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The Circle, January 27, 1977.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 18 No. 11 - January 27, 1977

content

·
.

::
;
_
.
.
-~~:</·
Welcome
.
·
back.
·
for·
Spring
.
·
Semester
1977
.
.
,.
Tll
-
E CI
-
RCLE
.
.
MAiUST
.
COLLE.GE, JJ,O.UGH.KEEPSIE, JV.EW. YORK 12601
·
JANUARY 27,
.
1977
For
..
Mc~aa,ri
i
Cente
·
~
-
·
--
·
.
~
-
..
·
-:
~.
·
:
----:
'
,
~.-
,
·

'
.
'
:
.
#!aii$,C
_
jlj9l'f
E
$~00,0f10.

.
_
.
.
By Dani~J.l)ronmi
:
.
·
.
.
;
:
·? .:
-iotnpietio1f.
of
'
the
-
~

complex
'
shortage:~ ~t
::
~eople
.
ire n<>t
_
·
·
·
-
-
-
-
·
_
'
<
·
.
_
,
:
,
:,. :,.:)
,
:-:':
)riay
contiilue
;
on schedule
:
:
·
· ' '
sending
··
in
'.._
tjleir
:
'
Pledges
:
and
·
.'Skip''
·
~ldrich'
Dies
at
>
&O
-
TheCIRCLE
_
hasle_arned
-
frorii
.
.
·
;;
Althotigh
·
completi<inhad been
_
org~tio11Sare
:
notaswillliigto
. . . .
.
.
.
.

.•
.
·
,
..,.
,
,
.
·
.
.
.
reHabl
_
e
/
$
_
Ou
_
rc~s
_;
that
\
~ar.ist
:
,~
pr
.
omiseQ
,
ear.J:i~rJo
r.
Jhe
·
Spnng
.
c9n~bti!e to
:
th~
-i
~~llegt?' ftlrld ~s
>
·
.
.
_
·.
·
.
By
Jeff
Benedict
J
-
bystanders
·
co\rered . the victim
.
.
.
.
C<>llege
.
.
~
;
shQrt
$9q(),000
j
~
J
~~
,'.
}
l7
.,
seIJ1ester;
::;
1t
·,-
no,
.
i
l<>o~
:,:
as
· •
.s
.
omuru~ht ~av~ ':Vant;e
.
d..
,
.
'
'<
,
-
:
>
.
··.
and
Regina Clarkin
.
.
·
with
·
:white

aprons to keep
·
_
him
.
for
,
the
;<
McC.anµ;,
.;
Recreation
,
:

though only
.
the po,olarea:will be
~-
At
Jl!e
.same
~
tinie,
>.
Thomas
-
.
.
,
·
,
·
.
>--
·•
•.···.•
.
·
.
warm.
.
.
.
·
· ·
·
·
~enter,,.\V~Cl(~:_1:iemg
.
~~t fr~i,r):
;
·
:
¢9mplit#d:by
Aprl}.
:\
... :.it,,,,
·.
.
.
wade;
'.
cfu:E!ctor,
/
~td~~(!lOp~«:nt,
_
·
.
·
R~ssen

·
·
!'~kip'
'.
-
.
.
A_ldrich,
~.
a
.
An
;· .
.
Alamo
·
ambuiance
.
.
.
·
. ·
;
$2,Q!!0,000
m lJI'an~ rec~1y~~_(r5!.II1
:;,
,;.-
?
'.!'.tie
.
T~as9n }\ff,U;IS~}$
,
J
~ho,rtof
~
and helld,of,JhE: g,p1tal
,
c~~~l.l .. Ma~t
• .
College
.
secunty sqper-
.
_
responde
·
d to the scene af
9:07

.
~~e
+
l'dcCann
0
fo!1,D.da~10.n
\.
along
,'.'
me>ne:1;1S.b~~~
·
~
'
tl..!!=!
.:
c~~1gn
::
.
·.
has••·'b~E!Il
>:
~~o~
.
o~E!9
/•
t<>_
0
an ·•vj,sordiedthispastMonday.-._while
'
aJn.,
arid
.
tht{technicians,
·
under
..
·
.
\Vlth
;
anoth~r.:Pr?Jected
_
$?,OQO,~
..
::
.fu~g,
;;
,,
,
<>r.gB;p.IZ~~ '
.
·;
~Y.
\:~
J9e
;
. e~e~u~t'Ve}_lE!v~I
r
.
~R~
J
~OSl~~
.
Oil, -on;
1!Js
.
_
Jvay
;
to
·:
~ve~gate:
.
a
the
·
supervision
:
·of

John
Wagner,
·
:..:,:
~atc~ed
,
by the
·
colleg~
:
l~~~•
>·<
y
D
.
ex.eiop~~nt
,.
9ff!<;
,
e ~n
p:p:ipµs,
. ·
,
\Vlthin the co~e~e
.
,t
~f
i
:
··
-
;~
,
.
_
parking
.
problem_
..
m
:
the Cham-
applied
_
artificial respiration and
·.
·
.
~
:
-In a11 unpr~cedented ll_love,}he
: , ::
h~

!lot beE!~ras
.
suc~E!ssfi1l ~s
ha,~
.:.
_
,:
,Dr\
':
~oy
.
wa
.
~
.:
Jlll~Vailal>le
:
for
·
pagnat lot.

He
.
was
60.
.
.
·
.
electric shock.
,.
-
;,-
·
.
boai:µ ~f
.
trustees
:
has.
-
~p!Jto~ed
,,-:
:,
pE!~~
'.
e~l!Cte~;
.
a~
_
c~
t
~s
.
tc,: oµr
i
C!<>~m
.
~nt
•:
~tpre~
:
.t~~
<
::
::/
;
:
.
'
Tf:le cause of
.
death was
termed
·
-:
.
Waters had Father LaMorte
;'
of
-
.
·
.
~fatf·
;
1
iff~~
ti!
~~
f
\
Ir
~
i
,
~£t
~
J
J~i;;
t
1
h
,~
~

FJ"f
:\{ts.:{1t
t
'.
0
·
· .. ·
·
·
·
•·•··
~:::J~;,~;!!!~

·
fi!.t~~-:;;,:~
..
.
;
WB
'.
ter-$
:;::
O.W
}~~
s,
~
~Qti
.
til
:;.:
(ibi.
;
f
.
-
~:
.
.
-
~?~i~~i~~£~Jf ~
th
;::::
:
.
:
.
;i:r
.
::
t
~:rr::c::
.
:
.
::f:~::
-
.
.
·
.
·
-
:.::•
.
, ·
·
.. ·
·
·
,
,
,;:
.
····
· ·
.
.
·.
.
·
'.
.
. -
·
.
. ·:
·
,;
.
...
,
..
.
..
-
·
~
..
.
·
,
,
:,:, '
.
.
.
.
.
·
last
.
·saw
,
Aldrich
1
.
at
8:30
a;in;,
_
at Marist
for
six
.
months anti
.
,:.(_
.
.
.
·: ·
·
·
.
·
·
·
.
-
'
-
·
·
·
·
_.
'
-
·
-
·
·:---
·
·
-

--
.
'.
when he told
·
the deceased to workedJoi)nterstate Security,fa
·
·
.
.,:
.
By
Regina
C\arkiil
..
'
.
:'::
.

·
.
',
~-
Anot~¢rjir~gr~
·-
impl~eiiteci ~
-
duty:· Thifourtll
'
guatd
-
~orks the . , check
.
par~~
..
in
.
the . Cham:.
C
Potig~e
·
epsfo

before that
"
.
·

.
·.
·.
. .
.
,.
. .
...
<
>
i
·

.
·:
·~.
.
..
,.:
,
S~<i~y
~
was
·
a,
sttaight'w:ork ~hift
:
,
swing shiftwhi,¢h
fills
the off.days P~~~ua.t
:
. :·
':
'
>< ;:
::c,-'
·
.
_
·
Russell

Aldrich lived with
his
An
ex New:.YorkSt~te
.
Trooper
'.
.
forJheJour f@. tµt1e gtiards

<
of the other
·
g
·
µarqs.
·
.. :
.
. · ·
.
·.
-,
}
·
_
,
a~¥ed htin
:.
t?
.
check
:
the
·
wifeMajori~ e>n Parksville Road
;
.
.
·

·
~
_
.
was
:
hired
:
by

Marist:Coll!=!ge
:
a,s
··
·
\
:
·
_
one guaf<i
.
:will. worl
(
the
4
p
;
m.
.:

,
,
J\ccordintto
,.
.Wclt~rs
.
Jli!,S
.\
plan
;,
parking l~t f~l'.
:
/
1
1,
olators ~ho Plea~nt Valley: He served in the
.
.
'i';_:
··
.,::
·
::
director
·

ofSec,urity
.
<_
Jo~~ph
('
J;
.
A
.
oJ2a .
.
01.
·
~hift
.
as
.
hi
(
$teady
·
four impleni~!lts
.
'.
be~
f
ftµictiomngof
·
..
were
:.
pa,rkirig
:
:
nea~
::
the
,
Joa~g
.
Nav'y'
,
durii:tg
:
.
world
·
War
-
II
·
and
·
·
,
;.:
..
<
·-
:,
.Waters
~
,
a 20 year
~
yeteran of th~
f<
of
~tity
.'~
T!i
e,:
:
second
·
guard
:
will
the persqIU1eL
:
'.
:
<>
.
· :
.
·
'.'.;
,c
,
,
pla~t
.
f.o~m
;~
:
and

<
blockmg
·
'thE!
:

K()rean
·
War
/
0
and wa~
.
·
a
f
tJ/
.
• .
'
-
.•
·
:
State
.
:
'
'I'r._(?opers
;
:
asswried
.
-
J
lit:i
,
:'
·
.
wor~the
,
1~
·
a
:
n
i':
to
.
~a:m;
:
shift
as
·
.
.
,
.
·
..
Jnt!]e tamp~
:
<;~n~r-Waters
.
is
-
,
~eliveru~s

.
.
.
·
~ai~
:
W:ater~
_.
:,.- .. -.-
..
.
memp_e
r:
:
ofthe ;Insh:~
.

Am~9~an
.
.
.
p
··:
.
.
. .
.
:~
P.<isitio!}
.
oµ,;Jan.
}2
.-;_
:
/
:
,
.
· •:
.
.,
::
.i
f :
a, s~ea~y
~ou
r.
¢ dy.ty
_
and
th~
th#"
.
d
~
_
;i
~tjt9ting
;
a
/
s~~a}~h
[
i
{O.W:
c.
ti6ur
,:'-'.,
~~
.
c
appron~~el?
,
9
.
,,
a:ztt
.
!
a
,
91ub
,
-~ Po~ghkeeps1~
.
;
c
.
:
.
.,
_
_
_
.
f
T
?,

.

