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The Circle, April 14, 1977, Special Edition.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 18 No. 18 Special Edition - April 14, 1977

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.
'fHE EIIICLE

.
Volume.18,·
Nu.mberJ
s· ·
MARISTCOLLEGE, J>OUGHKEEl'$1E, "/t/EW YORKJ260L •
. By
Pat
Larkin
ployees' 'salaries· were
6nly
in: ·
,
·
creased 4 ·percerit and the
in~
'_Tuition
arid
room . and board . flation rate was
5.8
percent.
He
f~s .have bee~ incre~ed for.: ~e . said the. employees
will
receive·a ..
f~ , ~nsecutive year.: ... Twt1on . 7 percent salary increase for next
WIil
costJ89 _
_per credit for the. year. ,
· _ .
·
·
upcoming sclioolyear: .
_ · -·
Foy als() saj.d f90d prices- are
Next year a ·
9111
tIID~,
un- .
on_e of,,the highest areas ·of in- ,
dergraduate ~~mmutf:!r·
wi;ll
pay .' flation today~
:
drivj.ng
up the. ~st·.
$2,67p for ~1tion,. according
to ·
q_fboarding a(the college ... · · ·
.cPres1dent
Linus
~LFQY•-··.. . .
_
· Foy said M~rist-will probably ,
Room ·and: board. wilt
be
:in-
lose nioriey for.the 1976-77 school
, cr~~ed$1?,5 for~e year; he said;
year'. 'lb~Board'of-.Trustees, who "
:~mg ~eJotal cost $1575._A-full
adoptedJhe increase--'lbursday,
tIID~ resident student
._WIIJ,
.be
Apr. ?,'.have set .an expenditure
parmg.$4,245 for _!heent1re• year;
ceiling, of · approximately '. _eight
said foy .
.
. • _ . . . ._ ... · . _ . .
million
dollars
for the
1977-78
_ .. }lb~ -~~on·.,·.:f~t_: :a':•gr&duate · SChool-·year. :-_·_---
-
___ .·
·
.•. · ·-
~ud~n~
;m.ll
increase
$8_
per
The
full
time activityfee
wil)
cre<!it; which m~ns he ~II. be .. rnmail! at $60: ,
Ot
the · sixty
paymg;$93 a ~redit;, -_ ... -
. • - .. dollars,
$20
will.be applie<i to.the
-

•·· ··_,Pres!d.e!lt
Lµius
Foy._; ~~1d __ ~e · operation of the -McCann · Cent¢r.
·. ·:ID¥~
reasons -.fo:r_Jhe:·
X:;158 ..
m The other$40 ~llbe ~llocatedto
tuition, are
a-
high
.
electnc and the Student Government . : and
. heating
~ill
this past winter,. and .. College Union Board..
.
an __ increase -in
.sa~!ies
.of-the · • •Foy also said; next.year it
will
:
c~llege ~ploy~s .. • . \. . - .
. · be determinec:l in the early_
parts
..
---
. Fairvfewfire~en fight a fire which
started
in
the chapellate Saturday night;
(Pho~
by
_James
P.
Deckner) :. ·· ,~ . · ·
. · ·
. · ·
· ·
..
-
·
·
Easier
eve fire
guts chapel saCristy
Foy-sm.ii
.
salanes and supplies, ·
of-
the second semester .
if
there
• such
as
food, ~re
~•very
sensitive•. will be
an
increase in,tuitfoii,
so
:toinflation·."; . ·. ·
.
· '"~.:· ·
students •will know of the.,..hike ·
~~-
-
'also ·
said, · last year- em- · before
tiler
reg_ister foi
classes. .
. By Ken
Healy
.
.
Later, ~one _engine :and
20
men . good.
.
;
·;

·
:. a
. • .: .
.
r~pol)ded
.
(rom_ the Roosevelt .. --.- · W~ile the· · sacristy-. was

Tuition.· increases·, at
Marlst
<ol'er
the ..
past
' seven<yeafs •.. ~; . . .. . •, .••
·
.·.
. .
- · · :·:oraphby,KenB~y.
; _•·,~ .'~·,, ·
'.
·,i\·: \ .-:;:_;,:~•., -:~-...
. Fzre. stru_ck Marist:College for .:,
fire
company
~hich
was called
to ··
destroyed, the.library and chapel .
________________
....,.. ·the second_ time in eight days,on Lthe scene under- a mutual 'aid
were virtually unharmed by the
Saturday'night, Apr.
9, when the plan: . · ·
· •

· · ,
.· .. ·
flames .. Both were damaged
by
sacristy of the · chapel .was
. Fire
Chief
William Sutka said · some smoke and water.- Ceiling
. destroyed:· The remainder oHhe . .the
fire
originated _in lQf!. sacristy
tiles were torn. out · and some
· chapel and the -adjacent library · · but was of' undetf!nnined 9rigin.
windows. broken by firemen
to
received heavy smoke
_
arid
·
water ·,'11ie value of the damage
has
riot . insure the fire would not·spread.
damage. · . · _
•·
.
· yet been determined but business
The contents of- the sacristy
. •The.· fire was discovered, at ·· manager ·Ant11onf Campillii said· were lost except for the four
_about ·11:10 ·· p;m;.·. by· security· the chapelwas insured,.and that · chalices takenfrom the burning
. _gu~rds Tef11'.' _Bilyou . ·and
Mel, tMarist
would orily t>e·responsible
sacristy by
:the
·firemen. These
Crilley;• who·· were;:'.making· a· for any improv~ents that would
-howeyer may· have .. been
, ro'1~e · check . of ·t1_1e ·.: chapel. ·,be-; made :above · what :was·· damaged beyond repair.
·Aci:ording'to_Joe·waters;head.of .'. destroyed
in
theJire.'. .. ·. . ..
. ·:LaMorte and Waters praised•
c,Marist;: security/.
~hf ::-gu
'
ards .'
'.':'Our. 'greatest•· concern right •· the two.fire departments. Waters
OP.8Jled the door:
to·:-see
:if
anyone : : _
now
is
cleaning tip
the•
chapel
so
c-aJso
:
praised J~ilyou and Crilley.
was.'h.is@(~~n·.~~ke·;po~_
:.we~-
go·.thr.ough:witl(tJ.le
ring.
"Co_nscientlous •·
·
--P,Elrt'onnance
, .qut/:·:
;~ : ·
:7 "'----~::
:

:,_
-
:'r: .. :
.··ceremony· that is:-plannect·•for · __ . of, du~y_ probably,: saved the
.• · .They:closed
the
door
to. contain
.:·:Saturday,"
said
.Campillii;'.' · -•.
l!,brary,"
he
sai<J,:·, . ·
... ·. _ : , .
•thefire:aild:"calledan:a1ann:into_•·· fFr~:rucruird,LaMorte,-campus
::·/.Fire.
9hief
Sutka
-
and
.-Waters .
• .

.,

C. "
C
.. , •
~the--_fairyiew·'fire,.Dt#rtment \,chai>laili,:'.':also,jaid ", that· ~:'- .alsoa~eoo. ''that-the
fire
was
n~t
. . . .
.
.. - .
..
.
.
· whoi,•,responded,:·:with: three, ,·chances for.:-theo:ring .. ceremony . __ susplCiousmnature,'}although 1t
71-~2.: ,
:.";7J..;
I
!3:?t-.;}f
1
f,.-!.~~-.. :,
~~--:;i,,!1}!-~,~-~es
·and:
3?,;:men: :
,
: · .•.• ·:---.··:· ::-,. : '. '.:~ .'
held'.in
.:the
/cliapel:::were'• .. Js_still under
'.investigatioo. .. .
..

¥.
,

·
. .
·
.
.__
• ..
"'~.~:.:
.
v.~_.,..,,J.,•'.'1:""-.J.J..,1.~.,),.•.J.-.>J.-J..t,-.>O:"~ ... v~ .. _-,_~.-:~ ..
•.~~'.-•·•'.;•t.~· ...
~.~v •
.-~•-•·;:•,.'.'_♦\'-'.•1••-·:··"•'•'·','•~•·<.•,,:,,.,)
.~ -,'.,,.,,
.~
,
. .,.,
,
......
,r
.























































































