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Part of The Circle: Vol. 18 No. 19 - April 21, 1977

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I
,
THE CIRCLE
Volume 18, Number 19
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
April 21, 1977
-Bradley
to
-
spe_a~
.
-
'
.
-
·
;
.
.
.
-
~
at
Grad-,ation
_
.
·
By
Larey
Strieiel and
'
·
·
Ken
Healy
·
··
MarisL has
·
received
·
con-
. firmatioh
·
through
an in-
termediary
_:
that Bill Bradley,
former New
.
York Knickerbocker
_and ~odes Scholar; _will speak at
the college's 31st
.
commencement
exercises
·
to
be
hel!i Sililday, May
15.
--
.
.
.
.
· .
.
.
.
-
Thomas Wade
~
-
development
.
·•
airect~r. said although he has not
_
-
SP,Okert directly to
·
Bradley
;
-
·
he
·
:.:
has received
·
word through the
.
Knicks that the

six~time National
-
Basketball
\
~.ssociation
·
_
.
all-star
.
will be available to address· the
--
· -
graduates 9-urtng
-
the ceremony
.
. next month.
.. .
.
~· "We're 99
·,
and·
.
-
44 htiridredths
-
per
/
cent
-
.
sure,"
>
said Wade;
.
·
-
"Rig~t
-
_
now
·.
it's
:
just
-
a
.
technicality. I've spokeri
-
to the
_
.
.
_
·c:
-
c
·
>
-
-
'
Knicks
:
and
.
they gave me the
·
By
Regina Clarkin
_
shared the
vision
of
:
the
'
McCarin
-
alwnni
are
appreciative tif the
conf~tion
,
b
.
ut \Vould n()t give
--
.
·
center
;
·
_
,
,
.
-
::
-=
·
:
past,
:
that
:
the QW
.-
·
gym
is hot
µie
:
his ph
_
one
_
number;''
.
-
.
. After fourt
.
~n
_
years of plan-
·
·
The students were represented without fond me~ories.
·
.
~radley,
·
~.
·
a_
·
gr;aduate
-
of
.
.
rung and waitm
_
~.
-
t~e James
·
s:
-
_
_
by
_.
senior. Ann
:
Ctillina~e
-
who
: ;.
_
Participating in
the
dedic;~tion
f?rmc~ton 1:fruversity
;
was an~-
_
.
:..
BillBra~ley
·
Mc;Cann
--
R
_
ecreatlon. Center spokeofabouthowthecenter
~
will
.
were
-
John
-
J. Gartland, Jr. and
..
-
Americ~n
_
m
_.
.
19~ and after his
-
·
of
th
eKnicks
.
_
b~~e
_
a
.;
!~~lity_
:
S1=1J1day_
:
t
_
o
,
~
~
-:
'
.
·
pr~~~qe,;
,
an
: :
0
_
pportu
_
p
_i_
t
f
__
for
,
Roy-C.:K~tcliam
~
~J'i
.
a~~
1
o!_the.--. gi:_:aduc1~on tljat year.h
_
e spen~ two
.
_
-
.
-
. .
-
·
· .
__
,
_
cr?w~
_
of more.t~~-
10~
§tud~~;
-::
_:.
~u~~~
_
;
Jo.::
-
-
~~t
'[
C!U!,s~d
f
'-'
of
·
:
;
Board·.of_;t'r~ee~
.
:_
-:-
;
_
_-
,~-
.
·
-_
.
.
·
-
. YE!llrs
Pq
_
a
.
Rh,~~e~
.
Sch9lar:sh1p
a!
gettmg
_
rea~y ~or the New. J_ersey
·
-
~
-
pat:~!-}~~.
-
-
~ ~ J
-
·
:
f~cillty
.-·
.
..
~z;i~
.:--.
r~1qel!~~
0
~nd
-
subject
~
~i:ea
(
-
;
, .
/
·:.t\fter.:-:.a~
.::-
,dch:~
:
_
bY
:
'.
Marty
.
. ~xfo~d
_
m
_
E11glan?·
. ·:
-
:"'
.
.
-
-
.
. I;)_eoIJ?,
_
~ra!1c
.-
Congressional
,
acimWstrattjrs.·.-
: · -.

-~
7
-
;.:'
;'
.
.
:
·
·
./
-
Dr;Jloward Golqman;
:
director

-
Liq~ori;. (see
·
story
·
beJ~w),
-
the
_In
19~?. ~r.acUe~
..
-
~~ame the
._
~ampa1
_
gn
_
1!}
the f
_
all._ · ,

·
"
:
..
:
.
•:.
..
The green
:
-flag, an emblem of
:
.
of
:
physical
_
education told the.
-
Rev. ~1chard
:
i
LeMorte
·
coor-
highest
-
p~id roQ.k!e
,
m
-
t~e
.
NBA
,
_
..
-
_
Wade
-
said he was happy to
·
·
.
the
;
.
M~eann
:
.
Fo1;111?ation,
.
·
.
w:as
.
~udi_ence}~at M~rist Co~!~ge
..
jg
:,:
clj.nator
,
?f ~a
_
mpu~
_
iµinist~y
~
gave
·- .
whep he ~~ed with the
.
Krtic~=
.
h~ar of the
.
confirmatfon. ."It's
·
presented
_
to
;
~arist
_,_
by John
·
J.
·
now the
·
college
_-
·
-
in

the
_
mid~
'.
a be,ne!ll~tion.
_
· . .
:
:
..
:
.
_
_
DQrmg his 10 year career whicli
kmd of a cap_per on the year•~
G~rtland,
_
pr~1dent of the Mc-
Hudson areafor athletics
.
He and
_

Self
,
tours
-
throughoui
·
_
the
·•----
en~ed

a :w~elt. ago
.
8;fter the
develo~,ment

.
of the
_
Mc Cann
_ ·
Cann FoumJ.~tion
.
_
,.
·
·
·
..
_
Ron
:
-
Petro, athletic ·director
.
buildirigfollowed the ceremonies.
'
Knu;~s fm1shed
·
t1ie1r
·
76-77
Center,
·
he said.
·
·
After
·
openi'}g_ remarks by the traveled
_
.
-
to other northeaste~
·
·
-
Although audience
·
reaction
·
to
season! the
-
~eal!l won
·
two

world

Rev•
-
~ys Willi~ms, Protes1ant
_ .
colleges
.
and deyeloped the
_
best the
.
dedication
.
ceremonies
.
·
was
_
. cliamp1ons~ps
-
m
19?0
.~nd 1973.
-
Comme
_
ncement Arrangements
chaplam,
.
.
Dr.
:,_
,
Lim.1~
-
Foy_ spoke concepts
-
of
-
what they saw. '!The
.
favorable one woman felt.it was Known~
-
Dollar Bill because
·
·
·
about the
.
changes on the
-
Maiist
---..
resultis
_
·
around
·
you,''
·
he said.
_
too
·
Iong.flef son
_
is planning on ·
0
at ~:me time he
;
was the highest
-
jolinDwyer
;
registrar, said the
can:ipu~. He has
·
·
se~il
.
·
the
-
.
He said the building
.
is
_
not attend!!_lg Marist in
.
the fall aIJd paid
:
p~ayer
.
~n
·
the lectgue,
graduation
.
ceremony will begin
~edications of the chapel; the about clinics and concentrations
she drove from Brooklyrito listen . Br!idley s~ored
.
moi;-e
_
than
70 00
at two p.m.
·
" -
·
library_and. now the $2.7 million not about wins
·
and
:s
losses
-.
but to ·speeches she really
.
didn't pomts
_
duf1!1g his career.
He said
'
seniors· will finish
recr~~tion center~
-
.
·
_
-
_ .
.
.
.
..
:
hopes
_
µie facility will
-
~now
·
.

know i:nucli about
/
·
-
:
_
..:.-
",,:
;c
.
~
_
·Bradley
,
1s t
_
h~
:
author
.
of .!..'Life
cl!isses May 7,
_
and final grades
-
-
W~~ Murphy, Marist's[irst

·
everyorie
·-
to gain respect
·
and
One member
.
of the staff said . on the _Run,'"~ book abo!,lt the 7'.1--
will
be
available in his office May
athleticdirec~or,actedflSmaster
,
enjqyment
_
out of their own the
_
openinjpnarkedanimportant
_
75 se~on,
·
and
·
the
-
life of a
11.
No
..
grades will be
-
mailed
of
·
_
cer~mo111es, he said
0
:
the
·
achievements.
,
__
~
·
_
:.
:
·
.:
..
:
,
--
·
occasion
.
in the
<
history
-.
of
.
the
·.
professiona
_
l basketball player
;
on
home.
_
Graduation details about
.
dedication cer
_
emonies were
·
.
a
.
C
The
alumni
:
were
·
i:epr¢sented
.
school
>
.
<-
-
,: •
..
·
. -
...
··
...
.
·
.
.
.
'
and O!f the ro~~; Bradley
is
no~
_
caps and gowns will
.
also
be
tribute to Manst member_:s who
by Jlilliam Cloonan, who said the
.
pu~umg a ~ohtica~ career, and
is
available atthattime.
·. ·
·
.
.
.
-
-
.
-
.
~
--·
.
.
.
.
.,
.
·
-
·.
-
.
.,
.
.
.
.
.
-
-
:
_-
~
~
-
~
-
-
FaculfY
>
-gets
I°%
pay
bike
.
:
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
By
Maureen Crowe
(h~~e percent increase. The
·<
this
_
plan
.
faculty.
:
members .
.
.
_
.
.
_
._
_
_
_ .
.
.
_
addition!ll:_
:
four pe~cent
_
will'
_,
be
.
receiving
:
th~
~ee
·
percent in- ·
.
The
_
1i1
full
.
·and. part-time
·
placed
:
m
_
a "m~rit
_,
pool'i
-
~~~
crease for satisfactory
.
workwill
.
_
_
members_ofthe
:
Marist
..
~olleg~
_:·
a.warded
-
acco
_
rdingly
,
~
_
tho~ .~ot·rn~t
.
the projected seven
·
Jaculty will
be
~W..!_~ed
·
a _seven who
,;
have exce~~ed
c
in
·
th~1r
.-·
percent
'
<;o~
_.
of livjng
_
,
increase.
·
,
-
~rc:en
t_
salacy mcr~seJ~
.
fall
_
t~coo.ig
·_
ex~llence,
.
Foy said;
;
Only those
.
faculty members
·
:
_
:
~s:ed
:
0!1.
i
metit
-
~
detemiined
~
.
by_
.':
Foy also
~~d
th_e ~eritraise
is
::
performil_lg
:
.
"well
or
ex-
_
e:v
_
c1Juat1011s
.
QY
·

,
deP,artme_nt
.
suppos~ to be lln
.
~ce11tive
,
for
-
ceptionally
~
·
well
"_
wilf
.
receive
·
.
. chaµm~; -~cc,~r~g
,
to
:
Marist
'
fu.e faculty
.
t!) pe_rfo~)e
_
tter and
.
enough of an increase
t9
meet the
·
:
,
·~
-College pr~i~ent Linus
·
Foy. All
_
gn~e better
. _
se
_
rvice
--
to the
-
.
cost of_li~g
'
in~r~e .
.
;
_
-
,
· •
facul_ty
_
Jl!embers
.
who
_
.
. are
-
-
-
-
students. _
: _
·
<
·
:
.
_ ·
·
:
.
.
·
Ne~ year'.~
-
raise
is
part
of .a
,
':
evaluated as-having
:
~rformed
- ;
;Anthony...:Campiln,
,
busmess . ·
--
·
-
·
-c:
.
.
~-
'
:.

'
·
·
· ·
.