. .
'
As director
::
ofsecur1ty ;

Water:,
..::
,
gua,rd
wiU
w
.
ork
,:
the
.
8
·
a.m
,

to
,
.
4
.
sh!,{t
-
f()z-
:
student
;,:
guctrtis
;
·:}
The
O •
driver..
.:
lor
;
P.~~
.
10
J
;_
.
~k,ecy,

~~o
.
-
..
He
.
~ sury1ved by
t¢;
w
_
ife, two
I
;
:,
.
·
has implem~ntedprocedlll'.es,;that-
,
;'
p
:
pi.

.
slµft
~
as
,
his
:
steady

toi1r
:
of
,:
·
guards
.
will
be
'
'i-¢qwred
.
·
to
wear
.
;
..
was
•;-
~kin~
..
~
:
.
.
d~livf?cy!
'.
,
Wit~
:
::·
daughte
r
s;
:
·
M_i:s
;:
,
Katllryn
,
P.
·
j
1
L
>. ·
.
p
i:
ovide ~~r.th~ I>¢.rsoria:Ijiafety
~
of
.
·'},Y
;
.
:
··
·
~-.c·
>
·.:
;
:
c
·
.
·
.
.
·
.-
,
__
.
identific~tfi>h
/
~f~
.<
~ ~ and
·
nesse~
~l~~c~
J
a~~
,
g_own
.
the
,
·
::
Eim.endorf
;
<,.
Clinto_n; and Mrs
.
-
.
\
f
:.
·
,
.
,:,'
thestudents
··
~the student.f
;-
per-:-
:
.
.

,
name
.
tags
:.
w1th
;
p1ctures.
:
i•:'
.
;':
.

.
,
.
step~
.
.
)ea~g
;
~?W1.1
••
}nto Jhe
.
·
J9r1e
.
VclnW:agei;ien,. Pleasant
·
.
.
...
i
.
·
Also
--.
a
'
ftilr--time
:
security
guard
·
-
-
guards
J
1e
_
has
-
met so far.
!
'
·:
·-
-
.
·r
-
.
·
o
··
·
.
jJ
.
s
·--
,
·:-
·
.
--
.,

,
.,
,
-
,
:
L
-
IJe
·
d
··
·
/
;~k
~
f~
,.
f~j\i~f
f
ff
:
·
f}PI~~
.
~t
.
i
e~!/~i~~~e~~
~
~~':;t
'
c~!i
;
r

-
Q
" '
·
.
,
-
.el!-lflCe
.
:
ro~
.- ..
.
.
'.
The
,.•
'
(student)
'
gua
~
~~
/
will
_
an~hin~."ThE
r
:
~~!lllerin which
· .
·
.
-:'::'
.
..
.
.
.,
'
.
-
-
.
'.
..
function much better
.
ifthey
:
are
.
the
.
·
Job IS
~
clone

is
.
important.

<
:
c
BY:CatlifRyan.
··
<
.
.
.
-
whl~li
,_
apparently
·
netted
$488
.-
t~
. in thefr
•·
owi1 dorins;''
:,
said
.
--
-~'Everything
·
·.
can't
:
·
be
<
done
--
-~~dJeff!Jenedict
cash.

-
.
.
:
Waters; they
will
recognize
,
.
yesterday!!:
<
s
.
aid
-
Wafers
·
·,
hr
'.
.'
Another
'.
·
$100
wa~. ·.
rep~rtec_l
·
.
-
people
_
and
.
if
.
there is a need
.
.to

:
referen~e
-
to
J1is_
pr~orities
·
:
·
.
.
,
'!'.he
:
CIRC:LE
has
,
leifrned from
·
stolen
'
from the cash box in
.,
the
sumnioJi
':
for
.
·.
help
i
they
;
will
'
be
·
·-BefQ_re
.
,,
c~zn1ng
,:
to
j
M.arist;
·
r'E!li~ble
'
sources ofa
.
bµrglary'. in
cafefena
'
office
·m

a.
:
robbery
.
'
s~m~m,n~
cla
_
ss
.
·
mates
\
and
.
.
:
c~~tinhcii
~~
p;g
~
i,
,
tne
·
~thskel~~r last
.
weekend
.
.
.
.
·•
,
.Con
.
tinu
.'
.
ed
.
· ·
.
.
.
o
.
·
..
n
..
'
·_
P
.
.
a
·
·
.
g
:
.
'
e
.
·
..
.
2
.
:
.
.

·.
·
·
.
friends
;
·
\.
·
·
.
.
·
·
·
'
·

·
...
.
·
.
..
·
·
F:ire
>
cJlatrn br0We11, ~ans
·
~recked


·
·

··
·

.
'
·
.
'
i
.

.
·
_
:
.
.
.•
. ,
.
.
:
.:
:
.
·
B
.
,
\
.
'
~t.a
·
:
·
·

rry
.
/:
·
..
s
.
..
tr
.
:
...
i
·
e~;~
.'
.
:.
:.:
:
'.:
.
·
·
:
·

.
·~
.
;:
·
:
.
}'
·
:
·
am>l?habblfy,
.
ijfua
:
lebt
.
ain
..
t
·.
hbrooaormd·~d
.
iioso
·
.
r;
.
i

p
.
·
.
t~o
'
ern
.
cl
ttially
all
it,dQes
is
raise
'
the Jost'
.
Fred
Lam.be
rt,
~ssistant dea~
.
. . :
P~ter Amato said the problems
.
_
_
.
of
<
going
fii
the c
.
Qllege,
,
. /
;-.·
·
of
-
students,
-
agreed
.
saying;
:
.
haye
:

been
i
related to d!'inking .
.
'rhE:l
,
:,
caznpus: fire
:
alarm
:
ffoin i~
.
hinges
and
;
2l>athrocim
. Jf .we ·
.
ca.11'rJirid ;Who
is
;
doing -~'Vand<!lism
is
far higher. than in_
·
"There
·
are

those ·who
drink
·
·
·
~ysternwasoutofcoll1Jllissic;mf
.
~r.
:
partitions wE:lre pulled from their these things;
·,
tl!en ~veryon«f:will past
,,.
years;'
!
.
He
added that
.
excessively,

who·· are
-'
not
.
eight
.
hours
.
early
Sunday
)por,:
.
,
walls
, ·
in the
·
7th
.
and
:
8th
.
:
noor suffer; an~they'.rE:l
beirig
'
done
by ·
students will

!)ave to
'
be the ones responsible
'
for their acts,"
.
he
'
h
;~~;
:,..
.
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ct~ie~=~~ ·~~t!ton:
.
.
.
~U1cifi:~~¥;~~s~~U:!~~:c:1;
.
·
the
~th
floor C>f.ChampagnatHaij, cup1E!d
_
by qien
;
.
a dizinex:
..
plate destruction
.
keeps up we
will
have doing these things
.
Those who
·
lot

.
of
·
·
tijne
/
and
·
costs
'
everyone
·
.
'.
c ~ g , a
$~1'.ies
,
of
.
de~ucµve
.
·
sized
·
hole
·
in
',
the
:
wall
:
was
.
ex
~
·
..
..
.
~o
.
proyid~
-
less
0.
services
'
and
·
_
a
·
.
remain
:
•:.
quiet
· .
are
·
·
equally
<
as
·:
. _
money. ~ere's no reasori
_
for it,
I
·
.
·
:
events
:
which occurred at Marist
·
tended to
·
the

Ceiling
·
and
·
made
·
·.·.
shabby
i
iristitution;>•·
:
said Perez
:
guilty.''
· ·
, -::> • :
-F
·'
·
·
. '
thin)t it'~ P.retty ~~ting
/
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.
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.
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.
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·
·
...
.
.
i>ossibly
~
·
related
?
incident
;
:,
two
,
,.
Illairit~nan'ce
~
;
esUil)ated
· '.
the

.
large.
:'.
)10le.s
,;,
w~re
\
found
;
u1
,}
a
··.
:.'
damage
:
-to
:;
~ije_
'.
bro~en
:
wa,J.ls
,
fu
.
·
.
~ll~Y
,
·:
~all
:
:\\'iqf
\_
th~:
·
.
P~sp~
·
.
·
·
..•.
.
Leo
:
..
and ,Cluimpa&n~t
.,
at'
;
'.'#lpr~
·
.
.
··.
:waUpaper
-
torn a:w~y.
:.:
:
·
. ..-.

···
·
.
.
:
:
·
than
$~90/'
and said that:.he•
,
was
· ·
·
·
/
:
~e.te
f''
.
~g1ato;
:
i:director-
>
~f
<.
}laying
·
~ ci:mtracto
f
.
c9me
:.·
m
.
~
t9.
.
,
-
.
· .
residence,
·
'
said/ari
?
inv~stjgatioif
':
.
gef an
.
approximate
:
figure;
·

..

/t
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.
C


.
.
by; t
_
~e
:,
hoirs~g,)taff
)_
uts; foupd
.
/
"
~anµ,s
'
.
said
'
~~h)•~
/
~s
·
_:
µ~set
;"
.
.
..
.
that three
.:
studeIIts
:
~y
.
be
.
:
m~
·
..
.
and ~ngcy
·
·aµ9u~
\
tlf~
i
s1tµ~t1C>~ .
.
volved
;,
'
''.We do_
,:
have
~.
strong
-!
'Kidshavetodo somethirig;'
!
he
:
.
.
.
·
:
i~~&:i;
:,\
~~
i
~:;,;i?\~
·
''..
ti~i;~~~~
!
1o~~~gef&%i!
:
. ·.
·
Friday
:
:,
-
0
There.
/
will
}
~e
:\
s~v~re
:
.
.
:•
Tlley
'
~veto
·
say
;
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W.
~
)
v_Qil
'.,
t
i
·
put
·
..
·
·
.
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.
r:€'1~t
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According
;
to
.,
sourc~
.
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cl«?s~ t~
.
<
h1.1l't;

Jhe
..
:
~mes
;f
w.:ho
'..
".
want

.

..
.
.
:.:
~e •
.
iriy~ti~ati.on}-~!til~~s ~ve
, :
.
s~rn~µiitig fro~: Miirist:Coµ~ge.
/
f
·:
.. :
.
.
,,
1deQt1f1e
.

