marist · is not committed to buy
Ticket" who · ran for student candidates themselves per-
the vehicle.
government (SG) office have· sonally." ·
According
to
factory
charged
the . Circle
with
.Pat Whelton, treasurer-elect specifications, it has~ top speed
favoritism in the recent election.
supported his party's feelings of 8 mph, forward and reverse.
It
Brian Jantzen, candidate for
and said, "we will see
if the can travel up to 35 miles . on ·a
· president, said . tl~e two · can- .. shortcomings in this election can single nfoharge. The vehicle can
didates who worldor the Circle, . be corrected in the future.,,
, caITy 500lbs. plus the weight of
Sue _Breen and pave Ng, were
When told of the . charges the operator and a passenger.
PAGE3
given favorltble pu_qlicity..
, against The Circle, co-editor The rear can
be
lifted up to carry
Charles Spratt, candidate for
Larry . Striegel said Ile . realized cargo, or down to two more The battery operated vehicle being. tested by Marist Security (photo
· vi'ce-president, said, "We were that many: would claim bias on
1
_P_ass_en_g_e_r_s. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..
_b.;:y~G.;.
. .;.M.;.c_,N,;,;,ul;.ty_,,,) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
,.1
not treated fairly. . We were
the part
of
the paper. ".That's the
behind the eight-ball before the chance we had
to
take,"
he
said. ·
fecting
the
commuter
vote, that
election started because of the "After
I spoke·to the rest of the was our very intention, that's
paper's irresponsible job
of
editorial ·board about the en-
what editorials are for," said
Mccann con't
. editorializing· . and
ov.eraJl dorsenients
I wroie the editorial. striegel. He continued to say that
<
coverage of,the campaign. The itwould have been wrong·not to .the. Circle provided .objective
· editor, was- pai:ticularly .
.
. unfair chool!IC the .. candidates.' we ,.felt . stories about· the candidates on
Hydra-Rib costing $3,000 each
because
of his own· personal were besUor the job.~We felt that the first two pages of the issue,
will be delivered to the center.
opinion
-in·
which the original .... it was our duty to make a stand and ·that no statements were
Also" ·employes of the athletic
stories about: the
Leo, •.
Ticket on the-issue.~• ·
·
manipulated.
''I have their
department will be moving from
ca.ndidates wer~ manipul,ate<l
in - · " ~ ,
if
the
Leo
people
.will
quot.es in their own handwri~ , their offices in Fontaine Hall to
context.'.'
. '·. ·· •. . . .• ··
1001', they'll
see
that:
we
only, and they can_ ask me .for them.". larger offices in the complex.
So
GI.~ Ma~pina, candidate for'.=~ endorsed David Ng.
Jri
·the vie~ · ; He
a1so
S8ld·
the- Circle would
far,
the .center has not received
secretary, S81d.the main problem · presidential race
we'
did not pick ~ontinµe to endorse candidates in
the standards for tennis · or
in .
~
.el~-~:: .'3S
'.'the
en-: , any011e.
f.. . : '.. ·.
:c · · ·. .
the
fu~
"no
matter
what
volleyball yet, but
when
they are
dorsement by•the Circle' which.-.·,.
<'As'far
:as
·
our·
editorials.·
af-
organization,•they·belong
to."
delivered courts will-be _set· up.
.
.
.
'
.
The Circle will, not
be
published next
week. /See you ..
after Easter ·
I
''
. I
·,



























































































































































































































PAGE4
au·siness dept
curriculum changed
By Pat Larkin
will
rep.lace
Sales
Ad-
ministration.
THE CIRCLE·
Variety
of
food
plans
.
.
offered
in
September
.
.
.
Operati!)DS . Management
_
By Maureen
Crowe
plan only eat 65
·
percent of their
·
~ been projected in the present
_
Th_ere
will
be ~ e s m the
.
Concentration
will
be ~anged
to
·
·
·
meals. This miss meal . factor budget but with the ne!V
_
f~d
~
·
c~culum of the Marist C.Oll~e
.
;
-Personnelt Labo~ Relations
.
T.wo
To
.
comply with the request
.
gives
tlie
;;ervice a "break" and options
.
the
·.
projected
.
incC?m~
.
is
business departl!}ent
.
b e ~ _
.
of the courses_
will
be the same. made by the
.
student gri~ance permi!5 the service to charge les:;
:
.
down and therefore board pn~
next fall. There will~ be mm~r Hmvever, a third course, Huma~ committee, Joe Lureriz director
..
than cost. St~dentf> on ~e OP'"
will have
to
be raised or services
cha~es for _econoD?1cs
and
a~ Resourses Ma~~g~~ent. of the Marist
,-
College food ser~
·
tional plans
will
nuss less m~Js cut to make up the difference.
-
coun~g maJors ~ e therE:
will
.
_
_
Problems and_ Policies
will
be vice,
has
proposed
_
additional and therefore
will
be paymg
-
'lbe optional food plans
·
were
be ~~or ~nges m the
bus10ess
added rep!ac1~g ~~n~gement
~
.
.
meal plans
·
tc
be
voted on by the
.
-·-
closer
.
to .
th~ exact
_
food cost, developed because President
administration majors
_.
.
·
,
Systems ~alyS1S. .
.
_
Marist students today .. atid Lurenz said.
_
- _
_
~us
Foy h~d ~equested Lurenz
_
The
_
only ~ngE: for the a~
Acco!}ntm~ :- F]Jl_ance con-
.-
tomorrow, March 31 and
Aprill.
_
Lurenz said he didn't want ~e to take action on the related
c~~ting maJors
,
will
~
the ad-:
.
ce_ntration will be chaJJg~
.
to
.
Under
·
the
-
optional
:
meal
_
plan people on the 20 meal plan
to
pay_ . grievance presented
to
hini by 21
di~on of an elective. This course Frna~ce
Conc_entr_ahon. students could save a maximum
•.
·
extra to ~ke up for the people
.
student representatives
:
·
_
.
wlll _be A<lvanced . Cost_ Ac-
Reqwrements
.
.
'!111
mclude
_
of
$4
5 however, the present plan on the optional meal plans.
However
-
-Lambert said that: ·
counting. ~e co~ is des1~ed
.
!rfon~tary_ Economics, Problems gives "the student a better deal"
·
Lurenz said he compiled th~e
"Based on
·'
the
amount
of people
for aCC?t.Qltmg malo!s who desire m Fma
_
nc1al Management
.
and
a
Lurenz said
;
·
,_
.
_ --
,
.
_
·
__
optional
_
food

pla~
..
by res
.
ear-
who come to
·
the
:
meetings (to
-
t<> obtam a CPA license;
.
.
.
new .. co~rse,
-
_
Inv4:_~~me.nt
,
The
first
op4on offers
20
i!1ea1s ~ g nationwide surveys
_
.~d
discuss
the
'
new food options)it
i~
_
'f!le oru~ change for eco~omics
·
AnalySis.
·

.
-
.
_
.
week at $BOO a year
.
This
18
the
,-.
different
.
college food services
..
doubtful as
'
:
to
/
the
·
number of
·
maJ_ors
·
will ~
-
the deletion of
_
A'
!1~w c?ncentration, Public
,
· ~resent plan
.
·
·
·
..
-
.
·
-
'
Lurenz believ~ students _would
-
people that are
~
intere;sted''
'
in

SclVlet Eco~omi
_
~•
_ .
/ ·
.
,
A~stration · ~ll
_
be offer~.
The
_
second option offers be better off
~µi
the present optional food l)laru;: Sev~ral
'
ef-
:
-
.
F~r busmess _
_
administration Reqll;lf~men~
:
\Vill
_
be
_
Public students
8
choice of
three
plans; system because
."if
Jhey
0
,
h~ve to
_
forts were ~df: by Lambert and
maJ~rs ther~ wi~ now
·
be 30 Administration, Public Finance The first Ian offers the
-
present
·
support
.
themselves
·
on ~he
the food
.
~ryice to talk
-
to
. -
.,
·
cre~1ts required _i~stead of 24. and -
·
another n~w.
course, rate. Ho!ever some ,students ... weekend they'll ~e at~ loss ~th-' students about the new food plan _
B~ess Law 2
_
win be made a Governm~nt
-
and Fis~a! Control
·
may select alternative plaDS of 15
_
th~ sky
_
rocketµig cost
·
of food
·
howeve~
:
orily
_
_
40
_
peo,ple
:
_
~ere
_
req~1rement. T!o
,
courses, Systems.
-
-
•.
-.
-
.
·
:-
-
.-
·
.
meals erfivedayweekat$755a prices
_
.
0
-
A lot of <:olleges a
_
~_ responsive
:
_
- ...
...
--
_
-

·
-
<
Busmess and ~
.
c1ety 3md P~r-
:
-
. ;Then~ber ofrelated
,
courses year.&hers, underthisplaymay
·
goingbacktothe
.
bas1c
_
mealI?lan

.
.
Severa! st'!,~e
_
nts expressed
:_-
sonnel
·
,_
Adm1!11stration
w~ll
will
be cut fron:i- 2V
.
credits to ~8
-
'
choose 10 meals per five day
·
he said because
·
of the high prices
___
mterest
'
~
),!vmg
_
QJL
c~mP1:IS
-_.
remain ~s ~89~iremen~ but
.
~
~redits
,
C<>urse~
.
needed will week at $765
.
a year
.
··
.
-

·
of food
: _
He a~o
·
stated ''~inan~
_
witho!!t a foo
_
d
,
,
plan.
,
\
La~~rt
_
. have s1gmficant changes ~n mclude __ Economics
.
l
_
and. 2,
.
The third option offers students
.
-
ciallyttieseoptro
11
s
_
couldhurtthe ~xplamedthat stud~nts
_
!_ho.live
.
content
:
.
:
A
·
.
11ew
:
;
c<>1!rse, Operationa} Models,}ntro~uct10n
·
the present
-
pla~ along with a 15 food
·
,
program and
:
~hen the
-~
on caµipus
.
are required to h,:ave a
,
.
Manag~pal and Orgaruzational
.
to ~a~culus, Introducb<?n to meal per seven day week at $775.
-
college would ha
_
veto pickup the
. -
,
bo_ai;~ progr~rn
.
because t~e
• ._,
-
Bebav1?r
·
has been
:
adde?. Stcitisti<:s 1, and ~troduction to Others may chooseten meaJs per
.
loss.>I
·
_
-
_
·-..
-
.
_
·
_
·
_
_
_ pr1!1ciple
.
~f. the dorm_ budget
lS
-
Markeb~g Ma
_
nagel!leµt will, Comp~tmg;
- · .
-
-
.
.
seven
·
dayweekat$'(!15peryear;
<
Fr~ Larnbert, a~1sta11t
:
dean
_.
paidby_theboar~f~smpart.He
_.
have.;.a rmnor c~ange m cont~nt.
_;
Df
.
John
_
_
Kelly, depart~l!!lt This option
,
however,
.
·
would
-
of studerits

as~~ for
:
the st~dent
also ~1ghted
_
san1~tio11 p,;obl~91~
111 ~he M~r~etlllg Concen~ration
...
chauman
,
said the ~hanges
.
WIil
mean aii
'
additionar $l2 fee to pay
.
-
vote
~
as
:
.
cl
.
~

.
i
.

_
co~s~l~~t~ye"
.
·-
-
lead,11_1g to
,
rod~nt
-
problems,
the . c~urse · needE:d
>
!V•ll b.e ~re_ngthe11 our ~q_rriculum, 1;11ak_e
.
for
a
computer system that would viewpomt so
:
he
;
can
:
estiµiate
a
.
e~~nenced ~t New: Pa~tza!l~ ~he
Mar~et~g
-
Commuruca!iQns

_and
_
_
1t m~r.e c~mPE:tltlve, and brmg 1t
:
.
.
have
.
to
:
bejristalled .
.

·
·
·
-
_
b~dger which he
_
will pr~~n~
:
to
.
·
.
ltm~ted
.
.

Ic~t~hen
<
fa_cihties
_
Marketmg Rese~rch
wx!}t_
rmnor
·
more m !me wit~ accepted n?~

·
Tne
food plari
"
was
·
worked out
:
_the _B_oard of
-_
Trustees
-
fot a f~at
·.
available to
,
stu<;let1ts.
·
_ changes. ~arketmg Policies and
:
ofcolleg1atebusmess education.
-
_
by the
'
food
·
service recognizing
_
_
dec~sion_
;
:
:,
.
_
.
.
;
>
'.
_ ·
<>
;'
_
.
·
. _,
. -
--
·
Problems 1s a new course th~t
-
----'---,--
that students on the full meal
.
·
tambert·srud that
,
no mcrease
:
~st
~!h~
.
:;..'!'!m~"..p~!!!.~!ye[

..
·
Easter·
•if~
:
i~e1
?
Plll111tif
.
$f{a~~lk~
i)i~~i~~~~~
;
l
')~
~~1
!
~~m
;
)~J
~i
~l;ti
~fl~~
!
i
~m
{
,~~;~
~
;
~,'
.
_
Th~
_
committee
_
surveyed 328
:
Ei¢iteen
,
·
of
~
busme§s maiors
:
. mod~rn
·
film
:
are
:
s~e~uled
,
as
parab.l~;
-
l:Vlll ~e ~own at
-
.7 p.m
.-_
.
film
set
_
m
;
the ~mous
.
:
co ony;
__ ,
-'
_
students: 309 residents and 19
.
said they w.owd also consider
-
part of
:
the
-,
Mar1st
.
College
on
~
Monday,
,
ApriLJ4;
.
lll the __ o~
-
Greenwi~h Village,
.
-~ew York
,
_ .
-
commuters, One }:lundred eig
_
hty
-..<
changing;
·:
·
_
campus

mi11istry_'s

"ln
>
.
An-
..
_
fir~ide
_
Loung~ ·of
:
the-
_"
9BtnP,~
-
<
Cityd.
Thedfilm C<>1tcetntratehsohn
,
a
·
.
_
five
freshmen
and
.
143
:
.
_

