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Part of The Circle: Vol. 18 No. 17 - March 24, 1977

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I
THE
CIRCLE
Volume_ 18,Number
17 .·
MAR/ST-COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
·
·
S.G.
elections.·
$tud~llt input ..
big
isSue
in> ·
·• ~i\Yay
."Pres._race
'-
By
Larry
Striegei: ·.~-
between . administrators and
•·
-~-
·
stuQ_ents~
-
_Con~_erning · policy.·
. Richard Crump
. March 24, 1977
Jeff': Blanchard ·'
Student input
in-
adininisttative decisions is• the . biggest. issue ..
decisions is the: foremost issue· Jantzeg list~d student apathy, a1, _
listedby candida~es in _a three• the · bigges_t. problem, -
:
but -
way race for student government said"lackof communication'' on
·
- (SG) presid~ntlhis<year:.Marist campus- is "an_oth~r foajor :~'~sta~lish,
·~a .
value
based ·he is,~elected p/\Vm.get it by . program is to be directly
in·
.students will::choose
·
between- issue.''.
..-..
·· ·•· .-.
.
:
-
directioq, and-s~nse of self~- meetmg '.'regularly with ad~
fluenced by." Crump said
three residents/Jeff Blanchard,- · Blanchard, , : a ·sophomore .· respect» for Marist ,students. -.niinistrators; faculty ;and other __ - students could earn that voice by
Richard-A Cr:ump ,and -Brian __ American ,·studies · major :··and . Howevertfie gid.notdescribe the_ students.','.;, •.•· ··. ,-
~
·
·· "

<
"electing a student govern-
~a~tzenfor.the executive po~ition st_u~ent,,a:c_ademic§oniniitt~e :particular~_·poUcies heha:s
.
in _
Crump, a--junior biology major
ment...which will direct their
m~Gelecti_ons_!odayandFriday.- member,saidaspresiderithewill mind;, ~--· '

·
".
·
:::,•
•·
andresidentadvisorinLeoHall,
efforts toward students' goals
_In a survey taken _by -The
-
. w?rk
.
on-"~aking policies which·· _ Blanchar:d said open ,com--
.
said. he thinlfs students should
and. efforts while _maintaining
Circle, bo~h Bla~char_d ~nd __ will. be_ne~t-
-
tbe/ t~tal"
,
stugent municationbetw~en('allaspecf:s · h~ve
-
~a s~y
as
to how,~~hy, and . a~istrativ
_
e overwatch;"
•.· ·
Crump said c_?mmumcatJoll POP,_ulat!on:: .and,.will .work to_ of the ca.mp1JS,.1s neededJmd:if: by whom their four yea(college
In
.v~p'
race \ ·
.
4
. -
.
-
"
. . . .
-
-
~•-"
B(cfei,Srl(,;
"
s
agaillSt
Spra.tt·
.
:
·-
. .
,
;·,
" .
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----
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-_.•
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Continued on page 7
, .. . By Larry Striege"i •
:
~pr9ye . relations between· .. the. SG ,
and:::
better the fotal student• life ..
.
'
• . .
., .. •: ,.
'
·• ... ·.
. _; <ind, o_ther studenr:·groups
·
on at-MaristCollege." The cfiminal
Like candida!es runriing for tf!e . c~mp~.
-
'
-,-c
-'· · - .. . .· -
·
.
justice major said-.-he would do -
to~ spoFin, tbe
.
stuaent· goy_!!rn:; .... --M~::·•._'13ree~ -
:
~
·f •·-
:re~idenf' . ~
.
by i'br~aking
0
dciwn' inany of :
- 111e~ts_
(S~)
.·t.!te: tlVp';
.
s!~d~nts ;-:,s?P_ti·q}!lor,e ·-.,~On,llllU!licatioys :{-the't~&s.;~taii@ig:,b,etween
.the.•.
l-
·.
squ~rmg · ,,off:-. foc:,tne·': _vice:'<~ :.rnl'IJOf. wllo
·
,transferred

to ·Marist ·c:·:students·,?'and,.:Yadriliriistfators:'~.:C
. -~¢'
:
~~H•'~tf'.
·
·
..
·;_;:~~?,:
·
··~~~~~--~-:-~\~:L/.?

~
;
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:
~~j~;--z:~~~~~~~~~~~~%~\\~fu~~~~~~~ii~~!~i~Jt~rli'.~~m;i~
'ljI~'
~·i:~~~
~
r~ces on
·pg;· 2. ·
.· ·.
· ·'
lackuW
"ill..
the pa~.? She
,
add$
·
~:el~ctecl,- ''ta~e-upthecftght :\\'.bere· ·
·
- ·· ·
-
. ·, ·
.
-
·
·
--tbat,
it
bas::-,(Ca_ very. outdated
·
·· the student·•: committee\ '(whlch':
- ·
. ·, ·constitution/' but· she.did: not•·:presented.~· Ust of.grie\iarices/to
.
. . . .
, , _
.offer·any specific
details
to,back~
Dr.
Foy),llas failed•'the ·stiident~.
presidential position: in. _tod~y)_ . her .~tatements; ·
~~E:
also · listed · body.": ~owever, in The: Circ~~
. and .tomorrow's elecbons :believe .. ·.· tbe.-lack. of activities :on cam-
pre-election surv.ey, Spratt did
that .Marist students don't have pus"_
I
as.
:
a
niajor , issue. not' name any instances;of such:
enough voice . in' a.drniilistrativ·e · <'Som~t~g has to be organized failures. ·
~
- ··--: -.. .
decisions.· Suzanne

Breen: and .-for-·stud~ntsto do,"· she said.
>
Ms.
Breen:sa~d she is;qualified
.Charles Spratt both believe there· '. · Ms. Br:een said tbesolutfon:to ·" to be SG vice-president because
is·- a lack . 'of communication t!Jese
·
protilems is studentinput. she· "deals well :with. people ·and_
between students ·and ad--
"In order· ,to , create·· com~ listens hard/!She claims to nave
ministrators, accordfrig to- a ·pre-
inunication
b~tween . ad: . ~worked qi student governments
election survey by The Circle/
ministr~tion and students we.(the ·before and says she
is_
"a con- •
However,: the two• wbo ·are-·· SG)·mu~t.be.consistent:and open ·• cerneffi.tude11t-w!_)o
wants
to
see
·
·-.
- campaigning for .a full~year job with tbem·(the administrators)," cbariges occur on-tne· campus."
Suzanne
·
Breen .
- Charles~Spratt
,-
,-'
Pi!Ogress slowing·
~: · diffe_r on other issues.
Ms.
Breen sbe said. ~s. Breen_added that .. Spratt believes he ...
will.
do
a::
says
if sheis•~lected she would
,
problems·:shollld be'.deaU with good·job_ifne
~
elected because ·
like to :,,restructure: the con~
,
,when .. -Jhey .. arise, '.'not ,:three
-
he has «be-en atMarist ,for two
· -
stitution ofthe-SG/a,ndJmprove ,_nionths
-
later/' - .
.
.
-
years a_nd
-
haf seen,_ the ad~
byLarcyStriegei
.
concerning ·academic; financial,
activities im campllS. Spratt says . -Spratt; •- als~:_. a
resident" ministtation · _constantly tl'lking
.. ·.·. ·
- . ·. ·.
·
and administrative ·ctecisions.
At
if
he becomes vice-president he - sopbomore, says ifhe is elected advantage_'ofthe student·body:» ·. · Altho~gli\'
ifome ·
of
their the· time they. threatened.· a
.. will
,
''take up" the fight»
of
the' ·-be will work.to C'create a. more However; again .be did
.
nofin-
derr.fariils hl:lye'._l>ee~ met, pre'. student.strike of-clas~es liriless
committee· ··of students:' which , workable reliµionship between elude any instances to- back his sprmg break mid
~
, term they saw some , changes made ~-.
presented"a,li§t"ofgrievancesto:;·: theS_Gandthestudentbody."He .. daim,
.' . . . -
. .
.
-
examinations
slowed-
the
duringth~week.Onthe·following
MaristPresideiii-Llniis' R/ Foy·iri : says he ·would also "help organize: · .... 'The . new .. vice-president wµl
progress
'
of· the:.,. "committee of
Thursday the group of students
late February; .and ·work.to
irn· . ·
more: social activities. at .Marist. ;take office
iri.
September. .
. . . 21'! almosfto a stop. According to
met with . 12 college ad-
..
·. ··
~,: .•· .··
'
· -
·
·· ·

·>
·.
· · · ··
·...::
· ·
.
-severa!mem.bers,the group has
ministrators to- discuss the
· . not met since Sµnday night, .Feb. . problems. At the meetll.lg several
._, J~ri,pli$-,·s·q;tial
·p.o.lic_y:dis,cusseil .
.
.
.

.
.,
....

.
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.
'.
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.
.
,
:·.
.
.
.
.
~7 whenPresident
,µnus
R: Foy agreements- concerning the .
·
addressed almost:400 studerits:in . grievances were·made. ·
-
the campµs. theater.. .
. . ··-".'·
·
.
The,committee'sdemands for·
ExtendedHours.
: -'By:M81,ll'~~J1Crowe : .
"
• .
groups represented,'. at thE( -'.individ~aliirpblein a~d the~~~~s extended gym
.aiid
library hours
.
; · - ·
. . -:--.'- ·
-~-meeting·. would - work . .in-
little_a·school could do:about it. nave been
.
met.and on Mar. 10
_The two most visable changes
Represen~tives.of
an
·campus
dependently for-three weeks'and .. Individiia~, he said, ·should -be so~e·inembers-Qf
-
the group-and,~, are th(? e~ended hours in the
organizations:
µiet ·
Wedn~day, . : bring , their :-finding1kback ·for·- responsible for their own ·actions sev:eral
.
/administrators
1
met · ·to .
gym
and lib~ary .
.
: .. _ ..
· ·..
. .
March:9,:
to_:
·discuss -~·and for-
furth~r discussion.
·
.
·. ·· · · ·•·.~·. · but -unfortunately that· student.· discuss·campus social policy asa·., .· -As· !i···resillt. of • ~e group's - ·.
mulate·-:a·."campus_dvide. ·social-.
·
· Lamb.~rt" moderate_d - the attends Marist·· and.· there. is . result ofthe committee's plea for
demands, a committe~ ·
,
was
.
poli~y• that-.. woulci; help: solve Jhe·' ': m~tm·g ,.: and stated ?-that
-
"the · · nothing that can be donei.«Marist: more :. :faculty • ·pa,rticipation •··· in · fo~ed to set ~P ~-new.policy for
abusive_: uses -of alochol. on•. the_,,,· purpos~of the·01eeting was to ·gef ·
'will,.
aiways··oo:
a
.-drinking'.:·
m:~·
•~pus :events;: ;(See .: related · · ~e ~Id .. ~ar1St . ~ - .·· I~ . con-: •
Marist__ C_ollege:
·
campu.s;
i
ac-: . : those . people µiost·' involved..
·
'. in , sijtution
·
_ untff thlF eiltfre :
·al~
·
·
~tory elsewhere
.
·on_ pg. 1) .. · .. ·
. Junction,; with· Athletic; Dir~tor
cor_ding/·.to; FredO::'.:L_aJ.llb~rt, _
.
. campus·,life.to;agree
ori
.
ai>OJ!cy·/mosphere:~~anges_;" he',~id;· .
.
· -.::- ,· l:iowever,-:acco~clirig\to coin-··- Ron
·
Petro, and.
10_
interested
·ass1Stant'dean,otstudents.· -"·'--,-' · ··that .• :: would·
_
effect.•::tne::..·~whole .i:·:.-As'.,.-tne .. •·.discuss10Q .
:
continued· ;mittee·membei'
'
Peter Baudouin· :.._studellts,p~urs for,l;ltudent use of.
·After,;:a. .:
;
tw~and;a:;hlllf, .. •hour, · •·<;ampus;, T~_begin·Qie-dis~ussion ... s~uden~·held to:the: opinion that
·
·: severaUssiies
-
still-
remain
to·
b~. ·. · the· gym wer~: ~~ended Mar -··2,
discussion: it ·was· resolved .that '-', ne· a~ked,' "Should there·: be. •a ·'.no r~gillations should be · ptit-:on ; worked-:-'o·ut
·
·including• formation
.
, and a new. security -system _\'las
althou~h . .,_:
.
no{:-~'~ .restricti\re :;:-.odiffe_ren!:e-: .. bet~een _:,Mar!~~: the:am~un_t'oJ ~qu9_r)erved •.
Jim
_of .:.a ne'Y _'.judicial : ~oard,' .and
.
:. set up .to '~e~rease van~lis~. _
regulat19ns would be put .. on the -,College ; and. Franks?'!.· ·and • ···Shannon,:pres1dent:of ·tne ·1nter~ ··explanation ·to: students of'· the . ~tud~n.ts 1_1ow must._.sh?w their
-·amounts <of alcohol ;.to .be con._: "How-, do:.
we~ .
feel: ·aoouf
··
. the:, •,•House Co~cil;·said "I don'tthink ·
.
college's 'budget. :._ -·_ :. : ·. : -.
-
·. identificatJ~n.catd ~-g~':ll access. _
sumed,
~
·wsc_ussions. would ·.con--~ ·reputation:i of:.
·
Marist: 'being:· ,a';':~~ can tell people what
they
caii •-':.: Th~e.and otlier.'demarids were : to ~~
-
~a~ility ·" ; . . . : .. , :-· , --
.
tinue·, ."',uritil.:
1
:,campusi<w:i_de
.
:.
_
;drinking ·s~ool?'t ·-:,.---'
0
·
0:•'~:.·· ;·.,.
-,.and, can ·not'·do . .We .-would·:1>e-< first m:ade;on ·Feb/21'":°when:the · -~~Ho_urs ~- th~ libracy-~e~e
'alsQ .
: guideliries:oL sociaf,procedures
!~:,.
,Jolin :_Blue;~:.Iriember::of.::the
1 ·
infringillg:orf
their
iights:''··\/·~:·;::·,group
ofr-21'stiidents:·antl
studenf·:
.-e~n~ed_~,ac.;c.oi:dance,~1th.the
are · fomiillated.
::-.It -
.:ws;s
,.:_:a1so:·-_'
Co]Jege~-Union .Board -beg~- and · -:- Dolly, B.odick, . ·coor~ator.: of ·--1ea~_ers :demanded to'.see Dr~:F.oy ·
·
: conm.u.~e; of ;21'.~. c;l~mand_ for:
a .
.. re~olvecF·thaVnew:
·
;
activities.,.
maintainitd >;throughout_h:
1
the ·
,: ·' -~- ~·•;\
;,·:!-.:.: _..-:~:. : ..
~:~-c:
-~.,-:-··to
.'gi.'ve·Jum::a ·:sii::~ ':page Jist of/ ·"~~tiour
.
~tu~y:Jacj.lity.on ~ampus .
. -~olIJdr~'~lst~J~!;~;::~~
Iha~;~,~ ~, '.·
.
~ .
.
C<>Oiinii<d.0Dii
2
'.?il;;~~
~;:~~;!"'tf
~iJ•(.:.·. -
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5'!\1~..:,;if~~>- . •
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·
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·.:.:_::·_··:.:.:.:.--.~:.
,-,_:·.--:~~-~-·::..:
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...
·:.
:
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The Circle
March 24, 1977

