The Circle, September 23, 1976.pdf
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 18 No. 2 - September 23, 1976
content
--vo1.UME.18, NUMBER
i
..
.
. ,
..
-
_MARIS'(
C<JLLEGE, POUGHKEEPS{E, NEW YORif
!260!
/ SEPTEMBER 23, 1976
_i.;;.
i}~;,
~t-:-:_ .. :·;·,
PAGE
2
THE
CIRCLE
SEPTEMBER 23, 1976
E
.
·
-
•
New Residence Directors
.
·
-
ntrance
u
nderwar
A. 9.Floor
Resp·
onsihility
.
By
Edward
P.
DeLlse
nelly permission was received
.
•
·
Brother
Nil
us
Donnelly,
director of construction for
Marist
·
College said Marist can
look forward to a new, larger,
entrance in the future.
·.
·
,
..
The problem of the old en-
trance was realized when
students experienced "trouble
getting cars in and off campus,"
according to Brother Donnelly. A
traffic light from the
·
state was
requested but refused, the reason
given was the state had too many
traffic lights in the
,
area, said
Donnelly.
.
.._
_
·
The new entrance will be at the
intersection of Route 9 and Fulton
St
.
Ac
,
cording to Brother
,
Don-
from the state to
tum
the present
main entrance into
an
exit from
the campus for traffic
•
turning
south only. The water works
Road
will
"disappear" and be
turned into a
·
lawn. The
·
swim-
ming pool located below the new
entrance
'
site
will
be filled
in
and
also be turned into
·
a lawn.
The co.5t of
·
the new entrance
will
·
be approximately
$50,000.
The new ,campus entrance will be
roughly three times the size of the
present entrance and according
to Brother Donnelly
.
will
be
"attractive."
The
project
completion date
.
is unknown
·
at
the present .June due
to
the
pri~rities on pemi~g funds.
·
·
f
Life
Off CampUS,
.
Dorni
.
No.
Six
By
Cathy'
Ryan
to Marist."
.
Mr.
Amato says every place he
. Peter Amafo is the new
has been, he has been very
.
Residence Director of
·
Cham·
committed to the students.
·
"One
pagnat Hall, and he is responsible
has
r
to learn
-
to Jive with people
for guiding and supeivising both
having different ways
.
·
and
·
life
the resident coordinators and
styles - that's
~
part of the whole
resident advisors.
educational experience. We have
·
Mr.
-
Amato
.
received his
to help people discover who they
Bachelor of Arts degree in an•
·
are and what they want in life,
thropology
from
Brooklyn
and part of my goal
is
to offer
College, and holds ~
:
MA from
some reflection."
·
·
·
Pennsylvania State,
_
where he -
Mr. Amato believes the small
studied anthropology for two and
college
·
offers more oppartunities
. ·
a half years.
:
.
and a different kim} of cl,lallenge
..
Before coming to Marist,
Mi.
not
·
found in
-
a
'
larger
.
school.
Amato taught courses
_
in
·
"Marist has a
lot
of
possibilities
sociology,
·
education
and
·
for my
·
own personal growth and
psychology at Brooklyn College.
·
·
for the
·
betterment
.
ot the
:
com•
.
He was also involved in ex-
_
munity.I
think
it's
·
ar~ally
:
nice
periniental
_
education at the
l'eter
Amato
,
.
group of students here
:'
'
"
··
., ,
college, where he and a group of degree af Pennsylvania
.
state,
Mr. Amato's office
.
is located in
students
.
designed
several Mr. Amato held the position of
Chainpagnat Hall, rooni
:
324,
·
arid
·
educational programs
· ·
and assistant
-
coordinator
·
of resident
.
anyone
.
wishingJo
·
reacll him
·
:
by
projects. The orgaJ_lization, called life for one year.
·
. .
.
·.
_
phone can do so by dialing
,
ex;;
Student Voluntee"t Resources . '._
As
the
.
new resident director,
tension
-
265. He
is ·available for
designed
.
a peer cotirtseling
Mr •
.
Amato hopes
:
to
·
provide
a
personal
·
_
counseling for
:
anyone
/
center,
a
tutorialprogram and a
"healthy
.
and
.
secure atmo~phere
.
wishing to talk to
.
him
-,
about,a
everybody. Some people . don't drug
'
·
program.
· ··
·
.
·
.
·
for the
_
students/'. "l hope· I· can
·
problem.
«
My door is open to any
-
-
enjoy the mob scene, while others
.
•
While
.
completing
his
-
Masters
·
c.on~~~tea lot of positive ~gs
.
·
student that needs
__
my
✓
h~lp;"
,::
.
By WENDY STARK
. According to Fred Lambert,
·
need more responsibility
.
Some
.
. .·
.
.
..
assistant dean of s
_
tudents, Marist
.
people
'-
we recommend to liv~ off
•
•
•
·
has
_
a "sixth dorm," Lambert
,
campus."
.
'
·
·
-
·
·
""
·
'
says, "I've often joked about this
;
"
The third reason is for in-
-
-
A
·
-rF"/o
'
m
'
-
all r:rra
·
-1,j.
e
·
s
·
·
·
Ph
:
a
'
-.'
.:.g
·
·
e
· ·
-
·
it's Rip Van Winkle; obviously''
.
.
·
.
dependence;
'
which Lambert
.r:I
""J
_
-
.
~
.
.
f'i
_
,
·
.
.
•·
.·
.
u
_
.
. _
·
.
•
·
I
'
.
. .
--
-
- .
,
.
'I'J'.lis year 51
_
Marist students are
··
i
says,
.
"is perfectlyJogicaL"
·
_
living
off
.
campus. ~very year
· ·-
·
Some students
·
move off
Marist projects that between 50 campus because
.
according to
.•
to 75 students will move off Lambert, ''Marist has some
By~laineBrusoe
.
,
campus and this year is con-
programs that
·
require stuclents
_
·.·
sistent wit~ pre.vious ories'. The to . Hv~ off
:
campu~-
11
. The
.
·
"-You're ~dcfu.lg!"
"
You are?~' ,
.
.
:
11~~er
_
thIS year has, dropped University Year for
Action
JS
one
•
,
These are Just a
.
couple of the
.
slightly fr?m !a~tyE:8,r s ~otal of of these programs. ~so, a l~t of
_
re
.
a~tioils
:'
-
that Beth
:
S!J.'gar
.
,
55
_.
stud_ents
.
liymg m Rip yan ~raduates from Ma~st fin
_
d Jobs receives when she
·
te~ people
·
.
·
Wmkle
_
Iow
._
income ho11S1ng, m the
.
Poughkeepsie area
·
and that she's the new
·
residence
.
·. '
:Ea~tman
.
,
Terrace and other move offcamp
_
us
iri
their senior
·
diJ:-ector
·
at
:
uo
;
'
,
~
-
·
Sagar
· ::
,
vaq~us pr~vate homes.
.
y~r to establish a permanen!
·
originally Jrom White
. :·
Plains,
'
.
'It-:is
·
exciting for me
to
c9me
·
and
:
find
_
our that I'm' the
:
first
woman
.
.
·
residence
·
director.
·
.
.
It
.
opens 'up new cloors and iflot
~
is
·
expected of Irie,"
·
says
Miss
Sagar
.
'
'.Thereis a wid~
-
ra11ge of
.
>
reactions~ !'-am, in a
:
serise
;
an
::
authority figure and
·
people
:
may
I
I
i
I
,
i
·
•.·.
'!'.he
·
1
prim.ary reason
.
why residence here.
.
·
·
·
.·
.·
.
.
,·
_ ·
·
New York, has
•
a
·
.
·
Psychology
stude11ts
i
mo~r
off
.
campus
.
~
O~er,feasons ra.~ged
}
rom,J()o
.
1:)egre~
/
{t:otµ
::
Slffl.Y-
:
8:t
·
4Ib~y-
_-
Lambert ~ys,
U
we can
1
go
.:t>Y;
,:
~uc}): _11()1s~
:
t9
_
y,lc\.Iltµ\~ a
:
~
.
l}angE:i,
·
. and
.•
·
a
·
. master
~
s
\
'degree:.
,
, .in
··. ·
.
.
vvhat
they
:
say on ,:surv~yJo.~s'.
·
O~e off. <:!ampµs
,
aJ;>plic~nt:.~ote
-c
Counsehqg
,
•
Education
::
:from
:
•
i
i.
financial.
-
students .!Ilov_e
·
o,f
,
on,the_app~c~ti<iq,
~
'the dortnS I ·
·
Perinsylvarua
·
State
'Y
She came'to
:·
:
campus to save money,
:,
~d
.
have livedm
.
are zoos.'
'.
Marist'.in search
>
of a smaller·
1.-,ambertsays,"ifits
,.
cl)~a~erfot
..
,
:J'he}ive donn~ on the Marist school
'
•
with
·.
·
a:
-
-
more persortar
·
them,
-
gr~at_.' ~
.
But
.
accor~mg .to
\
·
ca~pus ar~ currently housing 836 atmosp~ere
'.
··
She
-~
fincJs
•
.
'
,
Marist
· ..
½imbert, "it.would seem more
·
residents, l'close
.
to 50 percent "tremendously
-
.
different" froin
,
expensive."
.
Lam.bert
.
says, ·are freslµna11," says
.
Lambert. Albany
·
or Penn state
because aL
, ..
be
_
uncoinfortable in dealing with
.
·
··
·
that:
:
PhysicallyI may not be able
;-
to defend myself as
a:
man might,
·
J
.;
but
'
l
:
have
been
able to control
.
,
.
:
;.
\
sitµationsmthe
;
pastd
,
am;_!n
;
no
•··
,,
.,
.::
.
;
1-
~
.
;
wayafraidto handle a situation
.:
I
.
•
. ·
,:
.
1·
.
r~
-,
•
••'
..
__
1
~
.
;
·
"utility bills are exorbitant in this
:
.
-
According to Lambert several Marist "all of the
·
students
either
·
·
. ·
area" and off campus residents off
·
campus resi<;lehts do
.
move know each other or
·
know
.
of each
·
woul not eat as bi!J a var_iety of
-
ba
_
ck o,nto
.
campus, ec1:ch
.
y~r.
·
other with the possible
·
exceptfon
food as they would
if they lived on Out of the 63 students who applied
.
of commuters."
. ·
' ..
.
·
cainpus.
to live off campus, 51 are
Miss
Sagar observed that there
The _second _most
·
·
popular c~rrently living off while
12 arelCmore people stopp~g to say
reason is for privacy. Lambert either never made
.
the move, or hello or talk. Marisf is a
lot
·
says,
.·
''dorm living
.
isn'
.
t
for
.
moved back on.
·
·
wanner than otherschools."
Miss
Sagar said, "!
,
would like
to see domiitories as a
·
whole
·
·
becoming a
··
community.
·
We're
·.
.
·
Beth
Sagar
councils
.-
"Drinking
time
should
not be our main function; There is
a definite
··
need- for
.
parties
.
but
that should not be the sole, pur-
,
pose," says
Miss
Sagar.
'
.
just
have
fo
,
use a-:'differ
_
~t a~
•
proach
thari
a man might:
·· "
"In a sense
..
I represent the
female student body
'
in
that I
,
have a
..
•
similar
'
frame of
1
referen~e .
.
It inay
qe
.
easier
.
for
me
.
to
\
realize
whe~
-
they
.
are
.
.
coming from in their problems~ I
-- ..
·
·
could identify easier than
.
a
.
man
-
·.· ·
might
.
I'm not a feminist but
.
I
.. ·
believe one hundred percent in
equal rights."
.
Back To School Specials!!
·
L
·
iquor
-
Lic_
,
ense
Coming
really a very long way from that.
.
:, , . ,:
A lQt of people have tried doing
·
· ·
· · ·
·
&
-
•
·
·.
·
·
·
·
·
d
II
different things like making the
·
·
_s
.
~ve
__
·
on
aHyo
_
u
__
r.
Win
_
e
_ ·
·.
-
~•
-
_
quor
ne
__
e
_
s.
_
·
By ALISON HICKEY
AkohoHc Beverage . Control donn an academic area
,
·
and
·
a
1
·
·
:
·
.
Board and then it had to be sent to social
.
area.
:
Vie'
need
'.
·
things
Jo
_
:
.
._, __________
'"!!Iii __ ~,---.~ -
.--....
~
"'.7
"""":'
:
7
~
-·
·
.
.
'
.
'On June 16th when Saga left
.
the Alcoholic Beverage Control complement each other. Living in
;·
·
I
and Marist took over, there was a Board
·
in Albany
;
It
•
was later
·
a donn
is
very different,
•
·
there
verbal agreement that th~ liquor found that
·
the · license was not are academic pressures,
.·
.
social
.
I
license would be switched over to filled· out correctly
. _
and
.
Marist · pressures, and
-
family pre~ures..
I
Marist," said the director
·
of the College had
.
to fill out another
.
People have
'.
to learn to get along
I
·
Marist College dining hall,
Mr.
application in order to correct the together.
,
A
.
dorm
,
should
·
be. a
'.
·
.
·.
·
.
.
,
,
.
I
.
·
·.
Joe Lurenz. According to
Mr.
mistakes onthe first application. place to
:
.
~elax, study, know
,
and
:;
Lurenz the
'
liquor license
,
was·
,
The license
·,
is•
,.
now
'
:-
being understand
·
other people
.
_
or- to
:
·
.
f
.
,
.
.
·
sent to California to be
~
-
tran-
·
·
reviewed and Mr. Lureriz expects
:
work oµ
-
projects
:
together.
•r
·
.
·
1
.
sferred over
.
to Marist. Instead it
·
to receive it by October
Ist.
.
·
.
·
••
'
-
~
Sagar
..
n~ticed
that.
each
··
.·.
_
1
,.
was cancelled because Saga Food
·
Mr.
·
Lurenz also said
.
that the donmto!Y building
·
on
,
campus
Se'Ivice
failed
to notify California
·
meal stickers on the ID cards are
·
seems
to
have its own personality
·.
.
1
.
.
.
.
.
·
·
Imported
·
•
r .
~ij111-b·rusco
.
ofthe change. Mr. Lurenz said only temporary. New stickers which she sees as
,
good
'
but
.
she
SUPERSAVIN
_
_
GS
_
.
ONALL
"•
I
that it was the error of Saga Food have been
'
ordered that bear a feels that there should
be
i
.
'more
·
·
·
•
···
-
·
-
,
Service but that it was done
'
Marist emblem. lJntil these cooperationbetweenbuildingsas
-
Y{)_f..!llLIQU<>'flNEEl)S
QT
__
r-~~
:-
~-~-7
·
-f
.
accidently. .
.
.
·
.
.
..
.
·
stickers arrive
.
there will be a well ,as
:
within
:
buildings." She
I
·
·
,:
In ·order to obtain: a ne-wliquor careful check
.
at the
·
door
:
.
to belieVE:5
that
this
C
can be ac- '
BLEND
..
•
.
.
-
-
~
:
.
•
;
_
, -
~
~
.
e.ss
_
.-T~~n.
4.
,
29
·
1
license Marist College had to
fill
.
assuFe that no
'
students
.
·
with
s.
compllshed .
·
through
• :.
com-:'
out
.
a new 20 page application
.
phoney stickers will be allowed in muru~tion
wi~
the_Interff011s,e
GIN 80°, •
i
-. • • •
~~~s
.
J.h~~
3;99
I
which .was fkst sent to Qutchess to eat.
.
..
.
.
-
.
,
Co~cil a~d mdiv1dual-
·
house
.
'
,
'·
~?~~~~~:
_
: : \
:~:~::f~~t;:
I
:C
.
·
·
'c
F
_
-
_
<or
_
.
_
.
d
_
...
·
<
v
_
·
··.
s
_
.
C~rter
9
_.
·
:_
3().
T9
_
µig
'
··_
lil:
~~~8.?,~a&•
;:
.t~~~•~·l
99
1
•··
.
SCOTCH8~·:
·
·;·:·
.
·
'.
.-~
·4·99
,
.
I
'
,
'
At 9: 30 toriight, P{'.esident a~y
-
follo~
·
.
-
,
up q~eries
:
Each Court of
A~~~ls
ui
Pltiladelphia.
SCOTCH
86 · · · · · ' -
~
· · ' •
.
5
)
9
_
·
1
·; -
Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter·
.
candidate will
/.
be
.
allowed
·
to
<
The debate
·
should have some
.·
·· ..
COMPARABLE SAVINGS
<
.
'
,
.
will ineet in the first of a planned
·
comment briefly on
/
his
·
op-
effect on the_ canipaigns a~d the
·
f
}N Va
_
GALL
_
O,NS
.
·
I
·
series
·
of.debates. The site for
'
the por1ent's. replie( and
.
w
_
ill have
·.
polls, which now put Carter
.
only',
01sr1UEo&soTIUDBYLEAD_
1
"6>
1
··
debate
is
;
the Walnut Street
-.
three -minutes for
•,,
closing .four perce
.
ntage points
.
ahead of.
!""---•
·<
.
•
··
AM-ERl•CA!IIINo•,sr•,LLE•R•s.
11111
·, ·."..,·
--~!,,..
,
.
.
Th~ater
.
inPhiladelphia.
·
"·
:
.
r~marks.
;
.:.
,':::·'•
: ,
,
,,
.
.
.
Ford.
-
:
·
--··
·
-
-
~'
,
·
i •
':::
·
The format will be question and
.
f
.
Mean'whUe,'
'
t~e
•
:,_
Socialist
·
.
..
-.1t:w111
be
broadca~t
on
all three·
.
·
·
.
·
~
-
..
answer
:
•
A pan~l of
;
neW:s men will
.
·
.
:
Wor~ers·
..
f>arty
..
has
.'
cayed
i:
the
.i
.
major
:·
networks
i
and
.'
the ~blic
'·
__
.
<
_
~sk
:
>
~he
(
ques~ori.s
;
>
a_nd
/;
~ach
:
,-
debl3t'
;
a
:,
~~ge.4
·
:
n
.
e~
f
event
.
~nd
.
;
Br,oa.d~stiiig ~y~elil
;
) t
:
,
can
be
';'
.
~9:ndidate
:',
will
:,
•
haye
.
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_
-
,
SEPTEMBER 23, 1976
THE-CIRCLE
·
cafeteria· ·cuisine
:,
·Being Wasted
.PAGE
J
Politics '76
By Jerome Maryon
than
ever. "Four more years"
· • the Republicans have
been wont
When the
1976
political cam- to cry. "Integrity and the
paign
is
discussed, it appears restoration of faith in the
that it
is
at once one of the most government"
reply
the
traditional and yet one of the · Democrats. Guns! Butter! Slow
most novel of
campaigns.
down! Change now!
