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Part of The Circle: Vol. 17 No. 3 - February 19, 1976

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I
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./
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THE CIRCLE
VOLUME 17, NUMB
_
ER 3
:
MARIST COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK 12601
FEBRUARY 19, 1976
,,
.
..
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--~-------------------------..;.---------------~----------------------
Fir~
'
AilclBolllQ
Scare Disrupt Marist
.ByDanielDromni
;
.
fir~was-startedwhen
·
sarety
.
pins

Aweek ago
.
last Saturday a
.
jail;
·
.
.
.
threatwascalledintotheswitch-
.
,_ .
.
·
.
. .
.
inastuden~dothingfell
.
offand false alarm was
,
puiled on ttie
"Whenafalsealarmispulledit board by someone with a male
A
fire,
_
two false ala~
_
and
.
a caught:
_
iri
·
the dryer .
.
The pins ' third
·
floor Leo
;
:
Two
-
students goes
.
directly _ to the !<'ire voice. Two minutes later a person
bomf?
_
5<:are
·
plagued Manst
_
.Iast caused a short
:
circuit.
·
.
.
'
'
were fined
-
for refusing
.
to
.
leave Department," M~Cready sa!d. called again and McCr.eady
week.
i
:
_
.
·
.
~-
_
..
.

·
Jh
_
e fife \vas
.
'
noticed by
.
the building. The sti.tdent
.:..
who
·
Howeverifitisdiscoveredtobea
..
pulled the alarm. Donnelly Hall
The

fire
.
which
_,
start,ed m the
.
someone in
'
Gr;,iystoile
:
whO called pulled the alarm turned
himself
false
alarm the

fire department was evacua!ed a~d th~
·
Town of
:
.
dryer in the laundry r~o
.
m of the s~curity,
.2,
The
_
·
Fairview
'
!<'ire
.
· ·
iii
;
and
·
was
.
qismissed
.
from
"
ihe is called and told not
.
to
·
come.
-
Poughk~ps1e pollce responded.
-
.
·
gym ~ast Tuesday
CU?~~q
,
ovei:_
,,-
Department
\
pu
F
the fire
,.
otit
·
colle_ge.
:
He
:-
was
-
·a
.
Dutchess

Sometimes that doesn't work and

No bomb was found and students
$1,()00
:
-w<_>rth of
,
damage
_
.
·
:
~alse
_,
'\'.ithi!i·:~n
:
~9ur: 'I_'_wo doors
/
c16d
,
Co~~':1~ity
:
C_<!llege student
.
the fireme~ arrive anyway. "If a
·
~ere a
_
ffowed t~ r,e-enter
.
a~rI!15 were reporteq
_
<_>q
_
the
_
.
e1gfit windows
_
,
w.ere broken
;,_
and . ._i;es1~1c0g
.
atManst.
.•

·
<
.
·
.· _ .
fireman i$ hurt on the w
_
ay to a However at 12:05 p.m. the sup-
thir
_
q and fourth -floor
Li:~
a.nd
_
a,
_
~
tl}e'_dryer ~as t°-~lly destroyed; . /Acc,ording to ~cCready,_ any·
;
falsealann and the.person who posed caller called again and said
bo~bthreat_wa,s called
~
to,
·
t
.
~e
\
On su~day~ig~t
f
a false
:
alar:m _ stu~ent~h() pu~ a false alai:'in is pulle_d
:
the
,
alarm _!s caught'that he
.
was
·
serious and that the
switchboard m~onnelly H::l~_l~~t wa,s pulle
_
d on
_
the
,
rourthfloo.r;I,~o .sub~ectto receive the
·
"severe$t person can be arrested
·
for building should be evacuated'.
It
·
Mond~y.
·.
- , .
·:
.
.
.
:
:· ·:;

\
,
-
aroµnd
:
)2:30 a.m
.
<Jne student pumshme11ts"
.
.
from the school manslaughter," Mccready
.
wasn't and no inciceht occurred.
·
According
-
to
·_
Ph1l~1p
_-_
;
Mc;:-
:
-
:
was
'

fined
"
$25
;
00
,
:
for
.
r:efusing
,
to
---:·
and
.
may faceJegaraction in
"
the
-
-
added:
·
·. •
•·
·
.
·
·

Cready; di
_
l'.ect<_>r of. ~e~utj.ty,
_
J
~
_-
}
eav'e
.
th(buifcting
;c
'<
·
.
.
' -
·
:
·
,
_;
·cout-ts punishable by one
-
year
c
in
.
·
011 Monday morning
a
bomb
,
.
'
.
.
'·.".
_
-
'
·
.
~-
.

.

.
·
-
~
·,::.._
-

. __
-
:.
·
=
.
-
-
-:-
·,·
:
_.--:·
-
·
__,.-_ •

_.; :
·
-
-
-
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
··-
-
-
·

Stll,<lents
:
Save
·
·
Lives.
·

.
.
,
.
. '
.
.
•..;;.
:
·
\ ' :._
·
. ,_,._:
.
.!
-
-
.·'..:;
:
·._.
::
·
·;_
··
~y M_ARY
~ETH
:
Pt~IFFER
.
.
.
The Blc;odBank
.
was skiffed by
faculty and
.
administration
:.:.
:
·.
..
.
.
c

:
'
.
:",,
.. ; ...
<
:
.
··

. _
nirie
:
Red Cr9
,
ss
-
vohinteers_froi;n
-
·
garticipation
in
the Blood Bank.
·
·
Ifsomebody
)
v~s
.
1.1'.t
;
nice to
:
you
_
pu
_
tche~s Coun_ty ~nd eleve11
.
Red
.
Qf
the
,
117donors only four were
·
.
c
:j
\fonday,it was
·
prob~blybecaUse Cross
_
:
empfoyees
'
from
,
New York

,
members of the
.
administration
.
· you
-
didn
'.
t give
:
bfood
·
at
the
.
Reel City
.
'
-
:
· ..
:
_
_
:.. :·
'.
-_
< ·
·
·
and faculty.
_
...
.
·
·
.
·.
·
·
.
.
Cross
\
Blood
::
Bank
)
ii
·
it'ini~ide
_
·
·
'[ti~se
:
\\.'hO
'
-
gaye
·,
b~ood are
-
~
'As
for the experience ofgiving
-
Loiing'e
,
:
:
Not
,,
~rjpugh
'
people
,
did
:.:.
·entitled
:
to
·
hay~
,
ffrs
t
Pri<>.rity
_
for
·

blood
;:
a
"
female ~nglish major
-
The
'
projected
·
i
·
,
turn
·
out
.
of
0:
150
,
blood
'
l
V
they
'.
o

,any ine,mber
;
of
~
:
:"
f~lt that ~'the riurses were really
don<>rs actually yield~\1
.
117 .~ just
._
ttiei
~
fairiil:y.siioul<:f ne~d it _with.iil
.
·.
helpful and frfei;tdly' which put me
·
- .
.
·
33:sh<Jr
t
o
!,.
antg:ipi!~~d figures,
·
on
;
e
i
y1
f
ci
X
>
,
..
'.
_
!
IJ'~
.
,
-
inst1r~nce
;
''
·
:._
at
.
ease .
.
I was
.
a little nervous
·
;:
>
:'>,1t
~
1:
·
1
f,
p
:
_
m
·
,
r;
,
;_,
m~
·
r:e.
':'
tha1_1
\
half~-.
:t
r~~rlced
.\.
~n
\
~l\iei;,ly
:
.
VQlrinte_er; abplit parting with
a
whole
Pin.t
of
.
,
..
..
.
. ·•
.
, 'I;tt~cfjf&
1
~~
m
;i~:Jit~~!
:-
Elg~}ti
~i;
s~r~~k,r:m~t~{
i
f f
l'.J
ill!
Ji
~t
,,
~rs~:!
t
ttii~1;;:a?
:
~
·
t~hig
.
'..
_
_

·
:;
,
.
;
;
;
:,,
-Red
~
Cross
,
yolu~~~er
,
qµest1oned
,-_.
,
d<m~te~
.
b!oo
,
d~a1d,iilfe
_
ltexc1ted
.
· -
The ~lo
_
od from the Blood Bank
·
·
about
'
th
_
e tul"J)ou
f
.
said; "dori't
:.
tha
_
t
.
\
,f
,
c1:>uld
:
d6'
_
so
:
niudi
.
Ior
..
proceeds
~
froin
·
·
Marist
to
ask;''
'
anothe
·
r said,
·
''it'could be
·
m~rikintl
.!-
!
'
When
.
questio~ed Marihattanwhe!e it
is
typed al)d
_ .
··
·
better
/
'
.
-
Although
·
a
:
lesser. about-the
:
early turnout h_e
0
said,
tested
.
for VD and hepatitis.
It
is
.
.
.
_ :
number
of
students donated than
.
"it exe!Jlplifies t)le
·
,
apathetic theh distributed to hospitals in
_


.
t..:.:.
;
:
:-,
.
.
.

.··
.
;
_
was hoped fol"
;'.
f>aul -1.)el<'rarico,
.
attitude of
'
everyone at Marist
.
need .
..
·
-
_
.
.
..
.
.
_
_
;
_
-
.
.
.
.
.
...
·
(Cucle photo by Fred Ashley)
head of
·
Italian
:
:
Society
:
who
·
College.
"
'
;
·
.
.
·
_
.
.
.
.
."
.
You can save somebody's
Nurse te
_
sts blood in preparation to donate •
.
'
sponsored the Blood
-
mmk, felt it
.
A'
senior Business major who life," when you give, blood, a Red
-
'"·"-✓

was a good count.
.
.
.
gave blood
,
questioned the l
_
ack of
Cross employee said.
.
-
--
.
· .
.
.
·
.
,
.
.
·

I
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' · ,
·'
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·-:
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~.
·
:
:
.,
·
·
-
:

·.,
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FEBRUARY 19, 1976
.
.
Marist Presents
''Colorburst''
By
Fred Kolthay
~'tudents of Marist College are
presenting a
12-
week show on
Poughkeepsie Cablevision, as
part of their audio - visual class;
beginning February
23,
at
7:30
p.m.,.
The show called Colorburst,
will feature music,
films
by area
film
makers, interviews and
various other entertainment.
. The idea of h~ving a show was
originated by Mr. James Gatto,
business manager and teacher at
. Cablevision and Mr. Paul Kovit,
director, program manager, who
also teaches the class.
The opening shows will be
directed by Mr. Kovit, while the
class will work the rest of the
apparatus.
As the students familiarize
themselves with the gear, the
directing will be turned over to
the students.
The class members. include:
Marc Plamandon, Carol Salvati,
Fred Kolthay, Ed Ringwood, Ed
Rubeo, Dave Roberts, Mary '
Foster, Angie Ferrara, and Chris
Seman.
.
Sue Gans, a · cross registered
student from Vassar College, is
also in the class.
Direct9r. Appointed
. By Tina Iraca
division, summer courses, week-
end college, mini - semesters,
Dr. Peter O'Keefe.has become and extension centers that teach
the acting director of continuing' courses off campus .. Currently
education replacing Dr. Stephen - Marist has extension. centers at
Panko. Dr. O'Keefe says that the Ulster·· County_-· Community
position is a temporary one until Gollege and Middletown, NY.
someone can be selected to fill
Other-programs included in. Dr.
the vacancy through committee · O'Keefe's School -
College
selection. Dr. O'Keefe, also the . programs · are · the Bridg·e
director of School -- College programs ·which allow high
Programs, was recommended by school seniQrs to take freshman
Dr. Panko.
college courses. Also included is
Dr:
O'Keefe has involved a School - College course
himself in "the total operation" program that allows high school
. even
though
his
official students to get college credits for
responsibilities are
limited to some advanced -.high school
. specific
areas.
Continuing · courses.
· ---
·
education . involves evening
<
.. Maureen ~rowe and Bill D~nlevy· wm·
~e
.stan-ing
in·
the,
Mans.t _·
College Theatre Guild production of th~ Neil Simon comedy. Barefoot
in the :Park .. _,,,
1
.
.
••
(Cit:cle photo
by
David
I:..fvsbin)
1
1
,n~~~mm . . .
•k~~~~~'l'J'i;J.C$~~i
Student.
GoV't.
~e'Ws
.'PAGE 2
TheAdamsC.hronicles;
a
'series ·course:-'is:only available
to':·part
"·<-
i:•., ,.
.
>- . .
-.,.·
.
of 13 hour-long dramatizations of : time stude!lts ·and students \!,ho
By
CANDI
DA
vis
school, . stude~ts, : and . Student mainly. ~ocial fin-ancial budget,"
American history, is presented are
taking
m excess of 15 cr~dzts.
_
Government.'' .
. .
_
says Green:
weekly oh WNET~TV, channel 13, ·
·
There has been. a. tremendous
The president of_·.• Student
The Marist Student Senate was-.
.
He would like to haye the ad-
New York and ·can be taken as a response· to the program .. There Government said' the Policy an- innovation-.thought up by · min1.stration appoint
a
Dean of
three. credit course at Marist. are 63 people. enrolJed; some
Board will be abolished and. ·Andre Green, "I plan to run it and ~'tudents for Student Govern-
"lt's a dramatization of
150
years from as far as Hempstead. Long
taking its place y;ill. be the new make it work -for the students." ment, and· for. the rest
oC
the -
of American history as . viewed Island. Ab.out
15
or
20
people · student Senate. More students
Marist> · Student Government , student body;
·
·
through the eyes of one of come to the discussion. · · ·
will have. a direct say in the does not have a Dean of Students . -Student Academic Committee
America's most prestigious
This is not tile first time .Marist ~'tudent Government. with. the 'to relate their problems to. Dean · (S;A.C.) will appoint students in
families " said Dr. William has offered a program of this student. Senate, says Andre Thomas Wade :was the ,Dean: of the fall semester to write up the
Olson, who along with
Dr:
Vin-
type. In previous years Marist_ Green.
"It
will represent all Students untillast semester when · st_udent ·course. advisor. Andre
cent Toscano are the instructors has offered two others, The _ students and all issues involvfog he was appointed to Director. of Green, president oL Student
of the course.
Ascent of Man- and Classic them on ca:mpus.i•.,
.
, Development. "This Jeaves Governpient said that students
The program is quite different . Theatre: The Humanities in
-The student-Senate has been ~'tudent. Government without a th~t have taken.courses will be
from other courses at Marist. Drama.