'
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t
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'
r
PAGE2
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 14. 1917
Liquori to speak
~~~❖mt:~~'Yi.::m~~~&~aW=&~~~~..a~~'{c~~~~~11~fil=mft{zt~~~
,,
IVlarist awaits
I
I
.
. '
,
I
at Mccann dedication Uudge's deCision
l
.
.
.
11
,,
By
Larry
Striegel
the ceremony.
Beautiful
-
will be sung by Richard
11
@
Aquatic
.
Director Larry Van Checchia
accompanied
-
by
By
Rosie Nguyen
the secretary of Labor comes in,
_
Distance runner Marty Liquori
Wagner has arranged to have Celeste Maneri. Both are
and Suzanne
Breen
inspects and aud.1ts Marist
will be the
guest
speaker when
NCAA All-American David Laing graduates of the class of
·
1973.
periodically. He said there were a
.
Marist College dedicates the $2.7
put on a diving exhibition,
·
and
Ann
Cullinane, a senior psych
A federal judge' is in the few minor issues such as over-
million James J. Mccann students will be playing handball major on the women's basketball
process of d~ciding
if residence time miscomputations, "which
Recreation Center Sunday.
and racquetball, while others
will
·
and tennis teams
will
speak. She
advisors (R.A
.
) and residence we admitted
we
were wrong and
Liquori's address will highlight
be using the pool.
will be followed by Howard
coordinators (R.C.) are 24 hour a paid the differen~e."
the hour-long ceremony which
William J~ Murphy, who served Goldman, director
-
of physical
day employees at Marist College.
The three major ,issues
will include speecpes from as Marist's first athletic director education, who will represent the
Judge Lawrence Pierce of the disputed, however, included tutor
members of the board of trustees,
from 1960 to 1966,
will
be the faculty, and
.
William Cloonan,

N.Y. Federal District Court is counselor's summer hours, maid
faculty, and
a
student.
.
master of ceremonies. Murphy president of the
.
college alumni
presiding· in the
.
-
case brought and
·
custodial problems, and the
According to Shaileen Kopec,
left Marist in 1966 and is now Vice association.
against Marist College
.
by the question of wl!.ether the R.A. and
coordinator of the dedication, all President for college develop-
After Liquori's address, a
N.Y. state Board of Laborin 1970.
_
R.C. position
is
an employee
students and their families, ment at st. Norbert's College in closing benediction
will
be given
·
If
the decision
is
made agaillst relationship to the college.
faculty, and staff of the college;
.
Green Bay, Wis.
..
by the Rev. Richard LaMorte,
Marist, the college will have to
·
·
eoncerning the tutor coun-
as well as people from the
After an invocation by the Rev. coordinator of campus ministry.
pay R.A.'s and R.C.'s for all selors; the Bo~rd of Labor
community have been invited.
Rhys
Williams,
Marist's Ms. Kopec said there
will
be
hours except actualtime
·
spent in claimed it was a 24
.
hour day,
She said those who come
will
be
Protestant chaplain, President student guides throughout the
class. Judge Pierce will then seven day a week job
.
Campilii
asked to sign
a
register and
will
Linus Foy will give a welcoming building to as~st visitors
.
have to determine any back pay
·
said they were actually not on
be allowed to tour the center after speech, and then America the
necessary and how far back it duty all the time. Gerry Kelly,
Miles and miles of feats
-
·
:
By
Larry Striegel
should cover.
·
·
.
·
director of financial aid, was the
Ca~pilii said the Board
·
of
.
college's
:
~ntness
for
.
the maid
Labor
was
trying to relate the
·
and custodial pr?blems, and Fred
R.A. and R.C.'s hours to their Lambert,
.
assistant dean of
duties .
.
"They (R.A.'s and R.C.'s) students, was t~e college's only
have responsibilities, yes, but are witness c(;mcermng the R.A. ~nd
.
College Dista
.
nce Running Camp
not on duty 24 hours a day. It's not R.C. position
.
_
:
~e
refused . t
.
~
With Marty Liquori.
.
" He has
a nine to five jot;, or an hour and a comment on this 1Ssue: Campilii
Marty Liquori, the speaker for
'
Worked with the catnp for. three
quarter here or there," he said .
.
oversaw
-
business
.
aspects of
Sunday's dedication of the· Mc-
·
out offolir years-since
it
started
He went on to say thal the job
·
each.
.
.
.
.
Cann Cehter, says he
is
most
in 1973.
-
was not
_
like any other job on
R.A's and !)r.C.'s will now get
_
a
.
proud of his record of 11 straight
Shaileen Kopec, coordinator of
campus, "In essence, they're
.
schola~ship _
to help
_
_
-
-~~d th~ir
victories at the Penn Relays, and
student
leaders
of
i.m-
.
~ucation said Campilii. We feel
another string of 13 wins at
the
.
McCann dedication, said
derclassmen. Conceptually
·
,
.
what that what we are doing is hap-
Liquori
.
would probably speak
·
·
thr gh t th
t
Madison Square Garden, both at
about what a recreation center
it's supposed to
.
be
is
a
.
leanµng
.
pemng
ou,
.
ou
e ,coun ry.
a variety of distances
.
·
·
can do for a college a
n
d a com-
experience, a v~luable. ex.: Usuallr
.
R.A.
~
and R.C
.
s ~o n~t
A resident of Gainesville, Fla.,
.
munity
:
.
.
perience, one cut
.
above other get paid,
.
,
but get a ~eduction m
Liquori now competes in the 5,000
jobs."
.
·
.
.
.
room
a~~ bo~rd. It is part o! a
meters, but in 1969 and
-
1971 he
·
..
,
Howard
·
Cosen, the
_
widely
,
The Board of Labor, however, whole fmancial _pac~ge wh,ich
was the top miler in the world.
lqlown sportscaster; was asked to
.

called in three graduare R
.
A.'s we do not consider mcome to
He competed in the 1968 the U.S. His best time for the speak at the dedication by ,the
whose
testimonies

were students," he said .
.
Olympics, but was unable to run
.
distarice is three
.
minutes, 52.2 coriµn.i.ttee, but did not formally
adequate, but toally
·
,
con-
Coµrt iit~gation ended January
in the 1972 or 1976 games becauS:e seconds
.
-
He is now the U.S
;
and decline
tradictory to "our'
.
' idea of an
·
25t~ · w~en bot~
.
la..wyers gave
of
.
injuries;
. ·

.
··
.
.
.
..
·
.
.
··
.
/
_
.
British
,
title hoide
'
i for the 5,000
;
R.A. or
·
an R
.
C. said Campilii. their
'.
fll!al briefs. '!Jle court
·
· ·
He has been a l'!POrtscaster
-
with .
,
.
:
A
member
1
of
,:
t,ie
~
President's
.
Ms: Kopec said the committee
"Our
dorms
-
have problems but
.
preceed1ttgs
-
:
~ei:e
:
.-
u1f~r~a
_
l
.
ABC
television
'
since
,\
1972 and
..
Council
on -
--
Physical
,:
Fitness:;- needed
a
~rsonality who
,
would
not those
·
oresented
.
by
.
the
·:
Tbere
.
:was no
JllrY
:
and Ju~ge
covered both
:
the Munich· and Llquorns co-:ciwtier ofa
_
chain of

make a commitment to speak at graduate
R.A's!'
,
-
-
,
·
.
·
Pierce,
0
could override
,
!:?~th. at-
.
Montreal games with the
.
net-
.
45 athletic footwear
.
stores called the ceremony
~
and that she and
The cas~ began in -1970 when t~rneys
.
The Judge~~ unlumted
work
.
·
·
.
·
.
. -
.
·
the Athletic Attic
.
'
:
This swnmer the group are very pleased to
the college was audited by-the time to n:13~e a def
_
lSlon.
·
,
.
:
In
1975 he
.
was the top miler in he will be featured in the "Marist have Liquori for the dedication
.
wage and hour administration
"Our witness,;,.s did an excellent
._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.,. and reviewed
·
· in a number of job in presenting an
·
educator's
situations: According
_
to Campilii, point of view," said Campiii.
.
RA'sto get
.
grant
.
'
in pay foul up
·
Food plan to st8y
_
··
the same
.
By
Pat Larkin
·
Dormitory resident
·
advisors
(RA)
·
will receive a grant next
year equal to their salaries they
receive this year:Currently RA's
receive $725
.
to
.
$1,100
.
for two
.
semesters of work.
Dr. Antonio Perez, d~Jl of
students, had originally proposed
the RA's be granted a free room.
However, in a
.
meeting of ap-
proximately 40 prospective RA's
on April 6, it was decided they
·
would not accept RA positions if
they only received free rooin. At
present room charge~ are_ about
·
$700 a
.
year.
On
·
April 7,
.
Bob McAndrew,
Richard Crump, John McCarthy,
and William Deeken, present
RA's, told Perez what was
decided
.
the night before.
Perez
.
said that irlitially, Peter
Amato, director of housing, had
proposed free room and board for
the RA
'
s. Amato did this because
he wanted an equal amount of
compensation for the RA's.
Perez said he brought Amato's
proposal to President Linus Foy
and Anthony Campilii, business
·
manager. Campilii told Perez the
proposal for free room and board
would not fit into the operating
costs of the budget.
·
.
Pere'l thinking
,
Amato
.
want~
an equal amount of compensation
·
for all RA's proposed that RA's
.
be given free room
.
·
When the RA's confronted
Perez on Thursday he told
·
them
-
there
was
,
a misunderstanding
between himself and Amato. He
said he believed the old way of
comperisating the RA's was not
being considered anymore.
·
·
When
·
the
-
.
four proposed the
present system, Perez said he
would accept it.·
·
.
·
.
By
Larry Striegel
choice of staying with
·
the
·
20
·
.
·
·
.
'
:
meals
per
week or payµig $45 less
B~cause:of a low student tur-
·
and getting 15 meals weekly, or
noufMarch 31 and April 1 for a
.
paying $35less for
-
half the meals
vote to change the meal plan they get now.
· .
.
·
.
offered at Marist, and because of
···
Lambert said the reason for the
a:
shortage of time for next year's
· .
poor
·
turnout of students was
budgeting, the present meal
-
plan probably
.
"due to the !act that a
will be used next year.
.
lot of the students didn't know
Only 19 percent, or 152
.
out of
··-
.
what the prcigrams
·
were.''
.
Under the present system an
·
RA is paid
·
on the
.
basis of the
number
·
of students on his floor.
RA's in Leo and Sheahan halls
are paid more than an RA in
Champagnat hall since they are
resp~nsible for more students
.
774 residents voted on the
·
He said he was disappointed by
referendum which offered a the workings of the
.
Inter-House .
vari~ty of meal plans at different council o~ the issue. "After
:
folJ! .
.
prices.
-
.
··

·

·
,
weeks

of
-
discussion the coUJ1cil
-
Fred Lambert, assistant dean came out with a second proposal.
·
·of
·
·
students,
·
said
.
he made
.
his They said loud arid clear iwe wish
decision
;
to stay
.
with the
·
pres__!nt
to be ·consulted.' We tried to get
meal plan which offers students
.
·
cconsultation but everYWhere we.
The
money received by the RA
next year will be called a grant
inst~d ofa salary.
:-
'
.
.
All-pro
Bob
Tucker
to talk here tonight
.
20 meals
·
weekly at a CQst
·
of $800
.-
turned we got
.
minimum
-
feed-
..
beciiuse he was skeptical about ba
'
ck.
·
·
If
ariything, I will blame
changing
'
the plan on the vote of the time of year.''
:
.
_
such
a
small group of students.
Lambert continued to say
-
the
He alsci said there was no time for
.
issue came up too
·,
late to be
another vote because the food
implemented next sear~ He said
service had
to
submit its budget
-
.
he hopes the issue
wiU
continue
to
before April 7
.
when the boar~ of
be
'
discussed so students will get
trustees vote_d on it
.
·
what they
_
want for
-
the 78-79
Sixty-nine
.
percent or
.
106 of school year
. ·
·
By
Tom
·
McTernan
those
.
who voted favored the third
Lambert said the . Dining
Tucker, who gained m
'
edia lead the league in
.
that depart-
·
meal option.
·
·
Service
·
submitted· the same
-
attention last year during his ment
,
while becoming the . first
·
Under
·
that option students budget
:
they used
·
this year for
Bob Tucker, an all_ Pro tight
contract dispute with the Giant Gi~nt individ11al category leader
·
could
.
choose either the plan now
·
next year with
a
projected $500
end for. the New York football
management, joined the New since 1935.
.
being used,
·
or 15 meals per week
:
10ss.
He said food prices-on
n:uJk
Giants, will speak at Marist
·
Jers~y -
.
based team as
a
free
.
·
Pro_. bowl honors
.
came the
.
·for $775, o~
10
meals weekly for
and coffee have hurt_ ~e servi~e,
tonight on
·
'
.
'Professionalism in agent in 1970. He had failed in
·
following season and T!!cker
_
has . $7,85.
In
_
this
plan students would • but that he an~,pie
dini~
service
Sports."
.
·
·
tryouts
.
with
.
the
.
Philadelphia average_d 40 r
_
ecep_tions per
·
_
have had
to
pay $12 e~tra for a

management
:
.
refus~ to go to
·
.
The lecture
·
has been ten-
Eagles
:
and New
.
England season ·smce thend~e
.
also
.
set
:
a ·
.
~mputer system whi~ would
second grade mea~. .
.
.
.
tatively scheduled for 7 :30 •p.m.
Patriots after
·
graduating
.
from
:
club r~ord bf:
.
catching a pass m . regulate
,
the meals
.
g1ven to
·
!fe conu.nended D~g Se!:"'1ce
in
·
the
·.
Mccann
.
Re
·
creation Louisiana state:
.
.
'.
·

•,


...
·
,
:
35 sti;:rught games .
.
. ·
.
.
.
.
-
.
stud~nts.
·.
.
·
.
-
.
.
.
pirec
.
~or
,
Joseph
.
~urenz
··
for
·
Center; pending
·
completion of
the
..
After narrowly missing Rookie
·
\,
The ;_lecture

is
.
being co
.
.:
'
, Twenty-two per<;ent
_
,
of the
'
·
ha";ing gop~
.
foresight '!h_en
bleacher
·
seating
:
•structure:
..
:. of
.
-
'
the -Year
.
honors, Tucker sponsored by-the C.U
.
B. Lecture voters favored keeping the J?lan
b~ymg food
..
Joe Lurenz studies
_ .
Otherwise,
>
it will
.
be held -at canie back- in
-
1971 · to lead
-:
the ·
-'
Comrriittee and,the
·
Alumni
~
Qf-
· ·
n~w
·
usep_; The
-
remaining e~ght
his
-
mark~i and buys w~ll,
.
What
Fireside Lounge
;
in
the
Campus
·
NFC
-
:
with
·
59
.
receptions.
·'
He
.
fice
:
·
,
per~ent v~ted for the
·
secon~
,
he
_
~ved us on. c_offee before
-
th~
Center.
·
.
became the first tight end ever
.
to
.
. ·
·
option which gave them the prices went upis outstanding.'




























































































































































































'
'
·
'
APRIL 14, 1977
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
College fire
_
_
hazards
.
. discusSed
Baudouin new
.
CUB pres.
By
Maureen Crowe
-
Peter Baudouin, a
-
junior,
received what could be called
a
By
David Ng
Antonio Perez
.
dean of student mandate in
bis
quest for the
·
life, said the violatio_ns to
·
be College Union Board (CUB)
Fairview Company Fire Chief
-
discussed
have not been disclosed presidency
in
elections held
WJlliam Satuka
and
college ad-
to
him.

..
March
31 and
April
1.
Running
miilistrators were
·
to
-
meet
Peter Ainato,
-
·
director
-
_
.
of without opposition, Baudouin
yesterdayto
discuss
possible fire housing, said
this is
the first time collected
-
210
votes against 38
hazards
.
oh campus.
_
the hazard
has
·
been
brought to absentions.
-
-
..
·- After the April
'
1
fire in
Leo
his attention and
_
he is
In
the only race for a
CUB
Hall, which houses
250
students,
,
"worried."
_
position, Gino DiMartino beat
.
.
S!!tuka said
"
rescuing trapped
Mr.
Amato
said
the
.
dormitories Dave Gardner by eight votes to
·
-
students ·would be

difficult
_
if
·
a were built under New York State become
_
·
the organization's first
major
-
fire
.
ever
_
occurred in
-
the fire and safety regulations.
marketing manager .
.
The final
early morning hours.
··
_
-
.
The fire started in cabinets tally was 132 to 124.
,
He said
.
the swing-out windows
stor¢ in
_
the maintenance room
~
In two
_
other races, both
in
Leo
are not
:
suited for quick Fire officials
.
are still uncertain unopposed
;
·
junior John Mc-
.
escape
/~

.
_
_

.
·
how the fire started.
earthy
·
won the treasuref s seat
·
:
.
~
All
dormitories windows
.
are
.
of
·
-
-
_
A
.
heat
.
detector triggered with the greatest approval in the
a.
similai:-
swing-out design .
.
· _
alarm nwnber 116 •
.
The Fairview election, getting 223 out of 253
. __
Satu~rn
·_
·
said the
..
Fairview Company-
.
responded within ballots cast, while freshman
Company
·
:
lacks the proper. minutes and - extingui$ed the James Kelerher secured the
·
equipment to rescue students
·

blaze.
-
-
-
-
-
.
.
·
secretarial position -193 to 40.
0
.
from
a
building
such
as
Leo
Hall.
· ·
,
/'.
_
student
.
suffered
·
smoke
Baudouin, chairman of the
'.:
Joe
.
Waters,
-
_
director
<
of
·
inhalation b,ut _did
·
not require CUB social committee, said
securi_ty;
-
said he believed
/
if
a
.
hospitaLtreatirient.
- _
.,
·
·
during his campaign
_
·
that he
jnajor fire did
,
occur, the
·
Fair-
.,
According
to Waters, the fire
_
is
would try to get more money
and
·
view Co •
.
would~ask
_
for "mutual still under investigation.
-
·
ai~"
-
from the
.
P_oughkeepsie Fire
_

·The costofdamage d?rie is yet
DiMartino said he will "publicize
anything and everything students
would be interested
in
in ad-
vance."
Gardner said
his
defeat showed
hos
-
powerful the apathy
is
at
Marist.
"If
ten more people
would have come out to vote ..
.
.for
me I would have won. This shows
that everyone's vote counts." He
added he would offer DiMartino
.
any assistance he needed.
As
the
new
secretary,
Kellerher, will be responsible for
the communication between CUB
members
and
campus
organizations. Kellerher said he
will make himself available and
create more activities for
-
"deal with people directly."
students.
_
-
.
In
an election which included
The treasurer-elect McCarthy
night hours and tight security,
is know by his friends as "Mac"
there. appeared a discrepancy
and is reportealy the "whi2.'kid"
between the number of
-
votes
of the accounting department. He
registered and the final vote
said exploitation ofthe recreation
count. McTernan said
-
this oc-
center by the C.U
.
B. can provide
curred because some did not use
a positive effect on campus ac-
the abstain vote and therefore
-tivities
.
their votes registered for a
As
the new marketing manager
particular office.
.
_
.
,
_
Department which-does have the
.
not known.
,
I
_
.
_
.
adequate equipment:
·
-
~-
·
...
-
-
.

__
-;::-
~
-
.
-
···~
-..
..-
·
·
·
t:··
·
_
Ri.v
e.
.
~
-
D
a
y
~
i~-r ues~.
;
.
.
'
:-
.
.
.
.
.
-
·-
·
·
.
.
·
By
Alis
·
onHi
_
_
~key
,
adjusdhe
_
noi§e lev~1s
:
-
-
c-:---
-
·
('Last year,"Bo,dick said,
~
'no
·
~.There
will
be free
--
beer, music
.
one
}µid
_
enougl
r
coiltrol over the
_
-
-
and
;
recreation ·
at
·
the
.
.
second
-
.
_
bari~s v:olum,e llllt this y~ar we
'11
annualRiver
.
IJay sponsored by
·
·
have)nore control;"
_
·
-
;
Marist
::
College student
.
govern.=-
-
.
The
.
decision to h~ve a Marist
·
_
_
·
ment (SG
};:
College

Union
·
Board spon
_
sored

River Day was made-
--
>'
:
·
(CUB);
an4
the
.
ad_m4ristration.,
.
It last
_
y~r bythe ~!,ldent govetn-
.>
isscheduled for
.
Tuesday, Apr. 19,
ment
;~
CUB,
:
_
Bodick, and Fred
197'l
at 1 p:m;
:
and
·
willbe heldon
-
-
-
·
Lambert, assi~tant dean of.
_
·
campus grounds .
. _- ·_
,:
.
..
,
< _
5tu4en~:
·
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
'..
_
_
,
:
<=
,
.,....: A rock
-
band
,
from
·
New . Paltz
~<
Traditionally,
:
.
River
-
Day
.
was
-
·-
_.,
.
. ·
·

-
.. ,:
:
~
c~µ
.
ed
:
J~~
-
wornbJers ~lfpx:oif~e
.
a
J
m~lly_orgaJ!:izoo, by
a
group of
·,
-
.
'.;
~u5t
t
~~d
J
per~
w.iµ
,
~
~
'i
<>1'~Y.~ll
,:·.,
:
~~J
t
~ppomted
;'.
S~~rs
;
JVh(!
.
11Vould
:
·
(;
,

nets
-
,
set

up along
:
with
::-
kegs
-
-
_
-
of
'
:
·
secretiy
,
_
clto~~
-
:
a
.
day
;
·:.
an~
,
sul'-
,. ·::
,
"
beer.
'
The barid
will
bidocated in
·
pr~
'"
stude9.ts

on
_
the day
.'
1tself;:
.:
·front of
_
Adrian HaU facing
-
.
,
Then
.
~asses wo~d be _
_
cut and
·
··
Qhampagnaf Hal};
·
- ..
.
---
_
_
.
parties .
.
and
,
-
mock
.
· award
.

.
Last
-
.
year ?darist
:
security
_
_
ceremorues wo~d
be
held along
received complaints about
,.
the the
-
:
Hudson River
,
0
The yearly
noise
--
_
from
.
outside
_
institutions theJI?,e was
.
_
--
~
-
celebrate
__
.
the
.
such as St. Francis Hospi~l a1,1d
coming of sprmg
.
'
_
_
Doctors Park Office.
· .
q
What
happens
·
on
the
According to Coordinator of Traditional River Day is that
College
.
Activities
.
Dolly
_
Bodick, small grou~ of ~ople get ro'YdY
facing the band toward
Cham-
an~
;
drunk,
said .~· · Bodie~
.
pagnat
~
Hall
will
help
·
cut
:
no~se
_
1.J!timatelyl_wotild liketo
s~~
this
levels. She also _said that ~ese
·
Riv~r Day replace the traditional
outside institutions will be made
.
one.
0
she adde~.
.
.
.
.
- _
iaware
:
when Marist is having
It
has not bee~ decide~ whether
• .
River Day and
if
they have any or r_i~t cl~ses will be option.al yet.
.:
..,- .. ::
complaints they
_
can
-
calf' Marist
A
r
_
am date has been se~ aside for
and something will
be
·
done
.
to
,
Apr,
2.6
.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
.

.
.
_.;..
.

.
:
.
.
~
.
.
.
.
,
..
·

-
·
-'
-
A
Fairview fireman consoies the Rev. Richard LaMorte. In their hands are recovered chalices.
(Photo
by
James P: Deckner)
·
An almQst tragic happening
The fire, was confined to the
sacristy and gutted the room. The
As
he stood in front of the
.
chapel itself was unhar;med by
burning chapel, theRev. Richard
the fire, but suffered smoke and
-
LaMorte was trying to find
water damage.
-·~
somethinj;(
.
encouraging to say
The library, connected to the
-
about an almost tragic situation.
chapel by a wall, would probably
_
· '
"I
.
hope
-
they stop it before . it h'lve been destroyed if firemen
reaches
·
the library," he
·
·
said.
-
_
hadn't arrived on the scene, said
«You can
.
pray anyWhere but
LaMorte
.
.
.
books
are
·
hard to replace."
·
A
few days later Fr. LaMorte
.
LaMorte
;
the campus chaplain, . reflected on the scene. The worst
<
had complete~ an Easter se~ce
thing
·
about the fire was · ''not
Iess'than an hour before the
·
frre · knowing,"
,
he said.
"It
looked
alarm was called into the
terrible ... it was an over-
Fairview
·
fire
company.
whelming feeling,
·
all I could
:
Ironically
~
a:
.-
candle lighting
_
sense ~s the fire and smoke.
:
ceremony which
.
is part of the
You didn't. kno~ w
_
hat.
~~
ac-
. Easter
.
service
.
was forgotten.-, tually burrung.
It s true its
Just
a
:
IJ1steaci,
just
t~ee M,
_
~s candles
building, but tha~•s _wh~;e I do
were lit ''but they were
.
out when · most. of
.
my func~i~rung.
·
By
Ken
Healy
·'.'
i_Ieft,'
1
said La~forte. ·
:
.
. -
-
-
_
_
.
The blaze cla~ed all the
·
:.
:
"It's funnf
·
becailse
-
when the
.. _
vestments belongmg to
_
the
,
firemen found out that there had college
·
as well as several
•.
'
just
been a seryice they. assumed . belo!!ging to. Fr. LaMorte. Two
.
·
it 7.included
:
the: candles
·.
_
and. chalice's which were rescued by
.
·

-·.:
·,_
-
~.
:
.•
,
-
"
,
_
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
. everything, they asked me about Jireinen during th~ fire are
·
..
..
-
.:
.
·
-
TliestatueofBroth~J,'CliiunpagnatJnfront~f~
_
ecllapelisshrou~~
:
itand Hold
.
them.
'
we didn't use
.
·
damaged; pro~bl~ irrepara~ly .
.
·
: ·
::
.,,
m
smoke
.
diirlngaflre
Saturday
night.
:
(Photo
_
by James
P::._De~kner
.
)
·
-
_
the candles
,'.
'
-:-
·
,
The heat of the fu-e m the sacristy
_
..
. ·
.
.
·
-
~
•:
_
~~
\~
:
~:";
·
(~
-
:
~
-
~
:;_
~:;
.
-'
__
:
::
:
;
:~:::;

~
-
-
:.1.
:
:
,
..,
_
:
·
:
}~~~
-
!.~~
-:·
._
-
...
·
·
·
,
-
~ .
. -
;
~
;_

.
~ · ·
~-._
-
.\
·
,
-.·.
-
•.).'..-
:
..
·

.-
,
• :
.
,
.:·
~
;
J
_>_
:
~
....
_.
·

.
.
_._-
--
.
~:
:
_
~
-
.
·
-

:
__
-
.,.
.
'.-

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

-_
;
·•-
--
-
.
melted one chalice and cracked
the cement that most of the
chapel
is
constructed with.
Fr. LaMorte was at ease while
describing the events of the night
before Easter
.
He was more
concerned with the junior ring
ceremony than the personal
inconvenience the fire will cause
him. "We should be able to have
the ring ceremony in the chapel
as planned" he said.
_
"There is a lot of cleaning to be
done between now and Saturday
though. The benches and altar
have to be
-
wiped
·
off and the
floors will have to dry. People
have been great about it too,
some students have offered
·
their
help and so have people from
town. I imagine we're going to
accept some of the offers."
Fr. · LaMorte was especially
thankful none of the firemen were
injured. fighting the fire. "That
would.have been the worst thing
that could have happened," he
said.

·
-
I




































































---------------------------~---------.----------------
!.
!
I ,
\
.
I.
',
.
.
.
J
I
j
PAGE4
THECiRCLE
CARD TRAVEL
Poughkeepsie
.Arlington
W~ppinger
Beacon
CoUgratulatiQ-rtS Marist!
..
· _
on the opening of the
.
.
James
~J~-
McCe1n11 Recreation
Center
·
.
from
PEELOR.MOTOR· SERVICE-INC.
25(?_ Ncfrth
Road
Poughkeepsie,
NY 12601
.,
;;._ :·•·i:
, . /
.·,· ..
,
.
-
·
·~·-
..
. ··-HUNTER EQUIPMENT
.
.MARQUETTE•WEAVER•AMMCO ·
. MONROE•MOOG•BRAKE PARTS
TEL. (914)454-8400
20%-30% ·
&
50%
·
off
.
•.
ALL DANISH CLOGS-
w~
have brought in
l,500
pairs for our
Anniversary
·
.
'
Leather or suede, open or closed bac~: ~~n's,_ wo~an's
. -· • and childrens. We want you to share our celebration.
danish design c_enter _
389 Ma.in Street, ·Poughkee.psit·
~
·-----.T.,_._,_

••
... yrs
·
,
APRIL 14. 1977
·• · $5,200 lost
on rock collcert
By
Larry
Striegel
She continued
to
say the
future
of big concerts at Marist looks
dim
.
Money may have· to be taken
. "Students wanted a big concert
from next year's budget
to
help
and
we
got it for them.
If
there
is
pay for the more than $5,200 lost going
to
be another big concert,
by the College Union . Board it's going
to
have
to
be on
(CUB)
in a concert given by the altogether different terms, and
New Riders of the Purple Sage
we
will
have
to
justify it finan-
A~ll~ Bodick, coordinator of
.
cially so that we know where
the
college activities, said the CUB
:c:J.r.
is
coming from before
lost money because of poor ticket
Ms:-
Bodick said she
will
meet
sales on campus prior to the
CO
ncert which -was held at the
with CUB coni::ert chairman Lou
Ann
Waldron
this
week to discuss
Mid-Hudson Civic Center.
plans for
fu_
tu_
re _CUB_ concerts.
She said the CUB will take
about$2,000from what
is
left of
She gave Ms .. _Waldron_ high
this
year's budget to reduce the marks for her job organizing the
New Riders concert. "I
think
Lou
deficit, and
will try to come up
Ann
ran the
thing
responsibly.
-with the remainder through fund
raising events during. the rest of
One problem· was .. that· we·· had
the -semester: But some of the · only three weeks to publicize.the
money may have
to
be taken
concert before hand."
_ .
from next year's
CUB.
budget.
The CUB will try to regain part
About 1,225 attended- the of .the' _lost money by selling
concert, said
Ms. Bodick.
Of
that posters on River Day; Tues., Apr.
number only 275 tickets were sold
19.
-.
._ ._ --
on campus at a cost of
$5
a ticket
_"We have an &rti$ . designing
while 950 were purchased off
commemorative posters_ ~d we
campus for $6 each. .
r
hope ,enough stuqents
.:wi.11 _
buy
•~we were disappointed that,_so
them
-~~
h~lp·:)lS ;rais~ some
· , few were sold on the.
Marist
moner, · She also sa1d there ~Y
campus. We were 'expecting to
_bes~
sold, and_the CUB
will
. sell many more tickets. That's
be asking for C?l!tributions to
what really killed us," said Ms.
help plug the_ def1c1t._
·--'· Bodick.
r-·
.
.
.
_
Frosh~CORE courses
· not
for upperclassm~n _
.
_
By Cathy Ryan
major field, leaving one. elective
~
ci:>urse for·each·semester. ·'-'
·
Severalcourses did not appear
-The
'Dew
freslurien -.. courses
on-the course listinginextyear's -offered for the famsemester are
schedule because they
will
only "Introduction to P-hilosophy,"
be open
as
part of the new "core" "lntroductio:.rto Ethics,~• "World
curriculum requirements which L it'e rat u r ~, ' '.
" Sci e.n c e
will be implemented for -the first Technology and Human Affairs,''
time in the fall.
_ _
and "The Meaning -of History."
Louis Zuccarello, associate
Also. being offered are "Music
dean for academic affairs, said · Without Sharps· or Flats,"
~
the courses will notbe available "Film," "Business and·Society,"
- to upperclassmen unl~s there
is "Diyersions. in· Math/' "In-
room after freshmen ·have / troductiori to Psychology,"
registered.
.
"Political Science" and some
Zuccarello says freshmen must writing coQrses. ..
'-
take 2 core .. requirements~
Transfer students.
perhaps two courses in their
MCR fires Green
ByBllMcLaughlln
childish' decisi_pn
I
by '·three
people."
.
Beth Weaver· a resident fresh-
Greeri says he l3dequately
.
xpan,
is
the new program director 'performed the duties· of _the job
of WMCR (Marist _:College amidsC ,,.what
he-
·. calls
Radio}, after the station's "disorganized . management."
i ·
management board fired Andre
The board which fired Green
is
.- Green_· because they _
said he made of four students including
violated three station bylaws.·
Capozzi;·· Operations· Director
Vincent Capozzi, the general Chris · ._ Paccione, - Business
· manager, said
Ms. Weaver: was· -· Manager Kevin Stack, -_and. Gino
.· chosen for the post because of DiMartino, the stage manager.
experience. she gained from DiMartino was the only-one of the
Junior AchievemenLprograms ,group who did not.vote
to
fire
while she was in high school. -.
Green. He . sai<J. he ,_abstained
· Capozzi said
·
the board fired because-be•recommended _Green
· Greent.former president of the _ for the job and thought he;would
student government,. because he
be biased.
· - · · ·- · _ . · ,
did not perform his duties.
: . "Andre was active in . other
''Relieving· Andre was no
things ·which ··took: tune: away
personal decision. He simply was
from his _
being active : in _the
to : oversee, the news, sports, stgltion,'.' said P.accione.
'!It
came
feature and co~y editors a!1d to
time· that
we.
:were_ only kip~g
work closely with the assistant ourselves that he would fulfill his
program director _and the disc
obligations.n ' .
. : · --.-.~- _ -_
··
· jQckeys," said Capozzi;
_ubiit-.
he
':._-·.-As
program- director, :Gi~n
1
-neve~ _· "held . _ '~~y
formal · was.receiving .~ee.cr~~from
• meetmgs.u-
·
.
-
,. .
the Marist•Communications·Arts
. , But.-despite the termirtation,
depa:rtment .. CapozzLJid not.

·
Gr,een says he will continue to act · know .:whether/ Gteen-twould
-· -· as the sta~o11's program director.
continue to receive the credit:_for
:-. ~•4s
f~I:' as··~,dis~jockeys are'_.thf_reniairider: of the'.s~m.ester. ·
.. con~~rned ~ey,~ill ptobably still ?Any loss-cif~redits fo{ Green
is_
· • c~~s1de1;, .Ille
•·
the_ .. · P.i:ogram
between him and the department,
_
.. dµ-~t9r ._ ·l.'1:efuse to· accept· this .. : not· the. radio•'stationt( h~said. ,.
-
";
,',·.
,.,
...
-.,·_
.
..,-
'.
··_:
.
.
.
·-
,·._
:
.....
·_.,.·•·-•.;
·_'
-,..·_,'
..
•'
..
·

·
.-_·,
-.
:
..
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..
-;
.,-•,•·
.,._;.,,:













































































































APRIL 14. 1977
THECIRCLE
PAGES
Communication a problem for· Perez
resident
coordinator,
says Perez
has "a lot to
be
responsible for."
Increased support from the
people he supervises would make
his job more effective.
By
David
Ng
wanted. The traditional student
government roles have sub-
Poor communication lines
divided into other committees.
between students and the office of
Foy said noting there are few
student
:
life
is
Antonio Perez's,
formal
patterns
.
of
com-
dean
.
.
of student life, biggest
munication on campus.
problem but
-
there
is
hope, ·ac-
Perez says his ~•normal way of
cording to student leaders.
_
operation"
is
to consult and work
Jim
.
Shannon, :inter:.house
with students. Perez said he
council president, says it
is
the
-
attempted to work with student
.
"rapport" and "trust" between
government but found the
Perez and students is poor. "The
leadership "not very effective." I
whoie
·
concept of administration
gave up with the elected leaders.
is
_
we (students) don't know
I am at fault for not pursuing
··
wh~t•s happening." Shannon
·
other voices.
says
_
he hopes for improvement
Last
September, Perez met
but it will depend on the "new
·
with Andre Green; former
.
SG
blood" of the student govern-
president, and Jim
-
Dasher,
.
ment.
·
·
former
:
SG vice-president, to
Perez was hired as the dean of
discuss
the
removal
of
student~ on August 1st, last year.
r~frigerators-over 48 inches tall
Resident students began arriving
.
in dormitory rooms.
·
.
on campus on the 31st.
·
Perez says his impres.sion from
President Linus Foy
'-
says
those meetings was the SG of-
traditionally there·was not strong
i
ficers agreed large refrigerators
communication
·
between the~"
·
would be removed from the
dean's office and students. Perez
rooms.
-
has
not had the time to develop
Dasher, who started a rally
communication
_
as soon
·
as he
.
against the
··
removal, says he
PFe-school
0
1hay
movetogyrn
By Cathy
Ryan
Campilii said he.plans
to
·
bring
_
.
.
.
. _
_ .
.
_ .
_
,
in
an
architect.to see whether the
~dministrator~ are discussing ~ce
.
~
·
be
renovated to fit
the
ba~
_
rooins
of the
·
old
gym
as
·
children
s needs.
·
·
.
-
..
·

.
a
.
possible
'
'
relocation
·
spot for
<
·
He
cited manY:positive aspects
-
Marist prwchool, accordirig
:to
of
·
the area for pre-school.
:
The
Anthony
·
Campilii, business series of rooms are semi-isolated,
manager
>
.
·
.
·
·
>
.
_ -
-
.
providing
.
privacy and there is
.
·
He said the
·
decision
.
will
·
potential usage of the
gym
·
on
·
probably depend·
.
on .
costs
-
arid rainy

days. • --
.
.
state
,
approvalof the area.
,i
·
,
,
.
·
Campiliisaidthelocatiori of the
•·
..
·
· '
Dr;
:
",
~idge
.
Schraiz
:
of
·
the gym.would make it
·
:
easy for
-
.

·
.
psychology
:
:-
:
departnient
<
has
'
parents
to
drop
ofHheir
children,
_
:
·
expressed reservations abouf the
··
'In
:,
_
,
addition,
·
-,
.
the
,
,.'
gym
;
:
has
non-insulated,
<
·cemerit
-
area
.
bathroom
·
facilities
arid
,
fresh
·
according fo Campilii, but
-
~
~ter.
"W~
,
want to provide the
willing
-
to
discuss it further,
chil~en with a 1!falthy,
wann
.
providing
·
she receives cost 31).d liv~ble pla~
,
estimates.
-
·
I
Dembia inhales
13
·
By Wendy
Stark and
·
.
Maureen
,
Tullr,
slices.
Louis
Merlino and Joe

.
Krzys
.
placed third and fourth
respectively, Merlino eating
.
Amidst
a cheering
·
crowd of
eight and Krzys seven.
about
.
150 persons, Robert
Bernie DelBello ate only three
Dembia got the $15
·
prize,
a
.
pit-
slices and was no competition for
cher of
_
water thrown. at him by
Dembia, being
.
_
only
-
half the
'-
the1losers, and probably sick
.
chaniJ?'S ~ ;
'
·
·
·
after almost inhaling 13 slices of
Eddie Williams conceded after
pizza at
a
pizza eating
-
contest~
_
two~utes ofth~coiltest ~d sat
the Rathskellar Api:. 5. •
·
;
·
back t~ enjoy his two slices of
Within seven minutes, 41 slices
.
pizza .
.
Williams
-
was
~e
only
of pizza
·
and three
·
pitchers of
contestaµt who took ~e
·
time
to
·
.
water were consumed
by
the
six
salt and pepper
his
slices
while
contestants. Brian Jantzen was a
·
--
the crowd yelled, "Swallow the
/
·
close
second
to
Dembia; eating 11
.
piece whole"
t<;
·
Dembia

.
.
'
.
..
.
·
.
-
:
·
">

Bookstore prices
.
-
.
.
By
Jeff
Benedict
is
to hoof. it into the city unless
one has extra money.
to
spend.
Jim
Shannon agrees Perez does
which include the
dining
service,
have a "tough position but he has
campus ministry, student ac-
people under him" to be
.
tivities, etc.; the campus dor-
responsible for certain areas.
mitories;
financial
