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The Circle, April 27, 1977.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 18 No. 20 - April 27, 1977

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--~-----~--------.;.. ________ .;. _ _;_~ ... ...;--~--.;.;.. ___ ;_~------------..;.------
'1-
Volume 18, Number 20
·
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MAR_IST COLLEGE; POUGHKEEPSIE NEW YORK 12601
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Kelly"l1t!w-Dean

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April 27,
_
1977
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:(-~
I
P~GE2
,.

THE CIRCLE
APRIL 28, 1977
/
Marist
goes Divi$i0n
II
By
Maureen
Tully
offering scholarships we can put for men, and for women
·
by the
.
,
-
.
a good team ori the floor. 'Ibis will Association for Intercollegiate
.
_
Incoming
_
freshmen who will attract spectators and then we Athletics for Women {AIAW),
,
play--on the
·
men's and
-
women's
.
can count on the gate receipts to which means
-
that Marist will
.
~.
bas~etball . ~earns c
·
an. now
·
help pay the operating costs of have to follow the rules of each
receive athletic scholarships.
the center."
·
association
:
- in
.
offering the
·
~
Now that
Marist
is
offering
The operation expenses for the scholarships.' Petro
.-
said the
·
athletic scholarships, it will have recreation center are $215,000
·
a scholarships are . contingent on
.
to change frc:>m
·
a· Division ill
.
year
.
Seventy thousand dollars
is
.
playing the spo~, w~ch means
~
:
school
to
a
Division
n
school in already in the budget from

this
·
>
a studen~ ~ops pla~g. the
_
sport
·
athletics
:
tinder the National year that
will
carry over to next
.
then the scholarship
1
s
.
discon-
.
.
Collegiate
·
·
Athletic Association year, so the needed income f~r tinued. .
. .
.
.
.
(NC~) by 1979.
\
_
the center
.is
$145,000.
':[his
will
He Sald Manst
~
!1rst asking
.,•
This
'_:-
means that in 1979
if
conie from gate receipts
.
and each st
_
udent eligible
·
for
.
a
_
Mar;ist
JS
.
stj.11

a
·
Divisiop III rentals of the pool and fieldhouse,
..
~hol
_
arhip to a~p_ly for !ederal
_
·
school,
.
no athletic scholarships said Petro
.
.
aid
-
like The Twtion Assista~c~
0
ca
ri"
be offere<I. All financial aid
He said basketball was

the Program
_
.
(TAP)~
H
they r~eive
Benoit House, which presently houses Dutchess students,
is
to
be
closed next year'.
.
. '
would
be
based solely
·
ori
·
the
·
logical sport to start with because money fro~ this, it
.-
~
go
Parent Confidential Statement it has the capacity
to
produce towards
.
the scholar~hip and
· ·
ff
.
.
-
.
:
(PCS), and need.
a
revenue, and unlike other spoi:ts,
.
M~rist will ~y the, differen~e.
Be
· ..
.
·
n
·
o
·
,·t
.
0
·
us·
e
·
,C '
According
:
to Ronald Petro, it only has ten players which 'Ibis way Marist wont b
_
e putting
.
·
.
-
.
.
<
i
athletic direcotr, '"l'he reason we would
·
lessen the amount.' of- out as much money s~d Petr
_
o.
.
·
•.
~
are only offering scholarships
to
scholarships thahyould be given.
Petro a~d~ that offermg th~e
·
.
·
. .
-
r
.
:
men'sandwomeri'sbasketballis He added sports like soccer and scholar5.hips
,,
1.5 goocl for Marist
-
to
·
,•
.
be
--
c

10
·
··
_
sed
·
_
because it is·•ari ,income producing cross country have too m~ny because
-.
we
,
will ~et
~
gt?Od team
sport
:
Wiilithe completion· of the menbers
·
to offer ~holarships;
.
and the commumty is ripe for a
'-
.
McCann Center
-
we now have a
The
. scholarships
are good basketball team.
-
.
. -

home
'
court
for our"team, and by specifically ruled by the NCAA
.
.
.
By Ken Healy
_
·
::soifri:s:~~~~~~e!
_
·
·
.·:-
·
·
11Jaccul'aCy charged
~rif
0
t:~i~~!$
E!t~~ri7~£.;
-
. -
.

· -
·
·
·
_
Housing
·
Director
.
Peter Amato campus reach full ca~city.
·
·
·
·
-
·
;, •
. ,
,,
.
·
St k
''I'
·
said that right n<>w there are not
There were some stuaents "'.ho
A
letter whicli was circulated
.
down to 600
_
or 700 students
.
.
didn t say, said Ms. ar ·
.
~
·
enough students who want
to
live had signed up
.
.
to live in Benoit

1
·
around campus
_
last 'Thursday
in
the copi
_
es of the letter which annoyed that Belanger
-
didn t
in
·
Benoit next year
fo
make it
.
and
.
now they are without the
,
after ~he Circle wa~ published we~e addressed to Ms. Stark~ the h
_
ave th:
·
co~on courtesy to worthwhile to operate the
-
rooms of their choice. Amato said
-
has stUTed a small coptroversy Editors of_ the C~cle, and ~he confront . me first. He would have residence. "The reason is ba- _ everything will be done to ac-
between a Circle reporter. and a col~ege c~mmu~uty, Belanger been we!come to see ;11¼Y notes

sically a financial one", said,..
.
comodate these students .
.
:
.
faculty
-
~emeber.
.
demed ~avmg said the money f~r
~
from whic~ I quoted
him
rather Amato.
In
closing Benoit, Marist
·
George Connally, a student who
The letter, writte!l by Brother
_
the proiE;Ct wool~ come:from
.
his than se~
-
~
a letter to the will save money
_
on utilities as signed up to live in Benoit, said he
Joseph Belanger, director of the ~la~
.
ne alsosa1dhe ~~not ~Y c~ll~ge
.
fa~µ~ty
. a~d
.
·
-a?-
well as residence personnel.
could not get his old room pack
~arlst
:
Abt(!~~
__
Program, says
_
Marist accepts !ny
_
mcommg mim~ra
_
tion msmuating tjiat Id
_
Earlier this year it
-._
was
_
and would ~ave been _without the
Cll'cle reporter
.
Wendy Stark student who pays.
·

been im;o~petent. Gr8:nted, tbe propos
·
ed that Benoit House room he wanted if another
inaccurately covered a speech in
·
• 'I nev~r made such_ a Sund~y night meetmg. was
.
become a residence for, those
·
student hadn't stepped aside.
which Belanger made s_ev~ral statement and never wo~d~ smce emotional,
.:
but Br· Belanger
-
students who had a 2.5 index and
.
Amato said that
if
the n_umber
·
statements aboutthe
0
admissions
.
I k11:ow :perfect~y t~,t it is not
.
should have_}hought before he wished to live
iJi
.
a different en.: of students wishing to live on
policies
:
of r.1:arist, and the future true,'' said
_
B
.
el~nger~the l~tt~r. spoke;» he said.
.
·
.
.
·
.
.
vfronnieilt
.
This idea was not met campus
.
went
.
up theii
--
those
of the college
.
·
He
_
als? d~,ru~ the
.
pr
_
edicbon
·
~en told
.
about
_
the pet
_
ition with
.
much
.
response
.
Another students who wished
.
to liv
_
e in
~
-
T~e story
~
-
was about a that ¥~rist
.
~~ be down
:
.
to 600
·
.
with ~e
_
·_
5o
_
signatures, Bel~nger
.
laiLwasto ma~e Benoit a dor-
_
Benoit wotild get first priority.
proposal to convert
.
two floors of to 700 students
m
~ee year~.
1!1
reaffumed ~hat he ~ote m_ t~e
-
~tory for alternate resident
·
· · ·
·
· .
·
·
. ·
:
, ·
Champa gnat Hall' into
a
·.
·
the letter he explamed tha
_
t "it
lS
letter;
/
~My side_ of
_
the story is m
· .
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
··
·
tiuma:hlties house and dialogue

·
a
_
possibility by the early 1980's, the
.
letter,'.' sai<l
::
Belanger'.·
:
''I
.
.
\_:;:,
c~~ter
;
Belangef

ha.d
:
~olten ~
;_
:'
and
'
not only i?.r
.
Ma¥
but f?r
all
:t'
wrote
~
~
V-
'?ecau~
~
I-·
~nted ';_the
.
.,
:
.
front
:
of
.
a
,
gro_yp
,
of. stude11~ m
-
other small private liberal
arts
,
c~
_
lleg~
:;
f0:':11111!llll~
:
t1:>
,.
know
dffi,~
~
-
<
·
support
,
of the proJec
h
Sunday
_:
,
colleges.»
· •
,., .
·
.
'.
,
-
-
truth .
.
I
:
:was
·
~1squ~te. •
.
·
night April
17.
, ..
··
·
·
.

·
'
On
Monday,
-
more than 50
.
Belanger sa!~
·
he
dip
n~t
think
The story quoted Belanger as stud~nts
.
who att~~deq
.
.
the
.
Ms.
·
Stark
.
~isquot
_
ed
.
him
.
pur-
·
saying the project to renovate the meet1!1g s1gne
_
d
.
,
a
petition

m
.
.
Ms.
.
posely; but did ~ot c<>rrectly ~ear
floors would be funded by money Stark~ qefense. (See lett~rs to what he
_
had said atthe meetmg .
.
from his salary. According to the
.
the editor) The students said the
. . .
''Everyone
.
hears
.
what
_
they•
story, Belanger said the p~oject
-
.
quotes were
..
a_c~urate
.
and
·
tha~ · want to hear,:md.sees what they
was necessary to upgrade life at
:
Belanger
.
was m error.
.
--
want to see, said the
.
Brother.
Mari.st because the schoolhas a
When asked about the letter,
"It's
:
common knowledge.
In
high transfer rate and "Marist ~- Stark said she ~d not
-class
you can give
a:
ledµi:-e a~d
.
accepts any incoming student misquote Belanger
m
the
.
then ask studen~ w~t was said
_
. who pays." The story also quoted
.
newspaper articl~. "I don't know
'
and get
10
or 15 different
_
an-
.
him
_
as saying "it is
_
pred~cted
.
what' purpose
,_
it would . have
s~
_
er~
;
Any tea~er
-
~11 tell you
t~t m three years Manst will
be
served me to write· something he
.•
that.
.

..
.
·
Ch.-mp~gnat
·
1v
nixe$
.
·
·
. _
Pat Larkin
Michael
_
Teitelbaum
New
_
Circle edi
_
tors
the humallities concept
.
·

·
.
.
Regina Clarkin
When asked why he was
·
/
stepping down;
Streigel, a
!)at Larkin, · a sophomore resident sophomore
;"
said he
proposal 29 to 13.
"Belanger was
trying
to pressure
-
resident·
and
Michael would
·
like to start
.
·
goint to
_
The council
.
unanimously us
:
into accepting the idea" said Tejtelbaum, a junior commuter college again and said he would
·
House IV Champagnat won't be
·
agreecl that the concept
·
of the
.
Cavanaugh.
.
·
· -
.
.
·
.
-
have been named new Circle co-
stillbe working on the Circle even
·
'
the Humanities House next
.
Humanities
-
House was a
goo!l
:
Aiiiatosaid the proposal will be editors for the 1977 fall semester. though he will not be editor .
.
_
·
semester
,
as proposed by
:
Br. one and
.
deserved
.
more planning discussed
·
again next
·
semester
Tiie newly created position of
,
The new editors are hoth
Joseph Belanger, after resi~ents said Cavanaugh.
·
after more planning
.
has
,
been
.
news editor will be filled by communication arts
·
majors.
of the house_ andth~ Cllapipagnat
·
He said the council rejected it done
.
He said it's a good idea and
-
freshman Dave Ng. Ng served as When he wa~
-
told
·
of his
·
ap-
.
.
House Council
,
rejected
·
the
·
now because not enough-time and · "there
·
has be.en a fair amount of -layout editor this semester.
pointnient
·
Larkin said he
·
was
proposal in a vote last Wed~
·
plan~ing ~as
-
put
·
into
·
it. support
-
for
·
it".
....
.
Sopho!l}ore resident Ken Healy
,
shocked, "we will have an ex-
nesday.
-
.
.
.
will be feature editor
:
Present co-
cellent staff next year. We all
·
,
1n
the council vote, Residence
1
.
M
.
·
:
·
c
·
-
:.
·
.
·
,
·:
.
1
·
a k
',. ·
..
·
.
editor Larry
.
Streigel
·
will
step worked together this year and
Director; Peter Amato, who said
.
.
.
C
.
.· ·
an n roo
.
S
O
e:
S
down to become sports editor.
,
we're looking
.
forward to next
he had "full veto power~
/
over
,
·
-
·
Gerry_ McNultey, a sophomore
,
year," he
.
said.·
.
·
ho
.
use council decisions, was the
resident has
·
been named
-
··
"We
.
will strive to maintain the
only person who voted in favo,r of
·
..
By
Michae}
Brennan
think
-:-:
the problems are major photography editor, and Jim quality that the formei: ~itors
the proposal. Although he said he
.
ones, just details
;
thaf arise with Birdas,
.
also
_
a sophomore
.
displayed in the past issues of the
·
.
·
strongly favored the proposal
-
he
The new McCann'
·
Center is riew structures like this," he said. resident, was
.
named Business Circle," said Mike Teitelbaum.
complied with
~
th~ council's yote experiencing
·
som'e maintenance "Technically, th~ building isn't
·,
Manager .
.
·
.
·
. ·
·
·
·
·
·
after the members threatened
.
to problems, most
·
notably
.
leaks
in
finished
.
We're proud that we've
$Sao
·
,..

·
·
·
'
resign_if he used his veto pow~~-
.
some· sections of the
·
·roof. "It's been able Jo provide a month of
/
.
.
UIJnner · .
.
·.· .
.
.
Key.in
.
Cav
_
ana~gh,
;
c
.
ouncil
:
_
soniethi,rig
-
\Ve!re
:
aware of;'
,'
said
c
s~~v~c¢~
~
in
~
~n incomplete
:
'
.
,
· -,_
·
.
'.
...,.
i
.:- ·
.
.
.

.
.
.
pr~sident sa~d,
·
:
.
The
:
coµnci
_
l Athletic
-
Director
''
Ron Petro
.
_
...
·
·
· .
building.
;
'IJle roam work has been
·
·
After freshman AI Qull
'
wor(
·
··
twenty weeks
,"
a
,
-
winner was
thretttened
.
~o r~
J
gn;
:,
li.
:
he
-
has
·
;.::
}:ll
explairied
:
t1¥1t
;
it'~
-:
an ex
.;
co~pl~t~,:t
;:
WitQ
:
goo
,
d
·.
wea~er, $500
-
in
.
a
'
raffle
/
ge eall~
;
his
.
awarded
$25: Last
__
F~idar,
_
the
veio
·
pow~r
_
then
w:,
1;1\~:«;
:
perinleritaltype building
;
t~e roof
.
we
.
.
c~n
.)
,ttend
.
:;
to
;
t~e
··
.
im-
,.
fathei:,:..
collect
:
~
~o
;
tell hin;i the
-
twentieth week, three
_
fmal prizes
..
W~ hay~ no pow~r
:
~ a
·
.
. ·

....
~
• :
b
'
eing
.::
made
!'•
.
up
<
of
1'.
Hypo!an perfecti
_
ons
.:
~{' tp.e
·
building
·
and
.
good news.
·
·
·
.
.
,
:
>··
,
;-....
...;..
of 0$100, $250;· an~
$50()
_
were
-
does
, ,
',V;hiiteve.~
J
~e
·
.
'Y,
,
0
.
~~
·
·
mateJ:"iaJ; :'It's
:
a
y~ry
.,
~11
.;•
sur-: ~he coµip!e.~~o~-
:
gf s<>in~
.
,.
Qf
_
'.the
.':/
Qu~ won
.,
~he
·
first prize money

awarded .
.
,
/
.
.
.
. :
: :
.
an}"YaY-
.
:
· · ·
·

•·
·.
.
-.
,
'
.
face
·
:<
and
.
:
:wi~
-,
proba,~~)'.
_
p
eak
.
,
smalle~
t
l~W-s,
;-
.
su~
·
~
_,
tlle
::
·
m the
/~
r..1anst
:
Tr~ck Team's
;
200
The
·
runnmg Red F~xes earned
,
:.
-
pie proposal
_
w~~
unarumously
.
:
:
during
;,
heavy
,
rams
(
_
especially
·
:
transfernng
,;.;_
9
_
f
.
th
,
e
.}-
.
-
univ
_
ei:sal
·
,
ciub'';
'
a
•.
,
lottery
.
arrang4!
_
d
·
:i
pY
.. .
$31Q
:
to
·
supplement
.
:
the
-.
team•~
.
'.
_
_,
reJ~~e<tby ~e quorumofstudent
_
_
now: when the building
is
so new
;
"
,
:'
machine to
.
~
:
nell'. '!e.ightroorn,
:
:
track Coach Rieb Steven·s to ra1Se
·
budget.
. .
·
,.
_
··
·
·-
·
.
.
;
;:'
r~presentati~~
at
·.
~e
-:r
Ch~u1:1~
i
:.
<:
O
.
yer.
·c
the
)
-
)ti
.
nime.
r
J
P.e1ro
}
_
et~Htjus
f
~etpitje
;
to 1~n
:
out
:
:
_
mo~ey)or
~
the. J
,
aam
t·:~
.
· .
·
_
.
<'.
.
.
.

.
.
.
.
:
.

Qua
says he will
'.
give ~00 t? his
/ •
pag1_1at H~~
,
'.
Council
,'
m~t~g'.