,
th.ose .. allege~ly
,t
m~
·'
ci1re
·
about
,
'these
-
people. They
,
. : -
'
.
volved
,'
·
'
iJi
?
tne·°::incidents;'
~;
b<>th
'
,
.
:;
have to·say~
;
.~We're:.tired
·
otit:V'
·,·.
· ·
wruclitookpliice·

t>etween
'.
tand
t
i
i::-
Anthony::
:
)
Pei:iz
t
/
dean
;
r,
of

·
-
.
.
-
.,,.
-
.
..
..
-
_

--:
o•c1ock
i
Soodatniomiiig
::
•:;:::;,:it:
.:
r/
·
students
.
':
\expriiised·
f
siml1af
:
-
· ·
··
.
·.
<
IN
·
.
:
·
oTHElf
.':'::
INC!IDEN'.,t'S
;
..
::
se~timentif
i\
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.
Trus

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'''.
4th'm;;
'.
·
'
·
,
·
.
.
,
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:•
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·
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:
champagriat
t.
ID.i1
t:
was
···
the

:
har•
•:·,:
stitiitioii'.l'.vebeeriinvolvecrwitli
.
.
:
,
· ·..
-
,

.
.
·
:·-:
.
;
·
·:
·
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'

·
-
·
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,
.
-.
-
.
-
.
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·.
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:
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·
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.
dest
'
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,
hit

9
£
;:,:
~the
).
buildirigs
?
An
:,:;·
aoo
,
this)s
'
.
th~
:.
woi'sf ~ction
:~
:
:.
. , .-
'.A
bole
~
~e
·
wall
_
of seventh
poor
.
Cham~~,~
·.
~
-
~
«?De of manr
,
~cts o~ _
destruetfo~
c~m•
.
.
.
__
,
·
·
.
.
outside
.
door
wiridow
··
was
brolceri
:·:·.
rve
.'
seen}!
.
-
said
,.
Perez
~
.'.'"
Even
_-
,
:.:
-
~ ~
,
fi!
-
~e
.
d9~,
..
~~g
.
~e
-
~
weeken~.
·
...
.
(

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,
-
·
.
.
·
·
·
.
.
· .
Photo
by
Dr
~
,Vong

.

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t



































































































PAGE2
Requirements-
Adopted
By Rosie Nguyen .
terdisciplinary studies·_ by· of-
fering courses which will build· a
The core curriculum was foundation that will integrate all
passed by the Academic Affairs courses and relate them -to a
Committee (AAC) at a meeting central;theme." ·
held between faculty members
The theme chosen by the
and the committee on Tuesday, committee is "value." 0'Keefe
November 23, 1976. After careful stated that it is
this
idea of a
consideration the decision was central theme that Will make
~ade by a ~jority .vote or' 55, to Marist's core requirements
rune.
·
·
unique from those of other
This decision will mean that colleges.
incoming freshmen students will
The : · curriculum
revision
,
be required to choose one three-
received favorable ]'esponses
credit course from each of ·the from other committees also.·Jeff
following areas, excluding the Blanchard,_ student. A.A.C,;.
category in which their major · representative feels tha:t the
will· .
faU:
natural_ · science, decision will affect the future. of
language and literature, social
M?rist
academically. He sees a ·
· sciences,. business, .computer str(?ng '• purpose
,
.· in , ·core
science . and -._ mathematics, · requirel!lents .because, "They
history, fine arts ,(music, a11, · will give students' a common,
communication arts . including universal ground of subjects they
the?tre and
film),
philo~op~Y}iDd_ can all share."
ethics.
.
· ·. · ,. •· '
. This .decision will affect the
Students receiving high 'SAT
.
future of Marisf'in_ other ways
scores in foreign . language, also. • Ellen _Fitzpatrick, - ad-
however, will be able to omit that mission officer counselor doesn't
cou~se
in
the
required view .this change favorably. "Up
· c~rnculum. Transfer : students
.
until now, Marist has been
wi_ll . also · h~ve to. take C?re . recruiting students _bY- selling ·
c<c>Ur~es but willbe able t? receive three key ·pojnts. One was the
credits for . courses · which they_ location of the school secbnd was ·
have already taken provided they its size, and third ~as. tlie fact
.meet . core criteria.
that students . could. design.• their'
Dr.
Ed_ward
0'Keefe; own curriculum." . ·
-
·
\
I
THE CIRCLE
-JANUARY 27,1977
Ma~ist ·
receives
$4500
' . A grant o( $4500 has been coritributedto Marist Cqllege's_ Capital Campaign by_ the )3ankera.1i-ust
Company of Hudson Valley. First portion of the contribution was presented to MaristPresicfentTinus
R.'F'.oy, left, by,John F. Higgins, senior vice-president, right, and David Murd~_h, vice-president,
center~ "We congratulate you and your associates for your outstanding. endeavors for furthering
edu_cation in our Hudson Valley~»MI:. Murdoch fold President Foy. The grant will
be
.us·ed to help
Marist carry out its plans for improvement of its 'physical facilities andits service'sto students. · · . .
_.
. .
.
.
'
.
'
..
-·.•
'
. ,
.
.
-
Marist·To
_
Get ·Gr.ant
FellowslliPS -
;---:--.
Ac~demic: ~ff~irs_ Com~ittee
Whether. or not thischange .will
charrman, said_ This curriculum cause a decrease in enrollment
r~visi?n shows a movement in the
can't• be seen. yet, but Ms. Fitz-
~1rectlon of a. mor~ well-rounded pa trick does believe that it
will
be
libera} arts 1:duc_at10n; The core
a
deciding factor for many. ap-
exper1ence IS mtended to
_
in- · plicants. ··.··
·
· •. · . ·
i ,
·'
.
troduce · students to ' new in~
· ·
·
By
Pat Larkin
gra·n
·
ted
_
_ _
.
.
Marist
has
·
received a grant
,
•.

· .·.-
, ... _ ·.-
.
.· ··-.... ·.
. ::·; . . ,;
. . . ·.-.... ·. . . ·._··-.- ·.. · - , :_from
~~r~ R<lbuck_Co!l}pany.
ByWen~ySt.irk
: Menapace, proL of chemistry at
F~~.:.·
.
;,..;.,.,""'"·'.·"':~H
·

-a·
ili:,,;ftr'.
·o
'
·,m••
.
: ',
':••s·
·
·:
·
·et1
·
·
·
·
:i~-,- ,
·
.
,T
.. ,t:1.e:g,r:~nt.1s.::part. :o
.. t,a.Aia
__
tion
..
a. l
Marist.
· .
-
...
·
-.···
·
· .. :
.
•;
.
. . ·_ .· ·. ·.
:a;
:
·''
'
F"' ' . ·
I
O

'!':-:·
~
·:·~:•··:~·•c•'.pr,ogram~p;~ars;:has'.".,Whicn' ,,;:-:Marist·seniors/Thi>mas'Lynch
:\-2:Lynchis currently-studying.X'-
.
,
-
. .
.·.
·
provides_:'.~oney'to private two and Renee::- Bernard have ray· diffracticm, and;._Miss Ber-
.
·
·
and four year colleges across·the received science,Jellowships
to .
nardis testing water samples for
\
·
-
country, ·' ·, . '.
-
· ..
·
.· ·
> -·
·
the federally· funded·:,Argonne, organic contamination. .
·
>
·' By Maureen Tully .
_
the dorms have been resolved by
~~rist ~s ·not· received any National Research Laboratory in
Students, are· selected on
. putting plastic covers .. on _the off1C1al n_otice .of the a~ount of Illinois for this"•semester; ,·
academic,.record and letters of
Marist oil bumers are·burning
windows to act as insulation. · · money 1t
WIil
receive,· but·
This
is
the fourth year that recommendation,. ('Having two
a
lot more oil because of the cold
· When asked about the lack of Thomas Wad~; development . Marist students : have ,be·en . students accepted indicates the
weather • according to. Andrew
neat in the cafeteria, Pavelko director,' estimates the grant at awarded fellowship·s._to the 'well quality
~f
training,_in chemistry.
Pavelko,· director of main-
said, "The cafeteria has too approximately $900.
equipped and-staffed laboratory
at
Marist on a national level,"
tenance. Mr. Pavelko said "We
much window space to be able to
The gran! is unrestricted~which in.
8:
national. coinpetitiof! _ c·om- , said Menap~ce.: . . .
know there are certain problems
install anymore heat units, but- means M.anst.c_an use then.ioney __ .. pn~~g. soi:ne o~ _the,most·.COil_l-·'
Last ~ear
1! ..
recipi~nts of the
conc~rning the heat, and we are
we are giving it more attention." whEm~ it ~es f1t Wade sa1d,the . petitive umversi,ties _and colleges_ . _fello,wships are now· m gradu'.1te
going to look into them and
Over the Christmas recess money_ will, .. be -placed_ in the m the country. _·
· · -
.
_ .
. . · school, and each has a teaching
rectify them."
·
·
maintenance . . did
some . college general funds which will
1
<'It's quite an honor·· having
assistantship._ Louis· Graziano
Though there have been,many
renovation on the· heat in Don- be used for construction pur-
students selected. To-have more
andMaryKolorareattendingthe
complaints about" the heat, "nelly Hall but there is still some poses.
· than oi:ie-person accepted in one· Univ~rsi~y ·of 'Illinois:and_ Tom
Pavelko said they hav~ ~naged work to be done. Also, suspended ·
_
.
.
year
!S
~~yo~d . anyone's ex-' · C~rnISh' is at the Uruvers1ty of
to keep the complamts to·
a
ceilings were installed in offices
Food-Service Cont.
pectatI(?ns, . said Dr. Lawrence
Mmnesota.
·
·
minimum. Some complaints
·
in the Campus Center.
·
1

a~o~t the cold on the north side of. -
-
·
' -
·
·
which occured,. before the
.
N_. e.
~w.
·
.
'
Leo
.
..
H·ou·se_m· .. as· te· ,·
. Christmas recess..
.