On
the one hand, all the
Yet
is
the campaign absolutely
traditional elements of national a repeat performance? What of
campaigns since
1932
are Carter's
"born -
again" Southern
present. The Democratic ticket is Baptist faith? What of Ford's
stressing
what it
can do to im- anything - but - subtle overtures
prove the ecollomic situation, to gain the Catholic urban vote
particularly in regards to the long
deemed
virtually
working
man,
while
the synonymous with the Democratic
Republican ticket is · attempting Party? Are we about to have our
to present
an
image of greater first Democratic President from
expertise in foreign affairs. The the Deep South since the Civil
incwn~nt plays heavily upon his War?
Or
are we about to .witness
lofty "Presidential" image, while a critical realignment, with the
the <:h~llenger s~ks
to call to the Republican Party regaining
p~blic s altention the alleged control of the industrial Nor-
failures of the administration. theast, where it has been
~ot only are. the appeals and anathema since at least the days
unages projected familiar, but of F .D.R.? Many other questions
even the issues seem to be the come to mind, but perhaps the
same. Again the debate is heard most poignant is the one that
over the budget of the Dept. of . demands how we are going to
~enfense: more for social ser- cope with the sudden prominence
vices and less for an already -0f the abortion issue.
sufficient nuclear capability,
All
these questions seem .. to
demand the liberals, while the imply an imminent decom-
, consen.:atives retort that greater position
and
subsequent
expenditures for the national
defense are needed now, more
Continued on l'.igc 5
Marist
students are wasting .morefoo<t Was
this
your dinner?
.,Marist:
Uncertain On
Donnelly Library
· By LARRY STRIEGEL
staff member· worked in the their eyes . are · tligger than their
-
.
- dishrQom on Monday night, stoma_chs." Because of this,
: The old Navy_ rule of "Take - September ..
2oth.
On·that night, many .. people who arrive at the
what you can ~t, but eat-all you
668
people were served;. and:227 end of ·the meal must eat lef-
By Sherry Smith
Plans for the complex are in
take," is unheard of at Marist trays· turned into the dishroom tovers froni other evenings.
the preliminary. stages but soine
College as food waste has
in-
still contained more than half of a
He said that many . students
·. There
has
been some concern · ideas for the area are 24-hour
creased in recEmt years because serving of the. main. dish, ·or .at have .a negative. attitude about by students and college staff as to study space for_ students, lounge
·
more students .· are .. failing , to least. · two· . fuU- glasses
,of- a
the food. 'ilt's. not home cooking. what is going to
_
happen with the space for students, an art studio,
ucJean ttieir_platest- Countless. J)ev~~age~I,anuntouched
:
safa.d. buq_tl:\ink.,itseq~alor.bettertha~
old·
_library_ space in Donnelly photography h1bs,.AV
TV room,
· .· -~g;~t~~J~"';i~~iedf.i!
0
i!;b~~:
:~:~rt~~~~
:
th~iiih1ta~ft~~~ ·
,S~~x
a~kec( :~h;
·:ii~{
wa~t:
,;~fih~:-:a~:::~ ~-
·h;!mb:~ ·
-~i~~;J~mt~:l"~ ·
ii~c~~~~~
l)lns
~
three times daily.,
t
··
who ate -in .the cafeteria . that
food,
many students said that asked· by the President
tel' head on Mr. Campilii's part "to con-
. The sE:rious~ess ofthe problem . evening ·• wasted some·. part'. ·of they, did not like what was being
special , planning for the old serve en~rgy, while making most
is:-- re~hzed ,m th_e· cafeteria their' dinner. This waste as .well served, but took it anyway, Said
library complex. Several other of the space available in order to
_ dishroom, where workers dwnp as ,other small scraps
from
un- · one student,/'.You take one taste,
college ... administrators are enhance the needs of the cam-
,full
plates a~d gla~es ~to ~he
:
counted trays, wa~ enough, to fill and you don'Ueel like eating the . coordinating their efforts with pus."
· ga~bage .. It 1s. not a .. situation . three 40 .,gallons ·size garbage rest" Another added, "I feel that .. Mr. Campilii in order to get "an
"Because the plans so far have
which has ~uddenly come about, _ bins; According to
Mr.
Porkka, ~•qi-giving'. th~. garbage can· its
ofvetrhall view in ~eeting the needs been preliminary, there
has
not
b~~
~s exist~d for years.-;·•:
.
only two of the bins were needed Just reward."
·
. o
e campu~.
.
been any great controversy as to
It~. ge~t10g. worse, a
_
lot in past.years.,.
,. ·. .
. ·
Porkka said. that students
The delay m renova~mg ~he
what will happen to the complex.
_worse, said Kenny Porkka, a
porkka said that students often sh~uld try to have a more positive .. space.. has . been pru~ arlly More disagreement can be ex-
student manager ·who has been go.back for seconds or thirds but attitude towards the meals and
fmanc1~L.
The College
will be
pected
a~ talks become more
working in the cafeteria for three are not able
to
finish what tbey ask that students. take
only
what
dep~ndmg partly upon · funds specific but will hopefully be kept
years. .
_
.. _ .
·
·-:- __ have takeJ!. "The majority
of
they can finish.
·
derive~ from Development to a minimum so·that interests of
•
... To find ,out h~w s.ei:zous the e_xtra se!,"Vings seem to end up:in
Campaign,
1976,
which will be
the college
as a whole will be
problem really
15,
a . CIRCLE· the· di~hroo~,':-he said.- "I guess
sponsoring several on-campus served rather than individual
,------------------.--+--_;,-----~..:...-------------
projects including the renovation . vested interests."
.,.
.
·
,
. . ·. • -
,
of Donnelly Hall and the library
"Spacial plans are in motion
_, How.
do·
you. like
W,aris.,,
'
complex.
.
now," Mr. Campiliistates, "Paul
Fr•shmen. Impressions
'
....
~.
.
By;ElaineB~oe.
Tim BuchalskL- C819 - "It's
John King-Sheahan (S) -
111 -
According to Mr. Campilii,
Canin, architect for Marist
"the potential for the old library College, has a very creative and
complex is great, it
is
a question · dramatic approach to space
of ·what we put there." He con-· design and concept and we are
tinu~, "It is a question of the depending on him for good ideas
needs of the College and how they in order to concretize with visual
can be creatively and spacially displays the needs of the campus
designed into the plans for the and how these needs will fit into
.. ·-
< · · ·.
.
alright
A
lot of-parties; Classes "~ Jike it a lot. The people are complex."
the space that is available."
What do the freshmen think of ,are , easy. It's very small. The friendly. I like the overall at-
Marist College now that they've food coul<_! be better;''
.· , mosphere. Sheahan is
a
nice
been here awhile? Here are some .. Joe Kriys - · C-402 - "I'm on a semi-quiet dorm."
of .th~ an:i~ers:· ' . .
. . st~dy flO?r. I·like it. It's fairly-
Rich Hefferman -
S-207 -
"It's
Benoit: Dutch Treat
Luz
Soliz •
Champagnat
(C)
624 qwet dunng the week. The people pretty gOO<;l but some times the
- '.'I ·like the college- it's good'. are friendly. The classes aren't ster~os are on too1ate. That's my
The
classes,.·. the
people, big and you get to talk to the prof only complaint."
· .
By Frances Hurley.
eyerything is good."
-
· .. any time you need to. Something
Eddie Carmody :-
S-206 -
"I
· Dianne O'Connor
.!C-318
-IIIt's has got ·to, be done about the guess it's alright. I haven't been
Benoit House is presently
alright. It's good but! have to get food."· ·
around. to different places that :housing thirty-two Dutchess
to meet more people.'~-
1
.
Jim Lemakos - C-403 - "I have much yet. I'm getting used to it.'' Community College students.
·· ·. John DeLuca
~
C-219"-
"I like it. mixed emotionsi The food is . . Michael Tuzzio -
S-201 -
"It's rtie decision was made by Fred
Thesocialfunctionshavetakena terrible .. :I'here could be more to sort ofaead.lwas used to being
Lambert, Assistant Dean of
dive but that's- to,
be
expected. do; I'm _pretty ·bored most'of the · able . to jump in a -car and go
Students, and was
1
•
carried
They wanted to impress us - time.J'
.
. . . .
around. I'm kir).d of trapped here.
through on September 5th when
because \\'8 were freshmen: Now . Drew Courtney -
L-417 ·•
'
.
'It's It tak~ a little getting used to.
the students took residence
in
it's j~~t like personal cliques on pretty nice. There's a
'
lotoflltuff Classes are good. People are Benoit.
the floor.'' ,
-· · . · ·
going on at night but during the good. It'll get better I guess. It
At one time, the house was used
David Potter-Leo
(L);.s13 .•
"So
,day I just hang out in iny room. I.-· couldn't.get any worse."
· for a Black Culture group, and
far so good.
l
like my classes. I'm haven't been off. campus yet
so
I
Mary Millo;.
S-304 -
"It's rather later was offered to the students
getting into.those.-The food·could don't know what's going on in the · boring. There doesn't-seem to
be.
of Marist to be used solely as a
.be better~! don~t have any major area.''
.
·
much going on. The food's
study dorm. This option,
complaints about it. I don't
think .
Vick Rose .; L-302 -
C<So
far .. terrible. The people are alright, I
however, was turned.down by the
fve been here long . enough to everything has been · fine. . Jt
I
gµess." ..
.
' .
students.
make any real-judgements abouf seems· like there are . a Jot . of
.
Rhonda Balio -
8-303 - "I really
Lenny Fedyniak, the RC at
it. .. · .
-
. .
· ' :, .
_friendly people-up here.
A
lot-of like it. The upper classgieri_and
Benoit says "I couldn't ask for a
.
Chris Landou.-
C,418-
'.'I like it
I"'
partying which is good;· Classes people in my freshman class
better group of people to live
gt(ess,:-,
:
The. p~op,e::·haye
.
'-~ri.
ai:'.~ alright ·/Ibey
.
seem pretty have ~eri really frien~y. They
here.''. -The Dutchess students
really riicei I lion'tlike
,
the school tough;
l
guess :because
I
haven't ; make me feel right at home so it's
involved expressed
this
same
\Vo/,~
abut:,the ;pe~ple.jin~lte· :it. had .. a-}ot, .of-_tliem_they seein been pretty good so far.''.
positive attitude. They don't feel
alright,: , ,
·
·
· . ..
· pretty mteresting•so:far.!' ,•. . .·
·
segregated or different from the
. . .
•
..
,. ,
- •·
.
.•
.·
.. · .. · .... · .. •· ... • ... , ,
·
rest of the student. body;.
"
. r'
The
thirty-two
students
residing at Benoit 'were picked at
random. They . pay room and
board at $750 per semester, in-
cluding the use of all the facilities
available
in
Benoit. With ·the
exception of
Mr.
Fedyniak, there
are no single occupancies.
The purpose for
this
living
quarters, as expressed by
Mr.
Fedyniak, "is that students
might • become a community
within a larger community."
Dinners, brunches, parties and
recreational activities . are all
part .
of
this
co.rpmunity living.
"We do everything together,"
· says the RC. "We're a close knit
and very caring group. It's not an
individual type thing.'' He sums
it up with the Benoit House
philosophy. "We look out for tJte
other person. We are not· our
brother's· keeper, just our
brother's brother."
·
_
I
I
I
' I
I
'.
I
,.
1
f
r
PAGE4
•
THE CIRCLE
The Marist College CIRCLE is the We4!kly newspaper of the stUdents of Marlst
Collec;1e end is published throughout the $Chool year excluslve of vocation periods
by the Southern Dutchess
N~ws Agency, Wappingers, New.York.
. . . ··
GigiBirdas
Daniel Dromm
Joe Gigliotti
TomMcTeman
Larry Striegel
Rena Guay
Peter Van Aken
Kevin cavanagh
Editor
Associate Editor
Photography Editor
·· :Sports Editor .
Layout Editor
Assistant Layout Editor
Advertising Manager
Business Manager
Staff:
Sam Delgado, Patrick Larkin, Kevin Stack, Maurreen
Tully, Wendy Stark, Jim Birdas, Elaine
·
Brusoe,- Sherry
Smith, Regina Clarkin, Andrienne .Howard, Alison Hickey,
Lisa
McCue, Cathy Ryan,, Wanda Glen, Robert Morley,
Carmen Rivera, Bill McLoughlin, Edward DeLise, David Ng,
Tom Hillan, Andrea Anthony, Phil Colangelo.
.
··•
THE CIRCLE.
SEPTEMBER 23, 1976 ·
. a<;.tiviti~, -and any other ev~n~ we
will~ to
see you personally.
w~ch they want covered.
This
IS
However, time
is
against us.
So,
To the Marist Community,
very important
so
that we may in order
to
play it safe, send
a.U ·
Once again our yearbook staff . cover
as
much
as
you want.
information
to:
Th~
REYNARD,
I
has started production on the
1977
We have received a lot of grief
-P.O.
Box
C-843. Uyou need ad-
I
REYNARD.
In order to include from organizations which were ditionalinformation, contact me
. as much as
poss·_
0
ible~ we need the not covered last year
as
well
as
in room
C-714 Qr call 454-9373i,
:r
help of the students and faculty. · they felt they should. have been. ·.
· · ·.
Thanx,
Heads of departments, clubs, and Now,
this
is your opportunity to
Kenneth Porkka
~
organizations are being asked by · have
this
coverage included
iii·
·
(
editor-in:.Chief) ·. ·
theReynardStafftosubmitsome this year's REYNJ\"RD. Please
.
.
·
And,·
information regarding . policies, . contact
us as
soon as possible and
~
The REYNARJ?
staff.
-
~
.
r ,
,
·
--.
key: Replacement ofthekey·wiil · very_. va!uable··•student,.·-· :run
.
be at a cost.of
$.50 or the student. service, as a _place to ,buy f~s :--
An
Open Letter_. to the: Marist may opt.to replac.e the lock to
_
· notava_ilable~tnight;in th~_R.t\T, ·
Community:
· ·· · .. . assure better security at
his -
her and a convement_place for,those
·
When the lead article in last expense/!_ There is-no menti9n'of
.
of
us
.JVhO
c
-~es,ide ~in Leo. and,
..
week's (Sept.16) issue of
THE
either a fee or
.
the·reservation of· Sheahan • .cTo close the
.
DELl or
.
•.
CIRCLE. quoted
Dean·
Perez as thiHightto
assess
additional fees
ftake
it away fro}!i ~e ~tµ~eilts' . :
" ' - - . ; . . _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . saying, "We have
a
'strong on the,students rf<it listed•in,the . control wi:11:tld be .. ~,diss~ryi~eJo _
·committriienttothestudentsand ~talog. · ·: :~
:
.·
·the Marist Conµ:9unity ..
.
:·
·
· -.:.,
Editorials:
An Answer
Developing:?.·
their' welfare,'! the events. that- . In the. second ,place,
-
·with
Indosing, I caJt only
_
~a.µ upon
have'. occurred ·' between the ·
.
r~gard to the LEO. DELI,' it would
_
,.the
A,~ill~ti;~ti.011.
to: ~eriously
Administration and·the~students
·
·seem· ratherstrange.:that after .reconsider its_ present stand on
.
· over the past .three and
a ..
half tl)te~ years' ot operation tllere:_·~:the~e<and' ·any·· other ds~1;00(.
weeks, at least inmy mind, bring would siiddeply arise a. conflict of· fegai:_ding th~ ,M:arist'comm~mty., ·
about·serious•
·
. doub~~- regarding_ interests regarding";its ... running: .. -.:
I_ •.
hope : thei-e
;
'can :_b~·- open:a¢ld '·
the sincerity, of this statement, 1n·mfstay'here·at.Ma'tistI.have ·honest commwiication :.between..
· •
In the first place, the incidents never known·· the. DELf to in-
tlie students· and the· ac{':°
that .have taken place, with. terfere· with: eitlier. campus
-
-ministration.--,
···.
. ·
· respect to the room key deposits. security,• t11e_: acade111ic at- ·:
..
. .. . Sincerely,
would seem to be in violation .. of. niosphere'.on~canipus·or'in.Leo'
:
MicliaelDwulit ·
the housing contract, as it states: : Hau,: or
·
the ._op·eratioris of the .. · '
. Class <if'77-··
'-'Every
resident is.given
a
room .. RAT.In.fact I see the
DELI
as
a: - .; .. ·...:.. •
--=---
·
The battle
£Or.space
on theMarist Co~ege c~mpus has .been.g~iilg
_9n
--··
· · · -•~-
~-
.
·
· --·
,
. · · --- ----- ·:·_-
-
---~_-t
:
;
-
--;·
~~~v~~~--(~~~~:~e~~
it·has· hit home. with the dark.room con-
··.·.·••·.·. ~ " · , · ::, ·.• •
.
... ' .... -~--~_:·.
J ·:··
.
··
_< ...
__ .
·
·
•_·::~• .·.
:
· .. · ___ ·'. ... ··· :.
The d~rk room for the CIRCLE is shared equaUy with the
t:1'4
·
·
-la"-
·
"Reynard," the Marist College yearbook.
The
dark room, in the
·'
. ·
••~11·
•Wiai!J'IIII■
·
·
campus ceHter, for.those who are not familiar with it is extremely
· ·
· .··
··
.··
..,. · ·
· ·
· ·
·"'
.:
··
•
··. ·-,.:~. -, :_-_ .. __ ;_ .. :,:. -,~-
,_:
'• ~---·--.·~--:: --__ .... _
-:
.~ _:, .
-~-·.:/_:~·,:--::_·--~---~-;
-
~'":_~<:. ·•' .. .-·.: __ ·.
small.
.
. .
. . .
. . . ,.
•.
.
·
·
.
. .. . _
The CIRCLE, published weekly comes out .~ur~day _aftern,po11.Jn
. .· . . _ . . .
. '. .. ·. . .·.
. .. , ..
" · · .. ... . . .
..·
, '
. ,. .
. . .. ··· ·.
. .· .
order to have the paper to the Marist _community on Thur~d~y,
1~
mus~. • Applicati~I¥.!; for adµlissi_on. ~o : . a<ldr~~s, teleI?P<?!le_ri~~oot.*:·•
.
_;
A form: has J5een de_y~loped
.
and .
.
be. prepared· Monday and ;Tuesday, mghts,.
11le,
G~Rql..E .o_ff\c
.
~
~!~
ralso_ ,·,the.• secondary te~che.r• education ,;Jo·. tlilrd' p!¼rties \Vltl)out
~
fear/of' : . can be'obtaihed
frotii
the Office
of .
sl;lared by .Ml~•''.Reynard'r:s~~~' ,,; •
·
. .-::
,
,-:;,;,_,r:/
·
·.~r.''.)
t;'ti~
·
:~:•
,!
