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Part of The Circle: Vol. 17 No. 9 - April 15, 1976

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In This· Week's CIRCLE
·· Handicapped Swim~~.flg. 2
No Fa ult. History ...
Pg.
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P
5
, quus ..
ev1ew ...
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_River
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3
THE CIRCLE
. VOLUME 17, NUMBER 9
IVlf.RIST
COLLEGE. POU.GHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
12601
.--
APRIL 15, 1976
Trustees· J\ppr_ov~· 8%,
·
Price ·.•Hike
closing ~heJ?.rojected budget gap. ~year· - which_
is
pro1·ected from.· reven_ ue. from· student m· come
1 -
for-
1916 11
Howe
·
th
·
d
· emp oyees, such_ _.as insurance·,
Th
·
··
..
· · ·
<·
· - · •
.
·.·
ver, ·. e .· ata provided by the Admissions was~ $790,0_00: Approximately-
. . e Board of
.
~ustees . h~s __ TrusteesJeelthat.
·
inlight ofthe Office-Marist s_ees its income as
$468,·500.
has ··be··en .-.'e·
llin.
in· ated anticipated rate hikes in utilities
a~p_roved a $?10 m~rease m ~ecessary _increas.es in the $'" 000
000 f
9
6
.
-
and. heating oil; expensesfor
t{!1tlo'} for.full:trme _students and . oper~ting. · budgeL "._ .. th_ose . man-
.
1
• • ; .
or 1
7 ~
77 ·
At
this. point ttirough ·numerous
.
meetings .. of operating- two new facilities .. the
a $90 increase
m
m
d
bo
d
d ted b
·
·
· -
m
trme the> projected expenses, · the budget committee and the library· and the recreation cen-
f
.
·ct ..
·_ .
roo_ an
. ar · a
·
-•·.
Y
liiflati9n:.-arid other· which inclu_de the gap, stand at· Executive Committee. ""
·
te_r·,·. •and, a ·small· build-u._p of
. or _res~ ent students,. both ef- unavoidablepriorities :.: the ·ef- $_'",,321-,··500. ,.:.·,·. · ..
·
. · ·
>.
·
...

..
.
·
"I. d
·
·
··
fective m
Se
te b
-
f
t· ·
·
·
·
. n . etennining the need and · reserve f ds
f
l
t
.
· . p
~
er.
.
. ec ive.;:in~rease is
a
reasi:mable-
According· to Vice. Presfdent extent of. an increase
in student
·
. un
or rep acemen or
~~~
;::ic::a~t
m. total_ ~<?.sttl - sthadretsto;, be. assigned : to
.
the Waters;'.: _the: ~Trustees hav-e costs,
tlfo
College . Connell major
-
renovations of the plant.
eightperce
f
o .tahppti:foJWll19a75-e
Y
·s uTh. enb
•d
.. • : . . .
·

i. • . . . .
unanimously'·mandated that the ·.examined tuitioo• and room and
"And, of course, there is
. ..
n over.
a
or
.
76 ....
e u get gap to which
Vice
College,~ opera~e on __ a balanced' boai:d costs at.comparable in- always the orge of inflation" says
fi!as ·. recommended to . the !:>resident· Waters refers is the budget for 1976-77. "There can be stitutions," says Vice. President Vice President Waters. "We do
~stee~ byJhe College Council, pr<:sent mai:gin}Qr·expenditures _no deficit financing. Quite sim-' W.aters. "Figures_ were also not say that lightly because we
wh1ch_.represents the faculty, which exce~s projected income ply, there is·justno way thatthe•· available ·on. the·· projected in-
know that our students and their
_staffand students "<!(the ~ollege; ~o~. 1976-77. This .margin ~was College can r_e_c_oup .a. defi_c_. it in· creases·· at these schools .. The families are affected daily by .
9!1
a per credit . baSIS,' the llllbally comprised of the ex-
t d ,
.
d
.
-
that economic fact of life.Jn .view .
. twtlon cost w_illbe $84 or
$7
more pend~ture_ requests . annually .. o ay s.-ec_onomy, ·an ' unlike•. finaL recommendation
to
·the· of this, the Trustees have. ap-
" .. tha_n __ the_.
P __ re
__ s_ e
__ nt_ £_ee._ ·In t97fi-77
__ ,_ .
·
su_ bm_1t_ ted : b_
Y.·.'. a_c_a_ d_e_ mic· .·. dep· art"~-. more affl_u~nt scho~ls, we. do• not . Tf~stees. is coin parable. to. those proved
an increase _of $40,000 in
t
~"'l
t
f
t
-
.
.
.
.
have suff1C1ent endoW!Jlent for an . bemg. implemented: at · schools th f. ·
· l ·
·ct
b
·ct
t
Owa cos D:··_
.
UitJon and .room mflnts, admm1strative offices emergency 'bail-out'"
·
·
simila t M . t.:. .
h •. .
. e
.
manc1a a1 .. u ge next
and boar~
will,
am?unttc_> $~;970. -and.
_
.,oth_e,r .s·egments .. of·· the ... ·mven the Truste~;_ mandat~,., .
·
the ei;hi°to,~_.!ri~pei~:~w
_
farige/~
.
year,.which
will
be
available to
.t\<;corqmg •,t0 · Vice .PreSid~nt J;oUeg~; : ,
: . :
·
: · . ·
·

·
_. . . : · the College mtisfcontinue to ar~
.
·.· Among the expenses ,. beyond · }~~riEi:;lt~~:;l~~~~
th
serious
E;dw~_rd -\\late~~ whoDUlde-,the ..
,·. Maris.~-s, currenLqp~r.atmg the gap which. presently ex1sts. the College'.s control are ·man-
~~ounc;eme~~. The Tr~t~es
d~
budget: Is :$6,800,0® ... Given :,.a The· original· gaQ,~ excluding dated increases in -~cial Security
no .see the. mcr~~d tU1tIOE as· st.lble student popul~~io.hfor 11~xt . sal~ries· and ·_:)ncluding'~
_
_
new and i·other. fixed/ benefits
.
for

Continued ~ii Page
6
~~gti
Ti1-tea1.Je -
, . . ·•.·
-· . .
.
,;
.