Marist · ~ecuriW patrol
Waters, secUrity
Cttl~f Corit~ ..
. · received a.call at:11 a.m; Sunday
By David Ng._
Father LaMorte feels his
. . . _
.
.
from John Vandervoort, student
biggest obstacle will be that he
Waters ~as a ca~eworker ~nci
a
~estigation. 'He :did: two years of·, rpanager· of the R~~, who
Father Richard. La.M<>rte, the
willha·ve a "shortness of time"to
· comm~1ty service coordinator field
:
~ork, for.ano~er two years reporte~ tlle burglary.: At .the
coordinator of.Campus Ministry~:
get -acquainted" with· the staff
at the _P_1ou~ XII. Ag~ncy, a d~g_ he ·
~a?
in_ plain· dothes · as. a , same _time the door · to
the:
was named the new housemaster , : rather than•iiaving the advantage
re~abihtation-
_center.•
m _·sup_eryISo~:ofthe warrant squad:: c
_
afetena was foun9 to be open.
of_ Leo Hall during·_ the in~ · ofalreadybeing~miliarwith the
Rhmebeck. ·
: . :
.
·. . _ at Hawthorne.>· :.,
\ .·_ Vandervoort reported_ that h~
tersession bi-eak replacing Ms. ·. members of
1
the
LeQ .. staff.
For thr_ee years at the centei;- he · . As
a
member o(the Division : .. had _Put the money_
~
·the ~eer Beth ~ger who resigned from: -Another deficit that he sees is
· worked with the. community.the Headquarters
Special · . in,:.:'. r~fn_gerator of t~e,liquor cabmet the post. .
_ . . .
. . ·
prejudgement
_
on the part of the
courts and the police. :_ ,
. . · vestigatjori _unit he investigated:' within tti~. confm~s : o{ }he Rat
Father; LaMorte was originally
:
students ."to me .and where I'm
· I~ Jan.of
19!4
~Waters took -organized cri:riie for three years. af!er_ closmg .. ·T9e: ~oµey was - on the corµmittee resp~m:Siblefor
coming from." .
.
·
.
office as Rhmebeck . Town For another three years he mISsm~ a :few: ~o~s; lat~r, ·
· ~electing a new hou_se_master but_
When Peter Amato; head of
Justice. He ran unopposed for the worked with the Federal Bureaq · · <::once~~~g!}ie_ c~~~ria Frank as :,the ~chool
wa.~'.
to reopen and
dorm life~ .was ask"ed what would
part time job. , .
,of
Narcotics and. the New York· G1.!1do, dinmg~s~.':"Vic~s !1}anager, the post still vacant, he indicated
be the . biggest. problem · that
~or nin~ years W.aters wasJ,~·-/City,Poiice Nai:cotfos Squad.
'.'· said the ca!etena_office-door
was _
tothe.committeethathewould be
F~t~~r- ·Lc1~orte_ faces,· ·he
uniform with the New York State · He had limited duty with the locked the-~ght_of ~e. r_obbery wiijing,to assume.the'. role.
.··
.
i;-eplied, "ge~mg ·enough rest."
Troopersasastatior!, commander ·:Bureau: of Identification-at the last semestel'..:·H~.~1d ·a student··
.The· committee: discussed ·the
of Hyde Park and.Pound Ridge; Poughkeepsie:· ·He·adq1iarters. · man~ger cam~;..-m the next possibiµty and a
day
later.agreed
For 11 years he was with the Until 1973 he. \\'.as with the '.State . morrung and fo~d ~e dooropen . to name the Marist chapµ1in as
Bureau
of
Criminal · In-· Police in Rhinebeck.
and the $~00 ~ISsmg_ from the . the new housemaster .. ,
·
·
cash box. •.
. .
. · ·· . ·· · · ,· • The. one-time Bronxite feels he
.
'
,,
_.·
'
,,.
' '
'
..
'
'.
During the Middle :Ages, it, was believed thatthe consum·
mation ,of marriage could be prevented
by
anyone who, .
~vhile 'the wedding ceremon_y5vas tak·i~g place, either locked:····
a lock or; tied .a-knot.
in
a co\d, and tnen)hre~ the locjc •
or
cord away.,
,
.
_._
· . · '
.
-
· ..
·. '-'.We -_.don't _know· how many
'•is
qualified to fill the capacities of
kers are qut and being used,''· being a housemaster.
"I
have
· said_
Guido. Presently; Iqcks on been counselingyoung peoplttfor,
·a~ doors affecting the ·cafete!ia: . th~: p~st _: ten years·, of. my(
a,nd the R,athskell~r .. are being;
,
pnesthood;"
·
cites the catholic-
chan~ed, h_e•said.
·> _ · ·..
.._
priest · .·· .
. _
... ·
·
-. _,Gwd~ sau;t the cos~ ofthe
new:
·:By ,the . eriq
:Of.
the spring
• loc~.:~r~e approxunately $260 semester Father~LaMorte .hopes -·
· :Whic_h _.will come o~t
o,r
th_e _food
,
tci_ :.:"join ;~~~t.h :·,the-: :staff and ·
_
SfrvICe budget. ', · ·
~
.' : . , . . resid.en;s m !D~~g the .. building :
. · ~~th_the Town of P~ughkeep~ie:
~
place)n:wllere _pe~plfcari tl'Uly
•·· Po~~e , an~~
th~
Manst; ~cim.ty .. ·.· hye;' ~ t
IS_
i:ecrel:lte; study/
~q
_....;. ________ ~-------------------..;..--1
,.ai-e mvestiga~mg_.·~~ 1pcid~n~ ... ~~st;
,


:;,· .·.•· .. ~•·::- -
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.....
,::.
-
-
·
JANUARY27, 1977
·-.
Projected opening
·
date
·
now April .1st
Gym
floor and
·
pool
-
--
-_
are major
proj~cts
_
The $80,000 gym floor
-
will
be
urethane surface called Chem-
.
The projected opening dat~ for
Turf.
It
has to be slowly poured
the James J. Mccann Recreation
-
onto the floor in several coats in a
Center has been set for "about
·
·completely
·
sanitary
··
heated
April 1st" by_ a
·
construction environment for a duration· of
schedule set up by
·Marist
three
·
weeks. This surface
will
President Linus Foy, architect also
·
be installed on
.
the four
Paul
-
Canin,
.
and
Louis
Green-
·
handball courts and the dance
span, director· of construction. studio,
·
Petro said.
.
The red-
By Larry
Striegel
Ron
.
Petro; athletic director, colored rubberlike surface can be
'
said that the gym area and pool
·
used for track, basketball, tennis
will
_be
open for
use
in Uie first and
_
ariy other activities in the
,.
week'
of April,' barring unan-
'
gym.
· ·
_
.
_
THE CIRCLE
ticipated
·construction
problems
A pool
finishing
company has
or
_
a
breakdown in labor
.-
The
been hired which
will
spray the
.
locker ro<:>ms
ari<;i
lobby area of
:
inside
walls
and floor of
_
the pool
the center
will
also be usable
:
at with a chemical called Mai'zite.
/
that time. However, the entire They
~I
also
test
the filtering
-
"
· ·
d f
· -
~ d
facililf willnc,~ be
_
complete until
_
srs~m and equie_~ent, ~uch
:
~s
_
:
g
·
0 0
fl
8
n
·
sometune dunng
·
the summer.
-
·
diving boards
,
Their
,
duties Will
·
-
.
.
·
·
-
Petro emphasized that there
·
take four to five weeks to com-
.
~re "inaily
:
con<ijtibnsJI
_
which plete;
':

-
..
.
·
.
·
could
;
delay
C
the
:
projected
Petro
_
said tie
is
optimistic
~
opening; ~ut
;
that construction about the pr
_
oject because of
_
the
-·•
has
_
been on sched1,1Ie
.
so
-
far this -advantages students
.
wi
_
lJ
,
reap.
year. "I~ may have-~taken an "It's so much more flexible than
extra six months to
-
complete, but

what w:e have now; There are so
for what
_i~
will
do
.
to help the
._

mariy different areas to work in
.
:
·
college it
.
was worth the wait," You ca11 h,fve three gym classes
said .f>etrc,."We're glling to
-
get . in the po_ol,''reightlifting, hand-
an excelle11t buildin!f for an e
_
x:.
ball,
·
anq ba~ketball all going on
cellent price; When
it
is
don~ we at the
s.4me,_
time."-
·
·
·
believe it will be the hub of mid-
.
Petro said
·
that students
will
Hudson~sporls activity."
· .
have a
full
program· of physical
<
Thet~o major projects in tile education, intramilrals, and
center are the installation of the sports come September, and
gymfloor and completion of the added that he hopes to make up
·
"
pooL Both projects have been an
:-
·
information booklet ex-
.
stil>contracted to professionals plaining full
,
services and
who
will'
need a few
·
weeks to d~ . availability bythe fall.
·
.
their jobs.
.
.
'
·.
·
.,
:
;
....
..
...
,-.,
-
·
:.·

:. :1
·~·7
<.: '.
-:;
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.
:
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_
.-
.\-,.:
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.
•.
By
Walitla Glenn
·
Jimmy Carter, former Georg~ Governor, took the oath of office
.
on
-
Thurs. Jan
;
-
20, becoming
the
39th
President of the United States. In
a
brieflnaugural Address Carter said, "I have no new dream to set forth
today, out rather urge a fresh faith in the old dream.'
'
At the beginning
of his address he thanked former President Ford for "all he had done
.
·
.
·
to heal our land,.'' which was met wit_h cheering and applause from the
crowd. Preisdent Carter broke from tradition by walking from Capital
Hill, the sight of the
__
-
Ipauguration, to the
.
White
·
House after the
ceremonies.
·
·
·
'
President Carter granted a pardon to almnc.;t au draft evaders of the
'
Vietnam War in his first major act as Chief Executive. The fates of
those who deserted, receiving Jess than an honorable discharge, is
_
undecided
until
each case can be reviewed. Some
·
10,000 men
·
were
.
granted full pardon while
-
close to H>0,OOO
_
men
·
still await a decision.
carter asked all Americans to lower their therma:stata
to
65 degrees
to help
·
ease the energy crisis resulting from unusually
_
cold tern~
peratures
.
throughout the country
this
winter;
·
·
·
Gary Gilmore was executed by firing squad at 8:07 ~.m; Monday
ending
:
the 10-year suspension of capital
.
punishment in America:
Gilmore, convicted killer,- had asked the state of Utah to execute
him
_.
and got his wish as 30 witnesses looked on. Gilmore's last words before
·
·
the warden gave the signal
to
fire were '-'Let's do it"
.
.
'
.
:\
'.
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
Retired Army
Lt.
Gen.
·
James A. Gavin; a
.
Vietnam war
·
opponent .
who served as U.S: Ambassador to France during the Kennedy ad-
.
ministration is being w~ighed as a
'
possible candi~te
_
for CIA
.
chief .
.
·
Carter's first choice for the position had
·
been Theodore C. Sorensen,
.
top aide to President Kenn€dy, wlio withdrew his
_
name after. criticjsm
_
of his nomination:
,
ca~r said he· has not made any decision
·
on Gen
Gavin;
-
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
.-
·
to.
-
youngster~
i
·
n
the
.day
·
care
-
-
program
_
-
·
to older
'
.
·
people
-and
to
all
-
rr1a"r-1kfnd.
\
.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNIJY
.
The first
-
outbreak of flu was
'
reported at Vanderbilt University on
s
ff
E
·
I
·
Jan; 2lby
.
the NationaLCenter for Disease
,
controt·The
...;.
flu·is
.-
-
·
.
..
tu
_
_
·
·
__
..
nve opes
characterized influenza B similar
to
the B Hong Kong flu of years ago.
Influenza
.
B usually afflicts
.children
and young adults; Its mortaHty
s2s.
·
oo PER
'
HUN
_
D,RED
-
.
rate is much lowe
_
r tl¥1~ Irifluenza A."Swine flu is considered a
,
type A
Influenza
_
:
·
· -
-
·
·
· -· ·

,
·
-.· ·
/
'
·
-
·
0
-
·

••
_.
• ·
Im
.
mediate Earnings -
.
AbraharilLlncolr)~asthegreatest
:
AmericahPresidentaccordingto
.
/
Send $1.00
To:
scholars
·_
froin various
.
colleges and universities
-
around the
_
country

·
-
-
wlien
;
they
;,
were asked to pii;k the
_
ten grea~est Presid~nts .
.
Ge
_
orge
:
Envelopes Dept 2
1
2 6
_
Washington came
in
second in front
.
of F.ranklin
-
D. Roosevelt who
·
lOfCharles Street
·
Professionally
Speaking
By
Larry
Snyder
.
i'AGE3
On campus recruiti.Jig gets into full swing in February. AH seniors.
·
should automatically receive copies of our bulletin by mail.
If
you are
not on our mailing list, stop by the Career Development Office, C-113,
and register your current address. Those companies scheduled to visit
·
are listed below. Remember - we must have active participation on
these days
if
we are to coptinue to have companies rP.cruit at Marist. ·
National Association of Securities Dealers
Thursday, Feb. 3
Metropolitan Llfe
·
Thursday, Feb.10
U .S; Marines
Mon. -Tues. Feb. 14
&
15
Texaco Inc,
Tuesday,Feb.15
John Hancock Llfe Insurance Co.
Thursday, Feb.17
First Feder~l Securities
Monday, Feb. 28
An ever increasing number of projects and activities has made it
.
necessary to post the following
_
schedules.
·
Larry Snyder will be available for career counseling and to answer
questions at the following times:
.
·
·
·
~€di{~~~\W-:-~1l~diiyt~
~
P,.;~" .
,;
,.;
:,,.."
,..:.;
\.,;:c:_.,,,;:.:;.
~"."