(.i,}_:
,.J;~
,
;pr§graIIif?°~:~~f§pJ'.!ri~:~~~~t;t;lt~y@tt}~i~~qetlti,l{!~AA,J~tl!}y
,
~tlte~~g~tj-,iu.·:iq11~
p~g~g
of .. ~:·
.. ' ..
.
The ed1tQr:s of ~e 9n;WLE:_,wpul_cllike tg.~M~~:~am~~pC)p_~:nr . .-
.
ni,ustQe,4!!1-ed .
.
b,Y:;Qcto~r,~;;ffi~- : .. :d,r~V!J};~'.l'.n..e,-u;isti~~tu;,!1"Pr~:v1~g·,
0
ea~h;:~~~eaj;eri-~he:hotice-will
'be.
'
;;,c.
the stud~nt publicati,Clns ha.veto _fight over spacE!)v~ch,is :madeqll~te:, · form.ation' ·and)applicati9jls
:
:-are/:: such?.directory:,. J.tjforination,~, is •.' placed : in thir: Circle.• ~udents
:
to _begin-with;
,
The_sp'ac£=•,~d~signated for -the .CIRGLE .and 'th~::year~-.. availabfo'. fdirii
·tfie,,·Teacher ·
.·:required-to.giV:i:D;itipli~. riQtice:.<?.t: may,alter =or .·me· 'at_·any·time .·~
_
..,
book
is
small eriough; Schedules have
.to.
b¢.
followed
so
:
that e~ch : Education omce,"iRoom'' 218 · . the informatii>nit=plans to m~e: . during rtcirmal-workin'g hours; · ,.-
publication. isabletomeetdeadlfues
by
working opposite ~ne anothe.r· Donnelly. ·,
->
0
'<: ····
> ·
.
·•·
avai,J,able.to,the/g¢jie~atpublic:,, ,
·
:fti,l"Ilier day
·
national ,::news
intheofficeaswellasinthedarkroom.. ..
.
.. ,
.. :- ' ..
·
· ·
·
· ·
·
and<.to allow students:time
0
.to editor·oLThe New:York
Times,
We; the editors .of the CIRCLE understand the photography class is
· The. . cost · for
making ·
riotify
the institutjoij thaf:any
or .
Harold Faber,- will. speak about
experiencing tl)e same problem with .space: as are the CIRC~ and
_
photocopies in ·the. library_ has all of that information should not his experiences during a 37-year
yearbook .. The editors, however, feel the photography class
IS
not .• been reduced from 10 cents
·
to 5 be released: Marist-.will. release· _ career atThe,Times,. at the Sept._
solving their-problem by adding to ours. : •
, -· ..
\
. ·· •. cents per. copy:. •·
•·- ·
at various-times tlie.,'·following ·29.:tneeting of the=Mid·-· Hudson
Communication arts is a growing department.at Ma~ College. The · · · : .. :. . .
..._ ·
.
. .
information unless. h,qu~sted
in
News-Association.. · ·. ·
.·.
·
· editors of the CIRCLE feel certa_ill in!em~_aspects. of the dep~~~t-·
·
· Thefe· . will · be _ an .. important writing . · not
,Jo ,
do~- se>_
2 ·
by . the -. • Faber, who . is .. · currently, the
must grow alo~g with the enrollment, offenng the studel!,t_publicatio~ · meeting f.~r all those interested in · stu<l:ent: · stlltlent' ~ame,. ad.dr~, .· u~s~te . ~orrespondent for ~e
enough space is one of these.
. '
.
•
.
. . · ·'·.
· . .
.
working. on the, Theater. Guild · telephone., number;:: date
.:.and -Times;
will
speak at
7:45
p.m. m,
· The editors of the CIRCLE can no~ understand why s1;1chac4:m- pr()duction. of Agatha Ghristie's place of· b~; Alaj~r
fi~lg..
·of ,:the· conference room· .. at ·the
troversey has to develop at.
all,
especially _when the old library_ lies .
THE·
MOUSETRAP, tonight
at
9 study,· participation·. m · offlc1aJ!y · Dutchess , County _-_~Farm · and
vacant in Donnelly.
·
·
in· roolll · C:249.
7
.",_.
,
.
.
re·cognized activit!es and sports';,. Home· , Center,
1
_
Route · 4~,
Let The
Students
Serv_e
. THE ·.
MOUSETRAI?
'
auditions···· weight· and height of members Qf · Millbr,ook;: The. business,:.:portion . •··
will
be
held on:Sept. 27, 29; 30 in athletic teams,: _dates. of_ .· at-
0
of th~·mee
.
tiiig will begin at 6:30
.Rm
C-249 at 3:30.
All
old'.mem:.: tendance, :degrees and awards: p.m: . . . .
.
.
.
.
·· bersani:l·p~ople wishing to join · received aml the m,ost recent
Faber· ~erved as the .
.
day
. are encouraged to·coine
fo
both ..
previous:'ed~cational institution national ··news . editor. oLTh_e_ .
.
· · the meetings and:the audutions .. · attended
bl'
the,student/
i
.-: ··' ,
·
- 't.mes from 1952 to
1968.
During.
·:
·
, .., · ·· · .. ·-
, • · ·
·
.
:... Students
must
notify the Office' that period.he. worked con such
.
... . .
. . °ofthe Reg!_strar in writing should
.
i:najC>r · .. stories·
::
as
the<
··
·
·
·,
--
NOTICE. TO AlL MARIST thei:nof want information:made-· assassinations of President John
·
.
The recent controversy ,,, er the Leo Deli has arosed more students STUDENTS:'
, .
·
:
.
· ._' ·available.· }for. pqrposes of· in!,;;_-:-'
-Ii.'._
K~nnedy· and -~nator ·Robert:
·
·
· to
what
is happening on
C'
:lIIlpus
than any other issue in recent years .
.
: . The .. Family \Educational plementing . this- procedure,~ the·
F:
Kennedy, the first
·
launchings. .
The issue appears on .he surface to be simply an iss~e over the .. Rights· and Privacy· Act of 1974. College
.
will
~llo~-
·
th:irtY. days. of ~~rican space ~tellites~ the ....
. ownerspip and management of the deli. However, the editors of.the specifically ·provides :_.that a from date·.of pubUcatl!_>!):I~ tl}e .c1vilnghts struggl~
m
the ~uth.
CIRCLE-feel the issue goes even further.
.
· · schoolma}'.~felyp~ovide,w~Us -~~~~~ne~spap~r-~d-post~gm __
imd, !}u_rneroµs~~at1011atpolitic~
From the knowledge of-the CIRCLE editors, negotiations over th~ termed "directory.mformat1oli", ~oIISp~cuous '
·
places\ ~h9ut,:;the . caippaigns.
·
• · ••
· ,., · ,
deli began before s~hool started and has lasted ~ti!
this
da!e.
..
·
· su~h personal .
f~cts
as -~ ~fil!le; _
c~p~ 'f<ir-.students·
to
respond;
·
·
·
-,
.
•
·The deli has always been student owned and pperated. Last year,
~~~:::~:::1::::::::t:::zr:. . .·.
.
··• -·. ·. . "
5 . •·
i .
• •
...•
• :-
ittention by the
·
stud~nts and they ~ere_· inform~. they could not
.
I.It
~~f
::
the_ ~ervic:~ be<:3us~ of a confbct .~!t~he -~arist College Food_
coffcc'ncyir~~d~
ii~y~~c
soocr,: '
. . Our,q~estion is why,_all of
a
sudden; is there a_~onflict? . . .
. .
. ·:
.~it~~~tu;h~~\~~e:aii~~t=~:: :
In previous years:t!1e _de!f prod~ced
D?
~own competition to the _old
.
Butthafs aboufalli-., :.:
<
·
·:
_
r,,. .
. food service .. Students were provided withdean; satisfactory serv~ce...
- _ . '.
J:he best \V:ayto preve11
n
1 .·. ,· ..
We are disappointed thatthe issu~ ll~s taken ,so Ion~ _to be resolv~d, · .
·
_drunk from becoming a dead drunk~•~
however, we do not feelit has_ been a la,ck.ofcoope~a~1on O!) tlle __ pa~ of ·
.
·
.
iHo stop him fron1 driving .. _·,: · · ·
the students rather, neglect ori the part of tbe admm1Straµon.
· . · •
· ·
.
Speak up. Don:t let silence
·
. we stand
in
support of the.opening of
tli~
Leo Dt:li by students
pn .
.
~t~~~~~ug~~E~~{--~-
Monday night and ~re· disappointed to hE!B.r that
¥i5s
B~ll~o-~a,;~S-
7 ··
'>
,
. -.,
·.
·
.
.
i~~~~f
4
~RIYER,DEP.'J:
v:;-
.
. : .. ·
:
):~·
· fired from her
Job
because she.stood up for so~ething she ~li~ved_m.
:."". -~".': -'"'· .
1 ROCKv11.1.E.:-.iA1iv1.A:~m
-
20xs2
°
.... 1· ·
·
Maris .. has always encouraged students.to operate
theu-
own a~-
· ·· .. _. ·::-·"•
, ,. -
. . .
1 . •
.
. ---:-• . •
-, . _
.--1 · ... __
· • ; • •
" d ·
is
th.
1· ·
·
1 ed'
.
·
.
,
·
. · · • . ·
.
When ,someone drmks too
. ; .
What you should say 1s ..
·I
11 · ··
I
J
!km
1'wam
1,,
r,•mam_s,lcnr .. ' . . : ·
I. .
t
1
v
1t~es
an
this
--~
rea
lSSUe IDVO V
,_! . •
has.
·
·tr1'
ed
.
to·..
ilr .
d
,
much'and
'
then drives,it's the;
drive you home,·: Or, '.·[et me call a .
·.
I _.lcll_!"C what
dsc
I ~
3 " :
1
?'
-· . :, .
1-: .· .
For
too
long and
too often
the
adniinistration
ra
08 -.
,·.1 • · h
'
t
k"II
Yi .. · • -
1·
·
·
.-
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o
"SI '
·
·
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h -
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:.
·
, ·.
,
• 1 ·
.
'
·
'
·
d
·ts·
dth
b' d""
ease'student'powerand'in
s1encet
3
I Sa
ours1ence. ·
.cau .. r . .),. eeponn:iycouc..
·-
,
,~h-nam,•i,_, ___
:.-
.>.
::; __
,_:...:_:__,~~-=r-··
issuespasqhe.stu_e~ ..
at,1
.
,
ere_~
-
,.~r,,
,
;::: . :,·;,• , __ : ··:·· .•
'
.
::'-;•Itkil]syour~rj!!nd~.your,-:,· tonight.".:;:•.
-: . . .
. _
.. ·
··-_.
··-,.q.
1,,
.. ~.:..::::..: •
.::_c.c._~.:_~---··,--· ·
. put, · ·;
.
__ .
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.
, · · . ' . .
.
. -~.
·
. · · .' : ·.
, :
·
. , · .. · · ··
.
·
.
relatives,!!ndp'e<>ple·you don't even: ·· ~-· · ,--;Don't.hesitate becatise'your
.. ,
1
·r:-;: · :·- :-, .,: ;.,_. --~;., :.,· .,. •
-,·z'i> ·'
--1.-:
.
, •
':J:'llere~!)r.e, -~e ~e
the
adrilinistrat!on_.to
allo,
...
th~-~stanD,edlib•tor·;.
'kh~w--~_ut}~.e~'r.e}H~~~l.~'.yo_~ :.
. fri~idmaY.h~ve,~e~-~~i~~!ng·o~ly
.
_:;
,
_:J.--=~-'-:--.--..:.-~2--;::::;=.:'.-,,..;:1_'.(,
:·.- . ·.
open~.an~ opei:at~ by._
-
~
stud~ta pr.:9yid~.they .. •
..
.
Y., e_~
·_cou~d ~a~e_.__ . • .... :· : ·:": ·
< .
~t:.B~~rand;w•!1e:can ~·11;1~t-as .·'
·FRIENDS DON!'l].ET.~I~,; · .·
·
....
·-objectives·they·have stated·as:tJteir}'~~~
f~fliglj~g
~
,
~eep
~~" · : .. :
·
.·
~fyou knewwh~t to say.· •·: .-.!rit2x1~tmgas m1xeddnriks;
·
~
·
<_,:.
:DRIVE
DRIJNI".·,··<'..: -: . • .
·
· . ... _._-: . __ :
·Leo.Dell opened: ~. ·. · ..
1'
•
' : , :
· . . . :
::,:_
..
-
~ : • ••
~
• • •
\
· · . :
:
·.•::"'..':~·-
..
•
mayl><:'°y~ti'd ~lessqmet.-~,Y":.· . :. ,_,;--,• :,:','.\ndcl,on.'rt_hinlit~~!.bl~ck, . .. .
.,
.
0
•
-.:.-
•
• ·:~:
_
.. ..-,
:t~
:-;.->::;
. ·,\ _.:. · ......
We believe ~e
Leo
Deli
sho~d
~-~ the·stu~~n~• ~ncis.· ..
<· :
· ·
_f:~.c~
~~!.~~~ul
_
d
_
cJ•!:·
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.
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:
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-
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.
,
.
.
' \ '
l
SEPTEMBER 23, 1976 .
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
Postmaster To Retire
Preschool Erects
New Playground
By .CyntblaFalrbuks ·
Raymond C.
Seaman
was Master
·
·
of
the
Chapel Corner Grange they
Mr. Raymond C. Seaman,
sat. side by side. at
a
Grange
postmaster · of
Marist
College,
meeting. "I had to introduce the
By
lJsa
McCue
in 1?74. 'lbat first year the pre-
will retire o~ September 30th,
governor and he could tell I was
school bad only about nine
after nearly 8 years of-service at
nervous. He leaned over and told
'lbe five-hundred dollars worth children and a purely volunteer
Marist, and 50 years for the
me to introduce
him
as Brother ·of playground equipment behind
staff.
'lbe following year the pre-
Unit.ed
States-
Post Office.
Roosevelt, just · like any other the campus center belongs to the school fell under the directorship
"lknow rm-going to miss the
member. That put me at ease.'' Marist Pre-School which is of the psychology department
people here,,, says
Mr.
Seaman.
Mr.
Seaman was president of located on the basement floor of.
and
began to expand. 'lbe pre-
He is.eager to express
his
fond-
the New York state Post Office
Champagnat. "We're trying . to school now has a
staff
of three
ness for Marist · students.
"As
a
Clerk Association at one time and get state certification as a day-
graduate
students,
whose
.whole, they're a nice ..group of
remembers making trips to care center and they have certain salaries come out of
the
pre-
young people," though he sup;-
. Washington
to lobby
for safety regulations," says Dr. school tuition, and several work-
poses some . may
think
him
too
·
1
legislation.
"Back
then we were Schratz, psychology teacher and · study students. With the ex-
strict at.times. He enjoys in-
· fighting for the 44 hour week and director of the Marist pre-school.
panded
staff the
.Pre«hool
can
formal conditions..:: :al_Iiong his
the 4 hour Saturday."
..
"Providing
a
fenced
in now take care of more students
student :_workers. "I · wouldn't
. Mr. · Seaman retired once playground for the children is one and has a full-time enrollment of
__ have it__aily _other· way," and
before, for five months in 1975.
of these regulations." Although· about twenty-five.
keeps
iJ1
tpuch with some of the·.
Raymond Seaman
But
his
replacement quit and he the fence for the playground was
According to Dr. Schratz ''the
students·who are gone now;,His
came back upon_request. When donated by Marist College, the possibility of expanding the pre-
first studenthelper Pat Ketcham, . and went to ·work in the
Mr.
Seaman first came to Marist funds for. the equipment came school is there because there
is
a
still · .. writes.- and · _he -·· recently P':)ughkeepsie. Post Office as a
.
in·. 1964 there were still many solely from the tuition charged by need for good day-care." But she
. ·. learned of a new family addition · clerk. He stayed for ·42 years.
-
student and-faculty brotll~rs and Ute pre-school.
says tllat Marist pre-schoolis "at
. f~om
~
form~r student who now -
Born in Hyde Park, New York,·-. no women. Since then there have
The idea for the Maris~ College a maximum in terms of numbers
, Hves_m Flonda. _
.
. ... • ..
Seaman has· lived
in
Dutchess been some changes and he. pre-:~chool. was conceived by of students." Any expansion
- • ~. Seaman : b~gari. his post-· · q>tinty, all· his · life. When a · b~lieves the school is progressing,., Manst students _and, _with . the would require tllat a permanent
_offic~:.c:areer_ as a __ rural r(?ute ·younger man,. he was acti,ve ,in _well. This year Utere are more help of Do!ly Bodick, directo! of full-time director be employed
cal!!er, workingfor. th~ re~ular .· the Gr,mge(farmers~ assoc.) and student. mailbox numbers:cthan the campus cente!, was realized and a larger facility be found.
carrier when he_took vacations: Post Office affairs. -·wneii ever' and for Ute first time Benoit
AUer ,t-wo. sutp:ipers _Se~~an Frankiin D. · Roosevelt -was. and Gregory Houses have their
completedtlle_91vil,Ser.v1ce,exam
·
governor of· New York and owri box numbers: But the post
- ·
·
· ·
·· ·
·
· ·
·
office is trying to keep up :with the
Winnie-The-Pooh
Th~
·~tL~GE.CUTTER -
.
'
-
UNl~SEX
HAIRCUTTING
-
:
.
Uni,-sex Haircutting
··
•
·---·--
.--,
Salon.
6
7
·LaGrange •'Ave.
. '.- -_473-37.50·
·.c
.
· 3 Church St;
New·Paltz .
255-9925 ._
. Jnstr_uctiQn
at-
zf'~"y13ry
~bes;t
· -.lhdoor~Outdoor
_,. ·riding_ . ·· .
, tacilities-
•-
. · :·: . Ali:~g~s-
. :Get
:f6gether·U?itb
your
friei(tls -·
· J<JrSpe<;ia_lG-_1:/1up~Dis~~urtis
.
:.
•
.,~. /.
,
,·Dutchess
·
Hill ..
Rocad,:OffE~st
.
•
•<
.
_·:-•_·· ; ..
,
:.,, '.":'._; :~••
.·••::·t::-•,•.•:.'.:•• •,~•• ,••.
'•••'
,:
."~-~·•:,,"',
~•w_•
:
,._.:•·•:•
. . <
..
-->·,
.:··
•
.Qor~!Y.:L.a11_e.
,~o~r,l,l<~~e.es!.~-:· ... ·'·
,
_ ..
.
· PLEASf
:CAli'47l~l91,8
fqi:~ppoigt_m,nts ·
;-·•: ... ·-.:-_··•:;...._,.,,., .. ·•··.: .a·,· ·
. .