.
believes thi$
·
and c;,ther problems all the
r
PtO,bll!llls ~d
;
tthink
·
we
:
<}
,
Qua's
'
· father
·
bought
·
t~e wi~~
"
parents
.·.··
an~
·
-deposit_
,
_
the
·
:
::
R.esident~ _ of

·
[
0
~
t
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will be suffici~tly_ attended to by . ~a1-;e don
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;
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short
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ticket;
·
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204, but si~ed it
.
·
.
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rema
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ining
.
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ppze · mon«?Y
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_
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;
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.
a
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ouse or
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the
·
Center
-
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..
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.
and·
_
time we
_
'
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ye
-
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...
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·
over
,
to Qua;
,
a Sheahan resident.
,
-c
bank. He says he ho~sto
_
put the
.
next s~mester,
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, APRIL 28, 1977
Dena Keilny
Robert Goodwin
·.;._~~--·-/~
-y,/
-.
Jim
Benton
Mike
D'Elia
.
THE CIRCLE
Will Morrison
John Blue
John McGraw
Questioning Cameraperson
Seniors! Want
/._
_
·
-
to do it
again?
.
By
Wanda
Glenn
Jim Benton - history major
"I haven't enjoyed my time at'
Questioning Cameraperson:
If
Marist. Whether that
is
my fault
you could do your four years of or the college's remains to
·
be
1
college over again, would you do
.
.
seen. I think I would have lilted to
it differently?
·
change._that but it is kind of
a
moot point
_
anywayt
.
·
Dena Keriiif
- psychology
major
-
·
·
-

Mike D'Elia - chemistry major
.
'
people sooner
.
I would have
smelled more flowers."
Pat O'Leary - business major
"I probably didn't study as
_
hard as I could have and
if
I did
it
over, I probably
-
would study
more because now I realize
·
how
U11POrtarit it is."
-
"Yes, I would have another
"You better believe it!
I would
major
·
field, and
.
hopefully not go to Marjst. 1 would
.
go to· "John Gavigan :.
·
English major
graduate
·
within four years
.
·
McGill University in Montreal,
"I would take business courses
· Living off campus is
.
a must."
·
.
where I was going to go
.
at first. 1
.
.
instead
·
·
because I realize now
"
'
wish
l
had known about that
after taking English it
'
will be
Wiij, Morrison
;
. business 111ajor
.
piace before I came here because
hard to break into the business
.
"~ would
_
s~ill
.
·
major in I wasted four
.
years
of my
:
_time
field
·
with
no
business
b1,1~ness?. bu9
i~nk
I woulti go to and $20,000 .
.
But I did
1~m
·
one
back~ouild."
a b1ggerins
.
t1tu~on where y_mi~re
.
t
_
hing,
if
nothin~ else, anci ,that
_
Mary
_
Foster - communications
.M,
exJ>Ose.13.
.
to.a
-
diff~en
L
van_ety
_
of.
,
,;
~s
:,-,
t_hey,,
,.
(!'6_ari9tJ
a'
spend-more
.,
,
major
-
'

,
,
-
-

, . _
people and
.
what you do
.
J~
not money_for: the utopian bubble that
·
"Y
·
-
,
J
·
d f" ·t
I
.
_
Id
,
F
,

-
common knowledge to everyone h
-
·
·
t
·
-
-

- -
-
-
-
-
·
es,
·
e
JDI
e Y wou •
-
or
--
-
-
·
.
_
.
_.
.
.
_
·
ouses
_
.
_
1
than
_
1t
-
·'
does
.
.
for
,
-
:
one
I
would move
off
campus
;
I
•--.
else, and 1s v1rtuall~, of no con
.
academics
.
.
Last~y,
_
.,but not
--
would get involved in something,
_
-
cern to anyone else
.
leastly, as Pogo said, we have .anything. I wasted rriyfour years
.
met the enemy and it is indeed _ here
.
"
·
·
·
John
·
Blue - communications
,
us."
-
_
major
·
·
"I would do
_
them
'
totally
dif-
Dave Steiger
-
business
·
major
ferent. I would c.-oncentrate more
"Yes.
l would have gone to a
on academics than job ex- state school; preferably Albany
perience because job experienGes State,. Oneonta, or maybe
~
two
are good, but with.Q.1,lt a good
.
year school. They have
.
so much
academic standing job
,
ex- more to
·
offer than this place
perien~es
won't
even
be does. Better facilities, and a
acknowledged when applying for wider range of courses and in-
a
·
job.•~
·
structurs. However, if I came
,
to
John McGraw - business major
"I would have gone
lo
_
the
-
University of Miami and majored
·
in
philosophy
instead
·
of
-
·
business."
Reggnay Green - history major
"If
l
had to do my four years
·
over again I would have chosen
.
another school better
-
_
suited
to
my personality, a school that has
m:ore to offer a student."
Robert Goodwin ~
-
- psychology
major
·
·
·
"I think I would do it the same
and live in House IV Champagnat
again
."
·
(
I
Marist again, I would not do
anything
;
different.''
cheryl Powell
.
- biology major,
commuter
"One thing I would like to do,
if
I could do .it over,
is
live on
campus for a semester
t
or a year.
The
_
commuter
.
feels separated
from the residents and I think it
would have been good to live on
campus and get a different at-
mosphere than the one
iit
home."
Eileen Kirk - psychology major
"AcadEmiically I would not
change anything, because I got a
lot out of my ~ourses; but I would
have gotten more involved with
..
·
Brian
:
:
Bennett
~
American
studies major
·
·
"I
think, if given the chance
,
I
would do it the same with a few
minor revisions. I would more
. th~n likely put more con-
centration Jnto my work to get
more than a
c+
or B. This would
be aided
·
by the new library
facility
.
The school has just
opened an
·
outrageous physical
education facility. If I were given
the opportunity, I would like to
experience the other residence
halls on campus, not just one."
·
Jerry Dimenna - history major
·
"I would have concentrated a
little more on school work and
_
gotten more involved in ac-
tivities. School, no matter where
you go is what you make of it.
Instead of sitting around and
saying how bad the place is I
should nave gone out and done
something about it.
If
it was that
bad I guess I would have left.
If
I
-
could do it again I wouldn't play
football for Ronnie Levine."
---
-
·---
·
~
·-
-
-
-
-
·
··•
·
.
.
.
-
-
-
--
-

.,
.
--
~
--
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-··
·
---
-
-
PAGE3
Reggnay Green
Cheryl Powell
Eileen Kirk
Pat
-
O'Leary
o1m
_
Gavigan
;
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Nell
Hogan of the-Marist Press (photo by ~rry McNulty)
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 28, 1977
-Personality of
the week
No grass· grows here
,.
,
If there is one
thing
you can say
enrolled in the School for the Deaf retired late
last
year.-
about Neil Hogari, the. only
in New York, and he concluded
He says his job mostly entails -
remaining employe of the.Marist
his
secondary education in
1960.
filling orders·for the instructors.
College Press, it
is
that 'no grass
He attended the New York
High
He has
just
finished a set of 300
grows
under
his
feet.'
School for Printing for a year and
books.
foi: .Dr•· George So°:J,IIler of
Hogan,
32;
who was
born
in
a half after that. Since then, when
the English. depax:tm~t.
. ,
~ew Yprk
City
has'tieen on the
he was workJng - part-time,
. Hogan enJoys big-time c~lle&e
move since
1964
when he went to
printing has always been
his ·
footb~ll and Notre Dam~
~
his
California .with
his
father, who
"favor.ite job."·.
,
:
favonte team. ·He also_ likes_ the
transferred there for business
His interest remained in Yankees _and the _Knicks, ~d
purposes;.-...
_ 'printing until he return~ from · spen~- much _of
his_ free ~e
He_ moved to Poughkeepsie in
California. and through his ~wling. - ·
.
.
· ;
7
1974
with his father and he now
brother, who
is
a
Marist
Brother
He says that he likes,Califorma _
lives here with
his
parents.
stationed at Archbishop Molloy more tha~
~e~
York,
b~~
Seven months after he was
HighSchoolinNewYork hegota Poughkeepsie
is
pretty good. _
born .
he. suffered a spinal_ .in-
part-time job at the Ma~ Press. He
is
loo~ ~o~rd
to :_going
'P. •._
·
_
._
·
•t·
· •

fection that caused
hiin-to
lose
95
-
He has worked full-time since backtoCaliforma this summer
to
._-

-
·
··s·· ·,·
1•1e· reaction
percent of his hearing in both
November· of
1976,
and has see his relatives, an!;! ~ding
,:
.
-
W' ' _
-
·
-
·
ears. He now wear:;_ a hearing
worked the presses· alone since an?ther week_ ~f -vaca~on .cai-
, · · ·
·-i -·
· •
.
7
- - • ·
--
·
aid.
· - , ,
·
·
-
. Brother Tarcisius
former ching some sun rays, ·. m New
.toe,§0:ciology major
Whenhewasfouryearaoldbe director ••. the Marlsl
Pres&;
Jersey....
.
_-·
,
.,-, _
_
---;y~uzaweBreen
, Reactions .from-.the ADHOC
,
Doberman: Bisexuality O~K. , ,-
....
,.-'
<·,
'-
.. :-_ ·
·
committee- haye "been
sup--.-~
ByMa_ure.enCrowe
said
Duberman.
-
·
· ·
• .0:Thejdea
6f
a
·
sociology. major portive of the general develop-
_
_
·· .. Duberman then_ sighted many - in
°
th~r places.
· -' ·· · -• · ·
at. •_'M
_
a
___ r
..
ist_:
9o.11eg.e h. opefully will ment (of the major)
so
far and
Maintainin_ g _ bisexual and .- example
_
s
6f
other. cultures, past
Duberman said-''The_only_way
b
t ·
t
r· ·
th -
the culture. i_s going tocC
..
hang·e_
1.·.s if
- ecome a reality in the fall of the are
rymg
o re me
e homosexual subcultures rather, and present,. , that accept
-
, 197~:-''l9
school year said Dr._ . program,''. said Zuccarello. The than trying -to gain acceptance homosexuality and bisextia1ity as the differences between~ sexual
Louis
Zuccarello, academic dean committee consists of Dr. - into the mainstream of American a sexual alternative.
beha\Tior,
wliicll
.is•
valuable;

o(st~dents. "Right now .we are Eugene Best, chai,rman of
the
society
was
the· major point
Duberman,_·
_
author
and 1;1sserted ~rath
er
than-:trying' to
-
thin~mg ofa. sociology_ major religious studies· (REST) and stressed by Dr. Martin Duber- receiver of the Bancroft prize of al_~im-
u~: ..
tYeo_·_u
.. b-•.r
.. _••_·.- s-~ .. ,.-in_-!?~e
__ -
:~r_t
with
a:
concentration in
social·
sociology
department,
-
- Dr. -man, professor at Herbert Leh- the -_ American
Historical
·· work,": he said;
·
· : .
Florence Michels . REST, .
Dr: -
man ·. College --.of .th4:!
City· Association, said that America
is
Duberman :,-: ·quoted·
-
-~-
a
·
There are three draft proposals · John Breen, sociology: teacher, -University
of
New York, in his one of the .most se~ negative· · heterosexual- ·
.
psychfatrist;
being reviewed by the Student Dr. _Mal Michelson, chemistry lecture on "Bisexuality" to 25 societies because
it does not 'H~fo1d. Gould,;:as s~ying/ "it
is
Academic Committee and an teacher,· Dr. William Olson, professors
~11d
students at Marist accept alternatives in~ sexual now my profound conviction that
~DHOC
-
h"st
d
rt
t D - W"Ir ·
- without socialrestrictions more
.
committee for the
i_ ory
epa men , r'.
I
iam College Thursday,
April 21. The behavior. He said there ·were _-people:_ would be· functioning
sociology major said Zuccarello. Eidle, psychology_ departmen_t, lecture .. was .-presented by the communities -in ·Manhattan. bise_ ..
xii
..
all_ y· ·:_.'
-
-.
.
• -· -
--
-
"These proposals are the possible Gerard Cox; associate ~cademic ~history~ and political science "ideal for the brave new world!'
_-,~
.<" -
forms a sociology majClr
·at
dean, a,nd Zuccarello.
.
department df Marist College and but this is riot trtie in Marist and _
Marist might ta,ke," he said. The ' TI1e ~AC ha~ _three re~om-. co~sponsored: by the ·College
-
--·
···
t:r~~~w cow:I:iiltiiea~a;r:~:::~ '
,
~e;dri~itsii; tie -::=~~et··,,
~r:~~ie~t:S~~c~
nd
yie, S&H Lee-
-3
25
to .• ,
_
._._._
·
_,-.. _-:-: .r .. ~-..
_a_·
--c,···-·
_
d.,'.-·-·.,',ua
t~_
.
_
,
~? -
and
give reactions to
the
sociology department without·
Duberrrian who received his ·
.
-
.proposals.
· .
.
delay - They approve~ the first doctorate in' American History
- '
,
Bef~re ~cadem1c proposa~ can two dr~ts for the 3?a1or bl!t not from Harvard.lJnivei'sity/spoke
By Efaine
Bru:sof: -·
.
. •.
-.

:·franScripts· '. until :-mid~June .
be . fmahzed they must- be . the third, They. also_ ,recom-
of-~ human s~xuality .in a
· .
. · '--
--
;_.~
--:...
.
__ : becatjse the deadline for •grade
-
·
·_· _rev\ewe~- and"a-pprove~- py_·the,
,
-mend~d: thatyanother _ Ph.D. historical, biological, statistical,_
Over
325
undergraduates and ·
_
changes';;l,ndincompletedcourses
-_Academic Affairs
.
ComrruUee,
teacher m s~c10Iogy be hired as cultural .and futuristic context;
45 . graduate students
will -
be ·
is
in·June. Jn'.the meantime ·in-.
the Student Affairs Gommittee soon as possible so that students
·
Duberman, a homosexual· receivingtheir degrees' ·Sunday,
terii:h transcriptsarid·a copy of -
(SAC) the faculty, the President. can ~-e offered a broader spoke of the problems bisexua~
May
15,
from Marist according to
thefinalgrade report will be sent
~.md the Board o~ Trustees_. Then education.
_
_
were having i_n ·gaining ac-
Registrar John Dwyer.
·
·
~f :i:.equested, ·he said.
·
it must be submitte~ to the New
.. All other recommenda!i~ns -ceptance. "Bisexuals are having · He said students have-.<;hosen,
Seniors may pick µp their final
York State Education Depart-
~ere on the most part, positive, a harde1· time than homosexuals.
the ·soccer-football 'field·
as
·the· grades after noon on Wed., May
~1ent for review. "Once all the - wi_th one except!on,'' said D_r. Bisexuality ·is viewed as a cop-
graduation site.
In
case··of
raµi
11.
.
· .
approvals h~ve be~n made then Michels. She dechned to name it. out; an inability to . commit the'ceremonies will be held in the
· Seniors who are six or less
we can d_o it,'' said Zucc~rello;
themselves·one way
oi
another,'' · McCann Center. The main
credits short of the required ~20
r-~----~------~--""-!'-------.--_.;;..--•::......; __ . _ _;:,;. . .:.....,..~ ...... ~---
speaker will be Bill, Bradley; a
will-'be allowed to participate in
,R.
a-
·
•·

-1•0·
·
""GRAdDffli.tJ
-~r::s1;~·::::
:t?.F~::.~~;s~~
::
'
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-
able to get complete grade' Dwyer:. -
-::-zit~ti
T.:c ...
-..
-·.r··. ,
·
h
r~~lj
Diplomas
kePt_
s~fe
II
'
rt-;.::'
,o,
JJ
- , ,
By Elaine Brusoe
, , his them in the grottb in tQe trees ,
S
. .
-
. __ , . ,
across from DonnellY, Hall until
·
·
·
-e
This . ye~~ if_ you ar~n t
two days before graduation, :.
, ,
.
-Dior·

,
-
graduatillg, its going t?
be
a little
I -
Dw:yer said it was ·a costly
·
_
_
• _
• .·
-_.-_
-
_
_
-- ~rder _
to
:~et
.
a Marist Gollege -•- prank becaw;~ tlie coll~ge had
to
· diplo~. _ .
. _ . _ . .
0
spend -$1,000 to replace the')ost
.
_
.
·: .Regi~rar John J?wyer said he~· d~uments. They will be _use<lJor .
Th
,
a
ad'.
, , . -
.
," "
t . ,
lS-
~ g
-,pr~au~ons to m,a~e
this year's,ceremony; he said. ,,
8
- .. --
-
o··
-a·