.,~
;;,.,_"",_+:--.;;

.---:,
.,,--
·
·


·
·
·
-
·
,
C
-4
\
Friday 1:00 p!m. - 4:00
p.m.
.
·
·
·
Warren Greene will take over all responsibilities for part time jobs
off campus. Registration forms and job descriptions can be obtained
from Warren at the following times:
Monday ~2 noon -- 4:00 p.m.
·
Tuesday 2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p:m.
Thursday 12 noon - 4:00 p
.
m.
Watch this column for news of upcoming activities.
-
Announcements and
_
career information sponsored by your Office of
·
Career Development and Placement
'
....
Frivolous
Salli
19 Academy Street
Thurs-Fri-Sat·
MARYLOU
ARNOLD
Pitcher
.
nite
Mon.
.
Pitcher of beer-$1.75
Food
Served
Until Closing
'
No
-
Cover
No Mini,nu,n
.
_
_
came:_in
.
third,
,
followe~
_
by Theodore
:-
ijoo~evelt;
,
Thomas
-
Jefff;!rson,
-
-_Bo
_
·
s
_
to
·
n
·
-
, M
-
ass.
,
021
_
14
·
Woodrow
.
Wilson; Andrew Jackson, Harry Truman, James ~olk and
.
John Adams.
..
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
. _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ .
-=~~~~~~~~~~~::i:=~~~~===~•
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·
_
·
.













































PAGE4

THE CIRCLE
The Marist Coll~e CIRCLE is the weekly ne~paper ot the ,s.tildents
ot Marlst .
College arid is publiShed throughout the school year exclusive
ot
vaca!lon perlOds
by the Southern Dutchess News Agency, Wappingers, New
York. ·
Daniel Dromm.
Larry Striegel
Regina Clarkin
Joe Gigliotti
Tom McTernan
Cathy Ryan
DavidNg.
JimBirdas
Peter VanAken
Kevin Cavanagh
TomHillan
·-Co-Editors
Associate Editor
Photography Editor
,
Sports Editor
-· Articles Editor
t.ayout Editor
Assistant Layout Editor
Advertising Manager
Business Manager
Tr~nsportatio11 Manager
Staff: Jeffrey Benedict;:_. Suzanne Breen,: ·Elaine BrtJSoe, · Phil
Colangelo, Maureen Crowe,' Wanda Glen, Ken Hea,ly, Alison Hickey,
Patrick Lark4I,_ Bill McLaughlin,
Chris.
Paccione, Wendy.
Stark,
Maureen Tully.
-· · ·
·
·
Editorial
· Remembering
·A-
.Frien·d ,,
J
THE CIRCLE
REMEMBERS:·
JANUARY 21,,-1917
onto the force, along with the of security, he was very open
students· already on
it.
Formerly · with them.
His
opening line,
"Hi
he had worked with Interstate · ya Bub," helped
him
make many
Security of Poughkeepsie, while friends. ·
at Marist as a
guard
in the
· I personally worked with
him
To .the Editor, ·.
·
·
- · · Cbampagnat lot. Thus "Skip" many times. He handled most
Russell Aldrich, affectionately has been a mainstay· on the situations with the utmost
Known as· "Skip" by Security, campus for some time.
·
.
competency, and his rapport with
faculty, and students, passed
He brought with
him
the idea the,students was a determining
away on Monday morning,
that
security on_
this
campus wa!> . factor in nuuty cases.
_ ·
January 24. .
·
..
not to seek out students and get · . He
wm···
be . affectionately
· · ."Skip/' was the first full.,tiine
them in trouble - but to help the remell!._bered. :
·
security ·guard hirea by Marist, studentsin every way possible. In
· Brian Mahon
m
·
efforts
to
bring men guards
·
order to get students on the side
· StudentSec~ity(}uard
~
--~- >•··'
·.-
BAD
F!EANIJTS
To the Editors,
.
. .
. The ·· inaugeration of

.
Jimmy
Carter leaves an uriremovable pit
in my stomach. He can not yet be,,
judged by.policy;, riot having set
any, and no politician cim~verbe .-
. judged l>y the statements made
during a.· campaign; therefore,
we must draw•c01, .. ;!!sions from
the labels he chooses
to
give
. himself;'· The.
·
pi:>lltical~historJcal
•·'
.
label which he. has been most and .to_twist that fear into hate·
_ fond of assigning .. himself .. is
and, votes; The list
.
of:.American
"Populist,", and the -historicat . populists
is
almostidenti¢alwith
record ·of · populism.
is•
~nough .to
ttie ·.
list
of·
American pr.omiiient . •
puf a. pit• in the •mosLcast-iron . bigots;, William Jem@gs Bryan, -
stomach available: · · ·.
- -.,
Huey Long, Tom Watson, George
. ~opulism
can
be·defined
as
th~. Wallace.:
This
'.'tendency: can_
:
be .
political

-exploitation> of·•• fear;
linked with· either Conservatism
specifically, -of"the fear of_. an_ or Li,:iera~ism~!'that;,Js .not
elite. This elite may even exist; . televant
,
to~the ·.dang~r_ whi~h- a
but. all ~hat
is
necessary··~. ,the . .,.:. self~profess.ed · .. populH;t '.in':: the
ability of. the crafty p9litician to .. ; White, House: presents. ·
·
; .. ,
_
__ ;
convince .the. majority of citizens . .
· ·'
.. -Cllps~opher li'q_!!le
that it e~_!:;, to create
a:
fear
<i
it,
-
.
.
. This past Monday,-Marist once again: experienced :the death of a -
..
5 L
p
for forming a lo<;al Sectfon
:o(tpe" ··_
THE.
J~1fa{LY' PEOPLE," the
merribedif its community~ · •· .·.

:
. ••·
· · · . . ·•· · . ·· .
pa~ty'which is .in .tlie~process of
SLP paper,_ also :got_ ~0111e ne_w
To
all, the death of. RussE!ll ''.~!{ip'"
Aldrich
-was a
shoe~,
W~ . To the Edit~r, •
b1:mg_ acted upoll .'as an:-
~P-
subscribers and was pµiced· in
remember "Skip'' forhis·always encouraging "YLya~Bt1b" ·and,his
,_ I ,take great
.
pride .in an- plication to.do so has bee:n made
more libraries. Itis in theMarist
openness with the students.
,
c-:
.
· -
·
. ..
.
.
.
. .
. .· - ..
llOUncing tllaL1976 was· an .ex-
to
theNewYork, State qolllmittee .-'.:library.
. ··.
.
.
.· ... ,
He wasn't just--a security supervisor coining arid going_each day,
cellent year
I
for the : Socialist ofthe'SLP.; · : .. · '

c:_:
> ·:-
While
.
the • outlook \ for
only doing
his
job. He; was a warnr human- being conce~ed. with the
Labor• Party here
fa
the Hudson .. : Many .~nY. le~ets;: 52~125 is .._ cap(talism., 1s· bleak: indeed\
student guards and the entire Marist pomm~ity.
· -
Valley area; .
. ·
the latest count; were distr1butEld <prospects. for·the SLP: <are
·We ~tthe CIRCLE can remember "Skip" for all the·times ,he.left the
As.
a
resilll_Qf the discussion •by ~he members and
SY;1ll'"_
promisirlg;'.C, ..
,a:
.
:_-
.. , .,.:
.
:, ··
gate open after lp.n:i. on Tuesday nights and escorted us to the dorms, . group me~tings held in Beacon pathizers of the SLP, thus addµlg
·
; ·;• Nathan Pressman . , ..
·
Iri addition
to.bis
wife and three children, ·Russell Aldrich Jeftbehind. _ three 111:rw members j9ined the. ·neJVllames ofjnte.i:¢~~d.~opieto ·
.. _ 12
·
catherlne street
.
the tnany ·guards, both student.and full. tinie; wl]Q grew close
ttqui:n
in-
SJ..P.
Thm
provided the· impetus · tl).e :m:ailing;list. · · ::-
: · ·-·.
· .
: Elleiwille N .Y>l2428 ,
c.-
~-~-~~~~
~=~
=1
S
T()'
fi.
:,
.T·.-o. -:.th.·e·· gdif~.
·
r·.\,:::.~.i,'.(.··.· .... /_....
. .
·
..... ·.-- : cc:ollege's grourids.
~
: •
.
_;,, ::_ '. -~. .
·:.r just
hope i,for •. riior_e\ im::
· ..
'
· .. -
-
.J_ .•.
.
_r
_
One does _not h~V:~ to :explat!l~
-
" prove~ents ofthis-kind 3!1d that ·.
·
; ... Finally, iriiprove~ents on the
- .
what a tree
1S
to _vis1tots no~ w1lL_· n~ne ,getr ·ahold. of. anyi scraps
·-~Maristcampus. I amreferringto anyone laugh at1t. But a pamted
left over fr<im.-the McCanri
.. · ·the evergreen. recently :planted' septic tank, a p~e_flfra~road
ti~!>.
athletic ci:nter, paints them, and
otitsideCfiampagnat.Itisarelief (ro~ed_), or a:s.teel girder that,
·
.decorates.that landscape.
to· se~ something tba( naturally · looks like a magnet?
A
person's
··
·
· Michael Ball
fits
into
_the .landscape. Ion. the .. · first reaction is to laugh :when .
·
,7>-
-

r
·
.
' ' .
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...




