aid;
·
The responsibilities of the food
athletics; counseling services;
and health services, campus
the Upward Bound project; the center
activities,
campus
Higher Educational Opportunity ministry, and dramatics have
Program (HEOP); and special been delegated to Lambert by
services.
·
Perez.
According to President Foy,
Perez, according to student
excluding purely academic leaders, has strong points
in
his
problems, 85 percent of campus favor.
problems are Perez's respon-
Dasher says Perez
is
"straight-
sibility.
.
·
.
forward and honest...and will not
Mel Crilley, Leo house council
talk out of two sides of his
"definitely did not give any kind member said Perez has too many
mouth." Dasher says he is
of impression" to Perez.
"I
told jobs
.
Crilley said Perez's office
hesitant about' Perez because of
him
I was going to pursue it must be more "unified" and stop
"his behavior in the past"
farther in other areas
.
"
.
"passing the buck."
·
regarding issues.
·
Fred Lambert, assistant dean
Guy Greco, inter-house council
Greco says "at least when he's
of student life, said in the future, member, does not feel Perez has
wrong, he'll admit it and learns
the SG constitution should be too many jobs. "Marist College is
from his mistakes." Greco added
rewritten and thus free the SG probably the only school of its
Marist hiring a dean of students
·
president "from. any other size in this state to have a dean of
is
"a step in the right direction"
trivia" so he (SG pres.) is the students, an assistant dean of
but does not know
if
Perez is
first person to see regarding students, and a
.
housing director
necessarily the one for the job.
campus issues.
·
·
for
800
students who live on
Crilley says Perez's strong
As
dean
.
of student life, Perez campus."
point
is
"he wants to work with
oversees: all student services
Jim Honan, Gregory House
the students."
'A
chimp bit
me.■■'
By Pat Larkin
"Why
didn't you hand in your
paper?"
-
.
.
.
.
:
•~Well
·
Mr. Toscano," muttered
tlie student, "it was such a
beautiful

day yesterday,
I
decided to
take
.
a sail
·
on the
Hudson .
.
I
brought my paper witll
me and the boat overturned."
·
·
This is just one of many
outrageous
_
excuses
·
given by
students to teachers at Marist
'!!J.en assignments are not done .
.
;;
.
_:
,--
A
Likely
Story
-
.
·..
.
,
:
: '.Ibere
:.
are
:
usually
:
(
tyvo
·,;
:
oc-
·
·
casions
.
when students -give
·
ex-
·
cuses
to their teachers. 'Ihese
'
are
when ail assignment has not been
done or a paper has not been
completed, and when a student
has missed a class
.
There are the basic measely
excuses such
as:
"my
··
grand-
mother died ... my typew
_
riter
broke ... my roommate kept me up
all night ... and I got called home
in an emergency." These usually
are not very successful
if
used too
often.
·
However there have been some
imaginative stories which pupils
have told teachers when coming
iri
empty handed the day a paper
is
due.
·
One student
·
came to a class
taught by Vincent Tosc~no,
assistant p~ofessor
.
of history,
without his paper but with a
bandaged finger. He explained to
Toscano,
"I
took my girlfriend to
the Bronx
Zoo.
I
began showing
off and stuck my hand in the
monkey cage and a chimpanzee
bit my finger. It became swollen
-
and
infected."
Mrs.
Mimi
McAndrew, jour-
nalism teacher, had one student
tell .her she could not type for
physical reasons. Mrs. McAn-
drew asked her what was wrong
and the girl showed· McAndrew
her inch and a half long finger-
nails.
Another student told Mrs.
McAndrew he did not have his
weekly newspaper
-
clippings
because
"I
was

taking
care of
a
cat while friends were on
vacation. I brought my clippings
with me and the cat attacked me,
destroying the clippings."
SAGA
Strikes
One student
·
informed Toscano
he could not
_
hand in his paper
because "SAGA had this really
bad meal and I was sick all
night."
.
.
Toscano also received
an
ex-
cuse from a student who said, "I
was stuck in an elevator during
.
the blackout. I suffered from
.
exhaustion the whole
·
weekend
.
"
Mr
.
Robert
.
Norman of the
.
Communications Arts Dept.
.
recalls an incident when a
·
student told him he was having
-
.
trouble
gathering
his
bibliography. When the student
handed in his paper it was an
exact copy of the introduction to
the text they were using for the
course.
.
The
-
common
,
ineffective
.
ex-,
.
.,
CU¥sfor
,
missing
-
a
,
'Class
include
'
.
''my car broke down, I overslept,
;
I
was
sick
or
I
was working."

..
·
·
A
gI:aduate
student
of
Dr.
John
Sciliepi, psychology teacher,
came to class for the
first
three
weeks, but
·
was absent for
the
next ten. When
the
student
returned to class he informed
Scillepi his reason for being
absent was "I was buHding a
house."
Janet
Locke,
assistant
professor of Mathematics, was
traveling 47miles to school at one
time. She recalls a student telling
her he could not get through the
snowstorm to get to class. Later
she discovered the student lived
in a dormitory on campus.
Toscano
·
had one student who
did riot show up for a class when a
paper was due. The next class he
asked
her
why
she didn't come to
class when the paper was due.
She replied, "When I was going to
leave home on Sunday it was
raining; There was a prediction
of a rainstorm and my mother
wouldn't let me travel
in
the
rainstorm
.
"
.
.
,,.
,..
Marist students can get
.
Bookstore prices for
'remedies
bargains on some oftheir grocery
ruri 10 to
~
cents higher
-
than the
_
items in the college bookstore,
·
a.verage gr
_
ocery store.:
Again;
the
according
.
to
,
a comparison of
best
·
.
buys are in discount
··
.
'
·
prices with local retain
·
stores.
.
drug.stores.
·
.
,
·
.
· .
.

·
·
..
..
Students can save two cents on
For your laundry
_
.
needs
1
the
·
every dollar of. taxabl~ items by
.
.
_.
same holds
.
t~ue. _BI~ch
:
and
.:
· ·
buying
in
the bookstore instead of
detergent, whic;J:t
·
·
.
JS
.
10
.
-
short
·
in
the'
City of Poughkeepsie
·
suJ>PlY in the bookstore, are ~t
.
wher~ the
tax
rate
is,
7
percent, teast
20
t~~
30 cents
,
cheaper
10
compared to the town
.
rate
.
of
5_
loca
.
l retail
.
~ores.
-
.
.
.
.
,
percent.
.
_
.
• overall, most_of the prices
1'1l!1
.
·
:
Those with hangovers would be
.
·
higher than· ot~er stores
·
in the
_
better off buying · aspirin and
.
:
a!ea
,
However,· when one
.
con~
,
.
.
Pepto-Bisniol
irl
.
.
the
_
_
·
bookstore
_
Siders the
tax
ra.!e, t}le gas money
'
unless
.
they are able .to
.
get to a
.
~r wear ~ng
.
. teal' on the {eet, the
.
local discount
.
drugstore, "'.hich
·
aggravating seafch_for a park!ng
may be difficwt
·
to do;depending
place and Qle
2()
ce.nts
!or
parking
••
:
on the condition
.
of the sufferer.
·
·
joqm ho~ once you ~done, 9te
.
.
·
~°Jh
;
~rket prices
:
!re
j~ ~
,
~
:
~~
~
~IIUlY
J.
l°-~
:
seem. that
_
h!P.
~t
:
/
~or lingering
~l~,
the
be~
_
~t
·
,
'
··

-
-~
~--
·-
-
·
--,
:
,·•
:
, .•
·
,Everyday·needs<·avallable- at
·
tbe
·
Marist•College.Bookstore •..
.
.
.
:.
,
.
... ···
·
····
·
·
·
·
·
···
·
·
·
····
··
-
-
.
·
,;
·
-
-
-
' •
. :
-
-
•··

.,
"O
. . .
.
.
- -

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-
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••
·
·

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..
..
.
.
.
,
.
,
,_
,
.._
_
.
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·


_.
.
,
.
,
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._
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1
I
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r
,
'
~
I
r
,
I
·
-
PAGE6
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 14; 1977
""'''"''"
~ " ~ M W ! ( ~ ~ ~ : t ! 5 1 : t f f i f ~ l : t r ~ f X : G . ~ ~ ~ ~ «
·
,
.
.
.
.
- ~
!'ersona_lity of
'the
.
we~k:
[<f
.
.
Man
of
many
trades Sets his goals
.
·
I
~,.,,:_
a future
·Dick Young or Red
Smith, McTernan's ambition
is
to
work in management advisement
services.
But
he adinits that
an
eight
year
habit
is
hard to break
and he says he will try to continue
to write for a paper on a weekly
basis.
·
.
McTernan's
article
.
was
"Through
.
the speaker I
of the to~,
Democratic
clubs
in
I
published in the New York realized
.
that! don't
want
to work
Brooklyn,
he says.
.
..
i
Times.
.
.
_
,
only
as an
accountant." He says
On
campus, McTeman
is
i!}
his

_
He says Aaron
is
probably the the CPA told students to set third year
as
Marist's assistant
most famous
_
sports personality career goals but also to get in
-
sports information director, a job
~
he has met, and described the volved in their community.
·
in which he sends out sports
ii
world's greatest home
run
hitter
.
Along with writing free lance
pub}!ci~
·.
to
.
area
·
coll~es and
~
as
"easy to talk to and nuld articles for a weekly newspaper,
publications.
.
.
.
..

-
TheTablet
mannered."
McTernan wants to coach
He
:
als
_
o compiled
·
payroll
i
--
McTernan became involved
in
But despite
those
·
busy youngsters in community athletic
.
figures Jor
.
the Marjst Dining
I ·
sports writing
as
a necessity
;
typewriter fingers, McTernan programs
.-
He adds that one of
his
Servi~
~
'!be
.
colleg~
J
oo.k
.
over
ill
.
-
"When I was going to grammar says a career in sports writing
is
proudest
-
accomplishments oc-

operation of the service this year,
,,,,
school at
St.
Rose in Brooklyn we
-
not for him.
cWTed during his senior year at
.
.
and one
.
day ne
-
walked
.
in
.
the
tl
had a lot of good teams
·
and the
"I write to give the sports Xavierian wheri he coached St.
office and
·
aske(,L the assistanq
}t,
- ·
guy who wrote the stories for our where I'm at more
_
publicity so
~se's
(f
r ~ r
School t<>
·
th~ir · manager
_
~ he neE:ded help with
I
local paper, The Tablet, didri't do
they get more support," he says.
·
first city-wide
.
CYO
__
track the
·
payroll • figures.
The
tli
a good job."
.
·
"Right now there aren't any champioilship
i
"If took a lot
,,
of
management
\VaS
so pleased
-.
h
dtf"
At age
13,
rather than
·
com-
openings in papers and tfie pay
·
work, but! gained. the respect of
was hired
as
·
a part-time ac-
-
tf:i
·
·
ti
plam;
·
McTemari sent in
his
own .level is too low. That's why I've the ki~and we had fun doingit
;
~
'.
co.unta.nt
.
~
He. is
:
alsothe
,
we
_
ekday
w.
-
·
·
f&
storiestothepaper. The editor of .
.
never given
.
sports writing
_
he say_~:.
:
.
.
.
• ·
··
·
·
:
cat
_
er!Jl~managerfor,theservice;
JC
t.__:!_t__
the Brooklyn - Queens weekly serious con~ideration for my
. _
_
Time Secret
. .
,,
.
.
•.
. .
Last year - McT~rnan
:
wa~
M
w
found out who his ananymous career."
·
.
.
'
·
McTernaii will
·
.
tie
'
able
·
to
t
electecltreas
_
urer 9f
the
.
College
ll
.
.
M
contributor was and hired him.
McTernan says he came
:
to
..
.
graduate a year
,:
earlier
.
>from
.
Uriioii
_
Board (CUB)
,
:
·.: :
i
.
·
ii
Tom McTernan
·
at
·
k
At
first McTernan covered Maristbecausehewantedtogoto
·
'.
colleg~ because
~
he took
'
:
·
some
_
-
-
-
He
·
says
·
he
:
kne
_
w
:
.
almost
f(
·
[
_
r _
-
;,'.,::;-,:,:_
.
_
us
_
ual
wor ···as C(CaYth
O
o)lic dYhi?ghuth
.
,
hor
1
ganirtzatiHon acosmuldallbschool_ wdhe~'~Ahit. s talenb~s
,.
:
·
hc~ghllege hcourses
1
·
,

·
.
-
_
d whhiletahke
:
_wastrin
nw
_
ohtebin·
-
~gh
·
e
_
:
astabourtte
_
dt~~b
'
uotrghaer1ihzaadtioi!1t
·
tj
·
,-,,.
.
an
sc oo spo s. e
e
.
use .
.
· .
-
..
a
ig
_
i
sc oo
.
an

as
.
en ex a
:
.
·
.
··..
;
·
.
.
.
·
.
_
.
A
®
can't remember what he university a lcit
of
times
·
you
-
.
courses each semesterand
a
few
~
£lying smoothly
·
.
after a month.
ff
11
ByLarryStriegel
received in the way of payment aren•~
.,
able
·--
·
tc;,
·
0
realize y9ur
::
·
\lµring
.
'the sunµnef.
>
.
.
.
._ -
AHearing~~?~It?i
·
. ..:;\
:
,..,
for his first year, but says it was a potentia! because there are
:
so
_.

-~·
For IDo:rt stu_dents tl_l~r:e
-
lS
not
_
.
·:
:
The
_.,
.
.
:
ay~
.
r~g~
:::·_
peri;on?s
{y
f.4
HeisaNewYorkStatelicensed
.
meager amount. One
.
year later many peopl~.
_A.
small school
\
,
.
en<>ugh:,tup.e
·
m a
:
_
d~y
·
.
!o get a~~eme~t
,
.
. at !h~ number
.-
~.f.
!fil
I
n~tary public, does i!lcome taxes
·

he got
.
$25
for
··
each story about allows
..
for mdividual growth:"
:
..
,
.
everything
·
.
done
.
McTernan says
,
·
these
·
act1V1tles
_-
nught
_
~
be
,
com-
_
M
·
,~
with H.
&R
Block,
1S
a member area high
.
school
.
basketball.
He
'
aiso
,
says he heard
·
t~at

his "secret
".
is
allocating Jime
.
pounded _when
.
it
:
is
;
•:
niehtioifed
tll
.
ti
of
·
who's Who in American games and bowling matches. · Marist
-.
had
.
:
ci
:
good business
.
prop
_
e.rly.
-
·
"L
set asi~e ce~in
°

tllat
.
Mc'.l'eman has
!:I.
h~nng
J!
f1
Universities and Colleges, is a
McTeman also
_
wrote about - d~partment,
-
and
;
after three
·
,
periods of the dayfor J0bs
.
{find
·
p1:_obl~
_
.
;
'.:[he ~<>cky
:
six~foot on~
g
fi
part-time accountant
·-
for the sports ~or
_
the Shore Road Local, years lie believes what
:
he heard
· _
tune to socialize;
-
but
.
if
things
Inslurian says it started when he
.
M
·
.
ft
Marist College Dining Service, the "almost .. dail}'.
~
. st~def t
.
,
.
~~ut the program
J
s
,
still
.
true.
.
have!~ get doi:ie; they h~ve to get goJ, JPefling!tis atthe age of five.
I
·
W
andisanaccotintingmajorwitha
-
~ews~aper at xavien~.
--
1..
<,
·
Another
7
_
persuader
-
was
·
the
··
.done
.
.
_
_
_
·
.
_
,
_
_
: .
_
.
:
.
. .
-
~
I d1~n ~
.
kno:w.
_
_
about the
if
·
g
·
3.85 grade point average.
-
_
. liked it ~~use _the
-
~ort~ -we~e
-
-__
,
proximity
_
<>f l!3~
-
~o
th~
c~uilpus.
·
_
_
Another
.
de~and <>n
-
his tun~
_
lS
pi:oblem until
-
I_wasm th~ secoI1d
®.
ill
To that list you can add the up !0 date, he says. D~g his
.
ti
can't explain it
;
b11.t even a~ a
,
_
his
.
weekl}'. trip _to -B~ooklyn
_
to
grad~
'.
I thought
~Y
hearing level
w
F.i
pemocratic cl~b he helped :rtart seruor year he served
;
as the
.
kid
.
I've always wanted
.
to work
'
:
check_on
·
hisfamily, fnends; and
-
.:wa
_
s t~e
same:
as
:
everyone
K
iJj
·
m Brooklyn;
•·
his membership m Local's sports
·
editor:
:
_-
·\;\
_•--
-.
..
Jcirl~M.11:Hesays ~e
,
wou_ldstill
'
.
·
sever.al a~ivities
_
including
_
the· else's."
·
·
.
·
..
·.
.
.
_
·::.
··
. _ ·.
·
.
·
_
·.
_
fj
}j
the Marist Accounting
.
Society,
When he cameto Manst
_
m
.
the
·
_
like to work. there
if
he
~
gets
,
a
/
:
pemocratic clu~ he helpeq fo
_
~d·
·
:
Jie
says
a
teacher _noticed the
ii!
!}
his position
as
sports
-
director of f~ll
1974,
~cTeman ex~cted to good offer ..
·
·
_
·
·_
·
-
.
.'
.
·
-
·
•. ·


·
::-
--
_.
~
:
--
m
Brooklyn
.
'
'.
Right no\V it's one
·
1>rob!em 8:nd a,t~ge rune
_
~~ got-a
lf
m
the student radio station and the
·
f~d a ful
l:
~orts
staff
·
on Tpe
.
.
'
.
'My c:areer go~
~_
is to
.
~~rk
10
,
.
he,~nng ~d:
:
·
··
.
,
:
· ·
-
.
.
·
..
/ -

r.J..
]1
fact that he will be graduated in
Cir~e,
-
,
but
>
instead foun
_
d m-
,
~nage~e~t adv_i~ry service~
,
"

.-
.
·
Ac~dem_ically _it \_Vas :ough
0
..
lt}
May with the required·
~20
cred\ts consiste~t
.
~oveE~ge
·
of.
·
.
football
·
He s~y1, it will _take
_
i~e
.
ll'.8!o.re
_
!Je
/'
.
·
.. and ~me kids mad~ ft11! of

it_,
.
h,ut
.
$
~
· .
ti
after only three years m college
.
games
_
and other sports
;
-
:
.
.
gets mvolvedmthe field
:
because
.
thats the way--gramn:iar
_
sclio!)l
/1
,
Mi
· •
He's
-
.
also
Marist's assistant
..
Since
:
the secon.~Jssue of that firsh
he
i
wants
fo
become a
cer
.:'.
~::::;
.
,
:;
'!ti~
-
_
ar~
t
~:
':i:}
0
:.
:,

/\;:f•
jC,'::~;,
·
.
.
,
t

.

,.
ff
sports information
,
.
director, arid }:ear, )'vfcTernan
··
has almost
tified
(
pµblfc
:

€1C~o
'
~tan((Q,PA).
l:
.
:"~i:,
Mq1:erzian
'
~;rs
~
he
~
listoo
!is
.Ji
_z
:.;
'
m
treasurer
:
.
of
·
the
·
college union
·
smgle-handedly
_
·
covered every He will
-
llave
::
to
··
get
,
:
tw:o
·.
years
.
.
,:
·
h~ndi
_
~appeg
:
'
by
:
~
.
th~
:
:
_
Marist
r?-r-
;1
board. Yet, Tom McTernari is Marist
_
:
sporting event for
·
t~e
·
experience working undef:ll CPA
:
·
office
~
:
~f s~ci~l
.~
services;
:
,
b1:1t
t*
lw
probably best
,
known for
.
his paper
:
_
.
and then take anexam before he
.
.
;
doesµ
.
t ':Va°-t spe~i .. ladvantages.
~
W
weekly sports
.
article in
·
the
He estimates he has y;ritten . is certified. Another of his
·
goals
·H~ adds tllat many people
•~
don't
l .
.
.
tl
Circle.
"about
200"
articl~ in the past is to earn a mast~fs
_
c:legree
.
in
.
-~ven know about t~e prob!err:.
ti
M
-
McTernan,
21,
probably the three years, averagmg more than business administratioiC!
:
_.
: .
'
.
' One
-
of my
.
best friends
<;IHln}
m
m
most active student around the .three per issue.
_
.
_
McTernan says
·
the field of
know aboutthe
_
p
_
roblem
:
untll this
[!i
{:\
Marist campus, is also deaf in
.
.
~ad
Henry
. .
management advisory services
is
year.
"_ .
·
·
.
·
-- '
·
·--
li
@
one ear.
·
With _pen m _hand he ha~ met challenging. "Personally, I like ~t
.
,
:
P
_
erh~ps
-
~e reas~n
_foF
:
-
M~-
i\~
8
Hesays~he use of a heari~g ai
_
d some mteresting. people .
.
Two becl,luse there's a lot of
.
emphasis
Te~nan s
.._
~uccess lie~
,:
-
m his
@
M
allows him to commumcate years ago
.
the N.Y. Yankees
.
,
on decision making and you
philosophy.
.. .
·
·
·

·
·
rn
I:~
normally
with
tl:le many people conducted a ''college
_
sports advisemanagersonawiderange
--
~
-
~lgoforconsiste~cyandtryto
m
i:,h
he sees every day
.
-
·
editor_s day" at Shea St~dium in of prQ..blems .
.
Also fiiiai:i
_
ciallyit's
_
do
~Y
~st ~~.ek
~
and w~~k
{i
i

McTernan is one of few people
·
Flushmg. McT~m~n amvedJate
-
go_od, but_ ~oney isn't
_
_
the
:
out
;
, ~e
_
says.,
-
Th~t s one. t~g
{
{.
!IT
who could make a career out.of but metth~ Mihyauk~
·
Brewers prunary thing for me."
thats
_
unportan~. I take pnd~
1:fi
m
W
two fields as unrelated as jour~
·
baseball cl~b as:it amyed at the
< .
He says a speech by a
:
CPA he
whatever! get mto "".~ether 1t is
M
E
nalism and accounting. And park for the day's game
:
He and heard at an Accounting Society
·
· school
-::.
work- or wntmg about
tl
{{
al~hough his weekly _bylin~s
another editor interviewed Henry
..
meeting had
.
a great influence on
.
?
.
sport~.
If
I c~n•t
.
be c;onsiste!1t ·at
tf'
t:3.
nught sway a person to think he is Aaron
·
and a few
.
days later
.
him
.
·
: · .
.
_
.
.
.
-
.
.
.
.
'
whap'm doing, I don
'.
Ldo1t:"
:
ft

flaSbrouck &g811g show
th~
breaks

.
.
·.
By
Larey
Striegel


















APRIL 14. 1977
THE CIRCLE
PAGE7
48 have unlimited job
security
By Maureen Tully
tinuous appointment has to be of
adequate cause su~ as serious
Forty eight Marist faculty are violation of a civil or criminal law
guaranteed not to join the or gross incompetence."
unemployment ranks. This
nie criteria for
tenure at
ultimate security comes from an Marist includes distinguished
institution which those teachers service as a teacher, professional
lovingly and proudly call academic distinction, important
«tenure."
contributions
to
academic
According to Dr.
Louis
Zuc-
programs and planning, the
carello, academic dean, "tenure amount of participation a faculty
means,
if
after a six year member has had on faculty
probationary period of teaching, committees or other functional
and
if
the institution is hiring for committees on campus, and
the next yea.r, and a teacher is outstanding service to the college
granted tequre after being conununity.
evaluated, he or she is given a
The process of being granted
guarantee of continuous ap-
tenure is a long one.
pointment."
·
When a teacher is hired, he or
Tenure can only be broken
if
she is put oi:i a six year
the - institution is in financial probationary period. After the
crisis. Dr. Kevin Donohue, sixth year a teacher is eligible to
philosophy department chairman be reconunended for tenure
if
his
and chairman of the Faculty or her evaluation
is
passed.
Policy_ Committee, said, "in the
Each teacher eligible for
case
of . financial . crisis tenure must write a brief which
everybody's tenure is up for -·- must be approved by his
grabs."
_
department chairman. The
Dr. Zuccarello said, "any other
chairman then submits the brief
reason for terminating
a
con-
to the Committee on- Fac~ty
Development.
After reviewing the form, the
committee asks to see the
chairman's annual evaluation
which includes the results from
the student evaluations. These
are also reviewed, and then two
or three other faculty members
are appointed to make two visits
to the teacher's classes.
Along with this evaluation the
committee reviews a constantly
updated file containing all con-
tributions which the teacher has
made. ·
An
example may be the
reading or publishing of a paper
at a convention.
The teacher then has two
m~tings with the committee
with his chairman present at
both. The first meeting is to
explain the procedure of tenure.
After all reviewing is_ done the
teacher may be questioned in a
second · meeting
for
any
clarifications necessary.
After this long -process the
committee votes on whether to
recommend the teacher.
If
ap-
proved by a majority vote of the
Customers shop around in craft fair held
in
campus center April 1-3.
Congratulations
Marist
·
on
the
dedication
of the
McCann--Center
.
.
.
We were-proud to help you·grow.
THE MARIST COLLEGE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

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

·st._ Peters.- Alumni Office
committee, he
is
then referred to
the Academic Dean, who
recommends
him
to
the
president, who then recommends
him to the Board of Trustees.
The board ultimately decides to
grant tenure to the faculty
member.
The origins of tenure came
from the idea th2t a faculty
member who expressed un-
popular views could be fired by
the university governing board.
With tenure the teacher has a
built
in
protection even during his
or her probationary period.
During their probation they are
constantly being evaluated by the
Committee
on
Faculty
Development and according to
Dr. Donohue, the committee is a
powerful suasion force in backing
teachers
so
they can reach
eligibility for tenure provided
they meet faculty
policy
requirements.
This year five teachers are
eligible for tenure. And although
the road to protection may be
long,
in
the end it is worth it.
Craftsmen sell
wares at fair
By Rosie Nguyen
Les Matles, who has been
selling Indian guaze shirts and
pipes at various
flea
markets for
three years, met his fiancee,
Denise Rossi, when she bought a
shirt from
him
last year. They
·are two of the many craftsmen
who participated .in the Arts and
Crafts
Swishine Fair
held
April
1-3
in
the
Marist Campus
C~nter.
This
was the·
first event
sponsored by the Mid-Hudson
Community Core, a non-profit
student organization formed last
January to raise money for
Marist College and the com-
munity. It's president, Ruben
Lopez, a Marist student, said
"any student has the potential to
do anything and should do it now
that they have the chance .. at
college." He and several students
from Marist and Dutchess
college planned this event hr the
past ·three months.
Lopez said, "we want to do
something different for the
campus, and this event would
help introduce the organization to
the community." Future plans
· for the Corp include holding craft
classes taught by local craftsmen
to
students next
semester.
Among the 32
craftsmen
in- ,
volved
at
the
fair
were
melital
health patients from the Dut-
chess County Department of
Mental Hygiene. Part of an out-
patient program, these people
sold hand-made aprons, pillows
and towels for which they
received a percentage of the
sales.
25% Discount
on
Pressboard Binders
Report Covers
And Other Merchandise
April 14th to 29th
~ M E N T l : O . ,
at ,.
INC.
48 NORTH ROAD
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
914-452-9430
(across the street from St. Francis Hospital)




















i
.
r

PAGES
The MilliOn
$
decision
makers
By Cathy Ryan
There are 22 men and women of
varying
professions
who
although rarely seen
on
campus,
have a great impact on Marist
College.
The group
is collectively known
as The Board of Trustees and
is
responsible for directing the
purposes and goals for which the
college was founded.
Marist President
Dr.
Linus
Foy, the only paid officer of the
board, says the group has
"virtually limitless power."
·
Although not· personally in-
volved with faculty and students,
the board makes major decisions
affecting the college. ·
-
The · executive committee,
composed of the five officers, the
college president and three other
board members meets the first
Thursday of· each month. Foy
says they usually make routine
decisions, while major decisions
are made by the full board.
Although only 1-3 of the board
is
necessary to vote on major
issues,
2-3 . attendance
is
necessary for amendments.
The board has final word on.
firing,
promoting and recom-
mending faculty lor · tenure.
Th-e
last
time the board ap-
proved an appeal for removal of a
faculty member was in 1969.
The First Civilian
THE CIRCLE
The Board of Trustees
in
a meeting last Thursday
in
the
library. (P~oto by G. McNulty)
to be on the board. But Dr. Foy off the board.
College president; Robert Dyson,
said he wanted me to serve as a
Mr. Richard Cole is one of
president of WEOK and WPDH;
businessman, so
l
accepted." .
seven Marist alumni members on · and John J. Gartland, Jr., at-
Members are elected in thefall the board. "I'm interested in
torney.
·
- "'
by the board, which receives seeing the college grow, not only
Other members are -Brother
suggestions from a nominations
in size but in stature," he said.
James Kearney, class of· 1953; ·
committee. The committee
is
The 1969 graduate worked with . associate superintendent of
composed of chairman of the
the Alumni Association Fund
schools; Archdiocese of New ·
board, the presiden\ and a past -·Drive before joining the boatct "I
York;' Lou Lewis, cla_ss of 1964,
chairman.·
.
think
Marist. has made. some
attorney;
Jack
McEnroe;
The officers, chairman, vice
significant changes in education
president of Dutchess Bank and
chairman,
secretary
and since I was a student, and
l
hope
Trust Company;- Joseph 1'4_orley,
Attorneys, business executives,
college presidents and other
positions are held by members of
the board, most of whom reside in
the New York area.
Except for Foy, the only paid
member, all members serve on
the board as volunteers, and may
not be on· the Marist payroll for .
any job. Foy said this avoids self
Wisdom, work and wealth are treasurer are re-elected each · to see things continue this way."
assistant yice president an~ ..
some of the attributes ·considered · year by the board, according to
Other members on the board
director of operations services of
in selecting board members. Foy the _ board . by-laws. · The are Chairman Roy_C. Ketcham of
Securities Industry Association;
said the board looks for com-
president's term on the board Ketcham Motors, Inc.; Secretary
Lillian Shankman; Henrietta T.
petency, experience in education, ·
·
lasts. as long as his presidential Gary ,L. Smith, of the class of .. Smith,:a professor of psychology
·
knowledge of .financial matters, term;
·
,
1963, and. a Systems Marketing
at Vassar College;.· Harold D.
government and fund raising.
· Trustees serve a three year Representative for- IBM· Cor..:
Spencer, retired; and L_ouis -
_
One member of the board is renewable ~erm, and some -who
poration; Vice Chairman H.
Voerman, vice ·president·, and
also a trustee .for the James J. have given good service are Clifton Wilson, president of
general manager of the IBM
interest in decision making.
·
Mccann Foundation.
.
· voted by. the board to remain as · Central Hudson Gas & Electric
Corporation.:
. .· · •
·
..•
Eighty-six year old Harold life trustees. They hav~ trustee ·Corporation; and Treasurer
The life trustees are Brother
· The board, which meets three
or four times a year votes on the
tuition rate. Foy said the decision
is based on what other colleges
charge and ·rate· of inflation.
Although technically eight voting
members (1-3- of board) is suf-
ficient, Foy said they try to have
an overwhelming.majority when
voting on tuition. ·
Spencer·
is the first civilian to rights but are no longer obligated . Richard J. Cole, class of 1969,
Thomas P. Brennan, guidance
serve on the board, and has been as members.
.
·. · · ·. . .· .•· ·

who is ·· Manufacturing Manager
counselor at Mount Saint Michael
a member · for at least eight
Som~ of the board's .other : of IBM Corporation.
Academy; Arthur F; Brook,
years.
responsiQHitie_s .are camp~s~-~-
Also·
~rving are Foy, class of · chairman of Wire-0 Corporation;·
He said he was asked to serve construction matters, change_s m
1950; Walter R. Barisonek of the-· Ralph Connor; and Brother
on the board by Foy, whom , fainances, promotions·and hil:,irig· . class of 1965, attorney; Stan
Patrick Magee,· principal of
Spencer met through a friend.
and firing
,_of ✓
tbe · cgllege · Becchetti, class of 1966, a bond
Marist High School in Bayonne.
"I'm not a religious· man and presi~e!1t· If he~ fired•or rE:5igns ·••broker for Cowen and Company;
didn't
think
it would do any good
as pres1dent,-he
lS
au!omatically ·Brother John G. Driscoll, Iona
A· ..
WQrlii11g ...
dilY•;
~.ilftt;fhe fta-e&ident. ··· ·
.
.
·_-
.· :· -_
,-.
:,

;
._•,·:· ·., ·<
:
... ·,---
. ·
·
.,: .. ·~~-'.:--- --
,_
..---::·.-:;/·--·_
...
... _
....
_-1,~,-:.
--~-~~::----:~!~-;._•;~-~--·
~
_.
•~
~---:~----:· ,
..• ·~--~-'
-
By Wendy
Stark
-hypertension.
At 28
he
was
elected·
the youngest college
president
in
the country at the,time. ·. ·
·
· .. · .. :
_said Foy; squinting.and_shaking his_head
while
chewing a
fountain
pen. ·
··
·
·
.
· .
, . It was ·a Tuesday and Marist College President Dr.
Linus Richard Foy began his day with a shower; but didn't
get his green suit wet. Later in the day Foy would be
playing with his six month old daughter, Bridget, between
meetings ..
At 8:30 a.m., Foy and Anthony Campilii, business
manager, tested the.shower heads in the locker rooms in
the new James J. McCann Recreation Center that opened
Having degrees.·in mathematics and computing; .foy
clarified a:campus tlllllor that
he
has a "computer mind."
With a slight Bronx accent he said, "I'm quick and have a
good memory
if
that's considered a computer mind."
Nevertheless, he thinks in computer jargon. Referring
to- Bridget, the picture .of her father, as
if
she was a·~
computer that had crashed and "gone down", he said,
"She'll go right down after her bottle."
.· At 10:15 a.m;, out of breath from the meeting .with
Campilij, Linus Foy· discussed graduatii:>n. plans .. with
Thomas Wade,· director
of
Development, while a. stuffed
doll .of the Peanuts •character Linus stood on a shelf and
watched. Foot on'desk, still swiveling'in his chair, Foy
interrupted, "Tom you have red ink on your lips." Wade
sat che~ on a red pen.
·
·
the following Sunday.
.

After a little crying, Bridget did take her nap.
Leaky
Identification
"I'm not too fond of these shower heads because they're
not flexible," Foy told Campilii who pretended to be
Sof(Spoken
Ending the meeting Foy said, ••it looked like. those
taking a shower. "Students will have to stand right up
·
· basketball refs were gonna
win
the game last night for
under the nozzle to get wet" answered the business
Between typing, answering calls and babysitting, Miss North Carolina aga~ Marquette."
.
manager.
.
· Hilpertshauser yelled into Foy, "Could you answer the
"I liked the guys who were mopping the
gym
floor with
Since construction, on the center began, Foy begins phone I'm burping the baby?" "Sure" said Foy quietly. towels. The roof leaks like our own Mccann. Center" he
almost each day checking the building before going to his
"He's very soft spoken" said Miss Hilpertshauser. added.
..
·"•
third floor office in Greystone Building.
"When I fir~ came to work it was hard for me
to
take,•
Between meetings, Foy wrote in histelephone log that
Marist president since 1958, Foy switched on every light ' .. dictation because I couldn't hear him. I've gotten used to • he
0
keeps in a notebook bearing the red Marist emblem.
throughout the center and turned on faucets to check the i~."
-
Before lunch Foy sat in a meeting at the library with 11
water system. He bent over the pool to see
if
the filtering ·· By 12:45 p.m. Foy had met with several of what he calls administrators. Amidst . a table strewn with styrofoani
system was working.
.
his "five main execs." After asking Campilii at their
9:45 cups, unsugared doughnuts, McCann Center floor plans
Since Marist is its own project manager for the McCann
a.m. meeting, "Is that a cashmere jacket? It's ruce>J and and manila folders, Foy sat back playing with
his
black
Center, Foy said he has to make sure things run smoothly.
receiving a "no it's just corduroy" reply, the two key case.
·
·
After his morning rounds, which Foy could do blind-
discussed the college budget.
·
Arms
folded, he tilted himself on the two back legs of
his
folded, he drove up to his office in his green Oldsmobile
Clicking his pen, swiveling in a squeaky chair, and chair; something. the grammar school teachers · told
. Cutlass. Even college presidents have a few unavoidable
calculating figures, Foy acted like a student in · a dull students not to do. He took off his glasses, rubbed
his eyes,
. rust spots around the bottom of their cars. · ·
'
lectµre class. _''~en If~st C!3me ~ere,. the ~qu·eeky chair bent an alumin~ ash tray, c~ick_ed his pen and whispered
Carrying his briefcase and brown bag lunch up the three drove me ~uts. I fmally oiled 1t" said Miss Hilpertshauser. tQ Wade who still ~ewed on his red pen from the morning.
flights of stairs, Foy went into his green shag rug office to
Separate~ _only by sheets of numbers, the two ad-
.. After commenting at the meeting, Foy hurried off
begin what he called his "on campus day." Tuesdays Foy ministrators sat face to face and discussed what sounded before teaching class to ."drop in and say hello" to several
spends like a resident student. He stays on campus all day like the stock exchange. "No those figures are too shaky" _alumni, ~t the . Career Counseling Day · in · the campus
in meetings. Other days he spenas like a. commuter - ·· ·
·
· ·
center;
·
· ·
. · •
student, driving to College Board of Trustee meetings and
. After:teaching
his12:45 p.m. upperlevel_math course,
ot~er meetings where he is a member.
"Differential Equations,
JJ
Foy sat down to eat his lunch of
- tomato soup in a thermos, saltine-crackers, lettuce and an
apple. He ~lked from his desk
to
put his cup in the
combination sink-stove-refrigerator. unit in
his office.,·.
, Meetings, Meetings, Meetings
Foy's secretary, Michele Hilpertshauser, 21, said•·each
day is different for Foy. Usually he- attends the Vassar
Broth~rs Hospital Tr~ee meetings, Chamber of. Com-·
merce 'meetings, Mid-Hudson Civic Center
·
Trustee
meetings, or meetings of the Dutchess Bank and Trust· of
which he
is .a director.
·
,.
In ·. the large, immaculate president's office, decorated
with modern art, an ivory chess set, tan tweed couch and
stereo, even the ashtrays were spotless. Floor plans for
the McCann Center dominated brown cork ·bulletin
boards, as talk about the center dominated
his
day. · · :· ·
·· On
the worn shag carpet layed blue eyed Bridget : Foy,
six. months old, on a pirlk blanket. laughing.
Mrs.
Foy