•.>: '".
·
·
.
. . . .
.·
~- · ... • . . .
-
.
..,. , .
.
. ~"..
,
growtll and
if students remember
to have their box numbers used ,
on all correspondence · the mail
will
be
delivered efficiently.
Mr. Seaman says he
will
have
By
Ken Healy
I've never seen it done, but some
· plenty to doat home. He~ lives
attempts have . been made
· with his wife on a 58 acre farm.
Vinnie Capozzi, President of elsewhere and I've heard that
Though
·
most of the land is. un-
Marist's. __ Children's · Theatre, they were pretty successful."
tillable he does have a big garden along with Ute rest of his com-
A lot
is
involved in the story of
-to ke«:ip him busy;as well as ·odd mittee -are already· at work on "Winnie the Pooh."
It is said that
jobs around the_ house. He also this years production-"Winnie the A.A. Milne wrote the story for his
-·'plans to become mol'e involved in Pooh." The popular :children's · son who was without a mother.
church affairs, •. and as for the story by A.A. Milne
will •
be The characters are symbolic and
winter, ''there's always Senior brought
to
life this year on the represent things from Christ to .
Citizen's meetings."
-stage at Marist for the area's Motherhood and Communism.
JjecentlY
Mr~- Seaman-and his children from March 28th There are ten major characters
family had a gathering ·of five through April 3. "We're looking and "an onslaught of bees, trees,
'. ·generations, including his mother. foward to a new and exciting . flowers, rabbits and butterflies.
\:,~ho
)S .94·.~nift}!~J·mimtl:f9~d twµi_/_aspe~!.?..f ~hµ~en•~-~e~t!~ h,ei:e.. . . Childyt;n's _theater h~s changed
::
:
great"!granga~ughte~. ·.-~'That's , at Man~t," said Capozzi, who is accordmg to Capozzi. "We
in-
something you don't se~
.·
too of- . also the ·producer:of "Winnie."·. corporate English and Business
ten.,,
· ·· · ·
. · · ·-:
·
·
Something that has never been majors, language club members
·
. done by the Children's Theater and football players.
It truely
will be the use of a movie shown incorporates the whole Marist
before the play that
will
transport community." Winnie Siatta
will
.
the kids right into "Hundred Acre
direct the play and Artie Curran,
Ca.r
_
e_·
'~r ~-
l_. n_ ,•
+.
o.·.·.· .-
Wood"- where the story takes Sue
Smith and Barbara Kelly
J •
-
place. The reason for this Capozzi otller members of the Children's
By Larry Snyder
. · The Office of Career Planning
and Placement-is sched@ng the
first class. for students interested
in learning about how to prepare
resumes,· cover letters, civil
servic~ exams, the use of College
Placement Annuals · and other
· technicalities used in preparation
for Ute job search. ,
·
· The class will be held on
. Tuesday~ Sept. 28 at 2: 15 p.m. in
room C-270. People who are in- -
: ·terested · should sign up in ad-
vance with Larry .·Snyder,·
· Dir~ctor of Career Planning and
Placement, in· room C-113.
Seatirig will
be
on a first come,
first served basis.
· explained is because, "Kids are Theatre committee are also
media minded and T.V. geared involved in the production.
_from Se~ame street
to_
Wonder Tryouts.will be on Nov.16, 17, and
Woman. They're not used to 18 at 7 p.m. in the Fireside
·:seeing a live play, so we're going Lounge.
to start the show with a movie.
Politics From 3
self - preservation has usually
· ·
f
carried the day; the minority
recomposition o the two parties party developed a new appeal;
as we know them. In the short .
term,. this would be a change of The Republicans, having proved
Ute first magnitude. Yet, in Ute themselves consistently in-
long term, it wmµd simply be the capable of convincing the elec-
fulfillment of a cycle: as the torate to give tllem undivided
strength of one party steadily power in Washington (i.e. control
in~reases (i.e. the proportion of of the White House and Capitol
the electorate consistently voting Hill for any four year period since
for it
is
on the rise) Ute otller 19_32), are
l!OW
facing this
party steadily loses its drawing dilemma. Either they reshape
power until
it is faced with a final themselves, or they'll be shipped
·
· h
·
out.
If
they think to content
option: eit er maintain it's tllemselves· with. merely .gar-
current base and sink into
oblivion, or change its appeal. In nering Ute vote of Ute Republican
Party faithful,
they'll be
· American politics, the instinct of . hideously slaughtered at the polls
- - - • - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • m·November. (Democrats alone
"""1),4~1\
l)l§l'OU~T
outnumber Rep·ublicans by
·
~
nearly 2:1, to say nothing of Ute
. 131:iVl:~A._61:·.
•~c~ .
"Independent" vote).
1n this
-
·
light, we may. state tllat Ute Ford
ALBANY POST ROAD. HYDE
PARK.
N.
v.
12s3e
-Dole attraction to the Northeast
·
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9141 . 229.9000
(being "Democratic") is not a
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SCMMID_T
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abortion may well ·be the par-
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REYNARD
·
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SALE
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BEFORE
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PAGE6
THE CIRCLE
SEPTEMBER 23. 1976
I
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SEPTEMBER 23, 1976 ·
THE CIRCLE
Coach's Corner
"'lbe administration bas made a
commitment to upgrade the
. basketball program. It remains
to
be determined specifically
what 'upgrade' means ... it could
By TOM MCTERNAN
mean financial ~istance in the
way of athletic scholarships.''
position he has held since coming Marist currently does not award
here.
athletic scholarships.
.
,
A reorganization of the Marist
"This
is a very busy job,"
As a first step
to·
upgrade the
coming season."
·
A 1963 graduate of
Manhattan
College, Petro holds a
M.S.
· degree from PeM State and
is
nearing completion of a sixth
year certificate
in
administration
and supervision from Southern
Connecticut state.
By WANDA
GLENN
Athletic Department last spring Petro said, referring to his l~test program, Petro . has disclosed
to
prepare for the opening of the position. "All things like 'tran-
that Marist will pull out of the
Mccann Recreation Center sportation for teams, work-study CACC at the end of the school
"I want to show the ad-
reslilted in the appointment· of jobs and oper~tion of the tennis year. "We don't get anything for ministration that there
is a need
Ron Petro as the college's first courts are organized through my winning the conference, since for expanded athletics for
full-time Athletic Director.
.
office."
most of the schools don't even worn~.'' So speaks Eileen Witt,
Petro, a native of Yonkers who · But the big task_facing the new belong
to
the NCAA."
His
priority who is filling the vacancy left by
resides in Wappingers Falls, has· Athletic Director is planning the now is to schedule·as many NCAA Sue Nye as intraipurals director.
been at Marist since 1966. He has programs for the new facility, Division I and II schools as
Mrs.
Witt also _teaches physical
. s1:rved as assistant· Athletic scheduled -to be opened on a possible. Marist already has two education courses, and
will coach
Director to Howard , "Doc" limited basis in-- January. His Division Iteams (Iona and Siena) the women's basketball team and
Eileen Witt
•✓-
Goldmanforthepastthreeyears, ·responsibilities
include and/four Division II teams both the men's and women's participation from the women,"
·
scheduling_ community use for (Hartwick, C.W. Post, st. John tennis teams. She holds a B.A. in says Mrs. Witt. "Last year only
athletic · contests and special Fisher and Sacred Heart) on,_ physical education from Lehman 65 women joined out of a total of
events. Petro pointed out, "This their 1975-76 schedule and so far ·eollege in New York City and an 500." She hopes
to
make· the
'direction is consistent with have added Manhattan (Division M.S. in exercise science from the women aware of the program so
· Marist's phqosophy and tliat .of I) to their 1976-77 schedule.
University of Massachusetts.
they
will show up. "The women
the McCalini Foundation." The
Marist is a Division III schoo)
Prior to joining the Marist. don't have to be super athletes,
Foundation has underwritten a at this time but Petro hopes to
.
athletic staff, Mrs. Witt worked . but just interested
in recreation
• $1.25.· million . grant. for· the. $2.1 move up to Division II in the near for a year and a half at Grover or . in improving their own
million project.
.
.
future. He faces one stwnbling Cl~veland High School in New
bodies."
The McCannCenter, which
will
block, however, Present NCAA York City teaching
gym
and
An
intramural council will be
. replace·. the 60xl00 foot
gym•
rules don't allow a school to be in health classes.
set up with the first meeting
4asium., currently s~rving the Division II in one sport and
Mrs. Witt considers herself a
being scheduled in the near
school's -1500 students, will Division III in the others. Petro is very busy person, but finds the future. This council will be made
dramatically alter Marist's_ seeking to gain support\for an atmosphere of the job pleasant._ up of interested students to give
capacity to support athletic and amendment to change the rule, "Working here is an optimal Mrs. Witt ideas on how to better
recreational pr9grams. "For the as current plans are to keep all situation because of the new serve their needs. They will also
first time Marist
will
be able tQ · other Marist varsity teams in facility and expanding program. help plan activities for the spring
· · host athletic events .in its own Division III."
· ·
I'm glad to be part of it." She has and add any new activities they
facility. We. hope to. provide
· As for his future as basketball also coached women's basketball want, within the budget. "Unless
· excellent . competitive events in coach, Petro said, "I . wµl · con-
at Richmond Hill High School in we show the administration that
anticipation that the.Mid-Hudson tinue to coach at Jhe
'
present Queens,. New
York,· and there is a need and a desire we
YaJJ.ey
wiU
support us;" ex-
time.
If
the two jobs becq:me too volleyball at .. st. Barnabus High won't get the necessary funding
plained Petro. ·
much of a burden I may beforced School.··
...
·-
to meet these needs."
·
and recenJly resigned ascoach of · Emphcfsis for such-support will to choose between them at some
As intramurals director she is
As coach of the women's·
the tennis team and Director of logically be placed on improving future time." Petro has a 14fi.110 responsible for setting up the basketball team, she . feels it· is ·
the · Marist
·
Sports. Camps. the _basketball program, since record in 10 years as head coach schedule of intramural activities her responsibility to field a team
However, · he will retain his basket~all is potentially the of the Red roxes.
He
added, "We and recruiting more people, that will adequately represent
position as head coach: of the highest in_come-prooucing · sport had a good recruiting year and especially women, to take part. the school. "My main goal is to
varsity . basketball ~earn,• a at Ma:rist;· according, to Pe~ro. I'm looking forward to the· up-
"I would like to see a greater have a winning season, or atleast
a .500 season." By helping each
individual realize their potentials
to their fullest, then putting all
the individual potentials into a
team effort, she . hopes to
establish a winning tradition ..
.
:-'...:·
f:eo_ple
·_you
Meet: Jerry_ Scholder
_.-ByJ?J\VE~G
·comes
.
to fo_ughkeepsie_fi;:om,-his_,:la.~king· he div~rted ~is· effo~. _
of:th~.sea~on.
He
.cites
it
as a
.
. . ..
.. _
hometownof
·
Syracuse whex:e he· elsewhere, to the runmng·events: , ..
··:,r·< '.,•-·· ·--::~· · ·
-··1 ·
:
' · · ·
·_ Hisiiame is'Jerry Scliolder arid , attended l'{o~tingham·. Hi'gh Somewhere~ between operating a
he is probably one of the -best
·
Schoot At Nottmgham, Scholder · paper r_oute and running the four
,.runners. ever to race ori the was thetop runner for his school and half miles to his.girlfriend's
Marist ·black-top course.
In
his since his soph year., Under the house, Jerry &holder developed
· first collegiate contest, Beholder:- guidance of
his
high school coach, into a first class -~ong distance
ripped the frosh record and came. George Constantino, ,Beholder . runner., · ·
' .. ·
within six seconds of the record boasts highly respectable times
Rejectiug colleges the _IH~es· of
forthe campus .4.7 mile route. At in the mUe (4:15.9) and irlthe two Rutgers,. Cornell, ~nd .· the_'_:
the Glassboro Invitational held - mile"9:12):
_· . :,
<= ··
University of Penn§ylvania,
on Sept. 11 in New ·Jersey; he.· . Talent did not come naturally &holder caine to Marfat because
brol!;e the tape for the win
in
a · to this p~t~ntial All-American.: He ofcits minute size, its business
field .of ninety-nine competitors. had_ or1gmally gone out for program,. and its coach. Coach
The 5'9"-, 135 polllld harrier football but sfiscovering
his skill
Rich
stevens, now in his fifth
WILSONS COUNTRY-TAVERN
.HO~E
OF
POUGHKEE-PSIE'S
7FOOT-
.
.
C:OLOR T.V .....
ovle•s
WATCHMONDAYNITE FOOTBALL
. --iJASEBALL,-MOVIEs:. _ .
&··-WEEKENDROCK
'
CONCERTS
. ' -WiTHA PITCHER OF
BEER
AND YOURFR.JENDS!·
'
.
.
.
.
''
.
·.
.
,POOL TABLE~FUSSBALLCOMING
'
.. GREAT.FOOD-FOR LUN~H
I
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.'·, •,. :"<
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year as head of the cross-country
program, appealed to &holder as.·
"organized, . a hard worker,
dedicated, and . nice person in
/
general." Having seen Scholder
in his junior year at the state
:..........i
Iiitersectionals, Coach stevens possibility
but
has developed
realized the possibilities thl,lt the st,rategy to counteract
if
the
· then fifth place finisher would "could be" holds true.
have, an~ the two have be~n in
His name is Jerry Scholder and
contact smce.
.,.
· ·
, above all he is an individual.
Cross-country
~
a te8;ffi sport Despite his status as an athlete,
and the accounting n:ia1or feels he is on work-study doing laun-
strong.ly about••-
·
t~1s year's
dry.
He likes spending his af-
. ~oll~ction of outstan~g athletes, ternoons horseback dding and
ThlS year I "!ould _like our team talking to people,.he says. Jerry
to take_ .top . f1ve
(m.
the NCAA &holder will not argue one way
. ~hamp1onsh1ps) an~
if everyone or another· about the lime-light
1s ·healthy · that
ts
a good . publicity that is on him. He · is
possibility." He also adds tpat the Jerry· Scholder, person.
freshmen on the squad h?ve a
good attitude and with three. or
four upcoming . All-Americans,
. &holder feels that Marist will
see an NCAA title before 1980.
Upon &holder's arrival to the
Running , Red Foxes, some· fans
and bar-room debaters had
created -a rivalry between the
freshman . rookie and
·
. the in-
c um bent ace ·runner,· .Fred
, Kolthay.' &holder: attributes. the
· "Kolthay-Scholder" build-up to ,
human nature, answering ."we/
both look at it as a team instead
of . .individuals." · The · young
· Saggitari.us feels. although there
,are iridividual dreams and goals,
those
cif-
the team must · come
first. · · · ·
·
·
•• >
Having run over a thousand
·. miles this .summer as part .of
his
~-- trainirig ·. program.-
Schnl1iP.r
i"
classified
GOOdbye Mr. Seaman,
we
will
miss you. -We wlll always
remember to use our zip cOdes.
Help wanted Tuesday .nights in
the Cl RCLE Office, rm.
268,
Campus Center.
HAPPY ANNIVERSARY ANNE
AND RAY. SORRY I FORGOT.
FROM YOU KNOW WHO.
Hello St.. Raym!>nd's, From
Dave.
Young .Chinese boy craves ,
companionship. Is not particular.
If interested stand In laundry
room Saturday evening between
7:00 and 12:00 p.m.
Refrigerator tor sale. Asking $20.
S':hlgh,
P.O.,
Box C-~19.
Happy Birthday Babs!
Classified ads In the CIRCLE are·
SO cents. for
:2
lines. Lei that
special someone see how you feel
. 'aware of.his critics.who feel ~t.
· he
will 11peak"
too
soon, run
toQ
.._ __ - -_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..... _________________
.. :µiany
good
races at the beg~ing
.. In the. CIRCLE •. Mall cash
·
. In
advance via campus 'mall.
H~r goal for th~ in.en's tennis
.. team next spring ·.·
is to win the
CACC. "We have a good chance
to
win the title because all but one
player are returning from last•
year.1'
As
for women's tennis;-
. there
is
no league, but the coach
· would like to see.. a winning
season. "I will have to see who
comes out because we lost three
women from last year.'~ She also
hopes to upgrade the women's
tennis program.
Women's
Crew
Expands
By SHERRY SMITH
"I'm very pleased. with the
girl's performances and pick up
of style," states Greg Tracy, the
new women's crew coach.
Currently · a senior at Marist,
Greg was asked to coach the
women's team by Gary Caldwell,
the new Director of Marist Crew .
He
is a member of the men's
crew team and has been active in
crew for the past 8 years. With
this
experience, he hopes to. add
new direction to the women's
crew team.·
The training for the women is
comparable
to
that of the fresh-
men team. He adds he wants to
. raise the status of women's crew
at Marist. He has conducted on
campus recruiting and the
results speak for themselves·: 40
girls have been recruited with
approximately 10 dropping out
due to job and school schedules. A
change in practice schedule from
6 a.m. to 3 :30 p.m. can·be a factor
in the larger number of
recruitees than in past years.·
Tracy feels· land training most
important in terms o( overall
boat performance. He puts,
emphasis both on·· style of , the
rower· plus exercises which·
will
condition
the
women,stating that
"unless properly conditioned,
1
performan_ce
will.
be poorer."
·,,.
·
PAGE 8
THE CIRCLE
.
-
SEPTEMBER
23,
1916
.
.
·
_
By
,
TOMMCT~RNAN
•.
18.2.1
18.2.2
18.2.3
18.2.4
18.2.5
18.2.6
18.2.7
18.2.8
i
..
.
. ,
..
-
_MARIS'(
C<JLLEGE, POUGHKEEPS{E, NEW YORif
!260!
/ SEPTEMBER 23, 1976
_i.;;.
i}~;,
~t-:-:_ .. :·;·,
PAGE
2
THE
CIRCLE
SEPTEMBER 23, 1976
E
.
·
-
•
New Residence Directors
.
·
-
ntrance
u
nderwar
A. 9.Floor
Resp·
onsihility
.
By
Edward
P.
DeLlse
nelly permission was received
.
•
·
Brother
Nil
us
Donnelly,
director of construction for
Marist
·
College said Marist can
look forward to a new, larger,
entrance in the future.
·.
·
,
..
The problem of the old en-
trance was realized when
students experienced "trouble
getting cars in and off campus,"
according to Brother Donnelly. A
traffic light from the
·
state was
requested but refused, the reason
given was the state had too many
traffic lights in the
,
area, said
Donnelly.
.
.._
_
·
The new entrance will be at the
intersection of Route 9 and Fulton
St
.