. · delayed because of legalities with· h~gh level a~inistrator to ad-
given a quesUonnaire t~ evaluate-
Students are required to watch
The program is funded. by the the constitution. "The con;. vise us,· and· fight for us at ad-
the course and. the mstructor.
the show, do the readings from ?n .Mellon Foundation and the stitution is good,
I
think it should . mini~trative meeting_s," says This will take the subjec:;_tive vi~w
assigned textb?Ok, take three Nation~!- Endowment f?r. the be amended and .not scrapped," Andre Green, president . of of the course away from the m-
exams and write an essay to Humarutles.
It
,was. orig_mally ·· says·Green.
·
·
Student Government.
·
structor. The' instructor will be
receive the three credits from P,ro~uce~ by !he l!mversity of · · The people. on the Senate· will
Student Government was to be. •asked: his opinion of .the course,
~arist. . There is an optional Califorma at Sa~piego.
. .
consist ·of two representatives put under the supervision of Dean but fa.culty will not have anything
discussion group on Monday
The pr_ogra~ is. an exc1tm.g from each . dorm, three from Louis. Zuccarello,. Dean of . to d!) with ~he
.
_writing of the
nights and students can call a concept m which technolo~y
1S ·.
commuters, one fr()m Interhouse Academics. Green :doesn't think course advisor. The course. ad-
hotline telephone number .if they u~ed
t,~
open- . new educa~i~nal council, one from College Union · this is a very good idea: Student visor
will
be: written:
fo,r.
the
need extra help.
vistas, -~ccordmgt0Dr,W1lliam Board (C.U.B.), one from
vernment encompasses an· students planning t<> e11roll in
The course,Hsted as HIST 835X
Olson.
Student Academic Committee .,st>ects of student-life, -social as classes from the_ students that
The Chronicles - is offered
{S.A.C.), and the four members weli as academic: He thinks have already experienced. the
Ba~ic Grants Use.
U,p
(CPS) - Pennsylvania students
Individual schools across the
of ~'tudent Government.
Student Government will be c1a·ss .. This Will gi'~e.the !:!tudent a .
~'tudent Senate
will
represent hindered especially when ·it viewpoint of:the· course from
more aspects of -students on , comes to the'financial budget. "I another student; and n,ot to\ally
.·campus. Gre~n plans to have think an .Academic'Dean will be from. the instructor, says Andre -
respon~ible people on the Senate.
bias when it comes to· fighting at Green. -
·
·
·
"People who care about the an administrative me~ting for a
have latched onto over
$30
million country have also reported in-
more in federal funds this year creases in the amounts of money
through increased use of Basic received through the Ba.sic
F.
· G. ·. · · .. ·
"WT·
F ·
·1 .•
~:~~J\~n:~~~~:~~~tyaGJ!~!- ~~:~~~E~ff:i~~e:??asii~~~~
-_e_·.
w'.
ains For
w-Onte~---
.acu.
t-y
syl~ania higher education of- · For example, BEOG money
ficial.
.
received at Michigan ··state
.
.
The
increase, according ·to University has increased from
(CPS) -While the proportion of held by those un~er
30
years old. , academics." - .
•'l~ennsylvania Higher., Education
$700,000
to over
$2
million, while women on college arid university
· Nonetheless, · Ladd and Lipset
Ladd and_Lipset also noted that
Assistance Agency
official , Tufts University has logged an faculties across the country
has
repo~ed. that women faculty while people from high sociO:.
Kenneth Reehen, is due to a new ·increase·of
$100,000
to total over · inched up over the last six YJ~ars, · members:
·
.
_
economic_backgroun~are·more
state requirement that students
$200,000
in grants receiv_ed so far their professional status has
- spend· more time .teaching likely to attend major.-univer- ..
must first apply for Basic Grant
this
year.
·
remained much _ tlle same -
than men; . · . : .
·
·
.sities and · subsequently occupy
money before receiving . state
"We can· no longer _allow a significantly ·below that of their
- earn less than men;
higher. proportions of the fa~ulty
funds. -Reehen said. Penn-
studentto apply for a Basic Grant male colleagues.
.. .·
- publish 1~, exhibit less.'in- _ at these ,same universiti~ than ·
sylvania 's share of the BEOG just
·
if -
it suits
his
or her ~on-
· These findings. were contained terest
in
research . and receive peopJe:.:
<
from
~
low:er . socio-
dollar has increased from $7 venience," said a fin!lnclal aid in a recent survey of.US.faculty Jess support for_ res~arch. than ·· eccinpmic backgrounds, this __
million last year. to $37.l>' million officer from the Massachusetts members · prepared by Everett men; . .
:
· ·
.
. trend ·does not · hold· true for
this year. · .. _
.
Inst~tute of :Tecllnology.
.
Ladd a·nd SeymourLipset,for the
.. - . show a striking pattern .of
women.
. _
..
"We knew there were plenty of _ Firiancial;· aict·; officers have- Chronicle of Higher Eduajltion. "segregation'' in-terms of their .· The researchers reported-that .
· families ._applying to . the --;PeJJ11- noted· _that _incr.-eased • usage of.
The two researchers noted that :
rank,
where they teach arid what though women faculty members
sylvania ·. programs .. who . could : : Basic·. Grants
··has·


freed·.· monies . the proportion· of w:orrien faculty :they teach, . .
0

.

-
:

• • . . .
:
·
,
in general come ·trom
somewhat
meet, the', federal standards," : trom'other grant programs, loan -inezµbers has'increa~~_from>l9'
.
'..'By aµ objecµve measures,'': higher .soc~..,~ckgrciunds:than
Reehe11 said.;,"It was
just
a ·case . ·programs and college work,study. · · perc~11t .. to
21
percent:smce~1969, toe ~esearche~ .co~~lud~~. ~~the
men, they;r_egular~y 4md
up
in
1~
· of them•· not g~tting.' the;' word - programs for thosc:bieli~i.llefor ·
with ·
.
~omen occupymg·, n~rly: Jem~le .. profe~~o~~a.te_,: 1s
i
~
,, .
pres.ttgious.
posi~Q~Uf~d
sc~ools
about the tederarprograni/'. ' · BEOG's~ • ·
,:.
·
,,,.,,
·
··
one
third
of~e faculty pQs1t1ons , __ de1>nyed _g_t'.o_~P, ..
VUra~VIS
-~It
thaJ\.
mem,.,/ ,: : •
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FEBRUARY
19, 1976
AVTV
Lack~ Space
by
David Roberts
possible.
This move would serve the
It
is
over he~ted, lacks proper basic needs of the center which
space, has cons,tant noise froi:n consist
of
~roduction,
the boilers, the pipes, the main distribution, and loan of audio -
telephone equipment room and visual hardware. Because of the
adjoining rooms. This · makes present setup, it has been
working very difficult.
It gets necessary
to
refuse
ap-
flooded atleast twice a year. This ,roximately
40
per cent of all
spot is. in the lower level of current demands for' general
Donnelly
hall,
it is the AV-TV
:i
eo services. According to Miss
center.
·
Deyo, except for the possibility of
Under· these present conditions roof leaks, the new location would
·the AV-TV center caiuiotfunction eliminate all problems now
efficiently. Proposals 'have been facing the center. Th~.
17
foot
maae, but no serious attempt has ceiling in this area would be
been made
to
relocate the AV-TV perfect far the A y-TV center ..
· center. ''Decisions made by the "We are the only people that can
. committees of the college-council ·justify the use of a
17
foot ceiling,
· THE CIRCLE
did not include all space needs on the improper lighting the center ______ _
campus," says" Miss Carol Deyo experiences in its productions
m ••
~b,;
E-.., .. tl~u;J~e~
,.director of the center. "Requests would not exist in its new .
have been submitted as far back location," stated Miss Deyo.
It
A •
t
A k · R
t
as
1973,
when the Ad Hoc council woul~ also provide· adequate
rt1 S
S S . e urn
reviewed our. position," she said. storage space for software and
I
-
In
a May
1973
r_eport, .the com-
scenery .. "No. program should
· · •
-
.
mittee.fa._vored re~ocat.ion of_t.he. standstill,itw. ~OU!dbeallow.
__ edto
Of Stolen Work
center. "Unoccupied space 1s a. grow," she said. ·
.
waste of money, and its very
According to .Miss Deyo, it is
frustrating for those who need_lt. not a question of where the center
By
Mary Beth Pfeiffer
being," said Mr. Seaholm. In
The · administration has sup- . will move, but when it will move.
refefring to a photo - drawing
ported us witll necessary The· proposal submitted states·
A work of art which marked the which involved
2
years of study
equipment, they supply us with a that the ceriter outgrew its culmination of two years work for under an Austrian gentleman, he
budget, but they have not given present surroundings four years. artist - photographer John said "I was a fool to put it up."
us space," stated Miss Deyo. .
ago, and its being subject to the Seaholm was stolen .from the Mr. Seaholm doubts that there
A_proposal · submitted by Miss unsolvable problems of ceiling campus center while ·on display are five people in tlie United
Deyofa January
1975
for the AV~ height, pipe and hall
.
noise and late last semester. In addition States who know the process by
TV c~nter complex, _shows the flood4tg has not. helped the three other photographs of which it was made'. It's "ab-
center _occupying both sides of the situation. In relocation, the . Seaholm's were taken in two . solutely non - reproducible."
ml'tin.floor of the old library
.in-o-
unobtrused floor· space would separate thefts. Seaholm, who is · As a result
of
the incident Mr.
Donnelly.,
It
would be split by a allow
freedom
in
st~dio a member of the Art Department Seaholm cancelled a show in
· public hallway. With relocation, production and would permit the . of the State University of New California for fear of something
the center will.be able.to expand'. logical location .. of necessary York at New Paltz, said it was else happening to his work.
Semi
~
private .l!reas. for work areas. The center would be "rather mortifying for me." "I · Mr. Seaholm said that he was
production
planni!lg,
-ad_-
able to ,maintain optimum con-
don't know how people· can live unaware that the corridors of the
ministration
of
··center's tact with the majority of in-
with things they have_ stolen."
campus. center were so heavily
operation, and private viewing of dividuals served.
The first theft, which involved -trafficked during' the day. He
video. recordings _. would .be
·
Seatiolm!s most precious work believes that ~·they should have
·· ,, .. _ · · · ·
,
·
· · · ··· ··
·
-
arid+
on~Jphotograph,
was
·s1,n'neon~
OD
duty _there? du~ing
.Be_n_·.
-0'
it
·
Jl.es
tiu.··•
·ctltres
t:,c~:=~~fm
s:~~sk~Jcf:zi~;
•tb:i~~~::h~~
~~tr:::.~:v:;it
-
sliow should be pulled down for the return of his work. Any
By
Jim
Kennedy
of. house members · increased.
"The population . of the house
· Benoit House is to become '.'an pres.ently stands at eighteen."
early, but he declined. When the information
regarding
the
incident repeated · itself on . pho~ographs may be sent to John
Tuesday, December 16, Mrs. Seaholm,
9
Butterfield_ Rd., New
Fisher closed the exhibition.
Paltz, N.Y.
,
upperclassmen study dorm",
Bill Wright, Resident Coor-
"It's like stealing someone's
according to the Assistant Dean dinator of Benoit, said "Benoit's.
of Students, "as of the upcoming not doing much this year. People
room reservation period."
are just living here."
.
Belanger Publishes
Fred Lambert said that the
Although -he "regrets" the
students in Benoit "know that it change, Wright said ''.I think its
_
By REGINA CLARKIN
cannot be a -minority house realistic. I 'think its necessary
anymore."
.
because as long as there is a
Dr. Joseph Belanger has just
The idea of closing the house Benoitthe students that live there
.
published his first
book:
was discussed between Lambert, will be subject to different kinds Damedius: The Religious Contest
the Business Manager Anthony_ of institutional racism. There's a of the French Epic." The book
campilli, Vice President E~ward sort of negative mysticism at-
took Br. Belanger
10
leisurely
waters,
and
the · Higher tached to- being 'a. member of · and 3 intense _years of .work to
· Eclucation Opportunity Program Benoit. -
complete. Br. Belanger wrote the
. Administration,
(H;E. O.P.).
"There are some who think we
book as part of his doctoral
According to Lambert, the only represent dollar signs to dissertation in addition to his
continuation of the present Benoit Marrist." he added. ·
.
college teaching research.
religious phenomenology, the
Saints, the Sacraments, the
Liturgy and common religious
practices and structures. The
299
page book was published by the
Librairie Droz, Geneva, Swit-
zerland. The dealings with the
publisher went smoothly ac-
cording to Br. Belanger. "The
final mechanics of proofreading
and indexing were very tedious
but the project w~s a worthwhile
PAGE 3
i i
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o
.s•
,c•
,.j•
1 ~•
J.S•
Jo"
Alaska
Leads VD
(CPS) - Oil
isn't Alaska's only
contribution to the country. A
study by a major manufacturer
of prop9ylactics showed that the
state also puts more gonorrhea
germs to work per capita than
any other state in the union.
The study put Alaska in the
· leading position, followed by ·
Georgia, South Carolina, Florida
and Tennessee in incidences of
gonorrhea per
100,000
people.
In Alaska, about one out of
every
100
people have gonorrhea,
the study said. In comparison,
New Hampshire had the lowest
rate of. gonoq:-hea. Only .. one
·person in
1000
was·auucteo with _
the .venereal disease
in
that
state.
Arid in
a
•~ajor upset," ac-
cording
to
the
company,
California dropped from a third
place rating in
1970
to 20 place in
1974.
News brief
Mr. William Austin, varsity
crew coach
has
been chosen to
assume the Director of. Alumni
position at Marist College.
Austin was one of 110 ap-
plicants for the position and
replaces Louis Emery of
Rhinebeck.
classified
WANT ED:
Aquarium
.vlth-
without equipment. Call atrer-6
p.m. Monday thru Friday. Call
anytime weekends. (914)896-7571.
one indeed."
philosophy was discussed "solely
This alteration of the Benoit
The book . deals with God,
because of undersubscription"-of House philosophy_ is the first
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
residents.
major change
in
the house's goals
"Within the first week • of this in six yeai;s.
semester," he continues, "there
Fred Lambert said that people
were only nine to ten people interested in living,_in the house
living there."
As
the semester should speak to t!}e . present
progressed however, the number. members.
Snow Days
WhO
O_ecides ·
by
Barbara_MaGrath
classes.
,.,...-
1
Dean Cox said . that he must
An
unusual amount of snow and . consider the commuter students
ice ·has ·caused
-
·cancellation> of and faculty when making the
classes. twice in the lasf:thfee. decision'. Local communities
. weeks.
·
have cut their snow removal
. ·. Gerard A. cox, associate dean budgets, which m<!lkes travelling
.for , academic affairs, decides . mor~ dange~~u_s. Also,.
t~~
P.O?r
wiic~har
!c
Mid classes after a ~arkmg. fac1l~t1es make. 1t . dif-
report of
c:lmp11s
conditions from-,J1cult for m_amten~nc~
~~
plow ..
, maintenance and security, .He
·
1"?~
fo!lowmg radio stauo~s are
· also rec·eTves • road condition notified m case of cancellat10n or
·reports from-the stat~, tO\fn, a,nd delay of day classes: WEOK,
. city•police in the Mid - Hudson . WKIP, Wff.V,W, WBNR;WGNY,
. --area: The decision .niust be made • WGHQ, WWL,E. .
. . .
.
,
.
,.in:.time,forthe. 7.:~ta.m. ,news. .
;.;I\_
change of mght .classes _are
.
,
~·Dr/'. Peter .•O'K'eef~, ( acting :'ann9unced·on the above stations
.icilrecfor
of
Continuing Education,.· and· all;o
_oµ:_~
WHOD, W.LNA,
decides on cancellatipns'of night -WFAS, WALL.
/
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may not
be
our property, but it •~-~ur p~oblem.
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I
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PAGE4
After One Year ...
Re1nemheri11g
Shelly
By R. Rhys
Williams
Sometimes, however, cir-
cumstances force us to face the
facts. Then the truth comes home
to us. Such was the effect of
Shelley Sperling's tragic death
last February.· By facing her
death we at Marist were able to
share both our grief and our love.
We learned something about the
preciousness of life and the
imp_ortance of sharing_it With
others.
A· year has passed and we
wanted to remember Shelley on
the first anniversary of her
death, February 18th. There was
· a. special mass in the Chapel
yesterday at noon and her father
spoke at
8
o'clock Wednesday
THE CIRCLE.
FEBRUARY 19, 1976
'
.
Letters To The Editors
Stifled
by
Smoke!
a lounge, nor is it a "john." The ban smoking as signs would be
classroom is not the place for posted and the policy enforced.
cigarette smoking. There are- -.What happened?. Perhaps the
Editors:
.
areas outside the classroqm leadership qualities at Marist
According to the article in the designated for the inhalati~~- and will liave · to . emerge . fromthe
February
5th
issue, . •~lifled by
exhalation of pollutants. The students themselves'. ·
..
Smoke'!" the power of enforcing quality of -a lecture in
a
smoke-
For fi~e years
I
was a part-
the no-smoking policy is in the filled room, especially.· ih time student at
·occ
and in all
hands of teache'rs · and ad-
Donnelly
_
Hall, · is
sadly that time I· was never. subjected
ministration, but that power is diminished by . the . poisonous to smoky lec~ures; as· the • no-
ineffectively utilized. Well,
I
irritan~ cµrlingthrough ,he air.. smoking policy. at
._DCC
-is en-
would like to _remind· all of you
~
I
formally complained to the _Jorced.
Perhaps
the · ad- .
"non-enthusiastic" "Lackluster"
admiilistration~this .. summer ministration of l\1arist could get
"chickens" ofthe administration about the intolerable conditions icigether_With the administi:ation
and faculty that we, the students,
of the classroom in which
I-
was of
DCC
to discuss leadership
pay Marist College thousands of
taking . a summer course. The effectiveness .. Md perhaps the
dollars per year for quality teacher concerned. did· press· his smokers .. Qf Marist will exercm,e a
education. We pay you to teach
us
leadersf'!ip abilities, •·but the degree- _
of . respect an_d con-_
and we--pay you to le~d us With
administration played "pass the . sideration for other members of
your wisdom.
. ·
buck'.' .and
·
quickly· forgot their the Marist · community.
·
How
The classroom, in: which·
we-
promises. The administration about it'!.
receive our high=-standard quality· told me.that it was not ne~essary,
education, is not a nightclub; __ not · for. me to circulate_ a petition to
. Sincerely,
. Carole DiGiovanni
The American way is
to
evening
~
Sheahan lounge.
.
pretend death doesn't happen.
It
We_ celebrated Wednesday· in
doesn't
fit
into our belief in Shelley's 'honor .so. that we will
eternal youth. Whenever possible remember the courage it taltes to
Saga .
Imp' rov·e
·
· 'd?
we avoid the word and · say in- ~ccept the precariousnei;s of life .
.
. ·
·
-

pa'nies scheduled to recruit here pointrnents .. can
be -~- made .
at Manst: Pr-:ibably the ·biggest available for ·those' haying dif-
group · consi~ts of those in ·ficulty·gettingtogether'with me:
apartments off-campus.
·
during regufat hours: Please see·:
stead, "He passed on." We cat1't, and the dedication it takes to live-=- -
of course, avoid the grim reality it in. the- searc~ for' meaning ..
To
all Seniors: ,
of the corpse but we cover i! up \Ychen we re~embef Shelley we. .
It
has_ come to my attention
with
cosmetics. Visitors to the
WI_~
be remm~ed not .to put off. thc1t many seniors are not
wake can be heard to murmerunt1l toIDor_row the good:we can receiving the monthly_ bulletin
such nonsense as, "Doesn't he d~ today. ..
.
.
issu~ by iny office of the com~
Jf
you are not receiving these me in advance.
·
. .
b!J_lletins please stop by myoffice
\
Larry Snyder
and. register· your address. :
-· Career Co~nselor
· Also . cer_tain evening·- ap- ·
look natural/' !tall adds up to the · fhose· _of us who accept the
·
denial of death.·
...
·
._
·
·
beliefs oftpe ,leWish_or Christian · ·
· • , ·
Becasue of this attitude toward- traditions-will celebrl!te this day
·Senior .. Notice
Burger King and McDonald's
complaints arid meetings,
.I
felt
death we are ofteri victimized by for a deeper reason .. We will
-~-
.
with· their daily and nightly
that
the fgod would improve
the funeral industry;
Iri
'our fear celebrate this·· day because we To the· Editors:
.
, variatio_ns of
.
'.'.the hamburger", . greatly. tfiis ·semester. Needless
and uncertainty ,we
a_r~ _
per- believe in a life: t~~t death cannot
Saga improved'!
_I
almost seven days_a week'! Or should.we ..
to
say;I
am yery disappointed,
t
suaded to. b~y air c~nd1~1oned ~estroy. We wiJl . re~emb~r laughed when
1
read the article· rename
the
cafeteria· "Villa
know,that many other::students
ca~k.ets equipped with mner Shelley~and ou~ celebration. ~ll · untiJ;I found what had impr9yed;· Saga'.' with:the specialty ,beipg : agre~ :v,:ith_rrie; 1do ~now th~t I
sprmg mattresses . ang sealed
hav~
a -· certan:i, somber
JOY
Granted, the new decor does look- · -"spaghettiala carte"? Let's f_ace
have, had it an? my stomach has
permapently to "keep our loved b~cau_se we temper our sorrow nice, but couldn't the.$1000 spent . .it; there is_ilo.variatioh inthe food . had it withthe. Saga· diet;
rm
not
ones from seepage."
Wll
h hope.
been used ,tow~rds bettering. the~ .choice whatsoeveri But,_theniosC - sure-.what it would. take··-to g~t·
-food
-if
you could call·it.that.
important concern is the quality -:bEltter food;.biltsometliirig must.
What
It
Was· Like
The quality of the food has gone ofthe."f9od" so that it is at least · be don·e.
·.down so tliat it is not'even:edible. -_,appetizing and. !JOurishing.
~-., ·
,..,
-
Starvingly Yours,
Is Saga, now
.
competing ,With , After last semester's numerous
Debi Dahlgren
"··:·~~ -
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... Life often brings' many in- . ~b_out
it<
as they wa~ch~d :the
lr-''---"---'-''":-::,--'--i"-'-'-'--"---,-""7-..,,..,._;__;_:--:-:'---:--c:'~-,-.,'-. --.-,,-,--"-~,..,.-,,...;....;__,..__.;__.;;__..,,.....:.,;,,,,---,-:.,---...,..,..--,
~f:srehensible injustices·very
'?.~~~rl ·
F:~~?1~e~he'-~~~~
· ·. ; ____
J .-
.Annoti•lieen-teiits~~-
The closer these injustices ' floor lounge. · They_ wo11dered
come to us the more we· feel whether they'd still have that test
them. One year ago Wednesday in their_ sl9t' _twelve · ¢lass
night, for
a
couple of hours the tomorrow. Girls called home to
Marist College
community tell their mothers not to worry, it_
stwnbled around in one great big wasn'tthem, if they'd heard the
daze
constantly
reminding news, and then discussed· the
themselves and each other that a appointment they
had
with the
girl . had been shot to death in dentist for the following week.
their very own cafeteria - right _in
We all feel. We all care. We all
Jim Ladota's office. We all knew wantto do something -just-tell us
Jim Ladota. Many of us even what to do. Tell us to set up a
knew the gfrL One of
us
was her memorial fund to col~ect money
roommate; a few of us were her to rehabilitate ex-cons or to keep
close friends; twenty some odd of youth away from crime and
·on :friday·and Saturday, Feb: theat~r. _,
-'·'- .
·Crosby'!·
.
_
.
2oand21at8:30p.ril.tl'lerewillbe .. Marist, students will
,.be
ad-
· The ,_ play.-: i~
_about _a
a
performance of a play by
Bill
C;
mi~ted !ree o~ chargeto the play, revolutionary spy, who was held
Davis, a Marist alumnus
in
the which-is entitled Who Is Enoch prisoner. atthe.Dutch Reformed
1-...-------------------------,
Church _in Fishkill.
( .
· -
~
Editorial
Make·.