dropped her off while she took their son Peter, three;- to
·see.Marist's production of Winnie the Pooh.
. ·
>:
· Amidst telephone calls,•Foy asked. Miss Hilpertshauser
if
she:_could handle Bridget, who according to Foy;''isa · .,
placid kid."'A characteristic;of himself: .••·•
·
.· · · . ·
: Although F.oy said he has ·a tr~endous obligation to· be
cahn and
"stay
cool" since the j>resident reflects :the .. '·-
.
.coll e ·he sa s.he has
hi
blood·presstire
,
arid- ..
,.,a
_Fifty Percent,.·
.· · Miss
Hil~rtshauser: said ·soni~times Foy holds lun-
. cheon meetings where the executives sit around the long
bi:<>~ table_eating··sandwiches.sent up from.the Marist
Duung Service.
·
· ·
: . .·
• ··,
· · · Besides signing . student teaching certification papers;
Foy talked on
.
the phone, on which he says he spends 50
·percent of his time. The 1950 .Marist graduate also
inef
with
tpe
college's vice president, Edward Waters;
·
"How•~ your back Ed?''. For ask~ Waters. Explaining
why he fidgets so much m his chair; Foy said "I have
back problems myself and sitting long
is murde; for
me.,,
·: ·, ·. ~e last. bu~iness oHlJe. day Jof F;oy wa~ meetirig's_'mth·
sailing coach and Antomo Perez; the dean of students. ~-.
_:A~
6::oo
p.m.,
_
the_ appar~tly demure college president
. arrived hom_e ~o·Bi:1dget; Peter ancptjs \TI.fe Mary at their
.
-Eoughkeepsie · residence. The .two were ·
.
·married :in
· •,Dec.ember 1970 after he left the b~otherhood
in
July ofthe
... : : _S!lp:}~.
_y_e_a_r: . · · . , _'.; .. :': ._\; · ·
/ · · ·
·
· · ···•
·
-






















































I
i
i
;

.
.
·
.
.
·
.
APRIL 14, 1977
French night
· play
tonight
Senior P~w Miller
play~
-
the
role of a fencing tea~her
in
Mollere's
"Le
-
Bourgeouis
.
·
Gentilhomme''•
'
a play filmed
·
in the
·
Marist Audio
Visual
·
Center specially
'
for
:
ttie
,
Modem Language Department's
THECIRCLij
~.Cafe to
solve munchies
presentation of French night. The scene from the play, directed by Dr.-
.
By
Maureen
Crowe
Marist
Food
Service will
be
delivering pizza and "hoagies"
during
final exam week. Prices
haven't been decided yet
.
but Joe
PAGE9
Lurenz, director of Marist d~ng
services
said they will
be
cheaper
than anything in town. Deliveries
will
be
made
late
at
night
when
it's convenient to students,
Lurene said.
TIONS
}
francoise Gregg, assistant prof. of languages,
wfil
.
be shown along
:
S
•. Peter
's
.,..:. Alumni
Office
·
with
folksongs andpo~~r~dings; ~
_
beheld in the Fireside Loµnge.
:
"
~
':'
••·

.
· .

·
·,.·
·•·· ·..,.
·•··

· .·
.
·
-
·

·



·.
·

·

·
..,...,.,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
.
Congr~titlations Marist
from



'



a


'

·

,
;
<,
,





































































































































































PAGE10
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 14. 1977
CIRCLE drinking survey says:
Half
drink
anytime of the week
By Michael Teitelbaum
Almost
97
per cent of
the
Marist
college resident students
·
drink
some type of alcoholic beverage,
according to a survey
takeri
by
The Circle staff. The results show
96. 72
per cent of the students
imbibe.
.
The survey was conducted on a
door - to - door basis as Circle
.
reporters interviewed 488 of the
774
resident students during the
last two weeks in March.
Of those polled, a little more
than half of the men said they
drink anytime during the week
while more than one
-
fourth of
·
the men
drink
only during the
week. But one - fifth of the men
only drink on "beer nights" at
bars.
A "beer night"
is
a special
night at a bar when the price of
beer is usually lower to attract
·
1arger crowds.
A little more than one - third of
the women resident students said
they drink only on weekends.
In
comparison, one - third of the
women said they drink anytime
during _the week while more than
one - fourth drink on beer nights.
.
.
Overwhelmingly, both sexes
said they drink a few times a
week. Almost two - thirds of the
men selected that answer. More
than one .; fifth of the men drink a
few times a month while a little
more than one - tenth of the male
respondents said they drink
almost daily.
Almost three - fifths of the
women surveyed said they drink
a few times
a
week. One - third of
the female respondents said they
drink a few times a month.
The most popular
·
place to
:
drin~
.was at.a bar, according to
both sexes. However, the margin
of
victory wasn't large enough to
fit a pitcher through.
usually
drink
at social functions
while a little more than one - fifth
of the men said they drink in their
dorm room.
·
·
-
.,
One - third of the women polled
said they usually
drink
at a bar.
However, more than one - fourth
of the women said they drink at
social functions while almost one
- fifth said they drink in their
dorm rooms .
Asked why they drink, a little
more than one - fourth of the men
said to relax.
A
little less than one
- fourth said they drink to feel
good while almost one·- fifth said
they drink because they like the
taste. Drinking out of
·
boredom
and drinking for no real reason
was selected by one - tenth of the
male respondents.
.
Almost one - fourth of the
women surveyed said they drink
either to relax or to feel good. A
little more than one - fifth of the
female
respondents
drink
because they like the taste while
one - tenth of those polled said
they drink for no real reason.
Beer Most
P.opular
Although both
sexes
chose
beer
as the most popular beverage,
the women's race was close.
while a little more than one
tenth ~id they drink wine.
A
little
'
more thantwo-fifths of
the women surveyed said they
drink beer while almost orie -
third i,aid they drink liquor. Less
than one - fifth of the women said
they usually
drink
wine.-
When the
_
male respondents
drink beer, more than one - half
said they usually drink five or six
ca~.
A
little µiore than one -fifth
said they hav(;: three or four cans.
A
little
·
more
-
than one
-
tenth of
the men said they drink at least-a
six - pack.
•. .
·.
In comparison, a little more
than one - third of the women
drink three or four cans when
·
drinking
·
beer.
.
Almost one
~
fourth of the
.
WOII}en
.
said they
drink five or
.
six cans. The same
·amount of female
,
respondents
said
they don't
-
drink
J,eer. ·
.
Almost one
~
third
of
the men
said
they drink
·
three
or
four
glasses of wine
.
However, almost
two - fifths said they don't drink
.wiAelittle
:
mor~ than ~ne - thir;fof
the female respondents said they
drink three or four glasses

of
wine while
·
almost one - third said
they drink one or two glasses.
One - fourth of the women sur-
veyed said they don.'t drink wine.
· One·- third of the men surveyed
said they
.
have more than_ six
drinks of liquor while a little less
than one - third said they usually
have three or four
-
drinks.
A
little
less than one - fifth said they have
one
.
or two
.
drinks; Almost one
.
-
tenth of the
,
ineri said they don't
drink liquor.
·
In
comparison, almost half of
the women surveyed said they
usually have three .or four d_rinks.
Almost one
'
.: fourth have one or
two drinks but a little less than
oµe -
tentQ ha:v-e'om.or:e than six
drinks.
.
. .
. ;.,
.
·
0
When asked how much moriey
do
_
you use a week for drinking,
the average for the men came to
$7 .60 while the average for the
women came
to
$6.02.
·
.
More than two -
thirds
of the
students surveyed said alcohol
is
used more frequently on campus
than marijuana. When asked if
·
drinking causes problems on
campus,
a
little
less than half of
·
:
the men said yes.
In
comparison,
two thirds of the . women said
drinking does cause problems on
campus.
·
·
Of the students polled, a
·
little
more than two - fifths were fresh:-
mari.
Almost one - third were
sophomores. Juniors made up
almost one - fifth. of the total
while

seniors
made up
the
·
remaining one - tenth. Almost
three
-
fifths of those polled were
men.
·
·
Destruction
Big Problem
/
.
·
·
By
·
Elaine Brusoe
.
-
Destruction was listed as the
.
greatesf problem associated with
drinking by 42 per cent
·
of
resident students who answered a
survey about drinking
.
given by
_
'
The Circle.
.
.
·
.
·
The s~cond most listed problem
was violence, by six per
·
cent of
the stude
_
nts. Other problems
·
.
which students associated with
drinking were noise, low grades,
litter, alcoh9lism, students
getting sick in . the dormitories,
and
·
apathy.
·
_
....
. "
.
·
One student said drinking
"stagnates the emotional and
social growth of most students.
Drinking confines everyone to the
same redundant conversations."
Of those who responded to
where do you· usually drink,
·
a
little-more than one - fourth of the
men said at a bar. Almost one -
fourth of the men said they
Almost three - fourths of the
men said they usually drink beer.
Less than one - fifth of the men
polled said they drink liquor
No immedi_ate
.
Another student gave the op-
posi te view, "Alcohol brings
people together, it is easier to
be
sociab,le with alcohol and you go
out and meet people when you
drink.''
f
.
........
·.··· .
"
.. ,,
............
..
·
.
···=
~,
danger
I
Mounties say
M.c.
,
ByMlcbae!Teitelbaum'
Alcohol; notpot
l:.,_r_
•.
;,,•-~,,_:,l~::.;
_i·
'··
:
a party place
i
~~i;."';::S-r:.i'-:ng~'bu:
;;-
m
will encounter
a
lot
-
of danger
By Rosanna Cirigliano
said Paula Maiorana, senior.
ti
psychologically, said Alan
Kraus,
·
p
.
·
Wi
the supervising psychiatric social
fa
NEWBURGH - Marist college
.
They'd Rather
Party
m\.worker
at the Youth Drug Abuse
Jl
would be a weekend suitcase
"It
isn't the school's fault. I've!fl Center.
·
.
·
}n
school if
it weren't for heard Marist has a good psycliwJ
"When you're young, the only
@!
Poughkeepsie bars.
department," she said.
.
t[
dangers
are
hangovers,
%,
This is the reputation of the
"I

think of their excellent%
m
school in the opinion of students foreign language department
ml
Hl
at Mount Saint Mary College which sends students abroad,"M
~ft
located 15 miles away from said
·
Sharon Blackmon, fresh-
j
I
Marist
across the Hudson River. man .
.
"However, most
Marist
WI
tI
.
Nea_rly all
.
Mount students students have low grade point

t,~
mtervJ.ewed said they had no first. averages
.
.
They'd rather party
M
ffl
hand knowledge of Marist, but than work."
·
ru
cy
heard it had a drinking problem.
Most Mount students also think
M
tt.
''Marist?
It
has
·
a reputation of Marist as an extremely ex:.
M
·tJ
likeS;U.N.Y.atNewPaltz,"said pensive school.
.
@··
j
Sue Greenwich, Mount junior.
"I heard that they have trouble
i.~J.
.
.
!1
."It's a
~~Y
school
.
- all play and recruiting students because of
'ffi
· .
~i
no work.
·
high ~uition
.
so they accept
M
.
.
f
Carlotta Leonard, freshman, everyone who applies,» said Lori
fa
·
I
said ''Marist's nickname
·
is LaSota,
·part-time·
sophomore.
;1
_.
'
-
!
'playland on the
H
_
udson.'
I
heard
.
Marist's
·.
rel?utation
'.;
~as
W
.m
.
that the students are lushes."
·
·
changed dramatically over the
fl
.
·
:,
Im
:,
"Everyone's heard that Marist past
-
five years feels junior
~
•.
.
:
.
-
·
:
students go bar-hopping and get Wayne Chernik.
,
.
,
~
·.
,
·
_
:
drunk
-
and rowdy," said Camille
.
<'Marist used to be run by
.
'
'
Ivero, senior.
·
·
.
priests and be super straight,!' he
;
·®
:'.
·
;
,
~Qn~~:.
s~ineone called the said. :•Now the school's at
:
~he
·
.
,
:
p
_
oli~
_
-.
·~
..
~.)i
·
gr
·
·
.....
.
o··
·
u
__
Po
·•
f
.
th
_
_
_
e~ bec!luse
··.
op. po~,it_ e ·extre
.
me. Anything
!t
!
they
.
w,ent:c.slcpnY:-diPPmg
m
a
goes. .
.
; .
·
:
private
\~t,/~bey
~ere all
Mar1st:s "artistic camp11s•: ·
·
'
-
bombed·
out
r
of'.tbei1\
.
nunds."
·
.
was mentioned
as
a
plus by Irulny
:/.2
:
'l11e
;
;
coru1erisus
}
of
irio
_
~ Mount
.
Mo~t students.
·
l'~'ve
_
been

_
told
·
stiiclerits
'
is.~~
M.a!i5t
:
~
.
.
a
good ~ t 1t has
·
a beautiful campus,'!
!
curriculiiiii]
ff
l>µt
p
:
Jl!&.h9JlOSt
said
Bob
Galu, soph~more:
·
"~ut
,
/
students
'
:doo.'t
)\
work,~
~f\";7
:
?
~

_there's
.
so few activities
:
go~
cm.
:
· .
-
.
·
:
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;:
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f
,
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the
f
guys
:.
Ahere
,re
·
there - like ~ncerts
and
mu:ers -
.
.
\iirelicts~ricl
'
have
·
no
:
ambition'/'
'.
so
people
drink.''.
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i
headaches and making a fool out
Sixty - nine per cent of the
of yourself,'' Kraus said.
students surveyed said alcohol
is
However, he said that a danger
used more frequently
.
than
is
imminent for the student who
marijuana.
-
.
drinks and driv~s.
"Fifty
per
cent
They said alcohol
is
.
easier to
of all highway deaths are due
to
.
get,
is
legal, cheaper, and more
alcohol and a
lot
are college
socially acceptable.
st d
·
t "
Two students said pot is a drug
u
ens.
-
.
,
Kraus said there ~re inany long
and there is fear involved in
- range dangers
in
drinking, both
tryingit,Another said there is no
physical ijnd psychological.
smell
in
91'inKing while another
"Alcohol
is
most hannful in the
said drinking is
_simply
more fun.
long ..
-,
range," Kraus , said,
F,our of the students said pot is
because heavy drinking
.
can
more popular because it doesn't
cause malnutrition and the loss of .cause a hangover. Another said
brain cells .
.
After

drinking
·
"one joint goes farther
"
than a can
of
.
beer."
- ·
·
·
··
·
·
,
heavily for a~out
15
years, every
·
..
"Pot is
saf~r
·an
·
d h
·
e· althier.
-
and
time
.
a person has five
drinks
in
an hour, the
·
blood level rises
.
natural,"
.
wrote
.
one student.
above .10 and you start to lose
Another agreed saying; "You
brain cells. A psycholo<rical
.
ef
_
~ don't
.
get a beer belly from
f t
drink
0

smoking pot."
·
.
cc
ing can
·.
cause is not
functioning well with kids or a
When asked
if drinking causes
spouse
.
or
in
your job,· he said.
problems ori campus, less than
Kraus said although drinking in
half of the men surveyed,
47
per
colleg~
is
a lark to a large extent,
cent,
_
said it does.
Two
thirds, or
it has
.
tremendous implications
67 per cent, of the women sur-
for students and society.
veyed
.
:
.
said drinking caus~s
'!It
says this
is
how we unwind,
problems on campus.
·
have fun and socialize.
This
is.__·_
'
_
,
_
·
--
·
-----------..:.1
hannful. The college years are
.
the most developmental and
.
,
if
·
the students have to get blasted
to
·.•··
unwind and socialize ... "
·
".The
seeds for
·
becoming an
alcoholic
is
.
there in _ college,"
Kraus said. "The specific signs

are blackouts or when the person
can't
.
remember what he did."
.
.
Kraus said every school should
..
have an
·
alcoholic·

·
counseling
:
service.
"I saw a
good
number of
·

college students come
in
during
the past three years."
·
·
·
I
,








































































































APRIL 14. 1977
THE CIRCLE
PAGE 11
Par1
·
1
·
·
THE CIRCLE
looks at your •alor
Fewer English majors face stiff job market
By
Wanda
Glenn
.
-
departments. That is about one
.
strong said Dr. Sommer.
job
in
every
four
institutions.
'lb.is
strength
can
also be seen
.
.
Over the
past-four
years, the
·
The drop in teachers is evident as a weakness
,
"The same group
"
number of English majors
has
in the
Marisf
_
teacher-ed is required to teach such a range
decline~ sharply. Before
·
the program.
In
1967-1968there were of courses, we have
to
spread
communications major was
28
English majors
·
interning
as
ourselves too
thin
.
"
said
Som-
created four years
.
ago, there
.
·
teachers, today there are only mer.
.
were
-
~bout
235
English majors, four.
·
The department
h~
a teacher
today there are approximately

The English dept. was
·
started to student' ratio of one to
24.
90-95
.
-
·
here in 1957
.
by Dr. George
Most of the courses are geared
·
:
.
.
·
Students at Marist, like Sommer
.
He was head of the toward literature, but Lanning
·
students
-
all over the co~try department until 1970 when Dr
.
. says h? wants to broaden ·the
.
seein to
be looking
for
·
a major Jeptha Lanning took o.ver.
base
,
to include concentrations in
·
·
that will teach them a
.
certain
There are four main teachers, "writing, and explore the
-~
-
skill,
many don't see 'tlie prac-
·
three with Ph.D.'s, including Dr .
.
possibility
of
·
children's
·
.
ticality of majoring in
_
English .
.
Sommer, Dr. Milton Teichman, literature.''
.
. .
:
According to ·Robert Lewis; and Dr. Jeptlia Lanning. Lewis
is
Lanning would
_
like to enlarge ·
assistant
·
professor
-
of English a candidate for his doctorate.
the internship program so the
"'.fhe number of people majoring
These..:.-teacher~ make up the students "can learn more about
.
·
J
n E,iglish has declined because nucleus of the department.
their major area, in a non-play
..
ther~ is
,
pr~sure to
·
major in
. ·
.
"The
_
people in the department situation.
It
puts
him
.
one up on
.
something
-
pomting to a
.
certain
··
have quite a bit of experience as the student with no practical
job.'
_
' H
_
e said the job inarke
_
t (or teachers, and the people are not experience," he s~
i
d
.
_.
f~chers has)~come
-
spotty.
·
·
·
·
narrow specialists, but have done
.
.
Iri
a job inf9rmation list dated
.
versitile
.
thiilgs, and can teach a
February 1974,
.
out
·
of 1101 in-
wid~
·
variety of courses,"
·
·
said
stitutions in the
U;S.
and Canada
·
;
.
Lewis
.
.
.
. _
there were only 319 definite
·
or
"The range ancl depth of the
·
possible openings in the
·
E11glish
,
faculty'~
:
inakes ,the departm!!nt
Writing
Co~ses
Starting in the fall of 1977,
incoming freshmen will be
required,under the
_
new "Core"
curriculum, to take writing
courses.
Freshmen will be screened and
tested registration day. Each
will
be required to write an essay on a
subject
he
.
was
told
of before
hand.
. Highest scorers
will
be exempt
from the courses, middle scorers
will take three credits of writing
courses, and lowest scorers
will
have to take six credits worth of
writing courses
.
"Hopefully this program will
develop into more advanced
writing
eourses," said Lanning.
"Technical as well as creative."
The literature courses, have,
and will continue to play a big
role in the department. "The
study of literature is an in-
dispensable
part
·
of
·
the
curriculum," said Lewis
.
"If
you
do away with it you do away with
the college.
"
Lanning said they are not able
.
to do
as
much in literature as
-
-
they once did, because of the low
n
_
10netary situation
.
.
"For those who are interested
in literature, we aim to foster
that interest, but we may not be
able to as extensively
as
before."
One thing which is not done now
that Lanning wants to do
in
the
future is keep in contact with the
graduates to see how they are
doing once they leave Marist.
Meeting with the majors by
·
class for
·
group discussions is
another thing Lanning hopes to
implement next year.
.
A junior English major, Debbie
Bowers, said
"I
think the
department is too small. It only
has at the upmost, two good
teachers."
··
"I
thirik it should be expanded .
It
is very limited on what is
available to us:" said ,Tohn
Gavigan, a senior.
·
Jim Desmond, a senior,
s
aid,
"I
don't think there is enough
variety in upper division courses
,
but
I
think there are more
qualified teachers in the English
department than in any other
department."
Nari,,ral Sciences not just
a
fad anymore
-
-
~
.
.
·
-
,~
~yRosieNguyen
.
.
.
·
students
for
-_
_
further
-
work study believe it is due to lack of
. .
.
:
.. _
.
. .
_.
,
:
· : .
.
such
liS
graduate school. Students qualified students
:
·
:.c·
The average college graduate

,
iri
:
~nvironmerital
__
science and
The division is aware of the
.
today
:
corisiders
himself
lucky to biology should
be
prepared to change in
.
national attitude
. .
.
:
have
a
job in
ct
_
field relateci to ~s directly enter
~
their p~ofession toward science as the makers of
.
-
major
,
Yet
80
percent
.
of
Marist
.
-
after graduation," says Reh
-
bombs~
·
wars, pollution and
>.
environmental science majors fit
: .
woldt.
.
· ,, ·
slums,
in the late 60's to ecology
.
irito this category;
s;iYS
Robert E.
,
There has been a problem, and
·
conservation in the early
<
-
Rehwoldt, chairman
.
.
of the
--,
h9wever, for students applying to 70~s. Rehwoldt says, "Now that
·
~
-
Natural
:
.
Science·
_
.
..
Pivision
:
Inedical schools.
.
·
the fad of ecology has
_
settled
:
Chemistry niajoi-s
,
have
:,
a
,;
_
98
,
:
Rewoldt sees this as
.
a tei:n-
_
down, science must take a new
..
pei-c_ent
·
.
acc.eptance
_:.
i:
.
a.t~
: :
-
~t
_
porary
.
s~tllli:tion
.
pr.obably
,
due !o
.
direction.'' Rewoldt -anticipates
~aduatt!'schools.
:,,,,
,;,;:
,
.>
.
~>-
.
,
.
J~
,
.
Jlll!PY
~pplicaJ'lt~
.
-
-
and. not
_
this
change

and
•c
has
,
geared
--
·_;
_

''
.
The
:
purpose
~f
.
st~dy1ng
.,
.
en9~gh
:
open1Dg
-
poS1tions
m
a scieric1fatMarist forit.
·

chemistry~tMarist.1s to
.
prepare
,
particular
_.
year
.
He does not
The curriculum
·
·
is
·
.
being
·
·
·
· · ·
·
·
revised so
_
each major will have
to take courses in the other
departJ}lents as
·
well
.
·
Environmental science
·
·
is
starting to offer a greater variety
.
~
.
of courses including study and
research of energy
.
A new
program
is
being designed by Dr.
Malvin Michaelson and Rhys
·
William to understand the
"ethical and
·
moral" aspect of
this science. The department also
has an internship at law firms for
students interested in en~
vironmental conservation .
"There has been .changes in
national priorities in which the
need for energy
.
.
.
and its
production
-
are ~inphasized .
There
is also
a greater need
in
the
health professions," says Reh-
woldt.
·
He intends to combine existing
programs with new ones which
will direct biology and chemistry
students into these areas.
The division, with 201 students
presently enrolled, has modern
equipment. All teachers within
the division hoid a
.
Ph.D. and
most are actively involved in
·
some research. students become
involved by having the advantage
.
of .working
in
the local
·
en-
vironment, especially the Hudson
River.
Because science
is
.
a difficult
area and many
freshmen
students have trouble in basic
concepts and math, Rehwoldt
will begin to offer courses that
.
may solve
the problem. He
.
_
"1il1
not, liowever, lower the quality of
the courses to keep students
in
.
Because the
size
of
future
freshmen classes may be
smaller, a department concern
for each individual is necessary.
The division "personalizes" this
by trying to telephone all in
-
coming science majors.
FRANl{'S RESTAURANT
SEV'SPIZZA
.
Round & Sicilian
.
lf
er:~'iS.ub~
.
.
~
Spaghetti
&
Meatballs
.
.
F.REE
.
DEUVERY
-
SERVICE
·
:-
·t
<
-
fo
Pouglikeepsie

·

.
.
.

·
.
EATIN
:
OR
,
:
TAKE o
·
uT
·
..
·

.
.
471;3
·
020
:
•" .
.
siN.
Briclge
:
sti
-
Poijghk~epsie
,
.
·

.
,
.
.
.
.
.
,
-
.
.
-
~
-
-
~
.
'
..
.
,
-
~
-::.
;
_
:
.:~·
\'•
.:
·
-
.
.
Frank ·sorrentino, Prop.
Phone: 452-9164
Thu
_
rsday night is
bee,. night. All you
·
can drink 9 to 1
fo.r$2.50
85
North Road
Poughkf!epsi~, NY
































































































































I
I
l
i
l
I
I
[
-
l
I
i
t
I
I
I
1
·
I
I
I
I
I
I
.
\-
f
\
,
·
~
~ l
,
.
-
.
.
,
.
.

. .
~
....
...
'
.
.
.
.,,
·1:
PAGE12
THE CIRCLE
Business: Marist's biggest
·
·
By
Pat
Larkin
cepted norms of collegiate department
has only 14 full time
business education."
teachers. A full time teacher
Even though there are large
He points out that five of the must teach a minimum of 12
.
numbers of students in academic fourteen full time teachers have credits.
·
difficulty in the
.
business doctorate degrees. Two more
will
The ratio of full time students
department the
.
numbers are receive one soon. The five to full time faculty
is
one of the
proportionately the same as teachers with doctorates are highest of
_
all majors. The
other majors according to Dr.
··
Kelly,
Ramesh
Garg, Lester business administration major
.
JQhn Kelly, chairman of the Cohen, William Chase
·
.
and
has
the largest ratio of any
business department.
·
.
Theodore Van IstendaL The
·
two major. The ratio os 28.47.
The
There were 209 accounting
awaiting their degrees are Greg economics major is second
majors, 369
_
business
ad-
Kilgariff and Nancy Snyder
.
largest with a ratio of 28.34-1.
ministration majors, and 17
Others in the department who Accounting has
_
the
sixth
largest
economic majors enrolled for the do not have doctorates are Steven ratio in the school with 24
.
73~1.
fall 1976 semester.
·
··
-
·
Welborn,
Robert
Sadlier, The majority oL the classes
The business department is the
Raymond
Gila,
Theodore contain
40
or more students.
very pleased wi~ the department
largest in the college and
is
Prenting, John Griffin;
.
and · Another
weakness
is but the choice of courses was
divided into three different Brother Cornelius Russell.
inadequate
.
office space, said quite narrow. The addition of the
categories. These are ac-
Another strong point, ac-
Kelly.
core courses will make the
counting,
,
economics
and cording to Kelly,
is
the combined
He said he would like to see department V?ell rounded."
business administration.
practical
.
experience
and
.
more faculty writing arti~es and
Rob Ryan,-sophomore business
Dr. Kelly said the department academic knowledge of the in-
·
doing research. Dr. Garg, Dr, administration major, said,"The
_
has several strong points. One of
structors. Kelly said members of Cohen and Nancy Snyder have
.
courses
I have taken were worth-
these
is
the new curriculum that the faculty have held positions as written articles but Kelly wo~d while,
·
but a few of
·.
the faculty
has
been
-
adopted for
the
up-
research
economists,
owners of like
to see
more teachers domg
-
were unable to
·
·
express some
,
of
coming fall semester. He said, small businesses, and corporate this type of work.
.
.
the po_ints they w.mted
.
to
.
get
"It
is
.
our belief that the changes controllers.
·
Students
·
·
in the department across to the
.
students and this
will st!engthen our c~iculum,
·
One of tJ}e major weaknesses of have differing op~0!15.
.
made. un~e~standing
_
of thf;!
make 1t more competitive, and
the
department
is
it
is
un-
Mark Rudolph, 1uruor busmess material difficult.''.
:.
. .
bring it more in line with ac-
derstaffed, said. Kelly. The administration major, said, "I'm
.
Nei
_
l Tejeda,:
seni~r
a_ccount.ing
.
.
-
.
.
APRIL 14. 1977
major, sa.id he saw
·
an
im··
provement in the accounting
department during
his
four years
here. He said the addition of a few
teachers has
.
strengthened the
.
·
program
.
and
_-
''accounting
.
graduates
·
do not
_
.
have
'"
many
_
problems getting jobs;''
·
·
·
·
Glenn
.
-
Milner A-sophomore
economics major said
·
there
is
a
broad
.
range of
-
courses
·
but he
believesthere shQuld be
.
more of
·
-
a
'
concehtration in specific fields
of the economic world.
·
·
:
.
!
'
-~
.
Psych majors like their inStructors
"
~
;
By Maure
__
en Crowe
dergraduates and 60 graduate
Marist
in 1970 and says her '' Adolescents
.
~nd
<
Agµ)g,'';
either do
a
.
~sis or
_
work
-
two
students.
background was
just
as
good as "Intrinsic MotivaUon~••;
days
_
a week
.
·
at a mental
Students
-
majoring
-·-
in
Dr. Midge Schratz, director of the Ivy League schools.
.
"Psychology of Sleei>";
··
and
.
association of their own finding;
psychology generally
:
feel
-
good
·
undergraduate internships, said
Students in the department are
··
"Fundamentals
'
Of

Counseling/'
.
••
One student said the program
about the department even that the
,
psychology program required
to
do a semester of work
These
co~s,
,
Dr"
Eidle said,
discourages
.
thesis work because
though they say some instructors "attempts to prepare students for study at a
.
commqnity
·
..
health came about as a
.
direct
-
result
.
of
the
·creo~t
·
.
work
•load
means the
could be better. One student who starting a job.''
.
.
establishment .
.
As
director of the department'sjelf-evaluation
student
has
to do doubie the work
is going on for a masters in
Dr. Schratz said psychology
·
these internships, Dr;
-
Schratz donelastfall,
;:
facuityaswellas
.
inorderto
.
gethisresearchdone.
.
counseling
says
"most of them was one of the harder majors and
says
the
.
students get to apply student

representatives
·
.
deter:
::.
Students in the
·
graduate
really know their
stuff,
but few of due to hard courses
.
many classroom theory
·
.
to
practical
·
mined
,
that there was
BI!
interest
.
program
·
agree that it
-
is
/,
IioL
.
them know how to teach it.''
students
_
become discouraged.
-
use. Another advantage of this in ~eing
.
the psychology electives
geared towards continuing
Another student felt that one She . said however; the depart- program,
,
she says,
.
is that expaiided·and have courses
·
that education in a Ph.D. prograil) but
particular book seems to be
·
ment ~s growing and students are students have. four months _ of have applied orientation.
.

...
r_~th~r for
:
'
prepara~oiLJ>efore
.
,
WJ'.itten
,,
for
.
a
,.
~h.°-;
'
leyel
0
course
.
eager to .Jearn
.
'.and
.,
motivated
.
applied
·
expe°'ri~nce
.
w~cp
_
,
"giy~
.
However;,sbic¢.the_rewiUbe no
ent~fing
~
t~jop
,
ni~tket,
:>
J-
>;
and
needs
-
to
;
be
·
translated.
.
especially
..
in
the
.
.
special them the
_
edge
·
in getting
-
jobs." increase
irithe number offaculty~
.
--
·
,
Some
'.
:Studeqts
_'
enjoy
_
:
_
tliefr
According_
.
to Dr. Wimam education program.
.:-
-
The future of
the
psychology
·
Dr. Eidle
·

stated
t
that' these
-
.
study in
'
the program but
·
a
Eidle, chairman, the Marist
.
Dr. Schratz said students who department
will
be in filling out courses
·
will·
be offered
on
-:
an
...
,
considerableriUIIiber of gi:aduate
College psychology department want higherlevel positionsJmow the present curriculum with annual rotation ba$is;'.alterria~g
·.
studentsare dissa_tisfied a source
offers a broad background
·
in they will have to do years of 'work courses
-
that
will
give students a years with-other cowies offere
_
d:
_
stated:
,
.,.
0
.
.
applied and theoretical
·
courses. and many of their graduates
.
go
-
good
·
background
.
in
,
more
_
The Marist graduate program
A
.
sourte
.
felt. that
~
_some
The eight fulHime faculty on to good schools to complete specialized areai,.
is
one of the few programs in the
professors were not qualified to
members along' with part-time their masters and doctorates.
Four new courses will be in-
countrytoofferaMastersdegree teach
_
_
certain
-
~ur~
.
al!~
:that·-
~
instructors teach 147
un-
.
Dr. Schratz graduated from troduced
next
semester.
-
in Community
·
Psychology.
·
Ms.
:
.
there was n~tdirect1~n g1v~n _to
Schratz describes
,
it
as
.
a
.
model
.
.
the st~dent
m
.
explormg his m-
·NORTHSIDE
AUTO
REPAIR
-COMPLETE
COLLISION
.
AND
FRAME REPAIRS
ESTIMATES
.
.
.
.
.
_
TOWl~G
SERVICE
.
ANY
-
HOUR ANY
·
DA
y
·
.

.
=
·
.

.
,
~
.
•.
.
-
.
.

.
.

452-5358
_
_
JI
_
NoAnswer454-4738
·
124
_
WASHINGTON.
'
I



·
- program in·coinparison to other
.
terested
·•
_field. _He . ~id
.

"the
schools.·
.
·
·
program 1s mediocre.
· .
StudE:nts
_
~
this prog~am can
_
.
TAKING THE LSAT
;X
.···.
-
·
inJulv
.
? ·
.
.
·
· .
LSAT
Review
Yiee"lcf!.nd
a~ the
Engln-n
:
clult,
.
32
-
w~
40th
.
. ·
Streett, off 5th Ave
,
;
-
NY,
NY
.
-
July16&17
··
.
. .
We
alio
·
offer
extensive
-
.
8
,
.
'-:'
and 11
seisfon courses
star•
ting June 22 •
.
:
..
·
,
·
-
·
·
..
-
'Call
;
Law
Board
·
Review
Center,
.
(CoHect)'(914)62~29
·
:
.
or
(914)234-3702
.
$85
for
W-kend
Course
S..-ct_olgrc,u_~ratfff~rSorniore
:
.
.
_
,
_Listen
to
..
-
...
:
-
.
.
.
,:
...
....
.
.
·
..
...





































































































.
'
APRIL
14.
1977
.
THE CIRCLE
PAGE13
y
Language dept. has
ten to one ratio
By
Sue Breen
ficially bilingual. And the
government
is
now funding many
·
bilingual programs," he said.
on their
past
education;
This
-
makes
.
the
total
·
education much
more important and consistant,"
said Norkelunas.
.
(l(D(E[$01]GJ
(1(iJl]l][l(iJI][$
For
t.'Very
ten
students in the
modern language department
there
is
one teacher. But because
there
are six
faculty members for
six
major programs it's
"hard
on
the
· .
faculty members," said
casimir
·
..
Norkelunas, language
department chairlm:n.
·
··
·
.
Tne language ~epartment
offers three straight majors,
French, Spanish and Russian. A
program in
·
bilingual education
and
-
secondary education
_
in
French and Spanish
is
offered
:
· The R~an major
is
offered
in
conjunction
.
with the
·
State
University of New York at New
Paltz and Vassar College. When
cross registering at New Paltz a
student
takes classes
there and
may go abroad to the Soviet
Union for a year said Norkelunas.
"We have had in the past five
years approximately
·
seven
students go to the Soviet Union
to
There
will
be no new hiring for
these courses, said Norkelunas.
'lbe courses
will
be assigned to
available faculty members.
·
.
Community projects are
also
rµn
by the language department.
The students receive three
.
credits for teaching in area
§UC!JCD~ £DU·
OOuJCEO§U
Marist
·
also has an abroad
program,
·· .
where
.
studen~ can
study in Europe. The secondary
-
·
education
_
program
is
a teacher
training program in French and
Spanish
.
for
_
a
·
high school level.
The
·
·_.
bilingual
_
education
program is
.
a concentration
where students often find jobs
.
in
teaching and counseling.
''It
has
·
becoine
.
very important in the
past few years
.
because New York
.
City and other major cities on the
East Co~t have become of-
:
.
,
Dorm
.
Worker
Needed
study,
,t
he said.
.
New classes will be added to
the language curriculum next
-
year
due
to
the
.
CORE
requirements, said Norkelunas
.
students
,
:
will be given three
. options; take a language
··
course
in
an
intermediate or advanced
level; take a literature in tran-
slation class
.
derived fr
.
om world
literature; or take a course in
civilization or culture
.
in tran-
slation.
.
.
.
.
"students
will
ijOW
be able to go
from high school to
·
.
advanced
qasses
if
they choose depending
.
· . .
--
·
·
.
for
77-78
school year:
"
See
Dolly
Bodick;
CC
273
·
for more
in-
formation. Applications due April
28.
'
elementary schools ·
as_
in the
Second!lry Education program.
Since 1965 the language
department has held an annual
Modern Language Festival.
"This year
300
students and graduated students teachi
_
ng in
parents attended to see skits, the Arlington school district and
plays, poetry
·
readings and other others sprinkled throughout the
things put on by students," said area."
Norkelunas.
.
Fifteen to 25 percent of last
In
·
a breakdown of majors
-
year's class went
Qn
to graduate
Spanish has the most enrolled.
school, said Norkelunas. "Many
There are 39 Spanish majors, 18
of our students this year
.
have
French majors and 3 Russian
been offered
scholarships
,
majors. '
.
'Appr~ximately 90
teaching assistantsh
,
ips and
·
percent of our Spanish majors teaching associ,ates.

Three
find jobs after leaving Marist"
French majors and one Spanish
said Norkelunas. "We have 3-4
major so
far
have received offers
Part-tim~
Work
H
you are interestoo in working
up to 15 hours a
_