-:
sure this Y7ar s diplomas won
t -
'Dwyer said this time they know
·: _, -
.. •.
&·:
. , - _
-_
be
Hr-i; -:f;r~~~
~~~!•~,~~::~- ~!~~~
~~e~:;ewitpi~~~c:~
prank _. m which la~ year some - up safe and sound."
is Coming·,,
st~dents
s!<>J.e
the
diploma,.and
.
Mikes
Tavern:·
The -
The ·o·nly Handb_ook for Leaving _ ·
School.designed _espetially tp'help _-
gr~cJuatlng:collegeseniors:make·J:t' _
..
_
in ttie real wor.ld.
:
Arfr:f'.it's free:for
'
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-
-. - ·
·
,.
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·. for-a
-hearty party.~-
-,-..
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. ·,:-·Tuesday
·
&.Sun_d~y Special~·_ ·--
J:S~·-
be.er·:,.-_
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]~,,-t~he·r
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----
------
:
fgJ
,
·
$~/'.
:
·
APRIL 28, 1977
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
-
Bureaucracy stifles Green Hav,n tutors
By Michael Brennan
their inability to get clearance the prison, after receiving con-
.
upon arrival at the prison, or,
if firmation of our clearance
This year several -Marist they are successful at this, being beforehand, we were not allowed
stud~nts have devoted "'time to able to meet with those prisoners
.
in. Somehow, someone failed to
helpmg the education program at
·
who are not cleared to leave their get our names down to the gate.
Green Haven Prison. Their work cells to go to the school area.
We tried calling early
in
the
in\;'olves tutoring slow learning
·
Since Green
·
Haven is a morning, before leaving, to again
pr1sontrs at basic academic maximum security
·
prison
,
one confirm our clearance status, but
skills, while others actually teach
·
must get clearance at least two those at the gate
just
say" that
classes. Seniors Mike D'Elia and days in
·
advance of the day one they have no way of knowing who
Bob Griffin are two of these wishes to visit it. The alternative is to be cleared that early."
_
v~lunteers.
,
Yet they have met to this process, especially for
with difficulties this semester
.
those who visit the prison often, if
The two students sought
·
help
The problem is not with the
.
obtaining
·
a general clearance from Dr. Kevin
.
Donohue,
teaching process itself, but in pass, a procedure that includes, director -of the Greeri Haven
dealing with the bureaucracy of among other things, getting program at Marist. "Bob and I
_
the priscm's education program
. "
I.D.'s.,,
"It.
was suggested that sat with Dr. Donohue for an hour
The two had intended to tutor we try for the general clearance and a palf," _said D'Elia, •~~hi!e
prisoners
_
in college albebra but
_
pass,,, said D'Elia
;
"We did this, he waited
WI
th the phone m
_
his
-
..
so
far
.
this semester have been
.
but it took a long while .for my
-
hand to ~alk to those at the P.ns_on
_
able
-
to meet
·
with
.
the prisoners picture tc come through
~
Bob's responSible f?r _the foul-~P
-
S~ill,
,
only once, despite the fact that still hasn't."
-
_ Dr. Donohue s mterve~tlon failed
they
.
have made th
·
4
·
-
5
.
· t
·
. In the meanwhile we went
·
to _make th~ proceedu
~
g~
·
mo~e
. .
,
-
-
.
e
-
. mmu e
. -
_

fluid.
"
D'Eha and Gr1ffm
·
still
tnp to
_
the pnson on several oc-
through the usual clearance f
-
d
d
"
ff
lt
·
·
th
u,
casions
:
The problem stems from procedure. But when we went to
oun
I
icu
Y
Wl
·
e
clearance procedure. When they
were able to enter the prison
grounds to get to the school area,
the prisonei;s were not cleared t~
attend the sessions
.
The two eventually stopped
going to the prison. "We had
enough," said D'Elia. "W..e went
there so many tµnes only to be
denied entrance or to sit for hours
while no prisoners were allowed
out of their cells."
·
The students believe that
someone at th~ prison, whether it
be those running the program or
merely
prison
attendents
themselves, is causing the mix
ups. "No one
_
has acco
.
untability
to another there," said Griffin.
D'Elia agreed, saying, "We get
the runaround from everyone,
·
including everyone from
_
the
secretaries to the guards
.
There's
n~ way to pin any on
·
e down."
SG Funds Frozen
Both D'Elia and Griffin believe
that such bungling not only
discourages students from
participating in such a program
but loses credibility for the
program among the prisoners.
Said Griffin: "You talk about
rehabilitation and help, but with
the problems we have ex-
perienced,
no
one
gets
rehabilitated, no one gets helped.
T_he
prisoners
just
get
discouraged, having their ex-
pectations of improved education
dashed." And D'Elia said: "Even
though we. get paid a small
amount, I'd do
·
it without the
salary
.
I
j ~
like teaching. But to
put your life on the line by going
m and mingling with "homicide
on~s
,_
" rapists and all sorts of
c~1mmaJs,
_
and then have to deal
with such mcompetence its just
not worth it.
'
.
·
Leo
Deli
Controversy
-
_
_
·
·
_
_
The
Leo
Deli was closed down by the administration on September 21st. A conflict
concerning who
·
owned the deli arose between the administration and the two student
owners, j
"
ohn Blue and Valerie Bellerosa. The health department closed the deli due
·
-
Student Government (S.G.) funds were frozen by Dr
.
An(onio Perez, dean of
students, becuase of their decision not to fund club football. The football club had
received
$5000 every year from the S.G.
-
.
to unsanitary conditions
;
.
_
i
.
.
Vikings Crush F:DU
.
.
.
.
-
. The Marist football team crushed Fairleigh Dickinson University 4~ before an
.
alumni homecoming crowd at Leonidoff Field on October
7.
The Vikings rushed for
293 yar~ while holding the opposition toJ73 total yards. The <iefense forced six tur-
novers m the game.
-
··
·
.
·
·
School Grades
~
Marist's average index for the fall semester was 2.58 which is slightly above the
national average. The women, commuters, and seniors had the highest grade in-
dexes
:
Women had a higher average than the men with a 2.76 average compared to
the men's 2.51 average. The conimuters had an average index of 2.71 while residents
had an average 2.6 index. 122 freshmen earned below a 2
.
0 average while 38 received
under a 1.35
.
.
·
_
Grabbini
Incidents
-
_
·
.
.
·
·
_
·
·
·
/

.
A Marist coed reported to security she was grabbed by a man on October 31
as
she
Students Confront Foy
_
·
.
,
_
·
walked to the library
.
other incidents were rep!)rt
_
ed during a period of
_
three to four
,
...
21 students presented a list of seven basic demands to President Linus Foy on
days. Marist security and the Town
_
of Poughkeepsie Police captured
.
the suspect
February 21. The majority of the complaints dealt with the breakdown in com-
months later
.
,
.
'
. ,
·
.-
-
.
·
munication that supposedly occurred this year between administrators and students,
·

..
'
· ·
.
-
.
.
·
and the
.
quality of the food served
in
the cafeteria. The group of '21' eventually broke
·
M~=~~~t~~c~Cf!~~::;Ieted its best season
in
14
;~ars compiling
·
a record of
_
up but they' opened up channels of COIIlJ!lUnication for the new student government.
1~1-1. The Red Foxes emerged as cha,mpions of the ECAC Metropolitan Regional
.
.
Mccann Center Opens
.
_
.
tournament held at Le
_
onidoff Field. They came from behind
in both games winning 3-
·
·
-
.
The Jaf!les J. McCann Cente
_
r OJ?ened on Apr~ 3 after more than a year and a half of
2 and
,
2-1.
·,
_ .
.-
,,
.
.
,
.
·
.
.
· - _
.
construction. The center was dedic~ted o~ April 17 before
_
a crowd of mor~ than 1000
-
.
:
,
•-'
·
"·
"
.,~'
'
""·
J..>
~,
,., .. ..,..,
~..,.i,
,c,,,k.,.-

,
\,
,,.,.,
-
.
,
,.,,
_
.,,,,
,
..,.
,,.
,.
,.
,,
......
~
,
,-
-=-
-
.
o4,.e,,.,,
.,,:...,. .

:
.~
,
-
~·-"·"• ..
.
. __, .
.
.
.
. ,;-_
,
.
.
.
,.,
·
-~,
people
,
.
.
Guest speaker was Marty Liquori who spoke on wfiat the center will mean to
Marist Short $900,000
.
_
-
· ·

.
_
_
.
.
.
..
-
_
·
~
:
·
-
:
_-
· ·
·
~
·
·
·...:.
·
:
th_e-average Marist studentand nottojust the star athletes.
.
.
.
.
Marist took an extended line of credit for.more
-
than $900,000 to help finish payment
.
;,
·
.for the
_
James J. Mccann Recreation
·
Center. The school
.
had to borrow the money
Bradley to
.
Speak
·
-

.
·
because the article stated, it had not received a lot of the money from the pledges they
Bill Bradley, former
Knick
and Rhodes Scholar; will speak at Marist's
31st
com-
received from the capital campaign and organizations were not willing to donate as
mencement exercises on Sunday, May 15. Bradley was selected to the all-star team
much money to the college fund a~ some might have expected.
_ -
six out of his
'
ten year career with the Knicks. He graduated (rom Princeton in 1965
,
and spent two years studying at Oxford.
·
--

·
, , JMEllill~
-
,
..
.
'
;........,.,,__
.
'
-- ;,,,..;._._J
:
.
·.
.
-
~~
~-
· ·
,_;,'
_
_
_
-
_
.
~nis•~ Hai~~ing
for
Guys-Gal:
.
,
~The~
lri
,
Volumetric Cllla
from
N:v:c
:'
,
STUDENT DISCOUNT-
.
fl--,nd';1-:

-
·
.
-
-
~ s
·
-
.
5
6 ·
-
Pxoducta
_
·
-
For
Heabhf,
~Highlighting
.spec~I
Precision
Cuts
·
.....
_
~!1111.---'
17
So
,
Ha_;;llton
s1:,
P~ughkeepile

Block
~th·of-Maln
~ l
.
47T~38~S4-99&4
Mon
.
-Sat.
9
,
30-5:30
Thurs. Qpen late
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
,
.
.
-
L
P
·
afk
'
Dis
_
count and Beverage
··
.

.

-
·
BEER
.
&
SODA
.
'
Mickey MalJ liqupr
1.49
6pack
.
-
.
·
,
Tu borg Gold
(no
_
r~lurn)
-.
1.4 9
:
~
pack
TELEPHONE 229-9000
>.
_
_

.
.
.
.
.
'
.
..
'
-
~
'
.
'
•,
.
. .
·-
'
·.
·
.
;
ALBANY POST ROA~, HYDE PARK, N~Y:
, .
·
OpenMQh-F;i
9
'
r~
9 s,tfg
·
s~
·
nda~
_
.!?
~
5
.
'
.
...
~
.
.
.
'
,
.
.
.
,
....
.
,
_,
.
..
,.
---
....
~~
-
~---
....
~-
....
...
_
Everybody
has his
own
.
idea
~
.
about
an off ice
~
.:.
.
For more
:
information
call YoUr

local
Army
.
RiC(Uiter
452~0155
:
·.·
.
.
.
..
.
,
.
•.,-:I~
:.:_:
t
\:'.
":"
.
:
.
~
_

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

,
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PAGE&
THE CIRCLE
APRIL ~8,
1977
~e:t's
all
:
.
be
accurate
·
·
Letters to the
IMitor·
·
.
'
.
·
;
·
.
Unfair
.
Wheri
.
a bircie reporter mee~ c~iticism, it
.
not
-
~n
u:ying
to build towards fair
.
.
·
and accurate
_
Pun
·
·1shm
·
-
·~
en
·
t
students be expelled?
·
only affects
,
the editors of the paper, but the rest of Journalism.
-.
·
Having been a
police
offi~r. I
th~

staff as
·
welt
_
Many
times
during the year Circle
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
know the law and I have mt-
. _
reporters
~
and
editors
:
:
have
.
been denounced, and
The editors of The Cir<:Je stand behind~ of their
.
To the Edi!ors.
nessed criminal acts committed
-.
s01:n~~es rightjy
sii.
But, the reporters were also reporters. We stand behind the story
,
which W!IDdy
.
I would like to ddress myselfd-
on
·
this campus ranging from
· subj~ted
\
to
~
administrators
·
who would not com- Stark
.
wrote about the ~mments made
.
~Y.
Bro.
.
. to.
~an .
Pere-L and _the
a
assault, harrassment, reckless
_
,
menfoi)
'
issues
·
because
they bad
·
no time to deal Belanger.Theyarenotnusquotes. The letter signed . mm1strat1on
·
concernmg the endangerment
and
falsely
·-
with
:::
••some
'.
tw~if
'
·
student newspaper writer."
·
by
50
students is evidence.:
.
.
·
matter of the
st
udents who_ were reporting
an
incident, and yet
'
J\il!!
;
~e~
.
,
~e.s~
)
n:e
,
~e same people w~o complain~
·
.
f:~~~i~~:;.
of
;
therr ac-
.
these acts have gone ~h

:'1

.
~h~Il
-,
~
,
n~:WSJ>a.pel'.
:
~
_
ory was
,
one-sided and their
I was amazed when I learned of ~ep~rted .and unpdminiuni~.estd
;
ti
Y
·
;:
J~~~
\
~~
'.
~?~/~~~~ted:

· .·
.
.

the i!tt_ensity that_ this incident
~ ~h~~~;v
I~~~::
some ~ffo;
·
·
.-:.'.
·
.
g
f
~~d;;we ar,~students. Stud~nts a~e there to
~~~1~gh-l :tm~~~tefil:
.
toward discip1:ine?ill.
,
.
t
.
.
h t
.
;
:
--
learn
·:c
and
<
sometunes
·
the best
·
Ieanung comes
We feel Bro. Belanger was very much in the . .
.
.
f
.
be . .
t
d
.
This occurence ustra es w a
.
·
•.'.
throu~ mistakes
~
·
Btif Citcle reporters
.
should not
.
·
wrong in sending out his letter to the
.
·
college com
-
.
:
m~ident
·
rom
;
.
ipnrung
O
en
~s
.
been
·
said
·
throughout the
.
:
.
.
:
:

be
'
shwmedasidewhena
·
persoridoesnotfeel like munity. He
·
subjecteda student to unnecessary and_ strongly
.

beli~ve
.
t~! t~e school
·
year -
·
:
that Dean P~re'L
· ·
·
,
;
ta
··
1t;;,;:,
..;:
·
t
·
·
th
·
.
·
:
,,,.._
·
d
· ·
t
·
· · ··
·
·
"
If
·
e
e to be ex-
·
humiliation.
·
A
.
letter to the
.
editor
.
arid a meeting pwushmef!t they are recei:vm~
ts
.
·
works against and not
·.
for
·
the
.
·•
.
.
~ ' 6
·
o
.
e
..
.. ~u en
·
press.
.
.
w
.
ar
·
. .
.
.
far too extreme for the actions
·
·
·
· ·
h d
'
hi
-
· b
·

:
:
:
;
pected
.

to
.:
give

fair and accurate stones, then with the reporter and
.
the editor would
.
have been.
·
·.
·
.
· "tted
.
stude~
.
ts.
,.
How can e o
.
s J..O
<
>
sofu-ces
;
mtlst
i
deal'with us on
a
professional level,
-
appropriate
if
Bro. 13elanger feltsometbmg was they c o ~

.
·
.
.
.
h
;
and work f~r us when heabuses
•·
:
::
the
:
same
waithey
:
.would deal with a reporter from
:
wrong.
If
he could show
US
why, a correction would didl awa
,
msnort1_ghsatymgn
. ·
o
'
rthaam
.
t wra! ty~':ig
.
..
his po_wer
l!,I
such a?
·
waF Y tthish~t
·
·:·
f
th,
f
Poughkee
·
sie
·
Journal:

·
.
·
··
·
have
.
been prominenRv printed.
.:
·
·
.
·
.

·
.
.

:
.
· .
.
J:nnders
:
the

students.
or
-
.
::,/,c,:•
.:
;
'
-::;:
~
.
:-•·:
r
.
~
.
'.
.
..
. -
.
.
. ·
.
.
·
c
:
.
.
.
.
.
. .·
J
that they ~houl~
._
go unp~shed
,
. :
reascjn,
.
m:any
·
have suggest~
.
'.
·
.
:
j
Jwir
(
'
tlus
.
st
.
week The Circle was dealt an
If
you want fair journalism, don't
·
try to
bu~even
Wi
th the m~st serious 9f
:
that
(
we
~
th,e_ stu~ent body,
·
·
::
.
'
. uijfaif
.
,
biow:
.
.
pa
·
.
·
·
.

manhandle
us.
We are not a P!-}bli~
.
reJati9ns in-
.
,
~n~esd !!1\li1n;~~:e3;gr~
.
.
de_lll~I_ld his r~1~aµ?n, i:,erhaps
=

:
,
:':'
/:','::}:
:,:;,
.
_,,
..
<·
·• .

.
·
.
.
. .
.

strument for the campus.Our Job
1S
to prmt the
·
;8Jre~C:~ci~tted:·Are.these
••
this;
ts
now Justified.
,
·
J
:3ffi
·:t :
The
:
.
letter
:
which
~
was
.
sent out by Brother truth, even
if
it hurts
;
,
.
0

.
,
'
"

• .
..
.
·

hts thankful thatlam not one of the
~\
·
Bel~riget
.
was
:
apother
·
example o!the attitude some
_
.
..
.
.

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·

.
.
. .
.
·
·--,
~~dents
'
;
·
Co~titutional ~ig .it "~i~er;J)~y Ten'.' andth~refQYe
.:
J
f~
_
~
µIcy;
'.
~
.
d
'.
aciJ:Ilirii$tra~ors hav~ ~owar~ th~ paper .
.
.
·'
.
.
The
.
Circle i;nust b~ g1
y
en a fair chance. ~er hap~
'..
:rie~=filedM:i::r~,
:
~ail bem~
,
SUbJect~d
..
to
,
such abu
,
se
.
.

..
:
~
8
1,1!
}
~tt~r
_
he u.nde~ed
th~
reputation_w.~ have
_
,
next
.
Ye!r weH
·
get it,
.
Perez thirikdh~ is abotvhetthe ltahw in
.
i
.
.
Da\lld~~~~~~;~
·
.
,
·
··
··
,·.
,
.
,
..
.
k
d
.
·
·
.
recom~en 1pg
.
a
ese
.
_
.
.
·
_
.
·::
j.~
-
.·:;
_

:
:/:
Y
_
,1'1
...
_.·-
_,
·
-
·
~ood
.
-
.
luc
-
·
_
g
·
r
..
o
·
s
~.
-
~
,
_
-
.
-
u
..
. '--
·:
dnce ti{~
j
au seniester begins,
.
,
.c"
/'\
i'
,

s
ti
time of
the
year
;,gain,
Yep, it
'
s
'
The
underc1assmen
of
The
Ci<cle
wOuld
like
1o

T
.
·
·.
h
'.
an
.
ks
:
-.
.
.
·
:
··
:~e;::
.
~~tehri;t%it1i~
·
·-~
-
gr~du,ati~n time
:
a
nd
we're
.
saying good~bye to thank the seniors who worked so bar~ on our staff;
:
same
expectations
-
that we had .
.
:'.:
a)iotµef group of students who were . a big part of
.
.
.
.
,
. ···.
.
.
. ·.
..
.
.
.
.
..
/
.
.
.

.
.
.
Things will be different next year_
---::
:
\
~
¥~
.
r~t
Col.lege. U's hard to imagine tha,t they won•~
.
we
·
wish
.
the
.
best of
·
luck
.
to
.
Cird~
·
l?ports
'.
~aitor
:
To
~e editors,- .
·
• but that's the way it should ~-
:
:
be
.
;
_
here
.
.
next
.
Y~ar, but to
.
rep~at
·
~ .. stomped, Tom
·
McTernan; who we woul(l name personality of
.:..
.
With
.
grad~ati
_
on
~~Y
.
~
fow : Aridifi>eoP,l~forget us f~r awhile,
.''
:
-
.,.
squIShed,
.
and
wors~
th;m
.
de~~
_
cliche
~
tune mar-
.
the wee~ every
.
week
iIJ
th
_
e
year
if
we
·
could. (There·
-
w~eks
·
alfaY,
.
:
·r cant help but
~
-
it's not ~cause
:
~er
,
doµ't
:
care
;
:
.
· ·,
~
~es on.
·
-::
· .
;
sure is enough to write abo~t hiiri.}
,
And goo!J,
.
lock to
·
_
thi~~
tllat)he time has co~e f~r
it•
s simply
·
.::
bee a use Jhey' re
/.
·
:
.
·
.
·. •
.
.
.
. .
•.
.
.
·
·
Joe Gigliotti,
·
our photo
_
editotwho was always a
·
many se01ors
·
!~
.
feelent~us1ast1c
·
human
,
'
<
,
.
.

·
.
·
.
<
·
.
. .
. ·
Even
.
though t~s editorial
JS
pract1caµy a rerun
.
of help even when he got hisassigiin;lents so late. And

an~ sad_ at

t~e same tuq
_
e.:
:
We
..
..
··
·.
11tei:e are countless niµnbers _
.
. ;
.
o\he
.
r~ you can find ahno~ an~here_ m e1_1d of the
·
the same to Kevin Cavanagn to whom
·
this 12 page
.
sha,i::e.
·.
·
~·.···· fee]h.ig of
-
enthus1~sm
.
of people thar eacll
.
seajor
.
could·
·
-
.
Year ~chQol
.
newspapers, 1t carries sincerity.
·
.
..
·
gold
mine
ripoff is
.
dedicated:
·
.
Kevin always made
c-:
b~a11$e
,
we
.
kno
.
wJhat we li~ve
.
.
thank-ourparents, oiirteachers,
_

:
·
·
·
sure we had
:
enougli money le~for a party. What co:mpI~ted a
.
_
college education
.-
and
_
the ·administrators of µte
·
·
·
:
·
:
:
We
wiih
.
our graduates good luck; Ih a tough

.
more ccitild
'
a business manager do? And good 1uck and
·
arelooltjng forward to
.
the
--~
college
:
To them loffer a
.
sincere
'
.
,
world
.
out.there
;
and the
.
texture of a crisp diploma
·
·
to
Dan
Drominwho
we
hope will riever have to stay many
-
and.
:
varied oppo~tuajt_ies
_
''thank
:,
you
'
,
!;
Buttliere is
a
group
·
·,
in
a harid
Will
stir~y
-
mject :some happ~ess
,
pride, up all night for a newspaJ)er_ again.
·
:. .
..
-
·
tha~
-
o.ur:Juture
.
years mll b
_
rmg
of people thatl J)er~onally wottl.d
sense,andev:en
.
a
.
littl
_
e fear mtoa person s head
.
.
. . .

.
.
.
. ...
:
.
:
.
;
. '
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
US;
•:,
.
..
.'.:
~
.
:
·.
~
:
,· .,
:
.
.
.
.
like!
.
to say "good-bye" and
:
''
.
,: ·:
:
:-
. (
.
·>
i
·
r
,:·
:
. ,
._:;::,
<
..
.
.
.
· ·
·
·
Andgoo
.
i:Iluckto oµ(wr1tersincJuding
.
th~p~i~~ <>(
.·<
;
Yet, ~e
.
kriow!ha~~his
is
an ~nd
,
:
.
:
''thank-you!
1
to.Thejai,-e
·
~ore,

,
WeJ:;otild
.
~Y
-
:Y,
<>ll)l
ahvars have fnends
.
here ~o
·
·
.
the
·
Humanities House,.Wendy stark; t}ie fav:onte of
·
as w~ll as a
:
begtflM.lg. Iidooking
·
·
Megan,
,
Eva, . Elliet
.
:
Suzanne,
.
.
'
.
.
come
.
back
~
~o.
~
b~t
-.
things
·
:
will
:
·
cha~e,
.
people Will
'
tlie
"
.
athletic departm
e
n
t'
O
staff,
'.
''.
!tfatiteeJJ
~
,
Tu)!y;:
.
ba~k
:
on
.
_~el<>!ll_'
ye_arfi.J!V~
-
~~t
.
.
]{athy
t
Kathy
;-
··
Isabel
,
'(
'Jea11,
:
'
:
~
c
-,
·
·
<
·
,
·
·
'
·
·
·
grow older and differerit
;
.
a11d life
.
mll pack,
.
a pun~~
·
.
..
Elaine
'
Brusoe of a
·
defunct variety
"
sho~;
·
aµd Mike
•.
·
.
at
,:
~arist
,-
:
so~~~~~

·
the
:
tiad
·
·
Alicia,
.
J{aren,-
:
.•
l3arbara,
.
Mary
.
.
of
cha_llen~es,
>
.
···

.
.-
.
·

·.
.
.
·
,
:
,
..
·
.
·
Brennan, who wrote so
·
maiiY. stories
_.
f~r
:
9.lam-
J
hings:cion't
:
r~Uy
;
se~:so
<
bad
.
Ellen_,
·
·
Bµilny,
,~
Pc1ula;
:
and
I
i
.
·
'
·
·
pagnat Hall maintenance
man
John Higg~ns;_ _
· ,
.
anypor,e,~and
.
t~e good things
.
~re
especially to Mary, An.a, Bar~
Wesayrememberyour(riendsandcollegeyears
.
·
·
.
.
.
,,

·
·
,
.
·
.
.

:'·
·•
.
.
Joo.ltlngbetter
:
ev~ryday .• Desp1te
.
bara,Alaria;
:
Megan,Skitch_and
with gladness, and
·
bolt into the challenges
.
you
·
.
Ana"to everybody ~lse: Have a fun
s~er .
.
,
.
the harsh coinm~ts_-that hav
_
e
Gigi;
·
!
.
'
offe?'
o
a very
.
special
ha\'e. Face them and master them and move
'
on.
..
·
:
'"
..
.
.
· .
.
. .
..
-L.S.
.
o(ten come from many
.
of ~. I
~•thank~you» and "good-bye", for
But, mostly have
-
faith in yourself and God that you
.
.
, .
-
_
.
can
:
t
_.
help btit
.
bj!lieve that each
:
being the
kind
of people that this
-
can do whatever you want to do.
.
.
.
.•
. .