:Difference·
An artist reception
wtII
be-held
this Sun~ay aU: 15 in tlie Gallery
Lounge. Doris Klein is. the artist
on exhibit. , .
·
us lived on the same floor.as she,
·
drugs and in schools andYMCAs.__
Much too often in our·communitywe are critical.of an individual
cir
and approximately nine hundred· Tell tis how to keep crazy people an organization whether
this_
criticism is truly justified or not. • .·_ • ...
of us lived on.this same campus fronuattacking our little sisters.
nappears tllatth~ students here at Marist tend to see on1y·one side
with her. That's pretty closeby to · Tell us how to find peace amidst of
aJl
issue or point of view, and disregard aUernatives - especially
have somebody murdered.
· all this chaos.
when tl)ey aren't included within the limited boundaries qftheir 9wn
Then things went on as usual.
.Words of sympathy, of disgust, beliefs. This isn'ttQ say that there~ nothing wrong here at Marist:
All football players who wish to
receive a refuncroil their. football
deposits µiust contact Ron ~etro,
Fontaine 318, by. Tuesday; Feb.
24; -
·
.
.
.
. . Second.
:
· 5~week - · Physical
.EducatiQn classes begin Monday,
People discussed the detaps over of concern _ .,.- they're just. not there
is.
Yet we have so many good things to offer a'S wen. And it
the
fried-chicken-and-french-fry enough.
·
seems
that
they are constantly being overlooked: -·
·
_ ·
·
Feb:23. -._· -
.
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. :._sp;:e;:c;:ia;:l;:in;:;:t_h_e;:_Ra_.
;:_t_.;;:Th;;_·-e;;y;;t;;:h_._
0
_u-g=h=t========================-'"""'I
If all the things that people feel _are wrong here at Marist w~re
weighed with all the worthwhile things that are being done, one could
guess with an extreme amount of confidence ,that the· good would
.
Westchester
·Premier.
Theater ..
will presentThe·Martha Graham
Dance Compa·ny on Feb.· 29, at
7:30. p.m. Discount· tickets are
:available - to Marist students.
Contact.Sue Nye (Fontaine 319)
for fur);h_er information.
The Matlst College CIRCLE Is the weekly newspaper of the students of Mlirlst
College and Is publlShed thr011ghout the $ChOOI year exclusive of vacation periOds
: by t,he Southe~n Dutchess News Agency. Wappingers, New York. ·.
.-
~
completely overshadow the bad:
.
· . . · . · · .
.
-
When speaking about getting things done, it
is
important to exa~ine ·
,closely the people that are supposedWdoing these things, and:Whether
they are-or not. One would.be surprised to learri however, that those·
they believe are producing· results; are not: and those -who have
received the least amount of.public recognition are the people,who are·_
1---------------------------➔:~~~ia~~e:':.ff-
to do·something to_-mak~ Marist a-better ~place, to ,. C.U.B. elections are coming up
I ··
· ·
··ta
· ·t · ·
·
that
ria· • •·
t d t ff" -
1s·
•.• Fri. Feb; 27/Please come out
Mary
Be~ Pfeiffer
David Livshin ·
·. Gigi
air:aas -.·.· -~
Gregory Conocchioli
FredcAshley
Chi
Ennish
.
. P
Tom McTernan
Patrice Connolly
· Joan McDermott
· Pcm
Yan
Aken ·
.:i-,arry
Striegel
Co-Editors ·
~ociat~ ~~toi;-.
Editorial Consultant
· Photography Editor
Assistant Photography Editor
·
Sports Editor
. LayoutEditor
Business Manager
Advertising Manager . ,
Distribution, Manage~ _
STAFF: Ernie
Arico,
Dave
Roberts;,
Phil
Palladino;J)anlel :
Dfonim~
·Tina
Iraca,·Barbara·Magrath~:Fred·:K~lthay;_GandL -
· Davis,
Claudia Butler,,:Rhoda
Crispell,
Regina Clarkin. Jim :
Kennedy,·•. ~ch: _Bur~e, J.,arry\Str~igel, ·_Rena·
q~r-:
·<
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,
. n some
ms
nces
1
appears
ce
m
s u en .
o
1C1a .. are and vote, your support.is neeaed.
;1ookiilg'.after·on1y·their own interests·and are not truly representirig
Also; Thurs. Feb. 26
.:c
Jt'ireside.9.
the Marist community which placed them in the positions tqey _now: - p.m!. there •will. be
·
a ·_candidates
hold. ·

··
· · · ·
· ·
· -.- ' ·, ·
nite rot-those :-interested in
l
-
Witl\studentgoverrunentand C.U.B. elections rapidly approa·crung
hearing the ,pia.tforms of those
filUdents should take~a,.;very close look at the individuals .who -are .. ruru:iing., _· ·· · . . .
-
- · . -_ .. -
seeking offices. Look at what they have or h~ve not acconiplis~ed; and -;;· Remember! !
!
Feb: 26 .
& ..
27,
whattheystandfor;not~hotheyare,orwhotheykllow. ·-
·
.'..
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· . . Candidates. nite ·arid c.U.B.
i
We need to elect peop_le to these ·important student offices who are· elections;
·
their own people,:aIJd will stand up f<Jr what they bel,ieve
is
in.the best _
; interest of all.' We don't need anyhiore: power hungry,: s~lf.:ser:villg ·
puppeu; who are contr_ollectand maajpulated by others; _ ·
<
\
._Ify~uhavebeen unhappy_wit!1:thiilgs:a~ they-now stand at Marist
-
~
. an informal.
then your.vote can make a difference.! Supp9rt people wt.io you believe
'f!l~re"
.will
. .
..
are going to re_~lly gettbihgs d<>n_e; no~j~t taµc a,_bout it -
>;: : . · ,
;7·; - . .
f!l~et~~ for all
_those
mter~~t~d
lil
:: ~y~n tho\l~h ~eing~~~ticals~_ems to
b~
in
.fashion,
~ch
and
:~yery:, _
liv~g
·u:1
Gre~ry,
¥
0
~~-
.!~~:
t!ie __
md1v~dual'wzthinJ>ur,.co,r11muruty:owes:1t·:t_<?: .. t!'JeD1S£!_lfto a~empt,to.: }9.7&:-77_.scm~ol, y~r .... ·, · -.:, . · . .,..~---
conttj.bute .whatever they,_,cal) to· make .this school just:
a'·
little Ebit . :;, -'f~-~--~ee~~g:"'l:~- take ._plll~£! on
:_ ~e;t~~·;;e1o~i•fikrtt-'.i~me1,;·i;J/f~~ti~~-t~t;_~{~t\~y:_
{~i;~~~t~~~~~;;~J~;·,_wfJ:
ex~t
to get ~ut of tile,l4a~t ~~nen_ce, wlµlt we put mtoJt, we'll. all
a:.~
~!';;1-bufy<l, a,_nd 'i~ll, qu~~1,ons
._, ,, ;.
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. FEBRUARY 19; 1976
. THE CIRCLE
Stud~nts In· The.Community
Senior Works As
People Advocate
By
Tina Ira ca
teaching
a
class called "Welfare winning," he says.
''
.
.
Rights"
. for
people
in
Belter, who works .side by side
Mike Belt!:r
is
"ai:i ad_voca_te ~or · Poughkeepsie's housing_ projects with attorneys, eventually wants
the people·and their rights with to "try to organize tenants." to become one. "l want. to work
respect. to welfare, u11~m- · "Welfare is not a gift, _ it's within the justice system. The
ployment, ·
and
· housmg · people's property and right," he only way to correct the wrongs is
grievances.'.' _He_ works at .. the . adds. "The _. whole:· myth of to be involved in the law and for
Mid-Hudson Valley Legal Ser- welfare is irrelevant, invalid, and that you have to go to . law
vices .office
m.:
Poughkeepsie. · intolerable, especially in' a school.'' Belter will not go to law
0
My cause
·
~ to attempt to g~ve society_which professes .to have -school in September. "l want to
~11
people ... of
all
social• basic freedoms.'' ·-_·
take a year off and work in legal
backgr~llfnds an. equal avenue to
Despite being "overwhelmed services to develop my ca.use."
the· law. rve · formulated_ my· by the injustice that does exist,'' . ·
·
Besid
·
es working at legal
theories, ·and from them I've. Belter finds his job valuable to services, he also attends night
formulated ideas, now .rm going him in a nuinber of ways. "Ueel classes twice a week: and goes to
to use- my en~rgi~s :to:·try to like
Tm-
helping-:-people and meetings.
· _