week and earning
$3.00
an hour providing attendant
services for Marist's disabled
-
students, stop by the Office of
Special Services, Room 105,
Champagnat Hall
;
between 8:00
and
4:30
before May
l;
1977.
metropolitan New -York region.
"Ask not what a coach can do for
an atl:tlete, but what athletes can
do for themselves."
·
Accounting Society Speaks
Senior accounting students are
to ta1k to underclassmen about
accounting jobs and how to get
·
Th~
· _
Higher Educ
·
ation Op~
portunity
-
Program
.
at
Marist
College seeks
-
~ture,
.
r~pon-
siblejierson to·manage
a
coll
_
ege
dormitory for
·
six
·
weeks; July
•.
5
·
through
August
::
12:
_
One :
:
uve.-in
.
·
female resident director
·
will
'
be
respcmsi°Qle

for
·
2Q-25 Jemaie
·
studeh~s;
._
Ontt live-in
·
m$le
"
resident'
..
dlr~
_
ctor
will
-
be
resp
'
onsiblEY 'for 20-25
.
male
students. Experience
·
in dealing
...
with young people in group
Railroaders To Meet
them on
.
Tuesday rApril 19, at 2: 15
in
room C-243-A .
..
,
.
;:
,
,
_
;
.-
'
.
·
·.•.
See
B
.
ill
.
y
·
Joe
..
,
l
'.
·,
:
-.·.c:;,
.
,
'
'
·
·
·
··"

.
· ·
:.,_
·
·
Cl
,.
b
.
·
·
·
·
-''-"
'
•'-
·
c1
b
·
1
·
·
t
be
·
·
'I1i1f
·
Railroad
-,
TraCA
·
·
.
u
,
.
)
s
_
.
,
:
nu>U;
-
...
,e
-
u
·
pans
.
o
gm
> "
'
:-e
.
· ·
,
.
,
"'
·
,
;;:;
.,
!
:
running!
H
you are
interested in selecting officers for the Fall
'77
. This is)•our last
'
chance to buy AAU Track and Field com-
semester, due to the fact all
·
-
tickets for
Billy
Joel at the Civic
.
petition for men and women, students now holding office are
Center on Sunday, April
24·
They corrie
to
a meeting Sunday night; seniors
.
may be purchased from either April 17, at 7:30 p.m. in the
.
It's essential there
is
high
Sue Smith or
·
at the CUB office. Fireside Lounge. The club will attendance of underclassmen to
Don't pass up this opp~rtunity. involve competition in all track keep the club going. It's your
.,
situations is necessary; · Salary
$2.50-$4.0(f-per hour,
.
plus room
'
and
.
board. One day and night off
·per.week
;
Send resume to: James
Johnson Jr., HEOP Director,
Champagnet
·
Hall,
Marist
Campus.
--
Males and Females Needed
·

Fall
Room Registration
Returning resident students
must register with
·
the housing
.
office for next fall before April 18.
·
Students must pay
.
a $35.00
•·
Highel'. Education Opportunity depositto the business office. The
Program needs Jwo females, two receipt must include
the
males to
.
work as peer counselors student's name and identification
and academic tutors in six-week
be
··
·
.
summer progr~. July 5 through
.
nsrud~
0
nts should bring the
.
·
Au~ l2: Each
·
tutor-counselor receipt to the housing office,
will be a5:>1gned ~o a gr~up
.:>f ~12
Champagnat
.
-
334,
~o c~oose and
students
m
the acadenuc area of _ confirm a room. ·
_
his-her
.
choice. Appli~nts sho~d
.
Students wishing to reserve
the
have
-:
_
a backgro~d
m
_tutoring sameroommustdoso by Apr.14,
and _some expenence
.
m co~
today.
·
~ling.
H
student, must be of hi~
·
All
others must register by
-
·
caliber academically. Salary,- April 15. Reservations ~de
$3.50-$4.00
per hour, plus
.
room
·
afterwards
will
be on a first
·
and board.
-
One day and night off come, first served ~sis .
and
field
events
in
the club, do something
'
about
it.
what
do YOU
get when
-
.
per week
,
Serid resume
to
James
A
singles
list,
which presently
·
Johnson
·.
Jr., Director
.
HEOP, has
35
·women and
33
men
,
Champagnet
.
Hall,
.
Mari st waiting, will
be
honore<f up
to
and
Campus.
·
including the spring tenn in_l978.
·
. After
.
the January '78, semester,
·
NOW
a new
.
singles Hst will be started
on a first come,
.
first served
basis.
NOW,
the
~
National - - - - - - - - - - -..
of
$3,000
or higher to graduate
school,"
said
·
Norkelunas.
"Marist has received the first
and only Ford Foundation Grant
in language," he added.
.
In Donnelly Hall the language
department has
.
two language
labs which are used for classes
and lab work. "We make ex-
tensive use of audio-visuai
material for individual in-
struction," said Norkelunas
.
Ads
For Sale
Interested in the field of ad-
vertising? Come to
-
WMCR's
general meeting April 18 at 9:30
in Campus Center. 'lbe meeting
is
open to EVERYONE and
business and accounting
.
majors
are encouraged to attend,
or
contact Gino DiMartino lrBOX
59-RM 109.
Commuter's Meeting
Students interested in rUMing
for Commuter
·
Union
.
positions
.
should
attend
the
Union's
meeting tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. in
the
Browsing Library of
the
Campus Center. The Commuter
Union holds meetings every
Friday at the same time and both
commuters and
resident
students
are welcome to attend
.
Organization • of
.
Women, wants
·
._
y
_
ou to speak
.
out on Monday,
April the
,
25th; at
·
7:30 p.m. at the
Christ Episcopal Church, 20
· ·
..
Carron
·
street, Pougllkeepsi~,
·
in
·
-
,
reference
.
to the formation of, a

· women's
·
center in this area
~
H
you wish to join
:
Now, please
contact Marsha Luce at 2 Alfred
Drive, Poughk~psie, N~Y
:
, 12603
Applications for
.
DIRECTOR
.
·
"
of Children's Theatre
1977~
_
1978
·
The daily edition of the Poughkeepsie Journal co~tains all the
diversified, interesting information the Hudson Valley coll~e student
needs
to be
well aware of current events and area entertainment.
Clipping valuable coupons and shopping sales with Journ~I .
advertising can easily cover the low cost of a monthly subscr1pt1on.
When we say "We've got
it
all" you get
it
~II, apartment, home,_ or .
dorm delivered for less than
.
17c per day with a money-back satisfaction
·
or
...
~all 462::4361.
:
.
·
,
:
·c~ndy
_
MANage.tNeeded
-_
'
.
<•
--
'
j
.

·
>"
-
.
-. ',
:··.:
·
.
are being
accepted now.
·
.
.
Send nam~; address,
phone,
.
past
ex-
'
perience, ideas for
,
next
.
year, etc. et~. to
Children's
Theat
_
re
·
through
•.
'
the ·campus
mail •
.
:· '
.
.
.
.
'
·
Deadline;.April
25.
·
.
·
.
.
_
·
AppUcatio*s
_
a~aUa bl~
.
f!)r
.
assistanr
:
:
candy
.
Jnanager,
·
m-,
-
formation
·
desk attel).da~t, and
.
.
technician for
.
the campus. center
?
-
~~t?
:
~r·
····
·
·
,
···
~:t~
·~•-•.7.•---.•.•.•-·-·-..,:···
..
.
.

-
·
,.
.
,,
guarante
lougbkrcep~it
Journal
·
II
4$4:2.,010 now loryo
·
u, subscription.
...

·

...




















































\
..

')'
PAGE 14
THE CIRCLE
Apathetic
problem
solving
Apathy. That's what
we
say about Marist,
about us. But
the
Mccann Center is open now.
'!bat's not really news,
the
fact it finally is open
is
news. So, what of apathy on the ca111pus?
'!be McCann does not solve our problems, only
we
can
do that. We have to chose between the
bars and the tennis courts, between drinking or
swimming.
.
there~ What had seemed to be an apathetic start
gave "being away at college" some meaning.
People were ha~ fun
talking
to_ ~ch other.
All
.
.
· Editorials ,
A week ago, a girl with her guitar played in
Fireside. Five people were
in
the audience at the.
because a girl with a quick wit and good song
start. But by the end of the night, there were over
stimulated the crowd.
seventy - five people in the
room,
singing along
'!be McCann
is
a stimulus.
It
belongs to us and
and tapping their feet. Christopher Robin was -
we
are responsible for it. For 'its safety, its
there, so was Eeyora. Jay was ~ere. Brian was
cleaniness, whatever. It's
ours...
.
.. . - ·. _
Some
_Were fooled
about its tangibility_
--
APRIL 14. 1977
Letters. to the Editor
Surreptitious
schedule one more appointment ..
If
Mike had called before one of
these days, he would have had to
To the Editors:
wait; and consequently, our
I
am
one of the secretaries -who office would have· been termed
unwittingly participated in the difficult to reach witbin·24 hours.
so-called survey conducted by
'!be_ President schedules two
·Mike Teitlebaum·
in ·!'Dial'
an days per week for appointments
Administrator." . ·
· · ·
with students, faculty and ad-
In conducting
his
survey, Mike ministrators. - When students
Teitlebaum · used - tactics ~~that schedule appointments, don~t
were sin'reptitious and unethical. keep them, and dol_l't ._bother_ to
When he called,
'I
rearranged two· call
to
cancel-the .appoil_ltments,
. other' appointments with the· or when clandestine phone calls
President to give Mike .the
11:30
waste· our.time, that hurts the
a.m.slot the following day. When student with. the legitimat~ ..
. he replied he cotild not make that problem who needs the time to
time,
I
then offered
him· ·
two
see the President .
. alternate times on the following . The
•· secretaries
who
. Friday.
,At.
the.conclusion·. of my unknowingly
_
participated. in_ this
conversation--with Mike,. he _told· :_'.'survey"· should_ ha\7e be~n, in- -
· · ·
- : me
he'd get back ~o me, which he formed that it was .a S1;11"Vey:~er
.
th
tM"rist
'th I b t·
planofthecenter.Aloto_fthemwonderedwhere·
never did . .
··
..
--
the
da_
ta· ..
was_.complled.·Mike_
... And it's obvious a
a
can. · e
P
u
they could find thE! tiuilding when they arrived on
·
Mike
should realize that: con- Teitlebaum should try'·some
gr~st~~~i:
~II
probably agree that a_ g~d
Wed .. Sept 3rd to begin their_college careers.· But
clusioiis. cannot. be derived Ji-om professionalism
iii·
his ·
approach
game
of
hani:lball an~-a cool
:S~
wQl
~olve
it wasn't even off the gro~d; . · . . ·-:- . ··
-~ - ·.such.a<Csi.uveyJt,by'using results to reporting.· Tactfulness and
the memories of anxious waiting ... waiting ...
Then it was said that it wotild open in Sept.}76, · : frC>in one phone call · on .'ol)e accuracy .would also
~
~~lc9me. .
waiting for that big brown monster to open'.
· and then Jate '76.. ..· ._ _ ·_. . . .· · ·
·
_-
·
· ::.~-·
· .. _ ._.
partictilar day.as typical of ev:ery
. l\fichelle Hilpertsha~er.
.
Although we can't deny our
·
eilthusia~ for the
-
- • day> The. President.has hectic
· · .
.
.
Se~retacy
Freshmen due to begin at Marist
in
the fall of
·center, and eventho:ugh the recruiting value.of.. . :days':when hEr"cannot-. possibly
· ·.
·
,President'sOffice-
1975
were sent a brochure which showed th~ floor
. such a place
is
obvious, many werl! fooled•into _
.
. :
·
,·::::. ·
:"
·· · . .
- ---
Fieldhpuse:
Late
_;76:
-
. -l~.:..tahinkinrr_·
1.ve· dg, __ that. ,it wouldbe.~ng
__ !_.~_wwh_en. __ th~y -· ·, . ·. -.. · .. _··_: .. ·_ .. - ... ······ .. ···
.·.
·.-·
.
.
. . .. • .. , ,' ': in attaining,such
a
goal is,.to be
. : .. "And ~ha[~bo~t the ~niors?
-
-There1s one ~ho . , ·
CqHaborate .•. ·. . .. --
..
honest in tesf
taking.
A.test is.not
as
a woman basketball player was promised that:~ •
~ ~
·
· -
:-
·
designed. to> be a · community
i
. ··>...
she w:ould. be able to·use the facility: for her'-· .
projectJor all,to colla°!)orate on,
. '
.
.. ,',>i\:;',i\\\\'W\:\ ,, :·,...
games. But" ~t;'llnever play there. . ··'::·
:
.'.<
--TO
the·Editors, ._: . .
butins_teadisused tomeasur,.e the
. . .
'.
-,·.,··;,_ :., ···'.·'._·1,_·;::_i:?\, ___
·_:,l,\;'.:ll:.·.,\,· .•
·.\;_·_,,·1·\~i,:_,_'1.l:,\?·,\\l.1\\\\\\\\~~\\_\1\\~\\\\l_\,:\\l,~\~1~·~•~\l\~·~\~1\~'~~~\11\lf';~·,1~:~\\.·....
• ..
~h~r
~:diio~~!~~Il~~.
~?~:::i::;;~~g~:.·•·.
·

cteg:~~~~:nti:~:~:::~~c·ti;d!~:!i·=fi!:o!@!utsure.
_
i\i\
I
\\ \\
11
--_.
better ~ter you're·gC>n!:,"
. -· _ . .
-
•-. ..
_
.... · · protesfln regard t
0
·:their:rights: se~ester_..
_
The
~
stu~ent who_ .
\
\
· We _brmfUP these porn~ to show.
0
how ~ong : as tuitioripaying students an_d the · che~ts .-ei~er. has little, self:
.
.. ·:·_·!.J·;_·/.'. __
'.'.-1:·.;\:,_\\·\,\_\,\:_\\'.,\·;••.\,1.i_l_ •.
'.i\:·,JI;,',·\·.'_\\
i'
11
••
the situation was_. Its ha~dto blame .anyo~e?.c.: ·lack of. rapport·-::and com-
conf1denc,eorsmiply~~ntcare
,1\\
,,
... because everyone was aDX1ous for.the_center:to
inunicatiori
:
that exist.s between . about ·his_ academic respon-._
. · C>pen, ~nd things liKe thatwere_bo!1flcl t?.
~cu!:: .
the· studerils arid. the ·Marist sibility,:in \Vhicli ~se he d~n•t ·
_
-
~ut, it seem~ unf?rtunate thlit tho~e thing~
~<,I ..
<
.College· administration. Among
belong .1-!1, college.-~
·
.: -~-. ,/: -, :

·
happen;_especially.~~h~caseofsemors_whowilt
the students demands are:that
_'1'9e_ cl~room ch~at ... Js not
. be ~ble to use the building for two.,1;1ore weeks,,, _the administraUQn

open -and diffi_cult t~ fmd at Ma~ Coll~e;
- - - - =--
_
before t~ey ~~aduate .. · ,. · · · ./ ··.
'
. ).
.
· ·, ;honest ·conce111irig the college's:
}~e
)S
so, conunon ·an~,:.has '~:'
. s,,1mK•~•
.
:;i:,
:.'J
~~\.i~:.i.=
~~'.'!~~~:~~t~:. .
c_'.I'he Circle ccmgrautlates-tllose who · got th~
·
··:budget as w~ll as the other ~airs . HJ,~ate9.:. s? : ~ee~ly mto:.:: tm.s
..=t~
~
c,,'!',:C
.\'.'::;!'-~'=-~id ...
w:,:':l;. ::::
::,';'!!"~~ _
l'r1.cCano ,Cept~r
t;>ff
th.e gro~d,: ~ngno mlltt~r-Jlje .
'that,
goyem
:caJPpus-.life; , : :::-:/ , ,:
ac~deIIllc : inst1tu~9n _ .tha,t · Jhe
=~~~:,<:•.!,,~~
r,:
00
:n;;c;-,::
'!::f~'i:' ~•
!;'~!"~:
p~::.'.!- '.~ ':"":
1
de~ays and milk: already.
spilt;)!
JS.
here an_d we , , ..
.
I too
wish'
tJiat:'.'such a•. utopian av~rage student _doesn't: )hink .
I
•~-:~::.I:"~
~,~';.'.;nm"'•
;!~r:•~~~".'~~,.'!~ig: ·
1
.,:'~:1:.:::l:'.~.:'.
t~"'"
·
studen~s ~ho·will.be a~le_ ,to ~e-1t arehappy . -r
_
elationship; bt;~:we~n·stud~nts twi~e.J~,l>(!Ut- ch~ting or;'
Ill,
CO!}·_.
r.«nl storm. SIX >tdtng pan•ls.
'
•bl•tu pOllr «m•nl
...i
<all
in

about.It, and_ ·g\ad tJ:iat 1t
·lS
done;_,
'and administration was possible, - donmg·. __ anot~er- _.person S;_scan-
.
.
.
- blit ·uilfortwrately :I cannot
en-:
dalous_;behaVior. ··,:'.; . · ·': .
Yes, this is
TH~ CIRCLE.
· visiC>n ·that_ sort of
.

relationship, -Agami) feel.that. we shopld
occuring · until_ • Marist Coll~ge
reexamme 01!1' reasons ~or bemg
students become .. honest .with here at .. Man~? aJ!d. before we.
themselves .. The. openness and.-_· demand .. aclmiaj~~t;ttive. honesty.
honesty of the administration,
is
.we should practice
·
w~t- we· .
-
It
took a lot of work, but as you
A lot of people helped us get
read it now we can't help but feel · this edition together .. ·
·
a little proud.
-
Without a doubt ifis· probably
the . biggest edition you'll ever
see.
We'd like to thank them all,
including
Ms: .
Shail,een . _Kopec,
·
coordinator of the dedication; for.
We did it because of the historic . her assistance; O'The · .Hawk"
occasion happening .. on our . from WKIP for.his airborneness;-
was scafed as hell). We also -want
to say Bravo to
Mimi
McAndrew,
jo·urnaHsm teacher, for her
advisement on copy and layout;
·
the people· at Southern Dutchess
Ne~~ in Wappingers- Falls who ·
put up with. us; and .to Jim
Deckner of the Jourpal who took
stich great pictur~.
predicated only upon our honesty
pr
_
each. . :
.
- ,· .
.
·
Sincerely; ..
to ourselves. · · ·· ·_
· · :'. · · -
Ed_ Ma_ rolda_
The first step that we can 'take
-- Wh~t
benefit?
To the:Editors:·
Office
of
student Life.
· ·..
Mike Teitelbaum's article
· Do riot '.tliink : ·we are· in-
campus this Sunday. We thought Tom - McAndrew
.of
the ·.
something
else
somewhat Poughkeepsie , Journal for: his
.
historical ' on the part of the layout advice;. Gerry.. -M~Nulty
. '
·
:v
es:
this
is
The
Circle. See you
students was
in
order, so here you for
his
pictures (even
if
it \Vas his . next week -with: a paltry · eight
"Dial-an-Administrator,">which -
·
terrogati)Jgyou wheriwe askwhy
·
, ·
appeared)1.1-last :week!s issu1fof -you.want_ to·~e~olir supervisor_s. •· -
the. Circle has-left.
his
·readers We are mstructed-to. do so
_by,.-
with the wrong impression of. t!le·· :th~m.
_Also,
whet~er· you :are_ a·
·
.
have it.
first time up
in
a plarie and he pages.
:- .
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; commuter or· reside~t .will-:-m-

THE CIRCLE
-
The Maris! College CIRCLE is the weekly newspaper of the students
of
~rlst
College and is publi$hed througtiovt the schOol year exclusive
of
veca!lon periods
by the Southern Dutchess News 'Agency, Wappingers, New York. _..
· ·
> ·,.
'
··dicate to
us
which administrator
·- .. Dear Tom
--you shollld see, Some of
tis work
~;for· more. than. one ·supervisor.·
· • Mike Teitelbaum failed .to ·extend ·.
.. professicmal courtesy to the
.-
.__
· secretaries he ~•surveyed" by not
To the sports editor,:
·
.
. . · ·
·1t· is
·irl,
this· renewal-of the :informing_them, later, of their.·
In
response · to some of coach distanc~_.portion · of. the progrm,n -' participatio!l in same;
.
Stevens'. remarks (March._ 31 between indoor: and outdoor
·What I object to
·
most is.being
Circle) about the .reasons why. seasons that.-•·turn·s. runners misquoted. :I DID 'NOT inform
most rwihers aren't, turning out ·against coming out for the team. Mike. Teitelbaum that Dean·
for Indoor and outdoor track thi~
It
is
the common beliefof most
of· .
Perez was, "going on vacation,
so
year, . I would like to expand a ~e runners p_resently on the team · _he was going
to
be
tog
busy.to'see
Daniel Dromni
little:
_
(and of almost
all
sprinters that anyone." I DID say that Dean
Larry Striegel
.
Co-Edi,tors
.One of the major reasons for ·. are not) that <indoor_ and outdoor · Perez was going o_ut of town for a
·
·
p~r.turnout is a_ difference·
in .
seasons
'
sho_uld-be phil~sophised c'!eek:
... ..
. .
·
: .
Regina Clarkin
· Associate Editor opm1on between the·runners and• as one ~ntmuo~ ~~on.
·
. , - I did _1.!,0t m_
~8c
instan£e_,nor
Joe Gigliotti
Photography Editor the-coach~.
. .··_ . .
. .
.
. ijep~ating:the distance phase.· would I ever "mdicate to anyone,
TomMcTernan
SportsEditor : According .. to -the present . l~~rs the·mor!31e of_·the t~m, --faculty,studentoradministrafo'r,
Cathy Ryan
Articles Editor _philqsophy of the co_a!!h, ·· ind~r_

.•discourages ·sprinter~. who nught · _
:
_
t~t. any m.~mber. of _tlle Student
DavidNg • .
Layout Editor and outdoor ·seasons,.are bemg have stayed oq froµundoor, and .· Life Staff
18:
"too-busy"Jo: see
Jim Birdas ·
Assistant Layout Editor ·treated as two separi1:te seasons~ '." -,. mak~:d!stance.~~ers ~llo a~e · them. That is \~hat we are _here
Ruben Lopez
- ·Advertising Manager as outlined
in Red
Fox Handbook .. already m shape_ stale.
. . _ . f9r. ·
.
. . .
·.
- . . _ . . .
Kevin Cavanagh
.
BusinessMariager whi~h explains:a:.five-phase ' Jt}sa1:5~_im,Pp~nt·to.po~tout/'
A
word of advice,::Mike·,:
.. __
Su~n Weisberg
TransJ>?rta.tt,0~:ld~n~g~r i:'.unning: program
in
.
de~il•:
·
1n ·.·. that·Jhe.IDam:•differenc~s
be~~·.
LISTEN . CAREFULLY·. to _
...
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• .

• ... _.
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·brief~therunnersbegineachnew·:,-wef!ncro~-:(!ountry_aJ!dtrackare . p!;lople's responses," Of what
··~·
Staff: Jeffrey Ben~dict, . Suzann~ Breen, E_la_me _.B.r:u_s°.e,
~~
seaso11
vyit\l
a
·series!
of'
distance
.
:.
~ot_:<.tlle~:
mat~.rial: t ~ s
· . me!1•.: benefJ_tis, an inag£1;!rate· survey?
.
,: ·
·i:•:
Cola~g~Io,_ ¥al!l"~en .. ·.~~we,, I~~n • ,1,Healy,. Alsu?n :Hicke~,· -. P~tnck ~"which· ~re la~r follow~~. up_
j
tio_n~d aboutJaclt~f faciliµes
_
~~d
___ .. :. ,'.. . . - .· ... · .. . ·, __ :: ·
:e-· -·
;·-
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~iricerely,
Larkin,- ~111 McLaughlin, .
ChrlS
~acetone, WE!n~y Sta,;-~, -1'4.li_Jll'.een_ . W;J.th,_ Dlore·,vigorous..:and. quicker .. the ~wea~er,: but!hE! ·
tbi.n~~
,-w:e
. ·; · ·• · · __ ,--,
·
:- · "Suzarme P;_etito ..
~ly, ·. ~chael Brennan,
~Ph ,
~pone, ' R~s1e. · Ngµyg~n, . MJ.~~ isprin~: ,7-tte :g:~~r~ id~a)s
that
.·'.:.co~d J!',ive_ ·change<l ·,yester~y,; . ;--
. -~: , Sec~etary,
Te1telbauµi,
'Y.~~-.
~lenn.
· the runnE!rs -~ust · fu-st· build·:UP ,. w~1ch·
~
ar~ ·
r;
~.et_ter,,.·
_i
r~n.mg ..
·
;
_ Office of Campus Life·
· · ·
··
'1"
..
the
·
endurance tiefore they· can.
s
philosophy:1dells aild:mot1vation.--_. ·
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APRIL 14. 1977
The Lighter Side
Break ~he slump
One thing that will send shivers down the spine
of even the most self-perceiving Casanova, not to
mention the everyday turkey who was never
much of a womanizer anyway, is the thought of
breaking out of a slump.
"Slump" is that abstract term which everyone
shies away from using for fear of being
associated with it. But the fact is that everyone
goes through
a
slump at one time or another.
- It's hard to put your finger on exactly why
there are slumps, but it is by no stretch· of the
imagination hard to recognize the fact that you
are in one, or that you desparately need to break
out_ of one. The former c;_onsideration is a major
reason why it is so difficult to break out.
..
You are never the only one who knows that you
are in a slump, the girls know it, don't ask me
how, but they know it. •
_
It must be some kind of sixth sense, and when
the girls know that you are in a slump, they avoid
you like they avoid worming your fishing hook.
.You always get the feeling that the girls are
talking about you too. That might seem
egotistical, but you can't help thinking that they
are all in this conspiracy together, to try and
make you get down on your hands and knees and
grovel in front of the whole bunch of them,
begging one of. them for a date.
I
always picture one girl turning to the other
and saying, "Guess who__ ·asked me out·
today? ..... How did you · know _ it was
Colangelo? ...... You mean to say that in the past
two and a half days qe's asked out the entire
freshman, sophomore· and junior classes and
they _all told him to go scratchk~ .. It's a good
thing
I
said no,
I
could have ruined my re-
putation."
---
-
-
· -
. It is easy to see you are never going to break
out of a.slump by staying within the same circle
of girls._ You h~ve to move on, where nobody has
ever seen you before~ _ -
_ , .
_
Another point to keep in mind is that your ego
has been dealt a series of shattering blows, this
puts your confidence at an unhealthy low; so low
that you are definitely out of the market for
~
"fox" and you have to move all the way down the
ladd.ertoa "good dancer" or even worse, a "nice
personality". •
__ . . And
if
you have an ounce cif pride left in your
•,-. entint body, yoll would_iJev'er be caugllt
ill
familiar territory, trying to _
put the make·
on
·a:.
- "nice personality."
So
you have to head out of
,town, preferably Cleveland, ·but probably New
Paltz . .
Shot and Injun
Here is a typical night of trying to break out of
a slump:
·
I'm called Shot, and my friend is called Injun
( actually I'm telling you this because it would,
get confusing since both of our names are Phil,
so
I
have divulged our super secret code names
to make it more realistic.
I
just hope you are
mature enough not to breathe a word of this off -
campus.)
"Well Injun, correct me
if
I'm wrong, but! do
believe this is the longest slump we have ever
been in. There's at least one good thing we could
say about it though, and that is that
we
don't
by Phil Colangelo
have to try and break out of it alone."
_
"Shot we've been here for almost four hours
and we aren't getting anywhere. It is still early
and
if
we hurry we could always head down to
the Mount."
"Bite your tongue In jun, we might be havin' a
stretch of ~d luck here, but let's not give up
hope."
"You're right Shot, thanks for bringing me to
my senses."
"O.K.
let's just have a little patience. You wait
here and hold down the fort,I'll go up and check
out the situation, remember we might have to
lower our standards a little ...... Yeah, yeah I
know it took me a while, but I've done it."
"You mean,"
"Right, look,
I
believe that right over there at
that table, are the two. ugliest girls ever to set
foot on the earth."
''You hit the old nail on the head with that one
Shot. But no use worrying about it, this is the
chance we have been waiting for, lets go."
"WAIT."
.
"For what?"
"Take another look at those girls .... We had
better fire up a few more, or else we'll have no
excuses when we wake up tomorrow."
"Right. ....
O.K.
lets go."
"WAIT!"
"For what?"
;
"I'll send your girl over to you,
if
we have to
look at both of them together, we could end up
spending the better part of the night re-
decorating our shirts. You just wait here while
I
saunter over."
"Right."
"Dum-de-dum-dum, shake your booty, shake
your booty ... Hey girls how are you? ... Thats
right I'm talking to you two ... My name is Phil...
-Hi
Agnes,
hi
Mildred ... Mildred do you see that
guy sitting over there ... He is shy but he said that
he would like to meet you ... Slow down Mildred,
you don't . have to run, he's not· going
anywhere ...
So
Agnes its just me and you, would
· you like to dance, no, would you like a drink, no,
well uh would you like to (mumble, censored,
proposition, censored, mumble)."
_ "I don't think so, no, you wouldn't respect me
in the morning."
_
_, _ :'.M,h~ll, dqn'.t worry about that.I don't respect _
· you"now.''
.
_
'
- - -
-
'_'Oh yeah, well you have a lot of nerve, I'm
le11ving." ·
·
"NO, NO
I
was just kidding, please stay,
I
didn't mean anything."
"Well,
O.K.
but only
if
you start treating me
like
a
lady."
- "Are you implying that
I
haven't been treating
you like a lady?" -
"Yes."
"Well that's nonsense, I've treated you all
right, why in fact you're the nicest hog I've ever
been with ... Who~ ... Wait a minute Agnes, you
forgot your cigar, bye."
"Hey · tf!_ere. In jun, you strike out too!"
"You know I'll never figure out why two good
guys like us ever get into a slump in the first
place ... Lets blow this place."
·Faculty ignores computers
punctuation, and basic math.
with a
I:5 cum or less.
. The idea of "computer grade
Instant printouts of student
-By
Elaine Brusoe
- Almost
¾
of the Maristfaculty · books" on individual students - tra!)Scripts was
aJso
suggested.
who • responded to a computer met with opposition because the
Some of the reasons given for
survey have _ never used the system was consi(:J.ered a "threat the small turnout were "many
campus computer terminals. to privacy" although base-line feel threatened- by this survey,
Only
25
of the faculty members to
data
on achievement levels was the computer in general, and_ the
whom the survey was sent ail-
considered appropriate.
jargon used" and one faculty
swered.
_-
_
A ~mputer letter sent to member said "I wish I had the
· According to a survey" con~ students was suggested for those time."
ducted two months ago by Sandy ·
-
Hirschhorn of the math depart-
ment, 72 percent of the faculty
polled said they had never used
· the terminals and the remaining
-1.3
percent used the terminals
- Disaster to strike-
only for, ''administrative pur~
poses.''
·
.
.BY Regina Clarkin
realistically. "They are to play
' The survey showed 76 percent
parts along the same line3 that
of the faculty know little about
Marist journalism students will news sources have dealt with
the services.
As
a result, the cover a mock disaster on campus them."
.
~
inath department plans a . April. 20 at five p.m. in
_
the · Ms. McAndrew said a lot of
presentation summarizing campus center, according to - bizarre activity will
be
going on
programs for general use in the ;Marist journalism teacher,
Mimi ·
and no one should be alarmed.
near future with seminars on the McAndrew.
"Good teamwork
is
essential to
comput_er system for next
The advanced journalism class good reporting." she said ... The
d
· ·
tel 20 reporters class will be divided up into four
semester. -
. .
.
an -approxuna
Y

_ Mariy teachers said -the com-
and -- editors of the Poughkeepsie different newspapers, compe
mg
pu~rs can be used as a t90l in Journal-will be inv!>lved. Form.er with each other.
.
courses such - as chemistry, _ class members will· act as v~c-
'Ille journalism teacher said
calculus, . and _
political science. -·
tims,
relatives of victims, fire the object of the disaster
is
to
1- -_
Results indicate 60 ·percent and-police officials and college· allow students to -cover all
'favor the idea of "computer
.
administrators for the event. -
_
aspects of the news, the hard
tutorials" for such ··courses · as ·. : . The reporters and editors of the news. angle, the human interest
business . history, -- foreign Journal
will
be instructed by Ms. angle and follow u~ stories.
languages, chemistry,· spelling; · McAndrew to play' ·their
parts
I
.
·-
10% Student Discount
on
Hallmark Cards
Classroom Supplies
Commercial Stationery
at
Hudson Valley Stationers
270 Main Mall
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
Telephone (914) 471-7900
Good Luck
to Marist
with the
PAGE15
J
opening of the
McCann Center
·ou:tchess
Bank.
Potter Bros. Ski Shops, Inc.
-
.........
-
.

Authorized dealer for
Fuji, Falcon Peugeot
- 10 speed hikes
CLOSED SUNDAY AND
19 College View Avenue
Poughkeepsie, NY 12603
(914) 454-3880

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THE CIRCLE
MARCH 14, 1977
Congratulations ..
Marist
on ~he
/
Opening
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PUBLISIJIN6
,§Ql\li--r\.NY,.
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THE-CIRCLE
Womens sports ••
~
,
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Lack of
·
interest· hurts progress
.
By Phil
Colangelo
Rich Stevens, the
team
coach,
_
.
.
As
.
far
as
funding
for
the
girJs
warned her that there were going
·
basketball
.
team
this
.
year
·
is
-
·
·
On
the
,
surface
it
appears
to be
a lot of c
,
uts,
:
and as she put coricern~d.
_
the girJs did
.
not
women at
Marist
do
not have the
it, he said "your chances are no receive

a
·
set amount"
·
at

·
the
~ e opportunities to compete
in
:
'g()()d,
so
don't even bother."
·
beginning
oJ,the year
_
to run tlie
intercollegiate
~
·
club or
~
J
n-,
:
Steverursaid that looking back
.
progr~.
'
:
Money
,
,
was all~ted
tram,urarathletics
-
as men.
.
·
now he feels
he
'.'pi:-obably did
try
by
.
the
~
athletic department for
·
But according to Ron
·
Petro, . to discourage lier!' But he said both
.
the
·
mens'
and
womens'
athletic director, and
-
Eileen Witt,
he thought.it
-
was only
.
fair
-
to-her , programs
~
.
.
·
·
.
:
·
-
.
-
tennis and
·
women•s basketball
·
·
because there
,
were
.
only
-
24

Atth,estartofthe'seasonit:was
coach;
·
·
one
·
of
·
the
;
main
·
fador.s
-

-
uniformnmd
-'
he didn't
.
feel
·
she
.
-
decided
.
that whenever
-
Ms
:
-
Witt
holding back
·•
the progress of would have a
-
.
good
--
chance to thouglit
'
·
she· needed
'
money'
.
she .
women's sports·here
_
is a·1ac1c of
.
makeJt:
:
:
· •
:
_
,
:-
·•
· ·
.
·
.
_
could ask Petro.-
:
.
·
.
.. _
interest. -.
.c : .

.
.
:
~
~
·
:
He added that
:
if
Ms
~
Courselle
·
· .
Ms.
Witt said the arrangement
.
.
:
There
·
arel6
coaches employed
.
C
did come olitas she
had
planned
;

"turned

out to be
_
n:ue;t•
·.
: ·
·
·
part or
-
full~tinie by the _athletic she
'
wouldhave been given a
:
fair
.
.
:.
i>ractice
"
time
in
the old
gym
department, fifteen of
.
then
h
are ·
·
tryout{ahdshewouldhaveliadas was split up equally
-
between the---
·
men .
.
:
·•
·
· ·,
<
-
:.:
.
·
_ .
much
-
of a chance of"inaking the
·
two
,
basketball teams
this
year .
.
:
·-
-
The
-
10
'
·
sports
·
offered by
.
.
_
the
'.
-
team
-
as anyone
-
else.
-
·:-
:

:<
-.,
.
'
!
~oeyer
:
_
co
,
uld
0
,
have th~
l!lost
_
.
.
college fof
men
include football;
.
·
Marist"'
:
was an
aU
male in;. mern~rs
'
present
".
(;<>llld
·
~ve tp.e
:
basketball,
·
crew, lacrosse, cross- · stitution
.
until
.
1968
.
and
'.
it
.
_
has
-

·
-
gym
for
.
thatparticulaI'
_
time;''
·
country/ track;
!
soccer,"
:
and
·
0
taken
.
some
,
time
for female
•·
Jbe
_
girJs:tem.ndl~notllav
.
~use·•
::
tennis; Women
·
can participate
in

.
athletic
•,
programs
:
to
.
>
develop.
· ·
·
ot
any
;
locker~, ~ut" says
/
P.etro
·
,
five
spo$
_
incl~cµrTg basket~ll,
..
Even
-
~ow th~~~Js here, ~re n<>t
·
r e f ~
~
~ the~mp,e!ion ophe
·
crew~ tennis: Sailing and golf are

athletically
:
inclined,''
,,
said. Ms.
,
~
old f1eldhguse,
~'i(
there was
·
,ny
Ope!}
·
to
-
both m:e1f ~nd women
.
.
·.
Witt.
\
.
.
.
c
;
-
·:
· •
·
_
·
·

<
/ ·
:
,
.

dis~~i~inati_on
\/
because_
· >
of·
.
. -
.
.
Tille
IX,
·
an adJW1Ct to the
1972
.
She
:
said one reason
:.
_
1t takes
·.
fa(!ility,
:
next
,
y~~
-
r
-,
~er_e will_ be
<
,:
u
~
s,
Education Amen
_
dmerits
.
time
to
·
get
,
an
.-
athletic
,
'.
program
·
~on~
/~
/.:
;
_,
,
,
.
\
.
.
:
..
.
:
·
·
<.
,:::
:
}<
~
·•
.
!<>r~ids sex
-
di~crimination in~nf off
'
the
.
_ground
_
-
~
_
because
:
the
"
:
.:
:
,:
'l'.e@is
'
.
.i
!S
"
:
.~M~he(
·
sport
~
-
~
_
.--
'
institution µsmg federal.funds;
-
budget
IS
ll}ade
_
up a yea,r_-
~
ahead 'Which
,
l',19:nst
-
womE!n
..
have··
Marist
uses
these
.
funds
; ·
. :
;
.
in
:
~
October.
·
Ifthere
.
is
.
not suf- progressedmthepastfew
-
y~ars .
.
·
.. C
TiUe
IX
says
:
it
is
·
up to the ficient
>
iiiieresfc

sliown
.
the

.
:
.
When
..
Petro

started
.
a
.
gitJs
cliscretiori of the institution
>
to jircigraril
.
mu
·
not
~
>
considered;
.
.
team tw,o
;
years ago
:
·
there
.
we
_
re
.
·
-
~
·:.o:
·
,
.
·
.
::,
:
::,;,,
·.
,
: ;
·;·/.
;
:,
,
p
,
~~fucf:r:p~~YA~ll~::~~~
-
.

shi:!1::~
-
::
b:
i_
~k~tb~ll
-'.
is
_
·
,
one
.
:::e;~;tt~
;
~
p
ae~;!r~;
..
:
..
l1t
1
t}f
1:
]
J;~
J~~Ji~f;
i\
:?f
l{
'
.
would mclude football; basket:-
_
.
program that
.
has
.
·
developed
.
.

·.
llllller:tbe
.
d4-eci1on <>(
:
Ms
;)
V1tt1t
:
0
-
,
-
>
~
, ·
·
,
.
·
, .·
·
.
.
-
,
ball, lac:rosse
ari<!
:
\
soccer.
,
,
>:,
.
:-:
,
..
:
N¢xfy!:!artheywillmove
,
upfrom
·
:
has_
;"
14
~
mmib,er
.
s
'.
.
ij~xt:

y~
,
'
~
>
.
';
\
·
·
·
?-:c.>
:?'
~.
:
,;-.
-~
·-.
·
.
.
.
,
.
_.
-'
.
_
,.
__ -.
_

,
;,
;
However,
ln
·:·
i
non~co~t~ct the
:;
~UdS0J:!
;
.::
Yalley
.
;
/
Athletic
.
.
! l ~
t;·
of
:
,
:tpa!rl.i~
i
@l
:
.~
.;
in;. )ht!
:
third new~st
f?oat
.
_: . '
. '
:
timesiotsancischediliedtherii:for
sports,
:
_
_
.
·
su~
.
:-
as
:
:
,
_
C1'
_
9~~}l!1tg;
·
.
. ~;n,f~ca.n<?.e~o~t!e~
.-
t~~
-
~ern
.'
cr~~

ftQll:l
_
~Jo
"
l?,
-.
19
.
~tch
.
·.
_
-
:i
-
.
'
_
~ldwe}!
\
des£rl~~
-'-
them
_
.
:

as
.
·
___
sixgajnes.
,
Whenit
_
canie
"
timefor
"
!\ltfft.-e~
t
l
.
I
t
eiiir•l?i
i
i.!i
ll
i
i
;t
i~
t'.
~~!
~
,
~'l
ft
¥
:
:
~i1~~!1!
c.,sc
,~
,,,
..,
:
aJ).owe~~tfyoutif,5-he
~
canpr~ve
".
:
feilia~e~eq~ylen~of
:
tb~
./
NC.Ai\
:
.
tlle,y:-
:
~ ~
F
~~
..
;.
f~>~t:q
'.,
30.
·
:
:
·;--
~o
.
µ
_
th~
.
~u.gget
,.
~sses,
~
;
a
··•
·
and
. :
,
th~.· other~
--:
;,wel'~
;
;,,
.
not
t
_
~~t:
::
·
,
f.
_
!~
y
era!l
'"
,t~l~ti~
'.?
-
:
op;.
_
-· '
Mso
(
~
t
Witt

h~:
.'
_!>eg1u,t
a<!t!re
_
_
.
m
.
eJil:13¢r~
,,~
arid
\
~n~ed
:
~
w_itJf
;
_!8•
>-
:
Y9~e~bal!
·
~aJ?
-
Wl~
b
,
e
~~t
up ~or
·
.
,.
"r~i~tered
:
ar~nsL
c
·
,
·
•.
:
.
: ::
: : . ,·
,
:
wctuniti~
.
have
~en
~ted
in
',
,r~rµitment Jor.
:
neit
,•
):ear;
,
and
-;
:
q~ry
-.
C:ald°"~ll;
r,
the
.
,
spo~
y
111-
-:
fJJe. ~l"~
:
says
:
Ms
:
-
!.1tt, ~ause
.:
.-.
\\11th only one tearn_-left,
Ms.
the
-
p~
~r
~.t
/
:
•?
:
\\>
'; .'
< ,
:
'• ·
~Y~
.
if ~h
_
e b~~etpass~, and
'
she
.:
fo
_
r
_
~at1on
.
.
:
d1recte>f.'
~
ang
f'.
helld
~
of 1tsyop~pty
-
m
-
~~r81Ilur8!5
-
.
W.i~ as\ed
if
they would like to
.
_,,
i:none
·
!A~ldt!nt
·
~
,
fallI
_
{athy · ~ll
-:
kno!l'
.

lll
)
a: few
·
wee_ks,
:
coach
_
·of
:
the ~eJ>:S
.,
:_
~~w
<.-
~aIIl
t;tus
'.
P8-~ year:
.
:
_·.
·
:
.
.
~
.
.
.
~pmup1ts1o_membersa!}dha_ve.
Courselle;
:
a
;
_
~es~11 fr<>Ill
:
N~w
· -
~~~larship
_
mo~ey may
,
be made.
..
feels ~at
_
the gi!Js showe.d
.
' very
,
~
.
-
:
.
-
Ho'!ever,
.
thu;
,
pam.;
_
_
Jvmter
.
she