·
graduating seni<>r feels
a
sense of
senior is not likely to
forget.
·
====================================
··
=================
·
toss in leaving
·
what
:
has been
·
·
Patricia A. Perretto
sides
;
~
•bo~e" fOr the last lo~ yea~
,
class
oll977
.
''
r.,ixed-Emotions
w:~e~epromisedmoreeffecti;e
======:::;:====================:::;:=========
..
=
...
=====
·
<
'
, ·
...
;~
·
. ·
,
.
studentinputinto the decision-
.
·
··
Senior
Wee]
/
,
T)n
th
1cio='back over the
:
past
.
rnrk~nfr~~~~be~
-
my
·

i~-
Broadwa.y
Mafuie';'
.
Yearbooks
four'years,I realizethat
.
I will be
·
volvement with
.
the "21" We, as
.
There will
·
be
'a
one night
There are only a few
.
1977
>
·
·
'::;
Senfor.s
'
7
sign
:
:
,
u
.
p
.
\\lit~
·
a
·
J~viilg ~a~
·
very sho~ly
~
wi_th
;..,-:.
manf of you
:
may reniemJ?er,
·
; ·
showing of
"
Broadway Matinee'
.
Reynards leff. Buy yours as soon
.
·

m~~r of the Sen1or
:
~omnuttee
.
Illany
·
mtXed
.
emot!ons
.
:
.
·
.
·
·
·
·
·
.
·
.
·
;
.
were told that
.
alinost
·
all of
_
our
·
.
on Friday, April 29, at
8
p.m. in as possible before the)' al'.e sold
.
for
:
the

events of ·Seruor Week
.
...
Over the pastfouryearslhave
.
demands could
be
'
met.
:
Some
·
the
:
,
Mari st
.
.
College Theatre.
·
out;
·
.
Purchase
.
them
,
in the
-
Eithei
-:'.
see Kevin
·
Cavanagli or
·
·
seen
a
$25
.
a
credit increase, with
.
would have to
·
beworked out;but
Aciirussion·. is
free for
Marist Refriard
..
o
.
.
.
ffice,
·
Room
.
cc
268;' .
.
.
Den
f
m1rvey. · Representatives littl~ ·· improvement_ in;
·
. t_he
-.
they would
:
QEi met. Ahnost all of
students; $2.50 for
.
.
adults
'.
and
.
wilt:
also
be in Donnelly_
·
Hall by
,
curriculum (?r academ1cfaCI
_
lities
.
those demands were met, all ·but
.

,.
~_i_

"
..
n_f_rir.;.
·
"-t_h_
..
r_
.
_cl_n_,i_,.n_t_
.
c:_
.-
.
_
.
.
_
.
- -
·
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
·
-
--'
-
·
~---.
·
~
the sv.jtchboarcl untiltom~~ow. ~~re.
.--:
.
.
.
. .
.
.
_

·
.
.
one
µte
-
~Uege'
;
J),1dicial
_
.
BOl!l"d,
··
.
:

:,
:''·
·
· ·
:
·
.
I am
.
still waiting to see at least

,
-we were told before the rally
-.
· .
;
<:
:
.
·
,
;.
i
· .
.
25
.
courses
.
Qffered
'
here
;
tllat,
·
with President Foy
/
thahs
.
S:Oon
·.
.
,
·
.. ,
·
.
.
while
they are on. the.books, ~~ve
.
as job d~scriptio~
·
'!ere ready by
.
·
.
l
.
:
~?}i
.
i})
.

.
...
.
,
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
. . ;__
.
not been taught m five years
.
the· vanous administrators,
,
we
'
,
'
'
·
::
. -
.
THE
·
·
CIRCLE
.
.
.
.
'
.
,.
.
.•·
'.-
.
..
,
·
. " '
-
.
.
,
'
-
.•
.
.
:
J\ppli~ati<>n~ ~re
..
·
·
being ac-
.


J;yaguelyreml?1!1berh~ari!Jgof
.
could
,
begin
_
work on that board .

cepted
:
f<>r a
,
limit.ed number of pl~ns to r~ovate Donnelly
~
~e
.
AscWe, nor
·
the Student
·
Govern-
.
The Maris!
co
·
ueoe
CIRCLE is the weekly newspaper
.
Of the students Of Marls!
.
TEACHER,
;
·
,
·
TuT0R
·
C0UN-
"
.
.
need
·
(or 1D1proved
:~
academ1c
·
merit
·
haye
:
·
not received
.
these
..
SELO~
:
~'nd RESIDENT STAFF
·
fa~Uties

~ows
·
~ny.
·
It.is
·
even
·
.
promised
·
descriptions, I fee(
,
we
.
··
.
positi<>~·ror t~e sUDUI1er o!19?7
:
:
m9re
7
ev1dent
.
now
.

with
'
the
.,·
have again been
·
lied
·
to by the
..
Submit' applicatio"n p:1r
:
1ater
than
.
completion
.
of the . McC
.
ann
·
administration; This time; it was
May)i.
;
:197t·.A:pply
:
t~
-
:
:
.:·
J.os~ph
,
·
~ter. ~e desperately
:
-,
nee~t
.
by. President
.
Foy.

.
· ..
\_ ..
Parker
,::;
Upward
:
J3o~nd;
~
Manst better sCience,
.
computer

and
.
1
have two hopes for Marist
College and is published
t
hroughout the school year ellcluslve of vaca
!
lon l)el'.lods
·
.
·
by
.
th
.
e Southern Dutchess News A~~c:y
_.
W!ipp
.
lngers, New York •

·
·
.

Daniel
Dromm
·
:
·.-
·
·
..
~
_
rfy~tri~gel
::
·
.
·
..
/

·
·
·
C:O~l~ge
.
/\,::.;
\>·
:'
:
: ::
.-:
::)
::,/''
communicaf:io~ facilities; _µ

~e
·
:
eollegeaslleave. Oneisthat~e
~E;ditors
:
~;;
.
:
·
:.:< ·
::
.
: •
.
·
hope to mamtam the quality
_
of
studerits
·
wtn
not lose the uruty
. ,
;
:\!:
·
·
·
.
:,
_::
;
J,.:':.
_:
:'f
'..S
°:::
·
:
.
>
.
th~e areas
/
· .
.
.
.
..
:
.
·
·
.
·.
-
and spirit"they showed back in
Regin~Clarkin
:
·
·
:
AssociateEditor
·

·
.
·
::"