change things."-._.-..
' · _
they're helping me. - I see the
There are so many things l'.m
· ~elter_ represents welfare _
and fortitude they have in tin}es. of trying to do:
J
recognize . my
-um employment
recipients stress. I really enjoy the 1foople:1 strengths and I'm
going
to use
threat~ned
_y;ith
income represent.
L
don't want to lead them to try to change things."
suspensi<m at '4fair J1ea~ings" 'people,
T want..them to le~d
Mike Belter is
a
21-year-old
, and "wiemployment hearings.'' themselves _
l
warit them
fo
senior
at
Marist
ColJege
:· He a_lso repre_sen~ ' te.nants in develop knbwleqge."
' .
majori!}g in politica.l science: He_ .
. _ Pubhc Housmg
·
grievances
Most of the hearings Belter has works in the University Year for
procedures..
.
_ . · ,
i ...
·participated :in have been sue- Action ·cUYA) ·program which
. !'Welfare
is.
a very big jungle/ cessfuL They are
.
won by the enables him to live and work in
contradictory to itself,'~ he
~ys.--
rec'ipients: I get .satisfaction oU:t the community. ·
. In this.: Hgh;, · he_, and -Randy
_
of. attempting to correct the
Tucker,
a
V1sta .. ,voluntee_r, are . wrongs, not ne-ceJsarily . the
Student
Views
Life
DZith·in lnstitUtion
~
.
-.
-:
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"\:......
,'
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~-
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,
By RHODA.CRISPELL
Ari
interview with Shelli ·Iraca, a
· psychology •work-study · student.
the personal attention because -person working in a state hospital
, they (lon't get many visitors~·
must have empathy for people
The median age· of. people in and a desire to help, "You just
Ms. Iraca's-ward,cRyan Hall,
is
can'tdo it for the money.''
65. Most patients_ like it there
Ms. Iraca feels· that . the
PAGE
5
.
Epidemic Hits
By
Phil Palladino
A'ches and pains, vomiting,
nausea, and fevers have plagued
the dormitories of Marist
College. Since I<'ebruary 2, more
than 100 students have reported
to Mrs. Helen O'Connor, head
nurse at Marist.
-
Since most cases of the flu are
minor, Mrs. O'Connor has ad-
vised students to take simple
steps to relieve each sickness. "I
tell students to take aspirin, get
plenty of bed rest, and drink
plenty of fluids.
If
necessary, I
send a patient to the doctors. A
couple of students were so sick
that l found it important to notify
a doctor off campus," says· Mrs.
O'Connor.
Not only has the flu epidemic
hit Marist but also other colleges
in Dutchess County.
Mrs.
O'Connor called the nurses office
at The Culinary l11Stitute, and
found that a small epidemic has
started there also. The head
nurse at Dutchess County
Community College has notified
Mrs. o•co·nnor that Dutchess
students have been reporting for
sickness there also.
Mrs. O'Connor has reported
that for most students symptoms
last just about 24 hours. A couple
of students have been sick for a
few days. "Colgate University
has closed because of a flu
epidemic there; but I don't think
there's a chance of that hap-
pening
at
Marist,"
Mrs.
O'Connor explained.
NEW PALTZ .TACK
&
TOGS
MEN'S
FRYE BOOTS
20%
OFF
LEE'S CORDUROY'S
Buy
One.and
·Get. One
ft,r
$1
DO
SNORKEL JACKETS
:40%
OFF.
L
LINED JACKETS
40%
OFF
LEE ..• DENIM
PILE
LINED
COATS
& JACKETS
40% OFF ..
GOOSE DOWN
JACKETS.
20%
OFF·
eep Skin Lined
Women's Jean
Style.
MOCCASINS.
PANTS
20%
OFF
Buy
one get one Ire~
. At first', the. atmosphere in a
because itis· all some of them prob_lerris of working at ·a state
. state hospital seemed depressing-. have ever known; here they have ho_sI?it3:l-_
a~~
' mostly . a~- .
to.
Shelli Iraca; :but no\V she can people who c:are for. them: and·
·
~m_istrative. · Red ~ap~ mak~sJt
see
·
that iilstituti9naL care; '!is listen.
·
· · ·
. : .. ~. :difficult to accomplish.the thmgs
>·doing
a
Jot..:of:·good;" ·
·
·
Manyp11tients.in Ryan
.H;~H
~rEl ·you_.,_ w11_nt ,, to
do
as
·
·
a
50c BRIDGE REFUND WITH THIS AD
&
PURCHASE
RT .. ~2 ·
·
5 Churcl. St.
Shelli _ Iraca, • a
senior either mentally retard,ed or
.
hiwe psychologist.
_
psychology major,.
is.
working at suffered . nervous_ - breakdowns.
. The power str~ctute is headed
Hudson Rive'r Stat_e Hospital this .U11forttinately, '. seriously
tU : .
by the doctors, followed by the_,,
semester for :her required wqrk . patients are -housed <with those ~urses, a_nd lastly, attendants.
_internship;
.
.
· lessHI.
~
.
.
·Some
attendants
become
'"I decided to work at a state . •Some of the pat!ents are discouraged,and feel they can't
_hospital_ because I thought,. it ailowed to leave the grounds for accomplish much because th~y-
.
-would be goodexperience. Ifyou outside a<:tivities: -- _
_ .. _ .
a~e at _ the bottom of this.
can work here you can work
For entertainment the patients hierarchy.
almost ·-anywhere, -Ms .
.
Ii:aca have· a gym, bowling facilities,
."But as a studen~ it's a learning
. stated.
.
swimming. pool, _
and a library. experience and I want to get as.
The .first two weeks· at the Pati~nts · also ha!w'e workshops much out of it as I can," stated
· hospital were an orientation where they earn money:
Ms.fraca.
period. Activ_ities included t~urs
One pr?blem Ms. Ir~ca faced
"You can't go ~h~.ough a tour
, through wards,· role playmg, was relatmg to the patients. She an_d understand it,
Ms. Iraca
interviews, arid opportiµlities to said that students le~rn what to ~aid. "You must really become
question,the staff: -
do _from textbooks; but at first ~volved and have a good at-
,
The establishment of rapport, patient encounters were awk-
t1t~de. You must feel
that
you ar~
with patients·was another aspect _ward. . . .
. _
domg these people som~ good.
of orientation: The patients like
According to Ms. Iraca, a
Library Unnamed
...
-,
·-:~---~~--
· A library staff member
disclosed --that
"not even
President
l< ...
oy (president of
Marist College) has sent some
formal - ·acknowledgment of
thanks to the staff.''
The new Marist College
Library
has
now b~n open for
more than a month, with still no
name, and no local recognition in
area newspapers.
·
This has caused distress for. ,
·-numerous . people. on campus,
especially for. those who devoted
their'time during weekends and
over the winter break to move the
· books ,ffom the old library.
·
·
The only ceremony held, was a
· library staff party during last
week. -
ARCADE
FLORIST
255 Main Mall"
Poughkeepsie,-.N.Y.
'Flo~ers
ff/!
FoFA/1
:,3
Occasiohi . } •"
~,
:47t0410
· · MON.cFRI. '10-6
.. MON."SAT, 10-6
, .
~~!~~~
"SAL~ ENDS· FEB. 29
FRI.
J0.8
Eveyy
-SatuYcla~
t-lit~ .
Sou"d~ o{
{he 0\dies
MiKes Ta\Je'f(\..-
25Mait\ St ..
Pooan.
I'
t8k'
~:::1111:::::-.w
.
" eepsie
MOTOR
J-iOTEL
..
418 SOUTH ROAD (ROUTE 9t POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y. 12601
J"Mile South Of.Mid-Hudson Bridge
Special Ra_tes For·
.
.
.
.Marist College Event~
RESER VAT-IONS
.914-452-5453
~--
t;_ ,.
!'.

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PAGE6
\
THE CIRCLE
McClean a-nd Chapin
To Perfor"(n
Don McLean and Harry his Nwnber One gold recording of Number One spot in ihe cowitry,
Chapin, folk singers and pop "Cat's In The Cradle." Con- nevertheless put aside time for
musicians, will perform in · currently with the success· of benefit concerts for the Clear-
concert together in a benefit for· those records, Harry :wrote anc water. "American Pie" along
the
Hudson
River
Sloop starred in a major Broadway with such songs as "Vincent," a
Restoration at Vassar College production, "The Night That tribute to painter Van Gogh; and
Chapel on February 28. (Spon-
Made America Famous" which the .moving "And I Love You So,"
sored by Vassar Student En-
was nominated for two· Tony recorded by Perry Como,
· tertainment Committee).
awards. Harry has also recently established Don McLean• as an
A spokesperson for the Sloop been contacted to write two outstanding songwriter of con-
organization reports that in original screenplays for Warner temporary American folk music
anticipation of a huge public Brothers 'films. Despite
a
steady and made
him
an international
response to the musical first for touring schedule and regular star as well. Between bookings in
this area, two shows have been network TV shows, Harry Chapin this country · and abroad,
Scheduled, one at
7:30
p.m. and has become involved in benefit however, home to Don is
one at
10:30
p.m. Past benefits by 'concerts dedicated to solving the Garrison, New York and his
McLean alone for the Clearwater problems of hunger in the world. concerns are with the en-
in Poughkeepsie have been
Hudson Valley residents are . vironmental problems facing the .
sellouts.
·
not strangers to Don McLean's Hudson River. Don is hopeful that
Harry
Chapin
achieved love .and concern for out river. th·e
efforts of · the Sloop
national fame with the release of . Don, who skyrocketed· to fame Restoration group · will help,
"Taxi" from his: "Heads and with "American Pie's" release res~ore the river· to :its natural'
Tales" debut album, followed by several years ago, achieving the . state.
Poet· Toby Olson
ReadSWork
. / ·
By Rena Guay
find the connection to his own
.
.
.
.
speaking voice.
adding "that may be ,almost self-
defeatist on the part of the poet,
but it makes for the best poem."
.. Don
McLean (above) and
Harry
Chapin
will
perform
together at a
·benefit concert for the Hudson River Sloop·Restoration, February 28th
at
the Vassar
College Chapel._ -
·
·
Last Friday m_F1res1de a _g~oup
During the
.
question and an-
of students, faculty and vis1to~s swer · period after · the reading.-
heard poet Toby Olson read his Olson spoke about
his
experience
B. • d. · ·
p
Q~~
·
d.
:t;~~:t:i~it~:::nle!°:t1f;
,~o;:~~;otrh~cti:1/ni/
0
!~~: ·. .
rz·· . .
ue.· ..
·. .
r. on.ra_ m
.. · ,
·
· ... ····
f
·.···
..
e
.... .
· r.• ..
·.·.e_.•._·.
published Changing Appearance, "Fiction is make believe, and
e, .
e ,
(?ls?n has als~ written a. work of poetry is trut11/' ·
·
fiction, The Lif~ of Jesus, to be
Describing the poetic process,
, ByEmestArico,Jr.
,Dr. Peter O'Keef~, director:of tendingclasseson,twocampuses.
b~oug~t out this fall by New he said, "For me a poem begins
th~ bridge program explains the .~ ~esides academic advantages,
D1rect10ns.
with a line. After the.line forms I
Marist College and four area qualifications. "Since i t is an the social .life, .is also an . ad-
F~ding
_his
su~jects in ~uman work
off
it, making connectio~s high schools have agreed to accelerated program thl~ student vantage for. the : students.
relattonships and m the processes . with thoughts it brings to mind. I sponsor. a Bridge Year. program should· have a• good average and· Because . participants•·· are · not
of nature, r.ir. Olson has con- wo'rk·.best when not concerned ·which enables· 55 students -to be mature."
,
· ·
·
totally removed. from their-high
struc.teda _sty_le i:l~d ii~O!,nt of_ V}evi. · ~th. ego, when.
i't:n
not worried complete
·
a;·
freshman. college . The
:
unique-'· .feature . oL
the
school . environment/ · they can
_that mfus~ these
r~alit1es Wltli.an.
about_ the
'encf prO<luct.~Revisfon ·
year;
while·•'still'.1'.emaining' .high
-
p·rogram•
Js,
,,the;.,;csharing
/of ·
maintain . their .identities as
mtrospect1ve quality: Regardles~
is
a
matter of expansion rather · school seniors.
campuses _and · faculty. ··Each memliers
Jif
.tneir _. gfacluating
of the subject the voice is always than .condensation for me. The
Our Lady ... of Lourdes
High
student takes· three courses· at class.
.
. ,
·
s~rong;. he point~ out ~.at oi:ie of goal is always to make the poem School in Poughkeepsie was the Marist and'two at the.high school. · Greg Goth, bridge student from
his ~Jor tasks m wr1tmg 1s to look spontaneous," he said, first. school in
1973'-74
to · take
''In
addition
.
to the Marist facuity, ·.Spackenkill
High 'School,
~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . advantage,.of the program. They teachers from each
·
•of ·the high
evaluates the program.· ..

.
·
·

were
later
followed
by schools are also involved in the
"I think its a great. opportunity

F
k '

Spackenkill, • Arlington and program. All courses for the
for students. I would .have been
..
♦♦
ran·s
.♦ Roosevelt high schools.
bridge students are supervised
bored at the high school but when
The program- gives qualified and approved by the departments
Ifirstgothere I thought they (the

5 N · h Rd
♦ seniors an opportunity to take atthe college:
students)would treat me like a
•♦
'--·
8
0
rt
:
cours_es which are studied during
"The. average• grade index of • little kid, ·but they don't and I've
·

a typical fres!tJnan college year. the · bridge students show that
made lots of friends. Most
i
GL2-91· 64
♦· Since the pr.ogram ?ffers_ basic they are in the top one third of students like the program, .. but'

·

courses such as English, history, their, classes, consequently they
some feel its hard to inake the

·
.

modern languages and in- have consistently done 'better adjustment," he·said.

Thurs
7\.
r.l·
te·s

troductory s~ience, ... er.edits than' the average 'freshman;"
One area of growing concern to

.

1
~
i

earned at Mar1st can be tran- says O'Keefe. · •·
administrators and O'Keefe is


sf erred easily to other colleges
The biggest problem for the · the• _college fac~Ues failure to

.
·p · -·
" ♦
when the Bridge Year is. com- students · however
is . the· realize the environment of the



.z•ce·
♦•
pleted:·
.
.
fragmentation caus'ed by·
·
at-. ·graduatinghighschooL~udents.