.
informal
·
games. When

1t came
Paltz
-
·
was
<
interested
·
m
~
.
frying
.
·
-
available
:
to

some players.
.

:
. good mteresr m the
:
teain,

·
.
,
.
.
planned
-
to
·
start
.
an intramural
·
.
time for that team to use its
time
·
ouff6r
:
the Marist cross-country
·
:
·
'lbe
gfi-Ls
sche~ufo
··
wiµ
,

aJso
.
As
far
as
;
equipment
i
f
con-
·
ba
·
sket~ll leagu1:
-
for girJs.
·_
Two slot, agairi no one showed up.
team.:
·
.
·
.· ·
_.
·
'
0
_

.
·
• '
.
_
mcrf:l~e from
,15
g~es this year
-
cerned, the girJs used the ne:w,est
womens te~nns S1gn~,~p
·
for
~~
..
.
.
.
.
.
. .
_
.
· .
·
She
:
:C!hange.9-
_
!ler
.
mind
..
when-
·
to~
-
gam~ n
_
ext
Y~•
:
shell
last
fall·and now.they ~e
league,
_
__ so
_
she set ~ufe'"..thr~
~
Coqtmued on
page
88
Froman]dea
-
.
·,
-
-
.
to hard reaUty
-
ByTomMcTernan
.
when
.
the
·
McCann Foundation
-
.
.
.
.
was_started following tp.e death of
.
- Twenty years from now, you'll -James ~cCann, a Poughkeepsie
·
look
<
at
_
.
the McCann R~reation
·
resident
·
who had
_
gained
-
a
Center and say,
-
"lwasthel'.e
in:
.
sizeable
·
fortune through in-
--
·
. the beginning.'! True;
the
facility
vestments·
"in
the stock
.
market.
.
~
which
·
opened to the
'
Marist
He directed thafhis wealth be
·
<
¢mmunity
·.
on April
·
3
,
will be
:
used
to
improve
:
the social and
·
··
officially dedicated Sunday. But recreational
-- .
life
~
of
, t!te
;
220
f~t by
~
fee~
COIIlP!~~
.
Poughkeepsie, Other projects
first ~ca
_
me a topic of mterest o!i
·
.
receiving
,
funds
from
the
·
foun-
.
_
the. campus
soon after
.
the arrival
·
elation include
.
the
.
Mccann
·
,Golf
of
-
a
·
man
named
.Howard Gold-
·
·
eourse the Mid-Hudson Civic
man
in
1963
.
,
'
.
.
·
-
Center' the. Marist tennis courts
.
·
.
Gol~n, currently
_
the
.
Red
and th~ new library in Fontaine.
:
.
Fox

~~er
_
_
coa~ and 1>hysical
_
.
un·der
·
president
~
J:ohn
·
Gar-
_
_
·
education
·
chairman,
was
·
tland, who
is
also
-
a member of
.
·
.
dissatisfied with ~e
~1!1g
60
x
0_
the ~llege Board of TJ::ustees, the
· ·
100
foot gymnaS1um
.
servmg
·
the
foundation· first
•·
.
became
·
in--
.
·
~w!!tg
_
stJJ~ent
_
body
::-,
:
_
.
·
. .
'.
.
terested
iri
the proposed .facility
.
,
-
.
_
-
l
:
saw r1~t al!Sy
-
;.t_hat;we
.
-due_
>
to a
:~
Jack of
,
_
adequate
.
.
neede~ a more adequa~ pbys_1~al
&wimniliig facilities in the area.
educ~tion and recreation facility
.
·
The recenUy filled outdoor pool
-
.
_ ,
to
.
over°s!oJ?
.
e the
:
space limitation
OILthe campus's
_
northern edge
-
·.
·
o~ the ~Id gym.''
As
Goldma11
_
put
.
.
.
was
,
theJargest
_
outdoor
pool
in
·
: :
_
it
;_::

~
I
.
.
. started
··
·c~~~ting
/
arid
·

.
_
_
the
:
county,
but

sanitary
~
:
factors


-"'.11t~~}~~~
-
the

first
:
~y :lgot
.
·
_
and
.its
·
availability only
.
d~ring
.
here.
<
.
_
,.
.
·
.
_
_
· ,
"


.

.
:
.
.
.
-
·.
.
the summer months made it of
:-:~.'
:.
But witltout
'
the
:
_,
money
,
limited benefit to
_
the
coniinuriity.
.
-
-
-
.
!l~~essary
:
Jo
.
t
unde~e
:.
such_ a
.
Thus
·
it was only natural-that-the
·
·
pl'Oject(Goldn:uln
·
was)e~
. _
with
.
foundation becameJnterested
. :·
r
_
e ~
-
his
,
written
:"
plans ev~ry
.
_
and
the project wadinally
.
given
~
'-·
.

>
·
<
Y~
·
;
Or
;:~
so
::,
'
:
lle
·,
~1so
-
k~p
r
.
.
-
serious
,
consi~eratio
,
n
.
by
:
the
,
.
·
.
i
~~
·
·
~
-
~=~~~t=:t.f;t
7
-
~~~;
_
:"_
a~ra~on
_
,
hi
?!~1:
·
;{
;
·
·
..
:
-
be'kidded ~
-
'!"used
to
bring itup
to
:
·
:'.•
<Also
/
at
this
'
time
·
Golctman;
:.
0
;,;;.
·
·

·
.
_
.
.-
.
_
: •"
·
:, ,
·
·
:
. :
·· .---
_
-.
·
·
·,. •,,..
_.
;.
:,.
'. . <:·
-::
·
.
._____.
·
·
-
-..
..
;,
~
.
-
:
-
--.,
.
.-
-
.
... :.
.
-,
-
'
...
-
.,
PresldeQt
·~;'.
(Unlis)
"
/
Foy
-;,:.
every
'
•·
along
.
:\
vith
··
·
;
pi-esent
·
·
Athletic
·
·
_
_
_.
-:-
nr~·Uau:Foy;(~)talb;.,v~~
-
oftllelleCaa~rlaU7S~J~
_
~ o l t l l e ~ o f
:=
_
:
:~
~~ru
i':
I
;
~~lii~}'
.:.
·
,
:
:_/
,
/:>':;-•.:·
::_
.
.
.-
;
>
-

..
_ .
_
,
_
_.:,
.

.
_
_
;
·
.
, ·'.
.'
•:._
,
.
.
,
·
..
-:-
·
·
.
·
tnstees,_~,Loail
~
t l l e · ~
:
e.1
-
~
-
.
--
~:-
~
---
:
·
..
.
.
. ..
. :
,
~:.
·
~
-
~
-
'P:1
.
,
.
~
;
;
~~
..
~
~
~•
.-:
-.: .
.. ,
··\:.
Continuecl'oapage9B
,
·
.
.
.:_..
,:
:
· ·
.'
.
:--
'
.
:
·
.
..
.
·
-
.;
..
.
·
.
..
. _;
·
:<
· -
;~
·;
;:-,,~,;:;~ -
-•
•/
\

,--
-
.
.
• : .

.
.
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PAGE2B
a
THE CIRCLE
The movable bulkheads can a
'
djust the pool
to
either 25 yards or 25
meters for racing. (photo by
J. Gigliotti)
·
The one and three meter
diving boards hover over
·-
the
;
I3-ft. deep
diving area.
(plioto
by
Joe Gigliotti)
_
·
-
-
·
-
·
·
·
· __ ·
·
PARK
-
-
DISCOUNT BEVERAGE
-
CENJ
·
E

R
All Popular Brands of Imported
&
Domestic
.
.
.
.
BEER
&.
SODA
Cold Beer and Soda .,.... No
E~~ra
Charge
·
Draught Beer & Equipmer.l
.
.
\
• Keg
• Case
•·Six Pack.
,
-
229-9000
:::#~:Y:&1:,,J:J!=.-:l
-
.

-
Mi.
·
s
.
of Roosevelt Estate)
·
_
-_
ALBANY
POST-
·
ROAD, HY
_
DE
-
P~R~
-
,
N~
Y:
-
-:- Plenty

ot
_
Free
-
Pa,rkirig ,....._

,
'
I ,
··..
.
'

· .
APRIL 14, 1977
Natatofium has
many features
By
Larry
Striegel
··
The natatorium.or pool area of
the James J. Mccann Recreation
.
Center bas several features
-
which makes it one of the most
money
we
will
use for chemical
treatment and
will
pay for itself
iii
a
matter of years."
·
-
Best
tiIDhig
modem facilities anywhere, says
One of the most modern
Larry Van Wagner, aquatic
·
features in the natatorium
is
the
director.
·
.
timing system.
_
.
-
.
.
The
poo~,
which
is
15
yards
In a deal between the Pepsi
wide
and
.
40
yards
.
long,
·
has
a Cola
·
Company and
_
Marist,
the
superstructure
.
made
_
of
_
rein-
college
will
be provided with a
·
forced cement
·
called
Gunite. Its
:--
Colorado
:
Timing
System to
·
-
be
-
outer
·
skin
·
is
a
-
mixture

of
.
installed at the end of
-
May.
'lbe
limestone,
'
white marble and system
.
will
include
-
a
small
cement called Marcite;
-
.
speaker under each of the
six
The
pool
is
equipped with two
.
starting
blocks which will SQund
movable b
_
ulkheads each two feet the beginning
.
of each race
.
wide
·
~sting
$10,000
eaclt which
.
·
.
As
_
each swimmer
_
completes
can
be
·
used to divide the pool into his two
laps
his_split apd finishing
_
three
areas. Van Wagner said the times
.
are r!;lgistered on
·
a
-_
areas
¢an
be. used for
:
com-
scoreboard via a touchpad under
_
. ·
petition, explaining that
:
during the starting blocks. At the end of
win~i:'
_
s ~ competition
.
~ch race
-
a computer
·
will
list
the length used
is
25
yards, btit in
_
-
each of the finishing times on
-
the
_
-
_.
the
.
s~er the
-
length can
be
.
scoreboard and the
:
record tune
·
_
·
moved
c-
tQ
.
confopn
_
to metric for' ~e everit
.
The computer
.
will
..
competition making the distance
-
alJ,o
.
automatically print six
:
:
25
·
meters long.
,
_
_
·
:
copies of
·
the
finishing
times for
-
.
'
-
Th
_
e depth of the pool changes Judges,
-
the press and timers.
-
.
from four
.
feet
in
the shallow end,
·
·
Vail Wagner says
'
he
is
excited
to
six
and a
.
half feet in the
-
aboutthe system. ~We are one of
'
middle, to
13
and a half feet
in
the
-
the only pools around to have
·
it
_
diving well.
.
_
·
-
and it
will
help tremen~ously for.
· -
There are
three
diving boards, meets.
It's
the-best out to$y."
·
--
two at one meter high and
.
.
The four row· mezzaiiliiei
area
.
·
another
,
three
_
meters
·
high
of
the natatorium will seat
·
31Q
_
equipped
.-
with Duraflex
bc>ards
people
-
~ and
440
more cari
be
·
which
-._
Van
··
wagner
·
calls
"the accoijuno
_
dated with fold-away
-
best
_
macje today.»
·
aluminum
bleacher~ on the
pool's
:
-
The filtering system can clean
-
deck. The bleachers
·
can
be
_
water
three
·
times
faster
·
than moved to the field house
·
half of
normal,
.
Vari" Wagner says. The the center.
_
-
·
.
.

·
· .
-
.
.
.
syst~, c~lled
High.
Flow Sand
. ·-
Originally there ~er_e
_
two
pools
·
.
~il~i:"inll, will
·
handle·
!5
gallons P!arned for_the ar~,
m~l~~
.
!1
-
.
per cubic foot every nunute,
.
and diVlJlg well and a compe~1tive S1Ze
.
.
_
756
iil
:
o~e
:
_
ijQur.
-
:lt
~es
·
only·
_
~ix
_
-
pc,oJ
:,
~~~ver,
:
H~~ar,~
'.
~ol~--
_
-
hours to
·
clean the entire
26,000
°
man, dire~tor of
-
phys. ed., ·
·
gallons
iri
the pool, Van Wagner thougl}t ol
-
the
·
iuea9f

using
·
the
_
· ·
said.
-
.
-.
.
bulkheads
instead.
As
it turned
·
. ·
A
machine
called a Strantrol
· ·
out, the plan saved
$200,000
arid
hydro-analyzer controls and tests
-
the need for two filters instead
_
of
water for Ph and clilorine levels one, said Van Wagner.
_ -
.
and
'
dispenses
_acid
and
,
Adjacent
to
the
_
pool's deck are
chemicals. Van Wagner says the men's
.
and women's locker
-
$6,000
IIU}.chine
·
is
_
almost like a rooms, and a sauna room bet-
computer.
lilt
1:t1t.s
_
in
half
_
th~
ween
·
.
the
.
two.
-
,.
Marist s
·
wim
Club
-
to start this
summer
.
.
'
By
Larry
Striegel
polidtwiII compete
·
on ~
.
club
level for at least two years before
.
·
Marist
will
have
:
no problem
making a switch to the varsity
·
:
finding a team to swim in its new
·
level.
·
·
,
·
·
.
top
_
competition model pool,
says
'lbe entire group
_
could
,
go far
.
:tarry
·
Vanwagner,'
:
aquatic
says VanWagher.
·
.
director:
·
·
,
·
:

"I
can
see the age group
~~
,
Vanwagner,
_
a graduate
·
of
_
teaµi being one of the best in
·the
· Springfield
-
College
-
who
;
~as
:

area. 'lbe
potential
out there
has
..
hired
as aquatic director
last
_
never
_
been tapped, arid
_
now it
summer
.
plans to sta.rt the Marist
will
_
be;" he ~d.
·
·
C9llege
:
Swim-Club.
It
will
be
a
_
'
.
'As
far.
as the
·
college team
-
.team
made ofstlide_!}ts from the
goes,"
~
we~e not going
··
to attract
-.
.
college ~ong wjth area
gramnui~

the best swiinn:iers in the' country
and
high
.•
school age swimmers

·
-.'.
because it c
·
osts
so
·
much to go to
.
·.
'Ibis
past
winter, Vanwagner
,
Msrist.1fat for this area
-
we'll
coach~d
·s1
swimmers
-at
the
·
·
have a good
.
college
team;
H
we
. ·
YWCA
_
.
in
·
.
Poughkeepsie: The
_
_
-
get students who are very serious
·
·
_
t~am swam in
three
dual and four
·:·
about swimming and
-
_
academics
'.
_
AJ;nateur
Athletic Union (AAU)
·
we'll have
:
a
.
sti'ong

club/'
...

meets,
·
and
will
compete again
·
He adds that the bulkheads in
this
summer
with
.
Marist
as
·
its
· ·_
.
the pool
will
allow competitors to
_
'
home. Van Wagner sai4 the size of
·
:
:warm-up properly
.
before a race
the team would probably swell to
-
··
iristead
.
of.-starting off
_
cold
-
and
_
about
_
80
.
swimmers.
stiff
because of
·
_
tong
·
waiting
periods
.
~tween races.
·
.- -. ·
·
·
.
College Swim
Team
'
.
The
'
team he COllched
'
during
-
...
..
·
. ·
-
.
·
.
- ·
:
_.
_
·
the
.
winter
_
·
is
a meniber
.-
Of the
. _
·
.
He explained
.
that Marist
-
New York area
'
AAU; and
.
Van-
·
_
_
Coll
_
ege students~- be part
.
of
·
-
Wagner says_ although
Marist
the
.
club
_
in the winte~
·
season
. :
may have the best facility
·
in the
·
when they compete
m
_
AAU
·
area~ not many AAU meets
will
_
meetsd:~ut
the
group of students,
.-
·
be held because some
·
swimmers
.
.
.
·
which
·
he
e ~ .
to
.
:
mim~r
·
wiJl
,
be required
fo
·
travel
-
from
· ..
_
-
aroun,d
-
8 to}~
'
swunmers;
.
will
·
...
Long Island. He
is
teyµig
_
to
·
get
·
.
·
form
:
t11e Marist
,.
College
..
Swim

two AAU meets for
.
next
-
winter,
·Teairl
.
arid
-
w_ill
"
p.t
·
t11~lv~
.
_-
bqfs~ys
he
inaY.
tey
._
to
.-
get the
.'
,
,
·
again$l:other
:
~lleg~
>
0
<.:·
-
:

': .-
:(,
··
teamintotheAdiroridackAAU
,
so
·
_
.
.
I
.
:
';,
.
_-
VariW
_
agrier
-~
::
rall'~adf
,,
:
has
'
,
-
~ore
:
ineets
-
cari
~
,
held
'
in
:
i
the
"
;
:
'
~
-
·
scheduled
six
dual
meets for
-
the
McCann
'
Center
·

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


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/
<

I
APRiL 14, 1977__
James
d.
ltleCauo
Reereation
Center
. . At right
is
the layout of the
first floor level, of the James
J.
Mccann
recreation
center. The left half is
dominated by
-
the
fieldhouse
area, and the right by the
natatorium.
In
between are
.locker
.
rooms
and
·
storage
··
·
rooms.