Ac
,
cording to Brother
,
Don-
from the state to
tum
the present
main entrance into
an
exit from
the campus for traffic
•
turning
south only. The water works
Road
will
"disappear" and be
turned into a
·
lawn. The
·
swim-
ming pool located below the new
entrance
'
site
will
be filled
in
and
also be turned into
·
a lawn.
The co.5t of
·
the new entrance
will
·
be approximately
$50,000.
The new ,campus entrance will be
roughly three times the size of the
present entrance and according
to Brother Donnelly
.
will
be
"attractive."
The
project
completion date
.
is unknown
·
at
the present .June due
to
the
pri~rities on pemi~g funds.
·
·
f
Life
Off CampUS,
.
Dorni
.
No.
Six
By
Cathy'
Ryan
to Marist."
.
Mr.
Amato says every place he
. Peter Amafo is the new
has been, he has been very
.
Residence Director of
·
Cham·
committed to the students.
·
"One
pagnat Hall, and he is responsible
has
r
to learn
-
to Jive with people
for guiding and supeivising both
having different ways
.
·
and
·
life
the resident coordinators and
styles - that's
~
part of the whole
resident advisors.
educational experience. We have
·
Mr.
-
Amato
.
received his
to help people discover who they
Bachelor of Arts degree in an•
·
are and what they want in life,
thropology
from
Brooklyn
and part of my goal
is
to offer
College, and holds ~
:
MA from
some reflection."
·
·
·
Pennsylvania State,
_
where he -
Mr. Amato believes the small
studied anthropology for two and
college
·
offers more oppartunities
. ·
a half years.
:
.
and a different kim} of cl,lallenge
..
Before coming to Marist,
Mi.
not
·
found in
-
a
'
larger
.
school.
Amato taught courses
_
in
·
"Marist has a
lot
of
possibilities
sociology,
·
education
and
·
for my
·
own personal growth and
psychology at Brooklyn College.
·
·
for the
·
betterment
.
ot the
:
com•
.
He was also involved in ex-
_
munity.I
think
it's
·
ar~ally
:
nice
periniental
_
education at the
l'eter
Amato
,
.
group of students here
:'
'
"
··
., ,
college, where he and a group of degree af Pennsylvania
.
state,
Mr. Amato's office
.
is located in
students
.
designed
several Mr. Amato held the position of
Chainpagnat Hall, rooni
:
324,
·
arid
·
educational programs
· ·
and assistant
-
coordinator
·
of resident
.
anyone
.
wishingJo
·
reacll him
·
:
by
projects. The orgaJ_lization, called life for one year.
·
. .
.
·.
_
phone can do so by dialing
,
ex;;
Student Voluntee"t Resources . '._
As
the
.
new resident director,
tension
-
265. He
is ·available for
designed
.
a peer cotirtseling
Mr •
.
Amato hopes
:
to
·
provide
a
personal
·
_
counseling for
:
anyone
/
center,
a
tutorialprogram and a
"healthy
.
and
.
secure atmo~phere
.
wishing to talk to
.
him
-,
about,a
everybody. Some people . don't drug
'
·
program.
· ··
·
.
·
.
·
for the
_
students/'. "l hope· I· can
·
problem.
«
My door is open to any
-
-
enjoy the mob scene, while others
.
•
While
.
completing
his
-
Masters
·
c.on~~~tea lot of positive ~gs
.
·
student that needs
__
my
✓
h~lp;"
,::
.
By WENDY STARK
. According to Fred Lambert,
·
need more responsibility
.
Some
.
. .·
.
.
..
assistant dean of s
_
tudents, Marist
.
people
'-
we recommend to liv~ off
•
•
•
·
has
_
a "sixth dorm," Lambert
,
campus."
.
'
·
·
-
·
·
""
·
'
says, "I've often joked about this
;
"
The third reason is for in-
-
-
A
·
-rF"/o
'
m
'
-
all r:rra
·
-1,j.
e
·
s
·
·
·
Ph
:
a
'
-.'
.:.g
·
·
e
· ·
-
·
it's Rip Van Winkle; obviously''
.
.
·
.
dependence;
'
which Lambert
.r:I
""J
_
-
.
~
.
.
f'i
_
,
·
.
.
•·
.·
.
u
_
.
. _
·
.
•
·
I
'
.
. .
--
-
- .
,
.
'I'J'.lis year 51
_
Marist students are
··
i
says,
.
"is perfectlyJogicaL"
·
_
living
off
.
campus. ~very year
· ·-
·
Some students
·
move off
Marist projects that between 50 campus because
.
according to
.•
to 75 students will move off Lambert, ''Marist has some
By~laineBrusoe
.
,
campus and this year is con-
programs that
·
require stuclents
_
·.·
sistent wit~ pre.vious ories'. The to . Hv~ off
:
campu~-
11
. The
.
·
"-You're ~dcfu.lg!"
"
You are?~' ,
.
.
:
11~~er
_
thIS year has, dropped University Year for
Action
JS
one
•
,
These are Just a
.
couple of the
.
slightly fr?m !a~tyE:8,r s ~otal of of these programs. ~so, a l~t of
_
re
.
a~tioils
:'
-
that Beth
:
S!J.'gar
.
,
55
_.
stud_ents
.
liymg m Rip yan ~raduates from Ma~st fin
_
d Jobs receives when she
·
te~ people
·
.
·
Wmkle
_
Iow
._
income ho11S1ng, m the
.
Poughkeepsie area
·
and that she's the new
·
residence
.
·. '
:Ea~tman
.
,
Terrace and other move offcamp
_
us
iri
their senior
·
diJ:-ector
·
at
:
uo
;
'
,
~
-
·
Sagar
· ::
,
vaq~us pr~vate homes.
.
y~r to establish a permanen!
·
originally Jrom White
. :·
Plains,
'
.
'It-:is
·
exciting for me
to
c9me
·
and
:
find
_
our that I'm' the
:
first
woman
.
.
·
residence
·
director.
·
.
.
It
.
opens 'up new cloors and iflot
~
is
·
expected of Irie,"
·
says
Miss
Sagar
.
'
'.Thereis a wid~
-
ra11ge of
.
>
reactions~ !'-am, in a
:
serise
;
an
::
authority figure and
·
people
:
may
I
I
i
I
,
i
·
•.·.
'!'.he
·
1
prim.ary reason
.
why residence here.
.
·
·
·
.·
.·
.
.
,·
_ ·
·
New York, has
•
a
·
.
·
Psychology
stude11ts
i
mo~r
off
.
campus
.
~
O~er,feasons ra.~ged
}
rom,J()o
.
1:)egre~
/
{t:otµ
::
Slffl.Y-
:
8:t
·
4Ib~y-
_-
Lambert ~ys,
U
we can
1
go
.:t>Y;
,:
~uc}): _11()1s~
:
t9
_
y,lc\.Iltµ\~ a
:
~
.
l}angE:i,
·
. and
.•
·
a
·
. master
~
s
\
'degree:.
,
, .in
··. ·
.
.
vvhat
they
:
say on ,:surv~yJo.~s'.
·
O~e off. <:!ampµs
,
aJ;>plic~nt:.~ote
-c
Counsehqg
,
•
Education
::
:from
:
•
i
i.
financial.
-
students .!Ilov_e
·
o,f
,
on,the_app~c~ti<iq,
~
'the dortnS I ·
·
Perinsylvarua
·
State
'Y
She came'to
:·
:
campus to save money,
:,
~d
.
have livedm
.
are zoos.'
'.
Marist'.in search
>
of a smaller·
1.-,ambertsays,"ifits
,.
cl)~a~erfot
..
,
:J'he}ive donn~ on the Marist school
'
•
with
·.
·
a:
-
-
more persortar
·
them,
-
gr~at_.' ~
.
But
.
accor~mg .to
\
·
ca~pus ar~ currently housing 836 atmosp~ere
'.
··
She
-~
fincJs
•
.
'
,
Marist
· ..
½imbert, "it.would seem more
·
residents, l'close
.
to 50 percent "tremendously
-
.
different" froin
,
expensive."
.
Lam.bert
.
says, ·are freslµna11," says
.
Lambert. Albany
·
or Penn state
because aL
, ..
be
_
uncoinfortable in dealing with
.
·
··
·
that:
:
PhysicallyI may not be able
;-
to defend myself as
a:
man might,
·
J
.;
but
'
l
:
have
been
able to control
.
,
.
:
;.
\
sitµationsmthe
;
pastd
,
am;_!n
;
no
•··
,,
.,
.::
.
;
1-
~
.
;
wayafraidto handle a situation
.:
I
.
•
. ·
,:
.
1·
.
r~
-,
•
••'
..
__
1
~
.
;
·
"utility bills are exorbitant in this
:
.
-
According to Lambert several Marist "all of the
·
students
either
·
·
. ·
area" and off campus residents off
·
campus resi<;lehts do
.
move know each other or
·
know
.
of each
·
woul not eat as bi!J a var_iety of
-
ba
_
ck o,nto
.
campus, ec1:ch
.
y~r.
·
other with the possible
·
exceptfon
food as they would
if they lived on Out of the 63 students who applied
.
of commuters."
. ·
' ..
.
·
cainpus.
to live off campus, 51 are
Miss
Sagar observed that there
The _second _most
·
·
popular c~rrently living off while
12 arelCmore people stopp~g to say
reason is for privacy. Lambert either never made
.
the move, or hello or talk. Marisf is a
lot
·
says,
.·
''dorm living
.
isn'
.
t
for
.
moved back on.
·
·
wanner than otherschools."
Miss
Sagar said, "!
,
would like
to see domiitories as a
·
whole
·
·
becoming a
··
community.
·
We're
·.
.
·
Beth
Sagar
councils
.-
"Drinking
time
should
not be our main function; There is
a definite
··
need- for
.
parties
.
but
that should not be the sole, pur-
,
pose," says
Miss
Sagar.
'
.
just
have
fo
,
use a-:'differ
_
~t a~
•
proach
thari
a man might:
·· "
"In a sense
..
I represent the
female student body
'
in
that I
,
have a
..
•
similar
'
frame of
1
referen~e .
.
It inay
qe
.
easier
.
for
me
.
to
\
realize
whe~
-
they
.
are
.
.
coming from in their problems~ I
-- ..
·
·
could identify easier than
.
a
.
man
-
·.· ·
might
.
I'm not a feminist but
.
I
.. ·
believe one hundred percent in
equal rights."
.
Back To School Specials!!
·
L
·
iquor
-
Lic_
,
ense
Coming
really a very long way from that.
.
:, , . ,:
A lQt of people have tried doing
·
· ·
· · ·
·
&
-
•
·
·.
·
·
·
·
·
d
II
different things like making the
·
·
_s
.
~ve
__
·
on
aHyo
_
u
__
r.
Win
_
e
_ ·
·.
-
~•
-
_
quor
ne
__
e
_
s.
_
·
By ALISON HICKEY
AkohoHc Beverage . Control donn an academic area
,
·
and
·
a
1
·
·
:
·
.
Board and then it had to be sent to social
.
area.
:
Vie'
need
'.
·
things
Jo
_
:
.
._, __________
'"!!Iii __ ~,---.~ -
.--....
~
"'.7
"""":'
:
7
~
-·
·
.
.
'
.
'On June 16th when Saga left
.
the Alcoholic Beverage Control complement each other. Living in
;·
·
I
and Marist took over, there was a Board
·
in Albany
;
It
•
was later
·
a donn
is
very different,
•
·
there
verbal agreement that th~ liquor found that
·
the · license was not are academic pressures,
.·
.
social
.
I
license would be switched over to filled· out correctly
. _
and
.
Marist · pressures, and
-
family pre~ures..
I
Marist," said the director
·
of the College had
.
to fill out another
.
People have
'.
to learn to get along
I
·
Marist College dining hall,
Mr.
application in order to correct the together.
,
A
.
dorm
,
should
·
be. a
'.
·
.
·.
·
.
.
,
,
.
I
.
·
·.
Joe Lurenz. According to
Mr.
mistakes onthe first application. place to
:
.
~elax, study, know
,
and
:;
Lurenz the
'
liquor license
,
was·
,
The license
·,
is•
,.
now
'
:-
being understand
·
other people
.
_
or- to
:
·
.
f
.
,
.
.
·
sent to California to be
~
-
tran-
·
·
reviewed and Mr. Lureriz expects
:
work oµ
-
projects
:
together.
•r
·
.
·
1
.
sferred over
.
to Marist. Instead it
·
to receive it by October
Ist.
.
·
.
·
••
'
-
~
Sagar
..
n~ticed
that.
each
··
.·.
_
1
,.
was cancelled because Saga Food
·
Mr.
·
Lurenz also said
.
that the donmto!Y building
·
on
,
campus
Se'Ivice
failed
to notify California
·
meal stickers on the ID cards are
·
seems
to
have its own personality
·.
.
1
.
.
.
.
.
·
·
Imported
·
•
r .
~ij111-b·rusco
.
ofthe change. Mr. Lurenz said only temporary. New stickers which she sees as
,
good
'
but
.
she
SUPERSAVIN
_
_
GS
_
.
ONALL
"•
I
that it was the error of Saga Food have been
'
ordered that bear a feels that there should
be
i
.
'more
·
·
·
•
···
-
·
-
,
Service but that it was done
'
Marist emblem. lJntil these cooperationbetweenbuildingsas
-
Y{)_f..!llLIQU<>'flNEEl)S
QT
__
r-~~
:-
~-~-7
·
-f
.
accidently. .
.
.
·
.
.
..
.
·
stickers arrive
.
there will be a well ,as
:
within
:
buildings." She
I
·
·
,:
In ·order to obtain: a ne-wliquor careful check
.
at the
·
door
:
.
to belieVE:5
that
this
C
can be ac- '
BLEND
..
•
.
.
-
-
~
:
.
•
;
_
, -
~
~
.
e.ss
_
.-T~~n.
4.
,
29
·
1
license Marist College had to
fill
.
assuFe that no
'
students
.
·
with
s.
compllshed .
·
through
• :.
com-:'
out
.
a new 20 page application
.
phoney stickers will be allowed in muru~tion
wi~
the_Interff011s,e
GIN 80°, •
i
-. • • •
~~~s
.
J.h~~
3;99
I
which .was fkst sent to Qutchess to eat.
.
..
.
.
-
.
,
Co~cil a~d mdiv1dual-
·
house
.
'
,
'·
~?~~~~~:
_
: : \
:~:~::f~~t;:
I
:C
.
·
·
'c
F
_
-
_
<or
_
.
_
.
d
_
...
·
<
v
_
·
··.
s
_
.
C~rter
9
_.
·
:_
3().
T9
_
µig
'
··_
lil:
~~~8.?,~a&•
;:
.t~~~•~·l
99
1
•··
.
SCOTCH8~·:
·
·;·:·
.
·
'.
.-~
·4·99
,
.
I
'
,
'
At 9: 30 toriight, P{'.esident a~y
-
follo~
·
.
-
,
up q~eries
:
Each Court of
A~~~ls
ui
Pltiladelphia.
SCOTCH
86 · · · · · ' -
~
· · ' •
.
5
)
9
_
·
1
·; -
Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter·
.
candidate will
/.
be
.
allowed
·
to
<
The debate
·
should have some
.·
·· ..
COMPARABLE SAVINGS
<
.
'
,
.
will ineet in the first of a planned
·
comment briefly on
/
his
·
op-
effect on the_ canipaigns a~d the
·
f
}N Va
_
GALL
_
O,NS
.
·
I
·
series
·
of.debates. The site for
'
the por1ent's. replie( and
.
w
_
ill have
·.
polls, which now put Carter
.
only',
01sr1UEo&soTIUDBYLEAD_
1
"6>
1
··
debate
is
;
the Walnut Street
-.
three -minutes for
•,,
closing .four perce
.
ntage points
.
ahead of.
!""---•
·<
.
•
··
AM-ERl•CA!IIINo•,sr•,LLE•R•s.
11111
·, ·."..,·
--~!,,..
,
.
.
Th~ater
.
inPhiladelphia.
·
"·
:
.
r~marks.
;
.:.
,':::·'•
: ,
,
,,
.
.
.
Ford.
-
:
·
--··
·
-
-
~'
,
·
i •
':::
·
The format will be question and
.
f
.
Mean'whUe,'
'
t~e
•
:,_
Socialist
·
.
..
-.1t:w111
be
broadca~t
on
all three·
.
·
·
.
·
~
-
..
answer
:
•
A pan~l of
;
neW:s men will
.
·
.
:
Wor~ers·
..
f>arty
..
has
.'
cayed
i:
the
.i
.
major
:·
networks
i
and
.'
the ~blic
'·
__
.
<
_
~sk
:
>
~he
(
ques~ori.s
;
>
a_nd
/;
~ach
:
,-
debl3t'
;
a
:,
~~ge.4
·
:
n
.
e~
f
event
.
~nd
.
;
Br,oa.d~stiiig ~y~elil
;
) t
:
,
can
be
';'
.
~9:ndidate
:',
will
:,
•
haye
.
<
~ree
; :
say~
;-
tlle
>
te!e~~s~- . sh9~ld J>e
i
;_
h
,
~~~
,
,
on
.
,
r~dio
t
s~ti~n
.
1,
~()_!<
\
.
·
npnutes
0
,
to
...
a~er
·,
w.iµt
•
ap
~
.
ad•
·
·
.
,
caAcelled.
-
The
J>:8rl~l$ appE:Slin~
,<
:-
.
h~
.
r~
.
-
~
:
P<>ughk~ps1e
,.
.:/<:
'"'.
•\:i
·
~i~~~n'!~~r~!~
~
'.
i:
~
s~~~
.
,
t
t
,
e
,
f
?P
<
s
·
4r~~
~
:
p~
:;
~
r
9!~.W.
l
·:
·.\('
":
:
·i·;
/
:
)
:,
~
/:~
'
/
:
.
;
.
· ; .,
.
.
',
...
..
·
.
hnpo~,d,
:
:
:
Sangria
_
-
,
SEPTEMBER 23, 1976
THE-CIRCLE
·
cafeteria· ·cuisine
:,
·Being Wasted
.PAGE
J
Politics '76
By Jerome Maryon
than
ever. "Four more years"
· • the Republicans have
been wont
When the
1976
political cam- to cry. "Integrity and the
paign
is
discussed, it appears restoration of faith in the
that it
is
at once one of the most government"
reply
the
traditional and yet one of the · Democrats. Guns! Butter! Slow
most novel of
campaigns.
down! Change now!