·
B;Jinl~e°!1~~r:i•. ·:•:··,finan~~~r:f~as6pf:_
.'
Tl!;\studen~
··S-
·
e· .. n.
-1··0·
.· ·· ..

- J'ITe· .e
1 ".
.

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·.n··.
_
··
-
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.
.
·
· - ,
.
. . ;
. . :
.• . · ' - , ... ,> ~-
.
.
,.,,··
•.
~JJd;'a~IJ?:IStr~!O_l"S
0
.'haytl: b~tl~.
<,.,·
;,c.-,,;: •, , .. ' ··a•
>? .•
>VV :
:·~.
-
.•···)Ve .
.
Si
~i::
a,nne . '. .
'

--~
,
--...... •-· · ;:"~l~~t:~~ii!.'
1
;~f.¥~~7~~ii~{:-~r':"
:
-
'":ii;~~l~~~;::;/.
;
:.~ii!i~$tlJj,f
i.Iilf
:;tQ:,;~~i~ir1~£t:-:;$.:;,,c:
;
.,,,,, ··• '"
said
<
c
: Frederick . J,alllbert; · .d1qn'.t,1ose tl1e· contractto another ""
·
· , · ·
.
> ·· · ·. .
·
·. ·,- ·
·
: ... · ., -· .
~venmg:theie< wilhbe · a hayride·
.
_.· A clambake will. be:iieid in the
a5;:istant
ct1:3_ri
,~!,
stti~ents. _ _.. · · . company
1
''.
_
said Stahn:-·:,. :
<.· · ·
A:dinne( da,n~e ·at_ th~ Camelot and-.s~~Ill ·~t the ~o~kmg
.-
Horse _ lower field ori:May 14.
A
cocktail
.,. Our d~c1s
.
1?n, •. s~1d ~mbert, •· Accord~~ to, Lambert, 1t
':'7g1 .
In~,
Manst mght at_. the ·Last •.Ranch i~•Hi_g~land:"The :1Jayride party in)10Ii.or ofthe ·seniors and-
... w.3-s ma_de m ,a fma~c1al a~d be the option of the c;;afeter_u~
Chane~·· .. Salo.on,
·
. cla~bake, and. swim will be Jree to au •-their parents is scheduled forthe
• phi~o~ophical pomt_ of view: 11J1s. ~mployees whe~fr-or not they· c<><:ktail party, and a haynde and memb~rs otthe graduatingdass. ·. evening.
· · -
·
·
dec1si~nha_dver~llttl~_to_dowith want to. stay._ ;We want the swim are among the_scheduled The bllLwilLbe paid from·the
SeniorweekwillendonMay15
a~r diss,atisfaction wit~ ~aga." ~tudent food servic~ dollar to go · e_ve~ts for the 1976 seruor weekto cl'.3-SS treasu:r,". said .Richard witha
·
champagne breakfast and
_I don t thmk any dec1s10n ~s .. mto . the fooq service, and then . be held J~om May
11
to ._May_ 1!, .. Dmne~n, cha.lrJllan of the senior graduation exercises. The cost of
.
bee~, so well thought out _as this
.
baclt to.the students. '.l'he~efor~, · .. '.fhe senior week committee has committee~ _.
.
. ·
· ·· ·.• . the champagne breakfast will be
one, ·he added_._
-
t~e st~dents are crucial m this .. tried_i!) schedule_ on_e_ event each
R;o~ler skatmg 1s the afternoon minimal because the liquor is
Ken Stahn, _the
pres~nt operation'. .
.
.
. .
afternoon and evemng. _ .
activity plannecl for May 13. A being donated by the Marist
.... iru.inager ,.of. the food serv1~e,
. "By June first, we;hope to have ..
S~_nior v.:ee~ will begin on May din~er dance at the_ Camelot will College Alumni Association.
re1t~rate?, Lambe_rt•~ ~:x:planatlon . a new manager: . hired an~ . on
11
with a picmc and sof_tball game· begm at 7: 30 ~ith a cocktail hour
To participate in all events will
be~md . c~angmg · the Jood board. ~e are ~ow ~dvert1smg foUowed by an evening a_t ·the followed by dinner and an open cost approximately $35 a person,
pohcy, saying ''the rea~on we · for' the Job, which _1s open to Last Chance Saloon. The. Last~bar fromJ0:00 p.m. to1:00
a.in ..
said Dinneen. He also added
weren't rehired wasn't because., national competition_.''
.-·:
.Qhance will
be
reserved· for the T,ickets for the dinner dance will seniors will receive reservation
. of any dissatisfaction, but for
'
senior class and theirfriends~ • · be $1_5. a person; J<'or those who cards next week in the mail.
. Green
Plaris. ·.
.
HoMay
·s~.,)-Oclllat
will
pe
wish,,RoyaltuxOdofand will be
on
t~~d!!;!t .
Jim']ens~n
Bur
gh:1ries--I-lig9"
Radio. Stolen
stJ.l'!~i;;~:~rr:::::~;

·.
To Speak
I. n
:
:
:
Cr.ime~-R-_·a· · ..
t·,e·.
·
.
ByMaryBetbPfeiffer
a rally, April 20, to protesfthe
Approximately la.m. Sunday
tuition· increase .. ···
_
By Gi~i Birdas
· By Ernest Arico, Jr; ·
the actions of. a minority number
morning, Gene Berkery, a Marist
'.The Board of Trustees voted a
of•. students who cause all the '. senior discovered the theft of
his
$210.increase·in tuition and a $90
Jim Jensen! C~. television
Figures released by_ the ·office dainage;'':hesaid., . . .
. citizen's band radio from his van
· increase· in room and board/
an,chorman . will be the guest of safety and security showthat .· .
'Iii'
additicm, -Bodo· cited that parked in Champagnat parking
qreen said the 'faculty ask~d .. speaker at : th~
·
.1975·: Com· 55 ~rimes h~ve been reported to man.y students are .not aware _of · lot. · · .
· -
·
for _a 13 per<:ent increase in salary . · ~en~ement ~xercISes on May 15, d~te at Ma~st _College:-' .: ·
·
. .
>
wh,at-to · do in reporting a, crime
According to Berkery, -the
"across the board."