. ·
"satisf~ctorlly!', will
.
·
receive
,
a,
:
-
manager for Marist,- said
:
undel°
·
-
.
.
·-.: .
••
:
11
,
-
-
-
-
-
-
.
.
~
-
-
.
·
·
..
.
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.
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.
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·
·
:
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.
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/

















































































































































.
'
.:
PAGE2
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 21, 1977
Humanities' house proposed for
77• 78
By Wendy Stark
voted on Belanger's proposal
which, according to Belanger,
Residents of eighth and ninth was first discussed six weeks
floors Champagnat Hall were to ago.
vote Wednesday night
.
on a
Pinto said, "The council never
proposal to convert House IV to a
voted because it wanted to get
Humanities House and Dialogue student reaction to the idea
Center
.
Residence Director Peter beforehand. Questionnaires were
Amato will make the final supposed to be sent to the
decision on the plan proposed by residents a month and a half ago
Brother
Joseph
Belanger, but never were."
director of Marist Ab
7
oad
She said, "Last Thursday
Program.
Amato told the council the
The proposal, which according proposal had gone through. The
·
to
·
Belanger emphasizes com-
-
council then asked Belanger to
munity living, sens
i
tivity
-
and talk to House ·IV about the
horniness was also voted on by proposal."
·
the Champagnat House Council.
Sunday night Belanger ex-
-
Amato said, "I will take the plained his concept which he
student vot
_
e into strong con-
described as "totally irrational"
sideration." However, he added to residents of House IV who
he
_
had "full veto power" over the
--_
reacted negatively.
Champagnat House Council.
Belanger said the concept of a
House_ Council secretary; Humanities House existed in
Kathy
·
Pinto said although the
-
Sheahan Hall in the late sixties
council votes on all rules and and created
·
"enrichment of the
regulations
pertainfng
·
to college campus."
Champagnat
,
the council never
If the proposal was approved,
Belanger said $5000 would be
taken from
his
salary to renovate
House IV. The Dialogue Center,
consisting of a kitchen, dining
room, and piano will be moved
from third floor
Leo
Hall to
eighth floor in Champagnat.
Belanger
-
said this will create a
"sense of horniness instead of
institutioriali7.ation."
Belanger said he wanted to
furnish House IV'S lounge. "I
literally get sick when I look at
these bare lounges. I can't un-
derstand how students live
·
here.
You are getting ripped off. I can't
understand why more students
don't transfer out.
"
·
Amato said
_
the
_
concept of
-
a
Humanities
_
House
·
is a "positive
step in the right direction for
Marist
.
"
·
·
Belanger said converting
House IV is necessary because
"Marist's rating is going down.If
-
He said SQme steps have to· be
·
taken to prevent students from
transferring out.
·
·
·
TAPincrease
.
wo11't hela
,
,.
By Larry Striegel
He explained that many seniors who receive
-
financial aid are
were eligible for only $100 to $600 emancipated.
--
He said a student
Although funds for the New in aid because they began college who
.
declares himself as eman-
York State Tuition Assistance before
1974.
In
the summer . of cipated must provide
'
the state
Pro grain (TAP) were increased that year, the state b
_
egan a n~w with documents which prove he
is
"Marist is in a crisis" he said.
B~langer said the rationale for
"Marist is losing the most moving the Dialogue Center to
students it ever has. It has the
-
-
House IV Champagnat a';}d
highest transfer rate and we're in creating a Humanities House
1S,
trouble. Marist accepts any in-
"It's the best physi~al living area
coming student who pays."
on campus next ~o sixth floor Leo.
However,
David
-
Flynn,
Belanger said Champagnat
director of admissions
-
sa
i
d was the
·
best place for the
Marist has already rejected Humanities House beca':1~ . it
betweeri
75
to
100
applicants.

offered the most flex~b1hty
Belanger said it is predicted because of the four co-ed wmgs of
that in three
.
years Marist will be
_
_
single
-
and double
·
rooms
down to 600 to 700 students.
operating off of a central lounge.
.
Flynn said,
"admissions
·
House IV has the nicest view
definitely isn
'
t declining
.
" He
·
since it is highest up. He said part
said Marist was facing the dif-
-
of the lounge would be converted
ficulties
.
that were facing other to
·
a
·
dining !oom and
_
would
·
private colleges
in
the country. overlook the river .
.
He said, "Marist does have to
-
Amato said House IV's ap-
begin developing programs and
.
parent r~putation of
drinkif
g ~nd
attitudes that would make destruction "wasn't a motivating
students want to stay rather than
_
'
factor" in the selection of House
transfer
-
~
aild
·
would
·
attract IV as the site of the Hwnanities
students to come."
House.
-
Flynn said
_
the concept
-
of a
Humanities House was a good
·
one, but he wasn•~ in a.positi9n to
~valuate where it should
_
be
.
·•
-
.
by alplost · 10 percent at
·
the schedule which made new college sending
·
_
himself
--
through college
beginning of the
_
month
,
·
in-
students eligible for up to
$1,500
a without assistance from
·
his
divid~al Marist College students year
'
for four years
.
.
_
parents
.
_
,
·
(.
· ·
won't see any
·
mo
r
e money than
Fraher said most of
·
the
In
.
the past, the emancipated
-
they get now according to Mike students who began school before student
·
has
·
been eligible for
.
Fraher, financial aid counselor.
1974
will be gr~duating and most more
_
money than the average
Gov
.
Hugh Carey had tried to students attending school now student. Fraher said the new
reduce spending
·
on the TAP are getting up to
$1
,
500,
thus grant allocations for the students
program by $7 million, but in-
praining the extra funds
foi
the
·
have not been decided yet
_
stead the state legislature added TAP program.

He
.
said
·
an students who
$18
million to last year's total,
received TAP money this year
·
.
bringing it to $202 million.
Enianl!ipated Schedul~
_-
·
should
.
have .filled
·
out an a~
Fraher said most of.the extra
plicationfor
.
next year and have
_
money will be granted to students
In
adding more
·
money
.
to the mailed it to Albari
Y:
oy
·
this week.
·
from the City University of New TAP budget, the legislature also
·-
Only full-time students who
_-
live
York (CUNY) who are paying decided to give
1
less money to inNewYorkStateareeligiblefor
-
-
-
·
-
-
tui
·
ti·on for the f;r.:... tlID
·
e this yea
·
r.
·
-
"ema
·
n
·
ci
·
pated studen
t
s," those
·
the grants, said
·
Fraher. He
·
The Hudson river
is
being examiried by Marist for cancer causing
The rest of
fu:L
money
·
will be who finance their education added that about
59
percent of PCB's.
·
-
·
·
·
-
-
used to supplement
.
a grant without parental help
.
.
.
Maris
t;
students receive the
.
:
.
M
".
a
·
.. ,·s
·
.
t
_
to
.
s
_
t
,,.
u
_
d
·.
y
·
·
schedule which
-
has come full
·
Fraher said approximately 30 financial aid
.
• ,
circle this year.
percent of the students at"M~rfst
.
-
-
.
-

·
- -
Poughk
_
eeps,e water
Nursing progtam
<
possible
..
~y
_
Ke
__
n_Healy
~
a possibility the tests will be
:
_
_
continued for another year
if
the
-
The Marist Research Institute
original
·
ones are inconclusive .
.
If
·--
..
..
By Maureen Crowe
masters, Linus Foy, president of and two full time nursing in-
has been contracted by the City of
PCB's are found in the city's
Marist College, said
.
structors) which would cost an
·
Poughkeepsi~ to test.the drinking
drinking water, th~ findings will
Meeting
the
"rigid"
O'Keefe said that in recent estimated $55,000.
:
~.~-
-
,
~ter. the_ f:!Ity takes from the
be used
in
designing a filtering
requirements of the National years the NLN
has
been more
·
O'Keefe said that Marist was Hudson ~ver. .
,
·
system that
·
will
_
take the
·
League of Nurses (NLN) has conservative
in
approving also looking into cooperating with . The proJe~t wru.ch 1s headed by
chemical out of
-
the
·
drinking
caused problems in establishing programs because
·
of
_
the another ·school
·
-
with
an Dr. ~obert E. Re~woldt, of the
water.
.
·
a twc;i year upp
_
er level
_
nursing decr~e in the demand for established program .
.
"Marist Marist n
_
atural science depart-
-
,.;
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
progra!ll at Marist College,
·
nurses. .
wouldtakecareofthe bachelor of ment, wil~ test the water
·
for
accordmg to Peter O'Keefe
_
_
.
Foy said that because of the science
.
d~gree but the diploma
Poly~hloru:iated
-
byJ?henyles
director of continuing education'.
·
·
tight job market
_
for nurses it would come from another (PCB s) which
_
are considere~
_
~o
The proposed program would would be better to
_
upgrade school, '' O'Keefe said .
.
Tapping
.
be
c~ncer causlJlg_ ag~nts, He
wµt
·
enable registered nurses to the_ present nurses education into another program.would help
·
be ai~e~
~Y
Manst student Bill
complete
.
the requirements of a
.
rather than educate new ones Marist meet NLN approval and
.
Mastnanru and others.
:
.
,,..
Bachelor
·
of Science degree
,
a
·
that will not be able to get a job. also open another market for the
·
·
-
_
·
_
The
·
_
reason
·
for
-
the pro~ect,
degree nurses will be required to
-
Although a
1975
survey prov_ed cooperating schoois
:
·
__
· · ·
_
-
~
a~or~ to
.
Dr. ~hvvol~t, IS
_
to
-

fire
cause
still
unknown
By Maureen Tully
-
have by
1980,
O'Keefe said.
there was a need for a:n upper
Presently, O'Keefe describes discover-
i!
the PCB ~• which are
_
The NLN
is
.
not enthusiastic level program in nursing, more
_
theproposedprogramasbeingin dumped mto t~e nve
t
by the
·
The origin of the fire that
about two year programs in thorough proof of need and ''limbo
.
" This is one of the most
·
.
G~eral ~Iectnc Company,
_
are
·
desti:oyed
·
the
·
sacristy
'
in
·
the
_
.
nursing and prefers four year availability of clinical resources

frustrating things. You get your bei~g
.
filte~ed out at the
chapel
·
April 9 is
·
still unknown.
pr.ograms, O'Keefe said because are necessary to meet the NLN hands on it and
.
then it moves
·
-
Poughkeeps
_
1e
-
Water Work~.
,
·
According to
-
Andrew Pavelko,
,
of
.
the problem
/
giving credit to standards
:
O'Keefe said this away
.
However O'Keefe added
.
Rehwoldt said
.
the Poughkeepsie
.
'!We probably won
'
t know how it
--
nurses who received their would be followed by setting up a
that ~ne way or another a final Wa~r Works P~~bablr
~n•t
do
_
started sirice the damage
·
wasn't
diplomas in hospital programs. program that would insure the
_
decision will be made within the
_
the Job bec~use 1t 'Yas built}ong that drastic:'' However the exact
Giving them credit makes
.
it qualityoftheprogramandhiring next year whether the program befo~e e~ot1c ~?emicals su<:11
.
as
·
amount of damage is
.
still under
difficult for
.
nurses to go for their the required staff (Ph
.
d nurse
will go through or not.
_
fCB s existed
'.
_
The plant, which
_
investigation by. insurance ad-
·
, - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
-
·
___
.;..._...;.....;,
·
_ _ _
.,. IS
·
located across the road from
justors.