:
i
~
:
~ch~~ill~
:
:
·
:, .
.
.
·.
·

·

.
.
·
1-
r~~!>e!
Malist:
.
-
~~~g
! ·~
:.
FElbruary,and the:,,
'
wµI
.'
continue
·
Joe Gigliotti
.
.
photography.Editor .
.

.:
.>;·'
.
;:;,
: ,:
:.:.:
:
:

:
:
·
.
. ·:· . ·
)~SE:lf
a. hv~ng-learnmg ex~
.to wor~c for

the nghts
.
_
they
TomMcTeman
>•
.
·
:
\Spoi1BE~tor · Next-
:
~e
_
ek.·
-
1ffmalexam week.
:
_
1~1m~!1~
_
e .
.
T
have
_:
se~n
,
.tlle
.
ac-
.
·deserve
.
;

Secoil
,
~y,
:
l.-
:
hope
·
tbe
Cathy Ryan
.
.
.
.
·
.
Articles
Editor Exams ~re ~ll~uled
:
as. follows:
. :
tivi~es on ca01pus drop to a~ost
:
,
administratiori
,-
wiµ i:ealize that
-
D
"
dNg
,
· ·
,
:
:
-
-
,
~:':
LayoutEditor
·
...
M
..
onday;
.:
Ma
..
..
Y
.
-:
2
.
:
.
.
at 9
_
a .
.
m
:
:
s
.
Jo
t,.
1
.:
not
.
bin
_
.
g;
_:'
_bo
.
th_
·
wt
..
th C_ .U.B
.
.
·
and
,
:
.··
.
·.
th
·
e
·
.
ir
.-
prirna
.·"
ry
··
duty
..
:
.
is
.~:
to
·.
th.e
.
·
-
.
.
.
-
J~~irdas
·
··
..
· .
,
!
~istant_~y~utEdifur
ah~
at,i J>
'.
~
;
.
~ot
_
>
~ .
.
On J'µesday ;
,
_
~r~e
,
:u~vel'.Slty
.
·
While our ac~
.
,
stu
.
dents
.
~11
4
'.
t!teir
.
w.~ll-being;
.
·
-
Jerry Scholder
.
,:
:
!:
>
".,~ve~lllg Marager :.l\1aY}
~\8. :~
.
. ~;~
:
·
sl?t
7,
-
a~
-
p :30
:/
tiyitY,fee has d~upled,
.
, the
f
-:
V
:
!t
\
lb.~
studen~~
.
~ ~ ~
9
_
ye
.
~l'
'
~rom
:
·
-
"
.
Kevin Cavanagh
.
··

-~-.-
,.
~:,.-
_
BQSm~~~pa~er _a·~-
-
~l
.
o
t
U ,n4

~t
.
;~3Q
.
.
p.m .. slot
,
bud,g~thal3 ~op~d .

~yr ...
••.; .:..
.
.
: .
.
the
.· ,
bot~om
:

0
of
:

the
,
·
" ad-

~~sim
Weisoerg
,
:
..
.
,:.,,
11:,
.
~p<?~~~~
-
~,2~.~~~
l~;
:
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_
rie~d
_
aY.
,-:
~~y
4.
at .9
?,
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J1:ffie~__1:ieI'.
.
~n
,
.
a~stration_
,,
::·
rn,iiilstr~tiQn
:
s
'
list
:,'
of
.
·
priori_ti~si
. .
·
.'-":/
·
·
·
·
:
.
.
,
.
,,:
.
.
.
..
. ·
.
.
:
,
.
.
.
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.
.

.
.
,:,
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a.m.
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lot2
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~p~ 11t
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p.rn. ~Jot~

~11
i
:
_that· LS
~
hardlf
:
i:espo~1ve ,to
;
the
,

:

:. ·
.
:As
·
for me;
'
J
,
must
·
agree mth
Staff
:"
;
·Jeffrey
.
Benedict
;
-
S ~ e
.
'..
,
~!ee~,
·•
Elaine
:)
:~
_
~ e ,
·
:
J?.liil
,
'J.1lµ~y
;
:M
.

1
~
at~:~ a.rp
;
slot:
;
µ~cis.
,
of
;_t
he·st
_
lld.e~~;
f
or
..
to
-:
.
t~e
·
.:
·
Fri<fKolthay;I :amtirecLlhope
C<>langelo;

Maureen
,
.Cr9we~
:
K~n-
~
-,_i;
t.I~;
t
AlsJo,n
.
,
;Hi~~~~;
,
~a~~k
:._
3
i
~Ul:
3~
:
!
-;
~
{
sl?t 1~ and
;
~t 2
_
:30
/
!>P~ajp~
;_
of
t
t
.
h~
, ;:
~udents.

::.
}Y.h~n
,
i/
ttiaf
,.
those
(
wllo
\
remaiJl
:
and
>
will
; ,
.
.
.
.
·
~
Larkin;
>
Bill
'.
M~Laugh}in
;
::
9tJr~
,
fac9.~o~~
i
,
Wen~1;
'.
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.
.
.
'
APRIL 28, 1977
-
Support
·
·
meeting, yet they

were rude in
·
riot
informing us of the proposal
till the day after room reser-
To the Editors:
vations were due.
.
.
After
·
.
reading the article by
-
We
question
·
Brother
WendyStarkiiitheApril21 Circle
·
Belanger's motive~ asto wh~ he
on the proposed Humanities woul~ say someth!Og !)De mght
House, and Brother Belanger's
·
a!ld not recall
saymg
it sever
,
al
letter to the editors we the mghts later?
.
.
residents of House
r.v.'
were ap-
We the resident~ of Hous1: IV
palled by Belanger's accusations already stand ~mted behmd
that Wendy Stark's
~:
article was 'Yendy stark's article. We would
inaccurate:
.
·
.
.
.
.
·
·
·
.
like to ask Peter ~ t o
.
an_d
. .
We
.
the undersigned attended
·
_
Brother Belanger why they fee! it
·
•·.
the meeting Sunday Aprilp and necessary t_o
·
att~pt
_
to
·
unify
:
explici~ly heard Belanger's Ho~~
-
~
WI
th
.
the? con~ep
_
t of a
stat~merits as
·
Wendy' Stark Hlllllamtles House
. .
.
·
.

reported them.
.
"
.
Joan
_
M
.
~lynn
,
Another
~
Circle reporter
·
at-
.
Ju_diStngaro
tending
:
the meeting questioned
.
Man_ann Pouso
·
him as to where the nioriey was
Rohm Barland·
·
.
coming :from sin~e
·
.
he
:
had
.
!>at Donnell~
already stated that Marist was in
.
.
Mary Breski
~
the red. Belanger responded the
.
Raymon~ AI~m.
.
.
·
$5,000 was conililg
·
.
from
.
bis
..
:
.
SusanBaroru
·
salary
.
We also heard
him
-
say
.

.
Ther~a ~asso
.
''Marist accepts any
.
incoming
Cathy Schlesmger
student who
'
pays."
·
As
.
well as
. .
Mary Fo~ey
.
clearly hearing
him
:
state
.
tt·
is
.
.
:
Paul Lind
·
·
predicted th~t in 3 years Marist
-
.
G_regory Tr~cy
...
will
,
be
.
down to. 600

or

·
700
Richard Mason
student~
:
_
. . •
.
. .
·.
Robert Miller
.
Amato
.
accused .
us
of being
To!Il Mc<;:ourt
·
dosed minded and rude at the
,
MikeSheldon
.
.
..·
.-
.

' .
.
...
'.
.
.:
·
.
.
THE CIRCLE
-
-
Jerry Scholder
.
George Gambeski
··
.
.
Gregstent
Maureen Tully
Eleanor A.'Gray
Louie Merlino
Marian Conneally
·
Carol Frazer
Peggy Schaeder
Virginia O'Shea
·
Roseanne Doyle
BobGoodwin
.
Erin Martin
Inaccuracies
To the Editors:
I read with great interest the
article in the April 21, 1977 edition
of the CffiCLE conc
·
errung the
Humanities House Proposal.
It
is
generally accurate
.
However,
there are three
inaccuracies
of
some consequence that must be
brought to the readers' attention.
The first inaccuracy concerns
-
the financial arrangement.
I
never at
i~y
time said that
"$5,000 would be taken from
(my) salary to renovate HOUSE
IV." That statement is very
inaccurate .
.
Furthermore, such
arrangements are
·
a matter
between the Brothers and myself
PAGE7
and the Administration.
-
A far more serious inaccuracy
is quoting me as saying "Marist
accepts
81\Y
incoming student
who pays."
I
never made such a
statement and never would, since
I know perfectly well that it is not
true.
Finally,
I did not say that "it
is
predicted that in
three
years
Marist
will
be down to
600 or 700
students."
I did say ~ t that
is
a
possibility by the early 1980's and
not only for Marist but for all
other small private liberal arts
colleges.
I would be pleased to meet
Miss
Wendy Stark so as to make her
·
acquaintance before any fw::ther
articles on this
.
subject.
. ·
Fraternally
,
.
Dr. Joseph L
.
Belaru?:er
Alexander Theodore Bellas
·
.
Pred1·ct·1ons
·
David
C.
Richards
heart and has demonstrated this
repeatedly throughout my years
Joanne McCullough
Donna Wloszczyeo Dear Editor,
.
.
Andrea
-
Telesca
·.
In
refer~ce
'
to the. meeting
at Marist.
·
MaryFleming held on April: 17, 1977 m_ I:i?l!Se
In
this letter I am not ad-
Kevin Wolff. Four concerrung the possibilities dressing myself to the .merits or
G.McCutcheon . of a humanities house, I feel
faults ofa humanity house. I am
·
Thomas
w.
Conway, ·compelled t~ comment. .
.
..
far more concerned that an
:
James Clarke
'
As a semor graduating this
.
educator had so inaccurately and
·
Trish Geany
.
May I feel that Brother ~ela~er
.
casually
·
deseminated
.
·
in-
·.
Steve Deleskiewicz had not ~ed,
;
pro~r <!iscretion formation to students. I am

Patrick Hickey when he said Marist
.~n.
acceI?t
·
certain many underclassmen
Kate D~Wjtt any student who pays. _I fmd this were encouraged to consider
.
.
Maggie:Duffy
_
statement to be offensive to the transferring, which seems to be
Gary Diesel
,
current student~, the prof~sors blowing Marist's "crisis"' as Br .
BillFlaherty who have dedicated their ex-
Belanger describes it, out of
KevtiiMurphy" · cell~nce on our
.
behalf, an_d to
proportion.
.
Mark Mussa !\fa~ist College as an educational
·-
1 am not a member of House
Philippe Conerinec msti~ute.
.
.
.
IV, but I am a member of the
·· It
1s not my Intentions to smgle Marist commurµty and soon of
ou~ one statement and thereby_ the Marist alumni, and I hope Br.
misrepresent
·
the
Qverall Belanger's predictions of doom
~essage from Br .. Belanger, but
·
willnot be an inescapable fate for
.
·-
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·.
.
his message was mdeed a bleak Marist.
~
·
::
pictµres,
.
lhe
.
articles
,
Larry or humorous drawings, the p
_
aper one.
--
.
.
.Re:Spectfully,
.
striegel and the others wrote, the could
_
offer features
·
t
_
hat mo~
.
.
. .
I do believe ;that
B~~
Belanger
· .
Barbara Bella
·
Good
~
Work
-
·
.•
adsthatthe whole staff worked to daily newspapers provide
-
to
,
the ha~ the college s best interests at
get; almost
·
.
every
.
'
part of a rea~ers
'.
~
If the
·
me~bers of
<
_
·
·
.
1'o the Editors:
-''real",
.
''outside'' paper
.
was
.
va1:10Ufi clubs
:
at Mar~st. would -
E I
.
t•
.
thefr
·
own
·
·
ettecuveness; c)
_..-
In "this, the last
·
issue
.
of the
r
epresented. The
·
peoplE; that
.
did
.
wn~~
s~~nes or hstmgs of _
V8 U8
,
IORS
teachers report the forms
-
Circle for the.semester,
_
I
·
.
would the work and
-
had their names
-
th,e1r activities,- the~
.
~ould be ·
,
provide valuable feedback
li~e to congratul~te
,,
Larry
,
associated with that issue have assure_d.
·
of
pu bhcity
and.
"sometimes"
·
- 46 percent and
_
·
Stri!,!gela!ld pap Droxm,n, on their
:>
put togethei
::
some
.
thing that recogmtion, and
.
the newsp~per
"frequently" - 44 percent. Fur-
.
.. .
.
.
.
eftor~
.
this
.
spr:,ing to_ expapd ttie Marist
:
has
..
,never
,
seen.
·
before,
.
wo~Jd be~o~e m~r~polllplete, If
:

To the
-
Editors:
.
.
thermore, the teachers reported
• -
-
·
cover11~e
'<
<3.nd
·
If:ngth
,r:
of
:

;
~ch
·
;'
'
and
i
propabIY.:ml!
'.
_
11ot
~
·
~ee
:'
~
,
the
:··
·
':'~n~1;1S
.
~
_
a:'11p~ off1cia~, fa~ulty,
r_
·

·
,
Ari
·
ad hoc committee offaculty
·
· ·
having
·
the
clearest
un-
.
·
week's1ssueto a size more f1ttmg
,
near future.
·
_
·

:
· ·
_
·
:
-
·
..
. .
or studen~
,
i:epresent~tives wo~d
:
: arid students was formed last
derstanding of the criteria by
·
to
-

a
.
four year
_
school with
,
a
·
Unfortunately,
_
while the
·
in-
take the bmteach
_
~e~k to wi:;1te
_,:_
·
semester
·
to
examine
the
which their teaching
is
evaluated
Communications program
.
,
: ..
·
terest
iri
puttiilg
·
out a c9mplete a ~ort ~ol~ of opi~on or ~1ve
~
:
procedui;es currently employed
when using student feedback
.
While the paper at
J
imes
.
;ffiUlti-secUon
,
newspaper every
.
,
their VJewp
,
omt
.
.
on issues, t~e
_
for
·
the evaluation of teaching at
(chairmen; colleagues, and
seemed to be issued at th~
·.
con-
-
week

might

be
·
there, the per
-
··
-
~hole campus could learn of their
Marist
;
The committee has been
Academic Dean were less clearly
venience of the staff, (a paper sonnel and manpower are not.
If ideas,
.
~i:td the newspa~r could
surveying students (seniors
understood in their criteria).
·
was not
·
published one ~eek
.
only business s~udents in a grow
_
10
cov~rag~ and size
.
only), faculty members,: and
When students were surveyed,
beca~se
.
they were feverishly
'
marketi~g ~oncentration, 9r
I -~yse_lf behe':e .that ad-
departmental chairr.nen
to
.they report (seniors only) in
·
.
studymg for those always-tough communication students
10
vertismg is ~omething that has
discover
what
forms
of
answer to the question, "How
mid terms. Who says
.
Com- management would realize that been taken lightly for the past
evaluation are desirable and
seriously do you take the Student
munication Arts
is
an ~sy
·
they can gain experience
·
_.
for a two years; a nd the
_
Ad Managers
where strengths and
.
weaknesses
Evaluation of Faculty 'I'eaching
·
·
major??), the cons!stent eight future job by selling advertising have not done a whole lot fo~ ~he
lie in
_
current
·
procedures. A
Forms?", "very seriously" - 55
page siz~
,
and V!3nety of Jhe space
.
to local businesses, they paper or t~emselves. Ad~ertISmg • completed report of this work
is
percent; "moderately seriou~ly"
.
content spoke highly of
.
the
·
would
be
helping themselyes, and 1s somet~ng _that
.
_
pro_vides the
now in progress, but one major
-
33 percent; and "little
.
Journ1;tlism class and
_
the number the increased revenues and
.
space college
.
with mforniati~n about
finding which bears emphasis at
seriousness" - 12 percent
.
·
of articles they w~re required to taken up by ads would enable the t
_
he busmess~s a
_
nd services that
this time is that teachers who
Students, including those who
~arid in
:
The
_.
_
sports pa~es h~ve weekly issues to
·
grow
:
If more a~e surrounding them
,
~nd could
request students to fill out the
participated in the survey, often
also grown
:
m
...
professionalism communication students
_
would
.
give the newspaper the mcr~ased
ehd-of-seme
·
ster evaluation
wonder how seriously faculty
·
·
and scope under
.
Tom McTen:ian, be eager to

associate with
·
the reven~e and space
.
to
.
pro':ide a
.
forms

(80 percent of faculty
take student feedback.
On
the
·
~
md
·
will hopefully continue m a newspaper even without being
in
.
!Ilore m-depth look
~
at Manst.
It
·
responding
said
they
..
basis of the
.
work this committee
,
similar vein next year.
·
.
a
·
Journalism
·
class and
·
·
handing
·
may n~t r~val the Sunday, New
"frequently" do
so)
take these
has done, we can say that faculty
·
The 28 page Parent's Weekend~ in required stories, then the
york
Ti!Jles, but th
,
en, can~ you
students evaluations (which are
do indeed

attend to
.
student
Dedication,i
_
~ue was something
.
newspaper coul~ grow iIJ size and
.
.
Just
~e~
-
?.a pages every smgle
returned to them after" grades are
evaluations.
that ~owed a lot of ~a~d work, variety of stories available.
_
If w~ek.
submitted) quite seriously.
In
Ad
Hoc
Committee
on
planmng,
__
and_ creativ~ty, and
_
creative, talen_ted ~udents woulcl
Peter Van Aken
answer to various questions,
Evaluation of Teachiniz .
deserves special mention. 'lbe originate comic strips,
:
cartoons,
·
Class of1977
teachers:
·
a) thought student
Janet'Locke
·
--

·
,
evaluations inore accurately
Christina McLean
reflected their teaching abilities
Ed Marolda
.
..
-
than did classroom visitations by
Richard Platt
-
Cl
·
Th•
·
k•
·
g
·
·
·
certainly
a member
.
ofan interest
·
southwest?
Is
it fair to ask
·
the chairmen and colleagues; b)
·
·
·
Bob
Sandlier
.
. .
~ar
.
.
In In
·
group. College students, ~-
commuter to pay the same
_
teachers
·
"frequently" (79 per-
Vincent'Toscano, ~airman
..
ployees; employers, the self-
enormous gasoline
tu..
.
as the
~nt) use the
·
forms to assess
·
To the Editors:
employed, the unemployed, and retired, or tho~

~o~~
·
near
.
·
,
President
-
~rt~r
is
-.
~
serious the retired, are all interest hon_ie?:r1te law,_m i~ infwte and_
...._
·
danger
·
of dire<;tmg
.
his el_l~rgy groups. _Any
_
. energy program maJestlc
equality,
IS
ab~ut to
.
'
.
.
program accoi:ding to a radically must be directed at !{aining
.
a
.
make _the_ nght to freez~ m the
Better Heads
unpredictable. But, the very
.
..
· ·
-
.
wron~ co~ceptlon of what su~ a
. ·
consensus amoung
·
_
most such dark ~aliable for .the nch and
choice we make of the Fireside
program is for. We
·
~re entermg
:
groups,andnoprogramatallcan
·
poor alike.
·
.
.
Lounge instead of the
'
Theater
onto
.
a.road. that will hopefu¥: afford to ignore.them. T~ ignore
I-must_not a~t th:'lt
.
there IS
.
To the Editors;
.
.
indicates that an
'
audience of
.
100
lead t
_
o
.
a culture entirely
_
dif_ inter~ gro~~ m
,
fa~or
,-
of
.
~me s~ch
~
thing
~
a public ~terest,
,
I read with interest your article
·
people (the
_
number
_
.
accurately
ferent
.
from the
·
consumption
.
mythic~- ordipary ~1tizen
IS.
a even
_
~ ~ere
_
1S
-
J;1ot_ a public. The
entitled "Low Show at French
reported)
.
more than
.
filled
.
our
based
.
culture of the
.
last fourty return to the mentality that gave p~bli_c ~terest is m ~he ~ro~r
Night."
·,
,
average expectations .
.
,
.
·
.
.
·
.
:
Y.~r~
:
A~ t
_
~~ crossroads we
-
,
need
:
µs
the "Silent
.
~j~rity ."
.
_
~i:1buti~n ?f auth~nty; i.e.
~
I want to thank you f?r ~our
There may have
·
been
·
:
.
·
an
.
no~~g
-
~o~e tha~
_
w
_
e
_
n~d cl~r
·
.
Let us see, ag~m fro~ the text
.
Justice.
.
Smc~ . JU~tlce_
is
commendable and conscie~tious
.
element
·
of misunderstanding
thinki:ng.
·
. ·· ·
·
.
.
.
:
of Cart~•s address, exactly what
.
procedure! not distributive, it can
effort in covering the everung.
-
there.
In
any case
·
your fellow
"'._

We
-
~re ~old th9:t_thi~ program
-
conseqtiencesthissilentmajority
-
tell us how
.
to
.
go about cr~ting
Allow me, however, to express
French students ~hcf
:'
worked
·
.
· ~hall require.
sa~if!_<:~
5
rt~•
-
~:t
:
.
plann~g is ~~li to
:
·
!~d
us
.
~o:
.
an_ener~ pla~ ~thout ~ing a~le . . surprise
·
at. the ·_rat~er un-
.
hard toward making
·
the
'
·evening
. isfo~the_ul~te ucne
i
O
'.
_e
_.
"The:fifth· prmcip}e is
_
·
that
.
we to pr
_
ovide
.
us with one. Justice. fortunate choice of its
.
tl~le. Not
a success
,'
were u et-
·
as
~
l
~
was
.
public
,
.
,
:nie only .people
,
V,:~
0
will
__
"
must be
.
fair
_
.J~ll! solutions.
.
must tells us t!tat the '!fiY to
.
create an
.
only
.
was
it
·
unnecessarily
·
myself,·
.
:
,
at
,
-tk--
~
-':·
c•
"•
·
1
,
_
:
9ppo_se ~~_are m~bers of
;.,
.a¥ the
-
.
.. _
ask)?Q~l
.
sact~ic~
_.
fi:om eyer~
;
energy prop:~_
JS
no! to ass~e . negative and beli~, it
.
a~
gratuitously dama '· -

·
:
'iie~cfuri
s
...
.
.
s~ial
·
~terest
~
~oups
_
,-
m
.
·
the
·
1'.egion/
;
ex,~rY
:.
class

o~
:
people, th~t
;
leye~
lS
fa~,
~
not
.
to
conveyed the wrong unpr~!On
. ,
As
one of them put~'
.
'We
"
d
~t
·
'
_.
.
.
c~~ntry.
··
a
.
nd
.
_.
,th~
:
g~~itn~
_
ry
~
every
·
in~erest.
gr
_
oup
_.'!
,
·
: _
·
.
:
·-
: \·,.·
.
~
3
~WAe
:
that
:
m~erest
group.ir
are
· ·
of our
,
evening quantitatively as need
that
kind
.
of
:
publicity ,, on
·
..
C1tJZen ... 1Snotorgamzl:U
_
~o
.
an •
<
ls
:o.
equality
•:
.
then
·
always
:
the
·:
evil,andnotto1gnoretheprocess
.
·
n
·
·
-
.-
·.
·
,
:.-
-
·.·
,
:•
F
-
·
•·
-
.
.
..
.
.
.
interest'
·
group."
;:
'lbis
:
is
:
simply
:,
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
-
♦hlntt
'

:
·
·
oo· '
.
f . ?
-
I
.
.
·r
-~
of
·
comp
'
rimise
.
which
is
an
'
'
in.;
, .
w_e
.
~s qualitatively.
~
..
J

m-
-
-
.
;
·
, .
'
.
ra~o~~
;e.
-
qregg
.
·
-
,
·
if
·
th
·
ch
·
thin
,
,sa!'le
.
~"!"
16
:
as
,
mg
.
a1r
,
.
·
8
:
~
, ·

:.
-
~
·
·
'
- .
,
dicated, the turnout vanes from
.
Assistant Professor of French
.
,
.
,-
.
notJr~~;
.
. ~r!
is.
~u .
. _
a
_
_
g f~ir ~~
,.
as~
:
~e
-
no.rtheast
_
:
_
t
_
o
:
_
cut
.
tegraJ.
'.
pa~
_
of de~ocracy.
.
year to year
.'
according. to
dif.
:
"

.
·. (
·
.. :
·

:
,
:
:
:'.
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:
Chaiitrut
··
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f
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.
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·
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I
.
.
.
~
.
.
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_
_
.
,,
.
PAGES
THE CIRCLE
APRIL
28,
1977
Inter-House Cou
,
ncil
The Lighter Side
.
.
lacks-
accomplishment
'
.
.
.
.
Crossing
l!
.S.A.
·
By Alison llickey
whether it was a legislative or an
defines its purpose and amount of
by Phil Colangelo
advisory board .
.
We. were never
power.
_
Some
members of the Inter- really presented wi·th good things
House Council are discontented
'
to deal with."
·
·
Council
member
-
Louise
Well there is some good news and some bad news. The bad news
is that fi,nals are coming up. To many people the_ g~d news would
be that after finals comes vacation
.
But to me this
IS
all bad news
.
with
.
the Ia
.
ck
of accomplishment
-
The present constitution
.
of
.
the
Malinowski said
.
the council
f th
il
nd
didn't
work. She said, "the real
o
.
.
ecounc a
-
the uncertainty Inter-house Council states
.
the •problems weren't hit on."
(Alas, the eternal pessimist).
.
·
·
of its purpose:
'-
.
.
·
-
.
council w~s form~ to leg~~te
Decisions could not
.
be
made
Ben Franklin said something to the effect that after three days
· fish
·
and visitors begin to smell. I was never one to argue 'Ylth B~n,
but I give you six hours plus a. nap, tops, to be couped up_m a Inid-
sized American sedan with one of your best friends, heading cross-
country, before you start· thinking about drilling a hole in
his
head
Faculty'
·
representative Joe campus wid~ residen~e poliCies,

without input from the .. ad-
Norton
.
said; "the
.
council has
·
no an~ to ~sist the director 9f
.
ministration; She said "the real
set
·
Jdentity .'\ He blames the r~ide~ce
~ the perfo~~~ce of
.
problems were covered over. The
adrµinistr
_
ation because
.
he says it
·
his res1denttal-~espons1bili.tles: It

·
·
Inter-house could be powerful if
·
with a corkscrew
.
·
.
does
rton1otify the council ofthe also
sh~~~ assist
.
m co~rdinating
the administration worked side
Ptoblems and solutions con-
the actIV1ties of the vanous house
by side with them "
~rning housing
;
He said
;
-"the councilsandtoactasafacilitator
:

-
.
·
When you
·
start off driving to California (which
·
should not be
.
·
couricil
·
should say once and for for matters pertaining to the well·
·
.
Council member. Shirlene
·
compared to
'
driving to Florida,
·
a mere stone's throw
·
away), it
-
.
·_
a~ t_hat no
_
~ction pas~e
'
d by ad-
.
bei;'lg
i
and interests of the_
,
.
f.err~n~e
.
also
.
belleyes the
seemslik_enothingintheworldcouldpossiblygowrong.Imea'.nyou
ministrators concerning dorm resident students:-
·
To
.
carry
.
out·
.
council is
.
.
.
~
waste of
.
tIIDe. She
are fre~fortwoweeks; withno cares in the world exc~pfho
_
wmany
!ife
<
is
.
binding
.
:
unless
.
it goes
..
these functions the Inter-house
·
said
'.
·
sqe joined
:
_
because
..
"I
·
California girls
.
you can uh, well, um, you know; You are
,
sjnging
·
tl:irougli the
:
counciL". Norton also · Council may 1Jgislate policy
.
in,

thought
.
.
something would hair
.
with your buddy,
·
cracking jokes; laughing,
-
driving along and
.
said
;
that the council is not there
,
any area ofresidence life which it
-
pen."~ She said ther~ needs to be
·
having aplain old gleeful time. Then your friend hops in the back
. to
·
dotheadininistrators work. He
·
determines to be important.
·
to
<
more . inter-actjqn
.
·
between
·
·
the
seatfo.ra snooze. You listen to the radio to pass the
time
and take in
.
said
·
.
the
~
admini~ra_tors should campus
·
life.
..
council and th~ _administration
'
a little scenery. After your
1
shift of about 750 miles you are eager to
·
.
·
cotneto the council with proposed
.
Gambeski was a member of
·
before the-administrators make
catch some Z's .
.
You assume your sleeping position with your
'
face
solutions
to
·
problems and then Iilter
~
house Council in '74-'75. He
decisions concerning housing
·
pushed against the ashtray and legs bent at the)mees with your feet
!re
councHshould.v.ote
·
on them. said, ','we
·
were more willing to
<
policies .. The
--
-ad!11Jnistration
sticking out of the window
.
After your. uncomfortable, much too
'I;'o
;:
change
,
pohcies
-
·the ad-
take bolder steps then. Ithi!)kit is
should give us po~c1es we can
.
short sleep~ itisagain"yourturn tostek
·
,
nurustrators $ould come to the a waste of my time to be a
vote on; she said. Another
.1
·
.
.
·
Inter-:Hi:>use meetings,"
·
Norton member this semester because
problem with the council ac~

·
-

I
said.
·
·
..
.
·
·
.
.

.
.
. we never knew·what authority we
-
co!ding to Ferrante,
is
.
"l
don't
Suddenly your otiUciok isn't so carefree, you lost most of your glee
Councilman George Gambeski had and we couldn't make
.
think half the members go back
.
\
back in Ohio. 4,ttle things that used to make you laugh back at
·
said, "I don't go to , meetings decisions because we didn't have
to floorsand have meetings with
football practice ;1re becoming quite a bit more irritating in this
anymore because
r
saw ,it as a solid evidence to make
.
decisions·
the students about the issues."
small car. And it doesn't help matters when the most you can get
i
usel~ss organization
.
The council on.''

He believes the council
_
.
out of your friend are "nope" and "yup" .you are
'
lookingfor some
n~ver came to
.
terms
.
as
to
should
.
be dissolv
.
ed until
.
it
.
Old Gym
assistance while you are driving, arid.you say, "hey Kell do you
·,
,
km:,w where the atlas is, I have to find w}iat road to switch to?"
·.
-
-
Burglarized
"Nope."
·
.
.
By David Ng
"Hey ~ell do you know if there
is
any more of that pepperoni left,
.
so I have somethingto chomp on while
I'm
drivin'
-
?"
'.
_ .
:
·
·
Leave
Your-Head
to
·
ust
·
·
'
·
'
1
Nope.''
-
.
·
.
.
.
·
~
r
At least
$200
worih of
.
athietic
"HeyKelldidyouseeifthatwasacopbackthere?"
'
,,_..CU'rnE'R
. ·.
·
equipment was
'
taken
,
from the
"Nope/'
.
,
,
.
.
storage
.
room in the
.
old gym-
nasi mn late
.
Saturday night.
:;~::.!:
sniff ...
~
sn~ff, sniff) Ohno, he~Kell, did~oujust~?"
00
-
Three persons were seen leaving
As
you can
-
see this
:
is going to be a trying
·
experience
~
Even
,
·
.
uN·,~sE
.
X
FR
.
.
through
.
the front entrance
l
.
.
.
.
carrying
.
a"bundle of stuff in
,
s eepmg 1sbe~1nriing to become a chore.•During the day
:
whileyou
'
·
":~f
..
s,
w~
.
·
.
.
.
shop~!ib
.
bags
;\
:
a
~
c9,
_
~~ing
_'
to
,
.
,
;~o~e~h~;.tc!~~~~o;~5!;~:a;;:
1~
_
;,;~;,~~;;~:t~~:~
.
"
"
•.
.
· '

.
'.
":,
.
:.:
.
,
·
'
· .. >
.
:
.
.
::
-'.
:
:
Marist
:
11;:>
sour
.
·
·
:
.
·
,
,
.
.
..

.
· :•
·
·.
·
.
.
~.·
youtrytokeepthelinesofcommurucationopen.
··.,
.
·
;,.·
·,
.
·
s
·
r
'
REA
.•
K
·
-
1
--
NG, FROSTI
.
N.G
.
·
.
..
,
AccoJ"t1rng
t~
,:
Joe
·
TWateri
·
"
HeyKell,
·
ctoyoukriowwhatstatewe'rein?"
-
·
direct?~ of ~ecuntr, the own o
-
.
"Nope.''
/
·
.
·.
.
.
· .
.
-
- ..
·
.
&
PERMANENT WA~IN.G
·
·
·
·
.-
_
Po~~hKeepsie poh~e
-
ha"'.e ~een
''HeyKell do"youthinkthecarisgoingtoholdout?"
CALL 454-9239 for your
appointment now
.
.
. .
no~1f1e~ and are 1
,
~vestigatmgci
"Nope.,, '
.
.
.
·
·
.
·
ONTHallAINIIALL
Apparently,
_
t_he th ree ha
·
"Hey Kell do you know how much longer we have to go till
a
ua■IIITY STll■n
,
entered the ~uddmg through on.e
,
Denver?" '
·
(Above
Capitol
Bakery)
.
of the ~~ar w1~dows
'.
The latches
.
"Nope."
.
Entran~ ArQll!l~
~TT\e~
onth
~
wmdows do not ha"'.e,_locks:
·
"Oh no, hey Kell did you get
,
the pages of Hustler all stuck
·
·
·
together?"
-
-
·
-
Boxing gloves,
.
fencing foils,
"Yup.'' .
..
-..
,
_

·

bow and arrow sets
;
and other
. _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Cll _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
. , .
athletic gear was taken
. :
.
.
Jti
January,
$<tOO
.
:woi:th _of
.
It
is unbearable. It almost comes to fisticuffs in Utah, but you
Corijmuter
Union
·
Sponsors a
Get-Together
Featuring
·
Tim
Jessup
&
&>
Bob
Lyn·ch
Friday,April
29
2~5
p.m.
'
. ·
in ihe
·
Courtyard
.
·
(rain locati9n: old gym)
.
·
:
·
FREE
--
-
-
. l
• .
.
·
-
.
·
'

,
·
.
:.
·
,
-
.,
,
_
_
:
.
11eet
-
Sdda
-
..
-
.- :
:
#<it
Dogs
·
··
.
·
-
.
·

·
..
equipment including bas
.
ketballs
.
mamige to hold out till·Vegas. There is no way you can
.
possibly
and uniforms were taken from
make it all the way back to New York in the same car as that
the pld
·
gym
.
.
·
.
·
. ·

·
·
NeanderthaL You spend every one of your 450 silver dollars in the
Iir .
.
Howard Goldman; physical
·
big sl
.
ot machine in the
.
Stardu
.
st
-
Hotel, trying
t6
win a Lincoln
.
education director, said as soon
..
·
as the· storage
·
and equipmenf
.
.
Colitinental.
-
No luck, and worse, no money left with a we~k
-
and a
rooms in the McCa@
.
,
complex
half of facation left.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
areJinished, all equipment-iii the
.
·
"Hey Kell, maybe you're.not such a bad i,_ort after all."
old gym will be moved over to the
·
center .
.
.
·
.
.
JOHNN
.
v
··
oN THE
'
-
SPOT
.
CLEANERS
. -
(CLEA
_
N
FAIR)_
·
49 Civic
:
Center-
·
(~CROSS FROM
-
MUN
.
ICIPAL
.
COMPLEX)
.
'
.
'
~
.
..
_
Do yoi:fJ1ave
:
heavy
·
rugs, blankets,
.
,
or winter ~lothing
~
t:hat
.
you dQn!t,:
.
\-iar1
.
t
:
to lug horne'tYl
.
eJl,
·
JOH~
_
N,Y~QN THE SPOT.
,
CLEANER$
,:
((:L.EA.N
~
)
f
AIR}
V,IL~
:

STQ~E
·
THJM~
.
.
AND
,
INSURE
)
l'HEM
i
.'
FR
'
EE
{
:
.
IN
>;
THE
::
_
FAi.L
:
you
:
PICK
0
THEM
:
up

:
FRESHLY
'•
..
,
.
..
c:Li:'ANED
t
;
ANQ
:i'.
pRESSED
'
FOR
·
:
·
·:
THE
-~
oRIGINAL
:.
'
.
ctEANING
:
P,ICE.
\
Nb
~
S'l'ORAGE
'
·
·
FEE!!
AN
OFFER
.
:
vou
-
:
c-AN'T
0
PASS
'
UP~
Ct:ALi
,:,
fHEM
/
A'i
,
i
452~9732
'
or
i
visif
them

af
49
:
·
civic
)
Certte~
/
:
_
)~~~ci\~
J
tffl~
~
T
-
~~
-
~f•
.
P,,
:
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111
~~~
.
~r
· -
·
-
·
·
··
·
"·',
··
·
·
·