It was voted·· 1t .was announced today by,,, Burglary 1s the:number one arid how-to protect their.personal window was forced open and the
down by the,Boar'd of Trustees. Richard Dinneen, _chairman
_of ..
crime-~th
~
ca,ses;Jollowed_by. property:. . _·. •··
radiorippedoutleavingthe wires
Green would like the ·faculty th~, spea~e_1: coi:ri,m1~ee:--:: .
.va~~ali~m with_ 13;: larc~ny;- 9; · · •~The·firstthing :to do is ,call .. expos~.d. Security guard\ Mike
and students to bandtog~ther to ·,,.·_;The C?mm1ttee s ob1ecti':e: per:versrnn, 4;_. trespassing, _3;
securityand:eith-erJiave securi~y Delia, a Maristjunior, responded
form<'.
.
'collectfve: bargaining', . w.a.s to ,, !md_: so~eone who:
·
~s
'>·
arson;J; bomb sc~r~;J; .(a~e ~ire_ . ca~-
th~
t<>wn_..
of Poug~eeps~_e · ... to the call.· 'Berkery said Delia .
with the administration·. ·
·. ··.· · relevant· to Marist students," l!larm,·1 and·malic1ous m1Sch1ef,
~
pollce· or· call yourself, but do 1t Jook :the
·
.information and "fold
· The' rally isbeing,held'to
see:
said
Dinneen.pm~eenJeels Jim· 1._.,
< -•. · ..... · • . ··. . •., . · · __
rig~t)1w:ar, do_n't waiLU you . me he'.d call the town police."·
· what,kindof:suppo~.Greeil .. has Jens~n J1as cont_r1butedJo :the .· Jack.Bodo, a_14yel-¼rv_etera~of ·<wanf to"'pr<>tect your personal.,··: The incident. apparently. went
and to• discuss what should
:be
awar.~ness- .oL m~ny of -~he thetown of Poughkeepsie poUce, property, such'as.a stereo,,copy unreported to town police;
done
for
the protest. . . ·
sJud~nts)hrotigh· his_ role in. the beli~ye~ ·that the problem.
a:rr
dowri the ~!"!a~. numbers :or. b~ause when Berkery called
Greeri has started
a
letter
Illedta'. · .• :
..... .. . ..
._,;
·
Manst IS present
·
pecause of the· scratch your mibals or some pohce to c~eck on any develop-
writing · campaign: to·· parents · · Mr: Tl_lomas· Wadet. develop-· to~ µberal attitude o~. sorr.i,e ad- . ~rkings ~hat can b~ i~en~ . ments, pol~~~ were. unaware of
asking the_ril
to
protest the ,in~ Ill_ent_\dtr~c~or;. a~s}~Jed ~t~-~:. mµiISt~ato~s. ·. · · .
.
>
:_c. '.:.
tifl~~le:
If you d~n•t, _it's . rm- · th~ the~.
. .
. .
crease.
,
.
.
.
.. :, .. · -·. -~
0 •.... ·, .. ·.

_co_mm1ttee
m.
t_he.·_,sele~~1cm .. ··
«The
;problem with . Manst p~s1bl_e to.trace· 1t down," he . .
I:
~hmk secunty han~ed the
:<When questioned about the
.
~~fore~tre,A~c!Si~n wa~ made .. C~ll~ge 1s :that som~ of !he .. ad- :·satd; , .
· ... , .
· ..
0



s1t~ation·very unp_rofessto'}ally,"
Student Fuiicl ·Driye,. Green said;, J1n.~I, the c:omm1~ee s_ecµred the · mmIStrators . cre!ite ... Uterr,..,.·own . ·. · B~~o.-als~ stated that sec~r1ty said Berkery who ha~ wr1!ten a
"How ·.can_·
'tti
:sc:h90L: ask Jhe . app,rov~l •·of:: the, M~ryst,. Colle~e · pr~ble~: by beµig too:·hbe~_a~ .' 1~ al} unp~~11t part. of.r1:ll.1nmg ,,_..letter to t~El C~C~E
1!1
w~~h he
;:::_,:: '• · ···
students ·to donat~ -money.,;when: Boar.d
.o(
Tr~st~es .. , . ·. · : , .
. • ~ind~d, >Sll~s-BO<lo_., ,· ... , ,. ,, . .,
. ·c_oll
_
ege , C!l.lJlP;t!~, )10\Vever,"."~ ~e c~a~ges ~ec~rity wi~h
1~ef•

::-,'._ji.,_f
_
t·'.
they·just :voted on raisiiig.tuitiori'
.:.Also
servµig:on. the speal:cer,. · lie also.believes th~~ there1~ a .•cooperation_.· of._- everyone: -1s:· f 1 c
~
en t, 1 n v es t.1 g a t1 v e
·-
·
. and room and
board?'
.
' ·.:,
y,• •
t . _.j(!ommi~t~e,"~re~:·Beth:'Edy.tar~s(. <'la~k
~f
discipliriary
-
~ctioh'.t_.and. :neededJf Ws·g~Xng to . ..cwork. . ·• · · proced_ures." :Berkery further
.
::>: : .
·
.
.
Green. Jiopes•: many . ·students ·/Pat Cuc,ciolV Gacy:Trau_be, -~ike . note.l'!ough !;lmphas1s 1~ placed .on·_,: ''.l:._hav~. receivf!4. more~: gr1~f _ ·
~~ted
,m; the Jetter;·:
'.'I have ,not
))(
'..
:...
~u
participate;~_;the
.
rally;()tCM.alc>neY.<. Gre~;,·W,:~l_sh· · a
,
?d. secul'l~r:i.'-'lt's,_not:fall" to .o~er Jrom:M:a.r1st,Coll~g~ ~an}romo:~~en ..
_
a_ny ·. com1!11tmenJ:, __ f9r
t.~
.
t!_}:_i
i • "
Wln
t"'.'
P,t'
in!!Ji~•!l)~!er, ,
ll!~~r,<!Jilm~~-
9 ~ c { ;
>
"•~ts
.,tt~ ~••·:,
P•\~P
with
•. ·.
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PAGE2
1
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 15
1
1976
Aladdin
Closes
~
:L,
,
.