In
the upper right
part of the first floor are the
four handball courts and the
rowing
~
room.
·
.. On
the second floor ( not
.
shown) are a
·
dance studio,
::
;1thletic department offices,

·
a weight
·
room,
·
an audio
__
_
visual room, press boies, a
combatives
_
>
-
r~om,
·
and
spectator
.
areas
:
·
.,,,/
.
F
·
I RS
·
T
THE CIRCLE
HANDIAll
&
••ooL
,
I
IAU. (OUlU
A
B
C
D
:
Fieldhouse will add
-
n
:
ew dim
,
ension
.
/
-
PAGE 3B
The courts are made with an
dimensions than handball, the
tanks
are
designed
_
after the
-
The room
will
also
ac-
oak wood pa.nelµ}g; the ~me-as
courts can
be
adjusted by in-
tanks
used at the University of
·
cominodate the new $3
,
200
·
Four handball courts and two the fieldhouse.
·
Originally the
serting into the wall a 17 foot high
·
Wiscon$in in Madison. They are
ergometer, a machine which is
?.5
foot rowirig tanlµ; are two new courts woul,d have
.
cost
.
ap-
aluminum plank called a
.
telltale. 12 feet wide and three feet deep
used to simulate rowing motions,
·
features
in
·
• the
·.
·
Mc Cann
.
proximately $18,0()0 each with
Paddleball and racketball can
be
and

are
·
filled with water. A
facilitate development of style,
Recreation Center.
.
.
.
. . ..
another surface, but since_ the
·
oak
accommodated without any extra concrete platform rWJS length-
and measure strength and en-
By
Maureen
~ Y

I
.
Tile }:um~ball_ courts, lo~a~~
'
~n w-ood
.
\Vas bought in su~
.
mass it equipment.
, ·
·
wise along the middle of the tank
durance
.
. .,
.
. the
southwest Side
_
qf th~ buil<:fuig,
.
sa.ved abot1t half tl:i~
~oun~
,
:.
,
When asked
if
a varsity sport
in
accommodatirig
·
six
"
oifrsmeiC
·
·
·.
·
·--
According
'
·
tci
"
Gary
--
caidweiI
;"
·
·
·
..
·
·'
·
·
·
·
·-
~.
,.,
.-
:
·· ·
__
_
.
.
will accommodate other sports
· .
'!Since no,rmal handball
_
courts
.
handball
might
.
be
.
considered, The athletes use sweep oars and
head
crew coach,
"the
new
tanks
such as squash; paddleball, and are usually white
.
in
color,
·
we
Petro
said,
"Not enough colleges sliding seats similar to those used
and ergometer will help our
.
·
racketballalong with handball
.
]:tave stained the wood with an off have the sport or the facility for in a shell
. ·
program tremendously! They
.
;
At~etic
_
Director Ron Petro
.
·.
white substance
.
We did
_
this to
the sport for us to develop
,
a
.
The exact cost of the room was
·
will give the team an extra two
says the 20 foot by 40 foot by
.
20 retain the handball court effect,
·
varsity event.
"
hard to determine since so many
-
months of time to work on style
foot high rooms
,
will probably
-
be and at the same time
:
retaining
different types of construction
and development
.
" He said the
, ~he most popularly used parts of the wood effect," said Petro
.
Help for Crews
wei:e involved
,
but the equipment
room will be named after alumni
the building.
·
·
. .
Since squash has different
,
_
_
_
·
·
costs were approximately $1,500,
who donated a substantial
-
:
.
~

.
.
,
~
.
:
.
·.
-
i
.
.
.
.
. -

'
~
:
.
,, .-
:
.
.
'
.
·
Howard Goldman looks over oile of four handball courts
In
the McCaDll
Center.
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
•. •
:i
:- •

/
I
,
The two
?.5
foot long
.
r9wing
said Petro.
amount specifically for the room.
TROPHIES-50% DISCOUNT
LETTERII SPORTING GOODS
;-
APPLE VALLEY SHOPPING CENTER ON RT. 55
POUGHKEEPSIE,
-
NY 12
-
603
/
TEL
(914)452~2322
TEAM AND
SPECIAL
DISCOUNT
TO
STUDENTS·
Basketball
_Tennis
J
·Baseball
Swilllming Suits
·
.
Warm-ups
Danskins
Jackets
PONY Shoes
I
'I
































































































r:
r
.
r
,
PAGE4B
Canin:
.
.
PaulCanin
By
Wanda Glenn
.-
_THE
CIRCLE
th8
Marist builder
-
'lbe native of Brooklyn says he with what he imagined.
has always wanted
to
work in a
"You visualize something
visually creative field.
His in-
totally in your mind, and
.
it
is
a
terest
was
started as a young boy great satisfaction to
.
see
··
the
working
in
his father's sign shop,
-
·
final
·
product and compare how
Giinting
.
and
·
_
designing close
it
came
to
your
ustrations for signs.
·
imaginings."
Io
his
_
spare time
Canio used
Canio
chose the Poughkeepsie
the
014
·
signs
·
to
.
build play area to
·.
establish a
.
business
structures
arid
muses
in the because he had done some work
empty lot behind
his house.
in the area,
and
he
said· it
.
in~
He attended NYU for one year trigued
him;
He said
·
the
main
and Cooper Union for a year and reason he wanted
to
open his own
a half on
.
scholarships before
_
business
·
was
-
because he
is
-
entering the
.
.
air
.
·force-:-.
as a
hyperactive. "I
·could
never
navigator flying ~2!1's out of happily work for a firm where the
Italy.
_
.
_
pace
.
is
more leisurely.'.'
·
·
Three years later Caniil
·
·
Canio
said
his
most rewardiog
-
retumed
_
to
the U.S. and con-
design
.
is Kaai Rock Park,
tinued
-
·
his
education
:
at
-
Pratt located along the riverfront. "I
Institute in
·
Brooklyn,
for
in-
designed
·
something
.
.
.
for
dustriatdesign.
:,
_
.
.-
-
maximum
public
·
use, and
also
He
·
graduated _
from . Pratt
.
in restored the
·
beauty
.
of the larid,-
APRIL 14,
1977
lntramurals may
-
-go to weekends
By Maureen
Tully
'lbe new center
will
allow for
expansion of the intramural
_
With the opening of the James
program. "We
will
.
be a ex-
J.
McCann Recreation Center,
pandiog into a lot of new areas
the prospect of weekend
in-
·
based on what
is
available at the
·

tramural
athletics may
-
becQme a
center" said Witt.
reality.
'
.
. '
Some of the n~w events
may
be
According
to
Mrs.
Eileen Witt,
handball, squash, and racketball.
director of intermurals, "There
Witt said Larry van
·
Wagoer,
seems to be
a
demand for
aquatic director
has
·
agreed
to
weekend intermurals, so we
work
-
with the intramural
.
·
migb,t be experimenting. ~ctly department to
.
schedule swim-
wheri they would
start
I wouldn't
,
nilii!f
intramurals.
·
·
·
· .
·.
know, but it's something
to
think
'lbe fieldhouse
will
accoinodate
about.''
such new events as indoor track,
·
· Witt said the riew facility
will
tennis
and badmihtort
,.
-
enable the athletic department
to
Witt said the center will
.
make
start
thinking
about new
!11·
planning_m~re versatile.·
·
--
~
~~
-
""
tramural programs. Before, with
·
"
;
We will fmally
.
be able to
,
give
varsity
-
sports schedule and lack
,
the students a greater op-
of space in
.
the
_
~Id
·
gym
~ted
:
.
portuni_!y for !,lthletic coI!lpetition
-
the scheduling events;
,
·
and
·
recreation," she said .
.
·
·
1951
and worked for several years scape along the river."
Paul
Canin,
architect of the for different firms in Manhattan
Io his free tune, Canili, his wife
..
.
.-
.
James
.
J. McCann Recreation for d~gning schools, factories
<
and three children enjoy boating,
c
t
·
d
. ·
d
·
Center says h_e gets a kick out of
and hospitals.
:
.
.
.
_
.
_
·
skiing an.d photograp~y .
.
·
.
·
en er
·
a s
·
-
supervising a project. "It's
as
if I
.
·
Canin says his designs
'.
are not
He also considers
himself
.
a
.
..
.
.
.
see a
'
dream come into actual based on
any
preconceived ideas good cook, "but only Chinese
·
·
·
·.
• ·
existence."
.
-
butonthe functional needs of the food," which he tries to make
·
at
.
·.
-_
·
_
st
.
u
·
d
-._
.
e
..
·n
__ ._
..
_t
_
.J·o
.
_.
·
b
_
..
·
__
.
_
s
,
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_-
_,_:·_
·
.
Cartin, 54; has been an architect structure, conditions at the site, least two
.
times a week~
.
in the P9ughk~psie area: _for
_
22.;
'
and the budget
.
.
_
.
Canin, who has bee
.
n at ,the
years .
.
In ad_dit1on
~
des1grung
·
"These three elements are the
.
McCann Center every day for
·
·
·

/
tl!e)\kCariri'Cel}ter,
·
'
Canin als
_
o major- forces which lend to the over a year
.
supervising
·
con-
.
By Rosie
Nguyen
athletic departmenf Petro said, .
de
_
sig~5!d Leo Hall, Byrne firial

appearance
9f
the struction said he plans to enjoy
.
. __
.
·"I
_
will
be
-using
the wo~k
_
study
Residence, the boat
.
house, building."
the facilities and take a swim
i!t
Job qualifications for student
·
progr;,un as
.
much
"
as
.
possible."
Champagnat
.
Hall,
·
and
.
Benoit
He says he gets
·
excitement in
the
.
pool as soon as he finds
.
the
-
employment in
_
the
·
McCanri
-
.
G~rry
.
Kelly,
,
director
.
of
.
and Gregory Houses
_
.
·
comparing
.
the
·
actual product time.
Recreation
-
,
Center
_
·
wm
·
be fina
.
ncial aid, said althc;>ugh Petro
·
-
._._. _ _ _
....,;,_...., _ _ _ _ _ _ _
;;....;,_ _ _ _ _
.;,_.;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
...,_. "responsibility
"
·in
.-
handling
.
the
has
·
not met with hilll
_
to. discuss
St
·
d
-
·
·
t
·
t•
·
· ·
•t•
·
equipment and hone
.
sty" says
·:
student employment at the
·
U
e
.
·n r
·
eac
·
,on
·
p
·
o
··
s
·
1 1ve.
RonPetro,athleticdirector.The
.
.
center;''l·hopethl;lre
.
willbean
-
·
.
· .
_
-
·
.
.
. ·
.
·
· .
.
positions open to· students
·
this
even split-
_
bet~een work
<
study
;summer
'
and·
-
next fall are as
and non work study." He said
By Wendy Stark
.
·
gym" said
·
one student
-
while
·
quick to tell students when
·
they
·
meg11ards;
·
sec~rity guards, that in Jari~ry thefiltancial aid
playing tennis.
.
,
.
don't live up to their promises:"
·
equipment room and:secretarial
office, received extra
,
grants .but
Six
.
hundred and seventy
·
five
Another said,
.
"If
was worth
.
One student who worked on the aides.
. -
-
:
· .

.
.
.
c'
.
<
had no jobs. "Now we
·
have more
,
.
.-
·
:
s~uden~, faculty,_administration waiting for when we see how centerduringthesummersaidhe
· ..
Petrosaid,"UpuntilriQw~ere
·
_
money.fo_r
i
~wrimerjobs ~ough
-andtheirguests'firia:Uygottouse
mu_ch_ work went into
~he: con-
wasproudto~inallrseeitopened.
/
.
~ye beeri\!o~ ~~
:
Opl)~rt~ti
-
~
:
-!une.''
/f
<.
· ./
,
·.
:··
_.
. .
..
the new fieldhouse and poQl
at~pe
struct1on and how good 1t turned
'
"I dug the
·
parkipg lot where
.
y
for (~thleilc) :JOb/3
1
but-not mucli
c:,
·
;.
During
'.
the m:onth of April the
·
opening of the James J. McCann out."
you're walking," he said.
__
-
. ·
student
·
interest
;
"
_
He
.
said
.
-
number
~
of students
.
working
in
E.ecreation Center, Sunday, Apr.
Although most students agreed
· Orie senior, dripping wet from
-athletes
usually get
-
the-jobs first.
·
.
the
_
center
:
wilFbe determined
3. Although the
·
wait for the that the long wait was wor-
the pool, said ~e _was going to use
because they hear· about t~e~ said Petro.·"Right_riow
,
'we're just
.
center was long and the opening thwhile, one
·
stud~nt ~agree~.
,
the
·
pool.every
,
mght to
CC
get
h~r
from
.
the C<?aches
_
an~•
,
the
signs
.

·
·
handling
·
.
it day-by
.
da}( dn
,
Sep-
date extended, most students "Sure the
gym
1s ~ce but 1t money's worth.''
.
«rm
-
going
to
are posted~ the ~;area~. ~e-
·
-
tember
:
there won't
-
be
.
any
.
_randomly questioned by The
~s~
't W?rth the "!a1t. The ad- . make up for ~ost W!le," she said.
_
did_
~Y
the fmal},C1al aid. office
IS
problems: e9ncerning
'
.jobs;
::
All

Circle said the facility was worth ministration proIDISed us the "The center 1s so mce it gets me notified
.
of any
·
.
JO~ operu~s.
.
·
ntles
_
and - regulations
·
.
_
will be
·
waiting for.
gym
a long
·
time ago and th~y agg~avated to see it because
~
students
will
rece~ve
_
the published;''
·.
.
.
.
. .
.
_
.
"Marist has impressed me for
.
should have
·
stu~k to th~1r semors only have a few weeks
to
..
muumum
wage of $2.-20 except
.
Applications for
.,
lifeguard
.
the first time with the
·
pool and promise. The administration
is
use
it."
·
for lifeg1,1ards who
will
get':_~50
-
positions
·,·
w1ll
.
be
handled by

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . per h~ur because of
-
the requ1red
.
Larry
Vail.Wagner. Seclirityjobs
.
skill, mvolved.
_
.
. .
.
·.
..
.
.
will be headed by Joe
,
Waters,
SOUTHERN
-
DUTCHESS
·
NEWS
Purv_t3yors of Printing
To
:
The
Circle
,Go
·
::
.
.
Typesetting
and
>
Prfuti11g
Faciliti~s
.
F or
·
Newspapers, Catalogues
.··
_
·
·
-Aiid
·
Other Publications
··
·
.
-

.-
••
.
.
.
.
..
.
·:
..
'
'.,
Pa~ent for
_
studen~ curr~tlr
_
director
.
of security, and
a11
·
other
worlrlng at ~e Center
IS
.
through
>-
positions
:will
be llandled
oi
Petro
the
McCaon
budget,
'
tinder
gie
,
himself;
·
-
·
·
·






















































































































\
I
.
I
,
·
:
.
.
.
.
,
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[
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- - - - - - - - - - -
.,....-:c-----;-
,------:··--
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--
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- - -
- -
APRIL 14, 1977
l'HECIRCLE
How the Center
,
.
.
was
funded
By
Regina
Clarkin
Austin said that statistical college president amt director of
information about fund raising development on a one to one
The
Mccann
Recreation
indicates that 85 percent of all
.
basis.
Center, which
cost
$2.7
million,
pledges are collected. The
·
According to Austin the biggest
was
·
built with money
·
from the
.
development campaign will not problem facing all the divisions
Mccann Foundation, a college
be able to C!)mpute the amount of collecting money was the
fund raising drive and
.
a long
pledges collecte<l until the fall of education of the people being
te~ mortgage.
1980, when a pledge made this fall
-
solicited.
The
Mccann Foundation .is paid.
·
This meant solicitors had to
formed to prQvide money for the
·
He said that there are some big · explain what was happening
improvement of recreational
pledges still to be solicited. "lt:s presently at the coJ.lege and what
facilities
.
in
'the
Poughkeepsie
not an overnight process," said was planned for the future;
area
;
contributed $1,350,000 tothe
Austin. He said "the
-
cultivation
The biggest probleµi with the
PAGE SB
James
J.
Mccann
·
The namesake
_
college fund raising drive.
ofa prospect sometimes involves alumni Austin said, was record
1
$750,000 of
this
pledge was an
-
_
a couple of yea~" of-'York. ~e keeping. He
_
said it was difficult
By David
Ng
papers and New York's late
outright grant
to
the college fund
_
development
_
office worked with
_
_
to solicit pledges
.
from 4500
editions .
.
'
raising
_
drive. The
_
.
reµiaining
-
the McCann F'oundation seven_ alumni
'
when he
"
didn't have
Most
campus
buildings;
After Sunday morning mass at
.
$600,000
·
was
-
donated with
-
the
years before they pledged their extensive
-
addresses
and Champagnat, Donnelly, etc. were Saint Mary's Church, McCann
:
stipulation that Marist match,
gift.
-
-
·
· ·
·
-
.
telephone numbers. An alumni
named for Marist brothers
.
-
would go to the Dutchess Go~d
dollar for dollar, $600,000 with
There are seven divisions of the
·
phone-a-thon was held and in-
The recreation center
is
named and Country Club to play his
money from students, friends etc.
fund raising drive. 'Ibey
_
consist volved six areas, including New
for James J
.
McCanil. He was not . favorite sport, golt
.
_
The entire $600,000 was matched
·
of
_
foundations; businesses, York
City,
Long Island, Boston,
a Marist brother but a shrewd
.-
In
1970, the McCann foundation
said
·
William
-
Austin, alumni
·
corporatiol!S,
.
alumni,
_
trustees, Hartford, Washington
.
D
.
C. and trader and conu!nunity minded initiated plans to b~il~ the 18-hole
director.
-
'
-
-
. -
·
employees, friends of the college the
··
~d-Hudson area. During
·
ciev
·
eloper.
-
course at Spra~ park m the Town
Presently
·
a total o1 $2.1 million
and
.;,-
students. These groups February, after a general
Born in 1881 McCann began
as
of Poughkeepsie.
has
been pledged to the college
combined contributed $700,000 t«;> training session ten alumni a feed and flo:U. merchant on
471
McCann credited his father for
_
development
·
drive
.
-
·
A~in
is
the
__
campaig~
·
said Thomas
-
worked at one
.
location
-
and
Main
_
Street; a business his giving
him
the insight in dealing
hopeful that the goal
_
of
$4.1
·
·
Wade; development director. The solicited pledges.
In
addition to
father, John J .
.
McCann, started
-
with the 1!18rket. When McCann
million will be reached when
,
the
additional $650;000
!,S
_
being paid
_
the
_
phone-a-thon the alumni in l872. Each-day McCarin would, was 21, his !ather sugge~ed to
campaign ends in the
.
falt
by
·
a long term mortgage .a~-
followed up
.
with letter~..
·
:
as
his father did weigh feed,
him
to buy oil stock. He did, and
·
·
According to Austin 38 pe_rcent
-:
cording to Anthony Campilii,
'Ille pledges can be
,
paid back
_
flour and seed to s~ll to farmers became an
_
investor in the coal
ofthe
.
$2.1 million for"the McCann
·
business manager.
during a three year program
.
_
from neighboring
-
areas. · But and. cement businesses as well.
-
Center has already been

paid.
·-
.
Some campaign workers were Four times a year a bill is sent to
Mccann was a stock broker at
As
tune passed, he would spread
,
.
Approxiinately 75 percent will be
responsible for soliciting pledges
·
the pledger.
heart.
_
·
out even farther.·
-
paid :when the McCann Foun-
from eight or ten people. other
·
He dealt in the securities of
In his
late years, McCann
-
.
dation contributes the
.
$600,000.

-
pledges were
.
soll<:i~ed by the
more than 500 different com-
branched out into
__
aircraft
Facilities
.
will
star one s_port,,
·
·
·
:
aid
.
anoiher
-
··
··
paoies all
.
listed with the New manufacturing and airplane
York ~tock exchanges
.
McCann
.
travel. He was one of the largest
had a direct line to Wall Street" stockholders in McDonald-
and another to other parts of the Douglass
and
Northrup
country to check on market
_
Manufacturing Co.
.
.
.
'
/ .
/
.
The floor of the
gym
is made of
By
_
KenHealy
.
.
Chemturf, a resilient materia!
· -
The -fieldhouse half of
-
the poured into place in orderfor itto
James J
;
McCann Recreation harden into orie solid surface .
.
Center will add
.
a ·new: demension
-
This
surface has several ad-
all
.
Marist
_
faculty and students
with an I.D. card.
-
Guests will be
admitted after they sign
.
in and
pay
a
$1.00 entry charge.
·
·
quotations.
_
,
. McC~nn, _one o~ five children,
At
,
one
.
time,
,,
McCann
.
,,
was
.
.
.
liyed
.
lVlth
his.family
=
at
a
.
.
ct1.rr4µl,t
-
....
-
supposed to have subscribed to yellow and green ~run house at
more
than
_
200
financial the
.
corners of Mill and North
publications.
Hamilton Stree~ .
After dinner on a workday,
He was described as a clean
McCann would leave the family's and neat · man. Mccann told
house at Mill and North Hamilton friends he would live to be 100. At
streets.. Poughkeepsie, to go to
_
the time of his death, in 1969, he
the Amrita Club. With him, he
was 89.
would bring copies of the evening
-
to sports at
Marist
.
-
-
-
-
vantages over a traditional gym
Most obviously the new
gym
floor.
It is
more versitile than _ _ _ _
.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~ - - - - - - - - - - - - -.... - - - - . ,
'
will allow basketball games anp wood ana needs less care. 'Ibis
track meets to be
_
scheduled at
·
surface will allow for lacrosse,
home for the first
-
time.
In
the soccer and football teams
·.
to
past home basketball games practice inside· when weathe~
is
-
were played in Falcon Hall at not suitable for outdoor practice.
Dutchess Community
-
·
College.
The floor space will be divided
_
The new
-
-
-
facility is
-
large into three sections
_
to
·
ac-
e'nough to accommodate ~ore commodate three activities at the
than one activity at
a
time, such
·
·
same time.
-
.
·
·
as
basketball
.
and tennis. There
is
The
bleachers
-
will ac-
a four lane 11 lap to
a
niile track commodate over 2",600 spectators
·
that encircles the
·
floor and for
_
when completed; probably within
._
track
a
pole vault and high
jump
.
the next two weeks.
__
.
'
- -
-
pit
_
will
be a
,
dded
,
: ·
-
__
·
The Mccann Center is open to
Goldman: nc,
.
·
.
'
.-
·"'
.
.
.
ph)fs■
ed.
n1ajc,I" .
\
·
By Maureen
.
Tully
.
in physica~
~
.
. education are
:
·
·
-
,
·
.
"severely hmited." "In fact
.
Even though the completion
·
of physical _edu~tion jobs
may'
even
·
the McCann Center wilrallow the be curtailed, sai~ ~ol~n.
.
physical education dep~rtment to
Handball and swiriimin~
-
will be
add
·
new activity courses to the
_
:
two ~ew
course:i
add~d. to the
curriculum, there will not be a physical eduC!ltion cµmculum.
phy
·
sical education major at
.
Goldma~ said

-the
h~ndball
Marist.
,
_
·
·
·
c~ura:e will probably
.
be a
_
co~-
.
According
to
Howard Gold-
bmation of the fundamentals of
man director of the physical both
·
handb~ll, and ra~eth!1ll.
educ~tion department,
"It
would
~her~ will
.
b
_
e begmnmg
be
·
a false premise to talk about
_
a ·
~W1IIlIIUDg .
courses . offered,
~
hysical ·
·
edu~tion
·
major. here.
-:
,
well
~
·
a
:
CQ~
m
,
-adva~~
..
\ve would be
:
competing with top
..
~
a!ld
.
lifesaytng.
-:
·
Ii
ls
lik
Cornell University
,-
Goldman
··
said ev:~ntually
1
-
~ ~ e
·
Sta~
-
University of
-
New
·
~rist
~y
.
offer skin diving
~~
.
:
York
·
at
-
Broclq>ort
'
/'
.
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.'--
·
·
_
.
.
"
·
_
-
~u~
--
di~,-
and
wssib~y
-_
an
_
:,
--
.
.,
:•
H
'dMaristdoesn'thavethe
md
_
oo~
_
course
-
in small
_
crafts
,
·
WeAre
Proud to A
·
nnounce
The
Opening
of
Dutchess County's
Newest
Wines an:d Liquor
Store
_
at
294 Main
_
M3ll
_-
Lowest Discount Prices
·
-
Main
.
Mall
Discoun
·
t Wines
&
Liquors
-
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452~1900
,
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Featuring a complete se~ection offine wines for every taste
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I
i.
PAGE8B
Week
By
Wanda Glenn
Thousands of Vietnam war
veterans who received less than
honorable · discharges. are ap-
pealing to the Government to
have their discharges upgraded
to an honorable status. The
upgrading which was initiated by
President Carter does not include
those with bad conduct and
dishonorable discharges.
·
••
review
John J. Kearµy, former FBI
New York supervisor, was
charged with five felony counts of
conspiracy, . obstruction
of
correspondence and illegal
.;wiretapping;
'Ibis
is.
the first
feldny indictment ever brought
,against an FBI. man.
Measle cases in the first three·
months of this year increased 62
percent over last year's total for
' A Southern Airways DC-9 plane . the same period, according to the
crashed into a Georgia country National
.
Center for Disease
store and burst •into flames, last Control. There were
16,384 cases
Monday, while trying to make an •
in
1977 against 10,075
in
1976.
emergency landing. Sixty of the
.
·
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 14, 1977
85 passengers and crew members •
- · - -
died
in the crash. Eight persons ·
on the ground were also killed.
Students can
play
several
games
at once in.'the fieldhouse section'of tbeMcCann Center
I
-
-
--~
-
--
.
.
-