·
..
.
"Through the program, I've


'
·
k k · · • I ·
1
come to realize how oblivious we
:
.e.
very·th·-1·nu
__ , :
man me .
0
so ·e.
aretothefactthatourcollege

• . t_~--
-
;,_ ..
;~~i:::u~1 ~r
:i::~~:~:~:~~

on
e,·

.'.
<

. - - -
.freshmen are stiU high school

Th
F • S
·• }} 3
t
O'Keefe said.
-..
:
.
•UrS,
rI, at ti

.,,,,,,,._ ~.
.
"I have taken advantage
,
in
t_
''T'HE cL·u· B''
•♦
......-'\-··•·<--:.r..;.
. "-.
makingtheadjustme~tbecauseI
'"
.
_
.:•-r
..
~
...
.f ·
~
-.~
widerstand. the environment of ·
1
·

,
,
the students ~round them,
t>
he
·•••••••·•••••••••••••••••••••••••
morimekko
said.,
.
Galenti 's
,
geometric patterns
Mfct~~~~~~
00
a~~u:e~::!
0
~ : : ~
·Mt. Carmel' Square .
,
·
executed in tightly
:~~~~~~!~~~~g[~~~~~~O:~.
454
-8'

6.
o. . .
woven, washable
other· _'colleges have been
ac-
cepted.
.
.
·
OPEN 7
DAYS
fobri6's _thofore (
O'Keefe concluded that
the
. . . '.
hard to wear out
possipility. exists . that the
. Ho.
STS·~ Joe Champ,
.
program will expand to other
Joe Bellwoar, Gary GaUante ·
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Joe Champ's R.estaurant
.
Rt 9G Hyde Park
,.
.
:
,, _·. Catering
For All'
.Occasions
.
·• .•.
, •
.'•

.,. ~;··.
.
:...
=,
.
·· Accommodation_s
Up
.To
259
.
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''
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·.
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For Reservations
Cali
:454~8860 .
·-..
toke advantage of
30°1o
savings
·on oil in stoekfoshionswhile:we
· make room'
for
new-shiprne.nts.
.
. large sizes ~qvoiloqle .. · . ., ·
..
.
·.
donijh''
qesign ..
Senter
3.89
mai.n moll
poughkeepsi_e
ny
914 47-1-5545
.
• :·· .• ·r
.
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-area high schools, .
.
-ACE--
-
LIQUORS/
.
.
"The Narrow
. ~t,ore
. With
:The· Wide-'
·_ ·. -:-.Reputatio'k•,,·.
i:
. (· . . :'i':. .
.
..
i
·. :·;;,,
•-:
<:_;:
.
45 .. 2~ 245.5 ~, ·.

















PAGE7
t
~
I
i
· .. Tom Lukes (second from left) holds second place in 2-mile run at Queens. (TM Photo)
FEBRUARY 19, 1976
.. Keith Hollman takes pass from Vinny Quinn in nite relay at Queens
College Saturday (TM Photo)
,'Frack Improvement Not Eno!J.gh
I·-_
!-
~?}-
ti
~
· byThomas McTeman
-
,
-'.The Marist.indoor·track team
sho.wed·, some<impl'ovement · but
· not nearly enough
to
match
Queens in a triangular meet at
Q~eens'-,College last'-Saturday.
Queens finished with 102· points,
· Marist wa·s ·next with 57 and York
Foxes. were· Will Morrison
-
and team's se~ond _ best half. mile
John Vandervoort. Morrison led . (2:06.7.j and just missed placing
Marist to a 1-2 finish in .the mile··• in the 60 yard-dash ..
with .4:38.2 '(Bob.· -Coufal · was · Phil Cotermec also set a new
second.in 4:39.7). Will also had school record. with 8.5 in the 60
Marist'sbesthalf- mile (2:06.5 in-· yard high hurdles while taking
the two - mile. relay)· as he ·was s~cond: Dave Schools was third in
named .the Outstanding : Track-
9.o:
600 with 1:24.4 and Schools fourth
with 56.0 in the 440.
The field events program was
short but Peter VanAken didn't
seem .to mind a bit. His 43'2" in
the shot put was-good enough for
second place and was the second
best ever bfa Marist putter. Ray
Leger ~as fourth
i.'l
the event
with 36'4'.'. Mike Dor.'lbroski and
Cotennec both scaled 5'8" in the
lligh.jump but, based on fewer
misses, ...
.
Dombroski placed
s~cond arid. Cotennec_ .was follTTh .
The two mile relay, consisting
of Schools (2:09.5), George
Mccutcheon (2:16.0), Morrison
and Vandervoort, recorded the ·
second· best time for a Marist
team while finishing second to
Queens. The mile relay was
fourth with Quinn (59.4), Keith
Hollman (60.0), Mahoney (62.2)
and Jim µmen (60.5) clocking in
4:02.1.
~-
trailed ·with 27. , ·
Fir~t place winners:for the Red
BA~KETBALl-i., .
.
.,· .. •. ·, ·;· •.. ·,.--~<- ' .
.:,£ .. •-
. Con~inued From.a
were 18 of 21 from the .foul line.
man of the Meet.
In other individual events, Tom
· Vandervoort was first across 1n Luke was third with 10: 17 .5 in the
the
600
yard run, shaving a tenth two mile . run, Mike _ Mahoney
ofa secorid off his school record fourth with 2:10.~·- in the 880,
with l:!7:8.'°Later, as ·anchor of Coufal fourth, ..
ii\,
the
1000
,
with
the
two
..,,mile• relay, he,
rail '-the
·-i:
37:5,: Vinny Quinn.fourth:
in:
the
:
'
', < :.·~.~
. '.
a
• • ,·
• . .
~,
This weekend the team com-
pletes its currentindoor season at
the RPI In:vitational.
"Marist, meanwhile -was hitting
only 11 - of.- 32 froritthe floor but
managed to
·stay:
close until
Holmes and _·
.
·Paul : Kane both
Comrii'uter
U.
"Getting In Order"
scored.iifthe final minute to give
.
by Ernest Arico, Jr.
One program that may interest
. Marist a
·
:32-28 halftime ad-
"Getting everything in order" commuting students is the
\'.antage. · · ·
·
is the goal that John Wpodin, commuter meals and packages
The Red Foxes shot much president·of Commuter Union has plan. - The plan, arranged by
better
in
the second-half,-making set for this reorganizational year. Frederick Lambert, director of
·19 ·_ of .: 33. Kane, Holmes and
"We're going to try and get campus life and Ken Stahn, food
Walt Janeczek sparked ·a 14-4 more commuting students . in- service director, will offer
outburst for a· 46-36 lead that volved with activities on cam- several types of commuter
Marist maintained over the final pus," says. Woodin.
packages.
twelve minutes. ·
· 'Besides Woodin, the. other . Package one offers breakfast
·-Pettus· 'led Marist with 17 commuter union officers ·are: and lunch five days a week;
· points. Holmes was next with 16 vice. president, Jim DeFelice; package t~o provides lunch five
arid also grabbed 12 rebounds. secretary, Maria_ Troiano, and days a week; package three
Janeczek finished with 13 and tr~asurer, Sue Gregory. Gerald ·proposes lunch and dinner five
Kane added· 12. · ·
Kelly, director of financial aid, is days a week, and package four
· Poor shooting in the. first the administrative liaison bet- -offer~ dinner.five days a-week.
If
twenty mi!lutes·.again hampered ween · the students and ad- the package is bought. on a
the Re·d Foxes · in their loss .at
·
ministration, and his office is . ,weekly basis there will be a 20
Stony · B·rook last Thursday.· used
as
a
. temp9rary percent. reduction on the line
Marist made just 14 of 44 at-
headquarters.
· price and if its purchase as a
tempts and fell behind by as
"We're looking for some office commuter .package (five week
much as 15 before pulling within space to operate from," says basi~ there
will
be a 30 percent
37~28 at the half.
Woodin, "but we haven~t found reduction on the line price ..
~'tony Brook, whose front line anything yet."
.Besides the weekly package, a
wasallover6'4"theentiregame,
The Commuter Union has weekend one has been proposed.
all six meals are purchased for
the weekend the price would be
$9.00.
Another program that has been
initiated by Woodin and Kelly are
area representatives for com-
muting students. 13 students
from areas where most students
commute will ~riodically meet
with the executive board to
discuss school issues and
problems that commuters have.
"Each
representative
is
responsible to call ten to . fifteen
people at random in their area to
find out if any students. have
problems," says Woodin.
The 13 area representatives
are: Sue Gregory, Jim Stein, and•
Maria Troiano, Poughkeepsie;
Cheryl Powell, Spackenkill;
Monica Dudeck, LaGrange; Glen
Looney, Newburgh; John Steele,
Highland; Sue Van Parys, Red
Hook; John Woodin, Pawling;
.Jim DeFelice, Wappingers Falls;
·-
.
Candi Davis, Fishkill; Paul
Salvas, Beacon, and Elanor Bent,
Kingston.
. Woodin is also looking for any
commuting students who would
be willing to act as area
representatives for the East
Fishkill, Hyde Park, Millbrook,
Pine Plains, and Cold Spring
regions.
CACC Basketball
asofFeb.16
+Dowling
Marist
Kings
West Conn. St.
Bloomfield
St. Thoma1>
Ramapo
Nyack
Concordia
W L
11 0
9 3
5 3
4 4
4 4
3 5
2 8
1 6
1 7
Plant Of
·-The
Week
were led by Earl Keith's 23
limjted funds allocated by the_
~Y
student who is on the board
points; Marist~rrowed·the lead Student Government, but has program may purchase a
to three on two occasions late in made the ·most ,of them. A weekend package for his guest.
the.game butthe Patriots used an commuter
newsletter
is There are two options: one, the
effective stall to maintain published every month and 'price of. any three meals for. the
possession and draw fouls. ·
mailed to all commuters ..
It
weekend includ_ing Sunday
.Marist placed four starters in· contains programs and activities brunch and. -Saturday night
day; 50 to 55 during the night
double figures. Pettus;-.althougl.1 that take place on __ campus.
special is $6.25, and secondly, if
Small free-branching creeper
having
his
worst shooting night of
with
shiny,
olive
green
leaves
'the-season, finished high with 18.
,·P·

Of
n_o·s
ed·· Se· n·
.. ate·_ 'G'
,·_00_
d '
that are purplish on the back;
Holmes--"fOllowed with:·15. Berry
.r
_
_
· ·
tiny w_hite flowers. Effective ·in
. had' 14 and Ray Murphy 12. · ·
· ··
. '
·
" .

,
hanging basket. When well
. :_ Tonight, · Marist gets its last
established the branches are
"breather" of the season when
John Davern, treasurer of Government gets re-elected. "We
literally covered with white
they head to Brooklyn to face
~'tudent _Government, · says he are a ·new group of people, and
_·t.Y:
5
bloom resembling a bridal veil.
Yeshiua. On-Saturday they travel
thinks the new !>roposed ~udent are just getting- adjusted . to
~"-5~
to
M· tnouth to face the 18'-3and
Senate·.could ..
be
very valJ,1able. Student Government,'' says
The Tahitian Bridal.Veil is this
nationally -::- ranked Hawks, who ·
"It
would represent all aspects of Davern.
week's special at the MAIN
boast the nation's fifth-best .of-
'the .students. The Policy Board
Davern thinks it would be a
MALL MARKET,
373
Main
fense (~9.3. ppg.) Petro com:-
.didn't seem to do that," says
good·
idea for the members of
Mall Poughkeepsie, N.Y .
. 'mented, "We'll have to stop their . Davern.
·· ·
·
Student Gover_nment to be ,
. •
,
The plant comes in a 31h" clay
run__ ning· ·game and_ no_ tfall._t_oo __ far
· · ,The only draw back would
be ,
elected for two years. This would · Gibasisgeniculata
pot and is usually priced at $1.50.
t ·t t·
t
b
·
1
ha
t ca
out .. "Tahitian Bridal Veil" ,
Th-
k
l ·t ·
99
~hind early, if.JV~'_are to-wm:'.'
for · the· c~~s 1 u 10n
o
e give peop e a_c nc~ o rry
is
wee on y,
1 IS
$. .
,,, On · Monday: .:the·. Red

·Foxes . amended. This would take a lot of long planned ideas. If the person
,,
· 1eave for. an upstate·swing ..
where •
·time and effort, says .Davern. .
wasn't w:orking_ in the govern-
Location - Sun ·
The MAIN MALL-MARKET is
_ ._ tli~y'll play'g8Ilies.: with;S!tJohn · .. .:-ElecUons 'are. coming up soon
.
·· ment, there.· could always . ·
be
Water - Dryout (Water only when open from
8
a.m. to 6 p.m.
every
Fisher· -Tuesday ,.and·'::Cortland ·:
and
Davern-plans to re-r'un. :He - some·· type, oL. impeachment," plant has flllly dried)
_day ~xcept Thursday, when it is
·.· Wednesday>:;:: \
t:·".:
;
· '·"' ;~ ::
hopes.:-· ttie r~st_
'9_{"
·
Student says Davern.
'· ·
Temperature-6519 70 during the· operi until 9 p.m.
·



































































































































































































































