.
.
--
. .
.
SG
Treasurer's
Race
r
·
Three-w•y
contest
.•
:.r

By Regina
Clarkin
this
election is
to
increase student
The junior
criminal ,
justi~e
;
involvement and awareness. She major believes
·,
that the most
Campus wide knowledge of says she would like to
·
see
an important issue is that the
student government financial increase in the number of clubs students should be better in-
matters is the
main ~ISSue· of and organizations on campus. formed of the workings and
today's and Friday's election
·
She proposes to do this by taking procedures of the
business
office
expressed
:
by student
·
govern-' a
salary cut along with her and the student
·
government. He
ment (SG) treasurer candidates, running mates (Blanchard,
,
claims it is unc
_
onstitutional that
·
Keith Holhnan, Martha Trabulsi, Bi:een and Ng) in the
salary given
__
students
must ge!
~al approval
and Pa:t Whelton, all
·
·
resident
to
student government treasurer;
_
from the
·
. ~dn11n1stratlon ~n
-'
students.
·
The math major would like to
certain decisions and says he
will
_
Havirig
.
"some sort of veto make allocations to clubs
.
more work to change
·
thiS
.
.
· ·
power
·
over
certain

.
ad-
.
·
objective, relying on need rather
'
-
Whelton promised to make the
ministrative
-
decisions con-
than popularity
.
·
-
'
fµtancial situation of . the
-
SG
Ne
.
w. d
,
,·r-
e
·
·ct
·
o
·
·
r

cerning student funds"
"
'
is
an
Ms
:
Trabulsi
'
said she is public.However,accorgingtothe
·-
issue. Keith Holhnan sees
·
as qualifiedforthe position because
SG constitution he would
_
be
important in
this
election
·
ac-
.
she says she understands "where
required to do
this
9:0yway.
;
.
.
cording to a pre-election survey the students are coining from"
.-
He believes he
IS
qualified
needed
_
to teach
-
writing and
to·
taken by The Circle.
;-
· ·
_.
_
and she believes 'She has a
.
because he has
·
an
''"adequate
give assistance and leadership to
The sophomore
_
in"ath
·
·
and "concern
·
for their needs." She
··
knowledge
·
of
·
the needs of
.
the
Robert
P. Lewis, a graduate of
.
the instructo~ in
this
program
.
" - computer science major feels the says
·
there
_
are
certain
campus"
·
and because he
·
is a
by Daniel DromJn
Manhattan College, has been
The goal of the
.
program is to students
:
ought·-
-
to
·
have "necessary changes which must
junior and also a residence
-
~d-
named director of. the new assure that every Marist student representation in deciding where
be
made in the interest
·
of the
'
_
visor.
.
__
.
writing program at Marist has a l>roadly based idea of how thesttidentgovernmentfundsare students." However she did not
The
position
-
of the treasurer
College
.
The position was created to write a college
.
level essay.
going
.
arid making sure the elaborate oh these changes in the
·
encompasses
<
heading
.
·
the
-
as
part
of Marisfs reorganization
"The challenge is to somehow "administration
·
listens
to Circle survey~
·
-financial board which allocates
of
.
_
-
its curriculum,
_
_
which
._.
will teach writing in such
a:
way that a student representation on
'
certain
· ·
Pat Whelton,
:
~ member ofthe
-
·-.
funds for

student organizations;
emphasize basic skills, a balance student confronts his real issues."
-
· _
_
··
·
·.
-
- ·

·
studentcommitteii
--t
hat went to
·
the accounts ofchartered student
of
,
academic experiences; and weakness and at the
same
time
Hoilman does not say how
:
these President Foy during the student
organizations and acts asalias,m
value confrontation.
-
·,
does not get discouraged about plans would be unplemented.
A
·
protest
;
said he would "like to see
between the students,
-
student
According to Lewis, the writing
·
it,". he said
.-
·
·
·
·
.
·
desire to get involved
;
knowledge that effort c.ontiriued and
'
says he
governnient and
'
tile business
program was instituted because
,
Lewis
received
his
master
'
s
,
of "what the
_
students want"
·
wants
_
to
~
a part
.
of
it!'
·
office.
·
,
:.
many students lack the ability to
>
degree from
.
Colun1J>ia Univer
_
-
_
membership
·
in
.
the
_
Student
write a C'literate and intelligent

sity_
:
and
is
currently a doctoral
-
·
Academic
Committee
.
.
are .
.
S,G
,
Secretary's
Race
.
piece
-
of prose!'
·
.
'
· '
.
-
candidate
at
New
·
York
·
reasons why Hollman feels he is
He says his job will be "to University: He lives with his wife qualified for the job.
.
·
·
·
administer this program,
_
to be and
·
:
-
.
three
.-
children
in
_
Freshman Martha
_
Trabulsi
Ng
vs.
n,,li11.Spina
·
involved in projecting the staff
,
Potig~eepsie.
·
~

·
says the most important iss~e
-
.in
·
,
.
.
_,
.
.
.
.
·-
.
.

. .
-
..
:
.
·
.
.
.
,
-
.
.
.
.
,
...
.
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.

byMikeTeitelbium
on campus, the faculty, the ad-
.
continued from
p.l.

·
.
.

ministration and the ~tudent;,
;
·
.
·
·
:
Social_
.-
pollcY-
·
:
· .
..
..
.
..
.-
-~-
.. _
_ ...
~
.
. . ·
communication, or tile
lack of
,-:.
?
'The
students
·
need
·
t9
·'
Jcnow
..
Camp'i1s
Center, said that
'
,
bartender to refuse alcohol to
-
availabili~y was
.
her
-
grea~est it," is
-
the key issue .listed by
what is happening Jo
-
their
students did not live in a vacuwn
-
-
intoxicated 'individuals on
.
the
.
problem
~
creating ~ecreation
.
·
candidates in the two
-
way race
.
·
money," said Malaspina.
-
"What
and that the individ!-181s getting grounds that he is .legally liable
.
-
The ol~ library
~~
n<>t
_
be
·
used for
.
·
Student Governnient (SG)
I want to do is to

keep
·
the
drunk are "making animpact-on By working
.
out procedures that
;
_
because ?£
.
ventilatj.on Pf~blems
J
secreb1ry
.
-
this
;
year..
_-
_ Glen
·
_
~tudents
-
informed
'-:
with
·
_
a
0
bi~
the whole
·
school.''.
.
,· :
.
.
!
--
_
_;
c~ be follo\Ved in
:
iill
.
social
.
ac
-
.·.
and, _the
·:
~o b!3semen
t
is
·
not.- Malaspina
·
and Daye Ng
'.
are
monthly
-
_-
,:
student
_ .
.
letter
.
.

Blue
·
said that
in
order
·,
to stop
,
'
t1vities;
,.-
.
.
by
·
every
. ·
·
organization
;
:
·
-
:
.
consi~e!ed
'
:
~
feasible•

~e,£~~
,
~
-
"
o.f,
.
'.
.
vying
:
for
.
.
the·
year
~-
long post.
_- -
..
:
..
·
_
highlighting
•·
both
: ·
-
the·
·c
student
;r
·
-
·
·
· -
-
-destructive drinking ''you'd ha:ve
_
they
.
hope
.
to eliminate
-
any
.
in-
·-
sec
_
ur1ty proble,ms;
·
f'Jaces ~greed
'
'
__
The
ele~tion

will
..
be
held today
· ·
_
·
government
-
pi~tirigs and t}Je
'
to get: rid of
60
people and that consistencies
-
that have caused upo11 were the music
·
roo~, to be and Friday

'
Students~
'
Qrith
activities
·
of
·
the new student
just won't
:
happen
.
" However
·
confusion in the past about how
.
tempQrary home of. pmg-pong,
·
resident
.
and ·commuters may
·
revie~
·
board
.
"
_
,
-
,
:
.
other students disagreed and said much liquor
_
can
be
served
.
and b~per poo! tabl_es and the cast their votes in
.
Donnelly Hall.
Ng, wants to create a wider
_ they believed students should be
Although administrators said
'
use o! !he Browsmg Llbr~ry as
-
~
Malaspina, a
:
junior criminai
range of clubs and make the SG
'
a
·
thrown out if it would help
.
the the>:_ ar
7
anxious t~ ~~rt
irn-
television room._-Ms. Bodick also justice major,- said
·
the
-
most
more effec~ive
~
o~dy; "Before
·
majority.
·
plementmg new actlv1tles, the stated that .a discount could ~e important issue will be that of
anyone can
_
pronuse anything,
Some people also expressed the availability of space and the
.
a~r~ged with the Poughkeepsi_e
·
-
information and communication
·
th~
:.
students must have an ef-
hope of working out a more limitation of time presented Ctv1c Center -for concerts
·
u
.
.<_lealing with- the budgeFand
fective
·
stud~nt
'
gove
_
rnment
,
and
feasible means of enforcing the
_
difficult obstacles to be over
-
. enoug~ students showed that they
.
administration.
_
_.
_
_ - -
·
that is
what
we are promising. By
stipulations
·
in the New York
come.
_
we~e mtere~ted .. ·
.
.

_
Ng,
a
-
freshman·
·
com~
-
having four people on-the
1
s
,
anie
Liquor license that require a
Ms.
·
Bodick said that space
Su~ce
JJ
1~ . ~iscuss10~
-
em-
munications - major, said he
.
.
~
slate, we can work together
~ - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - phasize~ activ1t1es that could be·-, w~nts
·
to
-
~eep cominunicatiori
.
·
oecause we chose each other."
· Campus
Ministry
Presen~:
.
Donnelly-Room
246
·
.
.
at2:30p.m.
and
::
.
_
.
.
-
Champagriat~Firesiqe Lounge
· .
.
. at7:00p.m.
;.;
Wednesday,March30th
·
.
.
amovieb'y"
.
PAOLO PASOLINI
_-
.
.
1mmedu~tely _started
-
many open between·an the committees
-
·
students
·
requested
.
that
·
old
_
_
·
·
, -
·
·
services be brought
'
back.
_
-
_
.
-
.
1
·
-
-
· -
·
-
d~:.:rc!=~;
·
.
eo maybecome
the students as well·
as
Leo Deli.
·
·
-
.
·
-
·
Although
·
no conu'nent was made
-
·
11
t
.
·
-_ -
.
-
h
'
d
-
-
~rs'~!~°t~!li
;
::.r:_!~:~rtt~
-
a
:
·
_
.
ros
.
orm
cupation in
·
the
,
Chanipagnate
barn. Lambert said'that when the
pre-schoolwas given the "Barn"
ByElaineBrusoe
·
Amato and
-
.
Lambert said they
it
was understood
·
that Marist .
.
-w
_
anted to get
·
some feedback
-
students would be given
;
equal
.
. -
-
.
Peter Aniato,
.
director of
.
from students o~ a plan they and
.
space.
·
residence and Assistant Dean of
.
Gerard
Cox
;
assistant
·
dean of
_
·-
Many students also said that
'.
Students Fred Lambert were
.
the acadamics
-
had
.
been
.
working
·
on
more participation by faculty
·
and
oitly people who
.
attended ·a
-~
to
establish
ari
all freshman
students would hopefully build up
meeting last- Monday
.
to discuss dorm." - Amato said they
._
were
a pride for
.-
~arist c?m~ge
_
.;
_,
·
changing Leo dorm
to
·
an
all
.
strongly considering Leo
·
because
freshman dorm.
·
·
·
it could accomodate all of
~
the
Chalrpeople
·
elected
<
.
·
·
:
incoming lreshmen.
:
~
·
.
-•.
Amato said there was
.
a need
·
for an all freshinandorm because
.
Marist has
.
to
•·
recogn~e
'
the
·
·
byW
_
endyStark
.
The committee
d
d
.
chapge·_~tudents
.
go. through
as
_
.
.
_
_
_
_
.
ec~de 'to
.
,
they
,
adj~ to campus
lif~;
·
He
.
d!sl!ibute
_.
_
surveys
· .
ra.ting
.
µie
:
said
,
the
·
_
administration planned
Jeni Guarino and Suzanne di.wiers during the
,
meeting: wpich
.
.
special organization
·
and special
-
--
DiGiacomo
-
were·
·
elected
·
co.:.
·
.
·
was
_
--
atten4e
_
d
,
by
.
,_i~
-
comm1~e
_
-.
_
training of resident' advisors

to

_
chairmen
-
.
of the food
·
corriniittee'
_
members and
-
·
Dmm& Service
-
deaLwith problems which fresh-
:
·
by the
18
newly elected floor
Mana~er
,
_Frank _G~_1do ..
The men may_ have
:
_ -
·
.
representatives
:
members .sw,-vey~ will be
:
distnbute~
_
by
·
.
.
:
.
Amatosaidth~upper:-el8$smen
·
Tuesday afternoon. TomHam-
.
members
_
ofthe
_
food comnutte~
·
w
·
ouldnothilvetodeal·withother
mood was elected
as
clerk of. the
·
to stud~nts Iea
_
ving the cafetel'ia
-
·
;
levels of student development
·
'
committee
;
,
-
.
,
·
-
-
·
.
..
: -
.
--
-
-
.,
.
·
,
af~r
.:
dinner