·
-
.
_
_
_
·
._
McCann
_
Center:
the Champagnat parking lot
,
is
Pavelko said he
will
meet with
approximately 1.5 years
·
old
.
__
-
'.
A"nthony Campilii,
'
business
·
·
.
-
The tests; which are scheduled
maµager;·
_
Dr.
-
Antonio Perez,
·
F
.
-
e
·:
a
,
·
_
t
·
·
·
ur
·_
··
es
for
-
th
"
e
·
han
·
·-
.
_
d
__
··~
-
a
:
p
·
p
··
•·
,
e
'
d
__
_
.
.
to
'
begin this spring~
'
will deter.;.
·
_
dean
.
of students; Peter Amato
;
mine
-
if
.
the PCB's have come
_
director of
;
residence; and
:
.
__
dowri the river from Schenectady. Fairview Fire Chief Sutka to
,
··· -
·
_.
..
-.
\Vher
.
e
_
m~toftliemare~el~sed
.
·
appraise the
.
fritrire
WJ'ection and
· -
_
By D~vid
Ng
. -
--
remain open for ten seconds; handicapped and yourirchil~en
:
PCB's are used in the production
correction of violations
..
.
and
_
.
_
., providing enough time for
.
the
.
A water.
f
ountain in the
_
main
.
of electricalequipmerit. Although
general
·
policr
~
beJween the
.
Special· features in'. the James handical?ped
_
t~ en~er
·
an~ leave.
.
lobby
·
is extended
.
~11rther from
.
General Electric has repeatedly
_
college and the department.
·
J.
,
-
McCann Recreation Cent
.
er _ A ·
_
- sbng
,
device
m
:
the the

.
Wllll
-
~nd
.
_lowered ,for
_
denied any
link
between PCB's ,
-·-
The fire is the first
'
since the
-,
make the facilities accessible to natatorium can lift and lower the : availability
.
to
,
people · in and cancer; tpey
:
µid they will
·
chapei'opened in the

niid fifties.
-
the
.
handicapped
;
O
to
_
.
those
-
h11ndi~apped into the pool
;
'
~e
.
_ ~heelcllair~.
:.
-
_
.
'
,
.
i
-
_
.
..
.
_
-
.
:
~
stop
,
d~~ing th~ ~hemi~l
-
~s
:
-
P~:v.elko
·
-.
-
disregard,ed
.
.
any
requiring
-
crutches ~nd
?
-
those
-
haridi~apl)e~
-
per59~
,
is
,
~ ~ m
, ·
.B~throom
_,
.
stallf!
~
have extra
-:
·
summer
·
--
·
· -
,
--.-.-
_
·
..
··
·
maliciousness behind
.
the fire and
confined tQ yvheelchair~
;_
:
· . :
>
,
·_
-
th~
:
sling
;":
lifted
::
and
:
P9S1ti.;C>n~~
·
wi~e
_-
~trances
·
-
with door~
}
h~t
:'.>
The t ~
will
~o~ist of
taking
said
:
that it is
'
only
.
coincidental.
An
.
elevator
·
'
-Iocated
·
-
near
.
the over
-
the pool
_
and lowered
:
.
·
·
swmg
.
_
outward.
·
People
.:
m
_
:
.
water and mud sainples from the
;
.
that
it was the secorid
fire~
~ght
offices, enable:s
·
the
.
handicappe<i
,
.
."
-
ktelephqrie
·
boot~
(
in
·_
the
:
can-
_,
wh~elchairs
·
pan
·,
.
ent~r
.
without
:
a~a
."
around
,,
the
.
-
~ter
intake
:
;
days
~!
struck
.
the
"
campus.
>
.·:,
to
:
:
reach
·.
the
·
.
·
inezzariine
_
.
:._
1lJ~
..
-
teen
·
area
_
_
~
has
_
-
-.
~n
-
:
~owered;
._.
ass1sta~c;e .
.
Si
.
~
a
_
~~
:l
ower
~n<i
.'
P
~
~
<
The ~mples
,
will be
~~1
.,
-!
1:'he
:
C?tner
,
was a sm~
_
ll fire ma
·
U~~~Jlll~li.:.~~~~~~M,Ali&a.~"--!~=:i~b::.le:;,;
·
.-
~

·
t;.,;o ...
-
·
.
,
tl~1.;:;,e ...
·.-
~
,
ex~te_n~d-
·
fti~rth~e-.-r-.;
'
fro~m~th_,e,..
·
..
wa
__
n ...
-
-
-
·
~
.--
~
-
:
'
-
~~
a
,
~onth
,
for
~
year
<
~e~e ~
.
_
closet m Leo
Hall.
,-
...
.
-
~
i(
·
.
;:
,,
::i::;
.~
'.
(

;
~\.,
::~:
..•
.
.. ,,,,
;
_
::·
_
/
-

·:-:..-

































































































































/
APRIL 21, 1977
THE CIRCLE
.
Federal grant for
Manpower program
PAGE3
f""..r..r.r✓✓J"'.r.r✓.r.r.r.r.r.r.r.r.r.r.r✓✓✓..r✓.r✓✓.r✓✓J'"✓J'"..r✓.r..r..r✓✓-,
§
.
§
1
·
New Paltz Tack-n-Togs
j
~
Sale on "selected" boots:
I
By Wendy Stark
§
s
students, college president Dr.
.
CETA to beautify
'
the campus.
§
Frye, Zodiac, Bort Carleton,
§
Linus Foy, who along with the Foy said; "It's in the negotiation
§
T
.
&

8
Marist College has accepted a
federal grant of
.
$100,000 to work
in contract with the Dutchess
·
·
County Manpower and Training
_
Program in a youth employment
program.
college board of trustees ap-
stage of getting funds to use
8
eXaS
.
lngO
$49.95
88
proved the program in December Marist maintenance staff to
S
• • • • • • • • • • • •
8
said the program has long range landscape the McCann Center."
!
p
I
us
2 0
°{.
.
0
FF
on
83
benefits to the·college. Marist
is
Foy said since Marist is ex-
g
/C
0
enterin'g into its first "per-
perienced in working with the
8
th
I
t
d b t
Ss
The program involves finding
jobs for 16 to 22 year old high
school drop outs who meet low
incom~ · criteria
·
said Dr.
Margaret Olson, assistant dean
of special pro'grams whose office
.
is administering the program.
formance·contract." "It's a trial "not average college student" in

Q
er Se ec e 00 S.
8
run," he said.
the Higher Educational Op-
tl
The program isn't hurting"the portunity Program and the
§
·
.
Open .
.
8
§
The grant was funded. through
the Comprehensive
·
Employment
and Training Act (CETA) which
·
is a major department of the
national labor program
.
Dut-
,
chess· CollDty M~power and
Training
.
Program
is
'
a local
·
chapter of the CETA.
-
collegeanditgivesusexperience. Greenhaven Program, it is
s8
~
·
Mon.-Sat 10-68
with federal contracting and ·qualified to
operate
this
u
Rt. 32
.
F .
10 8
.
tl
experience with
.
the department program.
§
2
miles
north of
Church
St.
n.
·
8
of labor"
-h~
said.
.
·
He said employment of these
Rt 32 Store
u
u New Paltz
50 feet off
Main
St.
·
0
Dr:Olson said "It gives Marist "not average youths" will ha\Te a
o
8
a chance to develop a good tra~k
·.
direct effect on Marist graduates.
g
255-0172
255-7011
open
N
d D ·
~
.
.
·
Sunday112-5
8
recor . omg a good job on this
"H
these people aren't employed,
¥--..r✓.r✓.r.r..r..r.r.r.r.r.r..r.r.r..r.r.r.r..r✓.r.r..r..r.r.r.r.....-..r.r.....-.r✓..r.r..r.r.r.r.r✓JJ:I
program could be the beginning Marist graduates will end up
of other federal grants."
supporting them through taxes,"
Foy said federal education he added.
"H
a college doesn't
funding will soon
be
funded get involved in an employment
through the labor dep~rtment. program
-
who should?"
·
Dr. Olson said, "Entering into
this program is a

fulfillment of
the Marist College institutional
goal of cQmmunity-service."
· "H
such a shift of funding occurs,
·
The program involves no space
Marist will have__ a competitive or utility cost to
·
Marist because
edge
to
get other funds since the office is located on Market
we've worked wi
_
th the qepart-
·
St., Poughl{eepsie. The grarit has
'
ment before," he said
.
-
been funded from March 1977 to
·
.
: .
While the program
.
has
.
·
no
immediate benefits to Marist
Olson said, Marist is in the Feb. 28, 1978 .
process of receiving _$45,000 from
..
Pre~school
to
continue
i
/
.
.
By Cathy Ryan and
•.

Regina Clarkin
old gym, which will be looked at
by an architect on April 26. Cost
estimates for the area may be too
The Marist Pre-school will high for renovation and Louis
continue to operate during the
.
Zuccarello, academic dean,
.
said
fall semester although for he
·
and
·
·
·
Anthony Campilii,
seve~al
·
weeks elimi~ation of business manager, don't have a
serv_1~e.s was ~ons1dered a specific list of other areas which
possibility, accQrdmg to sources; could house the nursery.
~
.
The
·
pre-school
. ·
·
may
'
.
be
.
·
Campilii said when he and
refocat~d in the back rooms of.the
·
Zuccarello decided on the
·
old
gym as a possible area for
relocation they realized if it was
too expensive to renovate, there
might be no other relocation site.
Discussions about relocating
the pre-school from the basement
of Champagnat began last year
when students
:
complained that
the area, onc
·
e designated
,
for
student recreation, was alloted to
the pre-school.
.
• l
·
·
.
Stl.ldentS celebrate·
·
spring
By Elaine Brusoe
River Day
'71
were sold for a
.
dollar. Lou Ann Waldron, CUB
About 400 people packed up
concert chairman, said
·
the
their frisbees, blankets, soccer· . posters were collector's
·
items
balls, and skateboards and sat
·
since ··river day is' now being
out in
8()
degree temperatures
to
.
cal,led picnic
.
day.
·
·
drink 25 kegs of beer and listen to
In the past, river day had been
The Wolmblers, a rock band, at a day when students congregated
River Day held last·'Tuesday ou
down bythe Hudson river, drank
the
.
campus mall.
·
beer and gave out mock awards.
The drinkers were faced with
T shirts saying "Class of 1980"
signs pasted to shoeboxes which
were also sold for . $2.50. Tuna
said "We are
:
asking for a $1.00 fish, ham and cheese, and salami
donation for the
.
"free" beer you
.
and cheese·sandwiches were
.
sold
are drinking in. order to help at
$.75:
cover expenses of over $500.
Pe9ple attending seemed
Pete Baudouin, president of the satisfied
.
·
eonege Union Board (CUB) said
.
Will Morrison ~id "I love it ...
river day cost about $1200 dollars I'm kind of disappointed that they
including $50() for the band:
didn't get the band they got last
The Mari.st
·
Executive Board
.
year ... they were really good and
(made up
·
of• college ad-
they were loud."
ministrators) contributed $500 to
He said Marist should sponsor
pay for the band.
·
something like this for the fall so
.
A
·
sheet hanging out of the people could get
I
reaquainted
corner room of sixth floor and freshmen could meet people.
Champagnat said "This
is
not
Jim O'Rourke
.
said the
.
best
.
river day; it's picrµc day."
part aboufriver day
is
everybody
·
.