JANUARY 27, 1977
THE CIRCLE
Students Talk •About
.
Gilmore's Death
· Questioning
c:a111era
perso11
.. ByWani:la Glenn
Question:
tion
to
execution?
What is your reac-
Gary · Gilmore's
die they should have put
him
away before the publicity. It
should make a gOOd moyie."
postponed.-This
is an example of
the
mass media
making
something spectacular when it
Lisa Giannascoli • Fresh., actually
isn't: He did.not deserve
American studies major
the attention he received.
·"They should have let
him
live Gilmore should not have been
.· John Blue -
Sr., com- because he wanted to die and allowedtomakeamockeryofthe
muitications manor.
living would have been the· judicial system."
"I
don't believe . in capital punishment."
punishment because
I don't feel if
Jim
O'Rourke - Soph., business
someone takes a life his should be
Don
Hard-
~r ., business major. major.
taken
in
return, because different
"It
is a sad comment on our.
"I thought it was fine. I'm glad
governments
ask
you to defend society that the ultimate form of · he got it. There was no other
them in war anq yoti take lives behavior modification also course of action to take."
and are given medals . for it. I happens to be the most· effective
don't feel one is better· than the as in the execution of Gary
·Bob Griffin - Sr., criminal
·other."
Gilmore. Capital punishment justice.
. ·
.
seems• to address the problem· of
"Our culture should have
risen.
. B?-an Mahon - Soph., psyc, manslaughter
however
it . above the . 'eye. for an eye'
· maJor
' ·
'
mentality by
this
time ..
.
It is
"If th.
ts t di
h
h
doesn't cure the disease."
• ·
e man wan
o e e as
.
typical . of American society to ,
the right-to
doe."
·
·,
katµy · Crowney -· •. Soph., look for a problem's solution
.J_ay Metzger -Sr., math major. cb:!1munications major;.
. _
_-
which requires the least amount
· "He should not have used the
. Because of an the public . of thought. We were ignorant,
ta~g; of
~
· . life
·10
get.~tlie attent~on . he. . received t_he and we . were wrong in putting
publicity he did.<if he wanted to execution date kept on bemg Gilmore to death. We are as bad
as he was."
·
PAGES
Lisa GlaDDJ:lscoll
Don
Hard
Kathy Growney
i•··
arti11
it;
BOOS
Bread
between .
the lines
.
/BY
K_eri Healy
~
are good:·but
Schlitz
is
cp~p.'' . .
;
:.
·
... .
.
. . .
.Marty, has made, drinking
;
his
, •·' "'
0
,

.
: •
1
."Tuff!I'.
Genesse: Cream :.Ale, i:raderiiark; "I do it'for refaxation
/(c:;Ps).·~
When sttidents
:
begin.· in education philosophy in 1976,"
c.and·a !1,~ge; blaring'stereo :are the ; and:• recreation; · but it's liard ·studying for theirJirst.ec1Jnomics · reports Jim Bradford at Scott,
ttungs. most of the residents of work;" he: said.
''I'm·
a_ serious exam, chancEls a:re./they .. ,will Foresman and Co. publishers .
. Champagnat's :.: sixth· --
-
floor drinker,''he added._,
.
·

.-.
·.
,_' _·
overlook()neyery:rich1essonin . This trend marks
a
change
associate with Marty Boos ... '". ·
Of
course ,this. leads to where basic supply and demand theory.
from the past five years. "In 1971,
; Marty works~ hours_a:w~ek
in ..
•one goes in:order.to drink;In this. That~ textbook; ·for ·which. t!_le · we.were stm in Vietnam. Today
the.cafeteria/and is the y.,eekehd_ area Marty's experties is seldom student- has probably supplied students are more interested in
d~hro'!)m manager. He works .out challenged. When asked to name between $13 to $15, is h11ppily and
what this course will do for them
daily in.the gym and us,uallygoes the good bars in Poughkeepsie_ steadily filling the publisher's in terms.of coping with the world.
camping on the weekends and Marty replied, "l- don't
think
demand:-: . .
..
·
There is a focus on the consumer
.c!uring vacations: ·
.

_
. ·
. there are any.".
The textbook industry is a
side of economics," Bradford
_,., To his friends, ',Marty's ._most
financial_ oasis in the publishing · stated.
·
outstanding trait is his ability• to
busipess as 11ew markets open up
Textbooks are being geared
consume · large quantities of · a
in adult education; :wome.n's
more
towards
practical
certain fermented beverag~.• His
studies and.
texts
which one
education. Today a student can
trips . to . Poughkeepsie's various '
leading publisher says are· down-· open a textbook and learn how to
drinking establishments are
.shifted for the increasing number
borrow money. for a new car,
legendary. Very little 'attention is
of junior. colleges, community
finance a house or even balance a
_paid to the fact that Marty Boos is
colleges and night school courses~
checkbook, instead of confronting
. ·1egally blind. · . .
.... ·
There is also a •~return to basics
one hundred years of historical
data. In fact, the all-time best-
seller on the college · textbook
charts is a volwne called AC-
CO UN'l'ING PRINCIPLES by C.
Rollin Niswonger and Philip C.
Fess which has been on. the list
for 2444 weeks and is in
its
eleventh edition. And for anyone
who thought that textbooks
existed only for that rare student
who
is
adept at memorizing dates
and figures,
Prentice-Hall
publishers put out a text called
LIFE INSURANCE that has been
selling steadily since 1912. The
new edition is priced at $15.95 and
is expected to sell 25,000 copies in
1976.
. : M11rty .was ac.c{qently
hit.
in the
eye as
a
child and the result has
:been eveiltual bli11dness'. ' "It's
· something I've had to ac'cept;" he
said. ''What can I
do
about it?"
It's : hard
to
.
imagine .such an
active person ·being bliiid. Marty
hardly. leads a ~heltered life'. -C'I
like . being ainong people,'' he
explained;
-"I can't change. what
THE PARTY'S OVER.
Martin-T.
happene~." ·.. .
·
.
: _:He .. also, minimizes his -ban-
He said.that the Brownberby
'dicap>1'ltryto lead.a normallife. · on;Main Street was
his
favorite;
I'm depengent on others •but not
''The Derby
fs
a drinking-man's
that,much,"Jfe saiq.) • have·to
bar; and cheapei: thari any bar
I
have someone. r:ead
to.
me,: and·· I · kn~w of.J'he
sixth
flQot ~ngs out
need moretutoring and aids, but
there. Tuey have dark beer there
th~; sta:te'JNew Jej:sey).Jakes . and. pretty' good food. too,"· he
care; of:that. ·
< .. : ...
i . . .
. .. , · '
"--c-
said. ."cThe 'Caboose .
is • another
: l
must 'be. doing alright here
pretty . good. place.
The .
R.,at. is
.though; ::because·.· I•· haven't< been · , convenient. It's
.
righfdownstairs
tlu;own, out yet: :l can v;ork. I've an you know. a.lot of people there~
never" been turned:down for a job - Buck and
-
a ··half "pitchers';are'
because of
this,'! he said. . ·
;
, .
tough .to. beat, right?'.' · ,,
.-/., ..
... · •. Marty's;worldis .different, of .,
-
Marty·also.has··an.· opihion·.of
course •than . other student'_s; but why ·. fewer, people, . are · .. going
.
·he'11as been able toiaccpmodate. across. the. streetto>Frank's.
au· of. this. :' 'It's: not:"ariy treat ''The place used.to be.
_
alright but
: having this,"·liesaid. "You have
.
now the_ atmosphere:Jsli't any
·. tir.experiencei~- That's the only good:.They changed the place too
way,J: can •d_escribe_ it.'' Mal'o/ , .. mJ.!ch' and·_ tried
t<(
iru,ike -it
·doesn't, like toCtallc>_about-

•·his --respecta:ble,'':-:.he.~~said;'.. '
1
How·
blindness but he•~· riof afraid of it oftei(am l:evei" in• there?!' .. '
.
· 'either.,:i-\ .. , .. -,
.i·,··-.>·, ·: ·. ·•.· ,.:,•·
·:-Martfsunimed, u1fthis:p11r(of
/'·He·aoes
like
to
talk -about beer ..
his.
life~
by .saying ''Boos
is·. my ..
:arid lie
likes
to
drink
it eyen morl!._ ·name
·
and.Bo~e is:my
gaine
arid
.
,
i.
1
,The.:
best_is'..M!JlsOn's(Michefob
IIUlY,beSOIIJ,~ybooze:wiµ be my
oi-.:Schlitz/Molsori-and Michelob .. "fame."•
.
:
-
1. •
• _
,·•.,.
· All.too often,when the
party ends,
the·
trouble begins.
· P~ople whQ.shouldn't be
doinganythingmo~e active than
going to sleep arc driving a car.
· .Spe.eding and weaving their
way
to·death.
.
· • .
Before·any of your friends,
•drive home from your party, .
-ni~ke sure they aren't grunk ..
.
. Don.'t be fooled because
~
they dr~nk only beer or wine.
. Beer a11d wine can be just as ,
i~t9?1~cating as mixed drinks.
'
,
---~·--_;,
:.;,.
'•
And don't kid yourself
'J)RUNK DRIVER. DEi~,: Y
II
i1
because they may have had
I
nox
2345
1
,· some black coffee. Black coffee _
...
l
ROCKVILLE. l\lt\RYLAND 20852
l
can.'t sober them up well enou'gh
I I
want to
keep my friends aliw
I
I
[~r
the next party.
I
. to drive.
.
·
1 ldl,me
what else I
can
do.
1
If
someone gets too drunk
I
\h·
n.,m,
i,
'
.
I
to drive,.drive him yourself. Or
I •'•
1•11•"
:
-
I
.call a cab. Orofferto let him
L:·;"- -· -- .. _
.s,.:i,."_ ... - tJr- _
j
steep over. .
-
FRIENDS DON'T LO FRIENDS
_. . . . Maybe your friend won ·t
DRIVE
DRUNK.
be
feeling so
good
on the
. morning after, but·you're going
_to feel terrific.
.











































































/;.:~
..
·-··•"
f
,r
'
·PAGE6
.THE CIRCLE
JANUARY
27, 1977
Cabo_ose Hikes
Cafe
&
Rat
·plan
specials
Minimum Age
By Maureen Crowe
By
Wanda
Glenn
bargains such as a "Surf and
Turf" ..
dinner, musicians and
more films.
CUB
will give
financial aid and events
will
be
posted. in the Cubicle along with
meal menus.
semester. The cafeteria main-
tains an "open door" policy
stating-· that
aU
feasible
suggestions·
will
definitely
be
· tried, and invites all students to
attend the food planning meeting
every Tues. at
2:30
in the
"Minimum age· 20, · proof
required," were the
·
words
written on the cardboard signs
hanging on the doors· of the
caboose, a popular weekend
hangout for both resident and non
resident students on Duane
"We're here to satisfy the
people.
If I' dori't satisfy the
people I'm out of business."
rule was
made
io keep the stated Joe Lurenz director of the
number
of people do~ !!13inlY on dining service at Marist college.
~e '?Veekends. He said, . We.were By reorganizing management
gettmg a lo~ of complamts from • and creating new student ac-
people who liyed .~round here and tivities in the Rat, Lutenz · hopes
from
th~
J?Olice. .
· to serve the Marist community
He_said
if the liquor board _saw better
this
spring semester.
·
a po~ce record full of c~mp!3ints,
. The Rat, now managed full
they could haye thell' license time by John Van Dervoort; will
revolked._
.
·
. ·
• emphasize
entertainment
_ Accordini
to
so~e students· specials rather than drinking
Additions and changes in the
cafeteria menu have been made
and suggestions made by the
Food Committee implemented.
The management expressed
concern that the Committee's .
service has not been fully used by·
the student body as shown by the
meager response they received
cafeteria.
.
Future plans for improvement
include a "face-lift" · for the
cafeteria, delivery service to'the
dorms at ·· night, more ' in-
volvement
fith
student
affairs
ai:id perhaps a bakery shop.
Street.
, ·
•from the food surrey . last
Students will now have to be
20
and show proof in order to get in
who went there this weekend.
.
there was no one checking proof
Re.cord rev,·ew
to the local
bar.
·
either Friday or Saturday nights. ·
• • •
.
According to Skitch, .. a bar_-
tender and Ma~t graduate that
· They're: -different, l~nd
an
ea~
ilOO)i:Vi:Li:
i:Hcili:~c
Rte
Q.
H)'d• P•rk: CA 9-2000
STARTS FRI. JAN. 28·f.ltru:rHuRS.~EB.3
FEATURE AT 7:15
&
9:30 SUNDAY·
MATINEES AT 3
&
.
5
PM·
By
Chris
Paccione·
in order to like the artist. When I
.
~/.
.
listen to her I aiif not confined by
RADIO . ETlllOPIA -
Patti her lyrics, I like her for what she
· Smith Group
doesn't say as much as for what
Patti Smith
is
unique in . the she does say. I don't understand ·
history 9f rock n' roll in that her -everything she. says, she leaves
"ONE OF THE YEAR'S ·TEN
BEST"
~
Vincent Canby · ..
· poetry was published without the one room to interpret and to gain
aid of an albwn. Dylan has had mort; after .each listening. That is
much
of
his,
published, hut that why "Radio Ethiopia". exists: as·
was after his success
as
a singer . .
the. m~t··original .ro~k--n' .. roll
Patti was a poetJong before her _work.today: It's an album that
first album. This
is
nL-: :.o
say
that · can • be understood ·
with.
feeling
meaning exists somewhere in the
subconscious.. I'm tempted· to
print most
of the lyrics,.. .but
·
that
would• only be