_
for: four
_
w~ks.
·. ;
·
_
and
,
_he ~oped
·
to
)
uso organize
·.·
~ast
_
semeste_r's
"'
food
:
co~.:.
:
-
.
I
t
ho~
_
-
st11dents
:
.
wll!,
par-
special m~rest houses for up-
mi~~
wa~
_
a_bolished
-
be<:&use-1t _uc1~~e
::
1n. ~e
,
:
·
surveys,
:
said
·
perc1assmen .
..
,
.
·
- ·
.
,
-
..
-
was ;meffect~ve,
.
according
-c
to
.
Gua,rµ10 .
.
?
~'It
will
:
_
only
:.
take
,,
30
_.-
·
'>,
Fred
_
·Lambert
-.
said
-they
·
also
-
.
Guanno_.
·
.·_
-
,
_
·
,
_:
,
'
·
__
·_
· ..
_.-.- ·
,
_: .
"."'-
.
'
s~ondsJ_i:
.-,f
Ulout; Wstokeep
.
the
:,
.
·
wanted tod.iscuss
:
alternate

food
'
<:
~l~c
.
tions
/
,
for
.. :
_
thee
:t
:
flo~r
._
Joo,ci
-
,
s~rv,\'.:e
;
~
on
.
ffi.eir
.:
toes
;
::
pur
<t
plll_n$
:
and.
·
w.lietber
-
stt1derits
think
:
-
repr~tatiyes
took.place ~for:e
=_.
coim.ru~e
-
willJiav~
,
facts
;
from
.<
:
:
there
.
is a need
-
for-alterriate
:
food
-
-
:
the
_:,
spnng
-;-
break;
.:-
N~th
_:.
floor
·,
:
the
.-
survey
.-
to
·
show
:'
Joe
;
turenz
,
'
plans
::'.
:
,
',:\
;
:
i
'
/-
·:
,-.
·
:>>
.
·'
·
-:
,
_
;'
'
:
-
,
Cham~gnat
::
HalL
:
is
-;.:
the
'
only
.
-
81\~
Guido
so
they
,
~change
,
tlie
;
\\
-'.
Studetits
·
'
·
wfil
i
be
:•.,
given
~
>
th°Ef
.
/
unr.epres~~t~
.
~
.:-:,
n9~r
/\
i~
/-
~~~
-
·food.'
-
'
:>::\
:
·
- :
.~.\
_i:
'
.,
,,,
·-,;.~
-.:-,
·.
:
:
·
chanceto.vote
'
on
_
tbese·proposals
'
----.-------.------•--.-----1111
~~ttee
.
.
·
-:•
··-::)>->:
--
.
•-··.
t
:
:>.
·
.
-
"'
0
.-
-
,_
,.-:
__
: . -·
••

on
_
f~day,-
_
~p~
_

>"·. '-·'.··
.
:,
,.
,_
....
;
·
-
.
.
'































I
March 24, 1977
The Circle
Page3
personality of the week
;
More than a prof
Pooh play Monday
By
Wanda Glenn
,,
Brother~Joseph Belanger, who
lives_ on the third floor of
Leo
Hall
is not the typical Marist resident.
.. - Brother Joe, as .he is more
eomnionly called by soine
students, graduated from Marist
in 1948 as a Marist Brother and
returned
iri
-1959 to teach French.
· Living on campus is not the
ideal situation for Belanger, . but
he does it because he says he has
· a .. commitment to Marist beyond
the classroom.
"If
I don't un·
derstand where the students are
coming from I have , a real
problem.'" -

.
"Living on campus I can stay
in touch with the students," he
says. -
_· ·
Brother Joe's apartment is on
the third floor of Leo where the
student lounge;used to be. Three
- · and a half years ago, when he
decided to move in, the lounge,
and the adjoining room usually
the · Resident Advisor's room,
were reconstructed into his
presentapartment. ·
..
. Tite college supplied the kit•
chen, and equipment . and the
furnishings.were done by Brother
Joe and some other
·
Marist•
ijrothers ;. .
·
The homey atmosphere. of. the
apartment· . makes you almost
forget you are in a dorm. "When
kids ·first come into the apart-
/.
Brother Joseph Belanger
sound asleep and nothing wakes
me up ... not even the fire alarm."
Brother Belanger pays rent,
but has no responsibilities to the
, building, "but I
just
do whatever
I can
to help.''
·
He sets aside Wednesday and
Thursday nights to eat dinner
with the Marist Brothers from
Eden Terrace and Lourdes.
On other nights he eats Ief•
tovers from the special dinners,
such as beans, franks, or
minestrone soup. ''I eat . very
simply," -he said. "Hopefully
some swnmer I can totally relax
. and just learn to _cook."
Brother Belanger. spends his
Christm_as vacations at his home
in Lawrence, Massachusetts and
• the other part in Europe fulfilling
. his duties as Director_ of the
,,
Marist Abroad Program. "It's a
ment, their first comment is it's mad rush," he says.
just like home;" he· said.
During the summer he pitches
. He says his major purpose is to an eight by ten foot tent upstate
get- people into a natural en• and spends four to five days at a·
vironment. Brother Belanger time
there
reading
and
used to give dinners every organizing his schedule for the
Thursday night for a different next school year.
floor. or campus group, but he
Brother Belanger enjoys
says he hasn't been doing it as tennis, reading and bridge. He
much· as he wo~d ~e beca~e
wants to jog and swim
in
the
h~ ~as oo.en busy.
wipi overru~t Mccann Center when. it opens.
hiking trips and a Iectm:e senes.
''It
is not home, not the ideal
-- Belanger says ~e noises on ~he living," said Belanger, "but it is
floor have never_ bothered
him ...
what I want to do; to
be
able to
"Most of ·the no1Se takes place give a little more than just
a
after midnight and by then l'ni teacher:'' ..
lnterhouse talks
by Craig Cliborn
'For the ninth consecutive year
Marist College will host a
Children's Theatre production.
This years show is entitled
"Christopher Robin's Memories
of Winnie•the•Pooh and the
Hundred Acre Wood''.
It is an
adaptation of A.A. Milne's classic
story, "Winnie-the-Pooh".
The play will be presented in
the Marist Theatre at no cost, as
has been U1e practice in the past.
The dates are: Monday and
Tuesday, March 28 and March 29
at 9 a.m. and 12 p.m. Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday per-
formances will
be
given at 9:30
a.m. and 12:30 p.m. On Thursday
night a performance will given at
8 o'clock which will be open to
Marist students. On Friday night
there will be a 7 o'clock per•
formance for interested people
outside · of Marist. Sunday
af-
ternoon's show is for the parents
of Marist students.
Producer Vinnie -Capozzi said
that there is a possibility that the
cast will troupe to Long Island
and Westchester with the show
and the cast might also put on·
several special performances for
I.B.M. employees.
There have been no real
problems that slowed up the
play's production but, the con•
dition of the theatre itself has
caused some delays, Capozzi
said. Leaking ceilings through
out rehearsals have been an
inconvienience, but nothing can
be
done about them at
this
late
date. The floor and some of the
sets were damaged by water but
they are expected to be repaired
in time for the show.
John Blue the manager of the
theatre said the whole show was
"organized great" and the show
would bring something to the
Marist community as well as the
surrounding area,
The cast and crew number over
a hundred, with more people on
the technical end than · the per•
forming end.
One innovation the show hopes
will be successful is the em•
ployment of fihn along with the
live performance. This has never
been done at Marist and is done
very seldom in any other show of
this
type.
Rubella
outbreak
about
food;
other
issuesb.~~t;;~;~~:~
a~s::~::~l:~f:t
-.,b;CathyRyan
pears, in~ regard to residence porl:!ry and.there is a 24 hour and an outbreak of rubella,
other students had blood tests
and Alison Hickey:.
halls responsibilities._ . . .
/ . plan widerway.
_
commonly known as the German and throat cultures done by the
·:~• ,.
.. .. . ,-·.: '.. I, . ·. .. •. . . The lock systerii' arid key< :;Iriterhouse :---Councn. members measles.
.
BoardofRea\thandconf.irmed as
..
·
Ac .· a::n::'
lnterlioufii'i"
,·.·coiiricil .
. ·
·c·?ntrol .,, . on "'''.'°:cf.im.p~~}~:were<;Geoi-ge:
,
Galllbeski---and,0-: Mike.
.
. .. i,\c~qrding :to'. school" ,nurse rubella. .
.
.
·meeting Friday Mai:ch.:4, -.discussed by council ·membe_rs Marchesanopres.entedaproblem HelenO'Conhor, approximately·
"The Board· of Health was
. members discussed· three oir and Joseph Waters, .director of concerning the. area .· in
Cham•
25 resident students were investigating the possibility of
·tional meal plans with Joseph , security. Waters said security is pagnat Hall which was built and diagnosed as having rubella by · closing Marist, but figured the
--
Lurenz, director of dining ser-
now doing
a
study-on_ keys and funded by Marist students, and the Dutchess County Board of school would close for spring
vices.
Lurenz
said · these locks, and different types of locks· has
been
alloted
to
the Health, They were
all
sent home break anyway," Mrs. O'Connor
hypothetical plans are the most are being looked- into by experts psychology department for before the spring break. They said.
·
popular on other college carri- - in the field;
preschool. The two members have all recovered and are back
The Board of Health · has
I
d
t
t t t d ts ·
t th
hi h
at school
assured the Office of Student Life
puses.
_
nor er. o pro ec s u en m wan . e area, w c was once a
The fi"r.st case of the vi·ral th
t
th
-
t f th
o ·
h
h
"d t th
·t
·11 b

t
f
M · t
a
ere 1s no
ur er reason
ption one is t at t e res1 en
e gym, secur1 Y w1
e recrea ion cen er or
ar1s
disease, which 'is characterized for alarm.
student sign up for all 20 meals a stationed from 4 p.m. until 12 students returned to th~m
week at the present rate of $800. p.m. and on weekends. No ·non· .(students). The
Interhouse
Option two would enable the Marist students will be allow~ in Council made a motion to call
student to _choose between all 20 the gym and Marisf guests will upon Mr. Campilii to meet with
meals · at $800, any 15 meals have to sign in. There will be a House Council and Peter Amato
Monday· •through friday • (ex• file box where students may to discuss allocation of the pre-
· Week
in
review
cluding weekends) at $720 or any leave their i.d. cards.
school area.
10 meals Monday through Friday
Policy c~anges in security say.
At a meeting on Thursday,
at $730.
'.
.
.no male student worker will be March 10, Interhouse Cowicil
Lurenz said the reason why the allowed to work in his dorm and . voted unanimously to change the
, . price foi:_ any 10. meals Mon.. fem~es will be assigned to their key replacement issue ,in the
through Fri. would be higher than own dorms.
·
.
Housing Contract. This past year
aiiy 15.
ts
a result of the "miss
Resident students who live far the contract stated that
if
a
meal factor." He· said in com• away or want to live on campus 8 resident student lost his or her
· Saturday's Final Four in the
NCAA basketball finals in
Atlanta finds Nevada Las Vegas,
28-2, going up against North
Carolina, 27-4, and Marquette, 22·
7, playing North Carolina •
Charlotte, 27-3.
puting meal plans, costs (fixed .or 12 months was discussed by key it would cost $.50 to replace
Students at the University of
costs, overhead etc.), food costs council qiembers, and the
it.
·
_
Wisconsin make up to $13 per
and ·then cost" per student, they possibility of selecting one dorm
Next year's contract will read,
week by selling the plasma from
figure approximately one third for these students, to eliminate · "Every student is given a room their blood to Bio-Resources Inc.
(30. percent) of all meals served · security problems was brought key and ·replacement of the key
There are more than 2,000
will.be missed: _
.
:.•· - up-:The issue will be taken up in will cost $.50 to replace up until permanent donors who usually
He said
if Marist were to go into more detail at a future meeting. the end of the academic year. If give- plasma twice a week.
anothe_rfood plan the miss meal · The library hours have been the key is.
-
~
not returned, the ; . The extracted blood
is
put into
factor would decrease, therefore· extended and now from
11
p.m, student will be billed $14.50,
a centrifuge which separates the
increasing cost because "then until _ 2 a.m. Sunday through . which will be taken out of the plasma from the whole blood.
·you're talking straight cost.'' He Thursday the upper level
will
be student's liability fee." '.l'he The whole blood along with a
said ··the . meal plao · at Marist open, but normal library-services money will be used to replace the saline solution is then injected
_
might cpst $300 more at a college
.
will
not be available during these students lock; and the council back into the donor; who then
where students· can't get home, hours:· Gerard Cox, associate agrees
this
will help improve the takes the
.1ey and runs. .
In order to help alleviate
unemployment
among
the
nation's youths, President Carter
has asked Congress for $1.5