Children's Theater completed a 14 performance
nm
of "Aladdin and the Wonderful
Lamp~
'
Sunday
aft~r approxi~a~ely ~,000 children viewed the play. The production directed by Dan Edgecomb,
assisted by Wmme Saitta, had
a
cast of
54
and starred Judy Farrel as
·
Aladdin. Dan Edgecomb wrote
Handicapped
Students
'
Dive
In
By
Shaileen Kopec
Marist College Public
Relations Director
Swimming also offers physical
advantages. "For example, a
paraplegic can walk in the water
because of the bouancy that is
When it comes to swim
_
ming
·
provided,"
-
Hines said. "This can
"there's not a lot of difference also have a psychological effect,
between you and me," said Joe
because the handicapped student
Hines, who is blind. "I can have can do something in the water
just as·much fun."
·
thathe cannot do otherwise - the
Twenty-eight handicapped handicap is minimized."
·
students at Marist and Dutchess
Most of the handicapped
Community colleges would agree students can swim,
·
having
with Hines
,
who
·
directs the learned at camp or from their
disabled students component of parents
.
.
.
the special services program at
·
Because of lack of
-
tran-
.
Marist
·
·
and oversees
·
a new sportation anq the need for a
swimming program for tlie swimming assistant, their op
-
handicapped at the YMCA.'
.
port unities have been limited· in
Suggested by
·
Marist senior later years
.
The new program
Eileen Carmody, who volunteers
.
has renewed interest for many.
atthe "Y
"
and is interested in the
.
"I love to swim ... I wish we
recreatiorial health . field, the could go every day of the we
.
ek,"
·
··
the script, adapting it from the Arabian Nights. ( CffiCLE photo by Fred Ashley.
f
•··
.
-.
·swimming program began as
a
said
,
~arty Boos, a--juntor
Marisf project but quickly in-
business major from Elmwood
volved
·
outchess
.
Community Park
(
N
.
J
;
Marty is blind, but
College
·
through Herb Bender, that does not deter
him
from
coordinator of the
.
office of wearing out the diving board on
.
.
Mt
.g:¥
_
·n
.
n
·
t
T11o,s,-
.
ke
.
,s,-r •
..
~
.
special services for
-
the ban-
Wednesday nights
:
Interested in
I
u,
.
VY
I
I '
I
J
-
dicapped.
.
.
-
keeping in
:
Shape, Marty
·
would
In addition
·
to the
28
ban-
like to expand his
"Y"
activity
'A
·
F
.
·
·
· G
·
·
·
-
,
dicapped
·
students,
.
40
·
student and
,
·"
do a
·
1ot more things, like
-
:
·.
.
.
.
o
·
.
rgo
.
tt
_
.
·
e
.
n
·.
·
,
..
'
rou
·.
P
.
·.· .
.
-
.
voluhntheersd
.
,re alsdo ptartdicipahating.
·
runni
_
ng an_d working with
.
Eac
an 1cappe s u ent s a weights."
..
He works out every
volunteer:..:.?ssistant;
··
some have
.
day at Marist.
· .
.
·
There are housing
laws
to are not informed of their rights.
.
two.
·
The
·
handicapped students
·
Mrs
.
Vicki Buchheit
·
of East
By
Rhoda
Crispell
protect workers, but
-
if the farm
Children of migrant workers are blind, deaf
~
o'r orthopedically Fishkill
,
a first year accounting
'
The problems of 20
'
,000 migrant boss knows a worker
.
reported a often. do not
.
attend school disabled .
.
The orthopedically studentat Dutchess has a lumbar
farm
·
workers in NewY6rkState violation, he might deport him, because
of
.
ignorance
or disabled
·
are confined to wheel
. -·
fushion.
·
·
she-'s interested in im-
include "_isolation, lack of power
,
Ms. Boyd said.
_
prejudice by the permanent
._
chairs
·
·
or use
.
canes
.
!)e1;>e~ding proving
-
her swimming
·
ability,_
·
-
no transportation, no money, and
'
'.
Farm workers can be thrown community, stated Ms. Boyd.
.
on the needs of the md1v1dual, but
.
was also attracted to the
l
.
ack of knowledge
.
about the out oLcamps as
·
if tenant laws
The symposium, sponsored
·
by _volunteers a~ist
·
wi._th ~essing program
·
-
because it
·.
offers
·
area,"
__
stated Ms
.
Marcia B
_
oyd, didn
'
t exist."
·
the Marist graduate psychology
·
and helping the studentinto the recreation and a chance to
11taffattorney for the Mid-Hudson
Migrant workers are
.
:
here program, dealt with the rights of pool. Transportation, a major
·
socialize
.
1
·
·
-
.
_
Valley Legal Services
;
at the approximately two months, Ms. neglected populations. Noel problem for the handicapped, is
~•
1
think it's fantastic," she
"Annual Community Psychology Boyd said. "The recruitment Tepper, an attorney, was the provided by the
:
voluntee
.
rs.
said
;
_
"I hope
·
mor~_ will par-
Symposium".
system is yery
.
inefficient;
,
moderator. Also participating
··
.
The YMCA pool is reserved for ticipate -
·
it's a lot of fun."
·
"Migrant workers are a Workers. often arrive before the were Mss Jane)3loom,'managing Wednesday nights frorr. 9
Jo
.
10
"It's
·
~t
g09d chance to
,
ineet
·
iorgott~1yg;rou.p b~cause
_
th':y
,
ar~
.,
se~son §tarts .. lf
:
h~
a~!Y.~
,
e~rly, · attorney
for
Mid-Hudson Valley
:
o'clock.
,
Funded by the offi~e of
.
other
.
·
~ids,"
·
said 'Ivy Miller, an
un
_
o~garuzed_ancl
notun.~oIJJZ
_
ed,
,
,
:
tpe
only_ wayhe w1Usurvwe1s by
Legal
Seryic
·
es,
'.
discussing
<
s~e~i~l
;_c
~rvi~es;
.·.
the, pr,ogr~m
·:
:i
;,
o~Jhqp~gk~J!Y.
<• .f
ha
_
n~iC!_apped

Ms .
.
Boyd
said:
·
·•
.
·
. ·
,
going into
.
debt
:"
·
;
.
·
welfare problems, and
Al
.
wi),lextendthrough the semester. freshinan from Brooklyn
·
who
'
is

Ms. Boyd stated that although
·
"The workers are guaranteed a Tallakson
,
atto
r
ney for the
-
.