diss'ervice to
Patti because they exist within·
the context of the music. At the
risk
of being:. coptradictory
I
would
like
to reiterate something ·
·from
a
song, "Don't ignore me·-
Come explore me.". You'll only
find o.ut ~y liste~gto the album.
I
"ONE HUNDRED PERCENT · .
.
ENTERTAINMENT ...
·a
case of ·an·.
ingenious novel being turned into a terrific
movie. A lean back and loveJt lark that is a
-
_practically incomparable family film~ •. a
.
garland of cheers:•
Gene Sha/it, THE NBC
TODAY SHOW •·
she constructs her beautiful and emotion without the listener .THE SONG REMAINS<THE
lyrics, on the contrary;- her being [ible to put it into· ·words. _SAME
f
Led ;Zeppelin ' .
1
poetry is. ugly and distasteful on . The album

lives . ·and·. breathe~ · .. In wr1tmg
.this·
I· wondered who .
the surface. Personally, laccept ~lways :. in the present, at the
I should · address- myself to,
a definition of poetry espoused by moment one hears it.· Sometimes
people who like Zeppelin
will
love
a Maristrprofessor, "Poetryds
this
understanding only lasts for , trus··album and those .who .don't
language charged with emotion," a few,'.fleeting seconds and the . aren't gqiilg
io
change because of ..
and Patti is the m~t emotional listener doesn'thave
a
chance to ,this album. This is ,,for those
. poet .I have ever read· or heard .. Mally grasp)J]e meaning. This
marginal fans ·of Zeppelin those
I •
can · ac_<!ept .. her . ugliness doesn't detract from. its Value,
who_ accept but don't get all that
·
because, I don't believe one has rather it, give:, ,her
..
_musk . a
excifed :about them. Although
to like everything an artist says · gJ;eate:r
.
impact because the they've had a great deal of.
· _________ _. ___ _. ______ ,:. ___ ..;. __ ..;.i;;;;~ ..
.;.-,;._..,..;. __
1
commercial success over theJast
I
APRIL15 DEADLINE
_,
_ · ·.. . · :'
. ··.
I
few years; the brie problem '
I
. .
.
.
/
.
1
they've had is that their albums
f
.
27Jtcjlian Medical
and
_VeteJ}nary
..
vi
were not able tQcapture the ·
-
.
.,
~,
I
Schools
Acc
_
ep,
Ameri~an Students. ·
1
energy
.
and exictemeilt of Zep-
~
t / i ~
I .
,..:
. ·
.
·.
•.
. ·..
. .. ·
.
: .
I
pelin the
·
live band;- This album· .
' .
••·. ·.
,
· ''.···.·•,='..:,.,~,·.•·• ...•. ~ ,
..
.
·. .. ··.·_ . , ... ··.·. •. -..
·.·.L_i•·.••~.~..
. .. ·.•··.· .·• ...... · ...
'
•. . . .-
.
·· ... ··.,.·_·. ·
.
.
·.·.
,.JI
Medical aJlci veterinary school aspirants who are ihinking.of applying 'to Italian medi·
I
does. ·.manage. tQ ·:c1:1ptuie ,
.
that
,
. '
-
•·
-

• . ' )
.. c.al schoplsiand.theirJ~rt1ili~S,lJ1ll~tji<:t.immediat!)ly, New Italian govElm,ment.regula-. .
excitement and sue· ·c· e·eds .aswe·u
.,_ ··
··"2
·:·
~'THE"Q.lnm'II_ -· ... ·PE"R·· ...
_,···"'~'NT
·
··"'''

::,.. .
.
.. ,;,,.~-.-_"".
,.,,,,:tions·requiii, that·preiriscriplion applications
be ijled with Italian Consulates before',,
.
. . ..
,
. . . . . .
,
.
• .
. . . ..
~
y ~n
""
.'
I
April 15, for C!>OSideration f~r n,e<iicai'and veterinary school admission in .19!7, :
I
as one c~n on,:.a· 'plastic
disc
in . .
SOLUTION
·
·
I .
2_7
distinguished Italian medical schools accept Americans. Several hundred A.meri~
I .
reproducing the feel of· a live
. F¥om th
.i
#l ·
-'
I
carisnowarestudyi.ncat ltalian·me. d. i.calandveterinaryschools .. Medical,dentaland.
1
1 ·
con. cert.~. ·.In' · other
wo. rd. s.,
Best-Selling Nouel
-
.
-
hin
f
1
A HERBERT Ross FILM
I
veterinary school aspirants who need assistance in language and cultural orienta~
-so~et
g·· or· ~ose ·. ma,rginal
ALAN ARKIN·
VANESSA REDGRAVE· ROBERT DUVALL
I
lion and preparation before, (!uring_a_rid after medical school to enable the practice of
l '
people to get ~cited ·about .
a,s,,,,,,.,ndF,,uJ

=
1o1a
v-,,.,..
"'b.
""'''°"
I
medicine in the
U.S., should contactthe Institute oflntemalional Medical Education.-.
"Dazed and Conftis.ed" is
_ and
NIC~~!!-~~~SON
_in
"THE SEVEN-PER-CENT SOLUTION"
1 ·
The Institute has helped more Americans enter European !71edical and veterinary
I
·
Jimmy
PagE's ultimate triumph .
1
schoolsthananyotherorganizalion.Advancedplacementforholdersofsclence
I
as a··gw.·.ta. rist and,he is flawless
<>bo
""''"'9
lAURENCE OLIVIER.,.
Pml"'""
1-1.,.,,,. •
JOEL GREV
I•
post-graduate degrees.
.
.
•.
.
: ·
,
. ·
·
J .•
f
'
I
.,
on' this. verston. Robert Plant!s
SHOW COLLEGE ID
AND·
RECEIVE SO/DISCOUNT
LAST
CHA.NCE
CRAZ·Y
CROW
-
REVUE
TONITE.~
Thu·rs. the· 27th·
$1~00
.
.
.;'
OFF
V1J,ith
,Marist/lD
I
I
INSTITUTE OF
INTERNATIOr,IAl MEDICAL EDUCATION·
·
I
:_
singing on ''Wanna Whole
Lotta
I
Chartered
by
the Regents of the University Of the Stale of New Yori<
·,
Love" an.d ·."Rock and-- Roll"
I
3 E. 54 St., New York 10022 • (212) 832~2089
· .
·
1
.. ,
.
. .
. .
.
..
amazesme; JohnBonhamgetstQ
--~------------~~----------~~~--~-~---·
.
.
· prove he's a drummer on t'Mooy ·
SUPER-SAVINGS
ON
ALL
YOUR LIOUORNEEDS.·
QT.
BLEND.~
•-i·• ·.·:·.
42.
9
GIN 80°. ~.
■-·
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GIN 90° . . -......
4s9
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BOURBON 86° .
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• 6 year aid
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SCOTCH_80° ••
499
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.ii
SC.()TCH 8~
0 • •
5
-
19
,
Dick,,. John Paul Jones·is ex-
cellent on bass throughout;·
. powerful yet subdued, The album .
moves, it draws Jhe listen~r in
and makes ya wanna jump. 'After -
all;-isn't that what rock and roll is
' . supposed to do? ·
· Big
coolers·
Taken from
Dorm room$~ ..
, •. ~Y
Alison
Hickey.
Refrigerators m~suring over
48 inches- were removed by· the
maintenance staff from student's
•, rooms during the semester break .
and are being stored.on campus·
according. to Peter ·Amato,
.. director of.housing~
- · .
Students · owning · these
refrigerators received a notice·.
durj_ng the semester break saying
there would be a
$2
a day storage.•
fee; Amato is.not going to enforce
this storage. fee.·
.
• Students . can ·
_claim their, refrigerators without -
·
a penalty but riiay not use these,
refrigerators in the donnitories. ,
This · ruling · was .·. made·. last
. ~semes.ter
,
. by . Anthony · Perez,
Dean-of Student Affairs:""··
..
·:--Amafo:" wHf'<store. these
refrigerators ·asJong as possible; _
He··· ~id,< ';l/do noLdispose. • o(
·
peoperty th_at doe.s
9ot
belong to :
·
- .
me.'~ He said students.who do riot . · ·
wish.:to:iceep ·their
.
refrigerators:.
cansig·n
them:over
to•him
'
and he
. wilf donate them to
a
charity such
as-. the':
Sa\yation :Anny.·-
-
.:·. :- .
: :.p:::c.
·>:' .. \:/
··
·
:
:'Jtt:':
-
/ .
/
\



































































































































JANUARY 27, 1977
I
TH_E CIRCLE
PAGE7
.
.
Forlller
-
Shoot Out Now
·
A Hangout
.
This week, Mike's Tavern, on 25 Main
st
.