billion over the next 18 months to
expand the Jops Corps program.
The.money will be used in part
to train youths from 16 to 21 for a
vocation, and also to set up in···
novative and experimental
programs.
American Airlines' plan to
offer "super saver" rates has ·
been approved by the Civil
Aeronautics Board.
As of April 24, if tickets are
purchased 30 days in advance,
and the trip is planned for seven
to 45 days it will be possible to
buy a round trip ticket to the West
Coast for $227 to $268.
-because there• _w_ould. be no
miss.
dean fo.r · student academic af• securit:y system.
mealfactor; Lurenz said the'food (airs
saig
the ·change is tem·
. cont'd Progress.slowing .. ·.
;;i~~~~o\l?tf!\~
~
a. ..
.
Bo_.· ·o·' ·k·. h·o······urs
Peter Amato; .. director .. of
. . . . .
.
.
Starting March 5, the library is the library still has not been set
residence said a plan must be
,
.
-
. ·
·
open
until
two
a.m.
on up. Because of deadline, Dr. Foy
decided on or . before April. 7, · The library cl~sed four hours
~
5 _ when ac~ording to Li~rathrye· weeknights instead of until
11 ·
could not be reached to discuss
when·students sign up forthe fall . early Sunday night after the Director,. Vmcent Toscano,
p.m. Also, hours were added on the matter.
semester. Assistant Dean of. munberof staff members on duty Academic Dean,· Dr . .Louis · weekends.
.
Baudouin said the committee
Students Fred Lambert· said outmunbered . the ·_ stu_den~s · Zuccarel!o requested that the
When Foy spoke to students on would regroup this week to
. students will probably have to. present. The library,. w~ch µ; library expand its hours until the
Feb. 27 he promised them a 24·
1
discuss strategy and to talk about
choose a plan for bot_h semesters supposed to stay_ open until· two college. could accomodate the hour study area ·'!within· the formation of a new judicial
.,
because of the •food service a.m. every morrung to .hel~ ~eet students request of• -a 24, hour week.'' Foy said an area would be board. But according to com-
blidget. .
.
.
.
.· .··
student demands of additional study area.
allocated in .conjunction _ with mittee member Thomas Mc-
·
.Interhouse _·council plans to . study hours, ~.losed
at
:10 _p.m.
: The_ lib_rary cut down: on
tqelil~rary so that students would Teman, the group has not yet
meet soon to make revisions -in l,>ecause there. were four · staff operating costs by opening only
have a place to study no matter scheduled a meeting for this
the: _old constitution, dated Oc• members .a!ld .
_
only. one s~udent .the top floor of.the·library during · the- time of day or night.
·
week. He said he thought the ·
·-tober 9 -1975.c-In the new con- .,present said. a - library .staff the extended hours said Toscano. · However, according to Jeffery group would get back ·together
stitutioh :direcior of residences member'.
.
: .
i
.
··The 27 extra hours per week are
Blanchard, a member of the sometime "within the next two
__ ::will be'' substituted ·:'wherever-
•·t:Jt~
extended. library hours only study hours·and:incltide no· committee working on academic weeks."
assistB!tt dean .of-'stµd~ts-ap- wentmto.effect Saturday, March
q,:,rvir.P~c;
he.added.' . •.
· ·· ~airs, another-area ~ide fr_om
J
!
j
.,
I
j
j











































































































































Page4
The Circle
.
March 24, 1977
EDITORIAL
Letters to
tile
Editor
·
SG Choices Abound
El~ction
desires
.
We believe that we can best
represent the
.
Marist students in
the capacity of student govern-
ment officers. The time has come
for four
.
students from different
regions, dorms, and lifes_tyles
~o
come together
to
represent
all
of
It is interesting to note that in last
year's
student government (SG) elections there
were
six
candidates for the four positions, and
that two of
the
group of political aspirants ran
unopposed. '!be
.
issues then were varied. One
candidate for presidentsaid hiflop priority
,
was
to establish a student senate .
.His
op-
ponent said his centralized theme
was ·to
rewrite the SG constitution
.
Only a year later there are
10 candidates.for
the four positions, and they all seem to agree
that the
·
primary issue is to get student input
into administrative decisions
.
·
We
congratuJate all of the candidates for
their courage and concern. But we also warn
them that they have a large
responsibility
coming to them if they are elected. We had a
student uprising here because students felt
they had }?een left out of the ballgame Marist
is playing.
So
a group of
.'
21'
ran in and
grabbed the ball. Eventually that ball will be
handed
.
to the newly elected student
representatives. We hope they will hit for
power, field deftly, and play honestly
.
A
·
slump could send the whole student body ba~Jr
to the minors again.
Here ·
s
how The Circle
'
s ed
i
torfal staff rates
this year-'s contestants
:
·
-... f~r president
Candidate Jeff Blanchard, as a member of
the Academic Affairs Coinniittee, the student
academic committee, and the group of
'21'
students, seems to overwhelm his opponents
in the area
.
of previous campus activity,
Richard Crwnp, a resident advisor in Leo,
said the solution to student problems
is
to get
·
them involved by election of a government
·
"which has strong leadership
.
ability
.
"
Brian Jantzen, a sophomore business
·
major, says there must be
.
more

involvement
by ''students, faculty, and
·
a~nistrators" in
:
order to solve problems. Again
·
we getfrom -
·
the
.
candidate
~hatwe
_
alrea,dy
.
know
, ...
.
. .
·
B\arichai-d
says
·he :will
:
restr
.
ucture the
SG
·
and try to give self respect
·
to the student
·
·
body. He
·
says he
'
will
~
'
coriununicate via
newsletters, and will meet on a reguJar basis
with both students and administrators. These
seem like good ideas, even
-
though they may
have been taken from every candidate
.
who
ran for SG president in the last 10 years. But
-
Blanchard was the only one of the three to
offer these methods and that is why he is our
choi~ for
SG ,president.
·
... for ~eep
The race for SG vice - president appears to
be close
.
because both candidates are saying
virtually the same things.
In a pre - election
survey giventhem by The Circle~ both named
several proble.ms; but
.
both spoke
,
in
'
wide
-
generalities. Suzanne Breen said she warits
'
to
.
..
restructure the
:
SG which she
'
says
''has peen
·
,
:
lacking in the past"
.
She did noFoffer any
·
specific details;
·
·
<
.
.
Her opponent; Charles Spratt, said he would
solve many of the problems
he
sees plaguing
the student body. by "breaking down many of
the
things
standing between the students
an<i-
administrators.".
·
But he did not offer
any
specifics either.
·
We have
to
fate the race a tos.s
~
up because
-
both have a lot of good intentions, but neither
seems
_
to know what he - she is
talking
about.
One deciding factor
in
this race
may
be that
Ms. Breen says she will give back at least half
of her $100 saJary to clubs and organizations.
If
she is elected we hope she will hold true
to
_
this promise.
••• for treasurer
To the Editors,
As concemed._students of the
Marist community, we would like
·
to
-
express oµr desires to serve
the students
.
in the capacity_
.
of
student government officers. We
.
·
feel Marist has reached a critical
point
·
regarding
studE
_
mt inpu~ in
campus .affairs. · Recent weeks
. have proven that
Marist
students
want their voices to be heard.
-".· Now is
-
the time for Marist
Student Government
.
to become
our student body
.
·

_ -
.
.
We are students from different
·
backgrounds~
.
-
representing
.
different interests, and each with
a
·
·
.
different
·
lifestyle.·
..
. These
qualities, combined with com-
mon ideals
·
and
a
common
g6al,
·
will enable
us
to
.
restore Student
Government to the
,
studerits .
.
.
.
· · .
.
Sincerely,
.
.
Jef{Blanchard,
·
Candidate for President;
-
the voice of the students
.
In order
for
:
·
student
·
government to
represent
-
the students
,
we
_
fe~l
.
it
is
.
important
.
that those
:
four . ·
elected officials be able to work
together hand
in hand
;
'.
·It is
.
im-
portant to have unity with th~
:
_
_ .
given
·
structure, yet not -con-
·
-
.
-
forming.
·
'
·
·
:
.·:
_.
·
.
·
SueBreeri,
:
Candidate forYice-President;
.
..
:
-
·
.

Martha Trabulsi
;
·
.
·
Candidate for
Treasurer;
·
·
·
·
·:
, .
·
Dave Ng,
·
.
Candidate
for Secr:etary.
·
~
:::
:
:
...
"
<.'":"'"
;
.
.
.
:
,
'
·-
.
On record of campus ~volvement of the
candidates for SG Treasurer,
··
·
junior Pat
Whelton comes out on. top. He is
a
resident
advisor,and was a member of the committee
'21'
from its inception. Second in line is Keith
Hollman
·
who
has been
a
member of the
·
student academic.
c·ommittee.
·
Freshman
.
·
·
:
~t.::
.
Marth Traf?ulsi has not been involved
·
in any
L
d
·
·
·
k
five
players
•·
and· fifteen
of these group.5; but says she was a treasurer
ame
UC
_:
rrianagEirs, who warrant our
iri
high school, and hasn't "beei:i here long
support and
-
backing.
.
.. '
1
·
enough for the apathy to stagnate the
.
desire
To the
.
Editors,
-
.
.
.
To
remove
·
·
the
·
.
football club
.
to achieve necessary changes.>'
.
.
,
' As
.
acting
,
pi'.esiderit of
ihe
,
would
'
be
_
a
'
grQ~
_
irtj!J:StiCe fo
:
t!1e
i
'.,
·
·
As
.
far.
:
as ideas go,
Ms
._
Trabulsi
'
says she
studentgoyernmeht,I wo
_
uld like
·
:
:
stpdepts
-
.
. _
()t
:
Manst. To
:
.
~n
:
·
!11·
·
will hold monthly fqrwns so the
~m
can
to make one final statement
<
on
·
stttlltlon
'
whicl!:hasJew act1v1ttes
.
,
..
.
.
communicate with the student body
:
She a~o
·
~
.
.
behalf-of .th~
.
$tuderit
,
governmeiit
·
now ,
..
to
_
z:~mo\Te
-
the
'.
footb~ll c\ub
~
.
_
says she will contribute half or all of her
$100
:
concerning the football club
:
.
·
·
.
would be to ~ake a
-
bad situation
:
__
salary
to
clubs and organizations
;
~
·
:
_
.
:
-
~
In
··
the
'
past there
:
has
'
been
:
_
worse.
:,
"
:/
,
·
..
.
,
:
·
: , :•
·.
~..:. -
:
.
.
.
Hollman says the solution to many of the
0
,
:Confusicm over whether
.
or
riofthe
· -
: _
We realiz,e the sacrifices made
problems on campus is to "make sure the
·. stticlent gpvernment suppoz:t,sJhe ,
·
by ~he ~li¾ye_rs arid the manag~rs,
administration listens to student represen-
.
. footoall club
.
We have notturned which come from representmg
tation on certain issues." But he did not'offer
our
.
backs
·-
ori the ·football club.
.
·
Marist College, our
.
school;
-
in lhe
··
any specific ways ~e would
.
dothis.
·;
·
·
·
·
Wedofeelthatthefootballclub
,
area
.
of
..
intercollegiate athletics.
Whelton says lie
·
will
·
maintain
:.
·
betfor
.
·
·
.
js a valuable aspect of
the
Marist
.
,
f
9r the ~choo
.
I,to
,
drop tl1e football
financial records of the SG and
"
riiake
'
public
-
~
-
-
-
·
comriiuriity.
-'.
•,
,
-
·::
.c
, • <
a
.
.
::
·
>
.
club would
.
be
~
very detrement?l
.
I
:
the
.
financial situation of the
SG.» We don't
We do recogriize thffactthatit
·
.
t~
3
ampµs)if~
..
a~ i
L
wh~le.
'-
,
-
<
::::
·
know if
Mr.
Whelton has read the constftution
-
is the largest
·
c1ub
,')fl
campus,
•: .
"
·
_
;•
·
·
:
·
_
_
$mc~rely,
·
or not, but that is one of
'
his duties
.
as
c
-
consisting ofapproxiihately fifty
:-
,
·:'
.
<
,
.
Jamesrn•sher
-
treasurer anyway
/ ..
.
..
:.
,
~
·-.
.
.
.
·.
: .
:-
',
.,
,
>:
:.: .
.
.
·<
~J
;
~
.
'. ~.
,-;
.
·
.:..
, ;_ .
:
....
·

.
.
,;
'
..
'.
.
The treasurer i"aCE! could be c~ose between
'
·
Ms~
·
:
Tr&bu
_
lsi
-
.
..
and

·
:
Whelt9n
..-
·
<.
The
..
_-
Circle
.
_,
-
--
ediforia!staffgives a duUrazor's
~geJo
,
l\is.
,
;
WMCRrs
<
.
. '. :
lead us
'
_
tb some so;t ot.''Df;ired
·_ :
.
rr•~tt~r
~~Cret8ti:
t .
\
cl'l;it:•
>
'
5g!
!
!!l;t~lE~
''
·.·
.
.
fu
the
:
?
secretariat' ~ac~,
,
j~nio
/
G
l
en
.
.
--
'
treasurer of-Student Goveriunent
Malaspina says his main
·
objective will be
:
to
.
-
.
_
.
.
.. -
.
plays
.
a
:
majo
r;
role fri
'
·
our com~