·
-,
·
·
.-
.
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APRIL 28, 1977
THE CIRCLE"
PAGE9
·
For The Record, it''s The Circle
..
---------------
.
.
.
.
..
By Daniel Dromm
·
division totals 237; of these, 107 the story· as unethical formed
are student brothers
.
In the their own editorial board and
Journalistic history at
·
Ma
·
rist evening division there are 287
published the first Circle.
extends much further back than (students) registered."
_
-
In the editorial of that
first
A "teach in"
·
was held' on
March 30, 1966 to educate people
on the issue of tJ:le Vietnam War.
the publication of the first issue of
"450 Commuter Cars Fill issue the purpose of 'Ille Circle
Father Daniel Berrigan spoke
The Circle
.
Before there was Parking
.
Facilities" was the was
stated.
It
said " ... a college
against
-
the war and Ambassador
even a Circle the students headline
·
of the-lead story in the
·
newspaper should
-
be
a bat-
John
'
Lodge spoke in favor of
published the R~ord. And at the November
_
21,
-
1961 issue.
,
The
.
tleground for student opinions.
American
involvement
in
same time . the Record was
~
s(ory further
stated
that
"H
one However, The Circle does not
·
Vietnam
.
~ccording to The Circle
published, another publication were to
·
look into one or two
·
intend to let anyone's good
over 1500 people
_
attended the
·
appeared
.
called
·
,Reynard's Marist
--
parkiiig
Iois
·
some
af;.
reputation die on that bat-
,,
"teach in" where Ambassatlor
Record. But for those who care
to
·
temoon or evening and see the tlefield." ·
Lodge said, "Nixon
·
~ys we
go even further back; there was
_
· multitude of
cars
that are lined
should stop apologizing for
this
also the Greystone Gazette.
·
·
·
-
·
up there, he would r~~e without
-
~~~i.=~~~~~~~•
·
war. I agree with
him."
.
·
The Gretstone Gazette
was
a doubt that Marist
18
also a
Even
in
1967 the students were
published in i944 by the student'-
'
commuters' college.'
!
There
·
.
dissatisfied with the food service.
brothers
,
·
attending,
·_
the then,
·
were 800 students enrolled at
· ·
On May
-
l8 The Cirtcle reported
Marian College.
-

Unfortunately Marist, of which only 100 \vere
Student newspapers at
thattheStudentCouncil,asitwas
there are 9nly two issues oMhe resident students.
·
Marist College began when
then known, had dismissed tlie
· th Marist' Coll
,
Lo .:.
1
the Greystone Gazette was
paper m e
.
.
ege
·
.
ccu
-
-
.
·
·
p
·
ublished iti 1944
·
. In 1960
_
Th~
'
Brady Food Service and had
History Room in the library but
,-
Fruit
Flies
-
'
asked SAGA, last year's food
.
those issues speak
-
alotabout the
--
Record was pub~ed as the
service,
_
to take over the
early
·
days of the
school
>
·
: .
.
_
·
ComIJ!on to
·
many biology
voice of
·
the
-
students.
operation.
_
In
the Christmas'l948 issue the majors ate
·
Dr. George
·
Hopper's
Although the reasons why
In the years to come The Circle
.
-
arti~le_s d~l
-
primarilly
'Wi!!J.
.
:
sta!el!leilts
,
on
_
''fruit flies'.'. It
the Reynard's
·
·
Record was
was basically concerned with the-
reUgious
_
themes;
·
~t
,
.
was
seems that even as early
~ 1961
published in 1961
'
are
uh-
Vietnam War
;
and other social
-
dedicated
_
''All to Jesus through
Dr. Hoo~r
.
had begun his. ex-
clear, nevertheless it was an
problems. Most news reported
in
Mary'•
·
as are
·
.
the
.
Marist
-
.
"
tensive research
.
on the subJect.
attempt
-
to
·
publish student
.
.
f
ti
1
Brothers
in
·
their work. It
·
was
.
·
It
was reported
'
in The Record
,
_
viewss
.
.
_
_
the paper was a nnx O na ona
.
edited
~
by
,
Marist Brothers
,
'
. '
:
·
thaf Dr
>
Hooper
·
had addressed .

Circle was published after
.
and local events.
-
In the April 5
·
1953

edition "the
-
·
"
the Literary Club "on the subject
.
_
a
four month period in which
.
.
editorial was
written
on
the
·
riseri
:
··of his graduate work at Princeton
there. was
.
no student paper
Christ. The paper
was
-
produced
·
'
with
-
-
Drosophila,-

alias "fruit
-
at
alL
Iri
1973 The Circle was
OQ
a cardboard like
i
paper
:
and
. .
flies" in relation
_-:
to ecologic
_
al
-
:
published
·
to
set
a tradition
.
-
-
.
wa
·
s
<
illustrated with rf:lligiotis
·
.
bala11_ce."
,
_
.
that was never followed.
.
-:
pictures.
·
·
·
·
·
·
-
__
·_
Figb
'
•.
t Song

And
-
today The
.
Circle is
alive and well
.
.
.
. _
Hazhlg ,
/
..._,
stand
for the Crimso~ and
-
._
,
After the
"
school admitted
-
lay
_
:
~~en
:
of M~ri~fand Fight
·
.
students
;
a. new
-
periodical ap-
· .
_
Forward
,
banners
·
and
"
:
onto the
_
·
pe_ared
:
Ca}ldeliftThh
.
e :a.ecorfd
;
t
·.
h
·
it
·
·
Fray
-

·
·
· -. "
·
· ·
. .
·
.
-
· ·
·.·
Th
.
eeditorsofthe
·
ci·r
·
c
·
le
.
choos
··
e
.
.
was suppose y
e v9ice
-
o
'
e
Bring up the Might
_
.
.
sta11dards
.
. ·
student body
."
Inits,Oct.
:
1()
;
1961
Tr'
·
-
·
h
t
Arr
·
·
·
'Initiation
·
Tliru
'
:
Corn~
> ,
-
·.
_
.
.
!~sue a
:
storf
'
~ppeared

. en~\~eq
_
_
. ~aitbi~io ~~e
"
Col~fge' we love
.
·
munication'
·
as the motto for this
-
·
·
.
FroshHazmg
:
A Review

I.n
.
,-
we will"always
be
,
-
·
-
new paper:
'
1be f~st editor was
.
-,
that story
_
~he
-
author m
_~
nbons
_
Till the Hudson
Runs
dry
_
·
GeraWJohannsen..
·
-
.:
~
·

·-
.
tti~t
~~e
_
'~fr~~~~
-
'!e~~
-
not
·
ql)l~
,
:
-
We
.
·
will
thurid0r
·
·
oitr Cry
··
·
·
-
·.
·
.
_
. .
required
:
to
·
mem~riz~ the
_
_
pur-
Marist Men go
on
to Victory;
· ·
··
·
That first semester of the
·
·
_
.
poses of the orgaruzations of the
.
,
··
·
.
·
·
· ·
·
-
·
·
Circle's existence
:
ended rather
·

school, butalso,
.
upon th~ request·
.
This song was proposeq as the successfully. They had publish~d
:
of a sophom.9r~;
,
x:ectte
th~
=
.
Ft:Q~
.
•.
-
.
_o((ic
i
~1 §Ong of tltct
.
~Q}!~g~
.
iJ? tll~
.
.
-
~
-
paper
.
every two w~e~ tha~
-
was
_lie,
·
.
•·
.
.
.
.
;
·.·
-
.
~
.
.
Gaelic
club
formed
By Wanda Glenn
The Marist Gaelic Society, an
old college tradition, which saw
_
its last days in 1974 because of
money problems, is being
revived.
Jim
Kenney,
temporary
president of the club, said he
heard a lot about the club from
previous members and decided to
start it again
'.
_
.
"It
is definitely a Marist
tradition dating back to the early
1960's," said Kenney. "At one
time it was the most prominent
club on campus
.
"
So
far about 100 people have
signed up "which
is
about the
same as it was before."
The main goal of the club is "to
try to stop the school's reputation
as a suitcase college by spon-
soring different things on
weekends, and possibly during
the week to stop the movement to
town bars.
·
t
"
.--._
.
-
_
_
-· ·
pledge: "Fa
_
iµ ~Jowly fro~
:
:t
J'~nuary ~6, 1962
·
1SSu~
:
~f
:
'TJ!-
.
e

at least
'
fow:
;
pages·Iong.
-
.
_
,
.
-
The article
.
contmued,
·
"Hazmg
;
_
.
Recor.cl
.
It
was also asked that
if
,
_ .
as
.
w_e planned it
_
'!as aperio~
·
of
~•anyone who has any ideas
-
abcilit
In
.
the November1965~issue
of
unification of the
:
freshmen class,
adding to the song pJease contact
-
the Circle an advertisement
was
- _

recognition of Marist College;
Bro~h~r William Murphy."
·
_
placedaskingstudentstojoinina
.
l
.
respect for and from the
·
_
up-
William. Murohy, ~own. to us
.
"Vietoryin VietnamRally." One
.--
\\
perclasspen and fWJ for alldlwhf
ahs"t!ide.dima. stti~r offcethremoMruesCa
_
for of the guest speakers was Dr.
I
'
.
·
~
participated
·
,
wholehearte y. '
t e
e ~a (!n
·
o
e
c nn Roscoe Balch, history depart-
illteQ
_OPEN/NG
,
i

·
.
.

The October
·
24, 1961 issue
Cent.er, t~o weeks
:
M~, was
.
ment. He spoke in favor of the
.
carried a story on "the $20 ac-
Mar1St
__
s first athletic director. U.S
.
position in Indo-China.
i
tivity -fee
-
.
which every Marist
But The Record was . not
·
~
studentmu~pay;"Backthenthe
without criticism.
_
Qr .
.
Roscoe
~
Peter Walsh, chairman of the
Jl-
,
-
library was located
_
in Gteystone - Balch, history
:
departme!lt
"students Committee for Victory
-
ii'.
·
in what is
_
now the
_
president's
wrote: "The f
_
irst
_
step i
_
n
·
·

ti
rn
office and
·
plans
.
were just being
revamping the paper is to bum
-
~~e:~:re!f'iiitf:n;z:a::i~
l
~
drawn up
_
to move the
-
library to
it.tt
.
·
·
·
"The consensus of opinion (on
-;~
__
Donnelly Hall.
·_
.
-
·
Anotherteacher wrot~:- "I ~eel
campus) is
.
almost 100 percent
·
t
The staff of The Record for that
·
the newspaper should look,think,
pro
·
_
-Vietnam
.
" He -disclosed
.
;
b
_
\;-
-
year ·m· eluded
·
·
n<>
_
.
ople wh
_
o are
rea
_
d
_
an
_
d _fee
_
1
J
_
ilt·
~.a rie
_
_
ws
,
paper,

rt·
· ,a;
.
t--~
-
-
plans for a
_
petition, suppo mg
\

familiar
<
to us
·
today. Brother
.
·
·
not~ parish bulletm."
,
-
the U.S. position in Vietnam, to
J{
~
-
·
eornelitis
f-
·-
Russell,
btisiness
_
·
·
· -
-
-
-
-
··
·
·
· ·
be
cir~ulated among
-
the student
,
i
department,
,
was the Faculty
.
·
The
Cfr<!le
·
body
and faculty!'
: a;{
Advisor.
· -
Anthony
.
Campilii,
_
Eso.Ay
.
, ~PRtL<6
.
.
.
_
. ·
abuJous
.
_-
-
~FRfE
1
AiDl\n81ss10N
Tuesday
:
Wednesday, Th~rsday and Sunday
·
-Friday and Saturday before 9:00 P.M.
-:-
.
J}
&
currently the
·
business manager,
The first isstie
~
~
of The
·
Circle
·
·
; fj
i
and Gary Smith,
,
presently a
appeared
_
Feb:· 12, 1965.
__ .
:
· ·
For one year the students were
; J
-

~~ber of the board of
-
trustees·
This occ:ured only
.
-
after
.
there
u~et with
.
the
._
"cut" system at
!
I
.
were both
.
writers for the paper.
was a four month period where
Marist which
stated
that
-
students
; 11
·
-
-
~
Tom McAndrew; city editor of the
there was
·
no student" publication
could only miss
three
classes
in
TUESDAY
.l\'.~UJR.
~
lfifijl
SAUCY
_
TOUCH
_
Starting May 3
FREE ADMISSION - All Juice Drinks, 25c
·
·
·
Poughkeepsie Journal
.
. ·
and
at all. The editors ofThe Record
one
semester
.
-
Finally on
I
·
husband
-
of
:
:
Mimi Mc.Andrew,
were split over the implications
.
_
"Friday, Feb. 11, the faculty
.
journalism:teacher,worked as
:
a
of a
·
story
'.
explaining a
·
verbal
_
voted by amajoi:ity
_
Qf two to one
·
reporter for
_
The Record
.
· -
·
attack on the bookstot.'e manager.
to adopt
·
a new
:
attitud~ toward
,
McAndrewwroteintheFeb. 21,
·
One
'
group ~alled it "unethicalt'
absences:" This attitude was
,
·
1961
°
issue that:
.
''the present
_.
while the others want¢
,
to stick
'.
termed
"resp
.
cinsible
at-
,.
student enrollriient
·
in
'
the day
beh~d the story~ Those who saw
tendance."
·
.
,
.
.
~
-
.
.
·
-
."'
.

·.
·
.-
·
·-
.
. .
.
,
'
·
..
·.
·
.
V\IIZJ\la
.
·
_
.
,
,

.
.
~
~
-
:
.

,

·
.
,

':
of
·
.
_
and .
.
,
·
:
;
t
~~ijp~
from 8
:
00 to 9
:
30 P
.
M.
WEDNESDAY-
POWERHOtiSE
FREE ADMISSION - Girls pay 25c for drinks
from 8:00 to 9:30 P.M.
THURSDAY -
L
.,.
.
SAPPHIRE
FREE ADMISSION - All drinks, 25c with college ID
. ,
from
8:00
to
9:30 P.M.
·
·
--
.
..
.
~
.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY .
FREE ADMISSION before 9:00 P
.
M.
April 29
·
KiCKIN
.
May 13 &
14
SAPPHIRE
.
April 30
SAPPHIRE
May 20 & 21 SAU
.
CY TOUG,H
._
·
May 6
&
7
POWERHOUSE
May 27
&
2_8
ST~JPLECHASE
s·uND~Y-
l
~
BD
r
1.],
lffltill
t
)
STEEPLECHASE
;
_
:
__
·
<
FREE ADMiSSION-' Local beer,
·
256 per
·
boftte
·
-
-from 8:00
,
to 9:30 P.M
_
:
·
SPECIAL ... SUNDAY, MAY 22
RAT RACE CHOIR
:
;?
~

'
I:
,.
f
/
··
·
0
_



.:.


, •


·


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:
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_
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.
featureair person~lities hjg
·
tttly
;
_
frorn
~
.-
,.:.95
'

F.M
·
Roqk,
,
WRNW~Stereo
1 Oi\
"
:
W~DH'.71.01:
~
.
5
/
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a'nd
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_
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st_en ~qtt,e·nfonJne
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Westpt)E3StE3
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-
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.















































































































,

'
.
.
PAGE 10
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 28, 1977
-
A look at Communications
-
By
Larry
Striege)
were added to the curriculum of
·
business.
'We do this because are able to take more courses in short in its development."
·
.
.
the English department such as we have
to
-
bring home to the Platt's specialty, the , cinema
.
On
graduation day, May 15, creative
writing,

speech, and the student
that
communications is There are also four part-time
Marist
·
College
will say good-bye theater.
really an interdisciplinary
.
af-
instructors who specialize
.
·
in
to
_
.
a group of more than 25
Early in
·
1973 the English fair," says
Lanning.
"We want journalism, television and radio.
stu~~ts
,
who
are the original department
.
reevaluated itself,
him
or her
thinking
not only in The
_
budget of the department is
COillmunicaUons arts majors. said
Lanning,
and
after
much terms of the media, but in terms $136,000.
Lanning
said
.
all but
'Ibey were freshmen in 1973 when discussion and two college-wide of getting a liberal
arts
degree $4,000 for operating
.
~sts
is used
·
The hope for the department
.
lies
in whether
Marist
can raise
more than
half
a million dollars
to rebuild
.
the old
gym
into a
proposed Communications
..
and
Fine
Arts
Center .
.
(see article
elsewhere in
'
The Circle.)
·
.
the
-
college.started the program, colloquia
·
involving all faculty
.

from
Marist
College."
to pay
.
.
t~chers.
· ·
and are the
.
first students to have members
,
it was
.
unanimously
·
.
"I
think
along that line
·
the
Gut
Major?
.
.
·
beei
(
with it for four years.
·
agreed that a separate major in
Problems and Solutions
college is trying to give
·
the
_.,;
·
~
(
that· yea,r the group was communications arts would
be
students as much
·
as it can," he
·Another
_
problem which is·
·
not
Jomed
by
about 30 upperclassmen added. The new program
·
would
·
The growth in the number of says. "We're
trying
to
do

the as evident
··.
to
.
faculty
.
as.
it is
to
'
who
·
.
changed
·
.
their major to be
run
in association with the students majoring in com.;. most for the money.'_' He added students pertains
to
the image· of
·
communications arts
;
Since then, English department and would munications
arts
.
has presented
.
that the budget is about the same the major.
·
.
,
.
.
·
that
·
smau
:
population has lead
to
a Bachelor of
Arts
degree. some problems,

says
·
Lanning.
as
_
other departments of the
There are
·
students who
.
spr,oµted into the
.
fourth largest
Since that time, the depart-
'
_
'I don't
think
we thought the same size a~ Marist.
reservedly admit
.
to
·
being
.
a
·
major
.
at
·.
Marist
:
with 136 ment
has
developed and added major would take off as it has,"
·
communications major for fear
students, including
.
73 females
.
courses in different parts of the he said. "The work
.
of the first
Lack
~
of
Facilities
of some embarassment; "It's a
.
.
::_.
:.
:
,:
··
media, and has expanded its four years has been to get it
·
But there may
be
criteria for
·
gut (easy)
_
major,"
:
say many
The Start
.
internship program.
.
·
going, get a field of
courses,
·
and budgeting more funds for the non-communications
students.
.
.
As a freshman
,
the com-
·
to see
if it
'
s a growing
·
reality
.
" department. "My J>iggest con-
'
'.
Compared to
bio
or business, all
/
According to Dr. Jeptha milnications major
takes
basic
Some
'
of the problems the
cern
is that
as
we
move to the .it takes is common•sense."

·
canriirig, . associate professor
·
courses in speech, writing, and "growing
.
reality•:
·
has en-
future we
·
ne
_
ed bigger ex-
Dr.
Lanning
says
.'
that im-
Eriglish arid
-
-
chairman of the the media. By graduation tim¢ he countered include adding more penditures for lab facilities," pression isn't totally
_
false.
" I ·
department of English and may have worked a full semester courses, and
.
working with a
.
Lanning says
.-
'
..
. .
.
.
.
.
think
it
·
{the major) is what you
·

Communications
.
arts,
:
the as an intern at a radio station in
,
limited budget.
.
Most
·
faculty and students
:
want to
_
make it.
-
A major
.
in the
·
program evolved
.
from several
·
New York City, or a reporter on
Lanning
·
said
.
some
·
of the agree
.
It's hard
to
major in physical sciences
·
is
,
very
courses
-
once
.
offered to English an
.
area newspaper; Many agree teachers in the department are
.
communications .at a
.
school structured and moves along
'.
majors:
...

·
.
.
.
·
.
·.
·
·
·
that the internship program is the undergoing a llretooling
.
process"
,
without a well equipped radio and sequentially:~ It's probably easier
::
Since the
.
first course
·.
in strong point of the major: For the in order to offer more to students .
.
television station, a theater to get through in the humanities
.
con;irtiunications
.
was
off~~ . in ~st,three years the department Augustine Nolan,
..
assistant workshop,
.
or ah authentic than the hard sciences
.
But
.
what
:<
1962Ahe
·
department saw m m- has placed m~re than 30 students professor of English,
is working pressroom
.-
.
.
--·
does getting through mean? For
·
,
creasing need for more courses of in internships.
for
his
_
·
third
_
M.
_
A ..
.
Lanning
The seriousness ofthe
,
problem who? For what?
:
·
•.
·
.
.
··
this type because of the ''com-
Along
;
with communications himself will
,
he.
·
tak.ing
a
.
sab-
··
was stated in a report by Lanning
_
"Our
.
major can
be
a gut if they
municationsexplosionhappening coutses,
·
thestude~tisrequiredto
·
baticalnext
.
year to attend th~
dated Jan. 2, 1976 to Vice
·
(students)choosetomakeitso.It
.
all around us," said Lanning
.
So,
take several credits offered by a New Schoolin New York to study President
Edward
·
Waters can also be
a
very knowledgeable
-.
•·
in
.
··•
the early
·
1970'smore than 20 variety of departments including · the theory of:the
.
communication
.
concerning space allocation for experience with.much
,
need for
communications related courses anthropology, art: history, and process.
,
He said
in the future he
·
the major.
.
·
·
studyandworkifstudents·choose
p~~~~~~~~~~=:::i:a::=~~~=::~~~~=::~~•
would like to see more courses in
· :.
Tlie
ret,ort said: ".:.in order to to avail themselves of the in-
.
··

·
·
·
·
geriatric,
:
industrial, and elec
:-
enhance the quality of the major stru~ors and courses
.
who can
·
A
··
·
T
·
TENT
·
1
·
0
·
N
-tronic communication offered at and
to
remaµi
.
c~mpetitive in the give them their
best.,t
·
.
.
..
~
.
·
.
·
·
.
·.
·
.
.
·
·
"
Marist, and that the retooling of
placement'
'
of gur
·
Jnterns,
·
Despite
'
the interference of
faculty is a step in that direction.
· ·
adequat~ laboratory space
-
·
is
problems the department is
The Ad
.
mission·s ·. Office is ac~
cepting
the
n~mes
.
of
those studen.ts
interested
:
_
in pa~tjcipating in the
111-
·
ternship
__
in
,-
Educational
.
A..«;I-
i
.'iiiin'i"str
'
ati6n
·:
'
-
A~y--
·
.
.
,
_
p~e~ei:it:
soph~mores or juniors ~nterested in
recruiting for the col~ege,
.
should
·
subj.nit their name·s and phone
Lanning also said last year's
·

essentialto the maintenance and
_
progressivelyfinding better ways
·
addition of
_
0r:
Richard Platt;- the
·
_
development
.
of the program... to educate its students, says
.
.
first full-timer hired
-
_
since
·
1970,
·
Unless this need
is
addressed; the Lanning .
.
The sender's
..
message

puts the total full-time faculty
·
.
college credibility
.
to
·
field
·
a
.
is
·
making its way to a receiver,
·
figure
.
for the English and
·
majof in the area
_
wou.}d
be
called
:
and in the beginning and
.
the end
.
·
Communications Department at into question
.
and
·
a growing, that's what th1fmajor is all about.
.
· nine
; .
With his
.
arrival,
.
students
, .
.
dynamic progr!llJl might
be
.
cl}.t
- - - -
·

.
'
_
t
'
a1fn1ng
~
ro
·
·
"
rfitOOI/
·
- · '
.
j,.

'
""'
to go
!
on sabbatical
.
.
_
.-
-
.
·,
numbers to the office no later than
ByRoSie
.
Nguyen
r!
0
~~~~Jnex:;ss~~~~:~e:~
Dr. Jeptha Laiming,English
practice
,
" he said, so
as
to
.
return
Ma 4.
.
department Chairman,
.
will
to ~arist to hopefully strengthen
~~
111
~~,~,~
111
~
11
=,
't:t.
~.~i~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~
·
.
spend part of his sabbatical next
·
the department in what would
SUPER SA Vi°NGS ON ALL
YOUR UOUOR NEEDS
.
i1
.
BLEND ........
4
•.
G.IN 80° .
·
.
~
..
;
·...
41s
VODKA
80° . . . . 41s
Jlyll,
Ja~k
.
GIN 900. . .......
·.
469
BOURBON 88° .
4e9
.
6yea,otd
year'tryingto raise morieyfor the
enrich our majo
·
rs. ,
.
·
..
new Communication Fine
Arts
·
.
¾lother- area
Lanning intends
·center
.
''My job will be to work
to work ori during his sabbatical
more_
•.
closely
·
with
-
Dean Tom
·
leave is
.
to establish a relation-
·
.
Wade
,'
(director
of
d~velopment),
.
ship witlt the community colleges
·
with
·,
the endeavor
.
to discover
in the lower and mid-Hudson area
. <
people
arid
organizaljons
·
toJ}elp
.
so
·
that
.
they
·
could transfer
.
·
to
· .
us realize this
,
goal by donations
Marist. Lanning
is
presently a
and grarits," said Lanning.
communication
·
counselor ·at
,
.
·
· Lanning, · who
.
wrote up the
Ulster Community College.
proposal
·
to the executive com-
This is Lanning's last term as
mittee
arid
.
served
.
to coordinate
department chairman-.
.
He
.
has
.
the
:
c
·
onversation between
· ··
the
·
served seven years as English
·
depanments; said he
.
met with
··
;
department
_
chairman beginning
.
some
·
of
.. ·
·
the trustees
.
and
·
ex-
·.
in 1970
·
as
.
assistant chainnan
plained the concept to them .
.
"We
then
·
becoming chairman in 1971
· agr~dto.the basic design of the
.
Dr. Jeptba Lanning
and then he renewed his second
building/'. said Lanning.