:
.
:
ticipation of Easter'_' . progr~.
C~?t~r.
_
-<
·
:
.
.
_
.
-.,
-:--
.
mo em
SY
.
~reen er w o as
·
••~~~~
.
.
·,,
_
·
~~~,
-
.-

·
''Tenabrae
.
"
l!J
.
r
.
.
_adition
.
al Holy
.
.
· .
.
-
Tenab
.
rae"; £!
.
ea_J.s with
·
·
·
the
····
..
,
been
.
conurusd
.
d
.
u
.
s
.
io
.
nite
..
~Ittd m
.
. ieth
.
a
~
·
·.
·
-
.
·
.
· ·
Week
'
ceremony m the Roman
concept of conung from darkness
_
_
,
cross an
e v~r
:
.
epic
. e
_
I
·
E
.
L
·
1au
o
R
-
·
.
:
,
.
Catholic
:
·
Church,
will
.
be into light.
,
_
~
,,
:.
.
-
.
..

. en~OUI!!ers
-
l:te
.
make~
,
W~lle
_
.
-
AC
_
.
·. ·
_
·
-
_
. .
_
·
.
1
.. -
celebrated a
.
t
.
7
.
P:m
.
·
. on

.
Sunday,
.
·
Choral
.
..
si
.
n~
.
i
.
ng
·

'
b
.
'!
-
.
~ari
·
~
.
t
.
·
-..
Ae

li
.
verm
·
g
·_
.
~
.
e
,
cr
..
..
o
..
ss
·
..
·
-
:
.
-.•-
.
>
··.
f
·.·
.
-
·
.- ·
.
· -
· ·
:
:
. --
·1
·
\
April 3, in the Marist College
students,-
.
und~_r the dir!!CtlQn
.
of
-
The ,,entire
~!~CIP<!,tion o
i
.
.
·
STOIJE

-
g:a~~
:~~~~th~".1.: ~~:.. •
.S.'1
1~:
~·.m;~:
'
!.:nr~.Ei°~~~~:.lh•
1
112 W
.
ashi
·
n
.
gton St.
i.
Poughkeepsie;
.
"
.
1
PA
-
RK
·
·
o1scouNT
-
BEVE-RAGE
;.-
cE
:
NTER•
.
i
.
452~2455
-
-
.
·
,
-
-
-

'
. .
.
.
.
_
. _
-
,
__ ,
A
i
l
~
Popular Bra rids
·
of
Jmport
_
ed
'
&: 6~nieist_ic
·
";"'
.
.
,
:..
..
·
<--
-
-
BEER
&
SODA
·<-
.
.

·
_:Established 1940 -
,

·

.
.
.
,
,
~ } W l , ~ • r a n W P < ~ i l a w . J
--
:
_
cold Beer
-
andSoda- -
_
f\Jo
'
Extra Charge
'
,
_

,
~





I
.
·
.-
-
'
-
-
. Xeg

Case

• Sii
Pack
.
.
.
.
.

'

<~·
_
-
-.

,
2
-
29-9000
.
.
.
.
-.
'.
'
..
.
--
-
- (½'
ML
s
;
oJ_
Roosevelt Esiijte)'
.
.
.
.
.
. .
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·.
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:
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At,~
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.
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pfei:1ty_
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parking
-
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.

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·
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.
·
_;
·








































































MARCH 31, 1977
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
No student infJut
Pre-school might move
ByDavidNg
An
open meeting, to discuss the
pos.sibility of an all-frosh
Leo
dorm and an optional food plan
next semester,
.
was held last
Thursday in the cafeteria. Seven
students attended.
·
peter Amato, director of
residence, and Frank Guido,
manager of
dining
services,
also
attended
.
·
·
.
Jim Shannon, president of
inter-council had memos
posted
on Wednesday announcing
.
the
purpose,
,
place and time of the
meeting:

.
.
'
The memos read "The
.
above
.
. two issues are to be voted on by
inter-house council
.
Therefore ·
, student feedback is absolutely
essential."
·
.
·
Shannon 'said he had asked all
resident advisors to hold floor
meetings
·
and inform resident
studentl? about the cafeteria
·
_meeting.
Afterwards, he said he feels
By Cathy Ryan
"pretty bad" about the situation.
"When you need the input, and
'lbe issue of possible relocation
you just had the rally, and there,s next year of the pre-school area
so little ... "
in Champagnat
Hall
will
be
Shannon said some had classes discussed
soon
by
ad-
!illd others went to "Irish Night" ministrators, according to _
An-
m
the Rathskellar.
"It
raises a
thony
Campilii,
business
question of apathy."
_
manager.Hesaidpresentlythere
Jim Sullivan, a freshman who
are
no
developments.
attended,
·
said the meeting's Negotiations for a student
turnout is the "ultimate in recr~tion area are
Jn
progress
student apathy."
and will
be solved by September,
_ -
Barbara Cherello, who also
-
according to Fred Lambert,
attended, said she
is
"upset" and assistant dean of students.
if
the
_
meeting had enough ex-
·
The final decision to allot the
posure there would have been a
area in the basement of Cham-
better turnout.
pagnat to the pre-school was
A
random survey of ten made by Dean Zuccarello;
students showed eight students
academic dean, Dean Waters;
did not know about the meeting. .,, vice president of the college and
One, ·a inter-house represen-
Anthony Campilii, business
tative,
.
said
_
he
·
knew about it but manager. Dean Zuccarello said
had
·
already discussed it at a
they will be the
·
3
key ad-
Gregory house meeting. The
ministrators involved in any
tenth said/ "Yeah, wasn't there
.
space decision made, but there
something about it posted."

will be consultation with students
/and other parties.
The room
used
by the pre-
school, sometimes known as the
"barn" was
originally funded by
Champagnat House student
funds, and
was a
student
recreation room in 1974-75 run by
the campus center.
According to Dolly Bodick,
coordinator of college activities,
the campus center wc1s also in
charge
_
of 'lbe Little Peop1e's
Growing Place, which was
supposed to be located in the art
room (old
·
music room) in
Champagnat.
Ten days before the program
was to begin; the art department
was moved from Fontaine Hall to
the art room (old music room) in
Champagnat because : the new
library was being built. This left
the Little People's Program with
nowhere to
·
go, and
Ms.
Bodick
said after looking at many op-
tions, the barn seemed a good
area. She said several members
of Champagnat House Council
were notified about the issue.
Ms.
Bodick said it was her
understanding that it would
be
a
one semester agreement (to end
May '75) and the barn
'
would
be
used by the children in the
morning and the students for the
remainder of the day.
Ms.
Bodick said the problem
arose in September '75 when The
Little People's program grew
into the Preschool under the
psychology department and
began a full day program.
Because it was open
to
the
students
so
few hours, revenue
wasn't coming in to pay staff
members.
Ms.
Bodick said there
were also maintenance
.
and
security problems.
Since early 1976, according to
Ms.
Bodick there hasn't been any
recreation for
.
students in the
barn
'
area. She said temporarily
browsing library will be a
television
center and
the
residence halls will be running
recreation tournaments, such as
nok hockey and chess.
'"~ay days changed
.
Experience and enjoy
By Daniel Dromm
believed that the students prefer
New dates have bee~ setfor the to be paid on a more frequent
_
By Elaine Brusoe
Enjoy it. Don't
try
to get away Once we attain this goal
student payroll schedule which basis.
.
from it. It's as much a part
'
of everything will be heautiful. It's
-
~ll give st1,1den~s more frequent
Campilii noted that this is only
"The best thing to do about
living as a big night at Frank's. just not true."
pay days, according to
.
a
memo a trial schedule. After this
depression is just experience it,"
It's very limited and will go
"We feel we have to make
it go
sent _
_
to work supervisors by semester the business office will
says Dr. Midge Schratz, of the
away."
·
·
away," she said. "But it's like
Busmess Manager Anthony project the impact the
.
schedule
·
Marist psychology department.
She said the individual "should death, the last phase of life. We
Campilii.
·
.
·
-
has on the staffing patterns,
"Jus~ as we experience joy and
·
ac~owledge
they'vE:
ex- should experience
it-
not rude it.
The
.
new schedule would budget implications and student
euphona we also experience
per1enced a loss and realize that Anyone who is never sad is not
provide
a
pay day semi-monthly sat~s~act_ion
·
before a finar sadness," she saici. "A good part
it's painful
_
and will pass, and it really living."
mstead of the presentfour week
·
dec1S1on
1S
made for the 1977-78
of your
.
existence is just day to
does."
-
She didn'
_
t sugge.st
a
person
period.
·
·
·
_
·
student payroll ~hedule
.
day coping with problems."
She said "the first reaction dwell on depression, however.
"If
According to the
·
meino, the
. Wor~ s~eets: a~ du~
in
.
the
·
Dr. ~hratz made it clear she
may
_
be to get drunk, but the best they do, _that would_bear looking
rea~~~L~S is
.
,
,
being
.
·don~
.
is fl!)anc1al ~1d office a week bef~re
was not speaking
.
of clinical
thing would beto be open to a new into," she said, "because their
_
,
be_ca_use
.
of th~
,
unpact
~
the
:
f~d
_
theJollC?~g ~y days.
:
_
Tite
!U"st
de~r~ssion, where _the depre~ed
experience - go skiing,
s~.
to a functioning
'
is interfe,:ed with by
service has
.
had onthe clerical
pay
-
day
IS
tomorrow, ".April
-
·
l;
.
.
!hdivz~ual lets
his
.<
depress1on
.
_;
conctirt, n,i~t
:
new people.
.
_
...
their sadness."
_
.
staff
·
of both the
·
business
-
arid
-
April 22, May 6,
May
20 arid
·June
'.
mterfere
with his
.
'daily
existence:
·

Dr; Schnitz
said '·we}.hinlc life
financial aid offices. Previously
7
are the last scheduled pay dates
.
She believes the
.
depressfon
should
be
.
a
Hollywood.
.
movie.
Saga, last
·
year's food service' for the semester. A new schedule
most students feel is a reaction to
wrote their own payroll. It
is
als~ ~11 follow this one.
a specific situation, such as
exams or the loss of a loved one.
She said the best thing to' do
about
this
is l'just experience it.
Week in
review
By Wanda Glenn
The Long Island Press, which
was in its 157th year of
publication
·
prtnted its last paper
:
Friday. The
.
paper was forced to
close
·
because of increasing
competition and rising costs. Six
hundred . employees were left
,
jo~tess.
·
----
!'resident Carter is considering
a punishment-reward program
th&t would include stiff taxes, of
·
reportedly up to
$500
on new "e:as
-guzzling" autos, and
·
"instant
cashrebates»to buyers of small,
high-mileage cars. This is one of
several proposals in Carter's
comprehensive energy program
scheduled to be unveiled April
20
.
According to Carter aides; the
President has .not abandoned a
·
plan tc;, propose a stiff increase in
the fed
/
eral tax on
·
gasoline -
-
which wo~Id effect all motorists.
The fight over the proposed ban
.
on
.
saccharin started
.
in Congress
.
last Monday. Officials of the Food
·
and Drug
.
Administration (FDA)
insist that ·
.
the' artifician
sweetener
·
poses a public health
problem .
.
The bari would go into
effect in
:
July
if
·
there is
·
n.9
..
Con~essional
·
intervention.
It.\iriU
cost an average of.four
percent m<>re to attend all types
of colleges

in
-
19?7-78; over 1976-
·
11;
·
:
,
according
:·,-
_
t<>
the
·
College .
:
..
.
.
.
\,
·.
-
,
Entrance Examination Board.
·
co-chairpersons of the National
This is the smallest increase
in
_
Gay Task Force, Dr. Bruce
four years. Attending
a:
private,
Voeller and
Ms
.
Jean O'Leary
four year college next year could meet with President Carter•~
-
cost families an average of $4,905
public affairs
·
liason, Margaret
for stp.dents living away from
Costanza,
in
the White House this
·
home alth9ugh total costs at week.
It
is the first time that a
some private colleges could be
as
gay group has been officially
high as
$7,500.
Included in the recognized by the White House.
total are tuition and fees, room
.
Discussed were problems con-
and board,
books
and supplies,
-
cerning discrimination against
transportation and personal homosexuals in housing and
expenses;
empl~yment, among
.
regulations
barrmg gays from certain
federal jobs.
·
..............
''Meet At Mike's''
_
Where there
_
is a special every night!
Mon - Vodka-.50
Tues· Rum-.50
a,eer
.15-•1.50 pitcher
.
W~--
Rye-.50:
.
.
·
"fhur ; Gln-.50
Fri • Tequllla-.50
Sat - Scotch-. 75
Sun
~
--~~.00
pltchers-.20
beer
(4 pm-1 ain)
·
(
_
25
Main
-
Street
·
/
.
IS THERE
·
LIFE AFrER
-
COLLEGE?
It
depends on what "life" means ....
_.
For most of us, life is a good job. a good house. a good
car ..

and if we're lucky, a good marriage.
For some (and perhaps for you) this is
·
not enough
.
The
"good life" somehow is not enough. Life must mean ·some
-
thing different: the attempt to live in union with God, to serve
others, to give as totally and as generously as you can.
The Paulists offer a way of life which can satisfy young men
who seek more than the "good life.
"
As a small community
of Catholic priests, we have worked for over a ce
.
ntury
throughout the United States and Canada -from Manhattan
to Toronto
,
from Greensboro to Houston. from Los Angeles
to Fairbanks. Our mission? To speak the message of Jesus
.
Christ to this modern world: to communicate Jiis shattering
love and overwhelming forgiveness in a time and world where
He so often seems absent.
.
To do so, we are actively involved in parish work, preach-
ing, adult education, campus ministry, publishing and mass
communications. We are missionaries; we are bridge-
bullders. We seekto serve the Gospel in ever new ways.
The Paulist life is not an easy one. But one who dares will
find rewards beyond expectation, satisfactions beyond
dreams. But not complete satisfaction. for we are constantly
searching to make the Gospel real to more people in today's
world.
Don't let your idealism die
.
Discover what our community
can mean to you
.
Fill out
0
lhe coupon belo
_
w for more l
_
nformalion about th• Paulisls.
Dear Father DeSiano:
.
Please send me more Information on the work
ofthe Paulists and the Paullst Priesthood.
Rev. Frank OeSiano
,
CSP
.
.
.
·
.
Director
of
Vocations NAME _ _ _
__,;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
PAULISTFATHERS
.
Dept.
0146
.
_
STREET A D D R E S S - - , - - - - - - - - - - -
415 West
.
591h Street CITY
ST TE
New York. N.V.10019
- - - - - - - -
A
- - ZIP_
COLLEGE ATTENDING _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
CLASS O F - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
1111
.1































































































































PAGE6
THE
CIRCLE
It's almost a dream
Alas!
The James J. McCarm Recreation Center .will
be
open on Sunday; an event we can
all
appreciate.
The center, which a few years ago was only a
dream, has finally become a reality.
_
Students, faculty, staff and ad.ministration should
.
feel proud
as
we
begin
this new course
in
Marist
College history. The institution, which
has
grown
from a vertually
unknown
and ancient hermitage,
now has a multi - million dollar sports complex.
Some accomplishment for a small private school!
Yet what are·we to make of
this
new innovation?
We should recognize that
.
the facility is primarily
ours. Our pride, our wor~ and our dream.
It
is also
our responsibility. We must
take
the necessary
precautions to insure that it remains that way. We
must respect the building for what it is. We have to
protect it and guard it. We must tise it properly.
_
The effect it will have on campus
will.
be
tremendous.
.
Besides allowing ~tter physical
education facilities, the· center offers a much
needed boost to the sometimes
·
dull
·
and drab
campus
life.
With its opening
it
leaves behind the J>?ssibility of
.
Editorals
·
·
having
a
future communications center in the old
gym. There
.
will
be
more office space in Fontaine
Hall and the center is truely
~
asset toward
recruitµig prospective students.
·
_
We applaud those who
·
worked on making tlie
center come true and wait for
·
the formal
·
openjng
and dedication of the center later on this month.
·
No
-
Activities?
MARCH 31, 1977
_
Letters to the
Editor
Sad
·
Event
To the editors:
It
is
a
sad event
and a threat to
the future when members
·
of
a
college newspaper, and potential
journalists of

the
.
future, put
subjectivity
_
.
before a
fair
.
evaluation when judging can-
didates
as
was done in recent
student
.
government elections.
It
is my contention that the
editorial which came
-
out in
_
the
Circle the day of the election in
.

~
.
?
.
support
.
of members of its
staff
who were
.
running
.
for office,
·
_
·
exhibited a bias unfounded on
·
credibility. Two of
the
four
'
people
·
it supported, virtually _did not
.
·
present the slightest res~m-
blance of a platform.
It
·
is my
fond concern ~ t
in
a
college
where we are supposed to learn
.
the
~
true meaning of democracy
cllld objectivity in
m~~~
in this
instance you have

failed~
.
·
·
·
Sincerely, -
-.
..
...
.
..
··
DoinLaRuffa
Junior
dependent
.
colleges
·
and

.
universities throughout the
.
state.
,
_
,___
A
three-person staff is
-
located in
·
·
To

the Editors,
.
Albany to coordinate a program
..
·
We hear it a lot. Marist stinks because it
is
so
_
cry. ''That's what's wrorig with this ~hool, there's
~
We, members of.· the Marist
·
of legislative
·
advocacy and
·
to
·
·
.
small.
.
.
.
nothing to do and nobody to see except some folk community, feel it
is
essential foster communication within tht
L
students say this when
,
they hear
-
about great singer who no one ever heard of anyway.''
·
that we bi:ing

the Independent" independeut sector.
..
.
-
..
.
-
..•
concerts. being given at schools all across the
,.
student Coalition to the attentiQn
It
is
_
essential that
..
Marist
· ·
.
country. "They get the big groups and the great
..
.
..
Hear
It Now
of the Marist student body .
.
The College students have a voice
_
in
lecturers and somebody with a name,"
"
students
.
,
Independent Student Coalition
_
the
_
leg!5latiye
:
process
tha~
-
0
'!ill
·
·
Well now we have the chance to build some
en
.;
(ISCJ w.is
:
formed in July,
1976,
..
:
ciete~e
;
tlie
future
;
of
hi~~~
,
.
·
·
·
tertainment possibilities at Marist, the small liberal for the
-
purp
·
ose
_
of represent~g educa_tion
,
m
.
New
.
-.:
:Y ork
-
state
,
.
·
_
_
arts school on the
-
Hudson
-
where nothing happens.
the
-
260
ooo
·
students
_
m
·
·
the
_
m-
students
are
encouraged to ma
_
ke
·

·
;.
Tomorrow night
at
the Mid-Hu~on Civic Cen~er
depeild~nt sector
·
of
·
higher
..
,
no_is~, an~ b~
·
heard by
.
_the ~d-
the College Union Board
(CUB)
Wlll be sponsorIDg
• -
education in New York state. It is miJ$tration ID Albany. FIDancial
a concert featuring the
-
New
_
_
Riders
·
of the Purple
·
the goal of ISCto bring the plight
-
aidplay5-ani,mportant ro~e in our
Sage with the stanky Brown group.
- ·
of higher education in
this
state, attend~nce
·
here at Manst;
.
and
students cry for input, and
·
the
CUB
~ea~d tho~e
particularly in the

independent o~
_
vou:e must be.heard,~o keep
crys. Nqww~_have to support the orga,nIZatxon. Its_ sector, to the attention of
-
.
this fiow
·,
of
:
money~onung
-
~ur
,
_
-
not
~
sacrifice by any means
.
It~
.
good e~-
.
student's, citizens and public
way
;
_
For
.
'
more informati?n
~
tertauunent and a chance for a good txme and a
officials.
. .
.
.
·
-
··
·
contact:
.
.
_
_
_ ._
_
.
. _
._
night out.
.
.

,
. .
.
-
.
.
.
-
ISC
·
is composed
'
of student
'
·
>
,,
Y".es Ge~in, Leo 3rd Floor
_
_
The Circle salutes the
C1JB
for
.
their effort to brIDg
represent~tives
.
· ,
from
-
in-
-
Frailk Biscardi, Gregory House
a "big name'
'
to
_-
Marist ~nd we e?~o~a~e all
.
students to stop
.
by the
_
office of acti
.
vxlles
m
-
the
::.
.
·-
.
..:.
~--
-~
-
.
campus center to
.
pick up their
$5
ticket.
. .
___
..
.
U
you buy now, you'll be buying fo
_
r t~e fut~e too
._
.
Jf you don
i
t
hear it now, you'.ll not hear it again.
.
.
'
'
__
;,
. .
'Likes
·
Humo~
.
-
_
_
Ilk~ .
.
By
.
:
selling
,
~-(Uj~
-
_
~OU
.
are
-
·_
·
.
forced
·
to be creative, to answer
· •
·
'-
'
·
·
··· ·
any anticipated negative replies,
-
·
To\he
-
Editors:
.
.
,
.
..
~
:
~nd to
_
deal
_
~th people ~C>Othly
.
,.
-,,
f.liiil
)
Golarigeio;s
.-
:Jiumorous
· •
.
~nd wit~.P~!~~:i! yo~ gE:1~
,
<
-
con-
-
.. a
'
rticle
::
;i

,
'
a
.,
'
relief
.:
,from
.
,
.•
the
,·:
,
f1d~p~e
:
;

IIJ.
,;
Xour~U:-
now~
,
,
any
:
discouraging
_
-
~
wa;y
j:>f.
life
'
<;lt
-
fu
_
~~ JOb
.
mtefVIeWS or
·
s
_
ales
Marist,
..
and the
.
column is
_
J)Ositio~s should ~ome naturally.
_
something that
.
the
.
P:fiper
.
has
·
I.am also SurJ?rxsed that no one
.
needed for a long
_
time, and
-
on
:
ca
.
!Jlpu_s dr!lws car~oons,
should become
a
·
weekly featm;e.
-
writes comic stnps,
.
or att~ts
d
;
·
t
f
Corps
·
will sponsor
.
the
.
Fir
_
st
-
Now
that
humorous art
_
icles have
_
any
-,
of the other
-
mundane
Gregory House App
·
.
licat1·ons
Joseph Waters,
irec or
....
o
.
.
Craft F .
f tu
that mak
ur
·
· th
Annual Sunshine
.
all' on
.
been included, perhaps other
ea res
.
.
·
,,,
e
.
up
_
·
_
yo
secunty, to reI:nam
ere.
Frida_y, April 1
_
between
·
3 - 7 p.m;
weekly columns can be fitted into
_.
average da_ily newspaper
.
~e
Annlications for residence in
da
d
s
da
rt•no'
f
th st de ~;:; ID
'
WMCR12tol2
and on Satur
Y
an
un
Y
the paper • a column from
tne
.
.
_
ne~ repo
.~'o
o
e u n...,
Gregory House are available at
.
.
_
April 2 andAprll3
_
between 12:~0-
camp
·
_
us ministr
_
Y,
.
c.U.B.,
.
a
.
the
_
··
Joum
_
alism~ class appears to
the cafeteria entrance, switch-
Th
n
be
thi
be f high
lity b t here are
gh
WMCR at 640 on your
A.M.
dial
.
6:30 p.m.
ere
Wl
some ng
faculty member speaking out
o
qua
, u w .
.
. .
board, the post office and throu
is riow broadcasting from noon to - for everyone. Jewelry, pottery,
each week
on
how the faculty see some other featur~? Working for
_
cdaemadplusi·nern:~ :i:ip
·
~!~
~p: midnight Llsten in for some good plants, leather_
.
goods and WO?d
Marist College's growth ... This
is
the n~wspa~er
_
is not_ some
·
·
crafts will be displayed. The Mid-
something that the paper lacks.
- ·
mysterious, J~lously
_
_
guarded
plications is April 7.
.
tunes.
Hudson
-
Community
Corps
Reading
·
tlirouglf
'
the
.
recent
.
fraternal soc!ety: they ~eet
·
immin
Cb g
sponsors cu}tural
.
activities and issues of the Circle;
.
r find that ~very Mon~y and Tuesday rught
Parking Tickets
Sw
g
an
e
provides services
·
whi~h bene
_
fit
.
when' an article towards the back m room 268 ID the Campus <::enter
Unauthorized
-
cars parked
·_
Beginning Swimming, PHED
·
the community
.
··
·
·
·
:
of the paper has
fo
bEf
continued,
..
-
:-
·
come and join ~em}
,
If
enqu~
.
behind Champagnat Hall will be 1083J, previously listed for slot 4
·
·
·
·
.
itiscontinuedonprecedingpages clubs
·
~nd
·
orgamza!ions
:
:
'!1:ote
_.
--
'
-
·
·
c
will be changed to slot B starting
There will be a martial arts nearer
:
the beginning.
Does
·
this
·
something abo:ut t~eir
_
activities,
ticketed
st
arting tQmorrow
.
ars April 4.
_
·
demcnstration sponsored by the mean that Marist is going ba~k-
pei:haps more notice wo~d be
.
-
parked th
.
ere block a fire lane ~nd
Craft Fair
CUB on Monday; April 4In room wards
iri
its development
··
as the
taken
of these &roups, and people
..
create a hazard .
.
Cars which
268 of the Campus Center. action develops? Possibly, but on
-
would
_
.
get
_
1~terest!!d.
_
The
usually park behin~tbe building
The_ Mid•H
·
udson
·
Community
.
_Defense techniques will be a more feasible level, it means new~paper . disappomts
its
Jnay .receive permission from
demonstrated followed by the the newspaper lias attained
~
readers when clubs
.
do plan
.
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , highlight of the
.
show ".' Rich good standard
,_
but needs
·
to even~ and try to reach other~,

T
-
HE CIRCLE
~
.
·
Th~ ~ r
;
i
st
.
College CIRC~E
·
Is
the
wee_
k
ly n~~peper of the studen
t
s ot Mar
.
1
st
College
and
is published throughout the sc
_
hool year exclus
i
ve of vaca!lon perlOdS
by
_t
he Southern Oul~hess News Agency,
Wappingers,
~ewYork.
,- . .
·
·
~-----
Hasbrouchwill break 12 inches ?f enlarge, and
.
develop -more to but because the
_
~e~spaper
.
1:5
concrete
~th
the chop o~ his fully use its potential.
_
.
.
_
-
ha
_
J!lpered and hm1ted
,
to
-:
a
,
:
hand. The time of the show
will
be
..
In order to expand, more IDput n1ax1mum of 8 pages, this
,
.
7:30; ibere will be no adrnj.ssion
of stories, features and ad-
potential item
o~
interestis {eft
·
·
.
.
charge.
.
vertising would
be
neecled, and ou~.
·
·
If
enough
:
·
peoJi>le ~red
_
·
·
here is where the problem
seei.1S
enough to
.