,
.
PAGES
THE CIRCLE
FEBRUARY
19J976
-
.
-
High On
-
-
spor~s
'
..
MC TERNAN
before Tuesday's game ... Mo~u~
_
; now 18-3,
·
By THOMAS
-
-
.
. has dropped to eighth in NCAA DiVlS!On I_II_1~oll
JUNIOR VARISTY_ SLOWED BUT
_
_
NOT
·:
.. Earl Keith of Stony_Brook is first
lil
DlVlsi~n
STOPPED
_
·
III in
-
field goal percentage
.-(.688)
while
Dowling earned the
_
distinction Saturday of
-
Yeshiva's Paul Merlis ranks secon~ (.677) ....
being thefi~tteam in four games
to
_
hold the
An unusual nomination was receiv_ed fort~
-Marist
·J.V.
to .under 100- points. But
·
the Red
week;s Athlete of
the-
:
Week. Patrick Martm
Foxes won anyway, 19-:75_~
:
to
_
run ·their winniilg
.
complete<r his first· spe>rt
_
s~tic line parachute
streak to seven and overall record to 7-2 before
jump this past Monday.
·
With the Cessna 182
.
Tuesday's game at Siena.
:
.
-
.
-
·
aircraft at.an altitude of2800 feet, he made a
·
Ken Grimes scored on a three-point play with
··
.
gOCld exU and succeeded in pulling his-~ummy
20 seconds left to clinch the win: He finished with
-
·
rip-cord. AfterJanding on his lo~er ba.~~1de ~nd
-
15 poiots, tied with
_
John Vasquez behind Walt
still in a state of shock, he exclauned, Im doing
-
.
Brickowski's
:
17 points. Sa_tDePalma and Dave
this agam.'
.
'
·
Later he
_
added; while
:
f~eling his
wasilenko added 14
.
apiece:
-
-
. .
-
_
:
painful rear e~d; "l'll
·
get
;
(Clubpres1d~nt Ed)
Last Tuesday, Maiist routed Concordia 111-66
.
_
;Jermings_for this!" .. ~:Patnc~ a11d the rest of t_he
as Vasq~ez and
_
_
Wasilenko each hit for 20. Gary
·high-flying
_
gang led the natiQn_'~
.
colleges with
Diesel was next with 19 and-
·
Grimes
·
had 15.
the most students to jump in one semester.
.
.
·
·
Wasiienko took scoring honors with
_
_
22. _ in
.. -
.
· ·
Also
'
unustial was cancellation last Saturday
iil
_
_
Tiiursd_ay.'s ips-15
·
wiri'over Stony Brook:
,
Grimes
·
_.
~
-
I...inidonville:
·
Siena and Sact_:ed }ie~q were tied
-
_
:,
also
hit 20;Vasqu~J8 an
_
d Jack Grenna
_
n 15.
_.
.
,
·
1s-1a
-
when
a
bomb threat was received;causing
.
·
The team, c.oached by Bob Hildreth, is away at
-
~
gym to
:
be
,
evacuated-and game ca~celled. Was
Orange community College tonight, and :wm
_
-
"
·
·
,_
SLA
_
aroun~
·
_Albany
latel_f?
-
-
:
:
·.
:- -
·
---.
· face
-
Army

in West Po
_
int
:
~n
Tu~sdat;
.
.
·'· · ·
.
_
INTRAMURAL ltOUNQUP
·
:=
.
_
_ _
_
:
°i>ETTUS NAMED ATHLETE OF
.
WEEK
_
__: .
-
~
Tuesday
_
Iiight's.::.Intramural
-
scbedul
_
e
·
was
--
Steve Pettus, a jtiriiorf_rorri Jamaica;
-
N
.)!.,
has
:_
· -
_
p
:
~tponed
;
UJ\lil tonight whie!h _
ni~nt.t~e {!fst-
been namec1'Manst College Athlete of the-Week
·
place showdown b~lween Ben01t and
;
Good Old
-
-
-
-
-
·
for the \ve
·
ek
.
ending
'
Feb::14
;
_
This m,ark:s the
_
Boys'
'.f.
WillJ?e held tonigh(at9p;in
;
in the
:
gym .
. . Glynn Berry (No. 22)
.
gets loose for layup
in
74=-~ loss
W
Dowling on

second time that he has been named recipient
-
of
-
.:-Benoit
,,.
contiiiued
· ·
to
,
roll
:
\Vith
__ ,_
wins
-
over
Saturday (TM Photo)
•·
-
_ .
·
.
,
-
,.
·
~
·
-
-
'
-
·-
>
;
:
·
--
the award;
,
>:,
__
.
--
'
.;._
_
.
-- -
''Federafioif
:
Ffeet'' 82-30
-
and "BJg
·
1n••
·
95-37_
-
-
Pettus, who
.
leads the
·
Red ~xes
ii
'
SGOriil
Both
.
games were
~
ma_rkec(by bafanced scoring
L
. •
.
·
··
c
·
·
z
·
..
.
·
-

:
E
-
-- --
-
-
·
:::
'(16.4 ppg;), shcitll-for~11 arid score_d 26 points in
;:'
for Benoit;: led
by Doug Smith (17 and 25), Bill
- -
·
zo
·
n
·
·
s
·'
•_:
-
a
·
.
w
·--
_
.
--o
·
·
x
·
-
..
·

·
s
· ··-:
Sa~urclaf(7~3lqss
:
!opowHng.
;Eie
:
~11~~
-
~1:~re:d.
·-_-
::.
Wri~h!
:
(~
-
~ a~d
_
f4);
_
:qt~l
.
~r~nt q~and12_), and
-
·
·
·
_.
-
_
• :
·,
-
<: -:
. -
.
_
·
.
;
_:,
/.
:
-
.
·
·
':
-_
-
lTmTuesday's
.
73-:60 wm over
.
Concordia
,
and,18
--
·
.
Mano LaPaix (11-
-
ana
Il
k-
·
_
-:
.
-
-
.
_
by~homas McTeni
,
an
_
-
_
_
-
•,:
,
>
: ,.
;
··
-
:
·
·
_
-
:-,
·
·
in ttie 75;.{;BJoss
·
to
·
·
stony Brook Thursday
>
.
-
>
,-· ·
-
t'
.
Good

Old Boys" also remained
:
undefeated
the~pre\'.~0u~ m~eting
,wheri
th~y-
. _
~
-
,
·.
-
·
i
s•
<:
'
_
i
' ,
_:
-
·.
•·
-
.
_ ._
:-
with
·
a 49-38 wiri
'
o'ver the
'
'.'.Dongs'.'
be!J.ind Steve
.
fell asleep
_
In-the
.
second half-as
.
.
NOTES FROM:.THE SPORTS
_
DESK:
.
·
,
-

-
-
·. ·
.
.
Sulliva:n;s 12 points..
. -
-..
. '
.
.
_.