Poughkeepsie owned by
.\
Paul Eibert..
.
·
.
.
.
..
·
Atleast25yearsago "Mike's Tavern" was a three story, 16 bedroom
house owned by Williani Vassar, a prominent Poughkeepsie resident.-
..
Although the
_
16 bedrooms have been renovated into a
2
room bar,
the
·
tavern maintains its homey atmosphere.
.
·
·
. .
:
Within its paneled, nautical interior,
~
above the bar can be seen
a
wooden plaque; "We Run a Tight Ship" the motto
of
Mike's.
·
.
_
:
.
"We're looking for
·
a mature atmosphere where people can socialize
and
·
have a good time,'}
·
said bartende
r
Kevin
·
Burke, a part time
"
Marjst student. Toni'Frye, Marist's sailing·co
_
ach also tends bar .
. :
:
In_!rying'toattracttb!5 crowd, Mike's fe~tures sp~cial every night of
Jhe week:
.
'
.
·
.
·
.
.
.
.
·
~
-
.
Within the hautical decor
,
can be found btillet holes
in
the ceiling,
-
reminders_of
·
toe days when
·
.Poughkeepsie
.
poli~e
·
fre_queitted Mike's
-

for a nightcap. Their favorite past-tii!_le was to
:
find the quickest draw .
.
,
<'!
Weren't you surprised
to
find that,
Ii9
you didn't have one too many
·,
and that really
:
_
wasn't a
·
mfrror behind the bar, but rather
'.
a poof
.
:room? The
,
pool'room was converted from a _porch
·
overlookirig the
·
·
.
.
river w
_
here "Mike's Singles Club" enjoyed clambakes years ago, · _
.
'
.
.
You cad bet your beers Mrs. Vassar wouldturii over
in
her
.
grave if
·.
·
she know
_
fuse~all and Qash bowling
·
were
'
being·played
in
her
living
·
·
room
·
.
·
·
·
.
- ·
·
.. ·
·
·.
_
.
·
.
·
.
:
·
·
·
·.,
.··
,.,
·
·
·
Unlike other bar~jrequ~nted by
-
Mariststudenis,
,
"Mike's'.' has
a
touch of class, a phone booth with a door thatccloses so
,
you can ac-
. ·
tually hear
:
th~ person on the other end
/
Unlike the usual bendable
(Above) Outside shot
of
Mike's Tavern on Main Street, formerly a 16-room house .
-
.
cardboard ashtr~ys, ¥ike's has hubcaps;
:
:
-;
>
.

.
··.
·
',
1
1
·
.
.::.,
We't:e sure _th_at once Mike's
-
modernizes
.
its restrooµis
;
that may
.
.
.
well beth
_
e ongm~l ones the Yassars used
;.
and eliminates the yellow
,
·
,
checked curtains that add a kitchentcmch, it can
:
J:>e rated
.
a
four
and a
1
·
·
half
mug jayem.
·
·
·
I
-
·
Cubicle
~
·
Questio11
.
ed
I
>
,
. .
.
.
.
·
-
.
.
.
f
BySuz.~nneBreen
. Cubicle
_
and in niany
-
ways it
i
:
.
lacks campuswide
·
information.
,
t
..
. ..
The College
·
Union Board's Many com,mittees arid offices on
.
. ·
"
'
,
{CUB) monthly
·
'Cubicle' may campus don't give us iriformation
-
t
·
.. ·
.
.
soon
.
be
-
published
.
.
by Marists
·
when CUB isn't involved,'
.
'.
said
·
·
·
:
C()mmunicatipns
.
department;
·
Ms. BQ<lick.
.
· ,
·
:<
..
.
·
.
.
said
·
Ms:
::·
Dolly
'
Bodiclc".
/:·
coof.:
:
.. u
·
the
i
P.rogram
·
is
-
approved,
:
dinator .. of

college activities.
·
'
·
· Marti
.
Madory, campus coor-
.
''Right now CUB is faced with dinator
,
of, communications;
:
will
.
two major
··
problems

with organize the Cubicle making it a
publishing the Cubicie which
we
·
widelf funded program. ''CUB
hope
to
alleviate with the swit.: shouldn't have to pay the full cost
.
-
ch,"
says
.
Ms .
.
;
Bodick. C'Orie if not only CUB information goes
problem
is
that
'
people in
·
.
CUB into it. We're simply giving_free
··
aren't geare~ up to meeting publicity to others," said Ms.
deadlines, which gives us

a
_
last Bodick
;
·
.
minute
·
crisis with
.,
the printer.
The ~ransfer will occur during
And the printers have no sym-
the swnmer and next September
.
Below~ Ins
_
ide of Mike's: owner Paul Neibert behind the
bar,-'.nautical design;
and.
some
regular
-~
.
.
.
·
..
.
.
·
·
p~thy when
.
we continually ask the
~
Conimunications department
.
· for extensions."
·
will be in charge. «Then CUB will
"The second problem
is
th~C give their information to them for
·
CUB is spending approximately publicity just like everyone else,"
.
$190 a month
·
to publish the Ms
;
Bodick concluded
,
·
..
,.
'
·
Unlikely Courses
By Jeff
Sorensen
_
certificate or even a college
-.
·
community
oriented adult
.
.
.
.
.
.
•·
ciegree
.
.
.·..
·
.
:
education
.
program,
"
explained
. ·
(CPS) .
.
- With
.
courses
··
.
like
.
Students ar.e a.ttracted by "the Bill Draves, coordinator of the
·
"RaisingCatfishinaBartel'
-
~
and iriformality, the
.
shortness of.the Free University
_
Network. He
·
·
"Be ·GoO(r to Your 'Back,''. the . classes and
be~ause
the
,..
ppce is added tha~
although free
.
nation's
·
200
..
free universities
,
right,'' said Sandy Bremer pf the
.
universities

are
.
commonly
.:.
provide
·
classes that
.
most
.
Open University in Washington
.
considered as dying remnants of
..
c<>lleges .wouldn't dream of of-
.
D.C.
·
·.
.
·.
.
.
·
..
·
:
the
·
'60s, the
-
free

university
. -
fering
:
. ..
.
.
.
.
.
'
Staff workers at
.
free univer~ movement
,
is
'.
actually
.
much
Every'- year
·
hundreds
,:ot
sities report that the classes stronger now thl!P ~v~r,
thousands of people enroll atJree
·
·
usually cost between $5 and $15
·
: ·
.
"There may have _been
300
free
universities; which offer classes alth
_
ough some are pric
.
ed
at'
$100
.
.
universities about five years ag?;
·
witnout the burden of grade~
.
or and a few cost nothing.
.
.
but many ofthose were sporadic
.
credit. These alternative
'
schools
::
.
Most free university
.
students
.
efforts," Draves
.
sai(l.
«Today
'
s
.
·
specialize in unorthodox subjects are
·
young
·
(between 25 and
40);
·
free universities are stronger arid
.
.
.
that
.,
traditional
·
·
universities
.
single,
·
·
professional
·
people witl( off~r more
..
classes
.
~o more
.
ignore.
college degrees,
·
according
.
to people;" In
:.
fact, some free
·
·
What _we're doing )s getting Bremer
.
The
.
~jority have some
·
schools
.
have larger
,
t:nrollments
.
back to
.
. the
.
oldest, --most basic backgroilm;l in academic classes
.
-
than
.
state
.
universities. For
.
type
;
.of
·
:
education,
:
w.llere
·
in-.
·
so they come to a free university
.
example, 16,000
..
students an~
·• ·
.
structors are
:
people·who
'.
_
\Vant
to
:
looki:Dg
:
for
.
sonietl$ig different.
.
nually at.tend the
.
Experimental
tea,ch ~nd
.
students
·
are
.
people
·
Seminars on yoga and sexuality
.
College
10
-
~attle, and 14,000
·
who
.
'!ant
to
a
earn,". explained
·
a are particularly' populifr with
_
this
.
·
attend the University. for Man in
spokeswoman for the
.
Ex-· group, she noted ..
·
:
·
·
·
Manhattan, Kansas.
perimental
·
College -- in
·
Seattle,
Other
·
free
:
university
:
staffers .,
The firl!t free university opened
Washingtop; '
.
'we
:
re
·
trying
.
to
!$~~
'
repo~ f.!1at ~lasses
·
on astrology, its _door!!
in
1964 in Berkeley,
.
away

from
,
the
:
preoccupation meditation,
·
.
personal
.
problems
,
Califorma,
..
and the movement
witW teaching certificates
.
_
and
·
·
women's studies, health and a~
.
spread rapidly during the late
degrees
.
and move towards
.
.
and-
:
crafts are well attended.
'60s. "All these schools were
.
learning for
·
enjoyment.'.'

..
·
,
.
.
..
.
·•
: Instructors are generally free to ·
.
located on campus, but since 1971
·

>
Free ~n!versity courses are select ·any subject:for
;:
~lasses •
·
.
we've been moving off campus.
..

.
.
usually ta_ught
_
in the
·
.
homes of . from
'.
tradiUonaF
·
literature· to
"
In fact, full-time students don't
· ..
_
_
;,
_:
t~achers,
_
wh9
:
are
-
paid
_
lit~e. or witchci'aft
{
;
flute •
.
making
··
-
or

always
_
havea
:
_
lot of time for
;

<
j
1othingJor
A
~e~
:
wor~.
::
Th.f
.
i!t.: garde
.
rung
.
·

..
,
:,_:
..
,.
:
<
:
-
-
·
..
t
,
hese<:ours~
_;;
.
_
~owe
'
vese~n_an
·
.
·
:
structors
••,
,
generally
·
·
"
aren't
,
·
·
·
"Free universities
·
have
·
moved
explosion
·
m
·
aclult
.
learnmg,"
..
.
<
'
required
'.
fo
:
·
,
liave .. a
'.
teaching from a campus phenomenon to a
.
Draves
·
coilln'l~nted.
.
.
.
.
.
.
I



. .
,

.
.'
.
,.
. .
.
_; ,
,
.
:i
.
,
Surf and· Turf Night
in
,
theRat
Friday nightFeh. l~th 8
pm
. ·
appetizers
Baked Clams •
,
.
.••. ~
,
.•......•.•..•.••.. 95~
Shrimp Cocktail •.•
,
••.•....•.•••..••
$1.95
·
Fruit Cup ••••• ~
-
- •• .- .
-
-
.-
·
•.•••
·
••
.
••••••
_

.
•. 25~
French Onion Soup au Gratin •
! • • • • • • • • •
95c
,
.
.
·•
-~
Prime Rib
~
s •••••••••••••••••••
~
••
.
•••
.
$5. 95
Filet Mignon.
_
•••
~
•••
-
~ ••••
~
•••••••
~~
$7.95
·
:
Surf and Turf ••
·
••••
·
·

·
••••••• :;
••••••• $7.9$
Twin
Lobster
Tails ••...••..•...••..•.
$7.95
;
shrimp Scampi

·

·
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
. . . . . $6.75
Includes-
Carafe of wine per CtJuple.
All the Salad you can eat.
All the bread you ca~ eat.
·
*If
you don't eat dinner that night, $2.65 will be
taken off your final tab.
*
*Reservations must
be
In
by
Feb. 9th.
...
..,
·
























,
..
I
C
PAGES
THE CIRCLE
,
·
Marist
.
(3-9)
Breal(
Losing
Streak
'
_.
'
I

By Tom McTernan
JANUARY 27. 1971
.
I
·
High
·
.
011 Sports


By.Thomas
.
McTernan


18.11.1
18.11.2
18.11.3
18.11.4
18.11.5
18.11.6
18.11.7
18.11.8