_Mrs.
>
Marr
.
E_ssert,
:
han-
·
maj?rin~, ~n p
_
olitical ~cience at
there ~s high unemployme_nt in minimum wage of $2.10 an hour, Mental
.
Health Information d1capped sw1m~mg program Manst.
.
I m Just havl!Jg a good
t~e Un~ted States, farmers like to but it's not enforced, and they are Service at Harlem Valley State ~oordinato~ at the ''Y_,"
_
has been time,'
_'
she said
. ·
.
.
..
_
.
.
.
hire aliens because, Farmers can not paid when it's raining and
.
.
Hospital, discu~ing the rights of involved with the _trallllilg of the
-
C~1~ De
_
nnen, a ~anst Junior
have control O\'.er someone who they cannot work."
·
·
mental patients.
_
·
volunteer
assistants.
All
ma1onng
·
m American studies,
can be deported, and they don't
Ms.
·
Boyd said although there
volunteers hold senior lifesaving boasts

that he hasn't missed
.
a
have enough time to join the farm are some laws to protect migrant
and water safety instructor session yet
.
"I enjoy swimming
.
union."
'
·
workers, the problem is that they
certification. Mrs. Essert, who is It's fun. Swimming is also a
.
I
I
certified
.
to work with the han-
.
painless
.
way to exercise ...
dicapped, showed the volunteers
.
stretching and kicking helps to
a Red Cross film on water safety build up muscles."
for the
.
handicapped and those
The
.
Oakwood, Staten Island
working
.
with the orthopedically resident points out, "I'm han-
disabled r!!ceived
.
special in-
·
dicapped,
·
but
I'm
having a good
-
-
struction.
time
.
Some k
i
ds don't want
to
be
·
Fun is the objective of the identified
·
.as
..
liandicapped
,
program.
·
··
"It's
not they're non-accepting
,
.. the fact
rehabilitation," said Hines.
"
It's that we're handicapped is in-
an opportunity
.
for -handicapped cidental. We're just a bunch of
kids to go swimming."
..
··
.
kids having a good time. That's
.
"
Socialization is also an im-
the emphasis, not the handicap
:
"
portant. purpose," emphasized
Chris is orthopedically
\
han
-
Gail Cook, assistant to Bender at dicapped and has two volunteer
Dutchess. ''Handicappea assistants
,-
Charles Joseph and
~tudents
·
have
<!
social activity
,
George Connelly.
that
,
involves them with non~..
.
'
'They guys are really great.
·
disabled students
,
" Hines
.
added
·
They get
·
me relaxed. I
·
know
"Handicapped students are often they're right there,"
·
he said
,
reluctant to know people who are
.
.
"They
,
work awfully hard."
·
.
naturally b
_
rings them together
.
"
.
nnnued on
Page 6
.
.
·
I.
·
.
.
.
not handicapped.
-
Social activity
·
Co .
.
-
World Hunger
·
·
Awareness
·
Ap
.
r,1
;
2~~
-
25
ulilMIMilbiiiil
Rela~
&
Enjoy
·
Live
Mu.sic
:
by

I
.
B
-
ARVEST
.
WEDNESDA
-
Y ONL)'
·
BRINGIN THIS
All
F
_
OR A
.
'
I
.
.
FREE
f
DRINK
r~~t~!rTr
C
;
.. .
.
.
R
.
elax
&
'
enjoy
·
~t
·
·
<:
_
..
·
..
·.
EAS
·
:
Y
S
,
Tll
-
EFJ
.
T
.
::
_
··::
-







.
·.
f
.._
.


·.
2
·
2g-
~
7969
'
_-
A
.
group of Marist Students havejoined
.
together to
.
raise money and
to
fast
for
World
:,
Hunger Awareness •
The actualJast wiU
be
held or-i'Thursday the 22nd
· -
·
w.ith a speakerin the 11ew dining room. Other eve~ts
}!Viii
be a
.
coffee house,
,
a concert ar-d a Special Mass . .
-
---
:
::
:
:
Please J>arti~ip
,
ate ...
.
,
.,
,
. .
and
<
become
·,·
awa
·
re •
..
·
·
.
.
·
.
.
-__
Sh
.
ow
:
;
:
yo
_
u
..
··
·
care.
··
.
-
'
I -

.

.


.
•.
'
.
-
,
.
'
..
.'.
.
\





















































1
-
.
APRIL 15. 1976
THE CIRCLE
PAGE3
Students Celebrate Spring
!
·
~
\
:,--
,,
?~
.,
~-
~
l
!
~
t
';
\
,
j
~·:·;
\\
io..
_,
_
,.
•.
·
_
.
v
-
;>
,
The sun was shining and the beer was free which accounts largely for the River Day turnout.
MORE BEER! seems· to
be
the general concensus of opinion
in
this
crowd; (CIRCLE photos by Fred
.
.
Ashley.)
.
·
·
/
By Mary Beth Pieiffer
Tuesday afternoon from noon
until 6:30 p.m. Marist students
drank beer, ate barbecued
chicken, and boogied to the sound
of
:
"Potter's Symbol" as the
college presented River Day in
somewhat different style from
years past. Formerly, River Day
had been a stric.tly senior run
operation which
·
came as a
surprise to
.
most people, in-
cluding seniors, sometime in
early spring.
·
The festivities were sponsored
in part by a $500 contribution
from the college and other
smaller contributions from
student organizations.
The schedule of activities in-
cluded faculty - student tennis
matches, softball and volleyball
games. Thomas Wade, director
of
development, triu,nphed on the
tennis courts. Jeptha Lanning,
Roscoe Baisch, and Gus Nolan,
members of the faculty, joined in
the volleyball game in front of
Champagnat.
Approximately 400 students
turned out to hear "Potter's
Symbol" play from
1
p.m. until
5
p.m. on the lawn
in
front of
Champagnat Hall. The band
played selections from "The
Who" and "Jethro Tull", as well
as original songs. Free beer was
served throughout the per-
formance. ·
One student questioned said,
"This (River Day)
is
dynamite."