.
.
let students know where their money
is
going
.
--
To the Editor aild
·
·
community
,
munitY, and
·
Brian Jantzen,
.
.
.
via a bi -
·
monthly newsletter.
His
opponent,
·
.
Mixedfeelings
'
always overrid~
·
charles
'
Spratt
;
.
Glen
-
.
lVI~~pjna
David Ng, a freshman
;
says he
·
wants
~
to
-

.
positions
:
·
·
and
·
issues during a
and
P~t Whelton are
·
willing to
reorganize all studefitrepresentation intothe
·
''politicar
·
_
campaigfi.''.
:
ShO\y
_
irig
CO!llmtt
.
·
.
themselves
.
.
·
WM
_
(?R
structure of the student governme:nt.He also
.
"
persistan
t
,
interegt in
·
ones en-
management
.,
also _commits
says he wants to "create a
.
wider range of
viroiurierit
·
is involvement- that thems~lves
_
to supportmg these
clubs on campus.?'-. .
, .
. · .
. :
.•
·_
merits attention
.

We are not candidates.
r

·
,
.
.
.
·
·
While
·
Malaspina has given afleast
:
one
·
speaking of ba_sfo

idle chatter,·or
.
_
Involvement i~
-
~ p o ~ t
.
tq
· vehicle for
.
his promises, Ng gave
·
excellent
·
- rumor which is carried no further keep
.
an equabbrium m
-
our
ideas but no spe
_
cific meth~ ofq.eaU,Og with
· than
a
roorn
,,
cafeteria
-
or college
:
·
-
- -
·
-
.
·
them.
·
.
,
.
.
.
..
.
··
.
-
.
,
.
··
·
·
• ·
.
..
hallway.
·
·
.
'
·
,
_
. .
'
·
·
·
Support~hosewh~supportyou!
.
~
Ng ~s also stated that he will give part of
.
..
A
·
year
.
predominantly
·
filled
See you at the polls,

·
· ·
·
·
his salary
back
to the SG for clubs
.
We feel
·
with controversial issues
,
and
.
WMCR Management
that
.
this promise
·
makes him
·
·
the better
~
·
challenges has brought a "new
-.
·
'
GirioDiMai:tino
candidate
.
·
~
.
-
.
.
,.
group"
.
of
-
young
··.
·
1ead~i:s who
.
·
.
.
.
.
_
.
.
·
--
,Yinny Capozzi
.
{Ed .
.
Note:
-
although N1fis
'.
on the
·
eclit~riiil
board
of
The Circle; he was excluded from all.
.
election discussions, and the
·
staff has
.
no
reservations about its'choice.)
:
.
-
::.
·
have
·
spoken out and are now
·
__,.
·
·
speaking
-
out again.
,
They
_
are
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
_
.. .
.
· ...

_plan~ingto Ui~~~t
-
e~1'.thi~tj_will
~
-
_::
·~"
Wt!ll
·
_
p~t!
-·•~
.
' "
,
. .
.
------
-
~
--
-
-
-
- -

































March 24, 1977
The iighter Side·
School's a
trip_
by Phil Colangelo
· :CTiving to school every day can be
an
experience; Waking up and
getting
to
class on time, past_18 traffic lights
that are ingeniously
. placed and timed
so
as to make you stop every quarter mile, is a job
·
m itself. -
·
-
·
- .
·
·
. _
... - "Hey Ma; could you lend me some money for gas?
I
know ljust
got paid two days ago but all
I
got left
is $15 and
I
wanted to go out
a_fter class
and
have a few beers •.. Yeah, wait
till you wanna borrow
money·sorileday ... Good-bye;" · _ ·
,
Well, at least it's a nice day.
HI
hurry, and get
a
few-breaks on
the lights, I'll just make Sociology,
I
think
to myself; ·
No lady, don't cut in front of me
I
got to go to school,. Oh brotlier,
it's going
to
take forever to get by this old lady .with all this traffic.
- There should
be
a law disallowing old ladies the right of operating
motor vehicles.
All right, a-break
in
traffi~,
if I just
pass
her I'm
golden. (Vroom, Vroom)
·"HEY
LADY, SOMF;ONE __ OUGHTA
TELL YOU ..... YOU'RE DEAD!" (Vroom, Vroom)
..
The Circle
Page5
'The New Riders of the. Purple Sage
CUB_
presents.· ..
Well, I'm
just
a littl~ behind sche4ule ..
rn just
take it easy the
rest of the way and come in a little late."Hey what's the idea of that
guy riding my· tail. He better back off or there might·
be some
trouble.
I
saw "Rocky" and
I
know from tough. O.K. he's pulling
out next to me:
"YEAH
PAL!+&?!+&?!+&?! ·AND THE SAME
TO.YOU!'.'.
.·•
. . -.
. ._ .·.
.
. . ··.
.
B~~• I'm never go~a·get
fo
school-on tirrie.:.Is thatagirl hit~
c~king up ahead? This must be my lucky day! Fwmy thing·about
sprlllg, the teµiperatures go up, the parkas com~ off, the halters go
on and the double take becomes an integral part of every girl-
·
._:New
-Riders·
to
play
. watcher's repe~oire. Wow-that girl is put together better than the
__freeway·systein of Southern-California.
I
pick her up and they can
" _ s~rt Soci~logy. without me: What's that?' No; don't get inthat van
-
_
-Civic -Center, April 1
with that Jerk,::A guy just can't get Rbreak,
· . .
By M.L. Striegelbaiun
April.
Bodick .. encourages
students
_to
support the event
. Aw torget everything; since I'm here at sch9ol I-may as well. go
m. Hey there's Keller,
I
guess he's late for class too. "Hey Kell lDw
·· ya. doin?'.'

·-
.
.
..
·
·· ·
. "~retty good
·
.. Phil;' you get that· research project
·
done for
Sociolggy?" . • ·
• · _
_
,:
. '"+&?!+&?!+&?!+&?++.~·
.
- The New Riders of the Purple because, she said, students are
Sage, a country-rock quintet, will always asking for a big name
appear at the Mid-Hudson Civic group to appear. Bodick added
~enter Tuesday, April
1
~t
8
p;m.
that if the concert 'is successful,
in a show sponsored by the Marist another big name act will , be
Cgllege Union Board's (CUB)
sponsored by CUB for Sep-
concert committee. ·-
·· tember's freshman orientation
According ..
to
coordinator of
week.
-By
Jim
Birdas
college _activities, Dolly Bodick;
. The California band, famous
good reporter cares about his the group .
will . cost about for its progressive rock 'n roll
writing_. "You cannot throw away "$11,000" and will be part of
music with. a · country tint, · has
'
· ·
CUB's- "spring weekend"- a_c-.
been together since 1969.
·
John Mulligan, Associated
~
little story; instead you have to
Press.
(AP)>
editor;· spoke to treat it--with thf same fare and< tivities for the first wee.kend in Members_Qf the group are Dave
· Marist students cin March
7
atiout. • professionalism· as a big story,
't
.. the
.
'AP._,,wire,: service,iand~the .
?
he .. said.Jie stre~ed t!}e fact' tllat ·.-
.
. importance:~-of ·beint ·
a
·:good~'<!.
good
.reporter _ha~ )9.J>e
·'~s:·: '' .__,
reporter; . ···
c
"< .
accurate as possible and
begm
· -, The Associated Press, like its· · his stories with·
-
a ~hort and
rival United Press-International: punchy lead. "You are only as
(UPI):provides news to people; _good as your .. article','' said
.
By Wanda Gle~
newpapers,_radio and T:V. Mullig~n. .
. .
.
stations .throughout the country.
Mulligancontmued.}>y ~ymg a
The department of Fine Arts is
"W~ try to be where rQu cannot. reporter_ should_~ obJ~ctive, B:nd looking for a chairperson
be''. says Mulligan.
· .··
not ~rite_ opm10ns _or .. Print assistant professor· of art to
· According -to- Mulligan, -the ___ anyt~g without ~ecking it out. replace Mrs. Evelyn Fisher.
Associated Press, which began in Mulhgan also ~aid rep?rters
Mrs. Fisher, . who has been
1848 is located near the World should be as friendly with as . employed since the fall of 1963 is
Trade Center in New York City.
·
many people as possible because stilr going to
be
with the. depart-
Today it has a working :Staff· of,' theym~yrem~beryou later _on. ment, but.accordiiig to Dr. Louis
more·than 5,000 people. . . ; ·
. Mul}1g~n said that getting Zuccarello, academic dean, '.'her
Mulligan was first scheduled to !nvolved m the school ne~spaper role in the department will
be
talk to Marist students in 1963 but is a good way of getting . ex-
changing."
·
cancelled · his visit due to . · the perienc.e. He said _that even
Mrs. Fisher is now responsible
assasination of President-John F. though· reporting jobs are tough .for· teaching five classes, and
Kennedy:
!?
get,_there is•always_a chance. running the art department.
Mulligan, .who ~egan as .. a. You. have. to
~~.
persIStent and Under her new title, Professor
reporter in Poughkeepsie, said a very versatile;
he Collcluded. Emeritus< of Fine Arts, her
·
·
·
·
teaching · r~sponsibilities will.
be
ffi3QOM
illocclted
::~'!=r:~~~m:.it
·:aw~
-
·
"but she will ·still·
be
active on
f
o·r
defe-nse.>. loa-ns
c8¥:?e~;~~ing date for job ap-
plications was March 15, and as
of March
11
Zuccarello received
By Alison
Hickey
· prQ.bably did. not have .an allot- close. to 150 applications.
_.
. . . .
. ..
ment~:fot NpSL ·in his huaget The job pays $12,000 -•$14,000
Approximately 320 · Marist . be.cause the president thinks one depending on tl)e applicants
College students would have been · loan . program -
(meaning background. ·
·
. by a search committee made up
of teachers and students.
This
--committee · will
make
its
recommendations to Dr. Zuc-
carello who will niake his final
Nelson, John Dawson, Spencer
Dryden, Buddy Cage and Steve
Love.
Marist students and alumni can
get discount tickets
for
$5 in the
office of college activities in the
campus center. Tickets also can
be purchased at any Ticketron
office for
$6.
·
Bodick also
said students who
buy tickets can get free ad-
mission to the Lasr Chance
Saloon after the show.
decision to be submitted to the
tioard. of trustees for final ap-
proval.
The job begins fall semester
1977.
-.
.
affected by_ President Jimmy· guaranteed student loans from
The applicants will be cha.sen
· carter's. decision: not to allocate. _private banks)Js enough.
· funds for .National Direct Student • .Kelly said the reason ·NDSL
is
Loan· (NDSL).
in
next· year!s :. neededis because some ,students
· budget, out on Tuesday the House ·: do riot qualify for
bank
loans
· of Representatives· overruled· .. ~cause of their lacR of income.
. Mrs.
Evelyn Fisher
Carter's•· decision .. and: allocated:,
Also
sQme ·.· students · need . both·
· $300. million for next years NDSL:~· loans
to
finance their educations ..
,Welters:. Parking fines.fair
program.
. , · :,
· : , __ .
The:-:
NDSL · also has. a three
By Maureen Tully
Marist -
·
community,"
said
TI.le House of Representatives percent interest rate as' opposed .
· '
Waters. He said that rather than
. also allocated> $1.9 billion for·,- to a seven percent bank.interest
Although
some
parking having lower .fines, the higher
Basic
.
Education~! Opportunity rate~
A
nine montlfgrace.:period · violation fines in- effect this ones will act as a deterent.
.If
:Grant (BEOG)':'$240 million :for is. given .after the studenf sem~ter arEffrom $2to $15 more students violate something. once
j_Suppleinental Educatio11al,
.Op;..
graduates:• _b,ef~fe• .NDSL
_
,.'thansimil.a~ ones in the City of an~have~opaya~ine,theywon't
· ,porttlnityGrant (SE
.
OG)'and$430 pa~entsbegm.Ifa.student·p~ys -J~oughkeeps1e, J~seph _Wa,ters, . do 1t agam, he ~aid.·
.
·million,for:'.College·.Workstudy_ back-.theloanbefore.graduation· director of security said, ''ttie
. Waters' .main concern 1s
· l?i:ogram · ( CWSP>:::... -: •
-
~- ·_· .. ·.·
he-or.she
is'.
no~ · ~a,rged interest . fines that Jere set are •fair, just.· .. parking .. violations · in fire zones
... According··to the·head of~the ;riltes.Kelly-said that
bank loans · and·ineanmgful ones."
. : .·.
and blocking entrance gates. He
financial• aid · department,, .
Mr.
vary depending ori';the lender .or,: -:· Waters work~d with Mel Crilly, said, "hwnan lives could be
.. _ Gerald
>
Kelly;; there ·have been · ~,policies..
· :-·· ·.
,.< ·· ·
chieUustice of.the judicial board depending on fire departments.
-- ·. · other·:-presi~erits
·
in
~
past) ad- ·. Appr,oxima~ly:
i
.
$260,000 :
from in ~setting .t~e fines .. ''W~< <lidti't response time, and parking in
--i
ministrations·;: ~:.that··
:
:c./
have NDSL, were· ::used • by Marist • : use
tlte
City of Poughkeepsie as a either of these places is a serious
·
.
___ :: 'irecorrimended a· zero budget:for· :students
.this ·yem.-. .: : ·
- , . c~teriaJor the fines, we tried to violation~ 11iese fines
are
fair and
·
:-": NDSL;/
-
Kelly . .
:isaid ,
Carter-
-. '
·
· · · '
:
·'
'
·. · setfines thafwould pertain ~o the equitable;''
:
.·,. :::: \\jl'
<_
:·.·>:"~:-.-/
.
. -:-
~'-.-·:::._,·
i
;_--.·:::-·.·-~.::-·· . -. . ·-
,, "
, .... ._,_._ -~·
_;·~·
. . . . . .
•. ,,•· ;,•,,.,•·.•••.·, ..... ·.•-~•a••'--:·