Posters
'
~ying Marist College parties together instead of
_
in
~liques.
.
Steve Deleskiewicz said "The
band's too low and the beer's too
warm but I'm having a good time
anyway."
Ahoo Shafa suggested they
serve mixed drinks for people
who don't like beer.
-
.
Maureen Darragh
.
said "I
should be studying but it's too
nice and they're having it, so I'm
here."
Candi Davs said she was glad
to see river day organized
because in the past "it was only
·
jocks that went."
Connie Buckley said "It's my
first river day. The first thing I
heard about Marist
·
was about
river day. I'm looking forward to
many more."
Sue Weisberg said "It's about
time
.
C~ did something
.
for
everyone.
Bob Morley said "It's really
good for breaking up the tension
before
finals
week."
,.
-
~,
.
- Students take
~
sun and enjoy Riyer Day held on c~pus on Tuesday afternoon. (Photo by Joe
-
:
Gigliotti)
.
.
.
_
.
(:.-.
·
'
..
.
..
.
.
.
.
'
.
The
VILLAGE CUTTER
UNI-SEX
HAIRCUTTING
\
If
you
like
good music
friendly peopl? and great
haircuts then
you
'll like
the ·village
_
Cutter
·
-
Uni"-Sex Haircutting
Salon.
6 LaGrange Ave.
473-3750
3 Church St.
New Paltz
255-9925
Tel. 454-8420
STATIONERS, INC.
279
Main Mall, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 12601
Over
60
Years
Service to
the
community
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
'.
.
·-·
.
.
.

.

.
.
.
' '
'
..
'
.
.
.
.
'
.
,:
...
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
.

;
·
'
...
,
·
-
-
- -
- -
-~'---'
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-
PAGE4
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 21, 1977
/;
Editorial
Letters
to
-
the
Editor
No Ring
. payments;
·
After
having people carello and l would come away
search file cabinets and make without a
ring,
all the while being
telephone calls, I was
·
finally in front of my parents as well as
To the Editors:
granted permission
to write
out a
everyone else.
·
As ·
I have
·
been told, the
check for fifty-nine dollars and
I could just picture myself on
ceremony for receiving my class
change to pay off my
ring.
my
wedding day going through
ring
is a once-in-a-lifetime -oc-
On
Saturday, April 16, my the ritual, ~".en though my bride-
casion. Lucky for me, I am glad I
family · and I attended the
.
to-be ha~ t sh~wn up.
·
don't have
to

go through it a
preliminary mass in the college
My nng will probably not
~9nd time.
r
bad ordered my
chapel, after which ·I was sup-
arrive until May. Mr. Lambert
ring in January, 1977.- Fred
.
posed to receive ·my ring.
_
I told me that an effort had
-
~n_
Lambert,
-
assistant dean of
gathered with the seventy other made to nl>tify me the previous
students, personally filled out my
·
students who .were to receive Friday. I do not recall getting a
order form and took my check for
their rings, waiting for the in-
telephone call from anyone at
the ten dollar
.
·
deposit. I was
structions
:
about
·
·
the procedure· Marist on any Friday. Right now
assured by Mr. Lambert that the
which we were supposed to I will be satisfied just to get my
ring would arrive iii"fime for the_ follow. When everyone had ring. Nowalllhavetodois hope I
ceremQnf on _parent's weekend
gathered, Mr. Lambert informed do not have. to go throu~ such
·
When it came
_
time to makethe
me
that my ring had.not arrivect nonsense
.
ab~ut my d1plo~a
final payment,
I spent
an
·
hour
However;Mr. Lambert told me I
come
.
graduation,
::-
,.
.
· ·
·
and a half trying to fj,nd my order
.
could still participate in the
·
·
Charles Hallocll
form in Mr, Lambert's office
·
as
ceremony, but when
.
it was my
Classof'77
well asJalking to the student in
-
tum to
.
get a ring, he would
.
.
,
Donnelly Hall taking
.
the
-
·final
whisper
'
something to Dr. Zuc-
.
_
o
.
f ·
F
I
Ow
.
·
-
_
_
e r_
.
·
-po
_
·
·.
··
t
S
co
·
ngr
.
a
·
t

~
-
-
-
·
a: they shared responsibility for
controlling traffic and
_
parking.
.
the set-up of the field house and Toe student ushers,
.
under the
.
attended
to
.
dozens of essential capable direction of Head Us_!ler
,
To the
'
Editor:
tasks. Fred also trained the
Jim Honan, performed ad;.
d
·
·
H
·
·
· ,

·
The dedication of the McCann ushers and attended to details of
mirably, as did all
-
the student
·
an
·
um
·
-

·
n
.-.
•1
-
t
:
1
es
·
.
-
_.
Recreatiori<;enter
·
is
_
nowhistory, protocol, while Larry
.
aqanged guid~"' who were po_!sed
'
an~
but hopefully the
·
spirit it
·
for
-
the pool exhibitions.
·
hosp1taole.
,
·
· ··
·
·
·•
·
generated
will
continue. The
Dave
Flynn
should
be
·
As
recognized at th~ c~remoriy,
editors and staffof.The Circle are
.
recognize~ for developing the it was
.
a day of triumph
.
for
to be commended for

initiating very fine Mccann· Center President Foy, Dr. GQldman, the
·
Tl;lis past week's activities concerning ciuimpagnat°House
iV
that spirit with
·
their special newspaper supplement; copy athletic
.
.
staff; the board of
.
·
send our minds spinning. ~ot only does·the spring bring sunny
Parents
_
Weekend
--
~ ~cation
-
was
·
provided by
-
Marti Madory trustees,the Develcipment
:
Office
days and outdoor
.
parties to Marist but also
·
it
.
is the time for
issue. A 28-page issue is a feat for and
·•
Andy
·
·
Dellava. 'This sup-
and the Mc.Cann Foundation. But
problem solving on behalf of the administration.
.
·
any student newspaper -
it plement helped us share the it was most certainly. a'
'.
special
The problem to be solved is House IV.
.
·
.
.
·
··
·
means a7ot of writing,
.
a lot of
-
McCaruFC::enter with more than day for those who are the heart of
Certain administrators along with some students have sue-
layouts, a:
·
1otof advertising and a · 150,000
·
··
readers
·
of
. .
the
·
Marist College "- its students and

~umbed to the myth of the house;
.
that everyone living "up
lot· ·
of
·
·
commitment. Poughkeepsie
-
Journal and Toe
:
graduates.
Ann
Cullinane and
t
here" is at Marist for four years of wild
-
living, and that upon
Congratulations to ·each one of CatholicJ{ews. lt also
.
inspird an Celeste and Rich

Checchia
disembarking from the elevator
_
on eight or nine, 9:ne is ordered
you for a fine job.
..
excellent editorial in the
.
Suriday
-
exemplified
.
the
-
best' that
.
Manst

to down a bottle of Mad Dog.
__
_
·
·
·
·
.

.
· · ·
·
As
coordinator
·
of
:
the Journal.
.
·
.
. ·
nurtures. Likewise it was ~
·
proud
To solve the problem a humanities house will be started. This
Dedication I would like - to
And surely Ron Petro must not moment when more
·
than 100 of
is the attemptto calm down House IV. A humanities house is a
publicly thanlt
~
the members of be
~
ov~rlooked
.
for bis always
our alumni stood
to
be recognized
·
very nice
·
idea indeed but
:
it brings us to another troubling
the Dedication
'
Committee
.
for pleasant
and
deplmdable
·
for the Alwnni
'
Association's

question ... Why weren't The House Members
in
on The Plan-
· their able assistance and ongoing. responsivene~ to every request,
.
remarkable contribution
c-
of
ning? ... Wheri routinely registering foi.- rooms, students were told ·
~µpport.
It
was a team effort and large or small.
·
·
·
.
$131,000
:
-:--
·
a . contritrutiori
":
sym-
they couldn't live in·the rooms they wanted.
. · :
·
·
-
.
·
· should be
··
recognizE}d• as
·
.sticll . .
.
.
Several "behind· the scenes"
bolizirig great)oyaltf
.
and con-
Why?
__
.
_
·. .
.
· .
· ·. -~-
.
,
· ·
·
__ ·Sincere
.
thanks
,
to Howie Gold-
pe!)pleshouldreceiverecognition. fiden~e .
.
'.
' . " . ;:_,

:...-
;
~
•.
,
Because a di~louge center was opening. Butdon'tworry, the
.
mari, Bill 4\IStin
/
MartFMaaory, f9r
giving
.
ari
_
extra ·ineastire:
·
•·
w~as
a day of. pride,
:'"
~ap--
students were told rooms could be found for them
·
elsewhere.
:
.
.
Dolly
Boaick,
-
Tini
DeBaun; Tom Anne
·
Sommer, George Chelune;
·
·
piness and
·
.
-promise:
.
It
'.
was a
Possibly our residence director fails to see that he is dealing
Wade,Jack
·
Dougherty, JaY.
·
Ro
.
Hamey, Rich Stevens, Gary great
·
day for everyone
'
who
'•
is
·
with human
.
lives,-not just the occupants of rooms
934
or 813
:
To
Metzger,
.
Greg
·
Tracy, Bob Rosa, Michele Hilpertshauser
.
.
Marist College .
.
·
· __
. .
·
.
.
tell students that t}Jey can easily
be
placed on another floor is
·
Norman and Gary Caldwell.
and George Tugwood.
-
..
.
_
.
.
.
.
Shaileen Kopec
something ~imilar to telling
_
a
family
member they can move out
Fted Lambert and
.
Larry Van . Security Director Joe Waters
·
Dedication Coordinator
of the house
;
·
·
.
·
·
Wagner must be singled out for, and his
·
stud~_t attendants did an
·
Low
ad~ssions and a huge nwnber of students transferring
theJr
·
outstanding
_
contributions, excellent job organizing
-
and
are the reasons stated for the implementation of. a humanities
house. We do not feel that flower pots; carpets and pianos
.
will
attract students to Marist.
.
·
·
.
.
.
_·Equa~
.
Coverage
sibility for the "lack of interest"
in women's sports. One only
needs to surveythe recent issues
.
belief that our women;s
.
athletic
.
program will receive national
prominence in
the near
.
future .
.
· Recreational and social activities attract students
to
Marist in
addition to-the academic programs·. Flower pots and piano's
enhance the environment butthey do not "calm it down."
.
The residents of House IV do not have unreasonable demands.
.
-
They would've liked to have been informed of the decisions that
_
·.
are affecting their lives before they plan to sign,up for rooms;
.
They would like to know why a teacher's salary is being spent on
·
just their lounge and theirs alone;
·
.
.

To the Editors:
·
-
of the
_
p~per to realize the lop-
It
was indeed a pleasant sur-
si
_
ded
.
coverage
.
th_~
...,
women
prise to find an
'
article about receive.
-
Men
.
receive extensive
-women's sports
_
and a picture on articles
.
complete with ac-
'.
·
page one of section B of the last
.
.
companying
·
photos ·
while
issue of
,
The Circle.
.
_
women are fo~unate to get a few
·
The title of
_
the article,
···
sentences in the "High on Sports"
"Women's sports.
:
:Lack of
In-
column;if anything.
·
terest Hurts Progress" is
. .
-
Fall.. '77 will be the dawning of a
somewhat appropriate in relation new
_
age
·
of athletes at Marist
to the s1_tuatjon
.
at
-
Marist in
·
the . particularly
.
.
·
for .women.
:
Th~
past.
.
McCann
__
Recreation Center and
. It
is about time that the Marist
males and The Circle get
·
in ~ep
,
with the rest of the nation: and
accept
-
women's
_
sports
::
as
.