Another student called River
Day, "a great idea, like Wood-
stock
.
"
Perhaps in defiance of the
administration's attempt to
change the tradition of River
Day, a sign hung from a sixth
floor window which read: "This
is Picnic Day, Not River Day!"
Everybody's getting into the act including Dr. Jeptha Lanning, Bill
Dunlevy, and Mike Moore.
.•
Marist
students prove there's more
than
one way to
win
a volleyball
game;
·
'
..._
_
_
-~
- - -
·
••
- ~
,,_
• - -
.
-
- - - -
..-

-
·-

r
-

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

·

-
•--'
• - -

·
--
-•
-
·

,-
·
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•~
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·••
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PAGE4.
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 15,
1976
Coln..
Marlst College
CIRCLE I$ ttie Mekly
newspaper
of
1tie students
of
Mlrlst
by
~
llnd Is J)Ubllshed ttirougl)OUf lne sehool YNr exclusive
Of YIICllllon
perlodS
southern
l>u1l:hess
News Agency, Wappingers, N-Vork.
Mary
Beth Pfeiffer
GigiBirdas
Gregory Conocchioli
·FredAshley
-~P Ermish
TomMcTeman
P'atrice Connolly
-:Joan McDermott
Peter Van
Aken
Larry
Striegel
·Editor--
Associate Editor
· Editorial Consultant
Photography Editor
Assistant Photography Editor
Sports Editor
Layout Editor
Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Distribution Manager·
STAFF:
E~ie Arico, Dave. Roberts,
Phil
Palladino, Daniel
DroI?m, Tin~ Iraca, Barbara-Magrath, I<'red Kolthay, Candi
. Davis, Clau<!ia Butler, Rhoda Crjspell, Regina ·Clarkin, Jim
Kennedy, Rich Burke, Larry ~'treigel, Rena Guay
Security
'Inefficient'
Monday, April the 12th at ·noon, no reports, other than my own of
John Biue; a Marist junior and the theft. What would happen if
security person told me that my the police found my C.B.-?
name had been mentioned at a NOTIDNG
!
·
security meeting and further told
One of
the
problems
is that with
Dear Editor:
me I was suspect for stealing my a big weekend, such as parents
On
the night of April 10, 1976
I
own C.B. radio. Toe absurdity of weekend, or when the lots are
walked out
to
my van and found this accusation is proved by the filled with cars, no guards are-in
that my C.B. radio
and
tool
box
fact that my C.B.
is
not even ~ch_ parking lot. If money islhe
had ~en stolen. My van had been insured; which; in turn, must
.
problem, why not s,ell the
parked in_ the-third row of the bring me tothe conclusion that · cameras that scan the parking
Cha~pagnat par~ing lot. Toe this disturbing·accusation means lots, which do not work, and·hire
parkmg lot _was f1J1ed
~~- I.
\:Vas that
I
am the suspect, of tiie guards for~special events.

feel
glad I had_ ~rked close -to
the · recent
car
thefts.
·
- ·
there
is . · a
need · for
. entrance . stairs_. Proceeding_ to
·I_
wonder if __ security makes security to sit down and establish
. ~he_ se~unty office to report t~e th~e . acc~~tions_ beca}!Se . of new objectives and priorities in .
. mc1de~t, l found no _secunty their. 1p.efflc1ent. 1_nvest1gatlve . their system a_nd get rid of dead
personnel present.
A
girl s~:- - proc~ures and failure to come . wood . personnet
:
I-
would be
moned ~~m~one from ~ecur1ty up wit~ concrete evidence~ as in willing to· help accomplish this,
an~ an mterstate secu~ty !113n the case of.the student suspendecl . and my peers agree. Only with an
~mved andfooked ~s 1f_he hB:d from. th~ dorms _several weeks interaction between students and
~us~ awake~ed.
f
reo~rted t!tls _
:~go. ·
_ _
. . _
security · personnel can- an ef-
mc~dent to
him
and he did nothing~ _On Mo!1day, Apnl 12th at 2:00 fective
·
security force. be
.._, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.....i_.;.....J
except· summon
a
more com~ p.m.
I.
st?pped. a 'J'.own_ of established at Marist College ..
~ete?t pers9n. . .
-
...
·
.
' . · .:Poug~e~s~~ p~h~e officer and . This statement can be proven
c~--1111111.ci--o---M><_IHl _ _
CM_H><_IHl...__
04_ _ _ _ _ ·
M1ke_l)elia, a Jumor at_ Mar1st· told ...
hini.
a~out
th~
theft; of~my, . by the •increasing numbers' of
I
·and on s~cunty, ~ook down all the C._B. ~aclio. ·. .. •··
___ .
· .
criminal incidents
m{
campus. If
. needed mforma~1on and told me
A~
mentl~ned .,~b~ve, Mike this statement is. not :true,
I
I
.....
tha~ he would inform the.town Deha (Se£Uqty ofocer)}old me· _requestthat these administrators
pohce:.
.
he would_ fufoi:m th~·police of the who are responsible for security
While
m
the cafeteria on theft. Toe pollce said there were - prove me wrong:
·
Eugene Xiivier Berkery
I
~
11)*.
••
* :
;
* . .

+ .
. 4~* .
ACADEMIC CALENDAR
1976-1977
Fall
1976
August
30Monday
31 Tuesd~y
September
I Wednesday
6 Monday (Labor Day)
7-9 Tuesday-Thursday
9Thursday
22 Wednesday
October
15Friday
25Monday
26Tuesday
27 Wednesday
28Thursday
29Friday
November
•8-11
Monday Thursday
-
10-12 Wednes~ay Friday
· 24 Wednesday
29Monday
December·
17Friday
· Respectfully
·
· ·' Stephen H~· Blei:lk,
-Andre Green
Student Government President
-.
Those,.
elections . were never . amount to be spent, set by t}le .
. Open
letter·.
.
·.·
·:held; Furthennore,T-uriderstand
Financial Board." .
.
. Lasfdateforrepoi:ting
· : that_ there·_h_ave-_beeil no: policy
I"do· not•wish-to qufuition. the
P-NC Option and dropping

. ·.
· .
_,
.