subffi!t
_
articles
;
-
~
_
r-
C.U.B. Cbainnen
Needed
-to Ile. I can't
._
understand why tq
_
ons,
·
club

news
_
and dorm
communications
-
·
students or
·
eveiits
;
··
·.
the
:
newspaper would
·
.Anyone interested
:
in
being
a
markeUng
·
concentration haye
·
to
·
gro
_
w, to ~nd; and
·
C.U.R
-
committee
.
chairman for
business students don't wish. to really present the entire camp~
.
..,
the I977-7B
·
schoolyear ~}!ouldiill get involved with selling space-in
--
~l~
·
the st~ct~re of
·
~a_Illpus
.
out an application
.
by
-
toillorrow.
the
••
newspaper
.
.
O
to ·local
.
decision male~ _IS:changmg
_
for
· Forms
·
can
:
be picked up 'in the · busiriessrnen.

If
you are con-
·
the bett
.
er, ordinary campus
Campus
·
Center ·office •
. '
: :
.
_

sidering
a
career in adverti&rig,
activities
and clubs are changing
.
.
:
Positions are
·
open in the
:
sales retailing, or other related for th~ worse. You•v~
·
opened one
_:tor
.
following
·
areas_:
_
Social, Vi~eo
jobs/the
·
·
position ~!'advertising eye, l,dalist <:!ollege, now: open
_
the
_
~r Tape; ~erfornung Arts, F~e
.
~l~man for the ~e~~per
_
can other
_
an~ you'J_l really see.
or
:
Arts
,
Concert, Co~eehouse, Film
_
provide you
-
with
;
a
_
pretty some~ng·
::
-
and Lecture. Get mvolved!
·
realistic look at:what it
·
coul~ be
·
..,,
_.
-
·
·
- - '
"'.
signed,
_
_
_
_
-
-
;.PeterVa~en
·
-
.
. ... \.-1~~-<.-t/
>~~~~-
...
.
r;
-
...
:J~Mi::t ...
.
,.•·
··
.
-
.
.
,
"-¥-•··
,
'
,
. .
.
:
_
:
·=w:·· .
.
.
.
... . .
.
:·• .•
'.
.~-
.
.

·:
·,
.
.
'
..
'
-
'
.
.
.
-
-
·
,
:
·:
·.
:-:
·
.
,
.
_··
(
_,
:-
'.

.
....
' . '
..
•• •
.

·
·
1
·:

.
:



























































MARCH 31,
··
1977
THE CIRCLE
PAGE7
T-he Lighter Side
''Inebriation etc.''
.
Dial-an-administrator
by Phil
Colangelo
ByMI.keTeitelbaum
ByPhllColangelo
bombed, polluted, sloshed,
Half
of the top-level administrators
-
of Marist
wasted,
smashed,
ruined, College can see students
within
24
hours after
Everyone
seems
to be
.
at a loss phased-out, messed-up, blown• calling for
ari
appointment, according
to
a random
for w
.
ords at one time or a,nother. away, laid (ahem)
·
out, gone, phone survey.
.
There
is
one question however, stewed,
'
s-faced,
f
.
ed
The administrators were Dr. Linus Foy, Dr.
Louis
that
will
tum
even the
.
most or-
up, fractured, in-the-bag, hurtin'-
Zuccarello,
·
oavid Flynn, John Dwyer, Anthony
dinary,-
-
composed,
serene,
.
for-certain, wrecked or just plain
Campilii,
Fred Lambert;
-
Gerard Kelly and Dr.
tranquil,
-
subdued,
.
level•headed,
.
..
out-of-it.
.
.
Antonio Pere-L. All of them have secretaries who
long-suffering, unruffled, soft-
·
As
opposed to these universal were inquisitive yet polite.
.
spoken
·
armchair quarterback terms
.
there are private
·
terms
Foy, who
.
is
the president of the college, and
into the all knowing, omniscient,
·
which are invariably more Zuccarello, academic dean, were surveyed Monday
cocky, loud~mouthed~ confident, creati~e,
.
but only ~stantly afternoon. The rest of the administrators were
deliver
.
us from evil expert. And
'
recogruzable to members of the surveyed
.
Tuesday afternoon:
that
is,
"how
·
drunk
:
did you get clique.-.
. ,
Foy's secretary, after asking me how long would
last night?" And it would be
.
hard
Here
lS
a good example of this the meeting be, said Foy was free Tuesday at 11:30
·
✓to
blame anyone for
taking
ad-
phenoID:ena, "Hey P~il h?,w a.m;
·
After I told her I was busy, she gave
·
me two
vantage of
:
the
·
opportunity to drunk did
-
you get last rught?
times
.
on Friday morning.
_
.. colorfully describe their elbow
-
"Well I'll.tell you, I was.reborn
. -
Zuccarello's secretary asked
·
me what the
-
tipping· heroics of the previous
·
·
to
a new height of ~rception and meeting would be about, whether I was a resident or
night.
After all,
-
think of
all
the
:
virility, I forget exactly w~t commuterandiflwouldwanttocomeinonmyday
_
words society offers
·
us to mean happened after that, but knowing oft She told me Zuccarello was free at 11 :30 a.m.
· being drunk.
'
, ·
:
.
_
..
. ·
.
.
ID:e, I probably,~ent home early Wednesday but if:.: wanted to make a specialtrip,I
For example, the intelligent
with
some fox.
.
could see him Tuesday at either 9:30 a.m. or 1
.
:30
-
person has
-
his
-
.
own
.
wa1-s
.
of
''Yeah Colangelo, I'll teU
_
you p.m.
-
-
describing the drunken stupor he exactly
.
wha~
;
happen~. ~er all
Flynn, who is the director
-
of admissions, was
only after complaining of the length before I could
speak to Dwyer.
.
Campilii's secretary told me I could have an
appointment Wednesday morning at 11 o'clock.
Campilii is the business manager.
Perez, dean of students, was going on vacation so
he was going to
be
too busy to see anyone. His
secretary said the earliest he would be available
would be Wednesday April 6.
-
.
Lambert, who is the assistant dean of students,
is
well protected by his secretary. She first asked me
what the meeting would be about, then whether I
was a commuter or resident. She then informed me
that he would be available Wednesday morning
from 9:30·11 a.m
.
but he would be busy in the
af-
ternoon.
Kelly, who is the director of
'
financial
-
aid, was
·
available Thursday at 9 a
.
m.
was
.
In;
·
(for this one
I'd
better that percep_tion and_virility, You surveyed Tuesday. His secretary asked me when
pull ouU
_
he old Thesaurus). ije were speaking Sp~msllby 9:~0 by would I like an appointment. I told her at the
could say he
.
was in the state of 10:00 you w~re domg half-gamers earliest possJf.>le time. She then gave
·
me an ap-
inebriation
·
,
_
winebibbing, ba~•
-
,
off your barstool, you were all pointment for Thursday morning at 11 o'clock.
cananalia,
.
or libations,
·
(just
·
be
chugged out by
.
10:30 at 10:45 you
·
Dwyer~ who
is
the registrar, had difficulty finding
thankful there a:ren'
.
·
too: many heade~ for-.the
.
forest and
-
~ou free time.
His
secretary first asked me what the
intelligent
_
people
.
around).
seent 1~ mm~tes re-decorating meeting was in reference to. After I told her, I found
·
For
C
everyone
·:
e~e there
..
ai:e y~ur, _shirt and_ a ho~ and a half
·
out the earliest time to see him was "sometime next
universal terms
-
that enable.you gagging for your life. Then we week." His secretarytold me
if
there was a rush, I
to
.
~xplam
··
your _ condition
··
last ~arted you home
.
and dumped you
·
could see
him
Friday at 11 a.1!1, But
r
found that out
night no matter where you wake m the evergreens where
.
your . _ - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
up this
·
~orning. A person might
·
moth~r says s~e
_
found you in
.
the
only have
-
been lit,
,
buzzed or morrung. That
IS
exactly what
glowing; but then
·
again
with
a happened to you last ~ght!"
couple
,
,more he might have "Oh."
·
·
b~come
·
:
:
p
_
laste_i:-ed,,
-
.
crocked,
---
By
Regina Clarkin
_
children during lunch.
.
.
a snowman". said
-
Kim,
as she
.
Later
;
when the
,
floor
is
swept
;
squeezed blue and red play dough
An entire wall is c
·
overed with a the table
'
cleaned and the lun-
-
together.
.
.
,
mural of rusf colored footprints. chboxes put away, the children
.
"I know whatthis is, it's Marist
Inside; the light blue walls are have
··
a rest period for
-
five College. My mommy told me."
·
covered with pictures ofWinnie- minutes.'' I
·
hate resting, I like said Kim .
.
the~Pooh,
_
the Sesame
_
Street playing, eyery kind of playing"
Five year old Nicky was
-
-
gang,
:
original posters, and said
a
restless Lawrence, age c;rouching like a frog on the floor,
collages. Sounds of laughter, five.
·
.
saying "Ribbet, Ribbet" and leap
shouting, banging and vari?us
The pupils lie on navy blue cots frogging over anyone who
other noises can be heard commg with a blanket from home.
·
passed. Across the room two four
fromthe three, four and fiv'e_year Takomi, five, says she has "the year olds spent their free time
olds. These are the sights and best blanket."
It
has bears, ducks playing hide and seek.
sounds which cari be seen and and flowers on
-
it
;
she says
.
And
Chatting, hugging and kicking
heard in the
Marist
-
Pre-School as two
·
Man.st undergraduate
_
are part of the· average day for
located in -the basement of:
-
students in charge of the sessioa
·
the pre-school children attending
·
:
Champagnat Hall.
.
.
-
tell the children thE:Y have to ."be college.
·
"He's got soda for lunch ... you real good for one mmute," a little
·
The Marist pre-school began in
said you had a whole lot of stuff in voice
.
is
·
heard chanting ''l'm the fall of 1975 under the guidance
-
yoifr lqnchbox ... I'll give you one being a:
·
good rester.'
.
'
_
of Dr. Midge Schratz of the
-
of my cookies for a piece of that

Quiet play time follows rest psychology department, and has
'
:
-;
. I'm
.
fat, I drink beer." These period. Play dough, crayons an4 30 students enrolled. Presently
are bits of the table conversation
_
posters are used .
.
In
the corner a there are 12 undergraquates and
between
pte
,
15
morning sessi?n story
.
is being read. "l'm
·
making
·
four graduate directors.
·
:
Pi-e-:;~boolers during ''quiet" play
-
time.
(Photos
by
Joe GlgUottf)
··-·
_
,.
.
"'
·.

·
"
,.,
,
,,.
_.
.
:
.
.
.
··
.
..
..
.
.,
Marist pre-school bome<:_oming queen.
e
.
.
ilEllill
·
~
;
;,.,,.; .wznni=-l
·,..,,;..;,
~

·
-l.l..~
·'
:
· ·
.
.:.
..
Unl••x
Haircuftini for GuyS~Gal:
~
~
_
-
STIIIENT- DISCOUNT 5
6
All cuts include Vidal Sassoan
Conditi~ners for Healthy Hair
•Highlighting •Special Precision Cuts
17 So. Hamilton St., Poughkeepsie(½ block south of Main Mall)
.
471-4383-45+9984 Mon •
.Sa:t. 9:30-5:30
Thurs.
&
Fri.
Open Late
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
.I

I
···
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.
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J

















































































/
I
.
I
k
PAGES
THE CIRCLE
MARCH 31, 1977
*
*
I
How good are your student reps?
Student Government ..
-
.
ByKenHealy
president Green didn't have any good president would have stuck .
meetings with administrators. it out. When a chance came for
When asked to evaluate its
S.G. Treasurer, John Davern change he resigned."
work in general over the past said on several occasions Dean of
When asked for an evaluation
year, the present members of the students Antonio Perez wanted to of the Student Government,
Student Government
(SG)
gave speak with Green and the . Green replied, "I resigned, that's
the group as a whole low marks. executive
-
board but was unable my evaluation of the · Student
.
.
Acting President,
Jim
Dasher to because there were no Government." He then said "The
said the policy board,
·
which he meetings .scheduled. According student Government
.
wasn't
was
a
part of "accolllplished to Dasher and Davern there was together with the other campus
nothing,'.'
as
far
·
as formulating one executive board meeting
all
organizations.
-
That is how the
policy and rewriting the con-
year. Dasher also said that committee of
'21'
was formed."
-
.
stitution were concerned.
·
Both of because the executive board was Green refused
to
make any ad-
·
these goals were promises of
so
disorganized
'
it's power was_ ditional comments because he
former
S.G:
president Andre negated.
.
said The Circle would distort
Green.
·
Dasher, Davern and Secretary anything I
say
.
"
Dasher -said the policy board· Maria Troiano aU pointed out
The one committee on the S.G.
did not meet regularly because of that the S.G. was disorganized . that did get praise was the
a lack of organization that due to Green's lack of action in financial board under-. the
plagued the Board
·
and much of the role of president. Troiano said direction of ,John Davern. Green, ,
the work the S.G
.
tried to do.
the policy board meetings that
·
Dasher, and Troiano all said that
.
The relationship
.
between the Green did attend broke down into Davern did an outstanp..ing
.
.
job
S.G. and the administration was "a forum for Andre's elocution." with his committee and that the
.
also confused.
On
several con-
Dasher said that as president financial board was the one board
-
·
troversial decisions that were Green "went through the motions
-
that did what it set
·
out to ac-
handed down
·
by
·
the ad-
of being president. He appointed
·
complish .
.
Davern
-
.
.said, "The
ministration,
.
the
Student people to the policy and judicial financial board was as effective
Government, which represents boards. He called
six
meetings
.as
it could be .• we had
.
a lot of
the voice of the students, was not and didn't always attend."
good people, they allocated the
consulted
because,
then · Davern
-
said Green could have money as fairly as possible."
been a good president. "He had . _Jim Dasher also
·
ma1e a good
potential but he got involved in impression as :vice-president of
. ~. lnter-
.
ho
.
use
,r-
C<J
uncil .•.
too many other things.Jt Davern S.G. according
·
to his pe~rs.

said Green "didn't open up Dasher was responsible for the
By
Allsonmckey
constitution now
lists
the period
communication between· the refrigerator rally last semester
to just one year. Shannon and
student Government and the
.
which was unsuccessful. Dasher
For the members-of the Inter-
Amato
.
think tliat the council
·
administration." He added, "He said
he
thought he did a decent
.
house Council to do
-
anything well could do a more effective
~
job
_
if
hardly knew we existed .;. Andre job but he felt he could have don
_
e
the communication and feedback the members served a longer
.
'
was an idealist. He had good a better orie had he received
process has got to
_
work, says Jim · term because they would
be
more
·
ideas but he
.
didri't follow more
direction
from
the
Shannon, president. According to familiar
·
.
with
.
the
-
councils
thr gh H
•t
·
h
·
· d t D h
·
1
Shannon the counciltries to get proc.edures
·
and the issues.
ou
.
·
e can say e was presi en ·
as er
_
. was
8
so
student
·
.
feedback about
.
'
a Shannon recommends a twoyear
frustrated, we all were;'' Davern responsible for the food com~
went on to
,
say ~hat

·
Green
.
. an- 'mittee.It was one of his promises
proposed ~ue be_fore the council
.
period. Amato
thinks
the council
·
tagonized the administration by Jast year and he
·
got it off, the . votes on it.
.
.
.
.
works
,
well !ogE:ther,
-:
be~~use
.
.
making
.
::
verba
.
l
.
ac,ctisatioll~ ground.:''It didn't go as
.r
11r,,as-l
/
. B~fore tJ:15\co,~c!l votes_
c;,n
_
any
..
th~re
.
ar~
~ny c!iver~
.
,
OP':"1~~s
..
.
:.
before he knew all the.facts .
.
He
..
wailtedittobutitwasastart/'
he
-:..
JSSue
;
they
_
frrst d,iscuss
.
1t
at
.
a,
that
_
C(?me
.
!JP
about ~~
-
ISsue.
·
also
,
emphasized that Green
·
·
said.
.
.
·
·
·
Illee~mg
~
.
;
Then
;_
t~e stude~t
·
He
,
also said that
0
~annon
!}as
didn't attend all the meetings
Ile
·
.
,,
All
of the
-
officers
.
of the
~epresent_a_tives from th~ councll done
-
an excellent Job
-
working
·
scheduled.
·
.
.
outgoing S.G. hoped the incoming
!Dform their house ~ouncils of ~he
C on c e r
.
n i n g
,
Gr
e
e n ' s officers would have
,
a better
_
ISSues discussed_.
ltlS then the Job
resignation
·
as
S.G •
.
president
.
in atmosphere in which to
·
work to
of
·
th?se co~ils to hold
.
floor
late February, Davern called it get more of their goals ac-
·
meetings with the
·
resident
an "opportune moment."
''A complished.
.
students and get th~ students
·
·
·
feedback about the ISSUe. The
House Council members then
·

inform the Inter,-house Council
... College

Union
BolJrd
representative
,
of the student
feedback
·
they received. The
Inter-house Council represen-
tative
·
brings
-
·
these
.
individual
dormitory results back to
..
the
lnter,.house Council meeting.
By Pat
Larkin
College Activities, Dolly Bodick;
·
Ternansaidfor a schoolto run an There is a discussion of the
the
·
current president,
. ·
arid
effective program such as ClJB it results and then the council votes
,
One of· the ~jor
;
complaints
·
treasurer, and the iricoming needs $35-40,000.
Ari
example he
.
on the issue according fo
·
how the
given to
·
President:
_
.
.
µnµs Foy president
>
and
,
treasurer
.
of the
said was Dr
.
Joyce Brothers. She
_
students feel about the issue.
during the studentprotest in late CUB.
·


·
·
'
.
was paid $1000 to speak to Marist
Director of
,
Residence, Peter
I< ..
ebruary was thatthere is alack
McTernan said, "A lot
·
of students and no money was Amato said, "it
is
discouraging
of activities on campus .
.
Ac-
chairmen assumed responsibility received in return.
that a handful of students or no
against time restraints.
.
There
,
cording to College Union Board they couldn't handle."
·
McTernan said the position of students show · up for these
must be gopd attendance records
(CUB) Treasurer Tom McTernan
McTernan also said
-
elected president requires an "overall meetings." He said it is hard for
of the
..:
Inter-house Councils
the reasons for
,
this are th~t officers and appointed chairmen
.
coordination" of
·
the activities. the council
.
to make decisions
·
members because the council can
committee chairmen are not come in1o their positions
:
withouf
.
,
He must constantly
-
pressure without enough student
.
fee'd-
not vote on any issues without~
spending money :wisely, bad
-•·
any experience and it takes time chairmen to do their job
if they back. Leo Housemaster and
.
of the total members present at
publicity of events, and not
·
for
·
them to get
.
adjusted. aren't arranging

activities.
council
member,
Father Richard
the
...
meetings.
Amato
.
said
enough inoney in the budget.
·
However, this year the newly According to
.
McTernah,
..
John LaMorte said, "input's
.
.the
compared
-
lo last semester the
Th~ constitution
·
of the CUB
·
elected officers and the
·
appointed Dowling
?,,
former CUB
·
president problem
·.
·with, every
.
meeting
overall attendance of the council
states, "The College Union Board chairµlen will work with current. who recently resigned his (meaning
.:
house
:
meeting) I've
is
-
better.
':
.
is an organizaUon a11d a program offi~ holders to gain the needed
:
·
position
.
for personal
..
reasons gone

to
·
:
Only

7
.
students showed
Shaililon and student
·
govern-
.design~ to encourage members experience.
·
"didn't give
_
us the leadership we
. -
un
to
,
."
a
·
.
Leo
·
meeting
·
on food
m~nt
president~elect
Jeff
ofthecollegecommlinityto share
There have been four vice needed this semester.•~
:i
_ ,
·
·
·.
_-
plans/'
··
He
:
said the Inter-hotise
-
·
·
Blanchard would like to make a
interests, talents, a
_
nd ideas in an presidents this
.
year. Lisa
. McT~rn_al_l ~idthere shoul~ be Councll
_
could
'
accomplish more if :Jaw
saying
_that
if a council
action-learning environment. Voerman was elected but did not ei~ht ac,t1V1tles
.
per mont~~ .. He
~
we
·
could
,
,
get
_
feedback from
_
member misses three meetings
-
The purposes are two-:fold: A. to return
.
in September. Former said there
.
~ould be
.
act1vites
:
students.
,
<'If students don't he or she would be asked to resign
establish
.
policies
·
·
which will CUB
-
President John
.
Dowling
.
every
.
·
weekend
·
and
/
there· is respond we (meaning Inter-house
·
·
and be replaced by some one else
~
·
enhance and facilitattdhe func-
appointed
.
Tom Murphy who enough money in the budget to do Council) have to make a decision,
~lanchard is the Gregory House
tioning of the Campus Center; B. resigned last semester. Dciwlirig this.
<
·
·
·
·
· · ·
said LaMorte.
':
·~
:
-
.-
~,:'
._
·
representative.
.
.
.
to sponsor and expand programs
.
then appointed Mike Camey who
.
.
A
·
strong point
.
of
:
the
,
Inter,.
'
Blanchard said one dtiwnfali of
of an educational, social
;
cultural did
<'
~ot
·
return
·
to
.
school
~
-
iri
.
hous_e Co~il
is
thatitrepresents
__
_-
the council is that the
·
dorms
·
are
.
and
:
recreational nature
_
which January.
.
·
• ·
.
::
·
>.
:
.
·
_,
.
all l'eside
_
nt st~dents and dorms
·
not equally represented,

In the
:
_
_
wiU: serve in the inierests of the
. .
The main responsibility ofthe
on ~ampus, said
.
Amato.
,
.Jt als~
·'
constitution there are two Inter-
.
students,
.
faculty, and the ad-
vice
/
president is to advertise
·

·
· ·
··
,
repr~~nts ~he fa_culty
.
a~d the
.
.
·
_
house
.
Coimcn reps
·
from each
ministration
.
of
·
Marist College;'
·
'
,
CUB._
-
~yents. McTernan sa
_
id
·.
·
adininist~ati~n. It~ a vehi~e
.
for

..
·
.
doi,n. Blanchard does
.
not
.
think
Thei_CUB ;is
.
:divided
.
into eight
.
many times
··•
_
the
.
commiUee;;;
.
.
.
· commumcationJo
:
st}l~ent b~y,
.
.
that this is
equal
r~pi:esentation
different · committees
-:
and one cttainnen had
.
to
.
publicize
'•
their··
-,...:;;:;;;:.a;,~
-
-,-;~_,-:
.
:-
.faculty
-
:-
~nd

~d.nu.mstration.
·.
because some dorms house more
-
·
.
general fund. niese
,
committees own eyents. McTernan
.
said the
.
.
A:nul~
.
$8id, '
'.
ItlS .one of the few
:
·
studeritli
,:'
.
·thari
·
others
_ -
and
·
are
·
social;
>
lecture
;
. concert, current
:
_vice
.
president;
·
Paul.
.
.
.
. .
councils that r~presen~
:
aD; parts
_
_
: .
thetefor.e
-
~ey should have irio~e
coffeehouse/Videotape, film, Conway is doing ail excellentjol:I:
.
_,..,.....
:
·
.
of
.
the
.
~llege
:~
-:
'lb_e,co~~1l a~o
· .
representatives. For
.
example,
.
perlo~ing'
.
~rts
t;
i1nd
:
-
fille
,
arts .
..
,
'1;11~
'./
Yice,- pr~i~~11t's
.
Ji.tie
·:
~~
-
.. _
. __

has t~e ~~er
,
to ma.ke legislation
.
'.
.
Gregory
• -
has
O
two
:
reps
_
·
:
for

:
30
.
.'
Each
<
committee
0
,,
has
'
.
:
·an
·
·
'
ap-
:
re
'
cently
.:
'
been
·
.
changed
,
:,.-.
to
,
. -
and
politi~l
~teinents.
:
<
-
st~den~
.
while Champagnat oruy
·
..
-
~~1~t:-~~~~~~
/
J;
:
:
·.
=~:~~teii
}
?JJ;~
-

-
.
,r-~--Af
_
,-
_
·
.
~
w.::.r
U:ehinn;·
_
:
~
_
~te~
8
~~
-~
~t;
0
J:S
toto~300~:~nc!.~
-
.
·
aJ>ix.>~nt~ by
\
tlje
\
~ r ~ ~ l '
:
O.f.:.
,
ID
-
:1.~
;
~uclget
,
for
:
~
-
~~r,
/
M~
t.
.,.__~
·
:
·
.
-
·
~~ll ~~bers
·
enended. Th~
·
,
rep~esen~tion.
·
·
·
.
.
·
·
.
;,
'
·\:\t'::
-
,-
__
'.'\
-
-,?7:;:
_
··:
-<
·
:
.
:::>·
,-;_:
i
.:.C:fr-t
t~/>::
:
·
/
:
:;
~-
ftY
:?
·:i/J:f.\
.
.
.
..
.
··
__,...
___
....
-






























































































































































































































THE CIRCLE
'
-
·
_
Personality of the week for April I
Fred:
4
legged student
By BQI
·
McLaughlin
Walking
·
across campus and
seeing
students outside throwing
frisbees, playing

catch
·
or just
talking
to
one another on
a
wanh
spring day is
.
a
common
oc-
currence. '!be
-
rest of the year,
few.souls
-
are brave enough for
the
-
cold
wiiuis
arid
·
·
snowy
weather. '!bat
.
is except for
'.
one
who students fondly
.
call
·
Fred.
Fred is a black and tan though-
bred mutt known ~-
~f
campus
dog.
·
.
.
.
·
·
, ·
.
.
_
_
,.
.
The other day
I
~w Fred and
asked him w~t it is fike
·
to hang-
out year round on campus .
.

·
•1t•s
grea~,
no
onereally bothers ine or
·
gets on my

case," says
·
_
Fred.
"The freedom to
.
do my owntlµng
is
.
what
llike
;
Sometimes
I
can sit

ori
a
class wheneverJ want if
I'm
~
inter~ed
j
n
-::
the
,
§ubject.''
''.Yoti mean,Yoti attend classes
but
·
are not enrolled? "
I
·
asked:
"¥es,
that's
_
tbe
:
jist of it,"
he
replied
;
"My
_
s~cret i$
.
to wander
intoa
_
class and~uggle
.
up to a
.
student.
.
Theri the teacher doesn't
·.
have,ihe heartto
·
kick
me
ouC
.
"The one
.
big problem lhaye is
when
_
the administration tries
·•
fo

make
pie pay
_
tuiUon:
!just
_
look
mean,and
·
growl
:
a
:
little. That
alwaysgets
'
themoffmy case for
·
awhile.>'
. :
.

.
_; ..
·. ·
·
..
·
_
~
·
-
,
..
_
,
,
.
FrecLdoesn'tstay in
the
dorms
·
.
or eat in the
dinfug
hall.·
"Al'.e
you
.
kidding?
,.
Fdoil't
_
have to go back
to
·
.
a
:
room
like
:
the rest

of the
·
students