.
•: ___ ~--:• .-·,-• -~·•· :• •• --••• "'••·•• ~. • -• --•
*-----·-•--·--·•--•----••••- ,.~ ... ~-•-•--• .. •-
-M----•
· As a result of setting. the fines,
a students court will be set up for
appeals to traffic violations.
Waters said, "students need
some recourse if they feel a ticket
is
given out unjustly, and this
court' will give the students a
chance to appeal before a court of
their peers."
, If a student receives a . ticket
and neglects to pay it,
it
is
reported to the Business Office
and· the ticket remains as an
outstanding payment due on their
bill.
-






























































































































































'
.
Page6
The Circle
March-24, 1977
,,
Library space
sti11
·
.unusued
by Suzanne Breen
and Rosie Nguyen
.
Architectural renovation
discussions for the old library in
Donnelly Hall will begin
this
·
month, said Business Manager
Anthony Campilii. "We plan to
have things happen in that cavity
but we're not sure what," he said.
Some possibilities for the old
library include classroom space,
a student study lounge, or a
compu~er science room
~
Campilii
said that the major reason the old
library is not in use now is
because
that
·
area
·
requires new
heating and lighting systems.
In
its present state
·
the old
library costs too much
·
to
maintain.
·
"It would now use
twice as much oil because the
books are no longer there
to
retain the heat," said
.
Campilii.
·
Concerning
.
the
electricity
problem, not one section
.
of the
old library can be
lit
without
lighting
.
the entire library, he
added.
Another reason why the old
Ubrary is not being used now is
because of
·
.
"squatter's rights."
According
to
Campilii, it is not
fair
to
let certain groups use the
space and not others. "The only
way we can have everyone either
love us or hate
us
is
to
say off
limits
to
everyone; faculty and
administration as well
as
students."
The
·
old library is now
.
being
used as storage
for.
W1used books.
Plans for the old library
will
be discussed
this
month according
·
to Antliony Campilii,
hisiness
manager
-
HEOP helps students
.
Computerized
food
(
~
·
·
request it from the State of New Aptitude Test scores of less than
By
Sue
Breen
particuJar color
,
light indicating
.
.
By
Maureen
Tully
York.
.-·
.
500 each in verbal and math.
and David Ng
the
-
validity of the card for that
The
Office
of Higher Education
The financial
.
eligibility is Enrolled HEOP
-
students
·
have a
meal.
·
Opportunity Programs (HEOP) determined on
a:
scale set by the 10 semester eligibility.
_
.
Next September, a com-
The CPU records the amount of
lo~ated on
first
floor Champagnat state. For. ~xample a student is
Fifteen percent of the students puterized irieal checking system
consumed meals by the car-
Hall, offers students who
·
are eligible if he or she comes from a admitted,
_
fall outside
_
this
-
may replace the present. student
·
dholder for that.week.
.
.
.
economically and educationally household
·
with
.
one to ten criteria, btit only ifthere is proof
.
I.D. card method. -According to
The
ysm
system
>
will. cost
disadvantaged, an opportunity to members with
-
a
·
maximum in-
that
"
the family has been afflicted
-
Joe Lurenz,
.
Marist
.
Dining
approximately $10,000 to install,
attend schools and private come of $4,160for a one member . with some outstanding internal Service manager,' an accurate
operate
'
and maintain.
·
The
colleges throughout ·New
York
household to $14,634 income with problems
;
For example)f a child accounting of meals will be .Valedine company will also
State in order to pursue a higher a· ten
·
member household, in a household is ill and there
.
are
,
necessary
if
the school accepts an
provide the
LO:
cards; the photo
education says
·
James Johnson, provided there are two p~rents outstanding medical bills, this optional food
·
plan, which
·
-
is
processing,
-
photography
director
.
·
with only one working. The
-
in
-
would be proof of an internal
·
presently being considered by the
--
·
equipment and all bookkeeping
..
According to Johnson, the co
_
me ranges
-
for a family with pr,o~lem
.
and
-
'
make
"
a student
·
dining service
;
-
·
_
.
.
·
materials
:
ethnic characteristics of the state two workers or one worker
;
who
,.
·
ehg1ble.
·
_
.
·
. . .
.
·
The dining service
is
currently
"Going to a multi~plan meal
budgeted program include
,
49 is sole supporter of a one
-
parent
·
uunlike popular
,
beli~f the examining the computerized
service,
.
no matter how
_
you
·
look
percent black
,.
24 percent white, family, are different
. -
Incomes
,
average
HEOP
student does not Valedine Series Three (VSIII)
at it, is going to cost students
and
-
22 percent Puerto Rican. The rang~
_
from zero to $15,634 with atten,d school free;•
-
·
.
says system
;

If the system is ac-
·
more," said Lurenz. He said the
remaining
·
5
.
percent
.
are the same number
-
of members in Johnson. Based
·
,
on the state cepted, students will be issued
·
a
.
schoo
F
will profit
.
through non-
categorized
_
as ·
_'
other
_
.
••
the household
.
.
.
_
.
._
budget
<
anti
·
·
each student's
·
phot9
_i
dentification-card :with
·
?
..
r~side~tstudenJs who
.
must pay
.
The,omce provides counseling
-1'he ac~<lem.i~
_
req\lirements
·
of financial-
need
,: -
funds
a,re.
1•
-
m~
·
gn~tic
: :
strip. on its rever~e
·
.,:
forthe~r
.
meals;
·

,
;'
-•;
,
.
_
,.
·
to students in the prografi!,
·
works the program
,
depend
,
on the
.
allocated appropnately 'he -said. side
:
-
_
·
At meal tune, the
·
15tuden
t<
·
·:
.,
The
·
computer system •
will
with the financial aid office to requirements of.the coHege. At Johnson said
·
many
.
students do
·
will give his card toa "checker"
·
~nable the dining service to
know
secure anv additional monies Marist the student has to have a
-
make a contribution to their who will insert
:
the I.D. card into
.
exactly how many meals must be
needed for students, and develops high school, diploma or a high education
.
.
·
'
a desk uriit connected
'
to
the
prepared and
-
will
also be-
-
·.
a proposal for HEOP funding for school equivalency diploma. To
The
·
state budget includes an

central._ processing unit (CPU)
,
.
prQfitable in the long run;.L:t!renz
Marist.
·
qualify for the program a student allowance for personal
·
expenses The computer would
.
flash a
--
added
.
·
Only private institutions and shouJd have an
.
overall
,
high based on need, and an allocation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
colleges are eligible for the school average of below 80 for buying books.
·
program. and schools have to percent and
.
achieve Student
·,
To the Administration, Faculty, Staff, and Students of Marist College:
commuters
survey sefves
The Circle trys hard but it is impossible to cover all the events that
·
occur on our campus.
If
you know of any newsworthy event or issue, or
. noteworthy achievement of a colleague, we would appreciate
'
a note
.
addressed to the Circle box.
·
·
. ·
-
By
Larry
Striegel
.
• Members
-
of the Commuter
Union (CU) have circulated a
survey to
.
"get an idea" of the
relation
·
of commuters towards
Marist College.
The
four.
-
page
survey,
distributed before the spring
break, consists of six questions.
·
Commuters are asked why they .
are at Marist and if they think ·
they are getting their money's
worth.
· ·
Other questions
.
ask if
a
commuter thinks there is enough
c~mmWiication between himself
,
and
'
the school,
if
he thinks he is
The introduction of the survey
getting an "honest evaluation" of says,
'.'
We
(commuters)
·
·
Thank you,
The staff of the Circle
his school work, what commuter poten~ially have
.
power
·
in

_
our - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
reaction to the student rally held numbers and could
.
use
·
it to
in Jate February is
,
and about change
.
Marist
,
but
if
we don't
·
participation in social events on speak up, people
_
will
think
·.
we
campus
.
·
don't exist." The statement
In the last question commuters
·
continues to say
·
that
.
a
.
quiet
are asked to provide information attitude
·
Will
.
·
hurt -commuters
about themselves such as how financially,
.
and <'froni
a
more
many hours they work each human point of view (not fully
week, how much time they spend participating
in
an opportunity to
on campus, if commuters believe gr
_
ow
'
as a person.'')
.
.
·
'-
,
they "belong to the same com-
The results of
.
the surveys will
munity" as resident students; be given to
_
The
.
Circie

in
·a
few
.
andifthere is enough interaction weeks ?Ccording to CU vice-
.
-:-·
·
between the groups
.
president
Susan
VanParys.
·
·
-
:
·
_
-.
.
·:-
_.
:
-
~
·
.
.
.
~
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l


























































































































-
-
-
-
···
-
-
-
---~--------------------------------
March 24, 1977
,
Security officer ch!cks door
in
campus center.
Editor's
n~te;
While
th~ rest of
. ·.
.
the campus
.
sleeps, there are
others who
.
keep
·
~n
·
eye out
-
for
.
their
.
safety: To
..
find out what
.
their job is like, a
Circle reporter
accompanied those 'watchers
.
on
.
their rounds during
.
the midnight
·
.
·
to
sunrise shift.
The Circle
Page7
The midnight watch
, Security" a'"lllband over the left sleeve of locked.
"I can't jump out in front." He then begins
his
leather ja,·•ket. He checks bis RCA one-
Roosa then
walks
over to the old
gym-
to jot as Ryan
recalls
the license number
way paging device
to
see
if
iUs working. nasium and finds the doors locked. He out loud.
Static buzzes; it works.
takes bis key out again and holds
them
_-
up
Later, ihe two
securi!)'
officers decide to
Gary Roosa
is
a
full-time security officer
to
the
lamp-post
light, selects one
.
and look over
-
the nearly completed
McCann
.
hired by Joseph
..
Waters, director of opens the door. The door to the women's Center. They find
all
the doors secure but
security. Roosa, formerly a New Paltz locker room was left open. He slams the discover that one of the windows slides
police officer, lost his job when the town door several· times but the door fails to open. Roosa and Ryan enter the complex
made budget
.
cuts. He drives
40
minutes lock. Finally the lock clicks. Then he eases through the windows and lock it behind
from Kingston, where
he
Jives with
his
the door
to
men's locker room and finds
it
them. They begin to check each room and
wife and
.
two daughters, every night to locks easily. He
turns
off the lights and floor of the complex. After checking the
work what some call "the midnights"; the exits the building.
_.
·
boiler room, they leave.
eight hour
·
shift
from midnight to eight in
Fontaine Hall, the location of many
·
Broken Window
the morning.
·
,
..
faculty offices
,
.
is his
next stop. Roosa
Crossing the Sheehan parking lot, Ryan
Roosa walks to the front of the swit-
enters the building from the ground level stops and points to a parked car in the lot
chboard office and talks
.
to Lisa Gary,
·
a
and precedes to check each floor. On the at the bottom of the
hill.
A late model, gold,
student
.
working the security desk
·
in second floor, he finds Gerry Breen, the Monte Carlo with "D-L" monograms on its
Oonnelly Hall. He asks her about her mid-
sociology teacher, asleep on a mattress in opera windows, had its rear window
term exams and leaves the office to begin
his
office. Roosa smiles and gently closes completely smashed out.
checking
all
the campus buildings.
the door.
·
Roosa tells Ryan to get Bob Missert
,
a
.
·
·
He exits through the
·
main Donnelly
·.
He

finishes checking Fontaine and temporary student security officer.,
entrance and walks up the steps
_
to the leaves the
'
building and walks across Missert has been in the lot since earlier