On
the one hand, all the
Yet
is
the campaign absolutely
traditional elements of national a repeat performance? What of
campaigns since
1932
are Carter's
"born -
again" Southern
present. The Democratic ticket is Baptist faith? What of Ford's
stressing
what it
can do to im- anything - but - subtle overtures
prove the ecollomic situation, to gain the Catholic urban vote
particularly in regards to the long
deemed
virtually
working
man,
while
the synonymous with the Democratic
Republican ticket is · attempting Party? Are we about to have our
to present
an
image of greater first Democratic President from
expertise in foreign affairs. The the Deep South since the Civil
incwn~nt plays heavily upon his War?
Or
are we about to .witness
lofty "Presidential" image, while a critical realignment, with the
the <:h~llenger s~ks
to call to the Republican Party regaining
p~blic s altention the alleged control of the industrial Nor-
failures of the administration. theast, where it has been
~ot only are. the appeals and anathema since at least the days
unages projected familiar, but of F .D.R.? Many other questions
even the issues seem to be the come to mind, but perhaps the
same. Again the debate is heard most poignant is the one that
over the budget of the Dept. of . demands how we are going to
~enfense: more for social ser- cope with the sudden prominence
vices and less for an already -0f the abortion issue.
sufficient nuclear capability,
All
these questions seem .. to
demand the liberals, while the imply an imminent decom-
, consen.:atives retort that greater position
and
subsequent
expenditures for the national
defense are needed now, more
Continued on l'.igc 5
Marist
students are wasting .morefoo<t Was
this
your dinner?
.,Marist:
Uncertain On
Donnelly Library
· By LARRY STRIEGEL
staff member· worked in the their eyes . are · tligger than their
-
.
- dishrQom on Monday night, stoma_chs." Because of this,
: The old Navy_ rule of "Take - September ..
2oth.
On·that night, many .. people who arrive at the
what you can ~t, but eat-all you
668
people were served;. and:227 end of ·the meal must eat lef-
By Sherry Smith
Plans for the complex are in
take," is unheard of at Marist trays· turned into the dishroom tovers froni other evenings.
the preliminary. stages but soine
College as food waste has
in-
still contained more than half of a
He said that many . students
·. There
has
been some concern · ideas for the area are 24-hour
creased in recEmt years because serving of the. main. dish, ·or .at have .a negative. attitude about by students and college staff as to study space for_ students, lounge
·
more students .· are .. failing , to least. · two· . fuU- glasses
,of- a
the food. 'ilt's. not home cooking. what is going to
_
happen with the space for students, an art studio,
ucJean ttieir_platest- Countless. J)ev~~age~I,anuntouched
:
safa.d. buq_tl:\ink.,itseq~alor.bettertha~
old·
_library_ space in Donnelly photography h1bs,.AV
TV room,
· .· -~g;~t~~J~"';i~~iedf.i!
0
i!;b~~:
:~:~rt~~~~
:
th~iiih1ta~ft~~~ ·
,S~~x
a~kec( :~h;
·:ii~{
wa~t:
,;~fih~:-:a~:::~ ~-
·h;!mb:~ ·
-~i~~;J~mt~:l"~ ·
ii~c~~~~~
l)lns
~
three times daily.,
t
··
who ate -in .the cafeteria . that
food,
many students said that asked· by the President
tel' head on Mr. Campilii's part "to con-
. The sE:rious~ess ofthe problem . evening ·• wasted some·. part'. ·of they, did not like what was being
special , planning for the old serve en~rgy, while making most
is:-- re~hzed ,m th_e· cafeteria their' dinner. This waste as .well served, but took it anyway, Said
library complex. Several other of the space available in order to
_ dishroom, where workers dwnp as ,other small scraps
from
un- · one student,/'.You take one taste,
college ... administrators are enhance the needs of the cam-
,full
plates a~d gla~es ~to ~he
:
counted trays, wa~ enough, to fill and you don'Ueel like eating the . coordinating their efforts with pus."
· ga~bage .. It 1s. not a .. situation . three 40 .,gallons ·size garbage rest" Another added, "I feel that .. Mr. Campilii in order to get "an
"Because the plans so far have
which has ~uddenly come about, _ bins; According to
Mr.
Porkka, ~•qi-giving'. th~. garbage can· its
ofvetrhall view in ~eeting the needs been preliminary, there
has
not
b~~
~s exist~d for years.-;·•:
.
only two of the bins were needed Just reward."
·
. o
e campu~.
.
been any great controversy as to
It~. ge~t10g. worse, a
_
lot in past.years.,.
,. ·. .
. ·
Porkka said. that students
The delay m renova~mg ~he
what will happen to the complex.
_worse, said Kenny Porkka, a
porkka said that students often sh~uld try to have a more positive .. space.. has . been pru~ arlly More disagreement can be ex-
student manager ·who has been go.back for seconds or thirds but attitude towards the meals and
fmanc1~L.
The College
will be
pected
a~ talks become more
working in the cafeteria for three are not able
to
finish what tbey ask that students. take
only
what
dep~ndmg partly upon · funds specific but will hopefully be kept
years. .
_
.. _ .
·
·-:- __ have takeJ!. "The majority
of
they can finish.
·
derive~ from Development to a minimum so·that interests of
•
... To find ,out h~w s.ei:zous the e_xtra se!,"Vings seem to end up:in
Campaign,
1976,
which will be
the college
as a whole will be
problem really
15,
a . CIRCLE· the· di~hroo~,':-he said.- "I guess
sponsoring several on-campus served rather than individual
,------------------.--+--_;,-----~..:...-------------
projects including the renovation . vested interests."
.,.
.
·
,
. . ·. • -
,
of Donnelly Hall and the library
"Spacial plans are in motion
_, How.
do·
you. like
W,aris.,,
'
complex.
.
now," Mr. Campiliistates, "Paul
Fr•shmen. Impressions
'
....
~.
.
By;ElaineB~oe.
Tim BuchalskL- C819 - "It's
John King-Sheahan (S) -
111 -
According to Mr. Campilii,
Canin, architect for Marist
"the potential for the old library College, has a very creative and
complex is great, it
is
a question · dramatic approach to space
of ·what we put there." He con-· design and concept and we are
tinu~, "It is a question of the depending on him for good ideas
needs of the College and how they in order to concretize with visual
can be creatively and spacially displays the needs of the campus
designed into the plans for the and how these needs will fit into
.. ·-
< · · ·.
.
alright
A
lot of-parties; Classes "~ Jike it a lot. The people are complex."
the space that is available."
What do the freshmen think of ,are , easy. It's very small. The friendly. I like the overall at-
Marist College now that they've food coul<_! be better;''
.· , mosphere. Sheahan is
a
nice
been here awhile? Here are some .. Joe Kriys - · C-402 - "I'm on a semi-quiet dorm."
of .th~ an:i~ers:· ' . .
. . st~dy flO?r. I·like it. It's fairly-
Rich Hefferman -
S-207 -
"It's
Benoit: Dutch Treat
Luz
Soliz •
Champagnat
(C)
624 qwet dunng the week. The people pretty gOO<;l but some times the
- '.'I ·like the college- it's good'. are friendly. The classes aren't ster~os are on too1ate. That's my
The
classes,.·. the
people, big and you get to talk to the prof only complaint."
· .
By Frances Hurley.
eyerything is good."
-
· .. any time you need to. Something
Eddie Carmody :-
S-206 -
"I
· Dianne O'Connor
.!C-318
-IIIt's has got ·to, be done about the guess it's alright. I haven't been
Benoit House is presently
alright. It's good but! have to get food."· ·
around. to different places that :housing thirty-two Dutchess
to meet more people.'~-
1
.
Jim Lemakos - C-403 - "I have much yet. I'm getting used to it.'' Community College students.
·· ·. John DeLuca
~
C-219"-
"I like it. mixed emotionsi The food is . . Michael Tuzzio -
S-201 -
"It's rtie decision was made by Fred
Thesocialfunctionshavetakena terrible .. :I'here could be more to sort ofaead.lwas used to being
Lambert, Assistant Dean of
dive but that's- to,
be
expected. do; I'm _pretty ·bored most'of the · able . to jump in a -car and go
Students, and was
1
•
carried
They wanted to impress us - time.J'
.
. . . .
around. I'm kir).d of trapped here.
through on September 5th when
because \\'8 were freshmen: Now . Drew Courtney -
L-417 ·•
'
.
'It's It tak~ a little getting used to.
the students took residence
in
it's j~~t like personal cliques on pretty nice. There's a
'
lotoflltuff Classes are good. People are Benoit.
the floor.'' ,
-· · . · ·
going on at night but during the good. It'll get better I guess. It
At one time, the house was used
David Potter-Leo
(L);.s13 .•
"So
,day I just hang out in iny room. I.-· couldn't.get any worse."
· for a Black Culture group, and
far so good.
l
like my classes. I'm haven't been off. campus yet
so
I
Mary Millo;.
S-304 -
"It's rather later was offered to the students
getting into.those.-The food·could don't know what's going on in the · boring. There doesn't-seem to
be.
of Marist to be used solely as a
.be better~! don~t have any major area.''
.
·
much going on. The food's
study dorm. This option,
complaints about it. I don't
think .
Vick Rose .; L-302 -
C<So
far .. terrible. The people are alright, I
however, was turned.down by the
fve been here long . enough to everything has been · fine. . Jt
I
gµess." ..
.
' .
students.
make any real-judgements abouf seems· like there are . a Jot . of
.
Rhonda Balio -
8-303 - "I really
Lenny Fedyniak, the RC at
it. .. · .
-
. .
· ' :, .
_friendly people-up here.
A
lot-of like it. The upper classgieri_and
Benoit says "I couldn't ask for a
.
Chris Landou.-
C,418-
'.'I like it
I"'
partying which is good;· Classes people in my freshman class
better group of people to live
gt(ess,:-,
:
The. p~op,e::·haye
.
'-~ri.
ai:'.~ alright ·/Ibey
.
seem pretty have ~eri really frien~y. They
here.''. -The Dutchess students
really riicei I lion'tlike
,
the school tough;
l
guess :because
I
haven't ; make me feel right at home so it's
involved expressed
this
same
\Vo/,~
abut:,the ;pe~ple.jin~lte· :it. had .. a-}ot, .of-_tliem_they seein been pretty good so far.''.
positive attitude. They don't feel
alright,: , ,
·
·
· . ..
· pretty mteresting•so:far.!' ,•. . .·
·
segregated or different from the
. . .
•
..
,. ,
- •·
.
.•
.·
.. · .. · .... · .. •· ... • ... , ,
·
rest of the student. body;.
"
. r'
The
thirty-two
students
residing at Benoit 'were picked at
random. They . pay room and
board at $750 per semester, in-
cluding the use of all the facilities
available
in
Benoit. With ·the
exception of
Mr.
Fedyniak, there
are no single occupancies.
The purpose for
this
living
quarters, as expressed by
Mr.
Fedyniak, "is that students
might • become a community
within a larger community."
Dinners, brunches, parties and
recreational activities . are all
part .
of
this
co.rpmunity living.
"We do everything together,"
· says the RC. "We're a close knit
and very caring group. It's not an
individual type thing.'' He sums
it up with the Benoit House
philosophy. "We look out for tJte
other person. We are not· our
brother's· keeper, just our
brother's brother."
·
_
I
I
I
' I
I
'.
I
,.
1
f
r
PAGE4
•
THE CIRCLE
The Marist College CIRCLE is the We4!kly newspaper of the stUdents of Marlst
Collec;1e end is published throughout the $Chool year excluslve of vocation periods
by the Southern Dutchess
N~ws Agency, Wappingers, New.York.
. . . ··
GigiBirdas
Daniel Dromm
Joe Gigliotti
TomMcTeman
Larry Striegel
Rena Guay
Peter Van Aken
Kevin cavanagh
Editor
Associate Editor
Photography Editor
·· :Sports Editor .
Layout Editor
Assistant Layout Editor
Advertising Manager
Business Manager
Staff:
Sam Delgado, Patrick Larkin, Kevin Stack, Maurreen
Tully, Wendy Stark, Jim Birdas, Elaine
·
Brusoe,- Sherry
Smith, Regina Clarkin, Andrienne .Howard, Alison Hickey,
Lisa
McCue, Cathy Ryan,, Wanda Glen, Robert Morley,
Carmen Rivera, Bill McLoughlin, Edward DeLise, David Ng,
Tom Hillan, Andrea Anthony, Phil Colangelo.
.
··•
THE CIRCLE.
SEPTEMBER 23, 1976 ·
. a<;.tiviti~, -and any other ev~n~ we
will~ to
see you personally.
w~ch they want covered.
This
IS
However, time
is
against us.
So,
To the Marist Community,
very important
so
that we may in order
to
play it safe, send
a.U ·
Once again our yearbook staff . cover
as
much
as
you want.
information
to:
Th~
REYNARD,
I
has started production on the
1977
We have received a lot of grief
-P.O.
Box
C-843. Uyou need ad-
I
REYNARD.
In order to include from organizations which were ditionalinformation, contact me
. as much as
poss·_
0
ible~ we need the not covered last year
as
well
as
in room
C-714 Qr call 454-9373i,
:r
help of the students and faculty. · they felt they should. have been. ·.
· · ·.
Thanx,
Heads of departments, clubs, and Now,
this
is your opportunity to
Kenneth Porkka
~
organizations are being asked by · have
this
coverage included
iii·
·
(
editor-in:.Chief) ·. ·
theReynardStafftosubmitsome this year's REYNJ\"RD. Please
.
.
·
And,·
information regarding . policies, . contact
us as
soon as possible and
~
The REYNARJ?
staff.
-
~
.
r ,
,
·
--.
key: Replacement ofthekey·wiil · very_. va!uable··•student,.·-· :run
.
be at a cost.of
$.50 or the student. service, as a _place to ,buy f~s :--
An
Open Letter_. to the: Marist may opt.to replac.e the lock to
_
· notava_ilable~tnight;in th~_R.t\T, ·
Community:
· ·· · .. . assure better security at
his -
her and a convement_place for,those
·
When the lead article in last expense/!_ There is-no menti9n'of
.
of
us
.JVhO
c
-~es,ide ~in Leo. and,
..
week's (Sept.16) issue of
THE
either a fee or
.
the·reservation of· Sheahan • .cTo close the
.
DELl or
.
•.
CIRCLE. quoted
Dean·
Perez as thiHightto
assess
additional fees
ftake
it away fro}!i ~e ~tµ~eilts' . :
" ' - - . ; . . _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . saying, "We have
a
'strong on the,students rf<it listed•in,the . control wi:11:tld be .. ~,diss~ryi~eJo _
·committriienttothestudentsand ~talog. · ·: :~
:
.·
·the Marist Conµ:9unity ..
.
:·
·
· -.:.,
Editorials:
An Answer
Developing:?.·
their' welfare,'! the events. that- . In the. second ,place,
-
·with
Indosing, I caJt only
_
~a.µ upon
have'. occurred ·' between the ·
.
r~gard to the LEO. DELI,' it would
_
,.the
A,~ill~ti;~ti.011.
to: ~eriously
Administration and·the~students
·
·seem· ratherstrange.:that after .reconsider its_ present stand on
.
· over the past .three and
a ..
half tl)te~ years' ot operation tllere:_·~:the~e<and' ·any·· other ds~1;00(.
weeks, at least inmy mind, bring would siiddeply arise a. conflict of· fegai:_ding th~ ,M:arist'comm~mty., ·
about·serious•
·
. doub~~- regarding_ interests regarding";its ... running: .. -.:
I_ •.
hope : thei-e
;
'can :_b~·- open:a¢ld '·
the sincerity, of this statement, 1n·mfstay'here·at.Ma'tistI.have ·honest commwiication :.between..
· •
In the first place, the incidents never known·· the. DELf to in-
tlie students· and the· ac{':°
that .have taken place, with. terfere· with: eitlier. campus
-
-ministration.--,
···.
. ·
· respect to the room key deposits. security,• t11e_: acade111ic at- ·:
..
. .. . Sincerely,
would seem to be in violation .. of. niosphere'.on~canipus·or'in.Leo'
:
MicliaelDwulit ·
the housing contract, as it states: : Hau,: or
·
the ._op·eratioris of the .. · '
. Class <if'77-··
'-'Every
resident is.given
a
room .. RAT.In.fact I see the
DELI
as
a: - .; .. ·...:.. •
--=---
·
The battle
£Or.space
on theMarist Co~ege c~mpus has .been.g~iilg
_9n
--··
· · · -•~-
~-
.
·
· --·
,
. · · --- ----- ·:·_-
-
---~_-t
:
;
-
--;·
~~~v~~~--(~~~~:~e~~
it·has· hit home. with the dark.room con-
··.·.·••·.·. ~ " · , · ::, ·.• •
.
... ' .... -~--~_:·.
J ·:··
.
··
_< ...
__ .
·
·
•_·::~• .·.
:
· .. · ___ ·'. ... ··· :.
The d~rk room for the CIRCLE is shared equaUy with the
t:1'4
·
·
-la"-
·
"Reynard," the Marist College yearbook.
The
dark room, in the
·'
. ·
••~11·
•Wiai!J'IIII■
·
·
campus ceHter, for.those who are not familiar with it is extremely
· ·
· .··
··
.··
..,. · ·
· ·
· ·
·"'
.:
··
•
··. ·-,.:~. -, :_-_ .. __ ;_ .. :,:. -,~-
,_:
'• ~---·--.·~--:: --__ .... _
-:
.~ _:, .
-~-·.:/_:~·,:--::_·--~---~-;
-
~'":_~<:. ·•' .. .-·.: __ ·.
small.
.
. .
. . .
. . . ,.
•.
.
·
·
.
. .. . _
The CIRCLE, published weekly comes out .~ur~day _aftern,po11.Jn
. .· . . _ . . .
. '. .. ·. . .·.
. .. , ..
" · · .. ... . . .
..·
, '
. ,. .
. . .. ··· ·.
. .· .
order to have the paper to the Marist _community on Thur~d~y,
1~
mus~. • Applicati~I¥.!; for adµlissi_on. ~o : . a<ldr~~s, teleI?P<?!le_ri~~oot.*:·•
.
_;
A form: has J5een de_y~loped
.
and .
.
be. prepared· Monday and ;Tuesday, mghts,.
11le,
G~Rql..E .o_ff\c
.
~
~!~
ralso_ ,·,the.• secondary te~che.r• education ,;Jo·. tlilrd' p!¼rties \Vltl)out
~
fear/of' : . can be'obtaihed
frotii
the Office
of .
sl;lared by .Ml~•''.Reynard'r:s~~~' ,,; •
·
. .-::
,
,-:;,;,_,r:/
·
·.~r.''.)
t;'ti~
·
:~:•
,!
(.i,}_:
,.J;~
,
;pr§graIIif?°~:~~f§pJ'.!ri~:~~~~t;t;lt~y@tt}~i~~qetlti,l{!~AA,J~tl!}y
,
~tlte~~g~tj-,iu.·:iq11~
p~g~g
of .. ~:·
.. ' ..