.
a.
serious endeavor
·
and one
thaf
is
.
here to
,
stay .
..
·
:
..
__
·
· .
· · .
.
·
.
.
What's wrong here is the timing. A program like this cannot
·
be introduced at the end
.
of a semester. This
is
another example
of the lack of input students have been fighting.
Listen, we support the idea. But don't pull it on us now. Bring
-it up for discussion in September. Maybe you'll get your flower
pots in the spring:
·
·
-
.
. ·
The Maris! College CIRCLS ls the weekly
·
newspaper of the students
of
Maris,
College and is publislied throughout lhe
·
school
year exclusive of v11c11!lon periods
ov
the Southern Dutchess News Agency;Wapplngers, New York.
Daniel Dromm
·
Larry Striegel

Co-Editors
In
my opirtion
·
the female
.
the complete support of the
athletes are not totally to blame Athletic Department has enabled
f~r
this
apathy
~
I do ~lieve The Maristto attract_superior female
Circle sh~res a maj~r
:
respon-
athletes for next year. It
is
our
,
.
.
'
Therefore, it
is
hoped that The
Circle will manage to
.
provide
EQUAL coverage of female ,
·
athletic contests; The women
-:
of
Marist will accept nothing else.
·
· · Sincerely,
Eileen Witt
,
Women's VarsityBasketball
-
and Tenni~ Coach
No
.
Distaff
something about the women.
.
complishinents of a
.
fevi.
·
of
us
.
.
.
,
.
:_
Five paragraphs
.
later
"I
·
had
could
be
_
recognized by the Marist
To the editors;
·
.
. _ ·
....
Jeariled statistics
·
on the mens'
community, perhaps
_
·
we
·
could
I: read my

.
first
.
.
.
~lle
..
of _
_
P]e cross~otintryand football teams;
~ultiply in number.
-
We are at
Alumni
.
Ne~
7.?
(vol. 7 no:·2) just
·
0
:
Page
14
is
.,
theJast
-
in the Alumni
.
out birtli"in womens' sports
.
here
recently; Skipping a~ead to page
·
Ne\\'s, so as I am
_
aoo.utto turnthe
. .
at Marist. I
think
that publicity
13, 1-beganto;COIJ!ilume.all that 1_
0
page
-
,
l prepare myself tc:> read and recognition could help
:
us
couldconcermng
.
athle~1cs at our about the
.
.
,
Red
Foxes Womens'
·
grow,
,
.
.

_. ....
.
_.·
·
college_.
-
.
.
.
.
" - .,
.
Varsity

Basketball
.
team.
.
·
With the opening ofthe
James
·
-
.
·
I skimmed
·
-
througp
-
.!he
first
'-
~owever,
·
once again I. am J.McCannRecreationCenter,
.
we
'. ·
three par~~·;iphs 'Ybich were on ~p~ointed. The entil'e pa~e, have the facilities
:
.
to
.
begin an
soccer,
.
~1i,mg patiently,
to
getto
~
-
'.
mcludin~
~
phot~gi:aph,
perta~
athlel:i,c
·
·
_
fut~
·
at Marist.
·.
The
the secti~n. on
0
;
womens
_
8P9~-
·
to
mens ~cer.
.
<,
.
_
success must come from within
;
:
Then
:
ga~g.
_
mt~est;
_
~
read
.
Where
:
1s the
.
J~overage . of
.
With all of your
.
help, we
~
d
-
like to
-
about the
.
<!iff1cult
-
s ~ n of~e
.
women
·
m
.
sp~rts
-
at
:
Mar1st make
-
this a
.
reality. ,
:

.
-,
~.
.
·
··
.
·
n,:ums' yars~ty basketpaU ~m.
r
.
CoUege?
..
Certru.n}y
..
there
.
.
are
..
.
.-:
.
·
::
·
· •
Sincerely,
read on,
'
stµl
.
. on the
_
look!)Ut f.~r
.•
~omen
.
alumni.
If
.
.
th~ ac-
Kathy J; Courselle
"




































































































APRIL 21. 1977
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
-
The Lighter Side
.
'
Who's
.
boss
,
Sports for everyone
_
By
Ken
Healy
bj Phil Colangelo
The process of "phasing out" of a class can sometimes be short
"Sports for everyone" was the
and sweet, or long and drawn ou~.
This
proces~
is
a very complex
theme of the speech given by
onThe U.a~only ~expert~~ any right to try to pm down and define.
~q~~l\~redi~~~ : ~
e &mple . phase out would be to attend a single class and find
,
out from the inst~~or that
his
~
the
·
kind of class
in
which the
Mccann Recreation Center on
student become§
involved;"
.
This
usually entails an extensi·ve
Sunday. Liquori said the greatest
research pa
tw
d th di
achievement of the center will be
_
_
_
~r or
o, an
e
gest~on of six to 47 relatively
its
_
availability
to
every
_
one who
ma~outh
sized,
dry
as
a strung out wmo textbooks. There
is
no
qu~tion_ that ~ter an hour and a half~flooking at the sadistic
wants to participate in a sport.
_
twmkle m the instructor's eye, and ~ess it
is
_a required major
Liquori stressed the participation
course,. you are heade
9
for the registrar's office to transfer to
of everyone. He said all over .the
something somewhat less imposing. In this case you are not
in
country
·
people are being
_
_
danger o!_losing a!ly_credi~,. or money.
-
awakened to sports they
_
can
-
-
:
~owe~er, an_d t!us
15
a critical however, you can sometimes be
play. Sports like tennis, handball
tn~ked mto sticking with a course past the legal dropping time.
and jogging are enjoying a boom
.
'.fhls can only be done by
_
~ extremely
sharp teacher. He usually
and there
is
no place· where a
-
!ntrodu<:es the course by saymg that anyone cart get a B in this class
person can go and play.
.
·
-:,
·
if
t~ey
Jtist
sh~~ up
-eyery
time and band
-
in all
·
the homework.
.
_
Liqu9ri
who
lives
m
,
a~1gnments. Simple; right? What he usually mumbles under his
Gainesville, Fla., sees money
as
_
_
_
~reath as he turns around and writes his name
·
on the board is that
taking sport from the people and
10
the
annals of this institution's history, no one has ever ranained
putting it into_ the hands of a
_
aw~kefor every class or b~en able to complete all of the homeword
select
-
-
few.-
He cited the
ass1~ents without givµig up such incidentals as sociallife other
University of Florida and the
courses, letters to mom, and a habit known as eating ....
So
he has
continuing struggle between the
-
__
you:
·
-
·
-
-
,
National Coligiate Athletic
Association (NCAA)
-
and
the
Pass-No Credit
_
Amataur Athletic Union ( AAU)
as examples ..
_
_,
Well rou have been struggling, but some of your friends ~re
in
the
''In
the time
_
I have been living
class, and you don't wantto look bad so you stick with ii:But soon
in Florida
I
have not been able to
you sta~ to doubt
_
that this is the angel you have been waiting for to
discern the
-
·difference
between
_my~te~1ously come down, whisper in your ear, and clear
.
up all the
the difference between the
- anxie;1es you
,
have ~bout what you are going to do with the rest of
University of Florida's football
your life. The doubts usually start when you get your first test back
_
team and a professional one," He
·
and you have managed to catapult yourself to the better side of
28
said the football team at the U.-of
perGeht, butjust shy of 30.
·
.
·
·
_
___
-
Florida was
.
a corporation
_
. This isn't
_the
knockout punch though
-
, because you can
just
write
separate from the school and the
<
~t
off by
_
~ay,µig
that you didn't study, or the old standby "maybe
I'll
athletic department. He also
-
-
-
Just
take 1t pa5$~po credit.
quoted their budget to be over
$4
-
-
..
-
·
pnce you ~e in
.
and
take
a course pass-no credit you have ad-
niillion a year.
·
_
m1tted de
_
feat, Your days in
·
that class are now numbered and
-
.
"Marist is different," he said. -
_
_
:
boi:~doiri sets in;
-
The
·
c!asses become long a.net painful and you have
-
The emphasis here has always
to fm~ a way to pass tlffie. A favorite
·
way would be the process of
been on participation sports."
Track coach Rich Stevens (left) talking to Olympic runner Marty
Liquori before the McCann dedication Sunday. (Photo by James
Deckner)
·
- :
J~appmg
~
fly or an a~t on
your
desk and impaling
it
with the tip of
Liquori said the
,
center was
"The true dedication of this
..
.
:
Y01;U" pen, (The latter of course could only be done with
a
Bic Fine
very impressive as a new unused
building will be by the people who
-
_
Pomt.)
-.
-
--_
_
·
:
.
-
·
- ·
-
-c.
<
_
_
_ _
-
.
·-
_
_
·
-
-

facility but the realmeaning of it
use
it.
And
I
hope someday we
:
:
-
X:
?li
,
'Ya/ifto:
:
but you
just
can't find the
'
motiv'atiori to completely
.
-
will be realized years from now
will be back here to honor an
:
-
stop coming t~ _class
:
and «~base out.•
-
~
Then it ~
_
appens, what you
when the track has begun to wear ·
_
athlete who ~gan here and went
_
have beenw~utingfor. The)pstructqr; ~ne particularly boring day,
down and
:
the basketball back-
·
on to compete in. the Olympic
-
· _
~rs
_
so~ething to the
_
effect tha:t "anyone
·
whcdinds. theiain more
boards
,
.
were
-
dirty
, -
from
·
:
the Games."
-
:
·
~ter~iiigth~nthelectlirescansimplystopcoiningtoclass'."
·
_
_
_
-
_
__
huitdre<ts
·
of
games
-
that
.
were
As
for the fued between the
-
-
-
You walko~tofclass that day with~ griri
·
on yourface; and you
-::
-
played 011
-
them;
:
-:
·
-
NCAA and
.
the AAU, Luquori
tum to ~our fnendand saY, as
·
~amatically as possible, "I'm gonna
-
-
-
·
·
· ·
·
-
teach him a lesson that he Wlll never forget.I'm
.
calling his bluff
-
and never showing up for class again. That'll
-
show him who's
·
boss;;"
-
-
-
·
L
-
ow
show
a-f
French
_
night
_
-
By
Wanda
Glenn
that is
fun.
·
-
-
I
-
"It
gives them a
-
chance· to
- _
- Contemporaxt French songs, practice their French,
it
old French ~rumental music, acquaints them with literature,
:
and a 17th ce~tury French
-
play and gives
.
them a sense of team
'
~ere all part of
.
the annual spirit," said Mme. Gregg.
Fren~h
-
night at Marist held
The evening started off on a
Thursday, April 14.
_
_
__:_
lively note with Marist
-
French
_
_
_
Appro
_
x~ately
-
100 people students playing guitars and
attended \~ two hour
affair
in
singing popular French songs.
-
Fireside Uounge,
·
according
.
to
They were
_
followed
-
by the
Madame Gregg, French teacher, Westchester Concert Trio, who
the a_ tten~ance was "pretty g
_
o
_
od, slowed tlie pace down with old
but coul have been better."
French instrumental music.
·
;~:-
urged them to settle their - dif-
ferences and begin
a
program of
amateur athletic development
that would
·
enable the United
States to regain its once high
standing in world amateur
athletics.
He
said that the Mc-
cann center was a
-
step in this
-
direction.
·
-
-
_
The r son the turnout
-
was
.