perimeter of the upper level. Orderly, campus to the campus center in Cham- that night.
It
is his first night on the job and
Roosa shakes each door on the
·
outside. pagnat to meet with
·
Robert Rayan of sixth he is told to observe the lot from inside a
The outside door to the commuter lounge is
.
floor Champagnat, a student security car because of the cold. Missert tells
open. He juggles with
'
orie of his
39
keys, .
:
officer
:
They will_ patrol the campus Roosa that he saw the car drive in but did
finds the right one and locks the
·
door. He grounds together for the rest of the night
.
riot hear anything.
continues to walk counter-clockwise
Roosa asks Ryan to check the
Using Missert's tw1rway radio, Roosa
around the building and notices the lights Rathskellar and the cafeteria downstairs swnmons the town police
.
In ten minutes a
of one classroom is open. The officer taps·
·
while he makes sure that the offices are police officer arrives in a squad car
.
Roosa
on the window;
a
maintenance person
·
Jocked.
·
Roosa walks to the second floor in asks the officer to find out the name of the
comes from behind the podium and wav~s
_
the center and finds Tom McTernan owner. he does; the car belongs to Daniel
hello. Roosa. waves back
.
treasurer of the College Union Board, Lucas. The three men try to decide
..
Another
·
classroom door was open .
.
He typing in
the
activities office, He shuts the whether tlie car's window was broken on
'
locks it
.
.
light and McTernan 1ooks up
·
and says, or off campus. They finally agree the
Roosa finally finishes the circular walk
.
"What are you doing?
-
" Roosa says hello, destruction was done off-campus .
at
.
the
.
Donnelly entrance
·
facing leaves the lights off and resumes checking
Roosa and Ryan return to the DonneJly
Greystone
,
A door is ajar.
~
He shuts the
·
the rest of the offices on both lev~ls of the
.
office to see
if
they can locate Lucas on
door but
-
it woiftJock. From
his
keys, he Campus Center.
.
campus. His name is not listed on the

takes a wrench and inserts it into the
·
Ten minutes later
.
he returns to
.
the computer print-out sheets of resident
.
underside of the
·
1atch and tightens the ~ctivity office
·
and McTernan is still students.
lock. He shuts the door again and it locks.
·
typing, in the
-
dark.
6: 15
a.m. The swi begin
s
to rise over the
From Donnelly, Rciosa
_
walks to the
One o'clock, Roosa slides the gates to the campus. Roosa and Ryan leave Donnelly
north end of Adrian Hall - tije
.
door.s are Center
·
along
·
its tracks and closes the to open all the doors and gates they hav:e
open. He walks into the darkened building, padlock
;
·
·
·
locked throughout the night.
Standing on his tip-toes, he looks over the

Roosa and Ryan begin to walk over to
.
8
:
00
a.m
.
Their shift is over.
>
Byl)avidNg
· __
-
officepartitions.Heenterstheladiesroom Leo Hall. On the way
.
Roosa
.
notices a late
Security Log
.
.
. .
.
.
,
without knocking arid does not see anyone. model Torino driving on campus. He
·
The log entry for that shift reads: "3-11-
Twelve o'clock miqnight. Gary Roosa, _lie enters the men's room and looks under . waves it to stop, the car stops; the driver 77, Friday"-
12:00
On duty Gary Roosa &
security
_
Qffic;:ei:
,
;;
W
.
~Jks. ir!to P~ll:11
-
~!lf
{.
for
.,
_J
lle
;
l?Rtlli
b
.
Af.tetjugglirlg
t~
rem~ng
_
id
_
entif!es himself as an employe of Sev•~ Robert Ryan
.
(Reporter
.
accompanied
the
12:00
to
8
:
00
a;m
:
shift
;
lie
goes
mto
th
~
:,i
9'fice
-
·
door:
s
kilob,s
;
}~oosiHeaves
-
the com
-::.
~-~
,
,
pizzar1a
·
;
'
Roosa lets the car
·
pre
,
cede. The security)
5 :00
Security noticed
.
a Chevy
blue-painted
·
officer's

room and says
·
·
puter end of Adrian and works along the officer looks up and sees a green Maver{ck Monte Carlo (gold) plate no.
342
DDX with
goodnight to Mike
.
Delia and Peter side of the building to the Registrar's of-
driving towards him. Again he waves the
the
rear
window
smashed out - called
TPD
Boudovin, student security of~icers fr?m fice
.
That door is open
.
Again, he fumbles
·
car
to stop
,
but it doesn
'
t; it speeds up. The - Security investigated found the car was
the
·
prev
i
ous shift. The two students sign with
his
1
39
keys, finds one and locks the car misses Roosa by
"
a few inches. Roosa damaged off campus. 6: 15 Reporter left.
otitin the log book. Roosa slips his '
_
'.¥arist · door. The side entrance to Adrian is takes out his pad and pen, smiles
,
and says 8:00 Off duty G. Roosa
&
Robert Ryan."
,
Extra
·
help
at
Student input
big
.
issue
continued from
p.1
.
The third candidate for SG
,
_
L
·- ,
-

,
C
·
.
t
president, Jantzen, said the most
earning
,
en er
.
~~~rt
-
~~~h/;~ihp~:se~~
·r_
prevelant
·
throughout
the
·
c
·
onege."
The
.
sophomore
/
business administration
.
major
said the ''lack of communication
between students, faculty and
«
At the,. pre~ent time we
·
are administr~tion is another major
working on getting more money issue." Jantzen said the solution
.
The Learning Center, lo~ted from either
.
sources
_
and by next to both problems is to get "more
behind the
·
main
.
desk
·
in
·
the
'
year we
~-
expect to
.
.
expand interest and more involvement on
library, is a. new place where :equipment
·
_
and progr~s, ''
..
she the pai:t of students, faculty and
.
students can receive extra help in explained
.
.
_.
,,
admiriistration
.
" However,
.
he
by
Daniel I>romm
mostsubject areas
/
.
.
:- ..
.
·
Ms. Conklin hopes to get some did not say how he would
·
According to Eleanor Conklin,
funding
I
from federal
.
grants,
_
_
.generate the_ intere~t and in-
learning specialist,
,
"
.
The lear-
·
-
however;
-
she said; "we need a
.
volvement 1f he 1s
.
elected
ning center is. the
.
only place
.
at
.
·
strong
.
finan
_
cial
.
and mor
·
a1 president.
.
.
,
Marist College
·
..
where
~
,
l
stu,dents
·
commitment from the ad-
Blanchard listed as his third
cari come for
.
academic• help ministration and the academic
.
pi:iority restructuring of the SG.
outside
.
of
·
any professor
.
who
:.
faculty;''
·
·
·
·
-
·
·_·
.
He
.
said
-
that
·
if
_ .
he becomes
might
.
use
his
own time to help
.
a
Studerit
.
tutors are
.
avaiJ.abl~ president he wants to "centralize
student
.
"
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .
·.
Monday
_
through
.
~~sday
_
·_
io
the t~tal
_
SG structure _a;11d
·
·
Ms.~~
contmued,
'
"At !he
~
a.m.
'
to
5 p.m. and
·
on
,
Friday
-
estabhsh_
.
an _accountab1htr,
pr~sent
:
time
·
:
we
.
are
__
working
·
from 10
_
a
.
m. to 4 p.m .
.
They are
·
.
.
between. its vanous branches.
· through student tutors as
-
our also available· Sunday through
·
He added that he plans to call
resource except'
for
:
.
some
·
Thursday evenings
-
from 7 to
.
9
meetings
.,
with student leaders
programed
'
books''.::.
.
they
·
have
.
p.m
;
Co~ said, ''\Ve are
_
tcying
._.
from
_
-
area, schools,, but_ did n~t
··
"We have no hardware except for to find tune when stuaents would
·
say why.
·
Blanchard said he 1s
a reading
.
machine but there are
,
·
have
the
·
time

to come
_
here;''
.,
.
qualified for the position because
·
_
no
'
tapes for
-
it,"
·
she
~~
;-
<,
<:
::\
.
,
Tutor:s
·
:
are
:
.
a
_
lso
.
.
~yaili,lble
, .
to
·
he
:
~s
"~~n
involved," knows
.
.
·
<
According to
Ms.
Conklin;
·
'
.
'We take
:
assignments
'
outside of the
·:
ICwhat'.sgqmgon,',' and has "been
are
part
of
.
the li
_
brary
.
physically
: ,
learning center
and
go to peqple's
.
. :
obtaining
.
,
student
.
·
inp~t and
·
:
but most of our

funding
·
cqn1es
·.
_
dorms
u

thef don't
want
·
to
·
go
,.,
working on ways to change what
·
from
/
the
•.
:
Higher
:
Educati9n
\ :
there;:
,,;
·
·?
<--
y',•
:
;
sc
.
'.:c:/
· .
.
. ·
/
is
gQing on
:
at
.
-Marist."
, .
:
:
Op p·
.
o
·
r
:
t µ
_
irit
.
y
.
-:
pro
·
g'ra
m
·
_
.
·:
-
,
~

!
We)fre JJei:e
.
i
U>

serve
;
~
the
;
.
_
.
Crump sai~he wantsto!'direct
·
(H.E.O.P
:
r
-
and
-'
work
:
·
stu(br
..!
'
._
students
.
in any
j
vay
,:
we can· even
· '
.
to
the
.
students
~
the challenge
.
of
·
;,
However;
·
shesaid~
,
1,!we
are

here
O;
if
0
they.just
·
waiit
:
to
·
'
stop
1n
·
and
.
\
accepting
.
_
the

r.esponsibility
to
·
:
concern them
.
He said this would
be done if students elect
"a
SG
which has strong leadership
.
"
Crump claims he is qualified as
a leader, to have "ability to deal
with the administration on
several levels while maintaining
proper attitudes," and to have
willingness to "pursue any and
all. issues" which he sees as
important.
Jantzen said he is qualified to
be SG president because he "has
been here (Marist) long enough
to know what the students want
and what they need.'
'
He says he
is not afraid
"
to fight the ad-
ministration on any issue," and
has
"followed
the
actions of the
SG" and believes he can.
"
sur-
pass the qualities of the other
candidates
.
"
The new president will take
office in September, and will ,
replace former vice-president
Jim Dasher who took office after
Andre Green resigned earlier this
·
month .
\\t
Leave
Your Head to Us/
currt~~
STREAKING~ FROSTING
,
~I
with
Marist ID
.
.
.
&
.
PERM8,NENT.WA~IN.G
CALL
.
~9239
for your appomtment nQw
.
·
·
:
·
..
_
·
.
·
.
.
ON
TN■
MAIII IIALL
.
t
UUIITY STIIUT
:
'
.•
.
.
.
(Above
Capitol
Bakery)
.
Entrance
·
Around CQmer
.
·
foranystudentswhowouldlikei:9
. :
talk
>-
or
read

the
'.
·New York
':
j)lay·a
role"
:
inpa~cipating_in
.
.
; <
·:'
~
:
~
:
'
.
'
;
,

~>
.
.
:)_
\\\
·
X
::'/
:f
~
·•
·
::
:
i
~es.'
t,
Ms
.:::
~
:
concluded
!
,
· :
:
~olle~~
'.
policy
.
d_,,e<:1Sions
..
which
·
:
..
. .
.._ . .
1111
_
1111111111
...
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
. .
;
.
...
.
'
.;
--
,,
I
'
·
/
-




































































































































































































































































































































---
-
.
.
--~
.
·-·
.
-
.
..,
...
I
·'
-
\
\
I
\
!
!
1'.
,,·i
_
;
:
:
.'.
~
,
'
I"'
I

1
:::
.
.
·
:~
:
i,
:
'
t
.;..
~
'
,
-
Page8
.
The Circle
March 24, 1977
ByThoma~McTe~
·
SPRING SPORTS SEASON DEBUTS ~D!IIBSDAY
._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..,. _ _ _ _ _ _
..... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
J
.
.
The lacrosse te~ will open th~ spring sports schedule at Marist
S
·
·
··
·
·
t
·
· ·
· ·
-
·
·
·
·
·
·
t
.
·
·
·
-
k
--·
when they travel to Montctan: State next
W$esdaf; The
wm~er
.
-
o
.
.
.
c
.
c
_
e
.
--
r
.
.
···
.
·
-
·
o.
u
..
.
r
,.
riey
·
-
.
. •
·
,
s
.
.
. _
r
.
e
.
·
..
_
'
8
. ·.
;:~~o~xr:j~~::;::/:!s~lv~l,buiu1i:e1:::.bfov:~
-
-
:1Jii:;
·
.
Red Fox teams in full swirig with crew, trackand field, tenrus and
.
golf,
"
·
.
.
.
·
·
·
·
...
:
,
.
along with lacrosse.
.
.
. ·
.
· ·
.
-
:-
'
.'
.
'
·
.
·
.
·
·.
. .
· . . .
.
h
'
•t
'
·
-
3
.
-
·
··
t
'.
..
.
.
11
·
·
·
t
.
.
_Nextmonthwillalsoinarkthededicationofthe~!!~Re~reation
. .
·
1
_.
s
·
·
...... ·.
·.
·
.
·
s
·
. ..·
.
-
_-
..
r
_
_. .
a

1
g_
_
_
.
·_ ...
_

·
Cetjter~ an event s91eduled
:£0~.
-i\ptjl 17.
~The
facili~ has been
_-
lo!]g
_
_
_
awaited byJhe Mapst commuruty an~ we
.
re all looking forw3:1"d
,
to its
openingwhichmaybe~¢arlyas
.
~pril3.
· '.
·
· .
.
·
· ·
·
· ·
-
"
~
.
;
.
.
·
:=·
To provid.e you with
0
complete
.
coverag~ of '!hat_~_Euld
_
be_a
busy
By Ralph Capone
.
.
.
.
_
scoring with
his
second goal of clumips North
:
Ad~'s,
·
1-0.
The
··
.
spring schedule,
·
the Cfyclehas e~~ed
·
its
sp~rts
staff
.
~d ~spla!}"

· ·

'-'
.
··
·
: .
·
·
· _
~ .
·
the_tourney.
·
. -
·
·
·
· ·
Great Danes
:
~d beaten Marist
·
ning
a 16:-page ediijon to
·
commemorate the opemng
of
the ne~ athle~c
The Italian Connection trio of
-
··
·
Marist the~ pl
.
ayed to an 0-0 in the 1~6-firials otthis tourney.
_'
facility. So be sur,e to
~
getthe_ CIRqLE each 'I'~µrsday a.pd
k!~P
.
~P
)Vith
Vito Aprigliano, Zen one and stand-off with