· .. ,
>,
board
·•
meetings,, siI1,ce you
perforniance or judgement of the
courses without penalty of Andre Green
.
. :·. assurtjed
office
in Jamiary: This
Financial. Board: or·~,the· Student
failure.Lastdayforpaymentof Student Government President
is
especially serious since ... ·
-Government··Treasurer,-John
fees. Service charges assessed
· ·
-. • ·
.
1
·Toe funcUon :of · the Student : Davern. On the . contrary, I
·
on unpaid balances.
:
_
··Policy ·Board
:isto_.·coordinate _believe that John and. the :
Holiday Dear Andre,.
.
·-
~ studentp_olicy among the various, · Financial.- Board, have : done· an
. _, _
. Holiday. . I,am addressing this letter to . groups on . campus concerned
excellent job, arid have shown ·.
Mid-term grades due. you not . bec_ause I believe the
wi~~-
its f_or:m,ation, and to make
themselves more than capable of ··
Monday schedule of classes situalion it coric~rns is the-result. -surethats~udents speak with one
the job"they do. I do not believe, ...
·
wi.11 be followed. · of any deliberate a~tion on your· voice concern~g their :interests · however, that
·
we can allow
tlfo ·
Tuesday schedule ofclasses · part,- bti~'. be<;ause I believe tha,t; · as· ~el)resei:ited · among ._ to . the . Student Government to .
'rt.in'
in
. will
be
followed. · as President- of th~. Student admimstra!1on _or faculty." ·
~ _ violation of its · constitution
any
_ Thursday schedule of classes Go~e!Ilment, you are m.theb~t · Among the ~uties_ ;..
longer.
.· : . ·.
·
·-

:·. :: ··. ·
:i
willbefollowed. _pos1tlonto_correc~whatseemsto
''Toe-Poh<:Y Boar~ may ~P-:.
I t~erefore·,ask.you to call a
. . . ..
me a serious d1Screpancy .bet-
prove or-. reJect the aUocatlon
meetmg between the Student
. · ween .the organization_: of ,the recommendations drawn: up by·· Government and members of the
Advisement for .· Student Governmentas set put in
·
_the . .
Financ:ial ...
~oard
every· -Commuter Unlo:i, Interhquse
earlyregistratfori. · the constitution ·and. the_ govern-
semester; bu~- may not-increase .C:ounc_il, an~. ClJB_ t_o _discuss the
_
Submission ;..:ment,'s
-
ac~u~lorgamzation. : . , the t~tatamount !)_Lt~e:b~~get."
s1tuatlon._Further;Ia~kthatyou, ·_.
of Registration forms at · In .$ecbQn III
·
,oL:the )danst_>(see
:lil~O
By-Laws, __ Art1cle_ V,
as· ._I>res1de~t ·:ofc t~e · Student
Registrar's Office. _--Colle~e ;St\ld~n~ GovernIIlent_:·'.:l'aragraph
fl--: . , · · · · ·:
. : -,
Go~ernment; _talce. s~me k~d ,of,.
·
. .
-_Thanksgiving. Const~tuti_pn ·. (~arc,h 197~),:. ~he
'.?The.· St"!ldent . q~ver11!11ent
·,
achon__Jo ~'af!ir11}'',.thfleg~lity
of
.
.
. - _,, recess begiris: . orgalllzation k~own .~sthc Po~1cy_ . · bud_g~t. 1s ·· ~hen,: S'}bnutted to· the · .
·
t~e
:
const1\ution._'·.· · ,' ·: :·; _ ._ ... ·
· afterlastdaycla8$~·; l3_oard:i~ menti~ne'1,,c;<.- .::,
.
?:: ·
Policy Board;-wluch ma;v_chai1ge.,: .-..
· -. <Yourstruly; -:- . ·
. Classes resume. · .-._-
•:T_h~' :
..
~ommute~/: repres~11:: ;-.:the : ~ll~Ated,:_: ~Jn~µnt_ .to : any~
.. __
,
Ji_mDe Felice.·
. ·
·
. , tatives
shall be-three.m numlier ·.orgamzatton which presented a"
•...:.. ·
'. ActingPresident
.
and sliall·be'elected' from·withiii -'budget-to the Financial Board
for .
_
CorrimuterUnion:
. Fall Semester.ends. . the
_
foo~rn.~te( popul~U<>.n·. at:th~: \ t~b.ijll,lester;f ~·s ,!o~j(
~s
,·_the. . __
°'..
.
- .
-
·
·
_
27. Monday_ ,
--Final grades
are
due:
same_,.tlIIl~:::as ,Stude~~,9overn~_;cpang~ ~-d~ .. ~?,,~wtca~e fu.e.:·· ..
O>;tiri~oo
on
Page
7 ·' ·
,.
· -. ·
·'·
·,·· -'.·
·
·
ment .-e1ec,f10~: :• :,;·:,.,.·:
,•:;·.•,•rc_;-·
,. :'. •
_bu.~g~_t,
,1? ._
~u~
.\_?V'._~r;}~~:J~~l- , ._
..
.
.
..
,,
.,
:~·-•
.
.-
·
,_ ~.:> -~'. ...
/:~-~-~~~-~i:.,< -~-
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APRIL 15
1
1976
THE CIRCLE
Curtain
_
Time:
A
·
Review
Of ' '_
Equus' '
By_John
Dellamanna
wa~ loose t~e
-
mterest of
its
is
very forceful and compelling.
audience.
.
.
.
After the show you can expect to
Playing at the Plymouth
The story 1s baS1cally about a hear members of . the audience
.
Theater,
·and
presently holding boy, played by Thomas Hulce, say
"It
makes you think". That it
the
-
1975
-
Best
·
Play award
is
who has brutally_ blinded six does, and it should
be
.
your first
"Equus.tt
Whether
.
or not horses.
A
sympathetic woman choice for an
A-1
drama.