The high point of the evening
Marist Athl~etlc Director Roi:i Petro (left) and Howard Goldman, director of the phys. ed. depart-
ment, unfurl McCann Center flag during dedication ceremonies Sunday. (Photo by James
p
Deckner)
·
·
-
Browse at
T.v.
-
·
_
lower than expected
_
was because was the performance oUhe 17th
when the night was rescheduled century
.
French
·-
play "Le
·
from ~pril 5 to April 14 they did Bourgeois·
-
Gentilhomme" by
not
-
realize ~ny high schools Moliere. -
_
- - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . ; . . .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__.
- were on
-
vacation
_
and the
The
-
play is about a middle
ATTENTION
-
students would not
be
able to
-
-
class
·
man who tries to
.
buy
his
By Lal_Vl'ence Striegel
attend, according to Mme. way into upper classsociety.
·
G,:egg.
_
_
-
The 25 minute play
_
was well
),hel said the
>
high school done and the cast of seven Marist
students are invited so
_
they can students had
-
their parts
-
per-
"get to know Marist."
-
fected.
A new $600 Sears color
-
The purpose of the night, which
Even though attendance was television has been installed in
was spensored by the department
better last year, Gregg said the the Browsing Library, room 247
of modem languages is
to
get the
·
night went well, "mainly because in the ~mpus center, by the
French students at Marist in-_ of ~hat the students
-
did/'
-
Office of College Activities as a
yolved
in
_
a
.learning
experience
_
.
_
.
-
result of a
-
student plea to the
- -
-
--,
-
-
_
F
·
_
ac'
u
·
lty'
-
_
_
s
·
alary
·

d
administration for_ more on
con 1nue -
campus activities
.
.
.
In
late February, a group of
-
-
-
two-year plan devised last spring members
·
were required to put stud~ts gav~ a
list o_f demands to
b
,v
Cam
'Iii' A -
d
-
..
D
t
c· t of the1·r salary m· to
.
Marist President Linus R. Foy,
-
,
., .
_
_
PI ,
_
c1:1-
_
emic
~n
wo per _en
_
·
-
which listed, among other things,
_
Lou~s
:
Zuccar~llo and Vice the pension plan.
-
-
.
a lack
·
of. activities for resident
.
~!es1de~t
'
Edw~r~ Wa.ters:
-
:
-
Therefore,. a teacher ~mg students. At the time it was
\
-
,
.
.
U~der the or1g1nal agreement, $30,~ received_Jhe. maxunu~ suggested that a room
be
set
·
up
-
.
.
the first part_ of
.
the plan gave the $600
_
increase. Howey er• -th1s
._.
for • campus wide television
-_
,
faculty
:
a
,
_maximum _J_ncr~se of same teache~ was requir~ to put
·
viewing.
<
:
-
$600
:
O~
six
_
-
~rcent, whichever t~o
.
pe!cent
($600) .
0
t
his total_
·
_The
~rowsi_ng Library, a large
_
:
~as
-:1~~$
:
s_a1d, foy; Faculty salary mto t~e pensi~n pla~:
·
.
_
carpeted
room
used
for
,_-:-:---
-
.
.
_
,,
\
.
,.
.
.
' ·
- '
·
.
.
....
.
.....
:
..
·
:•
-
.
.

:
...
gatherings and quiet studying
was chosen and earlier this week
the television set was installed.
Senior John Blue, theater
manager,
·
said the set will be
available daily until one a.m. But
said there will be times when the
room will
be
used for other ac-
tivities.
~
The television, which measures
?.6
inches diagonally, has been
installed in
-
a wooden case to
prevent theft, said Blue.
-
He asked
.
that
students should
~e either Dolly
_
Bodick, coor-
dinator of college activities;
_
Mike
Sommar,
chief
of
-
operations; or himself in case of
technical
problems with the set
·because
it is under warranty.
-
The Admission's Office is accepting

the names of those students in•
terested in participating in the In-
ternship
in
Educational
Ad-
ministration.
Any
present
sophomores or juniors
interested
in
recruiting for the college, should sub-
mit their names and phone numbers
to the office no later than April 22.
HOOP
See Marist's
Intramural All-stars
play the
all-stars from the
Culinary insti,ute
of America
Sat.8 p.nt. in the
McCann Center
50' admission
l
j
j
j
'
I
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r
:
ri
I
\
PAGE6
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 21, 1977
faculty lounge
fil1ds
little
Use
By Cathy Ryan
faculty members expressed the
need for a place where they could
Gerry
Breen,
assistant get together infonnally.
professor of sociology says if he
.
In
the
past
most of the faculty
wants to see a student alone, he were
in
Donnelly Hall but when
uses the faculty lounge, located many departments moved to
directly across from the old Fontaine, the need for a lounge
library
in
Donnelly Hall, because became less critical, said
.
An-
there's never anyone there. thony
Campilii,
business
Breen eats lunch
in
the cafeteria manager.
and occassionally goes down to
"I rarely use the lounge, except
-
the psychology lounge because to use the refrigerator oc~
they have a coffee pot.
cassionally,"
says
Maurice
.
"I think I've been
in
the lounge Bibeau, · modern
language
about three times," says Dr. department.
/
Lawrence Menapace, chemistry
John Scileppi, psychology
department. He said he usually department said he was once
in
eats lunch at his desk. "HI want
·
the lounge for a meeting, and
·
to eat alone I can do so in my taught a few classes
in
the
office!" Menapace said if the evening, "but I never really used
facility had "the proper en- it as a lounge."
,Scileppi
eats
vironment" where people
,
felt lunch
in
the psychology lounge
comfortable he would go there. "I and sometimes goes there bet-
haven't seen any attempts to get ween classes because once again,
t>eople to use the lounge," he it has a coffee pot and reading
.
said.
·
·
materials. "It's a good place for
· The lounge once accomodated talking informally to students,
.
library staff. When they moved and· having
lunch'
with
over to Fontaine it was repainted psychology faculty and oc-
and carpeted, because some cassionally other department
Mikes Tavern:
The
Tuesday Place
·
fo,:
a hearty party.
Tuesday & Sunday Special:
15!
beer
-
$1.so
pitcher
Happy
Hou,r
Tuesday
andEveryda:y
49:
-
7

~
·
Leave Your Head to Us!
~
currt~~
0
SB with
'
.
STREAKING, FROSTING
Marist ID
.
&
PERMANENT WAVING
· ..
·
·
CALL 454-9239 for your appointment nQw
.
ON
TN■
MAIN
IIALL
~ ua■IIITY ftll■n
(Above Capitol Bakery)_
Entran~ Around Comer
Tow
Away
Warning
.....
·
.
.
.
.
•.·-
faculty,'' he said.
This seldomly used room
contains two couches, three
chairs, two lamps and several
tables.
In
an adjacent room there
is
a small refrigerator on the
.
floor with one bottle of soda in it.
Dr. Hugh Turley, biology
department was
in
the lounge
twice for meetings and ate lunch
there twice'"because no one else
was
in
the biology lab." "I nor-
mally wouldn't eat there," he faculty used it he would spend
said.
more time there. "The main
Turley said he doesn't mind benefit would be
·
casual in-
eating in the lab because "I know teraction
between
faculty
what's dangerous." Other faculty members
of
different
rarely eat
in
the lab because "you · disciplines," he added.
don't always know what's next to
When a Circle reporter ~opped
you, like a half dissected cat or a faculty member m the
.
shark, and the odor's not always psychology office to ask if she
pleasant."
uses the lounge, she was hurrying
·
He said the lounge
is
attractive to the rathskellar to eat lunch.
and congenial, and if
·other
The faculty lounge in Donn
_
elly
is
seldom used by teachers.
SUMMER IN THE CAPITAL DISTRICT
SIXTEEN COLLEGES OFFER 1400 COURSES IN 45 FIELDS
..
~
.
'
Sixteen different coUeges and universities in New York State's Capital District will offer

1400 courses this summer in 45 cultural and job related fields, Over }000 regular arid
visiting faculty at 2-year, 4-year and graduate institutions
will
teach both day and evening
courses. The Capital District is a summer resort area, ,too, famous for its performances
by theatre, dartce, music and popular
:
celebrities., With sµch a galaxy of colleges and uni-
.
versities, excellent summer,courses, and rich cultural opportunities
.
any interested student
·
can study with the !;!ars this summer;
.
.
A complete listing of these 1400 courses is contained in
·
~ single
.
publication available on
request. Sena in
_the
coupon below or tele1>hone, collect if necessary, to (518) 78~~3219
;
/
Adir
.
ondack C~mmunity College
t¥Jf.Jf.JfJf'fJfJf'fff'f¥¥Jf.'fJf.Jf.Jf-¥¥+'f'f'f¥'f'fJf.Jf.Jf.'f'f¥'f-¥\_
,'
Albany Business College
:
.
~
·
.
.1
·
.
n
-
CouncUfor the
Ad
.
vonce
·
m
·
en! ot Lifelong Leor~ing
.
..
:
TheCollegeofSaint,Rose
*
'
:
Cl
~
Box489:849NewLoudonRoodrRoute'9J --.
...
iC
Empire State College
!
·
Lolham·. New
York
.12
110
(518i 785-3219
·
·
.
t
.
Fuhon-M~~tgomery Community College
*
Please send me the "CAU. Guide to Summer Higher Education
-Jc
Hudson Yalley Community College
:
.
-
-
Credit Courses'!
.
.

. -
.
t
.
Junior College of Albany
.
.
, -
..
J
_
I would like specific infoJ
.
11}.ation from these colleges:
·
!
.
-
M~ria
Colleg~
.
.
,
!
(Ple~
_
Print)
,.
.
.
,
.
·

·
i
·
Regents External Degrees
.
_
~
- - - - - - - - ' - - - -
!
Rensselaer Polytech
-
nlc
lnstitut_e
·
. .
. .
. .
.
...
·
·

*
I was enrolled as
·
a student for the
.
Spring 1977'tenn

..,..Ves _No. -..
Russell Sage College
·
·
,
*
.
If V es, indicate school
.
+:
Sche~ectady County Community College
!
.
.
:
Siena College
·
·
*
Name
·
-ii:
S~dm<>reCoUege
_
.
·t
S~eet
,
_
~
(:tty
·c-
..
!
State University of New York at Albany
.
*
S~te
.
.
·
·
·
.
·
.
Zip
·
.
.
·
'

··
· · ,
.
-Jc
.
Union CoUege
.•
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APRIL 21, 1977
THE CIRCLE
PAGE7
Heavies and Lites trounce Ithaca
Both Marist varsity crews
'
notched their
first victories of the
season when they defeated boats
from Ithaca College on the
Hudson Saturday.
Rour,h waters later in the day
forced cancellation of both the
junior varsity and freshmen
events
.
_
-
The heavyweights came from
behind to catch the visitors and
beat them by 5.4 seconds.
The Red Fox lightweights were
in command most or-their race
and finished the 2000 meter race
some three boat lengths in front
of the Bombers.
Rowing in fairly choppy water,
the Marist heavies had a three-
.
seat lead after the start, but the
·
bombers caught up and took a
two seat ~ead after
500
meters
.
At
the 800 meter mark Marist put on·
the pressure and recaptured the
lead.
.
.
At the half, Marist held a four
seat lead and from there they
coasted to the finish, steadily
moving away to
win
by a length
and two-thirds.
Ma
.
rist Coach Gary
.
Caldwell
said the boat did well because
"they realized they not only had
to
·
row technically well, but had to
pull together also."
·
He said . the crew had been
frustrated at the beginn4Jg of the
week following their defeat by the
University of Massachusetts
resulting from whaf Caldwell saw
as their "inability to row
together," and what the oarsmen
saw
as
their "inability to go
fast."
·
.