·
Albany State
.•

In
the rematch~ the pattern was
··
the
.
latest news of
·
the Mar1St sports
,
scene.
""
:.:,.:
·
·
·
·
,
> ·
<
·
_
·
·
.
·
·
Firmir:Io Naitza combined for 10

,
leaving
.
both teams tied.for first
-
similar
:
to the
·
.
finals of
.
a month
·
.
.
..
.
·
·
·.
:
. -
~
:
.
·
.
·
/
'
.
",~
··
·•-.
·
<,-,>
..
.
· .
.
.
,
·.
:
.
.... ·
·
· ·
·
·
·
goals as the Red Foxes mad~ the
..
in
the
_
division with identical 2--0-1
·
·
.
earlier ~gairist Germarua:Ledby
' •
.TRACK TEAM CONCLUDE~
.
IlID,OOR SEASON'.
·
: .
·
RPt Tournamenton March
·
.
5
re~ords.
The
·.·
Red
·
F
.
oxes,
·
apaidofZerioileNaitza goals, the
,
·
·
· ·
·•
·.
,
·


·
·
·
·
,
·
-
·
·
··
·
·
their latest conquest;
:
running
. '.
however, byvirtue
·
ofmore goals, ·
,
Red F.oxes blanked
-
Albany State
.
.
.
..
!)ave sdioo~ and
.
Ai~Qua- :<rVere
·
t~e
~~p
'
individuarperfomiers
·
for
their string of
.totirnameilt
vie-
;
advanced

to
:
the
,'.
semi-finals again and
:
wori
'.
2--0~
i
to gairi'.their
·
Matist as the Red Foxes closed out 1tundoor track s.e~on
·
at the 21st
tories to threer
_ .
.. · ,;
. .
.
.
against
-
Oneohtif, Division
II
first
R.PLtour1fanient·. cham~ · an11tial
,
iJruori
"
College Invitational on
..
MafchJ2:
_>,
·
.
.c:;
~. '
•·
.
..
·

.
Deµionstra~gthe same flashy winners. The game
>
wenL into piciilship:
_
:
:
·
:
J
·:
.
< .
.
. ·
~
.
..
·
Scnools
firti.$lied 12tWiirthe:mi,le r
.
up

with a firie_4:36:~• his pers
_
onal
style
_
that
·
earned
,
them the
,
overtime
as
~
.
scoreless
·
tie with
·
. ''We
J
got
·
,
·
excellent
per:-
-
best Qua putthe shot 42'7" fQr'arfotherlwelfthplace fin1Sh .
.
It was also
Germania
.
crown a
.
mo1.1th
,
ago,
_
,
.
the,• Marist
0
~efe
.
nse
.
cif
>
R,11ss foniiances
·
fr<>in
ev~cy
.
player/'
.
.
the second
bestriuµ·k
ever.for
·
a Mari.st weightman
.
iA
tile
.eyegt
.
.
.
.
th~;
.
R~d-
.
Fo:x:e
_
s breez~d t~?~gh Beckley, Jo~ King
/
Jim.Downs,
:
,:_sai~
;,
coach
-
H9wa:rd
>
"Doc"
·
· .·
J'he Re~
_
Foxes o~>en t'1eir outcl,oor season
·
on
·
Aprit9 \Vith the Mon-
theirfu;_s~two contests m D1v1Sion
.
and
~
goalie Jay MetzgE!r
·
comiiig
"
Cioldnlan
:
·
.
:'The
.
guys
'
right n«rw
·
_
mouth
arid
:
c.w
,
J>,1s't Relays.
·
-
·
"-
•.-;
I,
dowrung Colgate
,'.
(3-'l) and
,
-
up
-.
with
·
the
.
big
:
plays
'
when
'
,arejust,playing
great soccer,''
.
:
·.
·
,
.
:<~-
--
·
:
.
·
.
.
.
.
Rutgers
··
(?-1). Aga~t
,
.
Colgate;
:
needed against
tM
:
powedtil
·
!!:specially
:
·
.
Z~none
'.°J
who
.
was
·
.
·
NAITZA NAMED
ATHLETE
:
oF
.
WEEK_
:
the Red F'oxes came out.shooting
,
Oneonta offense:
<
, ..
,
,
:

-
;
:
selected
:
.
as
·
the
·
MVP
of
:
the
.
-:-,, .
.
·
-,
_
..
··.
·
.
·
.
.
·
·
.
.
·
·
,'
;
-
.
(
.
.
.
ea
_
rly/
-
ge~ingtheirJirst
·
shofon
·
'
·.·
.
The
.
·
'\
~ea~~pck
:
·
·:
coritin~ed.
'
to,Uii'l8!11ent-with_Jour goal~.
:c.
<
:
.-
.
·
ienorie
i
Naitza
'
;
a
:
s6Jihomore from ~he
_
Bi:olix,N."{:, has_~en n.amoo
goal afte~ only thrne
-
seconds had
i .
through
·
six
.
mmutes
.
o~
·
overt1me
. :
The mdoor
_
season comes to an Marist College Athlete of the Week for tne
·
week ending Marc;_hJ2.
elap~ediAprigliano tallied twice,
··.
before
·
Julio
·
.
nostran
,
banged
O
end
,
for
'
the Red Foxes ;with the:
·
.
·
Naitia:, theJeadiiig goal~scorer
m
Marist
,
soccer history;
·
connected
a!)d
·
Firmino Naitza
_
once in
'
;
the
·
.
.
:
home a
,
~l(ot
.
off
,C
~e
·:
'
_
tipp
.
E!r
.
4Jb~y S.
_
tiitf
.
t9
_
µrn~y
.
beginning for four goals_ori
.
M;!tch5
to
lead· Marist"to
·
.the
.
cha?1pion~hip of the
victory.
· ..
·
.
.
,_ ..
..
0
.•
,
.
..
crossbar,- givmg the Red Foxes a
.
tomorro;w
:
'.
Har:twrck; ranked
·
RPIIndoor Tournament. He had both Red Fox goals m the fmal game
.··
·
,
Vito madejt fo11r
_
goals
in
.•
two
..
1
;<)
decision,
..
and a
.
·.
·spot:
iff
:
the ·

seco!1d in
.
tlie·
·
sta~~, and· ~bany ,,
_
and \Va
.
s also nained the tournam_ent'
s
most yaluable player.
games as ~e knocked
.
home two
·
fmals.·
,,
.
·. ·
_

.

--:
.:
:
·•
·
· · ··
-see~g
,
revengE!, will
-
be. the top
' ·
· ··
· ·
more aga.mst Rutgers
;
.,
Zenone
--
Albany, the
.
wild card
.
team, 9pponents
.
as ¥arist goes for its NOTES
'.
FROM.:!'*
·
·
'
'_
SPORTS DESK:
added another
,
paii:
while
-
,
his ~earned
-
another shor
·
~tthe
'
Red fourtti
'.
stfaight tournament win.
· :
• ,
.
·,
.
t;>r
_
other
~
Firniino capped Jhe Foxes by
:
:
beating Di~ision
,
III
·
-
·
0
-
':..
·
.
:
·



·
,
.
·

.
,_
__
:
Ji"mi,i~LV.
_
stats
:
f9I'theJ976-77
°
~eason show
_
JOQn Boylan as
·
the
.
M
.
.
·
.
-
.
.
,
.
-
.
.
.
:-
..
·
.
- .
-te~'~_Iea~iifig sc.or,~"'-~~t~ 17.3 aveta~e
;
Boylan also

l~
R~
Foxes
in
-
-
/'
a
tis
t
·: :'
c,e·w
-_
·:
f
rfl
ve,s .
~
.
r~~f1iiS:r~:l~li{liJrEh~:.~i;1~!~1:el::~,~i:
-
.
.
.-:-,
·
..
-
..
.
.
.
'
·
.
>
-
:<
,
·
.
" ,
.:
.
.
. .
·
.
.
..
:
,
Yetfor
:
the ~arist Intramural All-Siarteam•s
·
game with either New
--~~~~=
.
.....
:,
.
:
.
':
.
'.:/
,
.-
,
:.
-
, ·.
;·,
<>·
THIS
wii~K-
·
IN
MARJS'J{SPCJRTS
(Mardf24"30)_
:
ByLairyStriegel
.
_-
·
.
;
.
needed
:'
a l~ng
,.
rivef·w~e're
!)UX- ...
PQilad~lphia in May for the Dad
_ .,
..
. '
.
'
;
_
;
.
·
.
·
:
.
,
.
.
..
-
-
:
.
.
.
.
:
~
,.
--
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·.
· ,, ..
• .
.
. >
··
·
.
.
oarsmen c_oll1~ ro\J?
.
~ontm~ously Vail Regatta, consideref
·
to be
.
Fnd~Y,l\'Iarch25-Soccer: at Albany
St.
Indoor:Tournament
.
:
·
While

many students spent for
.
four or five mdes
.
without
.
the small
.
college
,
'national
,
_

·
Satµrday, March
_
25: Soccer: a~ A,lban:y St. Indo~r Tournament
·
.
their vacation
at
h(?me or St!Ilning
.
·
stop~ing. The
·
;
_
Kanawlul ~iv~r
'.
chalzjpionships.
-
'·'We'll be aiming
·
.
~ednesday, March 30
~
Lacrosse: at Montclair State.
in Florida;·
·
two
_
coaches, 44
.
was
·
1deal. \\'e 11eeded the work,
::
.rortheDad Vails,'
.
' said Caldwell
oarsmen, four 60-foorlorig shells,
.
arid I

thiaj,c
'
we
gorit,''
:
he sai~,
''btit we'll take each race as it
.
TI:ITRAMURAL ROUNDUP
· ,
.
.
and a maintenance man ventured
·
. ·
-Preseason
_
Outlook
.
. ..
comes along
.
and opv1.ously if we
·
·
·
·
·
south to Charleston;
w
Na.
to
__ Th.IS season Cal~well has
28 .
\Vin a lot of races along the way, it
The coed volleyball season has been hampered by several forfeits,
start serious training for th~
_:
upperclassme~

vylllg for t~ee ·
will
help us
.µi
.the
.
~nd:J!.
·
·
including three
_
of the four scheduled games Monday night: In the only
upGoming spring crew season.
boats.< The stiffest competition : Earlier this semester the team
·
rt~%~
that 'rVa
.
s played, the
.
"Suite Gang"walloped Sh,eahan 11-2 ~nd
.
·
·
Hampered in practice here
.
by
will
be
for
the eight_-secits in tlle • raised
·
$2,610 in
:
a combinatiein
Deadlin_e
_
•·
f
·
or ros
·.
t·ers·for
.·.
coed
·.
s

0
-
-
ftba
·
u
·
i·s Ma
·
r'ch 31,
.
.
w· bile

entri·e
·
s
·
for
.
.
the:
ice-cloggedHudson,the team
varsity heavyweight
·
shen:· raffle· and benefit
:
concert, ac-
fil)ally got significant time on the
Qaldwell estimates .there are."11 cording
·
to Caldwell. The
:
money floor hockey and coed badminton clQse, April 4; Roste
·
r forms may be
water after training on land for
_
or 12" oarsmen who could
.
earn a raised
·
will
.
.
supplement
.
ttie
·
picked u
_
p in Room 319 Fontaine.
·
.
.
.
·
.
.
-
.
.
.
almost tw,o months .
.
-
..
The
.
.
Red
.
:
sea! inth~ big_bo~t, inclu,diiig fi~e
.
budget of: the
.
t~am,
whicl:(was
,
All students should
~~
-
aware that the intramural budget has ~en
Foxe
_
s
,
trained on
-
the Kanawha
semors and a Jun1o
_
r who rowed
m
:
cut15
,
percent in Octobel',
,
and to depleted fo~ t~e remain._der of the sc~ool y
_
ear'. Thus, all competition
.
River wMe
·
staying· at Morris
<
th
.
e bo~Uast year,
:,
He says,- <'It
:
help
.
defray
·;
the cost of
a
.
new
.
_
must b~ officiated
~Y
v.ol~nteers. Failure_ opeams to supply volun-
Harvey
.
College; a school· corp.~
.
will betqughfor anyone to brealc eight-oared
.
shell for the varsity. teers
·
Wll~ caus~
.
cancellation of some
.
activities.·
..
,
parable
in size to Marist.

.
·
·
·into
th?Jlinelip but by
_
no means
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
·-
·
·
During
:the.
week
.
upperclass
is ,. the
·
boat

s!)t

,
right
:
now.",
,
_
eights -Jhe varsity:
·
and junior.
,
Caldwell added
:
tliat he will be
.
varsity ·heavyweight
~.
boats and
·
moving people between the junior·
· ·
,
the/Varsity-lightweight crew
.
-
.
varsity and
.
:
varsity
·
boats
.
had two practice sessions daily;
·
throughoutthe season.
> .:
. ·
~t
,
sunrise
·
and
:
an9
.
ther in the
·
Tlie {ive seniors in contention
afterno911.
·
·
.
.
··
·
·
,
.
·
.
for the boat are
·
c(k!aptains
Chip
.
~-
.
Marist
.
~ls
_
o
.
scrimmaged
.
Riordan and Greg
:

Tracy;
.:.
along
.
~
·
Morris
·
.
Harvey
..
and
.
"
Ithaca
.
·
\\'.ith
~
Bill'
.
Kellagher,
_,·
Paf:
, '
!
.
College,another: cr~w s_har~g the

·
O'Rourke arid
:_
G~orge_Schaffei:;
•"
-
facilities for the week.-
:"
.
-
-
:
.
.
·
.
.
.
· .
.
CaJdv,!,~11
.
noted that ms
·
varsity
"
_:
The
'
·
tentative h~av'yweight
,
ughtweight;
·
with
~
Ar'fCtirfari as
:
·varsity

boat' came
·
in

second,
--~
the lone
-
senior/
.
and only
-
four
t
three
·.
seconds
.. ·
behind
\
M9rris
··retur11ees
from the last year's·<
...
"Harvey's·-best boat
:
which
.
has
,
boat, "may be a young squad" ·
·
been rowing for alinost a
;
month.
but added that
,
he
..
is"
:
\'excited
'
.
(
:
TbeMaristboat.:was behind oy
:
because'thereis a
.
lot
:
of'potential
a length ·-and.'.
:
a
-,'
~ajf
i
rajd\\'.~Y
/
)n·the
boat.,, -
.
.
:.
),·\
?,/:.
>: . .
·
through the 200 meter rac~
.
due
,
to
.. ,
·
/!'he
,
co~ch
.
pomte~t
.
out
::
that
,.
·
.
.
'
:
steeri~g
'
~
-
problems,
-~
"c
:,
befor.e
.
'
,
there
_.
are varjous
,
.iriethods:
for

.
.
comingbackto finish.jtistthre~ judging
.
which oar~menwill
·
tow
>
.
fourthsofii'Jerigth
.
:
behincL
:
,
:

.
·
,
.•
;_,;
Jneachboa(Qrieis
hyusing
:
the
.
:•
·
.
Ma~t's vafsitfJ,ig~hy~igl:i__~
-~·
..
~ew
:;.
erg~~e~er
/:
th~
/
t ~
-
'
pur~
-
:
,
,
.
finished
:
. fou.i:th
~
:
~d
,
:
pie
>
j@i<>(
0
·
,
cha~¢
tpis,
y~t
_;J
t~~
';
an
:
op-l~d
,
·
'.:'
..
/'"
-:.
varsity eights
:
came
·
in last out of
:-t
rowmg machine
.
which
·
measures
~
..'
)
:
:
·
.
·
six boats
::
·,
_
-
,
.\
:
,
s .

·
·'_;;/:,,
·


· _

;-:
C.,
·•
.
·
the strerigtli:arid
:
~taniliia of each
·
-
-
:.

_
;.}
;
~
_
··.
.
.
.
.
:
In
'
tll~.,
s~c
.
ond
'
r~ce
/
~
ltf~~t's
\ ,:
,atl:il~te?
,
I~
f:
a1_1
.
o~~er
i :
method,.
·
>
:
.
.
·
freshman :eight.sJinisped
!
fourth
'P~,~~d{
s~at
-
f~cing?
· ,
the
·
· coach .
. -
.
· ~
:
..
~d:.f!~!h,
:~r~~PE!¢tiy~ly
,:
0
;
!~9r.~f:,sw,it,9h~:~~~
.
~ }?etween· t:>oats~ _ :,,
):_'
:
_
expenenced",supperclass
:,,
cz:~ws
.:;:::ln<l
ol;>serv~
:
pow rpuchf~ter or··
1
I:
'
_
_
.
!r:~i¥il1t~;an~
:
Mtlrg{~~~f
Y
:~~r
::
r,~~
~~t
:'
~,~~ls
_:
~ !
l
l
~
f~-
·•·
-

·
.
•••·
.
:
_g!f
l!~!r~i.
t
~t
&:g@=
.
;!~!f
l~l~0~~1f
%~~f
?~~~A:i~~~~~~~;~:~~.~~~
f
;::~:.:-
~
;
~•,

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

.
:,
~e
·.·
.,
·
•:•
.
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,
_,
·
.
.
.
. . .
,
.
,•.
.
.. , ...
. -
·
: .
,
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·
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·
->.•·:

.

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-..._.,
_
~-
, :
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r
· ,
.
,
.,.·
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.
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.

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:
.
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.
.
.
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.
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.
.
.
.
:
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:(ii
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;;:
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.
,
.
.
-
.,
..
_.,


18.17.1
18.17.2
18.17.3
18.17.4
18.17.5
18.17.6
18.17.7
18.17.8