term in 1974. He will resign from
.
.
·
In
,-
addition
.
to "selling
.
the
Coznmlinication
,
Theory, In-
his position June 30th.
·
.
.
.
- ·
concept
,
" Lanning intends to
dustrial Communication, Family
.
.
W~en
·.
Dr .
.
Lallning returns
spend
·
·
a majority
:
of
.
his sab-
·
.
Communication,
.
public opinion, fr~m hi~ sabbatical he says,
.
''I'
..
. batical by studying
.
areas in New
public relations, advertising, and
will want to.teach and work in the
·
Sciert
.
~e
. _
of Social
.
Research,
-
Communication between Social area
J
refreshened myself
in."
.
/.
l11ter-House inVites
.
Perez
'
ii
---..
.
·
r~
SCOT9H 80° . .
·
499
s29
.-
-
SCOTCH 86°
,
,
I

o
~
,
.
,
.
'

,
;
,
,
,
.
,
.
,
:
.
-~,
.
,
,
...
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.










































































































































I
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I
APRIL 28, 1977
THE
CIRCLE
PAGE 11
Marist sports:


year
,n review
By
Tom McTernan
those who have never heard of
Individually, Scholder won hampered by injuries to key
Pele.-
three invitationals (Glassboro, -
players.
.
The historical highlight of the
For coach
.
"Doc" Goldman, SMU, Lehman) and two cham-
Leading scorer and rebounder
1976-1977 sports year at Marist who passed the 100-victory mark, pionship (CACC, Upstates) for the women was Wanda Glenn,
was undoubtedly the opening and it was
·
another big step forward races. He al.so made first team whose efforts included a 35-point
dedication of the Mccann from the dismal years of the New York State, All-CACC,
All-
performance against St. Thomas
Recreation Center. But for on-· 1960's, when even a .500 season IC4A, All-East Coast College Aquinas.
'
the-field· achievements, the
.
seemed impossible. The only
.
Division and ranked 22nd in the
Once again it was the soccer
outstanding perfonnance of the disappointment this time was the country of all NCAA Division III team which captured the
Red Fox soccer team was clearly failure to repeat
·
as
·
CACC runners.
headlines during the winter,
the winner,
. -
with cross-country champs, resulting from a 1-0 mid-
Kolthay and
·
Brian
Costine winning indoor tii:les at the
and freshman sensation Jerry
\
season loss to Nyack.
al.so made the first-team
All-
Germania and
IU>I
tournaments.
Scholder next in_ llile.
-
Zenone was the outstanding State, with Tom Gilligan on ttie 7.enone Naitza was voted the
Sports fans were greeted on individual performer on
.
offense
second team and George Mc-
MVP after the RPI victory in
their return from the "Summer • breaking all school records with Cutcheon
.
on the third.
which he contributed five goals.
of ; '76" with news of the atr an incredible
25
goals and 33
·
·
pomtn:ient _of
_
Ron Petro _
_
as points'.
On
defense, goalie Jay
A
Bleak Winter
·
Springtime Oars and Racquets
athletic director, replacmg Metzger provided the spark with
·. Howard ''Doc" Goldman, who seven shutouts and an 0.79 goals-
It was another long season for
The spring season has just
rema~ chairman ·of · physical agai~st
.
average,
earning coach Petro and the varsity about reached the halfway point
-
education. other new f~ces were honorable mention All-State
·
basketball team, which finished- witQ big events still ahead for
·
Gary Caldwell, head crew coach; honors.
at 8-16, its worst record in eleven most teams. Crew and tennis
Eile·en Witt, tennis and women's
Five Red Fox hooters were years under Petro. Inexperience continue to head the list, with
basketball coach and intramural selected to the all-Conference was an overriding factor from the track and field, lacrosse
.
and golf
director; and
.
Larry Van Wagner,
·
squad: Zenone and
.
Firmino
.
beginmng,
.
but the failure
·
to
lagging behind
.
.
.
Red
Foxes have been unable to
field an entire squad for any
meet, indoor or outdoor.
Several individuals, however.
have continued to turn in im-
pressive performances. Pete Van
Aken
is dominating the field
events as usual and Keith
Millspaugh has broken the school
record in the
880, but the lack of
depth may force the team to
relinquish its CACC title.
The injury-plagued lacrosse
team is suffering through another
dismal season with a
2-6
record,
1-5 in the Knickerbocker Con-
ference. Coach Jeff Behnke is left
with planning for ne:{t year,
something that might occupy him
until next spring.
Intramural Champs
·
aquatics director and golf coach. Naitza, Metzger, Jim Titone and master the concepts of teamwork
The varsity crews started off
Plans for Marist's athletic future John McGraw.
.
and defense cost the Red
.
Foxes on a downer. with losses .
to
·
were also· disclosed,- which in-
on several occasions.
UMass,.
but
both
the
lotramural winners included
"
Goobers Tool" in toucl
-
football,
·
'Big
,
Bird"
in
women's
volleyball, Leo Third Floor in
men's .rolleyball, "Leo's Lions"
-
eluded leaving
.
the
·
·
CACC
·
arid
Scholder Stars In
x-c
The teaIP., showed grea~er unity heavyweights and lightweights
·
·
upgrading
.
the
basketball
-
when junior guards Glynn Berry have rebounded with several
program over.the nextfewYears.
.
ci=oss-country
.
coach
·
Rich and John Moro became el~gible in victories over tht! past two weeks
'
-
Once again, the fall season Stevens was always noted for his January
.
and this was especially going ir.to the President's Cup
·
provided the Mari~ cominuruty
.
strong
.
recruiting, but
·
Not-
_
evident in the
.
stunning 79m this weekend. Their big• goal,
with the highest degree of
.
sue-
tingham
--
H.S .
.
graduate Jerry upset win
.
.
over Monmouth, however, is the Dad Vail Regatta
cess and excitement: And
it was Scliolder was his biggest catch
of.
nationally-ranked
iri
Pivision
JII.
in Philadelphia next month.
-
the traditional bridesmaids
.
of all. And Scholder, state outdoor
-
Center Neil Lajeunesse led the
Rain has
.
slowed the tennis
Le
_
onido!f Field that were' most .two-mile champ during his senior squad
.
with 17A points and 9.3
team, which is 3-3 in men's play
responsible for the success
.
.
·
·
year, became the top
·
rwmer

in
._
rebounds per outing, receiving and
0-3
in w11men's. The men, led
Led
·
by all'-State
.
forward
·
Marist
,
history
as a freshman.
_,
·
.
all-CACC and honorable mention
.
by top-ranked John M~Graw,will
Zenone
·
Naitza, the booters en-
·
Led
.
by Sch
.
older.- and senior all-state.
··
The
~
junior
·
ind

seek to regain. their CACC
joyed their best season ever with Fred Kolthay; Marist compiled a
_
J~erry were both named to the championship for the last time
a
14-1-1 record, capping it off by 16-1 record and
.
won the CACC ECAC Division
III weekly all-star
·
when they host Concordia on
hosting an~
·
then
·
winning t~e
.
champs.,-the New

York Upstate team during the season .
.
. ··
.
·
Wednesday.
-
·
ECAC
·
Regional
·
tournament
m
Champs and the
-
Lehman In-
-
For rookie coach Witt, the
4-11
Track and field has been the
November:
·
Their two comeback vitationaL In addition, they were record of the
·women's
basketball big disappointment after
a
.
9-0
.
in soccer, "Leaping Gabusellas"
in -three-man basketball,
Rid1
Crump and Robin Smallwood
in
.t.he Turkey Trot, the "Rednecks"
in five~man basketball and
"Third
Time Around" in coed
volleybali. Winners in coed
·
softball and floor hockey are to be
determined this wefk.
Another indiv
,
ua
,
-
who made
:•
~~ontribution in!.
,
.
.
; own way to thl'
Marist sports .;cene was Joe,·
Lavin,
a
.
freshman
froin
Yorktown Heights, who advanced
:.o
the quarterfinals of the 160-It.
sub-novice division of the New
Ybrk Golden Gloves .
.
win~
:
,
over Tr_enton State and the ninth-ranked college team in team was far below
<
her ex-
record
last year. This year the
.
Upsal~ were c~lminated in such the
.
state and competed
in
the
·
·
pectations
of
a .500 season.
The
r".'~---------------------------
dramatic fashion thattpey will
be
NCAA Division
III
.
cham-
-
.
Red
·
Foxes lacked players
'
with
p
·
c

.
s
f
d
.
long remembered
__
here, even by pionshipsin Cleveland.
all-aroundskillsandwerefurth~~
_
·,.
res .
. ·
up a
ur
ay
·
_
:
Mee
.
a:nn
-
-
Cellt.,_
.
.
r.
i,,
':-ho.Urs,-=-,Set
..
1
More than '10 crews from 10
heavr.,veightvarsity,lightweight
· ·
. colleges
.
·
will participate·
·
in
'
vars_ity, '\leavyweight junior
Swnmer hotirs:
·
AIAumnlu~ni may
'purcha
-
se a

·
.
have g~~sf
.
privileges.
Meznb~~
5 -'
''
Marist's 15th annual President's
.
varsity, women's, and freshmen
Monday-Friday ll:OOa
_
.m.-8:30
U
mustac~~~panyandasumefull
_
Cup
_
·
Regatta this Saturday
~aces.Maristwillalsobeentered
p.m.
.
.
·
membership as.fo ows:
.
·
res~ons1bllity for their guests at
morning on the Hudson River.
m the varsity fours
race.
Saturday-Sunday
.
Noori-8:00
Individual -
$
75 for the entire
,
all tunes while using the Mccann -
'
Marist will be defending
the
Caldwell said Marist's chances
P
m
year commencing June
1
.and
.
Center.
·
·
·
team title which it
has
held for
are good
in
the varsity heavy and
·
·
·

ending May 31.
.
.
the
·
past two years in the races
lightweight races
as
well as the
-
I
Family
·
-
$100
.
for t_ he entire Families:
As of
.
Monday; April 31, D
u u
Th

d
f
-
1
f
which are the highlight of the
junior· varsity heavy contest.
Cards
·
wi·n not be valid m· the ·year commencing June
and
e
·
imme iate
am1 y o
h
,
.
.
ome rowing season.
·
-Season's Remainder
Mcca·nn Center. Membership ending May 31. ·
employees a nd full-time students
Among the visitors will. be
cards
($5.00)
can be purchc1sed at
A
membership allows use of
all
may purchase
a
membership for
crews
·
·
from
·
Manhattan, St.
Next Saturday, May 7,
·
Marist
the-Athletic Office
.
·
facilities in the Center. Marist
$4
8 per year. This membership John's, Holy Cross,
·
N. Y.
will
travel to Pittsfield, Mass. to
Present graduating seniors College z:eserves the right to close begins on June 1 and continues
Maritime, Rhode Island, For-
race Williams, Trinity, and
(full-time) will b·e
·
allowed to pay down some or
-
all facilities at an
until ~ay 31 of the fol!owi~g year.
dham, Villanova, Monmouth,
Wesleyan.
·
$5.QO
this s ~ e r (rather than
time
:
Events and
·
schedules
wih
Family memberships . mclude
Clark, and Worchester:
The regatta
will
pit Marist
the regular alumni rat~.)
·
·
be posted in the lobby For fur
spouse and ~ependent chil~en.
A
According to Marist crew
against some of the toughest
.
.
.
ther information co~tact th -
membership ca rd will
be
coach Gary Caldwell, the Red
crews
in
the region and
will
serve
Part Time
,
Summer Students:
Athletic Office, Ext. 262.
e
'
,
diStributed to
·
the spouse. Foxes will be entered in six of the
as a dress rehearsal for the Dad
Arate of $10 for those who are
\,_
.
· ··
.
,
..
~
Children must ',be accompanied
eight events. He said Marist will
V
ii
R
tta
M
enrolled in a credit course during
·
GueSt
_
Fees.
.
.
by their parent while in the
a
ega
on
ay
13
-1
4

The
the summer session.
If
the
Members Guest Fee - $1 per facility. Dependent children
boat crews in all of the
,
eight-
Dad Vail is regarded as the small

student took a
·
credit
course day for anyone 18_ and over and (living at home)
18
and over
will
oared events, including the
college national championships.
dui:.,ing the preceding academic $.50 ~r day for childre!'l up to 17.
be-issued their own membership _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.;.._..,J
year ,
:
but is not taking a sw:nmer
A
child. under 18 must be ac-
·
card. Tliis will enable them to use
La c
·
ro ss
e
course the
-
rate is $40
compa~ed by an adult niem
_
ber the center without
,
being ac-
-
-
·
·
·
at all
tunes. Only members may companied by their parents.
By
Pat
Larkin and
JimBirdas
loses again
·
.
Trc1ck

team struggles
showing. Bahnke pointed out that
top notch defenseman Jim Titone
·
has missed four games
.
Stent
·
··
Gary Diesel and Jim Mc Cue hav~
The Red Fox lacrosse. team all mi~sed ga!Iles due to injuries.
·
O'Doherty
. and
·
.
·
Steve
This short season means that
·
dr?pped their fourth straight He said, "This has caused us to
·
By Jim
Nystrom
De!eskie~cz both posted their the team has to be in shape by
game ori Saturday to Dowling.
use some second-line players I
The
bestcollegetimesasthey}1icked early April. Since the indoor
(14-6).Theirrecorddroppedto2-6
wasn't expectingto use.'?