Stickmell
.
drop
3
By
Pat Larkin
-
and
Jim
Birdas
The Red Fox lacrosse team lost three
··
of four games this week.
They beat CCNY on April:13 (17-5), bu
_
t then dropped three
s~raight games. They lost at West Point to Army
"B" (14-8) on
·
April 14, at FDU on Saturday" (7-4), and then at home Maritime
(!2-9 )
_
on Tuesday. Their ree:ordfor the season
-
now stands
1
at 2-5.
Against-CCNY the Red Foxes played a good all - around game, -
according to coach Jeff Behnke
:
·
areg Stentscored four of the
nine first half goals as Marist · opened up a 9-0 halftime lead.
·
_
Kevin McGhee added two goals in that first half. On defense
goalie Jay M.etzger made
.
some good saves while defenseman
·
G
_
ary Diesel made severaJ h~rd body checks.
·-
..
On the Army loss, Behnke said, "I thought we played some
good lacrosse." The game wastied 3-3 at the half but according -
to the coach, '
1
They jl!Sf; wore us down
m
the second halt and
.
took·controH>f the game." Stent, Marist's leading scorer of tlie
season with._18 goals, led the
.
Red Foxes with three goals
·
while
.
·
Dave Stieger added two more
.


·
·
.
'
·
Stent was oiifof the lineup in the FDU defeat, suffering from a
pulled muscle. Coach Behnke attributes

the low
·
scoring to
Stent's abs~nce but added
,
"We missed a lot of opportunities
when we had the extra man attack
,
and that hurt us." Behnke
also said goalie Metzger and Bernie Delbello played very well on
·
defense. McGhee sparked
.
Marist with
·
twb goals while Mike
Colluci and D_elbello added one apiece.
.
·
Too
.
inany penalties
_
were blamed for' the loss to Maritime .
. ..
McGhee scored.the opening
.
goal for
_
the
.
Red Foxes
.
but the
..
.
_
visitors answered with the
.
next
·
three goals.
.
·
The Red Foxes cutthe halftin1elead to 6-4 as Stent scored the
last two goals of the first half.
_
.
..
Maritime opened the second half with two
·
goals within a
But Caldwell switched some of
his athletes within the boat and
that seemed to do the trick.
The coach said senior George
Schafer was having problems
with a hyper-extended elbow and
was switched to the port side and
·
back from six seat to three seat.
Co-captain Chip Riordan was
switched to the starboard side
and put into four seat. Sophomore
Tom Clifford took Schafer's spot
in six seat.
"Both of them (Schafer and
Riordan) are rowing technically
better on the new side
;'
' said
·
Caldwell. "Their power ap-
plication
is
more defined, and
they are rowing at 98 percent
effectiveness." He added that the
boat would probably remain the
same for the present.
In
the lightweight race, Marist
fell behind by two seats after the
first 25 strokes, but then fought
back and led by half a length
after 800 meters.
During the race the Hudson
became steadily rougher and
both crews rowed somewhat
sloppily, splashing and even
momentarily losing control of
their oars.
Marist took three "power
l0's
·
during the first half of
the race, and a "power
20"
at the
1000 meter mark. After 1200
meters they led by a length, and
had opened their lead to three
boat lengths by the end of the 2000
meter race
.
The win was the first for the
Red Fox crew
, -
-
which was
defeated by Princeton by three
lengths a week earlier.
"The race was a question of
who made the most mistakes,"
said Caldwell. "But I don't think
the lightweights rowed badly.
In
the past Ithaca has had little
trouble with lightweights, and
their boat was set when they
raced us at Morris Harvey
College earlier this spring when
they beat us with little trouble."
The freshman race was started
but after 200 meters Ithaca's
·
eight became swamped and the
crew had to abandon their shell.
The oarsmen had to be picked up
by judges and observers in
nearby motorboats.
Marist
will
travel
to
Philadelphia to race Temple
tomorrow before returning to
host Connecticut on Sunday.

minute and thirty seconds, extending" their lead to 8-4. Stent
scored 3 goals later in the third period, but Maritime matched
that withthree more, making the score
-
11-7 entering the fourth
period.
.
-
-
,
.
-
-
_
In thEdinal quarter, McGhee and Stent each added a goal to
Red Fox defenseman Jim Bohren looking to
.
bring ball upfield in Tuesday
'
s 12-9 home loss to
Maritime. (Photo by Joe Gigliotti)
make the final score 12-9:
·
·
·
·
··
.,
.
·
The Red Foxes will tjash with defending Knickerbocker
Conference champ Dowling in Oakdale ori Saturday. Marist will
then play Fairfield on Leonidoff Field next Wednesday (3:30
p
.
m
.
)
-
.
Cindermen held in

blocks
·
LETTERS Continued
·
- - - - - -
By Jim Nystrom
students have been duped by the to athletes at Marist is the an-
administration
.
The
·
tuition has nouncement of NCAA Division II
The Marist track team has
·
risen after you have registered status.
been struggling through its first
for next semester.
I say ~ou
This is indeed a giant leap few meets· after one week of
because I am graduating.
forward. Having been fo:tuna~
.
competiti~n its dual record
But don't fret.
It won't happen enough to co~I;>C~e three tunes_ m stands at a dismal 2-4.
In
reaction
·
again.Dr. Foy has said next year the NCAA D1V1s1on I~, I realize to this poor start co
.
ach Stevens
students will be told of tuition
·.
the advanc~me~t being mad~. remarked,. "The team has good
increases before registration,
But what I don t un~erstand 1s quality but lacks quantity." They
Of
co~rse the new Ma~ track why? Cro5:3 c~untry
IS
proba~ly have •some strong perJormers
was gomg
·
to be built many th~ most wmrung s~ort at Ma~st.
·
who can pick up first places, but
Ill"onths ago
_
too.
.
·
It 1s probably _the highest caliber there is nobody to grab the
Butthepointofthisletter
,
isnot
·
of the now existing teams at second's and third's and that
is
one of
ill
feeling
;
Rather, one
_
of Marist.
-
.
.
where meets are w~n or lost
.
warm feeling. I
.
would like
to
The
-
cross country team cer-
The dual season started last
,
.
thank aU the people who chanted ~inly
is
not i:eady to jump "into
t
.
Wednesday at New Paltz against
my name, ~nd my teammates
.
higher league. There(ore, I don t the
·
Hawks and Siena. The Red
name's during the four years I
·.
think other athletes are ready for
·
Foxes captured 5 first places but
_
have raced on the
~9:ss
country the
·
change~
.
.
.
.
·
·
-
poor
.
depth
_
hurt them as Siena
team.

·
I cannot . thank you
·
a~
My unde~standing 1~ t~at cross won the mee~ with 89 points,
-'
enough
.
for rooting, because i
_
t country will not receive any while Marist was second with 52
was
_
additionalfu~lfor us, in the scholarship mone~ for recruiting. and New Paltz had 37 points.
closmg
of
_
a . race,
that Yet basketball will. Why? Why Despite the lopsided loss to Siena
.
regen~rated our bred souls. .
only basketball?
~
.
(who Marist beat 62-23
.
last year
I thinak you too fo~ cheer~
·
\Vl}Y
when bas~etball had a ~d on its way to a perfect 9-0 season)
me
_
and others oi:i m tenrus. year. And ;why
IS
basketball. so there were plenty of fine in-
.
Although the fans are often rude graced !fith money to give dividual performances by the
at
·
.
home matches
I know they
scholarships and not la crosse, Mai:ist track men. Pete VanAken
mean well.
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
s~cer, tennis, football
,
trac~,
_
led
.
the.way by winning the shot
But I would
.
like to
.
especially crew or any of
.
the women s put and the javelin; he broke
his
tha~k !he facuJty
_
·
and the
.
sports
.
.
.
.own school record in the shot put
president of Marist,-
·
who have
·
If
money is not evenly with a toss of 42' 11
½".
Keith
alway~
.
sh_owed a continued and distributed, there will_
be
many Millspaugh turned in a
.
fine early
1µ1ending support toward
.
c~oss angered athletes_ on this campus. season -time in
.
the half-mile,
country.
'.
.
,
·
.
A!}~. why
a
..
~sketball
·
winninginl:59.DaveSchoolsand
.
And it was
-
my -pleasure m exhibition
.
tour to
,
Europe,
as
Pete Velz also
·
won their events:
winning
races
·
·
·
at Marist,
.
and

planned?
··
·
.
.
·
·
·;
the intermediate hurdles and
·
the
·
Saturday the team traveled to
Westfield State (Mass.) for a
meet with four other schools
.
They finished a disappointing 4th
behind Westfield, Salem state
and Eastern Connecticut state.
This meet was a_lmost a repeat of
Wednesday. Marist again had
some great individual efforts but
they didn't have the numbers to
realistically challenge the other
·
teams
.
Millspaugh and Fred
Kolthay continued to run strong,
each setting a school record in his
event. Millspaugh ran a light-
ning-fast 1:56
.
7 half and Kolthay
broke his own record in the 3-mile
coming across in 14: 56. 7.
VanAken became the.first Marist
trackman to qualify for the 1977
NCAA Division III cham-
pionships as he heaved the
hammer
.
162' 5".
~eing Dr. Foy congr~tulate the
..
·
ll~ve Marist
_
a
tired warri~r .
.
poJe
.
vault;
·
respectively. The
team for
_
a fine pei:formance.
·
.
I have
.
tasted defeat, but will rrieet was lost
·
in the sprinting and
.
.
: ;
.
Now,-wi~ the ne~
rormnasium,
.
.
hopefully_
:
nev~r
.
be
i
o".er:co~e by
.
_
.
jumping events, as
·
Marist
· .
.
·
·
,
wiU come
ll
_
n~w
.
era f<>~ spo~ at
.
defeat
:
·,
·
.

·
·
:
·
.
.
·
·
·
......
.
participants
·-
were almost "non-
;
·
·
Marist.
-
The
·
most dolllll'lant
·
~dea
·
·
-
·
·
_
·
Fredep~k L. Kol9tay existent."
·
._
.
·
-
-
-
As you can determine by these
performances, Marist's track
team has talent but there simply
isn't enough of it to win most
meets. The irony of the situation
is that there is
·
so much track
talent on campus, it's ridiculous.
The reason that these people
aren't out competing is one·of the
biggest questions surrounding
the team; but until tlley start
·
coming out Marist will continue
losing dual meets.
·
Stevens is looking forward to
the championship meets later on
in the season because he feels
"we have the top-notch talent to
score points in the big meets."
Marist's next meet is a
·
"big"
one, the Iona Relays on Saturday,
with the "last" CACC cham-
pionships coming up Wednesday
at Kings.
.
'•

·
'
••'
,
·
·

.
•.
'
.
·
..
,
.
.
..
.
,
.
.
..
• .. ; • •;. •
,

·
•. •
.
..
:.
• .
.-..
~

.


.
,••
,
•:•;'; •
.•
.

,

• ,•
·
·
,
•~
·

'.:

.•
·
,

~•
r:
,•

,
·
·
;',
-
,
,
,
_';
>).::./,:";.':.'
.~
;
:~ .. :.
,
./_
.
;
·,
.
;•
_-:
:
:.

.
....
































































































\
.
l_
PAGE8
THE CIRCLE
_
Netters
_
·
win 3rd
str•igh,
·
t
Dedrick, Chris Curran, Jolin King Saturday's 7.:2 deleat over
·
and Kevin
Schmitt
then com-
.