-
•,
The highest unemployment
rates in the country during
·1976
were recorded
in
New York and
New Jersey, . according to·· the
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics;
New Jersey lead with
10.4 per-
cent and New York was second
with
10.3 percent. They make up
for
15.6 percent of last year's
total unemployment.
Bill Bradley, ·· who had been
with the New York Knicks for 10
years retired from basketball
Sunday after playing
his
last
pro
game against the Detroit Pistons
in Detroit. Bradley, not quite 34,
is
pursuing a political career, and
right now he
is
getting ready for_
the New Jersey Democratic
Congressional
campaign
in the
fall.
.
LACK OF
INTEREST
Continued
r
, According to one woman. coach
unifonns, good · equipment_· and
at a large university (Sports . transportation money. That
is
illustrated
7-29-74) . equality in
what equal opportunity
is
about."
-
sports does not mean - equal
Ms.
Witt sees the question of
spending on a dollar for dollar . discrimination:- at. Marist ; as a.
basis. She feels the men should be
complex one.
If
you
"look
at the
·
allowed to spend whatthey-cari,
figures in- black and ,vhite girls
but the women should not have to
have had• significant!}' less op-
New York-State
is
celebrating continue to sacrifice so the men
portunities.J)
.
. . .
_ ·
its 200 birthday this year. The · can spend. "O~r college .football . She says that-before • a new
Scientists around
-
the country - State's first Constitution was team has a budget of about half a
program can be started, <lthe
..
·
- ~eres
-lots
~of
living
. and:· - ·
loving
ahead ·
· are trying to develop and get formally adopted on April 20,
1777 million dollars. Wha~ in. God's · athle;i(!:departµientwantsJ~ be
approval for
artificial
sweeteners in ·Kingston, which. was one of name. would
.l
do, with. half
·
· a, ,;_convJ11ced-.there.;1s -·suff1c~ent
to saccharin, which the Food and. several short-lived Government millio~ for field hocl!:ey?
I
~on't ·.·. interest;• especially by ·women." ·
.
✓--·-.
_


Drug Administration proposes to
seats used by state leaders as want it and couldn't
use
it ..
If
She says that she· can see the :
c:nJ'L.:.
,.
3
,
L:
.~?
ban. Research is not
likely
to gain
they were pursued by· British _there
is
a half a · million for
situation through the eyes
of
the · .
rr
I.IJ'
C:... , ,
t"
$1.10i.
& •
results because no ·one knows
forces up and down the Hudson · football, there should- be .enough_ athletic department,.and that is, . .
.
\?{
· .
·
. ·
what it is that gives sweet foods
Valley.
·
·
·
so girls_ ca_ n hav_· e lockers ~ather:- "why, budget t.h. e money, when
.
·
.
·,- ..
ita. · · . .
·•·i ·
their flavor.
than nails on the wall, a tramer
to
they don't show up?"
.
.
Am·; r·•a· n
'
·,.
attend to
injured· . ankles,
·
·.
e
. •
·
·-,
Cancer Society
.
.
,, . 9
MARINE M·IDLAND BANK
ANNOUNCES
GOOD DEAL BANKING
A FREE Checking Account is yours, if you . use
any other banking service, such as,, Master
Charge; Loans or have a Savings Account-More
information?. - - ·p1ease call or stop in. at
-our.
more than
·300
branches throughout the_ State.
Marine Midland
Bank,
M
,
ember FD.IC ·
Memoor FDIC.
.
..
.
.
.
'
Pr
-
i nt·i ng
·FOR
THE
J~B
:iOL
NE[DEC'.
1·fs~EPCAY
,.
.. ·. 6 RAYMOND
'.AVENUE·.
.
>· ...
pqt:JGHKEEPSIE,· .NEW YORK 12603:
-· . . -.
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(914) ~73-9511
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APRIL 14, 1977
-steel ~uprights being planted during th~
fall
of 1975 •
. · -·
REALITY Continued
Director Ron Petro and former Development Office began in 1974
crew coach Bill __ Austin (now and increased in intensity and
.
. . Alumni .Director), began map- ~ope after the ground-bl'.~ing
.
. · · · ping · out \concr.ete . plarui con- in. the. spring of 1975. 'Ibe big
. . cerning
floor ·
space and .
em-
boost, of course, was the
$1.25
~
·••
~.rked
OJ)
trips to several Nor- million• package deal from the
· . _Jheasterri schools to check out McCann foundation aannounced
·
·and discuss their new. facilities. in December of 1975. President
As.Goldmailrioted, ''We.observed Foi· .. w:as :instrumental in the
the· operation and functioning of: fundraisirig effort · and . his per-
. these facilities::--,· We wanted to sonal associations were a major
•weigh'the good against ·the bad factor in oQtaining the grant from
<
·
·and
.
coip.e up · with a
i
pl~n thaf .• the
1\1:cCann
group.
·
:
·would ~. best for
our_.
college." -
Once construction was un-
. -
.With the accwnulation of ideas derway; decisions ·still had to
be
•. aricl/
!)ther data :Jrieetings •··were made, involving everything from
. . held with fow\ _or. five gi:oups the floor surface to the lockers .
. · intere$ted. in./doing .· thtf
·
con- .. Petro· and . Goldman.· tioth
ex-
struction. The college: called . on ' pressed their satisfaction that the
PaulCanin, a'local 11rchitect.who. Athletic Department was givena .
.. · : has designed,other structures at .'major: role in• theserdecisions.
. --. 'Mai:ist.- Canili offered what . Gol<hrian explained,' "President
. Go~mp.an belieyed
}VBS
'.'the· best F'oy still had to give the final
building at.the· lowest cost/!
-
approval- to all our recom-
. Jn 19
_
73
a study ~s undertaken . mendations
but . at · least
by. President Foy, .Goldman, everything we asked for :
·
was
Petro, _and Brother
Nilus
,Don-
given
a
fairhearing."
·
. ·
nelly,.
·
Marist -construction
·
So,
thanks.to the massive fund
- supe1;"iSor; to choose the best . drives· and untiring efforts of
· location . for, the . eomplex.
'
'Ibe . several individuals, the building
THE CIRCLE
PAGE9B
THE TOWN
HAT DREADED
SUNDOWN
A TRUE STORY
ARLINGTON
SPORTING
GOODS
INC .
...... BEii .DIIISON
''QUALITY SPORTING
GOODS
FOR ALL SPORTS''
SPEEDO SWIMWEAR
306 MAIN
·
M-ALL
9·14~452-3066
794 MAIN STREET
9·14~471"-3055
-"MOOSE" KARN
&
CLIF ONG
CO-OWNERS
_present site was: chosen. for· its we will dedicate Sunday. is
-.u!i,ique combination of traffic-· ·beautiful,. versatile, and, above
'--------------------------------➔
easing isolation and proximity
to
allfirst-class.-Itis also the dream
the domiitories. . .
,~ ·
• ·
9f one
man
that
came true for all
Fw:i,d driv_es
:through the of
us ..
ACE.LIQUOR
STORE
.
112 Washington St.
Poughkeepsie, N.Y .
452-2455·
·
.
·'Ole roof
is
constructed
during the
winter
of
1975-78.
..
.
.
'
.
.
'
Free. D~livery -
Free Parking
'~Nearest To Campus'·'
--- Established 1940
....











































































































1- •
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PAGE IOB
THE CIRCLE
Jocks get advantages
By
Maureen
Tully
aid mµst be made by the applying priorities. Unfortunat.ely sports
student or
.
the student's high sometimes
do
· override
A student who
has
applied for
school
.
"
·
-academics." He said the coaches
admission to Marist and happens
Recruiting is done individually
,
stress academics and keep
·
tabs-
·
to
be
an
athl~
_
e has an advantage
_
by each coach.
It
is up to them to
on the academic progres~ of each
over other students
.
·
find students who might enhance athlete.
"We have tried to make Marist
their particular
teams.
According to Mrs. Witt,
a place where athletics is im-
According to Dr
.
Howard students fill out a form for each
portant, and by accepting
·
an Goldman, director of physical class they take and the coaches
athlete over another student they
education, "No money can be check on
the
students.
will offer a lot more
·
to the
·
offered on an athletic
_
con-
"ll
they need help we go to the
school/' says Ronald Petro,
tingency. Any financial aid given · students and give
·
them help.''
athletic director.
·
to student athletes is based on
She said the athletic depart-
APRIL 14~ 1977
Hig·h On Spo_rts
·
By Thomas .lUcTernan
C.U
.B.
SOFT~~LL BEGINS TODAY
-
Eight teams have
·
entered the C.U.B. men's softball
league which begins action this afternoon. Due to lack of
entries, the women's division has been suspended until ad-
_
ditional teams apply.
.
·
A copy
.
of the schedul~has been mailed io all captains.
Posters
will
be placed outsid
_
e the cafeteria for any changes
as a result of rainouts, etc:
·
·
MCGRAW NAMED ATHLETE-OF WEEK
.
·
John McGraw, a senior from Island Trees, N.Y., has
·
been named
_
Marist College Athlete of the Week fo:r the
week ending April
9.
· -
·
'·.
.
·
.
McGraw, a member of the men's
.
tennis team, had a
.
·
hand in ~oth of Marist's pomts
,
d.UJing
_
its 7~2 loSl:I io'Ne'w
Haven last Wednesday. Mc
.
Graw'
·
won the number one
.
singles mate~ in straight
sets
and
.
then led his
_
top-ranked
doubles
team
to
a
c6meback victory in straight
sets.
·
.
.
.
.INTRAMURAL ROUNDUP
"

·
'
The. admission standards are their
Parent
Confidential ment
·
works with students about
not lowered for athletes, he said.
Stat.ement
(PCS)
and up to the problems instead of teachers.
A student is accepted on
Director of Admissions David Dealing with teachers
.
might
academic performance as first
Flynn.
.
.
~ply manipulation on our
part,
.
priority
. .
·
.
·
_
.
Flynn said, "Out of an $80,000
.
and
·
that is unethical;- she said
/
.
.
C ~ softball and m~n
;
s
_
floor hockey both got
Ull~
But if.there is a choice between
·
·
budget of Matist Grant funds for
Petro says,
'
.
'It
is good
policy
to
<lerway on Tuesday. Seven
_
teanis are e~red
in
softball
two students with similar · the 1976-77 academic
·
year, be concerned about studen
'
t
.
'
with the playoffs sc::heduled to conclude April 27
;
In
floor
academic standings, and one
·
$16,000 or
20
percent of the budget
c
progress and ask a bout at-
.
hockey,_ the tell teams ha
_
ve been split into two divisions
happens to
be
an
athlete, the was
given
to
studentse teildance and class work;
.
There
athlete
.
has
an advantage, he
who are athletes." He
said
any
.
is no manipulation involved."
·
with the top two in each diyision qualifyii;ig for the 1;>layoffs.
_
·
.
. said.
.
.
aid given
is
not contingent upon
·
Goldman said student athletes
·
According to Mrs. Eileen
Witt,
playing
in
a part!c~r sport, ~d are not. _given any special
NOTES FROM THE SPORTS DESK:
·
women's basketball and tennis
that any reduction
m
followmg treatmenhn respect to academic
·
·
·
--
·
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
coach, "A student who can give a
yea~s
!~
based
on
need and
_
standing. <'Athletes are not being
Marist'~
-
two-mile relay of- Kei
_
th Millspaugh, Ste;e
good performance to draw at-
availability of funds. .
.
tr.eeat.ed speciallr,
0
because
:
they
Deleskiewicz, Dennis O'Doherty and Dave Schools ran an
tention to the school positively,
Forastudentto5t3:ym_asport, haveto~~euJ(any
:
workmissed
.
·
.
8
_
:
__
34
in the C.W
_
; P_ ost R
_
elays Saturd
_
.
ay
·
.
-_
M
.
i
_
l
.
lsha
'
ugh
.
·
h
·
a
·
d
.
not necessarily athletically, but he or she must mamtam a
1.7
and sometunes · have to work
.
~
in any

way, will give the school
grade point index as a freshmafl harder
·
than a non-athlete
;
"
-
·
.
the beSt 880 time with
·_
2 :0 I ... Athletic Director Ron Petro
good public relations."
and a below
C
average of a
1.85
-
·
Caldwell said "There is
.
more
informed me that
-
the handball courts in the McCanri
·
Cen-
There are about 200 athletes at for
.
sophomores, juniors and1 pressure on crew team members
ter wiHopen on Sunday night at 7
'
p,m
.
-
Sigrt
~
ups begin at 6
Marist and 40 are women. Petro seniors.
·
·
-
partic$rly atthe end of the
·
year
p;m. ...
·
_
·
.
said athletics have expanded
.
''Fre~en
_
a_re
_
given more with
0
the
·
oad
Vail
Regatta. They
·
Football director -s
·
teve VanBuren's
>
fundraising efforts
significantly and he sees Marist
·
.
leeway
_
with their mdex because
-
have to work twice ·
as
hard
.
h
·
·
d
· ·
·
-
·
·
·
-
-
·
·
as a good place to participate in we take. into consideration the Besides, outof 30 students,
I
have
,
·
.
.
a".e
.
n~a e ~ootball seem l~e an a
,
II year round
s
pof1;
;
Are
·
.
sports
.
But the outlook on
difficult adjustment they have to only
.
lost · two because of
:

.
sp!i
_
llg_:_practices next?
· ·
.
·
.
·
,

·
.
.
.
:
athletics
.
at
.
Marist seems
.
to be make in
·
coming to
.
college," academic probation."
·
.
.
.
.,
,.

·
slanted.
.,
.
;
Petro said.
'
Petro
:
said
'
aihletics
~
are'
·
im
~
·
;,_
0
-
THISlWEEKJN
_
·
.
'.
M~IlISTSPO,RT~
:
;(MApril
.
,
14
~
20)
~
·
,,
.
l,
,
The athletic department has a
When asked
if
athletes
.
at portant
'
for education.
"I
think
system of recruiting, but does not
Marist are m~re concerned with
..
athletes are special people." .
·
offer athletic scholarships, said sports than with school Goldman
"How much time do other
Gary Caldwell, head crew coach.
said, "People who are more students spend
·
on their ac
--
·
"We are governed by the
·
concerned with sports than with tivities?"
··
·
-
· -
.
.
,
.
National Collegiate Athletic their academics
.
don't last
four
Look at society, sports are very
·
Association
(NCAA)
eio·
·
in years."
important, it's the American
recruiting, which states that any
.
However, Petro said,
''It
way
.
People do well and others
contact made regarding financial
.
depends on each individual's notice
,
he said
.
Acidemy Liquor Store
under new
_
·
management
\
-
.
,
Located on
.
the
main mall
L()westPric~s
Allowed
by
.
Law
·
\
-
.
~
Tel .
.
452-41
_
10
·
.
Thursday, Apn.l
1
~
4
-'
Lacros~~:
-
atAnny
B~
4
p.m.

. · .·
·. ·

.
Friday, April 15
~ Tennis:
.
Women - at Siena/ Me~
·
:
at
Bard
-
·
·
··
· ·
·
.
·
·
·
·
Saturday, April 16-Crew: Ithaca -.Qome-
9
a;m.
Tennis: Dowling - home
:
.1
p;m.
.
_.
Lacrosse: atF.D.U.
.
Track:
~t
Westfield State
.
·
·
.
·
.
Tuesday, April
19
-Tennis:
-
Nyack - home -
3
p.m.
Lacrosse: Maritime - at Leonidoff Field - 3: 30 p.m.
Golf: atQuinnipiac
.-
'
·
.
·
.
.
Wedn~day, April 20 -Tennis: Kings (Men and Women) -
home-2 p.m.
~OTICE: Due to ~tting and cleaning_ up for Pare~t's
Weekend, thefieldhouse
.
section of the McCann Center
.
will
b
_
e closed
:
on}'riday,
.
Saturday and Sunday. The pe>ol and
·
·
otherfacil
_
~ties, however, willhe open.
.
·
···
.
.
Stickmen off to
.
.
·.
.
.
.
.
.
Slow
start
By
Pat Larkin


and
Jim
Blrdas
·
The Red
Foxes
opened
its
home ·
schedule in a
,
qriving rainstorm
against York. Behnke called it "a
The Marist lacrosse team very easy game
.
" The Red Foxes
opened its·
·
season
.
by
dropping jumped off to
.
a quick lead
as
two of
.
their
·
first three games. Kevin McGhee and
.
Greg
~
Sfent
They dropped their opener at both scored
·
goals
·
in the
..
first
28
Montclair State
OJ\
March 30 (12-
seconds. After the
.
first quarter
· 4).
'They
.
bounced back against the game was just about over (5-
'
·
·
:
York (13-2)
.
in their
_
first home 0) and by halftime the crowd of .
game of the season on April 2,but approximately
20
people had left.

last Wednesday they suffered Stentfinished
_
the game with four
their
·
second loss of the season goals and an assist, while
.
(15-8)
at Kean
.
State. The Red McGpee added thr~ goals ..
·
Foxes thus took a J-2 record into
·
. ·
,
The team then traveled to Kean
yesterday's home game against State with three
.
starters out.
-
CCNY.
.
·
'-
··
Even
_
though the
·
Red
.
·
:
_
Foxes
In the opener against Montclair played without

the

services

of
State
_
the R~ Foxes stayed_close
Gary
-
Diesal, Jim
:
·
Titone
·
.
.
and
through the
first
half,
trailing
6-3.
Stent Behrike said if\ivasri't
ihe
.. -.
-
~owever, the ~cond half
~s
a reaso'n whythey·lost. He pointed ·
different story as
·
.
the Indians
·
,
o_ut ~ t
·
Marist
spent too
.
much
,
pullecfaway.-
·
-
·
.
·
·
.
ti.me
m
the penalty box and
"we
·
CQ~ch
Je,ff Behnk,~ said,' "we
.
had
·
a
_
tough time
.
getting
our
:
··
just,,,weren
t
~eady.
~e
.
added
offense

,
going
.
''.
.
.
,
.
.
,
that Montclair
wa:1
.ID
much Foxes
travela,g°
;
·
·
s
.tiirda
-:
t'
.
.
.
·
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st~tterckw
·•
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8nd
teted
"sloppy
.
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r
APRIL 14, 1977
fflECIRCLE
Lites
-
clobbered
by
Princeton,
.
.
.
-
/
.
come from· behind
for
'
second
·
Six ho~ after the varsity
.
and a length and a
half
lead
-
in the line creditabiy well, rowing a
jun~or varsity :heavyweights
.
·.
first 1000 meters. Columbia also little high and. rushed," com-
mixed
..
success against
.
the moved out to lead Marist by a mented Marist head crew coach
.
University
.
of Massachusetts
.
ori
length, but the Red Fox
.
crew Gary Caldwell.
·
"Princeton was
the Hudson Saturday, the Marist slowly began to battle back.
·
clearly ·a stronger lightweight
lightweight· eight found
.
them-
,,
After
taking
a "power 20" at
.
crew, but our boat $owed per-
selves in a battle
·
in Princeton the half, the lightweights steadily severance and unwillingness
to
which matched Tigers, Lions and closed the gap between them- give
-
up.)tCaldwell also said poor
Foxes.
selves and Columbia,
,
finally steering on the part of coxswain

·
The lightweight crew was
"
passing the Lions with 250 meters Larry Striegel probably added
defeated bf thl;! Tigers of Prin-
left in the race. Princeton con- four to five seconds to the crew's
ceton, but managed to
_
stage a
_
tinuing
.to
build a lead over both time.
· ·
·
comeback and gain second place
·
Marist and Columbia
finishing
The members
·of
.
the boat in-
aMad of
·
the Lions of Columbia. the
·
race
·
three· lenghts
·
ahead of clude stroke Jeff
·
DeCarlo, Art
'Marist started the. race even the Marist crew,
winning
by nine Curran, Jim Palatucci, Dave
·
.
with Columbia,.and ,the Tigers,
:
seconds. in
,6:38.:
Marist- got Koper; Pat Brown,
.
Jim Koob,
butfellbehind by the end of the second
·
in•• ~:47 arid
·
Columbia Jack Boyle, bowman Dan
first 40 strokes.
,
·
finished a
.
length behind
·
the

Gualiteri _arid Striegel as
_
cox.
Princeton immediately took
.
Foxes at 6:50.
.
.
control of the race, moving out
to
·
"Th.e lightweights got
.
off
.
the
Netters
-
ope~ season_
on
losing note
.
By
RalphCpove
"Even though we
·
1ost to New
Haven,
I
feel we have
a
strong
·
The weather report for the
.
team." Her assumption was
tennis team's season opener tested again on Tuesday when the
against New
·
Haven last Wed-
team played at Quinnipiac .
.
nesday said
·
that it would be
.
John McGraw heads the list of
-
·
sunny and pleasant, tern-
·
the
.
Six
starting singles' men,
peratures
·
ranging from
45-55
followed
-
by Jay Dedrick, John
degrees. But that afternoon, it
.
Gavigan, Fred Kolthay, Jay
appeared more
·
like Mother Roberts, and Anthony Johnson,
.
Nature was hopping mad as the the Ione freshman of
.
the group.
conditions rocked back and foi:f;h
.
On the women's side, however,
from sunny and comfortable to only three positions are.
set
.
The
cold and driving sriow,
·
until top prospect is in the person of
finally the
.
coldness won out.
.
sophomore Nancy Sheenan,
Well,
so
much for the opener,

followed by SuzaMe· Gallucci,
right? Wrong. ''The secretary and
Martha
Trabulshi.
After
tbat
called that morning
to
find
out
:
it's a tossup
~
to
.
who the next
·
what the weather woilld be like,"
.
three will be, although freshman
·
explained
·
rookie coach
.
Eil®n

Rose Viktoro seems
to
be getting·
Witt,
.
"and they forecasted it
··
top consideration for the number
would
,
be sunny •
.
So,
-
that af-

·
four spot.
.
ternoon, when it · went crazy
The women's squad was a
outside, we. tried to postpone the
~
healthy 5-2-last year, and coach
match; but they (New Haven)
.
Eileen Witt thinks.that a repeat
had already left.
So
since they perfcirmance·is very likely, and
·
·
came, and
L
wasn't here, they she expressed this liy saying,
decided to play the match "We did quite well last year, so
·
anyway."
.
rm certainly expecting them tQ
.
The decision didn't tum out
too
keep it up. Anyone on
this
team is
·
.
well for Marist, as they con-
·
good enough
to
·
go from a nine
sequeritly dropped ~he home spot
to
a four
oi
five, e51?ecially
.
open_er in the harsfi
·
w~ther 7-2,
.
also for
·
Ute fact that
wigt
..
o~r
to
·
New Haven:
. ·

.
schedule,-a few of the top six will
Senior John McGraw sta
·
rted
..
not be able
-
to play on certain
Marist off on the right foot as he
.
dates."
,
.
PAGE 118
,
Heavies defeated;
J.V.
•s
kick Mass .
In
their first races of
the
season
Saturday, Marist heavyw~ight
crews
saw success or failure in
all shades of the competitive
spectrum.
·
·
In
a home dual meet the Red
Fox varsity crew lost by a boat
length to the University. of
Massachusetts. But, the junior
· varsity gained
.
·
a measure of
revenge by coming from behind
to defeat the Minutemen jayvees.
However, U-Mass also made it
two out of three by winning the
freshman race.
In the first half of the varsity
race, U-Mass rowed well at the
start and opened a full length on
the Foxes. Although Marist tried

to make a move during the
second 1000 meters the distance
proved to be too much for them. ·
U-Mass thus avenged last year's
defeat while completing the 2,000
meter race in
5:34.6,
\Vith Marist
coming in three seconds later.
·•
"I think we got out and were a
little shaky," said Marist head
crew coach Gary
'
Caldwell. "Our
body movement and
.
timing were
bad.~' He explained that from
what he could see
.
from shore,
"the hand motion of the crew
indicated that the settle wasn't
the way it should have been. They
tried to make a move but didn't
maintain it," he said.
Ironically, five
·
of
.
tlie Marist
rowers in the b!)at were part of
the crew which
.
had beaten U-
"power 20" and for the next score
of strokes the eight applied
enough pressure to pass the crew
from
U-Mass.
From there they increased
their lead and finished a length
ahead of U-Mass in
6:07,
three
seconds in front of the visiting
crew.
"The J.V. was a little hyper at
the line and lost ground. But at
the 500 people started to think and
·
at the
l,000
they destroyed U-
Mass' confidence and took
control of the race. People pulled
together
as
well as they have all
spring," said Caldwell.
The winning boat
is
dominated
by sophomores, with only stroke
Tony Lynch (junior), and cox
Jerry Mayerhofer (a freshman)
being the outsiders. The sophs in
the boat from seven seat to bow
are: Ed Finger, Bob Keller,
Walter Matuszak, Bob Missert,
Frank Hildenbrand, Joe Ford
and Kevin -Murphy.
Iri
the freshman race, Marist
got off to
a
good start and led the
·
U-Mass crew for the
·
first three-
fourths of the race. But at the
thousand, the U-Mass eight put
on the pressure and passed
Marist. At the end of the 2000
meter race u~Ma:ss was up by two
and a half boatlengths, and won
in
5:26.
The Marist crew finished
eight seconds later.
·
Freshman
coach
Joe
. Mass on their home course last
year. 'ijle members of.the crew
are:
·
stroke Greg Tracy, Pat
O~Rourke, Chip Riordan, Bo
Mason,
·
George Schafer, Tim
Clifford, Butch Josephs, Bill
Kellegher, and
·
coxswain Mike
Davis .
Eckleman said he
was
pleased
with his crew.
"They
rowed
exceptionally
wel1,"
he said.
"Only one of the guys in the boat
.
has any experience and the crew
rowed well for most of the race
until they were challenged."
.
The members
of
.the frosh
squad are
:
stroke, Joe Whitely,
·
. Ralph 'Biscardi,
·
Dave Fein, Pete
Lamb, Ralph Desederio, Bill
Demick;
Wayne
Schmidt,
In the junior varsity race,
bowman Mike Laima, and
.
Marist again got off to a poor
coxswain Mike Bartscherer.
start, trailing by half · a length
.
The Marist boats will face
during the first 1000 meters. But

Ithaca College Saturday morning
·at
that point Marist coxswain
on the Huqson.
Jay-Ve,es turnout
Jerry Mayerhofer called a
- - - -
captured the first singles match,'
Returning to the
·
men, Witt
6-4,
6.:3 •.
However~ no· one
,
e,-se
continued,"This is alsq_
,
true for
could follow

his performance, the men's team. Because of the
Marlst junior.varsity coxswain Jerry Mayerhofer gets a traditional dunking after
his
boat defeated
.
!
and
Marist
didn't
win
another extended schedule for them,
·
theJayVeesfromtheUnlversltyofMassacbusetts.(PhotobyJamesP.Deckner.)
·
match until the finale in
the
som~ players can't make all the
·
·
·
doubles. It
took
John McGraw to matches.''lbus
I
won't be able to
in
the
double's grou~,
saying
in their final year
in
the con.:
·
team
with Jay Dedrick
as
Marisf
·
decide
_.:
sometimes on who's
that
th~ pairings will also·
be
ference. 'lbe Red Foxes
.
last year
.

salvaged. the
.
last
match
otthe
·
startmg
:
until the
,day
of
the. determmed_ on the
day
of the
·
wer~
~
overall and 4-2
in
the
: ''
day;
.
6-1,
o-6,
·
6-4;
St~essing thc
>
~tch."
·
.
.
. ·
..
·
.
.
~~-
.
.
.
CACC, losing
to
Concordia
(3-1)
· -•
~tiler,
~
and Jhe lack of outdoor
· ·.
/
Coach
·
Witt.; also
·
related the
·
. While the women are P!aymg
arid
lwnapo
(5-4).
·
.
.
:
practice
as
major reasons for the
.
·
problem of the extended schedule md~pendEmt, ~e men
will
.
be
·
Tomorrow the women
open
:
loss} coach
Yfitt
continued,
,
.
as
_
the?~ of the undecl.deness
-
:
hop111g
to regam
.
their CACC t1t~e
their season at Siena. while the
.
'
<
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-.-
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:-
.
·
·
<,
·
:
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·,
.

,
,
.
..
-
.
,
·
. .
.
.
.
_
.
men visit
·Bard.
The men
will
then begin a
·
series of home
conference
matches
.
with
Dowling Saturday (1 p.m.),
Nyack on Tuesday
(3
p.m.). and
Kings
on
Wednesday
(2
p.m.).


























































































































































































































































































































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PAGE 12B
:..:.-
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·
The Mi4
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_
is the Hudson Val
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HQusing both
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Mair Han
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Are11a/tpe Civic Cer:iter .fs
'
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mo$t
veI'.Siltile
·
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·
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f.~c.fliti~s
.
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'
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Coast_.
·
Coricerts,stage
a
_
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.-
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tr~de
.
sh<>vv~;
a~en~
events,

exh1b~ts,
1¢~
sports
ari4
.
·
-:,
·
· ·
. ·
shows;
_
conventions
~
banquets arid much Illore
are
..
. _ .
·
·
p~~jblf

:
this
J
leautiful,
,
nevr f~cility.
Maii'
:
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~
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·
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hasa
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maxh:rium
:
seati11gcapacityof ovet
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3,000~d
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air
·
exliibitioh ~rea
:
of
21>,000
sqiiare feet
/
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'
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·
·
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Arena c
_
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t
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.
with an
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·
by
200'foot
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·
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surface and
.
from
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to
3,000
se~t capac~tY
-
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The staff atthe
'
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anx-

.
foqs
_
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w~itiitgto
help)
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<>u \vit}lyQur
;
ne~
event8nd
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help

y_ou
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;
how exc,itin~
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New
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York''caribe
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To make arrangements to
book
the
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Civic
:
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>r
-
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your
;
nexf eve11t
:
call
.
Ne:<f y(
'
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Bennett', Executivi
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Director at
454-5800
:' ·
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APRIL 14, 1977
_
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·
Civic
Center
·
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.
.
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2~5
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LEGEND
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18.18.se.1
18.18.se.2
18.18.se.3
18.18.se.4
18.18.se.5
18.18.se.6
18.18.se.7
18.18.se.8
18.18.se.9
18.18.se.10
18.18.se.11
18.18.se.12
18.18.se.13
18.18.se.14
18.18.se.15
18.18.se.16
18.18.se.17
18.18.se.18
18.18.se.19
18.18.se.20
18.18.se.21
18.18.se.22
18.18.se.23
18.18.se.24
18.18.se.25
18.18.se.26
18.18.se.27
18.18.se.28