.
The ed1tQr:s of ~e 9n;WLE:_,wpul_cllike tg.~M~~:~am~~pC)p_~:nr . .-
.
ni,ustQe,4!!1-ed .
.
b,Y:;Qcto~r,~;;ffi~- : .. :d,r~V!J};~'.l'.n..e,-u;isti~~tu;,!1"Pr~:v1~g·,
0
ea~h;:~~~eaj;eri-~he:hotice-will
'be.
'
;;,c.
the stud~nt publicati,Clns ha.veto _fight over spacE!)v~ch,is :madeqll~te:, · form.ation' ·and)applicati9jls
:
:-are/:: such?.directory:,. J.tjforination,~, is •.' placed : in thir: Circle.• ~udents
:
to _begin-with;
,
The_sp'ac£=•,~d~signated for -the .CIRGLE .and 'th~::year~-.. availabfo'. fdirii
·tfie,,·Teacher ·
.·:required-to.giV:i:D;itipli~. riQtice:.<?.t: may,alter =or .·me· 'at_·any·time .·~
_
..,
book
is
small eriough; Schedules have
.to.
b¢.
followed
so
:
that e~ch : Education omce,"iRoom'' 218 · . the informatii>nit=plans to m~e: . during rtcirmal-workin'g hours; · ,.-
publication. isabletomeetdeadlfues
by
working opposite ~ne anothe.r· Donnelly. ·,
->
0
'<: ····
> ·
.
·•·
avai,J,able.to,the/g¢jie~atpublic:,, ,
·
:fti,l"Ilier day
·
national ,::news
intheofficeaswellasinthedarkroom.. ..
.
.. ,
.. :- ' ..
·
· ·
·
· ·
·
and<.to allow students:time
0
.to editor·oLThe New:York
Times,
We; the editors .of the CIRCLE understand the photography class is
· The. . cost · for
making ·
riotify
the institutjoij thaf:any
or .
Harold Faber,- will. speak about
experiencing tl)e same problem with .space: as are the CIRC~ and
_
photocopies in ·the. library_ has all of that information should not his experiences during a 37-year
yearbook .. The editors, however, feel the photography class
IS
not .• been reduced from 10 cents
·
to 5 be released: Marist-.will. release· _ career atThe,Times,. at the Sept._
solving their-problem by adding to ours. : •
, -· ..
\
. ·· •. cents per. copy:. •·
•·- ·
at various-times tlie.,'·following ·29.:tneeting of the=Mid·-· Hudson
Communication arts is a growing department.at Ma~ College. The · · · : .. :. . .
..._ ·
.
. .
information unless. h,qu~sted
in
News-Association.. · ·. ·
.·.
·
· editors of the CIRCLE feel certa_ill in!em~_aspects. of the dep~~~t-·
·
· Thefe· . will · be _ an .. important writing . · not
,Jo ,
do~- se>_
2 ·
by . the -. • Faber, who . is .. · currently, the
must grow alo~g with the enrollment, offenng the studel!,t_publicatio~ · meeting f.~r all those interested in · stu<l:ent: · stlltlent' ~ame,. ad.dr~, .· u~s~te . ~orrespondent for ~e
enough space is one of these.
. '
.
•
.
. . · ·'·.
· . .
.
working. on the, Theater. Guild · telephone., number;:: date
.:.and -Times;
will
speak at
7:45
p.m. m,
· The editors of the CIRCLE can no~ understand why s1;1chac4:m- pr()duction. of Agatha Ghristie's place of· b~; Alaj~r
fi~lg..
·of ,:the· conference room· .. at ·the
troversey has to develop at.
all,
especially _when the old library_ lies .
THE·
MOUSETRAP, tonight
at
9 study,· participation·. m · offlc1aJ!y · Dutchess , County _-_~Farm · and
vacant in Donnelly.
·
·
in· roolll · C:249.
7
.",_.
,
.
.
re·cognized activit!es and sports';,. Home· , Center,
1
_
Route · 4~,
Let The
Students
Serv_e
. THE ·.
MOUSETRAI?
'
auditions···· weight· and height of members Qf · Millbr,ook;: The. business,:.:portion . •··
will
be
held on:Sept. 27, 29; 30 in athletic teams,: _dates. of_ .· at-
0
of th~·mee
.
tiiig will begin at 6:30
.Rm
C-249 at 3:30.
All
old'.mem:.: tendance, :degrees and awards: p.m: . . . .
.
.
.
.
·· bersani:l·p~ople wishing to join · received aml the m,ost recent
Faber· ~erved as the .
.
day
. are encouraged to·coine
fo
both ..
previous:'ed~cational institution national ··news . editor. oLTh_e_ .
.
· · the meetings and:the audutions .. · attended
bl'
the,student/
i
.-: ··' ,
·
- 't.mes from 1952 to
1968.
During.
·:
·
, .., · ·· · .. ·-
, • · ·
·
.
:... Students
must
notify the Office' that period.he. worked con such
.
... . .
. . °ofthe Reg!_strar in writing should
.
i:najC>r · .. stories·
::
as
the<
··
·
·
·,
--
NOTICE. TO AlL MARIST thei:nof want information:made-· assassinations of President John
·
.
The recent controversy ,,, er the Leo Deli has arosed more students STUDENTS:'
, .
·
:
.
· ._' ·available.· }for. pqrposes of· in!,;;_-:-'
-Ii.'._
K~nnedy· and -~nator ·Robert:
·
·
· to
what
is happening on
C'
:lIIlpus
than any other issue in recent years .
.
: . The .. Family \Educational plementing . this- procedure,~ the·
F:
Kennedy, the first
·
launchings. .
The issue appears on .he surface to be simply an iss~e over the .. Rights· and Privacy· Act of 1974. College
.
will
~llo~-
·
th:irtY. days. of ~~rican space ~tellites~ the ....
. ownerspip and management of the deli. However, the editors of.the specifically ·provides :_.that a from date·.of pubUcatl!_>!):I~ tl}e .c1vilnghts struggl~
m
the ~uth.
CIRCLE-feel the issue goes even further.
.
· · schoolma}'.~felyp~ovide,w~Us -~~~~~ne~spap~r-~d-post~gm __
imd, !}u_rneroµs~~at1011atpolitic~
From the knowledge of-the CIRCLE editors, negotiations over th~ termed "directory.mformat1oli", ~oIISp~cuous '
·
places\ ~h9ut,:;the . caippaigns.
·
• · ••
· ,., · ,
deli began before s~hool started and has lasted ~ti!
this
da!e.
..
·
· su~h personal .
f~cts
as -~ ~fil!le; _
c~p~ 'f<ir-.students·
to
respond;
·
·
·
-,
.
•
·The deli has always been student owned and pperated. Last year,
~~~:::~:::1::::::::t:::zr:. . .·.
.
··• -·. ·. . "
5 . •·
i .
• •
...•
• :-
ittention by the
·
stud~nts and they ~ere_· inform~. they could not
.
I.It
~~f
::
the_ ~ervic:~ be<:3us~ of a confbct .~!t~he -~arist College Food_
coffcc'ncyir~~d~
ii~y~~c
soocr,: '
. . Our,q~estion is why,_all of
a
sudden; is there a_~onflict? . . .
. .
. ·:
.~it~~~tu;h~~\~~e:aii~~t=~:: :
In previous years:t!1e _de!f prod~ced
D?
~own competition to the _old
.
Butthafs aboufalli-., :.:
<
·
·:
_
r,,. .
. food service .. Students were provided withdean; satisfactory serv~ce...
- _ . '.
J:he best \V:ayto preve11
n
1 .·. ,· ..
We are disappointed thatthe issu~ ll~s taken ,so Ion~ _to be resolv~d, · .
·
_drunk from becoming a dead drunk~•~
however, we do not feelit has_ been a la,ck.ofcoope~a~1on O!) tlle __ pa~ of ·
.
·
.
iHo stop him fron1 driving .. _·,: · · ·
the students rather, neglect ori the part of tbe admm1Straµon.
· . · •
· ·
.
Speak up. Don:t let silence
·
. we stand
in
support of the.opening of
tli~
Leo Dt:li by students
pn .
.
~t~~~~~ug~~E~~{--~-
Monday night and ~re· disappointed to hE!B.r that
¥i5s
B~ll~o-~a,;~S-
7 ··
'>
,
. -.,
·.
·
.
.
i~~~~f
4
~RIYER,DEP.'J:
v:;-
.
. : .. ·
:
):~·
· fired from her
Job
because she.stood up for so~ething she ~li~ved_m.
:."". -~".': -'"'· .
1 ROCKv11.1.E.:-.iA1iv1.A:~m
-
20xs2
°
.... 1· ·
·
Maris .. has always encouraged students.to operate
theu-
own a~-
· ·· .. _. ·::-·"•
, ,. -
. . .
1 . •
.
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is
th.
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.
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.
,
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. · · • . ·
.
When ,someone drmks too
. ; .
What you should say 1s ..
·I
11 · ··
I
J
!km
1'wam
1,,
r,•mam_s,lcnr .. ' . . : ·
I. .
t
1
v
1t~es
an
this
--~
rea
lSSUe IDVO V
,_! . •
has.
·
·tr1'
ed
.
to·..
ilr .
d
,
much'and
'
then drives,it's the;
drive you home,·: Or, '.·[et me call a .
·.
I _.lcll_!"C what
dsc
I ~
3 " :
1
?'
-· . :, .
1-: .· .
For
too
long and
too often
the
adniinistration
ra
08 -.
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'
t
k"II
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1·
·
·
.-
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d
·ts·
dth
b' d""
ease'student'powerand'in
s1encet
3
I Sa
ours1ence. ·
.cau .. r . .),. eeponn:iycouc..
·-
,
,~h-nam,•i,_, ___
:.-
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::; __
,_:...:_:__,~~-=r-··
issuespasqhe.stu_e~ ..
at,1
.
,
ere_~
-
,.~r,,
,
;::: . :,·;,• , __ : ··:·· .•
'
.
::'-;•Itkil]syour~rj!!nd~.your,-:,· tonight.".:;:•.
-: . . .
. _
.. ·
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1,,
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·
. · · .' : ·.
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·
. , · .. · · ··
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·
.
relatives,!!ndp'e<>ple·you don't even: ·· ~-· · ,--;Don't.hesitate becatise'your
.. ,
1
·r:-;: · :·- :-, .,: ;.,_. --~;., :.,· .,. •
-,·z'i> ·'
--1.-:
.
, •
':J:'llere~!)r.e, -~e ~e
the
adrilinistrat!on_.to
allo,
...
th~-~stanD,edlib•tor·;.
'kh~w--~_ut}~.e~'r.e}H~~~l.~'.yo_~ :.
. fri~idmaY.h~ve,~e~-~~i~~!ng·o~ly
.
_:;
,
_:J.--=~-'-:--.--..:.-~2--;::::;=.:'.-,,..;:1_'.(,
:·.- . ·.
open~.an~ opei:at~ by._
-
~
stud~ta pr.:9yid~.they .. •
..
.
Y., e_~
·_cou~d ~a~e_.__ . • .... :· : ·:": ·
< .
~t:.B~~rand;w•!1e:can ~·11;1~t-as .·'
·FRIENDS DON!'l].ET.~I~,; · .·
·
....
·-objectives·they·have stated·as:tJteir}'~~~
f~fliglj~g
~
,
~eep
~~" · : .. :
·
.·
~fyou knewwh~t to say.· •·: .-.!rit2x1~tmgas m1xeddnriks;
·
~
·
<_,:.
:DRIVE
DRIJNI".·,··<'..: -: . • .
·
· . ... _._-: . __ :
·Leo.Dell opened: ~. ·. · ..
1'
•
' : , :
· . . . :
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..
-
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~
• • •
\
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:
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mayl><:'°y~ti'd ~lessqmet.-~,Y":.· . :. ,_,;--,• :,:','.\ndcl,on.'rt_hinlit~~!.bl~ck, . .. .
.,
.
0
•
-.:.-
•
• ·:~:
_
.. ..-,
:t~
:-;.->::;
. ·,\ _.:. · ......
We believe ~e
Leo
Deli
sho~d
~-~ the·stu~~n~• ~ncis.· ..
<· :
· ·
_f:~.c~
~~!.~~~ul
_
d
_
cJ•!:·
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,
.
.
' \ '
l
SEPTEMBER 23, 1976 .
THE CIRCLE
PAGES
Postmaster To Retire
Preschool Erects
New Playground
By .CyntblaFalrbuks ·
Raymond C.
Seaman
was Master
·
·
of
the
Chapel Corner Grange they
Mr. Raymond C. Seaman,
sat. side by side. at
a
Grange
postmaster · of
Marist
College,
meeting. "I had to introduce the
By
lJsa
McCue
in 1?74. 'lbat first year the pre-
will retire o~ September 30th,
governor and he could tell I was
school bad only about nine
after nearly 8 years of-service at
nervous. He leaned over and told
'lbe five-hundred dollars worth children and a purely volunteer
Marist, and 50 years for the
me to introduce
him
as Brother ·of playground equipment behind
staff.
'lbe following year the pre-
Unit.ed
States-
Post Office.
Roosevelt, just · like any other the campus center belongs to the school fell under the directorship
"lknow rm-going to miss the
member. That put me at ease.'' Marist Pre-School which is of the psychology department
people here,,, says
Mr.
Seaman.
Mr.
Seaman was president of located on the basement floor of.
and
began to expand. 'lbe pre-
He is.eager to express
his
fond-
the New York state Post Office
Champagnat. "We're trying . to school now has a
staff
of three
ness for Marist · students.
"As
a
Clerk Association at one time and get state certification as a day-
graduate
students,
whose
.whole, they're a nice ..group of
remembers making trips to care center and they have certain salaries come out of
the
pre-
young people," though he sup;-
. Washington
to lobby
for safety regulations," says Dr. school tuition, and several work-
poses some . may
think
him
too
·
1
legislation.
"Back
then we were Schratz, psychology teacher and · study students. With the ex-
strict at.times. He enjoys in-
· fighting for the 44 hour week and director of the Marist pre-school.
panded
staff the
.Pre«hool
can
formal conditions..:: :al_Iiong his
the 4 hour Saturday."
..
"Providing
a
fenced
in now take care of more students
student :_workers. "I · wouldn't
. Mr. · Seaman retired once playground for the children is one and has a full-time enrollment of
__ have it__aily _other· way," and
before, for five months in 1975.
of these regulations." Although· about twenty-five.
keeps
iJ1
tpuch with some of the·.
Raymond Seaman
But
his
replacement quit and he the fence for the playground was
According to Dr. Schratz ''the
students·who are gone now;,His
came back upon_request. When donated by Marist College, the possibility of expanding the pre-
first studenthelper Pat Ketcham, . and went to ·work in the
Mr.
Seaman first came to Marist funds for. the equipment came school is there because there
is
a
still · .. writes.- and · _he -·· recently P':)ughkeepsie. Post Office as a
.
in·. 1964 there were still many solely from the tuition charged by need for good day-care." But she
. ·. learned of a new family addition · clerk. He stayed for ·42 years.
-
student and-faculty brotll~rs and Ute pre-school.
says tllat Marist pre-schoolis "at
. f~om
~
form~r student who now -
Born in Hyde Park, New York,·-. no women. Since then there have
The idea for the Maris~ College a maximum in terms of numbers
, Hves_m Flonda. _
.
. ... • ..
Seaman has· lived
in
Dutchess been some changes and he. pre-:~chool. was conceived by of students." Any expansion
- • ~. Seaman : b~gari. his post-· · q>tinty, all· his · life. When a · b~lieves the school is progressing,., Manst students _and, _with . the would require tllat a permanent
_offic~:.c:areer_ as a __ rural r(?ute ·younger man,. he was acti,ve ,in _well. This year Utere are more help of Do!ly Bodick, directo! of full-time director be employed
cal!!er, workingfor. th~ re~ular .· the Gr,mge(farmers~ assoc.) and student. mailbox numbers:cthan the campus cente!, was realized and a larger facility be found.
carrier when he_took vacations: Post Office affairs. -·wneii ever' and for Ute first time Benoit
AUer ,t-wo. sutp:ipers _Se~~an Frankiin D. · Roosevelt -was. and Gregory Houses have their
completedtlle_91vil,Ser.v1ce,exam
·
governor of· New York and owri box numbers: But the post
- ·
·
· ·
·· ·
·
· ·
·
office is trying to keep up :with the
Winnie-The-Pooh
Th~
·~tL~GE.CUTTER -
.
'
-
UNl~SEX
HAIRCUTTING
-
:
.
Uni,-sex Haircutting
··
•
·---·--
.--,
Salon.
6
7
·LaGrange •'Ave.
. '.- -_473-37.50·
·.c
.
· 3 Church St;
New·Paltz .
255-9925 ._
. Jnstr_uctiQn
at-
zf'~"y13ry
~bes;t
· -.lhdoor~Outdoor
_,. ·riding_ . ·· .
, tacilities-
•-
. · :·: . Ali:~g~s-
. :Get
:f6gether·U?itb
your
friei(tls -·
· J<JrSpe<;ia_lG-_1:/1up~Dis~~urtis
.
:.
•
.,~. /.
,
,·Dutchess
·
Hill ..
Rocad,:OffE~st
.
•
•<
.
_·:-•_·· ; ..
,
:.,, '.":'._; :~••
.·••::·t::-•,•.•:.'.:•• •,~•• ,••.
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,:
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•
.Qor~!Y.:L.a11_e.
,~o~r,l,l<~~e.es!.~-:· ... ·'·
,
_ ..
.
· PLEASf
:CAli'47l~l91,8
fqi:~ppoigt_m,nts ·
;-·•: ... ·-.:-_··•:;...._,.,,., .. ·•··.: .a·,· ·
. .
•.>: '".
·
·
.
. . . .
.·
~- · ... • . . .
-
.
..,. , .
.
. ~"..
,
growtll and
if students remember
to have their box numbers used ,
on all correspondence · the mail
will
be
delivered efficiently.
Mr. Seaman says he
will
have
By
Ken Healy
I've never seen it done, but some
· plenty to doat home. He~ lives
attempts have . been made
· with his wife on a 58 acre farm.
Vinnie Capozzi, President of elsewhere and I've heard that
Though
·
most of the land is. un-
Marist's. __ Children's · Theatre, they were pretty successful."
tillable he does have a big garden along with Ute rest of his com-
A lot
is
involved in the story of
-to ke«:ip him busy;as well as ·odd mittee -are already· at work on "Winnie the Pooh."