;
,
J
-
·
jugt
:
crash
-
-
,
an;ywhere
PAGE9
Admissions
Marist for sale
By Wendy Stark
residence office, and major
departments are sent out on a
Approximately 700 high school periodic basis," said Flynn.
seniors are deciding whether to
'lb.is year the accepted students
become
Marist
freshmen
next
were sent invitations
to
th
·
e
semester.
Of
the
·
aso
seniors who Mccann
Athletic
Center
have applied for admission, 700 dedication on April 17. "We've
have been accepted. David never done
this
'
before
.
because
Flynn, director of. admissions, we've never had such a building
says he anticipates
350
will
enroll dedicated, but
I
thought it was a
next semester, along with 100 to nice gesture," said Flynn.
.
·
130
transfer students.
.
'
·
Accepted ~udents were broken
CCHigh
school seniors have until down by major and were also
.
I
·
either, April 1, April 15 or April 21 sent invitations to department
to let Marist know
if
they are open houses. Sunday, ap-
.
coming. After these ~tes
.
we
proximately
57
seniors were on
..
usually hav
_
e a clear picture of campus for the Natural Science
who
will
be here in September," and Math open
houses
·
said
said Flynn.
Flynn. "Saturday also had a good
Although the admissions office turnout for the. Psychology,
hasn't received definite answers_ Modern Language,
·
History,
from the majority of accepted Political Science,
·
and Criminal
seniors, "We still have
_
our Justice open houses."
-
.
fingers crossed that they will
Students
who
become
decide to come," he said
.
matriculated are sent the "Off to
During their junior or
·
senior College" magazine that giyes
year at high ·school perspective advice on adjusting to college.
Marist freshmen receive a They are also sent a Freshman
·
general information brochure Register that includes the names
and can 'send back an attached · and addresses of all present
.
card requesting further in- Marist freshmen, Flynn said.

formation aboutMarist
.
They are
.
"Once we're certain we've
then sent a Marist Viewbook that done all we can for the high
condenses the information in the school seniors in terms of giving
catalog and includes an ap- them information about Marist,
plication for
·
admission
.
it's
.
up to them to make the
Once a student is accepted, decision to come" sa,id Flynn.
Marist stays in close contact with
He
said the best
·
way to per-
them.
"Letters from
the suade students to come is to
show
registr3:r,
.
dean's
,
office, them what Marist has to offer.
,
Night
members·
needed
aftera
·
goC>d
'
µightof partying,"
.
.
.
.
·
.
·
he
'.
said
-
.
··.
·
· ·
'- ·
·_-
·>
'
-
:
•·
'
<

··
-
·
-
·
· ·
·
·
··
The
Part-time
Evening_ well as the development of ac-
.
"Anircan't
b~lievltno~J
:
kids
.
-
·
:
:
Fl'ed tbe'campus d~g
'
.
Division Student Council is tivities.
. The
Council
.
.
a~tiially
,<
pay
\
for
J
that.food
:'
·
_
1
· .
>

...
·--
.
...
.
.
.
.
\,
·.
·.
.
·
..
_
:
'"
,
.
·
... _
..
.,
> ·
.
.
·
coniinuing
.
its drive
,
for
new · diss~minates information
con-
.
usually
:
fmd
:
t
gafbagefscraps
~
like
•:~
~
see
/
tj)pies
:
lif:The
·
:
;
Cjrcle ]y.ing
'
meail
-
you'l'e
.
going
:
to print
·
all
.
L
.
:
me~bers
;a
I;)ue to graduatio~,
,
the
...
cerning
.
impo~nt
-
platters that
pizza
:
crusts
'<
_
i)
r
'
illifiriislied
·
beers
~ ·
·aroup.d
~ailsE
(
"th6se
:
rags
can
:
·
said?" 1: told
:
him
l
,
was
;,
"You
:
:
membership
:
of the Council
will
affect
pa rt-time
· ··
evening
lying
·>
aro~d
t
{
Sev's
.
i
has
··
'
goo
_
d
:'-
r
e~dly
)
o~
j
fup.
"I'didn't
·
fmow
:
'
sho
_
uJd have declared
that
you
'
be
·
dep~eted
.
Vaca.ncies
must
.
·
be
.
students.
The
Council
.
works
with
ct·ust
;"
:
and
_:
Milleri,i"
~:
are
·
my what
·
he
'
meant exactly,
·
and
·
were
-
~
a reporter before
.
·
-
you
filled for semester for the fall of the part-time evening student
favorites;''
.
·•
-
-
.
·
_
·
·
,
·c
.
:
_
..
·
changed the subject
.
.
started,"
.
said Fred
.
"You can
1977.
Therefore, it
is
essential body.
_
Fre<L says he likes
.
Mai:ist
As
-
1
started _to ask another
·
just forget everything I said."
that new members be recruited
if
Membership on the Council is
because of
·
its
-
small ·school at-
.
question he interrupted me and
The next thing
I
knew he began
the Council
is
to continue its work
open ·to any part-time evening
mosphere,
·
bu,t the thing he likes
,
·
wanted to know why
.
I
was being barking at :m,e and walked aw_ay
on
:
behalf of the Part-time division student.
If
you would like
best isthe
'
modern artwork which
·
.
so inquisitive.
1
_
told
him
·
I
was muttering something about libel
Evening Division students.
to find out more about joining the
he says he usesin
tun.es
of special
·
writing a newspaper story.
_
and the fifth amend.J:nent.
The Council is responsible for
Council, please call Marie
need.-He added
:
that he·
:
likes
_
to
.
·
He howled and yelled,
.
"You
.
planning all of the activities in
.
Pagano (229-5298) Tom Malone
which
-
the Evening Division
(462-5286)
or Ron Varricchio (485-
~
Cha.1t1p House Council
.
-
>
having
i
troqbles
~
-
·
·
k
·
Representative for House
i
is
.
. ·
Tile council meets on Wed
-
:
ByWendrstar
,rKathy
Pinto,
Larry
McCabe for
-
nesday.
ni~!tts
:
in .
Amato
'
s
_
The,
.
Chauipagnat ·
,
House House
Il;
George Connelly
fo~
apa
_
rbnent, and
is
trying to get
Council

presided
-
by
House
·
m
·
_
House
III, and George
Gambeski
the gro;und floor Barn
.
bac~. for
·
·::.i
·
'
.
·
·
·
-··
-
·
.-
-
·
.
·
-
K
·
-
.
-
-
.
for House
·
IV;
·
·
-
student s use.
It
is
also planrung a
--
-
r~siu~gt coo,rdmator
.
~"
10
.
_.
Mary
,
Beth Ca
_
rey is the
.
campu~
.
wide
~
picnic_
.
and
_
a
Cav~~aug~,
,
deals with all-
"
d
t
·
d
·
tati
. ·
basketball
·
game with other
matters ·
pertaining
to

Cham-
.
reSl en
a V1SOr represen
~e,
.
.
.
.
P
·
agn
·
a
·
__ t
-
·
Ha
· ·
11
·
··
"
d
'
nt
·
·
Arna

_
·
to
-
and
·
,Mike Marchesano and colleges
m the Mid:-Hudson
area,
.
.
sa1
re
er
.
'
G
bes
.
ki
.
4-..
ti
said Pinto
"
residence director ·and council ' am
.
are represen~
ves
__

.
-
member.
'
.
.
-
_
,
. ·
.
from the
Interhouse Council.
.
~thy
-
Pinto,
council
·
secretary
·
said,
~
_''The council-votes
on rules
-:-
and regulatiQtis
.
of
_
Champagnat
· -
Hall; Before
a
.
matter
goes
to
the
,_
Interhoiise CouncilJLcomes to
·
the House Council and
we
vote ·on
it.''
.
,
,
, :
'

.
,
·
.
'.
·
_
~
-
.
:-'
Pinto said there
·
has been some
.
..
:
-
question
as
·
to whether
the
council
.
~
·
,
consi~~i~g
:
of
·
.
ti:ie
·:
_
·el~c~ed
.
representative
·
from each
,
liouse ,

in
·
.
~mpagn.~t,
_
two ·
:
~terhQwi~
.-
·
CQun~
_
r4:!pr~entaµv~s, 8Jld·one
.
resident ativisor
.
representative
':
.;
··-
.
IllilkefJthe rules
<>r'if ~to
:
does .
.
,>>
''For
C'
instance
·
:
tlie
.
:
c-ounciL
didn!t:
\,ote
\:,,:
on/
the
'.
'.;
ban
'
:
.
of
.
. :
Christmas
--
trees'
over·
·s
.
feet
.
last
,
-'
semester
~
:
Amato
:
just
\
made
·
the
·
-
--
~it~!t:~~i~
l
t
is
:l

s~i~
:
{
t
h
~
~i
-
·
·-
.
councll
:'.:
was
·
\
1
J
reasonably
'.
,
4:!f
.;
_
,
.
_
_
·
···:
·
.
fective
·
'~
Pinto
~
said
.
'-''Ille
council

'
cou1d~-6e
:
more
··
ett~iive:
r
we:
do

: -
.
.
·i
discuss
_
hoµst(pollcy bi:1:~
_
we
~
don'~-
.-
.
have enou~
P<>:we
_
1
\
to)nake
.
8.
big
-
.
'
differ~ce/
.
'
· ·
.
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.
·
·
.-
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.
.
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'
students may participate
.
These 9985 and 876-4633).
include the social activities, as
.
--~
-
,~
SUPER SAVINGS ON ALL
YOUR LIOUOR NEEDS
,
11
BLEND ........
4
-
~IN 80°.:.
·
..
_
...
/
41s
VODKA 80° . . . .
41s
GIN 90° . .....• .-
BOURBON 86° .
6
yearotd
SCOTCH 80°
SCOTCH 86°
469
499
499
529
WINE .
JUGWINES
.-
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$3
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M,
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4 ~ALLON CASE
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CHABL•$
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Pll';K
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SAVE ON ALL NAME BRANDS
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.
...
.
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:,
~
~
··
.'·.
·
PAGE 10
THE CIRCLE
MARCH 31, 1977
A
man on top of things
By
Regina Clarkin
name, Brother Donnelly
is now
and
Cathy Ryan
retired and
is
an architectural
consultant with the college.
Classical music can be
heard
coming from the· Champagnat
"The only
thing
I refused
to
do
Hall penthouse which overlook& · was
milk
the cows, because it
the Hudson. However, Brother
paralayzes the whole forearm,"
Nilus
.
Donnelly the penthouse said Br. Donnelly who spent·
a
resident says he "enjoys living
·
year on a 200 acre farm in
around young people." Although
Lawrence, Mass. with 20 cows, 20
his home
is
located above 450 pigs and
·
four
horses .. Before
college studeµts he
has only been living on a farm he taught in
N. Y.
distur;bed by
drl•nk
students who
for 15 y~rs where
.
he had a
lose
their way and knoc~ on his
·
camera club and coached
door, five times in the past
11
theater.

years he has lived there.
,
Br.
·
Donnelly received his
At 65, Br. Donnelly is bachelor's degJ;"ee froin Fordham
celebrating his 50th
·
anniversary University,
·
and his master's
as
a Marist Brother
this
year.
degree from _Columbia Univer-
A native of Bridgeport, Conn., sity.
hangers and
.
plastic urathane
balls.
·
"Abstract art is like laughing
~
at calculus.
"It
doesn't make any
sense
to you unless you know the
secrets behind it," he said .
.
·
Although not yet a gourmet
.
cook, Br. Donnelly says he has
about ten
dishes
he can cook for
friends that vi.sit. He
·
·
said he
started out with steak arid baked
,
potatoes.
:
~
-
.
Honor Thy Father, civil
engineering books,
-
"Horizon''.
magazine, and the Tomb
·
of
Tutankhamen are among the
books that line Br. Donnelly.'s
wall length bookcase. In addition
to reading, Br. Donnelly
_
enjoys
watching
~
such television shows
as All in the
.
Family, Barney
Miller
and M.A:S.H.
.
.
·
Br. Donnelly
,
came to M~t in
An
admirer of abstract art, Br.
1952
as
a physics professor, but Donnelly's
walls
are · decorated
after one month
,
.
.
he
stopped with students
·
art work and a few
·
teaching to work
·
with the ar-
paintings
drawn
by Mrs. Fisher,
chitect who was building. the
Marist
art
teacher.
·
chapel. --
·
.

Hanging
over the staircase Qf
. •
During the cold winter months
when the
.
barometer
·
and ther-
mometer 'on
·
the wall
in
Br.
Donnelly's wood

panelled
.
den
register
below
freezing he can be

·
found skin
·
diving in Haiti, where
·
Dr. John Kelly
After helping construct many
his
·
two floor penthouse is a
of the buildings on campus, in-
·
mobile of different shapes that
eluding
the-
on~ that bears his Br. Donnelly made out of coat h~ vacations each year.
.
-
-
, __
,.,,.
·
Kelly
named·
-
'
MHA president
Dr
.
John
c ..
Kelly, chairman of
•.
similar to a children's day care
the business and
economics
center.
.
"It
is a place where:
department at Marist College has patients could receive care;
been
·
named president of the while those who cared for the
Mental Health Association
.
for patients could go to work," Kelly
Dutchess. County.
·
said. The organization also
Kelly, who has been involved
r
provides "little
.
things for the
with the association for the past
·
people in the community." he
seven years
·
has a:lso been a said
.
There is
.
an emergency
~
member of the board of directors,
·
..
financialaid system.
"We
collect
a treasurer, a
.
vice president and
:
·
,
Christmas presents arid we ~v~:a
chairman of the finance and scholarship to a psychiatric .
planriing
committee
.-
'
-
----;
-
,
-
m1
_
rsing student ezich year/'
_
he
.
.
·
According
to Kelly th~ local sa1d.

·
.
.
;
.
.
.
.
.
.
chapter,
located on
North
Road,
·
Kelly
.
meets
with
the
local
Poughkeepsie,
"is
made up of c_hapter at least ~o or ~ee
concerned volunteers."
tunes a week, and
.
with the board
One of the purposes of the of,~rect~rs once
.
.
a
:
month'.
.
.
·
association
''is to conduct lee-
I believe we could do more .
tures and training- workshops," though,". Kelly Said. "I've
.
also
which deal with parent
·
ef-
found thatrm not skilled
:
in
.
fectiveness, clergy and the dealing_with patients on
a
one to
police, and the mentally
ill.
·
.
one basis .
.
Itry to use the ,~lents
I
The center also
.
offers
·
a
have behind the scenes.
geriatric program which is run
Frivolofis
s
·
·
·
1
.
11
·
.
.
a
.
·
19 Academy Street
'
Thurs-Fri-Sat
.
.
.
·
March
:
10-11-12
RIVER
-
ROAD·
'
'
.
Br.
Nll~s Donnelly
in
his
Champagnat penthouse overlooking tht Hudson. (photo
bf
Joe Gigliotti)_
Strictly
··
business day
_
.
·

·
-
·
·
_
By Maureen
Tully
number
.
one public accounting

definitely chauvinistic
:'
'
·
firm in the cquntry, said
'
.
'most
·
Gary· Smith,
a
1963 graduate,
Out
of 26 representatives from firms will hire a student with a
member of the board of trustees
various corporations at the liberal
arts
degree, but depen-
·
at Marist, and systems specialist
Business Administration Career ding ori the
.
-
skill
required, a
.
- account manager
·
for
fo
-:.
Information Day held Tuesday in masters degree
i!1
business ad-
_
ternational Business
·
.
Machines
the Campus Center,
19 of them ministration (MBA) may be
(IBM)
.
said, "there was a g~d
are
-
Marist graduates.
·
necessary." He said that in the

cross ·se
_
ction of career
·
op-
.
The purp9se of the day was to field of accounting a student with
,
portunities
"':"
r
.
epresented
~
r
·
supply information
:
,
on jobs a liberal
arts
degree
.
and an MBA
'
However
·
.
he
.
said
'.
that more
ranging from accounting to sales would be just
as
eligible
as a
.
students
· -
should
·
take the
;
op-
.
and mar~eting; ·
.
·
·
'
'
·
.
·
student
'
with a

business degree
portunity
to
use
,
these

available
-
.
:
Students were able to ta}!t
-
with and ah
..
MBA.
resources and thaLhe was
,

field representatives from
firms
Dave
·
'.
,
McDonald, a
1970
disappointed
,
in
:
the number of
that interested them. Some of the graduate history -miijor is
students
,
that turned out for the
·
things discussed were the
_
Jypes
-
assistant treasurer
.
of
·
American
,
career information day.·
,
of jobs available
;
'
requirements
_
Expr~s International
-
Banking
·
·
·
.
Students who
'
· did
.
attend the
.
for certain jobs,
-
and ~ploym~i:tt a.,rpor~tion. He
.
said, '
_
'graduates
-
·
career
:
c1ay 'bad
.
~
a
favorable
,
outlook-for people
with
.speciflc with
·
a MBAdegl'ee and an
un-
opinion of
it. Senior accounting
~
~~ckgrounds
~
'
.
·
.
. :
dergraduate
-
~egree
i~
liberal major Kevin cavanagh said "the
.
-
Thomas
·
¥cKiernan,.
a .
1968
.
arts
are the highest paid/'
·
: ;
.
.
people that missed this, missed a
.
·
..
·
p
..
1·tche
·
r
·
.
m
.
·te
.
·
M
.
o
·
n
·

gr~dua~
,
historym~Jor,who
·
·
Al~oughmostr~presen~tiv~s lot;
·
·
--:
es
·
pedallr
:
.
the
.
un--
o ~
_
his own converuence food
·
admitted that-the
.
Job market
is
derclassmen. This was not"just a
.
.
·
_'
'
p•1
.
tc
·
h
.
e
,'
r
.
of
·
b
·
·
eer
·
'
$
.
,
·
·
·-

.
7
·
5
..
.
.
stor~ an~
~
gas_-station un~er his extremelycompetetiv~,t~eysaid day for seniors;''
.
.
..
.
,
-
·
corpora?~" titl~
.
(!f Threshold that;.~. day like
.
thi~
.
~
ve~y
:
Junior accounting major
'
John
E~terprl.Ses Inc;
·
said "Before
.
a beneficialto students m
~
lot of
-
Mccarthy said,
"The
day seemed
·
·
--
·
. {ONLY FORMARIST)
·
student cari
>
1ook
·
at
.
the ways;ifnot'justby
_
gaining
·
.
afe:wtogovery
.
well.ltoffered
·
a1otof
F
·
d
s
·'
· ·
·
d
prospective job mark~t today,_he
·
wntacts. .
.
_.
. ·
..
.
_
.
.
insight into •sonie career
:
op-
·.
0 0
e
rv e
·
or
_
she ~Ust
:
personally
.
W~l{Pl
~
.
Stan Bec~~e
_
t~i, a
1966 graduate portunities;''
,
·
·
:
:
.
.
,
.

..
·
.
,
. · ·
·
.•
·.
.
what
,
~ey
:
want
..
to do/'
.
...
.
.
-
...
history
-,
maJor,
>
and a i:ecently
·
:
Lan·y
Snyder, director of
.
the
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
:
.
•_
.
·
·
~
..
·•.
··
_
.
n
·
t
'
·

.

·
.
,
.
:
·
·
_
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c
..
,
.
·
·
o
.
·
_
·
..
s••
··
"
·
g
·
·
..
_,
Spellking
':
J~
:
reference
;
t
_
o
·
·
appointedmeJ!lberlo
.-
tlie

board
::'
offi~(t
:
of
·
Career
:.
Planning
·
and
pr~erences bum.t~es ~y.~ave of
.
Tl'ustees
:
at
·
Marl,st,
:
is
·
:
a
Pla~ent, whiclfsponsored the
:

.
towa~
students with
.
a
,
busmess
.
manager oL
_
corpor~te
.
bonds
for

·
·•·.
:
day, sai~, '
!
.
The
.
day :went
·
w_elt
.
:
.
.
..
N◄
.
·
.
0
.
.
..
·
.
--.
.
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·
·
.
.
c
·.
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.
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.
.
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-
0
.
. -.
.
..
v
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·.
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eum
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bo
·

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nd
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·-
·
_
.
.
·.
·
.
,,
..
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.
·,

~
m_aj~r
,
,
a:i
::
opposed
:_
to
.
.
a
;
st~dent
·
Cowep_&
:
Co

He
-
said;
:·-
~
_'
jo~
-
~
-'"".
:
Therespoose
··
of
·
the
.
alumrii a:rid
.
.
witll
;.
a
;'-
libe~al
.
arts
·
majo~,
:
most
·
professional l>rQ~erage
,
firms
_
are
.
,
othel.'s
.
askedJo partic.ipate
·
in
the
..
·
.
.
i:g,r~e~taµyes
:

~d
;:
that
:,
bofu.
.
.
tougb
,
to
:
get.~'Unf~rtimately,you
.:
progr~
.
was
.
excellent'
,
~
.
Hesaid
grou~,,
,
unlike :,popular •belief
,
.
. ,'
have to
..
fall
.
:
mto
_:
1t
.
through the
::
students-seemed to feelit
:
was
:·.
a
·
:
·
7\.
r_
·
·
·
,
·
:II•

·
·
·
:
.
.-. ·
hav;e
an
equal,
~~nc
-
~
,
~f
g~tting
a
,

gr.~pevine
·
.!•
}
In
i
res~
·
~
·
~
the
-\
helpfutday,
,
but
_.
that
'._
he
wished
·
.
.
:,·
J
:
~/O
<
Jr.l:ln
·
imum.
·
J~b
,
in
:
~
,
~
·
"'or~d.;
·)
t/
:_.:
/
Jr.e~~
)
to_w11
_
rds
.
J1a
_
:vmf
,
~ore
,
-
·
•·
!Jlol'.e
;
stu~ent.,
:
Ul:O~
~
adviui~ge
_.
or
.
··
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..
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.
MaM~t'
aMiuditcht
maell
,
~ger for
..
wo~en
,
msaid
:
:
bro~W:eragest
,
flrmt ~'
.
.-
1l
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.
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;
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.
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.
.
·
.
· ..
. i

4
,
.
•_


,





































































MARCH 31, 1977
\
'
THE CIRCLE
PAGE 11
1977 Spring Sports Schedule
SAILING
Coach:
Tom Frey
SUNY AC Minor
· Hartley Trophy
At
Maritime
Home
CREW
Coach~ Gary Caldwell
Fr. Coach~ Joe Eckelman
u.
Mass
Ithaca .
Con*~ticut
C
.
<·.
Temple<
Pres.. Cup
stown
9:00A.M.
<9:00 A.M.
9:00 A.M.
3:00 -P.M,
9:00
J\~ltf.
11:00 A:.M~·
Mon.
·April 25
Ramapo
H
1:30 P.M.
N,Y.S. Upstate CJ1amps
RIT
Tue. ___ April 26
-Iona'··
IC4A Champs
1 •
U. Penn.
Siena
H
2:00 P.M.
NCAA · Otamps
Gr. Rapids, Mich,
Mc.in.
May 2
N.Y, Maritiml!
H
2:00 PM.
>Seniors c1b.ound in rebuilding
track
By
Jerry_Scholder
~nd
Jun
Nystrom
Stevens feels reqsons for the difference between cross-country saip, "I guess it will be here next
- poor turnout are varied. "I think arid track is thaf there are no year. It should be. the next. to go
that by the time· spring. rolls facilities for track and that the up on campus."·
·
'Ibe .March 22 practice of-
around, there ,are many. reasons weather is different. But there
is
Noting that an outdoor track
· ficially,, began.:t}le outdoor track for . guys no.t coming out ... These , nothing wrong with ·. th,~ · track will. supplement the ... new. indoor
and field·~season ·
·
for the Red include
·
injuri.es, academic/ team performance-wise.
. ·track in.· the McCann · Center,
.
Foxes, . headed by · track coach problems, .and other social. in-· . ::>'tevens also prqvided an up-
Stevens continued, "This seems
Rich Stevens.· Stevens-is well-
terests. Injuries, weather. con- date on the proposed outdoor to be a transition year. The
known for his winniqg record of ditions, and poor facilities ac- tra~k facility.
foundation is being built for next .
.720 over the last 5 years, with counted for a poor indoor season.
"The new outdoor track at year, with a lot of changes ex-
former head coach Len Olson as This outdoor season will depend Marist was supposed to be done pected."
his assistant. But this year he'll on the runners' attitude."
by the summer of 1975. It is up to
As
for
freshman
Jerry
. be
alone when the season opens at
Why, after an excellent cross-
Linus Foy (College President) Scholder, the cross-country
the C.W. Post Relays on April
9.
country season, does track look and John Gartland, president of sensation who missed the entire
I managed to stop Coach so dismal? Was too much em- the McCam Foundation, whether indoor season, Stevens said,
Stevens last week for a short phasis placed on cross-country? we will have an outdoor track." "Scholder is out· with a knee
interview on his outlook 'for the
"I think there may not
be.
The track has been promised for injury. He has seen many doctors
coming .season.
enough empha.sis on track. The the last
10,
years and Stevens but the chances are that he will
not be ready for the outdoor
season, which will definitely hurt
the team."
The Running Red Foxes have
severnl .. major . championship
meets on . their
1977
schedule
as
they. shift
away from
the dual
meets which , dominated their.
schedules of the past. Included on
the schedule are . the Iona and
Penn Relays and the State
Championships. Because of this
ambitious schedule, Marist has
just one meet at New Paltz, their
present home track, schedule!l
for April
13
against Siena.
··"The outlook is still up in the
~.r..,.....r.r.....-.r.r.r..r_,.....,._,_,......,.....,.....,......,......,...,...,..--cer..r...r..,-...r..r..r..r

..r..r..r..r..r..r..r..,....,.....,..4
~~~~~~~~~ssssssssssss~~~~~~~
air, mainly because of many
ti
-~ca,
·
·.
ti
inJ"uries. Our,strong
po.
int wi.ll be
O
~ ~
o.
O
1,.l . • ..
,,,,'<"--
"'-" ~.
.x:-v ~-
0
in the- weight events," with
o .~~-~.,.
&"
""'
~v
O
returnees Steve Blenk, N.C.,!\.A.
8
~
b •
~'lj
fi..O"-
i,_,~
8
- and Division III qualifier Pete
§
'6
-Q-.:>.
l:"~n"
~
.·.·
NEW PALTZ
§
'Van Aken joined by a promising
8
.t.'
"'"'S"
o
freshman in Al Qua. Van Aken, a
8
s:)4,
(.!<!"-.:>
.
§
senior, led the team in scoring in
S
'3 ·
~
·
S
1976
·,··
8
s
~~
T· AC·K·
&
TOGS~§
The
team also shows strength o
in . the distance events, led by
S
8
seniors .. Brian '
Costine
S'·'
.
.
boots and. fashions
.
~
(steeplechase) and Fred Kolthay
8
. (6-mile) both N.C.A.A. qualifiers
§
20
nt.o
0'~~
Q.n
Frye
.Boots
8
a year ago. Also returning .for
3
7l
'J J
8
these events will be Da~e
R
·
,
S
Schools, Tom Luke, Frank
Ss
Zod1·a· c-.
Bort C.arleto·
n
s
Stephen and Keith Millspaugh. In
S
§ ·
addition, there
is
an outstandiilg ·
8
· N
freshman. crop led by Dennis
·8
Din.· go-Tefas
§
O'Doherty. , · .
.
ll
8
.. "Our weakest events will be in
8
- - - - - - - - - - -
g
sprints, --jumps- and hurdles.
8
Si
nee ... _·~ l Pu ... cha.·se
S
People in these events are almost
8
r
c-a
• ·
·
8
·non-existent," explained Stevens
§
L..
Jl
b.b
d . .
§
adding "_!llls year with~
~e~
of/
S
.
IJRU U
er . enlm Wrap
8
only 20, all the men are gom~ to ·
S
·d +-l ·
l
· · h k •
8
have to
be
utilized
to
their
full
8
8.rOUR
JI
OOr engt S lrt
$21
0
potential."
· . .
·
i
.
.
·
·
~
·ARCADE
§
/NOW.$11.95
~
FLORIST
.
I
Danskin bathing suits are in
I
255 :Main Malf
l
20
to
40%.
gff
on winter outerware · ~·.
~cc.iJsions ..
;·ff
···l-c•:.
~·w.
Pa. ltz . :.. .... 50· .•.feet·o·
ff
Ma. in St •.
f!J ..
32 Store
.S
4.11~0410 . ,
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· . ·
·
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I
\
I
'.
I •
.
~
~
-
.
....
,.
~
.
..:

PAGE 12
.
THE CIRCLE
MARCH 31, 1977
H~gh On Sports
.....
.
By Thomas McTe~
C.U
.
B; SOFTBALL BEGINS
NEXT WEEK
-
·
·

In
an
,..
effort to fill
a
void left by the Intramural Departm~t~s
decision not to
·
sponsor the pop~ men_'s softball league
~
spring,
the College Uni.on
Board will
orgamze ~d
run
the sport
m
··
separate divisions for men and women, d~pen~g on the number of
entries received for each.
·•·
-
·
·
.
.
·
·
.
Every team will be required to
'.
pay
JUIO
for
each of the fifteen
inen on its roster
.
'Ibis
money will
be
used by th~ C.U.B. to buy
.
equipment
arKr awards
.
'lllere are
a1so
·.
plans bemg made for a
picnic for the
teams
after the season •
.
·
.
,
.
,
.
. .
.
.
So get out your gloves and
·
join the
fun.
Entnes are
.
d~e
m
the
c.U.B.
office by
,
Wednesday
.
at
5
p.m._
:
R~rs
may
be
picked up
.
starting today
ii1
the
Campus Center office,
.
.
·
APRIGLIANO
~-
; ~ _ i \ T ~ E
OF
fflK
.
Ludovlco
·
Aprigliano, a junior from state,;i Island,
N.Y.,
has~~
named Marist
.
College Athlete of the Week for the week ending
Match26
.
·
.
.
·,
·-
·
·
-
..
.
.
.. ··
·
.
•··.
Apfiglj.~no;
a
fotward on the soccer t~am, scored
_
three goals and
·
·
had three assists fot
.
the Red Foxes m
:
the Albany
·
State
·
Indoor
. i
ToumamenUast weekend;
.
.
·. .
.
.
.
.