Dowling
.
here. Other singles
_
Sweeping all five singles
/
bined to
.
win
two of the three winners were Johnson, Brittis,
matches; the men's tennis team doubles matches.
:
·
· .
.
.
McKee and
.
Brickowski.
· ,
By
Tom McTernan
APRIL 21, 1977
.
.
High On Sports
By Thomas McTernan
INTRAMURAL STARS AGAINST CULINARY SATURDAY
The Intramural All - Star basketball team swings into action
Saturday night .when they play the Culinary Institute in the
McCann Center at
8
p.m.
.
·
The team, selected at the conclusion of the intramural season
in February, is comprised of Bob Fitzgerald, Keith Yearwood,
.
Mario LaPaix,
Doc
Morrison, Sal DePahna, Rich Crump, Jeff
Hackett
;
John Mccarthy, Kevin Geraghty, Chip Erhardt, Tom
.
Luke and Greg Giles.
.
.
.
.
.
.
The All - Stars are next scheduled to challenge the varsity
_
-
basketball team on Wednesday night a_t 9:15 p.m. in the Center.
LAJEUNESSE
.
RECEIVES CACC HONORS
.
remaine? undefeated in the
-
. ''We played
.
v~ry
O
·
well in
CACC with an 8-1 romp over smgles,'' said coach Eileen Witt
·
Women
Diop
Opener
-
Varsity basketball center Neil Lajeunesse was selec~ed last
·
Nyack at home Tuesday.
It
was noting that Nyack won more tha~
.
-
·
.
_
.
.
-.
_
_
·
_
_
week to the CACC all - star team. He
is
the last of a long line of
·.
the third win in a
.
l'.(?W for the
.
Red
·
.
-
on,e game
·.
_in
·.
just
·
one
,
of the
.
:
.
_
Martha Trabulsi
.
was
the only
-
,,,.
.
Red Foxplayers to be so h<>nored, since Marist has dropped out
.
_
Ji'.oxes,
:
'Yho ~
.
d opened
_
the thirteeI1 sets
_
played
; _
Refe~ring !o b~ght spotJn the women's loss to
of the
.
conference, effective next month.
-
-
_
·
.
seas1>n
·
with two strrug~t

losses.
_
the team's cUJ;ren_t 3
~
2
.
record,
-
she
.:
$1ena, with
.
a
·
str/iight set victory
.
·
:
Dave
.
Nelson of Bloomfield was chosen as Player
·
oUhe Year
·
The womel}, meanwhile! were
:
a~ded, ''We played otir toughest
-
in the
,
singles sect
!
on.
-
.
_
·
·
in tlie vote of conference coaches~
.
..
·
_
def~ated by Sienti 4-1 on Fr1day
:
in
.
opponents
.
(Qu~~piac
:
an~
·
New .
. ;
_ ._ Buf Witt
<
explainea

''We were
.
·
.
Lajeunesse,
a
junior from Troy
;
N. Y.~led Marist (8-16 last
t~e1r se/iSOI!... opener

at
·
Loudon-
.

.
Haven) at the
.
start and have had_-._- bot
_
hered
·
by the
_
40
_
m.p.h. winds
season)
_
with averages of 17.4 points aQd 9.3 rebounds per outing.
-
vdle:.
-
Y~tefclaY both the men
~
s
.
l:m
_
easier tiine in our last three and
_
most of our
.,:
players-·were _
_ ,
Thes-:6 front court standout also was selected to the:E.C.A.C
.
and ~omen
~Jeams
·
played host
<
matche~. "
,
.
•· __
.
--
<-
playing in their
.
first
,
collegiate
"
.
Division.
iII
weekly all - star team
·.
guring the season and
_
to ~gs;
·

·
· ,
_
·
-
•·
. ·
-·_-
>
.
Thewmskem
-
started with a
5-4 match
"'
W:~ll
get better
.
as the
received !'specialmention"
.
in NewYcirkStateDivision
ill.
.
·
_
:
_John
-
McGraw; the top-raiik¢d squeaker at Bard on friday that
.
season goes along
.
"
_
'
.
-.
-
,
·
. ·
__
Fo~ard John McKee and guard
Glynn
Berry also received
mef!'s . player,
-.
Jed
-
~
-
th~
_
march
-
l\'as decid'ed
iri
.
doubles
'
play,
:
in
~
Tomor:row the women travel·
·
ment~on in the CACCballoting. The i:emainder of the conference
c1g~~
-
.
~yc1c~
·
.
.
with
·
ru.s
.
·
fi_fth
:
.
.
which
-
l\1
_
arist
:
took
'
_
two
:
of
-
-
the
.
'.
-
crosstown to play: Vassar
·
while

team includes· Bob Kaible
·
and Rich Hernandez (Dowling), Jack
.
st
r
a1gh! wm;
,
a6-,,
6-0 trouncm~
_c:.:
three
.
matches
,
-
:_;
McGr'aw,
,
An-
.
.
•~
tlie
_
men
_
hcist C.W;
.
Post(3 p.m.).
-
Guerci
.
an(Denrtis
-
Lynam
(St.
Thomas), Bill Heard (Bloom-
over
.
Dave Gfu.rtore. ~ay
.
Roberts,
:
thony
_
.
Johnson
- .
and
.
·
.Walt
·
.
Bloomfield coines to
.
Marist for a
.
·
field), Eric
,
BergstoL(King's), Joe Ricke (Nyack) and Paul
Fred J{olt!Uif, John
'.
Brittis,
.
?ohn
>
Brickowski had ~on
·
m
singles
as
.
l!leii
_
's
••
contest
.
on
-
-
Saturday
·
(1
.
:
.
·
J\!artinsen (Wes Conn)
;
_
.
.
.
.
-
.
McKee
-
and_Johp
,
Gay1gan
_
the~
-
Red
:
Foxes
:
split
:
the
-
.
~ix p.m.) with_ Fairfield next on
--
-.,
c~mpleted the
,
Manst
~
~weep in matches.
·
·
·
"
·
,
.
.
.
>
· -·
:·:.
. _
_
.-114ortday(2 p.m.)
.
Next Tuesday_
C.U.B
."
SOFTBALL·
sn~gles. :.~-
-
.
..
:·~
--- :
--~
-
-
-
..
.
_.
:..
·
_
-
__
M~raw
."
;.
1
_
e<f
<
-
fiVe
.
.
_:·
.
Red
~-
:
_
~ox _·boih te~
_-
will
;
play
=
at
·
~po.
.
.
-..
·
··
. ·
Four· different" players;
.
,
~ay
_
soloists in the victory column in·
·
· .
. -•-.
:
.
i _
>
.
.
.
··
·
.. :
·
· :-
·
.
.
A hecti
_
c, seven,. game SGh~dule yesterday closed out the first

·
·
.

·
·
·
·
· ·
·
· ·.· ·
·
·
·
·
··
week of th~ men's· softball league sponsor
_
ed by. the College
.
--
-
:
'
.
1/
.
.
·-
.
.


)
:
.
.
-
:
.
,
·
Top-ranked Maristnetter John McGraw cues
in
on a shot against N"yack's Dave Gilinore.-McGraw
_
wonmatchheldhere'.filesday:
·
(Ph~to
by
Joe
.
Gigliotti)
:'
.. ·
·
.
·
_
-
-
· -
·
·
. ·
_
_
-·.
-~
·
.
.
.
--
.
.
..
~
-
-
U..nion Board.
-
-
.
>--
_
.
.
.
.
,
·.
.
.
.
_
_
_
·
·
..
.
_
·
-
·
Nine
.
teams ~re
_
vying foflhe four playoff spots, which will be
.
.
awarded tot~ m,ruiing ~earn
iri
each division.and the next two in
-
·
either ~vision
.
with tlie best recoras.
·
T,he two - day playoff-
.
-
schedule
:.:
is
slated to
-
begin next
.
Thursday
.
·
-- ·
·
·
·
.
_
AfterMoriday;s g~Iries;_ihe ,
;
Walkaways" held the top spot
lil
:
the East
·
Divisi
_
or\ \Vith wins over
.
"Bonds Boys" (7-3) and "The
,
Runs''
.
(~1).
.
.
·
,
.
·
·
c
·
. ·.
Iri
theJ<iligh West Diviaj_on~the undefeated ''Glory's Boys" and
. '
'
'
Ac~
·
.
Heads»metyesterdayto provide an early - line playoff
. faycirite. ''CHory's_Boys_'~ recoJ:"ded
~ns
over "The Banjos"
(13-
.
>
l
)'
and
\
'13<>n_d's Boys''
.
(4-3),·whUe
:
th~ "Ace Heads" were vie-
.
t~rious
_'.
ov~~
/
.
'Erm Stone~~:_;(14~).
.

lNTRAMURAL
ROUNDUP
.
-:
The
'
!
Boys
;-'
-
and Sheahan
are
the early frontrunners
-
in coed
softball
with
three
wins
apiece~ as
:
both
·
bounced
back
with
wins
Mon~y:
.
.
after losing last Thursday.
_
·
.-
'
·
.
-
·
"
O''.Qte Boys''. dropped a
s-:3
decision to "Fifth Floor Frosh but
then
'_
edged the ''New Hope Players"
2:J.
-!'\fter losing 5-2 to "J -
Bonics"
,
Sheahan
·
was
·
awarded

a
·
,
_
forfeit win over the
"Yankees":
.
..
Right behind the leaders are "Fifth~ Floor frosh" arid
.
"J -
Bonics"
·
each with a
2-1 record.
.
.
·
:
In meri's floor hockey, th~
:
<'Slosh" leads the East after edging
.
''Nay Play" 1-0 Monday rught: But they have yet to face - off
:-
with the p
_
owerful "Jappers
_
Killers," ·who
-_
demolished "Nay
.
·
Playl> by an 8-lcount.
·
··
.
·
c

·
.
.
-
Mciriday
'
s other game saw the &'Oark
'
.
Horse" blank "Ace
Heads''
3-0.
.
.
.
.
-
.
~
.
.
_.
.
.
.
·
--
,
·
.

~4LSPAUGH NAMED
'
ATHLETE
..
OFWEEK
,
·
.
~
i
_
~ith
Ml~atigh,
a sophonio~ifrotn Wilden: N. Y., has been
·
nam.ed Manst_follege Athlete of the
·
Week for the week ending
April 16.
.
· . . . .
:
_
.
. _
.
·
· ·
_
-:
_
·
·
_
_
...
Millspaugh,
_
a middle -dist:a°nce runner on the Marist track
.
team, set
a
new school record for the
_
880 yard run with a 1:56.7
·
ciockm,g
_
in a meetatWestfield State on Saturday.
·
NOTES
FROM
.
THE
~PO~TS DE~K:
, .-
/
.
~
-
.
..
Tomorrow's
weekly
track team drawing is to be the final of
the
.
yea~ ~nd ~ll feature
:
$8'.75 in pi;izes, with a $500 first prize
.
The d!awmg will take place
_
au
_
p
.
m .
.
ou~ge the team's trophy
case
in.Donnelly Hall...
.
•.
·.'
.. ·.
·
·
.•
·
.
·
-
~eeting Jor_aU ~andidates for the 1977
·
cross ._· country team
tomght at 9 p.m.
qi
D,onnelly
,
RO()Ill
'
206 ...
·
.
·
·
·
-
·
...
·
_
_
.
All (,!Oach~ have_been sent ballo
_
t~ for the CffiCLE's annual
.
·
Athlete qf the
,
Year ~ward. The winner will be
-
announced in next
.
.
·
week's e~tioil.
·
··
·
·
·
·
·
· ·


18.19.1
18.19.2
18.19.3
18.19.4
18.19.5
18.19.6
18.19.7
18.19.8