.
.
.
Marist. track_ team con- up seconds in the mile and 3-mile,
for the season·.
B hnk
Is
t
d
t st
l
d
....
thi
t· 11
e
e a o some bright spots
mue
.
o_
ru~
~
m ual meet respectively, .
.
· .
.
.
·
s~ason
.
s year was prac ica Y
l,)ow!ing took a commanding
from this year's team. He. said
competit!on, p1ckmg
_
up their fifth
-
·
,On Saturday Marist competed ml,_ ~';le m part ot the lack of
lead right away on their home
GI
M
h
d
loss agamst Oneonta
.
State last in its ,first invitational of the faci~1ties, the ~~am was
_way
field, leading 8-1 after the first
def~se::tJ:/ ;~e D~:fpe~~
1
:
~~he
.
W~dnesday. The outcome of.the season,' the Iona Relays. The
,
behmd most of
1ts
compeJ1tors
quarter.
:
t
"d
bl
.
0

mee!
.
was never
.
~ d~ubt as results weren't what coach Rich before the se~son even began.
Dowling continued to pressure
.~m consi era Y and added
Mar,ist
~
was unable to field any Stevens had hoped, as
·
they fared
.
Hopefully, with the McCann
.
the Red Foxes, building up a 11-2
y:?o1~~~~J~~~~y~g
th~irfirst
re~ay teams,
.
thus forfeiting 15 little better
_
than they have in
.
Center ~ompleted, the Indoor
halftime lead, and led
.
at the end
Af_
ter th
_
eir sixth
,g
·
a
_
me
.
m·t
·
h
·
e
pomts. Tpe Red
"
Foxes could dual meets. Pete VanAken was a ~eason
WI~
become more useful
of three quarters, 14-4.
·
K
k b k
never close the gap and they were one~man team; placing second
iri
-.
m preparmg runners for t~e
·
Greg Stent scored three times
·
me er oc er
Conference
.
badly
·
Qeaten 99~37
~
·
.
.
·
·
.
. /
the jav~lin, third in the hammer, outdoor se~son,
_because
·
1p
in the• defeat, while Kevin
·
Mc~hee
1
1:8ds
th
e .Red,
.
li'oxes
~
.
'l'he
.
perf~rmances o~ a~ t~m fourth m
,
the disc~ and
·
fifth in college th
_
e mdoor and outdoor
McGhee and Dave Steiger each
scormg
Wl~
19
points.
0
He
'.
has
.
members Inlprov~d, :md1cating
.
the ~hot put, thus earning 10
. '
Of
·
seaso11s l!!ive to be treated _as one.
scored once and passed off for an
~:r:!;;i~~es
_
while,
dishjng
.
off
th9:tthey
.
areroundmg10toshape. Mai:ist's 1
_
1 poin~.
: .
Marist
:
sought to defend its assist.
St
··
t l
ds h
.
·
.
· '
·
K~ith MillsJ?augh won the 440
. .
,
Part of the trouble the-
,
track
CACC
·
cham
_
pionship
.
before
. ·
Co~ch Jeff Behnke gave a few
en
·
-
E:8
\
e ~eamjn
_
goa1s
·
g
omg a ay
52 8 h displ ed t
·
f th
·
scored witb}4
:
while ~ssing
·
off
.
w
,
.
:
m

, ;
·
~
. ay
.
...
eam1sexperiencingst'emsfrom
sendinga1600-meterrelaytothe reasons ~r eteam's2-6record.
foronlyoneassist
..
- -
.
~~
·:'-.
i

.

~s ver~tili~yby
<
co~m~ mtl?lrd theleng~hof.the spripg se~s.011 ..
·
PennJ~.elays tomorrow.
· ·.
.
1
_Accor!1iflg _to Behnke, he is
. M_ cCue
:
h·_as
..
.
s
.
c
_
o
__
r_~_
-
'
_'.
j
0
·
..
·
u
·
·
r.

:
_
.
·

t
·.
'.
un:
·
·
·
es
.
m
the _high Jump. B.~1an ~stme, AU the Inlportant . meets occur
. .•
.
.>
.
·
·
.
·
·
,
d1sappomted 10 the play
.
of some
.
hil h di
·
;
.
w~o
·
.
}':1st
·
r~en\lY
:··
joined
,
:
the after
·
$
_
choophas fµushed;
'
meets
·
.
\Vhen qmaStloned on next year s seniors.
In
the begiMing of the
·
w
Se~o:n
g~!u~f ~JfY..~
i
~is_ts .
.
~eam, ~o~
·
his spec1al~y,
·
,
the :t.fO
:-
-
suclt
,
.
~
:
the
:

Nf!w
:,
York U~te P.wstec
_
ts
,
St even~ r~~~rked,
:
year he
.
said 9 of the
.
top 13
playing inhis
'.
first;
,
8
fc
,.<;
,;,
-
~~er,
,
!
;
111
.
i~r~d;ite
:
hurdle~.-s~rvm_g
,
ChamptQnships; the
'.
IC4A's{arid
·
:
big~ ~ii~:r~g~nJ"e
1
distTne:~ playersonth~team were seniors.· 65
,
&oals.
_(S.l
,<
avg.)~g
6
~~gYfm. utpo
110 ice a
_
,
e1s out to defeil~
~s
:
,the NCAA:s
/
.
which·aren't until
'.
.
.

.
.
.-
,, •
.
• .
Behnke al.so cited injuries
as

·
yesterday's
·,.
:
;
ga
•·
,;t•·
· .~ •
.
.
_
CACC cr,own,'_rr~n
._
Denms
.
M,aY 26th.
·
.
<
·
' ·
r~ers commg m.
·
·
.
cause ·for
·
the t~am's poor
,Fairfield
·
at
-
Leo
-cT~t
'
·;'ga_mst
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
/
.
.
, :
.
,
-,.)
,1:
~\f
t
.
·,
·.
, .
,
;
'
...;
.
··
:,~;



























































































































































































































































































































,
·
THE CIRCLE
.f
?

;"Jf:
j~~liy
llghi;eigb~
.
defealedTempt~
an,1
c~-~~~• ~~
;.
~;f
~~;
j)h~.;,,
..
APRIL 28, 1977
-
High
·
Ori
$p.orts
By
Tb0!D-98
Mc Teman
ZENONE NAITZA NAMED ATHLETE OF THE
YEAR
·
Zenone Na.itza the greatest g~al scorer
iri
Marist soccer history as a
sophomore, was 'selected as the cmc~~s third ~ual Athlete of the
Year Tuesday by
a
panel of coaches an4
.
sportswr1ters. .
.
Naitza, an Italian native, scored
25
goals and 8
a:,sists
last
fall m
leading Marist to a 14-1-lrecordand the ECAC Regional tournament
championship. He was selec~ed to the CACC all-star
team
and_
first
team
all-state,
the
first
Maiist
player e_yer
fJ-0
hon~rt:d,
---
.
.
·
.
Mvoiog indoors
this
winter, Zenon4: contm~ed
his
incredible scormg
_
..
,
feats
.
with five
·
goals and the
·
MVP
.
award m the RPI Tournament
w ~ : i : ~ j ~ ~ McGra~--ion
tli~
award,last year/while Joe
Cirasella was the
first
recipient in
:
1975,
·
·
.
INTRAMURi\L
STARS RO~
·
.
-
~
.
--
-
:
:.
Led
by th{fast
·
breaking o! Keith Yearwood af!d the. inside
.
-dominance of Richie
·.
erump, the Intramural All~~ d~olishe!l a
.
team from the Culinary Institute, 79-56, Saturday ~ght
_in
the first
.
-
_:
basketball game to beplaye<l iii~e McCallµ Recr~tion Center.
.
.

·
-
.
Ma:rist controlled the contest right from the
start
but
_
were unable to
•·
.
·
pull away from the visitors untillate in
_
the, first ham Y earw<>0d scored
-
~3
.
o, lrls gam~high !!points intbe first half; mostly~
.
~ result of fast
breakjayups.
,
.
·
·
.. '
.
·
·
.
-
.
.-.
.
. ::
.
,
·
·
c
·

·
-
:
.
·
.
.
·.
.
·
·


·
.
.
:
Crump; wpo fiJlished ~th 10 po!flts, c._ame off the bt:nch mthe second
halfand

electrified the crowd
-
withs~v~ral block sliots;a
.
slan1dunk
·
and
·
an
-
offensive goalteQding. ca:11
/
:.
;
·
.
.
..
.
' ..
. · ..
· ·
.
.
.
:
. <
Next
"
in
scoring f~r)Iarist was Keym
.
ger~ghty with ~1~t ~omt~;
followe
_
d
.
by
.
~aLDePalma, Greg Gi,le;;,
.
Chip Erh,a~~t and
..
Doc
.
-
Morrison
.
with
'
six
:
points apiece.
. ·
_
>
· .•
· ·
_ ' ,
·
. <·
Th¢
gaIDe \vas otganiz
_
ed
:
by the Champ_agnat Ho
_
us~ C<?~cil and all
:

:
proce
·
~ds :went
~o
th~ Dutch~s CQl,UltY
,
Homefor-the Age_d~
, :
.
-
.
_
.
·
..
. .
.
·
,
_
v
ARsiTY
:.;
uciIIm1GHts
·
~iimo
-
ATlILEtEs
:
oF
.
THE
.
WEEK
.
·
.
.
.
..
:
·
.
.
-~
~
.
: :
,
.
.
.
•.
.
.
:
·
.•
.
.
.
"
-
·,
;
~
.
.
,
.
-
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
<
The Y~r.nty
-
lightweight' crew
,
h~s
.be~~
riamed
·
M~rist
College
·,·-
Athlet~ of the
-
Week for the week ending
·
April 23.
.
.
:
·The
boat, comprised ofArt Curran,
Dan
Gualtieri, Pat Brown, Jack
Boyle,

:1~ff:;DeCarlo,.'Jini Palatucci,
·
Jim
~
Koob; Dave
Koper
.
and
·
'
'
·
,
·
..
',
·:
·
·
;
·
.
~
-
,_~
-
~
·--
~~
{
~~
,.
:
·
>.-::
·.::
··
_
_
.;
'
.
-
·
··
~
-
~~~w.~m
<
_La
_
rry~
;
St:.r1~g~l,

defeated
·
·:_
T~Ple·
-:;.
and
~-.Conne~ticut
..
in
·:
;
.--·
.
..
.
: ..
:
'.::
·
,.:
-
.
.;
~
·:..
' ·
.
·
.
,.
-
..
:'
·
::
·
·

.
•;
·•·
·
·

-:
.
:
•;
.
.
' /
·
.~,

..

.
.
;
.~.::.
~
..

.
:
c_
:,.
-
e:.-
·
.
·:
/;;.
·
and the
_
r
.
em
.
aiilder of the.regular season was to
be
completed

.
. .
·
.·,
::c
'
I'
. . .
.
'
.
.
.
<.-
, ~·.•.';
.
;
.
•."c'
;
:
;,
-:;/
-
<
'
.
.
....
.
•.
.
,,-
.
.
.
. .
..
·
··
. ... •"
···,··
·
· ·
'. >

':i/:
·
:
·
:
-
-:-:;-
. :-
·
...
.
.
:-
:
.
.

. .
.-...-.. . .
. -
yesterday, but continued showers qave rendered the fields
_
virtually
i .
,
!t,_
~s'a ~~c~essf\ll
~~~~e.n~
£.~(
,'·
meters. ~r6ni.tlj~re they
~~dilr··
:_the~r
·
J<>ugll~~r OJ>P.~iient~: of.the llllpla~~b~e .
.
:
:-
;
. -
·

.
.·. . ..
.
:
. ,
.
.
:
. · .·
,
- ..
.
.
.
.
'.'
·
'.
t~e
~~¥c1~i~_t
:
,
G_olleg~
·
;/
_crew
·_Jengthe11_~~the:leac;i'
and
,
fiµish~d · . seasori
'.
eariy
;:
~~daymornirig ori
>
:
'
_After
,
'l'JI.~day's ra.mo~t, •~Glory's ~
_
oys."
.
contmued to pace
.
the West
..
.
; :
.
:
~rogr1;t~;
.
as t!_le
;
.
~a.~e1gh~;
,: •
.
.
·
~he:2000 meter
·
c
.
om:
.
se45 st:con,~·
·
·
·
.
the
-
ll~ds<>rf ang
.
·
caJ1ie
:
away.iwith
with
.
~
:
fO
,
.
r..~or
.
d,
,
mcl11.ding
~
~l.de
_
c1~~«;>n ov~l". the. "Ace
_
Heads'' last
.
:
.
·
·
··
·
)Jght\Ve1gpt~,
·
,
~.11d.
:
JU~?~
._y~rs1ty
· .'
"
in ~ron
.
t
:
of
,
TeII1pl~
/.
'I'l:le
,
,
WJI
)
PUt'
a
_
~~
:
w~~
_,
rriakesJhem
;
a strQIJg
~
We4~e~~y
!
:
·
·
·
--
·

.
.. ·
·
..
·
·
-
·
· ·
·:
·
-
-
·
·.
·
·
.
·
.
·
·trave!e<!
:
fo-Pllilad~~pnil:!
:.
to
·
.
.
face
.,:·••
the1r
.-
record
,
at
.
~~L
:;
·
·,
::
·
,:'
:
-
Y
/
'.•·
..
•~
•:cont.ender
.
.
for
;
·
t}ie
·
Dad
:
Vail
·
·
·
.::
Th~
b_1g
:
~
.
intheWest, ho
_
wever,
·
have been ''.Bond's
.
Boys,•~ who
..
,
J'erriple
·.
·
F.riday;
.
.
arid
:~
ret~riled
:
·
,
·::

,
Jri
c
the
::
HghfweighF
·
ra~e;
..
.
the
'
·
:
.
Regatta)fr
May

·
::
·
.
·:
<
'--'-:;
, ·
.
:
explo'ded
·.
for
:
32
=
runs Iast
:
week
.
m
·
Consecutive ~ns oyer the
·
"Ace
.
. :
with
.
·
,
:
th,r~~
:;
stunhir1g_
· 'i
yi_ct~ri~s.
~,
... :
M
.
~rist ~igh~
:
hlld the
'
~
tilllf9f
/:
\/
'.Qiei
:
9~feated
.
Connectic·u1 by
;
Heads''
(~2) alld ''El'Il) Stones" (12-~); for a
_
4-2 recor
_
d;
: •
.
·
,
·
.
·
.
Tl)en
'
on ~undar., th~
:
ligh!w~1gh~.:
the
.:
day
,
while
'
.
dE!f~tlf!g

;
~f!IpJe.
:, '
,
foufseconi:is:
.
~arlier this seaso!i
.
.
·
In.
~e
~ast,
the
l'W.
alkaways''. (5-1) hav~ opened up a tw~game lead
fa~e
_
d
·
Connect1cu
_
t
:
·College
·
and
'
by
·
21 seconds. Mar1st got
·
o';ltto a
<:
U Conn: had lost to defendihg Dad
•.
despite a
_!€Mi
Joss to th~ •.•B~J.os" on ~ri~y; The '~BanJo~,"
.
"Erm
\Von
_
by
.
one an~·.a
,
h~lf lengths.
.
.
.~alf-length

l~ad
_
_¢ter the {irs~
:
25
yail champ!on
·
Coast"Guard by
,
Stones," "Ace~ea$," and Dmmg S~rvic._es ~ere a:11 m_contention for
.
The four victories
.
sweUed
.
.
strokes and mc
_
reased 'the1r.Jead
nme
·
seconds
:
.
· . ·
.
.
· ·
the fourth-and final playoffspot before Wednesday's action.
·
fOach Qary
:
·cal~well's
,
:
·
seas~n
. ·
to
)wo
..
le
_
ngtbs
·
,
bf
··
tiie
'.
_lialf½7ay
·
·
j•:
Marist got offto ari early half INT

•· ..
R
. ·
·
AM
.
·
u
·
R
.
AL
.

·
.
R
-
OUND
.
0
-
p
.
.
.
·-
_record
.
to eight wmsagamst two
.,
mark. At
.
7:0l-the
.

Manst
,!!rew
-
length.lead after
the
start but the
•-
defeats.
crossed the
:.
finish;
·
leading ·the · visiting frew fought b~ck. arid
·
·
·
· ·
·
-
,
·
Philadelphia eight by six lengths.
was
'almost
·
.
even
·
with
.
the
.
Red
.
.
·
'

·
The semifmali:ound of the floor hockey playoffs was held last night
·
· ·
..
.
·Philly
M~s~acr
_
e
.
.
·The
~ed Foxes
:
won the
,
jwiior
,
:
-
Fo~es
.
after
.
tJie first 700. meters.
.
with the.winners advancing to tonight's-championship game at 8 p.m .
.
.
.
·
•.
··
.:
.
.
.
·. ·
.
.
·
.
·
·

.
·
·
.
,
.,
·
·
·
varsi~y
.
race
:
,
by
··:
Jhe
:
:
·-
,
biggest
,
Coining iiltQthe
·
1000 metennark in th~
.
.
c:>ld
'
gy~:-
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
_
,,
Abmit
=
~he or1ly
:
excit~g
Jhing
.
. :
ma
.
rgm ofthe
~
day,
.
finishing 30
·
.
:r.,~rist _took
<
~
,

,
iwwer
20'/ arid
"Japp~r'.s Killers" in. the East
~~d "Dark Horse". in the West had
,
~
.that
:
h~ppene1
;
whe~
·
Ma':1st went
·
sec:onds
.
aheliQ of th,e J;V.'s
·
of-
-
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·
pulling aw~y
....,
from their alre~dy clmched spots in the ~emifinals. In <:ontenbon for the other
. •·
.
. '
Jo P!Uladelp.pia F~1day
\V~S
the.
<
J.emple.
,

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Rowing at
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·
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·
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.;
·
-
· ·
ti:_uck,
.
which
·
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_'
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the
· ; ·
Cald~~ll. th~ race
~i,
-
won after
,
length lead for
:
most ofthe second
.
·
.
1\
belated c;ongratulati~~s to "~ird Time Aroupd,"
_
which repe_ated
_.

·
_
banks of the Schuylkill
_
R1ver and
>
the.fir~t.10 strokes .
.
"The

junior
.
half of the race
-
and then sat on it as coed volleyl:lall champions with a 12~ •
.
9-7 victory
.
over "Mike's
.
': :\.;/;~
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.
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fell
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,
the

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':arsity
~
:start
,
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.
clean
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uptil
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tlie Ja,st-:100· meters
.
.
when
.:.Tayern?
.
on
.
Al)ril 12'. Members of t~e
..
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·
Val
. ,-:(
there's n~t mu<& to tell, ~Jlo~thow
•~
lme a_nd fro~
·
t~er_,e, t_h~y had
.
~pen,
:.
tti
_
ey
·
spririted;
.
~creasing their

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Bellarosa,; Rohm Smallwood, GaryD1esel{Dena K~nny ,_ Jay Metzger,
:J
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up
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Red:Foxes
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the
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he
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/
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!
.,
lead,_to
:
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.
he
.:
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--
margin_ of a
.
JohnVandervoort,Lynne Peel, J.Qtm CovelJ, Neil 1.aJeunesse, and
\.·'i-./
.
. \.'/
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--:paldweltsa1d
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The',victory
·
Greg stent.
·
.
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The·
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heavyweight,
with the results:
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'lt was hard to gives
·
them· a
·
4-1
-
record this
·
-
·
.
,
-
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,
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Jjght~eight,
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yarsity
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teUthe rriargiJI we cou_1If¢reate
·
in
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.
.
.
·
.
:
.
.
·
.
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NOTES FROM THE SPORTS DESK:
, .
Zi~
J\r
<{".
,
:
:i
}rew~
a_u:·wallted
~
a'.\\7ay
,
_fro~ t~e
each•of
;
the
·:

races;
'
:
so~e
:•
oLthe
-~
·
ln
'
other

ra~es
..
Sunday,
the
.
.
·
.
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de~e~t
-
T.e~ple
~
py open
_,.i
crews
-
.
weren't
-
pushed
;
~er
.
the
· .
.
~arist!fes~e11losttoUConn:'s
·
,
Jeri)' Scholder and
·
Bob C<>ufal
·
were elected !~_Thursday as co-
\g~
,;/
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.
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.
,
·
eight: completed the 2000
·
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·
,
SM:U ~v1tational and completion of at least 500 miles
this
summer by
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s.tJeild,ujg bY'._:
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with
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finislling
,
of the group will be held torught a! 7
.
p
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Ill~
.
in c_amp~ Center, Room 249.
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Kett)\rni~~; ~1tCl Apr1gli3,no,_!UllAustin, Russ Beckley;
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M~Ntilty,·Jay._Metzger
·
Pamela: Muse
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Zenone Naitza
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18.20.1
18.20.2
18.20.3
18.20.4
18.20.5
18.20.6
18.20.7
18.20.8
18.20.9
18.20.10
18.20.11
18.20.12