·_
:
.
INTflt\M-cmAL RO~UE\
.
_
.
.•
~la~offsf~
~
coed volleyball l>Eigintonight_
:
(?:~O
p.Ill.)~
the
gyin.
'Ille top two
..
te~ in each of -the .four divis~ons 9u~lify f~r the
·
·
playoffs/which end
.
with the championship game next Thursday.
·
:.
The'
East
·
division has
·
a
tw~way
:
tie
:f
or first
.
between
_:'
'Suite
. .
Gang';
·.
and
!
•Mike's
Tavern,)) whi
_
cp won
a
.
forfeit
.
over ~•~ping
·
~
qabusellas''
.
Monday.
:
Both teams qualify for the playo!{s and met.-
. last
·
nighrto·
·
decide
-
first. place .
.
· -
i
:c
•. · . .
.
··
·
· ,


.
"
Another tie resulted in the
.
South
·
as both "Kiki's B
.
ombers"
_
and·-
-
'-'4-Sixers••
·
won
_
Tuesday
.
nighi to f~h
,
.
4-0
:-?
'Kiltl's
.
Bombers"
·
outlasted "TriumVeratst'
·
12-10; 8-12,
14-5,
,
while the '
.
'4-Sixers'
'
,
took
a forfeit from "Bent House"
:
'
.
.
Oi
. .
.
.
.
.
..
-
·
.
·
''Third Time AroWJ.d,'.'
.
the Jn
:
eseas(>n
:
favorite,
.
also finished
undefeated
.
with-an
a.,.11, 1~10, 1o-a, comeback
win
Tuesday over
''.Wal!er'sVolleyers": They th~
.
finished
'
first in the Ce~tral, with
·
second place going toC'Leo's
Angels.,,
13-7, 11~13, 16-a victors over
·
·
·
·
·
·