It is said that
jobs around the_ house. He also this years production-"Winnie the A.A. Milne wrote the story for his
-·'plans to become mol'e involved in Pooh." The popular :children's · son who was without a mother.
church affairs, •. and as for the story by A.A. Milne
will •
be The characters are symbolic and
winter, ''there's always Senior brought
to
life this year on the represent things from Christ to .
Citizen's meetings."
-stage at Marist for the area's Motherhood and Communism.
JjecentlY
Mr~- Seaman-and his children from March 28th There are ten major characters
family had a gathering ·of five through April 3. "We're looking and "an onslaught of bees, trees,
'. ·generations, including his mother. foward to a new and exciting . flowers, rabbits and butterflies.
\:,~ho
)S .94·.~nift}!~J·mimtl:f9~d twµi_/_aspe~!.?..f ~hµ~en•~-~e~t!~ h,ei:e.. . . Childyt;n's _theater h~s changed
::
:
great"!granga~ughte~. ·.-~'That's , at Man~t," said Capozzi, who is accordmg to Capozzi. "We
in-
something you don't se~
.·
too of- . also the ·producer:of "Winnie."·. corporate English and Business
ten.,,
· ·· · ·
. · · ·-:
·
·
Something that has never been majors, language club members
·
. done by the Children's Theater and football players.
It truely
will be the use of a movie shown incorporates the whole Marist
before the play that
will
transport community." Winnie Siatta
will
.
the kids right into "Hundred Acre
direct the play and Artie Curran,
Ca.r
_
e_·
'~r ~-
l_. n_ ,•
+.
o.·.·.· .-
Wood"- where the story takes Sue
Smith and Barbara Kelly
J •
-
place. The reason for this Capozzi otller members of the Children's
By Larry Snyder
. · The Office of Career Planning
and Placement-is sched@ng the
first class. for students interested
in learning about how to prepare
resumes,· cover letters, civil
servic~ exams, the use of College
Placement Annuals · and other
· technicalities used in preparation
for Ute job search. ,
·
· The class will be held on
. Tuesday~ Sept. 28 at 2: 15 p.m. in
room C-270. People who are in- -
: ·terested · should sign up in ad-
vance with Larry .·Snyder,·
· Dir~ctor of Career Planning and
Placement, in· room C-113.
Seatirig will
be
on a first come,
first served basis.
· explained is because, "Kids are Theatre committee are also
media minded and T.V. geared involved in the production.
_from Se~ame street
to_
Wonder Tryouts.will be on Nov.16, 17, and
Woman. They're not used to 18 at 7 p.m. in the Fireside
·:seeing a live play, so we're going Lounge.
to start the show with a movie.
Politics From 3
self - preservation has usually
· ·
f
carried the day; the minority
recomposition o the two parties party developed a new appeal;
as we know them. In the short .
term,. this would be a change of The Republicans, having proved
Ute first magnitude. Yet, in Ute themselves consistently in-
long term, it wmµd simply be the capable of convincing the elec-
fulfillment of a cycle: as the torate to give tllem undivided
strength of one party steadily power in Washington (i.e. control
in~reases (i.e. the proportion of of the White House and Capitol
the electorate consistently voting Hill for any four year period since
for it
is
on the rise) Ute otller 19_32), are
l!OW
facing this
party steadily loses its drawing dilemma. Either they reshape
power until
it is faced with a final themselves, or they'll be shipped
·
· h
·
out.
If
they think to content
option: eit er maintain it's tllemselves· with. merely .gar-
current base and sink into
oblivion, or change its appeal. In nering Ute vote of Ute Republican
Party faithful,
they'll be
· American politics, the instinct of . hideously slaughtered at the polls
- - - • - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • m·November. (Democrats alone
"""1),4~1\
l)l§l'OU~T
outnumber Rep·ublicans by
·
~
nearly 2:1, to say nothing of Ute
. 131:iVl:~A._61:·.
•~c~ .
"Independent" vote).
1n this
-
·
light, we may. state tllat Ute Ford
ALBANY POST ROAD. HYDE
PARK.
N.
v.
12s3e
-Dole attraction to the Northeast
·
.TELEPHONE·«
9141 . 229.9000
(being "Democratic") is not a
shot!king development. It's
SCMMID_T
-
NR. bottl~s.
99c
·-slx
p~_ck
·UTICA' ·c·L-U B ....
·
.. case of.24
-
12
oz.
bottles
.
.
/
.
.
.
C3.6$.8c
deposit
.
~
·-
HURRY THIS OFFER ENDS OCTOBER 7TH
.
'
·;:
.·
'
· happened in Ute past; they're
simply· carrying on the trend -
abortion may well ·be the par-
ticular expression of a more
general phenomenon ..
REYNARD
·
oN
SALE
$ll.00
BEFORE
oct:r
.
-.·
-.:\:~~--
. CONTActl{'t .
·N~REEN FE~,
SHEAHAN HAU. .
.
-·
< .
~~~
"··
'·
•'
PAGE6
THE CIRCLE
SEPTEMBER 23. 1976
I
sears
I
3 things that ever
_
y
college student shou~d
1~~01r·:
a
·
...
.
.
·
Handy
.
c;,~~y-p
;
,~k
·
.
wi~Ir
handle
·
.
\
'
'
-
-
.
1.
You:
call
SAVE ,
8
5
On
thi~
slide~rule
-
-calculfitor
·
-
.
SA
,
LE
·
-
l
:_
;199
_.
.
-
-
1~
-
Regular
,,_
,·
·
.
·
SI9.9<)
.
a. An
8-digit.
s
licle rule cal<:ulator can
·
make the difference
in the spee.i am]
ai
:
curai~y,,,:ftl;
_
whicl; you
S(>h-e complex
jii:ohlems
;
·
\Vork square
-
r<>~>ts~
sguares,
•.
recipr9cal:.
··
in-
stantly.
4-key
:
m~~nory
.
Jets
:yo~;
~~1,rk
2
1;rnblems
at
-
~rice;
·
·
·Has pe~-c~nfk~y
;.
Jloating
:
~le~:imal ai1cl
fa~ge grt>~Il iligita]
1lisphiy.
Witl1
:
ca:-e
.,
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uns
Oll
hattei-ie
s:
(indmle,l).
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SEPTEMBER 23, 1976 ·
THE CIRCLE
Coach's Corner
"'lbe administration bas made a
commitment to upgrade the
. basketball program. It remains
to
be determined specifically
what 'upgrade' means ... it could
By TOM MCTERNAN
mean financial ~istance in the
way of athletic scholarships.''
position he has held since coming Marist currently does not award
here.
athletic scholarships.
.
,
A reorganization of the Marist
"This
is a very busy job,"
As a first step
to·
upgrade the
coming season."
·
A 1963 graduate of
Manhattan
College, Petro holds a
M.S.
· degree from PeM State and
is
nearing completion of a sixth
year certificate
in
administration
and supervision from Southern
Connecticut state.
By WANDA
GLENN
Athletic Department last spring Petro said, referring to his l~test program, Petro . has disclosed
to
prepare for the opening of the position. "All things like 'tran-
that Marist will pull out of the
Mccann Recreation Center sportation for teams, work-study CACC at the end of the school
"I want to show the ad-
reslilted in the appointment· of jobs and oper~tion of the tennis year. "We don't get anything for ministration that there
is a need
Ron Petro as the college's first courts are organized through my winning the conference, since for expanded athletics for
full-time Athletic Director.
.
office."
most of the schools don't even worn~.'' So speaks Eileen Witt,
Petro, a native of Yonkers who · But the big task_facing the new belong
to
the NCAA."
His
priority who is filling the vacancy left by
resides in Wappingers Falls, has· Athletic Director is planning the now is to schedule·as many NCAA Sue Nye as intraipurals director.
been at Marist since 1966. He has programs for the new facility, Division I and II schools as
Mrs.
Witt also _teaches physical
. s1:rved as assistant· Athletic scheduled -to be opened on a possible. Marist already has two education courses, and
will coach
Director to Howard , "Doc" limited basis in-- January. His Division Iteams (Iona and Siena) the women's basketball team and
Eileen Witt
•✓-
Goldmanforthepastthreeyears, ·responsibilities
include and/four Division II teams both the men's and women's participation from the women,"
·
scheduling_ community use for (Hartwick, C.W. Post, st. John tennis teams. She holds a B.A. in says Mrs. Witt. "Last year only
athletic · contests and special Fisher and Sacred Heart) on,_ physical education from Lehman 65 women joined out of a total of
events. Petro pointed out, "This their 1975-76 schedule and so far ·eollege in New York City and an 500." She hopes
to
make· the
'direction is consistent with have added Manhattan (Division M.S. in exercise science from the women aware of the program so
· Marist's phqosophy and tliat .of I) to their 1976-77 schedule.
University of Massachusetts.
they
will show up. "The women
the McCalini Foundation." The
Marist is a Division III schoo)
Prior to joining the Marist. don't have to be super athletes,
Foundation has underwritten a at this time but Petro hopes to
.
athletic staff, Mrs. Witt worked . but just interested
in recreation
• $1.25.· million . grant. for· the. $2.1 move up to Division II in the near for a year and a half at Grover or . in improving their own
million project.
.
.
future. He faces one stwnbling Cl~veland High School in New
bodies."
The McCannCenter, which
will
block, however, Present NCAA York City teaching
gym
and
An
intramural council will be
. replace·. the 60xl00 foot
gym•
rules don't allow a school to be in health classes.
set up with the first meeting
4asium., currently s~rving the Division II in one sport and
Mrs. Witt considers herself a
being scheduled in the near
school's -1500 students, will Division III in the others. Petro is very busy person, but finds the future. This council will be made
dramatically alter Marist's_ seeking to gain support\for an atmosphere of the job pleasant._ up of interested students to give
capacity to support athletic and amendment to change the rule, "Working here is an optimal Mrs. Witt ideas on how to better
recreational pr9grams. "For the as current plans are to keep all situation because of the new serve their needs. They will also
first time Marist
will
be able tQ · other Marist varsity teams in facility and expanding program. help plan activities for the spring
· · host athletic events .in its own Division III."
· ·
I'm glad to be part of it." She has and add any new activities they
facility. We. hope to. provide
· As for his future as basketball also coached women's basketball want, within the budget. "Unless
· excellent . competitive events in coach, Petro said, "I . wµl · con-
at Richmond Hill High School in we show the administration that
anticipation that the.Mid-Hudson tinue to coach at Jhe
'
present Queens,. New
York,· and there is a need and a desire we
YaJJ.ey
wiU
support us;" ex-
time.
If
the two jobs becq:me too volleyball at .. st. Barnabus High won't get the necessary funding
plained Petro. ·
much of a burden I may beforced School.··
...
·-
to meet these needs."
·
and recenJly resigned ascoach of · Emphcfsis for such-support will to choose between them at some
As intramurals director she is
As coach of the women's·
the tennis team and Director of logically be placed on improving future time." Petro has a 14fi.110 responsible for setting up the basketball team, she . feels it· is ·
the · Marist
·
Sports. Camps. the _basketball program, since record in 10 years as head coach schedule of intramural activities her responsibility to field a team
However, · he will retain his basket~all is potentially the of the Red roxes.
He
added, "We and recruiting more people, that will adequately represent
position as head coach: of the highest in_come-prooucing · sport had a good recruiting year and especially women, to take part. the school. "My main goal is to
varsity . basketball ~earn,• a at Ma:rist;· according, to Pe~ro. I'm looking forward to the· up-
"I would like to see a greater have a winning season, or atleast
a .500 season." By helping each
individual realize their potentials
to their fullest, then putting all
the individual potentials into a
team effort, she . hopes to
establish a winning tradition ..
.
:-'...:·
f:eo_ple
·_you
Meet: Jerry_ Scholder
_.-ByJ?J\VE~G
·comes
.
to fo_ughkeepsie_fi;:om,-his_,:la.~king· he div~rted ~is· effo~. _
of:th~.sea~on.
He
.cites
it
as a
.
. . ..
.. _
hometownof
·
Syracuse whex:e he· elsewhere, to the runmng·events: , ..
··:,r·< '.,•-·· ·--::~· · ·
-··1 ·
:
' · · ·
·_ Hisiiame is'Jerry Scliolder arid , attended l'{o~tingham·. Hi'gh Somewhere~ between operating a
he is probably one of the -best
·
Schoot At Nottmgham, Scholder · paper r_oute and running the four
,.runners. ever to race ori the was thetop runner for his school and half miles to his.girlfriend's
Marist ·black-top course.
In
his since his soph year., Under the house, Jerry &holder developed
· first collegiate contest, Beholder:- guidance of
his
high school coach, into a first class -~ong distance
ripped the frosh record and came. George Constantino, ,Beholder . runner., · ·
' .. ·
within six seconds of the record boasts highly respectable times
Rejectiug colleges the _IH~es· of
forthe campus .4.7 mile route. At in the mUe (4:15.9) and irlthe two Rutgers,. Cornell, ~nd .· the_'_:
the Glassboro Invitational held - mile"9:12):
_· . :,
<= ··
University of Penn§ylvania,
on Sept. 11 in New ·Jersey; he.· . Talent did not come naturally &holder caine to Marfat because
brol!;e the tape for the win
in
a · to this p~t~ntial All-American.: He ofcits minute size, its business
field .of ninety-nine competitors. had_ or1gmally gone out for program,. and its coach. Coach
The 5'9"-, 135 polllld harrier football but sfiscovering
his skill
Rich
stevens, now in his fifth
WILSONS COUNTRY-TAVERN
.HO~E
OF
POUGHKEE-PSIE'S
7FOOT-
.
.
C:OLOR T.V .....
ovle•s
WATCHMONDAYNITE FOOTBALL
. --iJASEBALL,-MOVIEs:. _ .
&··-WEEKENDROCK
'
CONCERTS
. ' -WiTHA PITCHER OF
BEER
AND YOURFR.JENDS!·
'
.
.
.
.
''
.
·.
.
,POOL TABLE~FUSSBALLCOMING
'
.. GREAT.FOOD-FOR LUN~H
I
~
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:ON-RJ9:G REAR-ENTRANCE·
,.·TO
HUDSON
RIVER STA'l't;'tt.OSf'IT
AL
.'·, •,. :"<
:--.->·_:~~-~:~-·.::,
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year as head of the cross-country
program, appealed to &holder as.·
"organized, . a hard worker,
dedicated, and . nice person in
/
general." Having seen Scholder
in his junior year at the state
:..........i
Iiitersectionals, Coach stevens possibility
but
has developed
realized the possibilities thl,lt the st,rategy to counteract
if
the
· then fifth place finisher would "could be" holds true.
have, an~ the two have be~n in
His name is Jerry Scholder and
contact smce.
.,.
· ·
, above all he is an individual.
Cross-country
~
a te8;ffi sport Despite his status as an athlete,
and the accounting n:ia1or feels he is on work-study doing laun-
strong.ly about••-
·
t~1s year's
dry.
He likes spending his af-
. ~oll~ction of outstan~g athletes, ternoons horseback dding and
ThlS year I "!ould _like our team talking to people,.he says. Jerry
to take_ .top . f1ve
(m.
the NCAA &holder will not argue one way
. ~hamp1onsh1ps) an~
if everyone or another· about the lime-light
1s ·healthy · that
ts
a good . publicity that is on him. He · is
possibility." He also adds tpat the Jerry· Scholder, person.
freshmen on the squad h?ve a
good attitude and with three. or
four upcoming . All-Americans,
. &holder feels that Marist will
see an NCAA title before 1980.
Upon &holder's arrival to the
Running , Red Foxes, some· fans
and bar-room debaters had
created -a rivalry between the
freshman . rookie and
·
. the in-
c um bent ace ·runner,· .Fred
, Kolthay.' &holder: attributes. the
· "Kolthay-Scholder" build-up to ,
human nature, answering ."we/
both look at it as a team instead
of . .individuals." · The · young
· Saggitari.us feels. although there
,are iridividual dreams and goals,
those
cif-
the team must · come
first. · · · ·
·
·
•• >
Having run over a thousand
·. miles this .summer as part .of
his
~-- trainirig ·. program.-
Schnl1iP.r
i"
classified
GOOdbye Mr. Seaman,
we
will
miss you. -We wlll always
remember to use our zip cOdes.
Help wanted Tuesday .nights in
the Cl RCLE Office, rm.
268,
Campus Center.
HAPPY ANNIVERSARY ANNE
AND RAY. SORRY I FORGOT.
FROM YOU KNOW WHO.
Hello St.. Raym!>nd's, From
Dave.
Young .Chinese boy craves ,
companionship. Is not particular.
If interested stand In laundry
room Saturday evening between
7:00 and 12:00 p.m.
Refrigerator tor sale. Asking $20.
S':hlgh,
P.O.,
Box C-~19.
Happy Birthday Babs!
Classified ads In the CIRCLE are·
SO cents. for
:2
lines. Lei that
special someone see how you feel
. 'aware of.his critics.who feel ~t.
· he
will 11peak"
too
soon, run
toQ
.._ __ - -_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..... _________________
.. :µiany
good
races at the beg~ing
.. In the. CIRCLE •. Mall cash
·
. In
advance via campus 'mall.
H~r goal for th~ in.en's tennis
.. team next spring ·.·
is to win the
CACC. "We have a good chance
to
win the title because all but one
player are returning from last•
year.1'
As
for women's tennis;-
. there
is
no league, but the coach
· would like to see.. a winning
season. "I will have to see who
comes out because we lost three
women from last year.'~ She also
hopes to upgrade the women's
tennis program.
Women's
Crew
Expands
By SHERRY SMITH
"I'm very pleased. with the
girl's performances and pick up
of style," states Greg Tracy, the
new women's crew coach.
Currently · a senior at Marist,
Greg was asked to coach the
women's team by Gary Caldwell,
the new Director of Marist Crew .
He
is a member of the men's
crew team and has been active in
crew for the past 8 years. With
this
experience, he hopes to. add
new direction to the women's
crew team.·
The training for the women is
comparable
to
that of the fresh-
men team. He adds he wants to
. raise the status of women's crew
at Marist. He has conducted on
campus recruiting and the
results speak for themselves·: 40
girls have been recruited with
approximately 10 dropping out
due to job and school schedules. A
change in practice schedule from
6 a.m. to 3 :30 p.m. can·be a factor
in the larger number of
recruitees than in past years.·
Tracy feels· land training most
important in terms o( overall
boat performance. He puts,
emphasis both on·· style of , the
rower· plus exercises which·
will
condition
the
women,stating that
"unless properly conditioned,
1
performan_ce
will.
be poorer."
·,,.
·
PAGE 8
THE CIRCLE
.
-
SEPTEMBER
23,
1916
.
.
·
_
By
,
TOMMCT~RNAN
•.
18.2.1
18.2.2
18.2.3
18.2.4
18.2.5
18.2.6
18.2.7
18.2.8