·
_
·
:
:
i
.-
·.
·
Dowling won
'
its fifth CACC
_
title
·
Dov,,~~ ca~~
-
b~c){}r~ni
:
a
·
_;3t,2V
·
-
:•
Glynn Berry retum,sJoJiie
.
scerie
,
of_ ~
:
~gh
. -
·
._-
·
<
-
'f.he
_
."Sprockeyes"
.
alsci poste9
__
hvo
:
wms last
in
seven years Saturday
0
night
.
defecit for
,
a 60-55
.:
tnumph
_at
-
school
~
heroics
:
tonight:.when Marist
-
trc1vels to
:
week. John McCarthy had 17 points and Rich
with
·
a: 74-63JYin C>Ver Marist in
·
.
Loti~ct.es H.::i. ori}ari. 24
(·-:
.:
:
Brobkly'i1toface·Yesluva at Na~are,!p H.S. Berry
:
..
.
:
FJeishiru.inri-14 toJe~d a 55-40 win_over·Leo Fifth,
-Oakdale, The
_
Go!de11 LiQns; n~\V,:
..
·
~~~".e
j:P~~us
;-
played
.
a
:
stro.ng
_
Jed·the Kingsmen to th~
_finals
~fthe old
qHS,a~
·
'
.
:
.
which
\vas
·1ed
:_
by Pa(Intintolfs
-
17 points. Mc-
25-2,
:
seek to
-:
comple~e
.'
their
.
.
1mm
_
e,h1ttmgop Uof ffshots
-
anci
.
iri-1~74 ;:
;
,'
Eileen
,
Gregg
:_
mad~
.
a
:
remarkable
"<
·
,-
Carthyhad 19 and Dom

Forcello and Bob Fitz
s~co11d st~aight unl>e11ten CAC<,_::
_<
scor
_
ing_
~
_
p~iµ
_
~-
:
fie
.
~nd (ilyr
_
m
.
,
r::_ecoyery
:
~f ~e_r
kTlE:~
:
!Jtjury and
-
w11~ ~ck
in
ttie
·
__
_
lQ
.
api~~e
.
iil
a
·
6?-41
·
win
over
,_
"
-
Tappa-Keg?-
.
·
_
sea~on when
,
they face. We
.
st
, -
Berry,
.
Wh,?.
fm1shed withl
_
0,)eci
-
Jmeup a~o11g with Robm Smallwood mtheteam's
- .
.
Beer.'.'
-
;
,
-
.
-
.
.
_
.
. ·
·
.
Connecticut State next
·
Sat1,1rd
_
~Y-
.
. _
M119st)9
:-
a c2_1~1~
.
lead
-m._1~way
_
-,~
70,;35 loss
>
at Manhattanville)iatur~ay
:
-:~
.
Earl

.
.
)~
_
other
.
games; ''.Holy
-
~
Erasmus" · stopped
Marist had
.
a 53-49

:tead
~
.
with
-
through
,
}lle
first
-.
half but
:
Bob
·
-
Holmes
·,
was named for
.
the
.
second time to
'
the
·•
!'Return to Forever'' 63-44 who also lost to Leo
7: 54
:
:
rem.~ining
:
but were
;
_
imab,e
·
_-
~ai
_
b(e
,
:
~n
.
d
~_
Ri~J:t llern.an~e~
;
got
_- •
· :
~
ECAC Divis19~
-
Ill
·
.Co!}ege J3as
_
lcettiall
',
:All-Star

_
~
-
:
.
:
;Fifth 58-:5~ as In.tint9ii sco~ed 24:
•-
-
·.
t~
_
SCO:e
'
o~er
_
again
:
~or
.
.
11lrll:?5t
·
~
th~ ~
.
OI_lS
.
_ro~i:~~}
.
?.
:
talce
. -
~
-
36:35
<
}~arri
la
:
s~
_
,
_
eekrne
_
had
_
5,9 poiiits
.
anc!:55 t~~lltlds
~
.
.
_
'."
~im.
_:
.
Stellll an~
·
_
Jack McCutcheop
.
sc_ored 16
five n,imµte~;

_
by t_hen;
.
they w~r~
.
·
lead, at
.'
~~)!tlffi.e .
.
, '.
·

• ·
J:'
,-,.
,
,-·
,
'
0
m)~
_
e
/
~11s
:_:
oyer
{
New, PaJtz;
-
BIQoinfi~ld and
,_
,_
ap1~c~
t?
lead the ''!)qngs'! over
.
"Big III" 5De34.
_on
the ~liQ~t;_en.<l
~
Qf
~
61f5t~~or~:
,
:
,
,
~e~H
_
S
;
,a
~
n
_
<I
·
Earl
_,
l:J:e>ln_l~s
.·,,
(14,
:
-
,
Ra
_
~po
_
;
;;
~y
.. ·,Murph}'.
:c
~~<I
:
~t~ve
,:
·P~tt,us
~
haye
:

_
_
-_
-<
~
/
;
_,:
.
_
:
i,
.
·
-.
_
.
_
,
-
.
-
.-'
.
'.
--
..
.
..
>.:
.
-.
:
.
,
·
-
~
·
The:
.
Red
'
·
Foxes
·
also
·
lost
·,
.to
-
.
pomts
;
-
,.
14
.
,
rebound
_
s)
,:
comb1,11ecl-
.
.
ea
·
ch
:
been
.
namect to
~
the
,
team-once
:.,,.
·
:
·
>.--1'::I
,r
·L .
.
::",
,
.
Tlll,S
.
WEEK
~
;rN MARIST-S~RTS (Feb.
lS.:-25)
·
Stony
i
Brook
:
75~
:
aftet.
.
a
'--
7~0
,
·,
_
for
l'.1ar.isrsnf~t
te?
points---ofthe
.
<
_
:
£~tt·
stil!istks
:
-
sh~-.y
_
Ho~es rankeg sixth
·
fo
·
·
-
.Th1:1rsc1a,y,
Fe}?
:
.
19
.:~Basketball:
at
·
Y
~hiva;
·'!!D.}~V~r,q!)n~
,
or~ia
_
l~st
,
week ~ncl
:
•·-
sec~nct;~alf
,
befo~e
:
the c
_
g!~, peU
.
_
,.
scor~ng (F'.3)-_and
,
eight_~
.
·
ip
feboun~mg
<
(9:9) ;
__
.
Vars!ty
.
" -~-
p;II?,,;
.
Wom~n•s Basketball:
_
at Con-
.
·
fa'cea
"
a'=', strong
_
Sie
,
na
.
team
-
set~;
-
You cc1n t goth!0.1:lgh a
•'
KenHudak
·,
ofWesConn. still
.
leads m
-
scprmg
cord1a -
.
7:30 p.m.; J.V. Ba~ketball:
~
at Orange
-
Tuesdayj1_1gh,t
'
ynthar.:~cord
_
of12.::
·
,
st~etch
-
~ike
--
that
_
-
~nd;XI?ec.t
·
to
:
/
(21
_
.7)
_
and F
·
T
:
pct
;-
(100.0);Bob ~elrnari (!G#g's)
-
.
_
.
c;c
~
8
_
p.rn;
.
.
:
-
'.
::
,
s
;
,
.
--·
:
-
_
_ ,
a-:
:
·
:
>-
. ·
_
.
· ·

-
--
_
. -
·
0
wm,'
/:_
s
.
~ud
~~t~o
:
JimSg~1tt!)
-
l~d
_
i
a
.

ie
_
ads
·
rebouriders
\
with
'
16.4
:
:
average
·
;
and
.
·
.
>
Saturday;
-
Feb
;
21
_
- Basketball::at Monmouth;
Althotigli the
.
eleven
'
:"
poipt
1
·
the
.
~~ners
:_
wit~
_
F
whil~
_
Her-
·
:
.
wesConn's l:.evi Jackson is
-
top playmaker with
_
Varsity- a
-
p;m.;
:,r.v. -
6 p.m.;. Trac}{: RPI
In-
rriargin ma::r~s their biggest loss
_
nandez
:
adaect.
,
15.-
._
'
_:
_
._
.
·
averag~ of-6.fassistso.. Iri re~ent CACC games,
.:
· vitational 12 noo1f
_
.
"
>_;
. _
_
.
,
_
ofthe
..
season, coach
·
Ron Pet~9
_The
J~ed
Fox~~
-
ha~
.
a
~
ru~e
Dowling beat Nyack (91;4~). Kings
-
(86"68) and
·_--
_Tuesdcly, i:-eb:
,
24 -
.
Basketball: at St John
said;
.
"We played
.
a
_
real strong
_
a wakemn_,g
:_
agams~
,
Concordia
_
:
st
;
~.
-Thom~s J72-70)
and Ramapo _upset )Vest
·
. _
Fisher;
-
yarsity - 8 p.m.;
_
J. V _
;
Basket
_
ball: at
game except for that short p
_
eriod
_
.
after t~e Chpp_ers ran otqo
.
}
_7-0
;
.
.
Cqn~-~-~JicµtJl6:-:54 .,
_
,:
_
_
_
.
.. -
-"
..
,
.
West Pomt.- 4
-
p.m.
-
_. _
.
_
_
_
_
_
oftime.We had four
.
good'shots l~ad.
_
Concordia
0
IJ1~de Just five
.
.
.
Siena
,
was·ranked thrrd-m the state
,
college
_
:

.
Wednesday,Feb:
·
25-Basketball: ~tCortland;
during tfrat span
:
but couldn't
-
held goals m theJrrst half but
div~ion poll behind
_
Hartwick and ~uffal°. State
.
Varsity
_
o~ly
~
8
_
:30 p.m.
--::-
.
;
make thein.'' He did
_
not~ that th~
.
.
~
-
OONTiNuEo'oN PAGE'7
.
team
:
played a
·
lot bett
_
e,.r thari_i~
.
',,
.
.
·
.
, ·
:·.
_
byThomasMcTernari_
c_
-
:
have
.

gbne eithe~
'.
way;
in
fact,
.
.
any of. the;top
.
four teams cQuld
A corner
.

.
kick_. in
-
soccer
.
is
.
have
c
wori
.
th1Ltournamerit."
:
He
awarded when . the defensive
.
explaine~that indoor soccer~ so
·
:
'
~
teain def.Je~l$[the ball behind the
,
fasnhat
·
it
;
is
_
difficult for
;
an
:
of~
·
backendline wtiich runs oneitiie
·
r fense;to
.
set._up: and th~-most
side of the
:
goaL
· -
-
·.,.
<
>
~
:
-
.-
·
goals are
:
the resultof mis~Jces
For those who don't realize'th.e
·
by
·,
the
:,
def~nse,
_
·
So,
the
:-
teaip
'
·
·
-
-
i
_
mpor~~rice
0~
the
,
prece_ding w!tlc~
·
m.akes the fewest ID~takes
-
sta~einent

let
.
it be added: that wms>
~
::
_
~~
; .
·
·
,
, .'
,
-
-
.
when
a·.:•gain~
-
9f il_ldoor .§o~~~r
.

-~11one
;
Nai~a, who
}e~
.
.
ti1e
,
-
ends in a
:
tie score, the team
·
wit
_
h
.
Fox~.iri scciring
-
lastfall, scored
_.
the greatest riumber
of
silchJticks
:
all three
--:-
goals
·
as
.the
·
Red Foxe(
is·
·
declared the winner.
,
<
:
.
,
.
'.'
-
beat
,
ttie Qld Timers 3-1_ in
.,
their
7
And ::.tbat'.s
·
.
how
0
Mar~t

was
;
f1rsf.game. Naiiza
·bounced
his·
-
'
eliminatetL
.
frorw Sunday's Jiilal
' :
nrsf goal witµ
~
l
_
: ~4
.
gon~
.
by
,
to
·
.
round
0
<if
!•
the
··
Geiniarua
::Jridoor
.
·
give Martst a 1-0 lead;
-_
·
.
- :
·
>
-
·
soccer tournament ati
'
Diltchess.
"
·
After
the Oid Timers tied
·
it at
Ge
.
rmania
·
1,
·
which outn'umbered
-
·
6:22,
:
·
Scott Carter
·
. stopped ·a
.
..
_ . -
l\.fai'ist iri
'
kicks frorrithe
:
cori).er-~
-'
,
deflected sho( by Al -Robinson
·
at
· ·
_
::.:
',
;f
·
theri weriton to)ose ur
-
suddeil
·
midfield
·
and
:
hjf
-
Naitza
.
with
a
;;

·
-
cdeat~ m
'
jlie
:
~hiunpi~~s~il?J~~ipe
'
p_el"fect
,
pass
in
,
:,
c_l9~f}or
;
~
what
.
-
· '
. to Germania
·
II
-
3-2.
, ,-:-•

'
'.
· ,
_
:-_.
.-:
· .
.
.
-
·,
pi:'oved
,
to-be
_
the
:
~n_mg goal.
·. ·
·
"''fhe
-:~
Red
/
Foxes
.-..:.
had
;'.
played
<-
Naitza's final'.score .was
.
on a
'.
~0
~
.
_
,
,,
--
poorlyJlj.fweek befo~(~~affeer~
.
_
foot)1
_
ast
'.,
\Vit~
'
f:
:
211~ft
:
\:is
-
-
-
_
•,
-,
;
·
~
-
-
·
-
b~ten
;
:
~ by
.,
Ger,:na~
JI
an~
:
:,
'.
:Mar~sL;eceive<J.
,
:
tTTi:ee
,
~orner
.
.
_
·
;
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
-
.
.
-
tj
_
eed~
t
if:
~.
2-~
··
:'!ln
:.
_
Qyer
•~C
th_e
.-
.•
kicks
-
aga~st G~F"}~maJ
~
.
th~
.

•. Goalie Jay Metzger ( oi(grouod) making
_another
great save
in
Germania
-tournament
at Dutchess
~illinary)nstit~te_morder,W 5-u1t
~;
fi,rstt\VO mm~tcs
_
~nd
,
w~r~
_
~}_ead
.
,;
. _
_
,
(Chip Erinish)
--
..
,
.
.
_
_
·
_
JµSurt<l,~Y
,.
Jf~e
-
~play
,_
~.;.,~

a!1Y
-
,
-
~
:
~n
·
~
.
orner_k1~ks
,
bef_9re
:
Jhe
.
.
,
-;
,
:
.
: ;;-_
·
,_
,
;.
· ·
.
.
.
.
"-
.
.
, ..
,
_
_
·
. ,,
.
.
·
_
s,ign ~~
f
-meir.
-
~PP
.
~e,
_
ci~W>ll;,
"'.
~~~r
-
·
wmner~ \Vere
~
~~aJ.:de<l f1Y-~
-
II:>:
~ _playE:d
,
~rnli
,
antly
_
after a
__
poor minutes. .
.
_-
.
_
~
_
a 3-1 edge in penalt:r kicks after
. r~ally
;
~J•~JV~d_
:
1t:
:
:
;,-
\

:,:
·
,
:~ _
-
~
/
,.
:
-
sp~n pf
:
tw<>_:
.
~~~~es
.
~t~
.
8
_
:3~
.
t_~: s~O\Y~g
,
th~
_
w:eek
_
be;qre. Tlle .,· _G~rmama_- I ~e
_
ached. the fmals
·
~
,
11n _ovei:time_ P
.
~riod. couldn't
·•
;
·'
;:
..
.
.
·
:::
'
••rm
-
v:eryJ1appy with
_
the
:way

-
,
go?
,:
''We
..
::Just
·
made
_...-::
s9~~
, .
..
Pr:i!rshott~tgotp~~~
-.
h!fll_an.~ay·
~
with
·
aJ:lW111 ~ver
.:
Qutchess-and
. ~
breai(the
,
deadlock
,
in
•:
both
_
the
'. '\
~
{
,
:
:
.

.:
:,:
'.
.
·
.
.
;
w:e
.
,
i
P~i
~
~
f:.
(;
-Y!_e
,
;\V~~~
-
i
;
Jr~~en~
_
:
mis,t~k~}~
r)
:
~n
;;;,
~ur
:c:.
de~en
.
~iY.e.
. ::
)vas
,
a
,
:r~~Olllld
\
?~
:
~
'
:
dit~ct_J~i~
_
k
_
a
-
~~.<;isi<>n
\
~Y
:
~
corner
;
lti.~l_cs
".
OV~fc
/~
S~Ore)md
:
~oaj~r]ci<!kS.
··:
•.
-
·
,
-
~
.
·
·
.
-
~
--
:<
//-
.
-
;
:
>
-
.
,
;:
~
dousltimPr.oy~{'.
,:
praUJ~
;
<:<>a
,
ch
·
'.
/
,~1g~~~~.~~
1j
n~t~
t
Golctman·

J
r0,~)2Jeet_qut;
:
And g~nnan~r t
_
h~
:c;
~a~hes:
?-
'fl.l~
~
9>11c~~t
~
had
-
'"°
:
}
fµe
•)
1exf:Joti\'n~JJ1ent
-.'
on
.
the
[
,
'
.
·
.


.
'
/
. ·
i,~'.';C~~~:'1'~;
~ e
,
\
·
~
.
~~OS~Ofs9t~!h~,P~
(.
ou~yt"'~
J~
.
-
~era9.,
;
~•
.:
50~!}0Ug~IU~i
IOSmgAAWli~
.
ufd:r~h~WilsS.t!or
March
6
.


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

.
:~
_
-
· .
. -
--
~
-
:~:~
~r
-
~_
·
,
.
.
:
-
·
·
.
·
_
_
_
_
.
.
..


17.3x.1
17.3x.2
17.3x.3
17.3x.4
17.3x.5
17.3x.6
17.3x.7
17.3x.8