·
·
·
·
·
·
·
"Los Mejoresll
.
Tuesaay,
, _
·
.
·
·
'
_-.
:
..
-.
·:
·
.
_ .
:
B
.
oote
rs
·
~:
,:
f
cl
-
lte
·
r
:
.~
:-
i
11
;:
--
·· ..
i::.
-
~~f:tsi~:e~~!:~~·~.::f:~·~~u;~~::~
~~~
;
~:?:.~
~
-
..
_-,
.~.~-
.
A
_--
,
_
-:-
-
-
-
-
1
'
.·1
_:
·
~
·

._
.
a
-
1
_
··
_
_
1
_
v .
...
.

t
.
.
o
·
-
_
·
_
_
·
,
.
-
·_.
·._
1
.
-,r
·
_.
"
-

n
.. ·
__
t ! _
·,
.
·,
_ ~
--

·
: .
.

.
..
: ·.
~;;i~~1
1
i~~,;.~~:::J%~,:.:;~r;
_
-:
_
·
1
_
'
,7:
,
_.
-
·
for flooi
·
hockey
'.
arid
:
coed volleyball entries ..
.
·_
·
;;·~~t
·
ci
:
ne
·~_/-: .
,.
~:
-~
.
•·
:
lb
I
:
;
S
:
~
i
~
i
:
neve
::
~~rrie<f
·


.
Lud~
;~~~
;

A;;~;l~a~~
\
·
an~
-
'.-::
:
~
~f&S"
:
~
1
~
-3
~
\
f;~i#I
{
~~~
~
' :\
•.

·
~
·•;
.
.
··•
·. •_-.
-:•
··.
·•-
.
·
..
:
• · ·
--
,::
~
·
,:?
':-"'

'
~
> ·
,:
~ -
i
fo
_
gef tiritrac;ked and
"
the

Zenorie
~
. ,
Finnino
:
,
Naitza
le<!
-
the
·.
Mari.st -
. :~.
-
i
Men
's
tennis team o~ns
its
seiis:on Wednesday ( at home) against
.
.
• .
Playing without the

services of
_;
less
;
·
offense of
;
Vito Aprigliano~
. \
scoring witli"three
'
goals apiece: -

New'
.
Haven. First-year coach Eileen Witt said she would not decide
Zenone Naitza,
.
..:.the
:.
Red Foxes Fermin<>. :Naitza
'.
and
:;:'
Jilljo
.
.Apriglia
·
no
··
also accounted
'..:
for
·
-
onherfinalsquad until Monday, butit
seems
safe to say that seniQr
had th¢if
·
tolllilamel}t
·:'·
yictory
·
Rostran hlcked the crispness and
.,
three
·
assists
;
·
_:.,
· •
.
:
.
·
-=-
·
-
,
:
·Johri
McGraw
wi,ll, be
tije team's top - tanked player for the second
streak stopped
:
at
·
three·
~
in the the
'.
poten
·
cy
..
that
·
was
.,
the
.
'

-:-
One player tried tcfexplain
.
the

·
:
consecutive year ... It'lLbe-interesting to see.how Jay Metzger
·
Albany State Indoor Tournament
.-
.trademark
of p.arlier
victories in
,
difference in play, saying "Sure
·
makes out in his first season in the lacrosse goal. M~~ger, an all -
last \ll_eek~d
;
__
,~
· .
.'
.
·
·.-c
·
·
,
the ECAC
_ ··
Regional (;ermaaja theinjurieshurt,bqtweknewwe
CACC·and
_
honorable mention
.
all,. State goali~
'
·
i!1
:-
soccer, will
.
...
Along with the loss of Zenone,
~
and
RPI
tournaments
.
· •
<
·
••
·
hadto lose sooner or later, and I
·
probably m._ye up mor~ goals this wee.k than he did
m the last two
··
sidelined
-.
with a
:
knee
-:-
injury,
.
·
As
·
·
a
result;
.
the
.
Red

Foxes guess
'
this was it.
f
mean, let's
seasons in soccer...
·
·
~
·
·
"'
·,...
.
,
Marist was also bothered by the
·
suffered
~
three
·
shutouts;
.
more face it, even
a
,
winner losei,
.
It
looks as thoughJhe Marist women
will
have a volleybaU team
. rough play of their opponents. than they had in the
.
previous
'.
S()metimes
:-'
.
'
:.
-··
.
.
next fall. Further details will be forthcoming ... The football team is
Defenseman Russ Beckley,
.
who
.
three tournaments.
:
Even

worse,
,.
This drops the curtain on
'
·
the
cuiTently selling
.
chariceidor
a
drawing to be held at their 1977
had played well
in the earlier
RPI'.
·
.
two of the team's-losses catne at
:
most successful year of
-
soccer in
home opener on
·
Sept;
18.
·
First prize
is
a week in Florida. Chances
··
Xournament
·
victory,
.
was
·
.
cut
.
the hands
.
of
·
opponents
·
they
.
:
had Marist
·
history .
.
··
The
·
Red Foxes
..
are $1 apiece and can be obtained from any member
·
of the team ...
down from behind
.
during the
.
beaten
_
in the RPI tournament.
.
now' break until late
.
si.pmner
·
I've been
-
asked by
_
members of the soccer team
,
to- thank their
opening
i-o
·
1oss
to Oneonta on
.
Oneonta avenged a
1-0
_
overtime ~hen they will operi_
.
their
quest
of
·
faithful fans who traveled up and stayed overnight for the tour-
Friday .
.
He hadto
·
be helped
:
off
~,
loss to Marist and
..
Albany State
_,
a first~ver
:
NCAA Division
III
·
·
nament at Albany State
last
weekend.
Thanks!
·
·
·.
the court and
was
uriavailableJor
.
later reversed
i~
the
2-0
cham-
,
playoff bid.
~
=-
'
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
·
- ·
'
·
further action.
'

pitmship game ~ore_.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
TlilS
~.K.}N
~ S T SPO:RT~
(March
31-April 7);
·



-
~
\..
·
-


.
a
Saturdaf,
.
April 2
·
~ Lacrosse: York-
~t
i.eoiiidoff Field
-
1:30 p.m.
··
Sunday, April
3 -
Lacrosse: Poughkeepsie
;
Lacrosse Club
·
- at
.
L~crosSe season under\\'ay;
.
Leonidoff Field-3:30 p;fu.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
·
··-
W,ednesday, April
6.;
Lacro~e: ~tKean State- 3:30 p.m. - Teruus:
·
New Haven ,. home
~
3 p.m.
·
-
..
.
.
ho11t@
op,per~Sclt~tdai
·
·

.
·.
a
.

-
:'
'"
.
-•


-

.:.
• .


'
-

f
·.-·
·
·

--~1
-··
<
..
By
Pat
Larkin.
.-
.
man
attack; similar
.
to but
·
t>tten
·
·
·
.
along withDave
'
Steiger, anoiher
'
.
.
·
•·
more

exciting
··
than
the
·
power
:,
senior.Behnke.expectsalotfrom

·
Coach
-:
Jeff Behnke
is
not playin
·
hockey.-
...
·:

.
·
.'.:·
·

Jhese
_,
three.
·
Also
.
.
slated
·
for
-..
.
·
.
··
making
·
any predjctions for
:
the
.
.
SeniorJaYMetzgerwillopenat significa11trol~upfrontwillbe
.
· ·
::.,.
Marist_ lacr~e.
·
team for
~
the g9alie;
·
.:
.
a position
-
B~hnke
·
Mike Boyle; Pete Delbello, Brad
.
-
<
upcormng spn_ng ·
seaso!1
-
but he described
as
..
-.
"crucial'~
. _.
Jo : the Callahan, and
'
Pat
I>unn;
• •
·
. ,-
.

said, "I'm annously mi1ting'
~
for
·

team's-success.
·.
Tliis
is
Metzger's
·
·
~
·
'Ille midfielders ~re still
vying
.
.
UJe
.
.
seaso
,
rtt~
~rt.
-
...
~:--
:
-
··
first_ ~son

phlymg Ia~osse
,
at .
.
for
sbut~
:
posiµons,
.
accor~
: .. ·
·
._
Behgke said rune
.
of the topl3 Manst and he
.
must show that he
,'
,
to
Behnke.
·
Stentls another high
·
-
·.
players on
.
the team
ar~
seniors
.
can do the jobjJfa·sport
'
known scoring rettimee

with
·
Bob Jor:-
..
.
Inaddip.on
·
fourreturning ~ors
·
for its _high
scores
/: ~

-
_
"·. ·
·
.
.
_
dan;
.
Peter
,
Stuebe
;
Bill
Fl!)he,rty,
·
haV'~
~n
named
·
c~p~UlS !or
._
Helping -Meu.g~r on
.
.
d~fense
...
and
Mike
-
Colluci the
_
top
can-
/
tlle-1977 season; 'lllese
:
are
;Jun
.
will
~
·,
two top
:-·
n~tch
.
seniors

,
didates
.
for
:
·.
other _starting
:
·
Bo.href!,
.,
iiill
<
McCu~,
.
,K:eyin

r~t~ng
·
from
~
·
y~'s
.
tea.~,
·
p~sit!on.s.
·':
Al~~
..
fighting "for
·
.
~
:-
l\JcGhee,JU1d
.
9r~g
_
st~t. ..
.
.
:
:
,.·..
J1m
·
Titon~
_
and~ohren
_
.~cking
.
.
••·
m1df1eld
:,
pos1t1ons
::
ar.e
_
Phil

•.
!
Jlie
.
team
.
opened
·
1ts
season
:-
up these veterans
,:
will
.
'
·
be
.·;
-
Co~tenn
.
~c,
.
Bob
.
Geckel,-
:
Bob
o
.~:
yesterday
·
at
-
Moiltclair .
.
~te .
.
.
newcomers
:
Gary
·
Diesel,
-
.
.
Glen
;
:
Goodwin,
'.
·
Lou
~
Merlino,
,
Mike
:
. ·
>
'Ibey
.
had
:i
onlf
::
one
.
_
pres~n
:
.
.
•.:
:l\furphy
:
and

.
Don
·
. Mimmarigh;
/:
Brennan~
.
·
Kerry
\
Rip;
,,
Jiin
·
.
.
scprriinage
~
ivhich:took
'.
i>lacfoi
f:"
B~~
•··
·
said :t,hese

Ahr~
/•
~re
··
:
Qawson
,'
and
·
~,..-g~
·
Janis
/·:=
.
...
. ·
Sundayagainst
;
the'PoiighkeeJ>-!ie
:.\
P~~
.
Vf~ry wel\
-
for
-
f1rst -
:
year
~,·
.
-."
Jl1e
·
~
.
·
f.ox.es
·
play
.
their.

first
-
.
.
..•
_
,,,,...
··
.
.
.-
:
Lacros~~
,
Cl
_
u,l,:
::
Even
·
:
though
·.,
plJl.y~~
.
a~~t!y

sho~
i
lleip
·
the
·
-:
hom,e
-:
gaiµe
:;
OQ
.t
~turday
f
O:30
·
.
·:
·
.
<
Marist
:;F
easily
:;
def~ted
;_
llie"
J
>J>?
,)
,·.
t
_
earn
;
•I~
Sopbo111ore
f
~l
·
::.
Be,llal!
·
.•
.
·
p.~
·
.
)
,
_
agalns(;
:~
,xork
,
an<!
:
;
play
·
.
·
· . position;
-
~~e:~d
:
theie
-
are
·~
- ~ •
·
out_..~e
;
def~.
;:·
_-
:
:.: ,
:,-
,:
ag~in
·
on
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18.18.1
18.18.2
18.18.3
18.18.4
18.18.5
18.18.6
18.18.7
18.18.8
18.18.9
18.18.10
18.18.11
18.18.12