"l~quus'' deser:ves this award
is
judge comm~~es the_jurf~harsh
·
u
you're a student, you can sit
yet another question
;
As Anthony sentence to psychiatnc treat- on stage to see "Equus". The
Perkins
_
laboriously whines his ment at a clinic run
.
bf a friend of management has set up a three
way thi'pugh the first few minutes hers (Antho~y Perkins). The play tier
.
semi-circle of
_
bleachers
·
of the play, we realize
.
that were deals
_
w1t_h
·
the
boy:~ facing the audience. Upon
it not for
the
·
stomping of the
.
psychoanalysis, and the doctor s presentation of a student I.D.
horses,
.
his voice
.
could
·
have pe~sonal anguish in ~reating him. tickets will cost $4.00 during th~
easily lulled the entire audience As1d~ from that, 1t would be week, and $5.00 on weekends.
into
·
dreamland. After a tcying unfair to tell ~ou mor~.
Tickets must be purchased in
operiing, a bit of air slowly begins
Jeanne Ruskm (Laune Kart on advance and are unreserved.
to fill this
·
theatfical balloon, and
''The
Edge of Night") I11akes,Jhe This means that you should be at
we realize that what we have mnst of the part she plays, and the door of the theatre when it
hei:_-
_
e is a very powerful piece of because of the inte?se nature . of opens and ready to run and claim
psycl:iological
drama;
The
·
the play, the audience readily the best places. This is not much
.
.
audience becomes totally cap- ~ealizes
·
the ~ork that must go of a sacrifice considering the
·
·
ti\'ated by
_
every word and action mto
·
even the
.
smallest part
.

_
savings.
,'.
ofeach actor. At no point did thi~
To sum up
"Equus"
is not an
-
- magnific_ant work drag, or in any amusing or lighttype of sho,~.
It
-
Teaching
Jobs,
O/Jen,
--
-
3
-To
-
---
-
Take
.
Sa
-
bbaticdl
By
Rhoda
.
Crispell
Dr. Louis C.
·:
Zuccarello,
academic dean is. inte~iewing
teachers for
-
positions
in
political
science·
'
and criminal justice,
business

and economics and
•.
. communications arts.
.
·
10
addition, Zuccarello_ said
]hree faculty members will take
sabbaticals
_
.
·
-
·
·
··
·
Dr-:-: Daniel Kirk, chairman of_
- the psy_chofogy departrneQt, and
,Dr. §erge McAlonie,
·
.
assistant
-
·
·
profes~of of chemistry,
will
take
full-year sabbaticall!. Dr. Roscoe
Bal~h,
,
professor
.
of hi~tory, · will
_
.
take
a
·
sabb3:tical
in
the
sprin~ for
>
H0U'(fl00H
-
TOGBTHBR
.
-
--
WHen·
:
HOUBHOP
TOOeTHBR
-
BBRR00
1
8
-
.
.
Barron's is all for equal rights. Why
just show great fashions for guys?
Why not give the gals the same
:
.
.
wide selectionsc..;..the same
·
name labels,
-
?
·
··
s0
in
with
Damon, Petrocelli, Bill
-
Blass are Huck-A-Poi>, Happy
.
Legs. Nik Nik; Collage
:
.
.
·
and all
the other names you both know
.
.
.
__
so well.
·
. ·
Why not let the people who are
·
_
together
,
shop together?
More arid more pairs of people are
proving that the idea works like
·
crazy!.Come in and ~ee
-
·
.
for yourself,
.
THE COMPLETE
-
.
.
FASHION S!i{1P
_
.
_
319 MAIN MALl:POUGHKEEPSIE
·
Open Oaify
io
5:~0PM;J!,UJS
,
;to 9PM

HiJDSON PLAZA SHOPPING

·
"-_'
CENTER
,
POUGHK~EPSIE
:
:
.
:
:
Open
Daily
to 9PM; Sat;
to
6PM
-
us~
_
Barron·s
Chaige
_
oi Ma1oi.Ci~o,1
_
Cards
research.
.
been taught at Marist since
1960.
During his sabbatical, Dr.
Kii::k
This new book represents an
will write a book entitled "Ego
'
Updated and more concise

Development
·
and Behavior P.r~sehtation of the theory.
Disord~rs" with David Ausubel,
_
Dr. Kirk has written several
the man who developed the articles and one 'chapter in a
theory -
.
.
,
book,
-
but'
this
will be
his
first
The book deals with a theory of
-
book.
·
personality and
·
the causes of
·
Dr. McAlonie will take a
pe,~sonality problem.5.
sabbatical to pursue studies in
We have. used
-
~1s (Ausulbel) computers and mathematics.
theory, published m
1952.
It
has
·
·
·
-
·
Sullivan
To
Give Recital
,

...
...
Assistant
-
professo~ of music l}olds a master's degree
in
music
John Sullivan
wilf
present a solo
-
from New York University. From
re~ital on Sunday, April
25 at 4 1966-1971 he served as assistant
p.m. at' Christ Episcopar Church
·
chairman of the Department of
corner of Barclay and Academy
_
English at Mount
st.
,
.
Michael
street, City of Poughkeepsie.
Academy, Bronx.
An
-
accomplished organist, Mr.
Mr. Sullivan is
.
a member of the
_
·
Sullivan was invited to present a American Guild of Organists and
.
recital in
-
the Vassar College the Christ
_
Church Choir. He has
chapel last spring. This year's
also
directed
.
the
annual
recital is open to the public program of the Marist College
without charge. The audience is Chorus.
·
invitec.1

to attend a. reception
Mr.
Sullivan's
upcoming
afterward in the parish house.
program will include pieces by
A graduate of Marist, where he
·
Buxtehude, Couperin, Bach,
majored in English, Mr. Sullivan
.
Messiaen; Dupre and Franck.
·-
.
.
.
BULLETIN
Sources close
to
the administration have revealed three of the five
names that have applied for the position of facilities manager here at
Marist College.
·
·
_
Fred Lambert; assistant dean of students, John Dwyer, ,Urector 9f
the Registrarrs
.
office and Joseph Norton, housemaster of Leo Hall
have sent
in
applications for the position.
SMART SHOPPERS SAVE
.
.
ON OUR
-
EXCLUSIVE
HY
DE· PARK BR
..
ANDS
(FULL QUARTS)
Less
s3ss
.
Than
Less
_
s3ss
Than
-
~~:~
s399
Less$4
_
s9
Than
·
Less
$4
·
89
Than
1
PAGE 5
Job Outlook Glum?
Not so, says Snyder
By
Danny Dromm
If
one ·were to go solely by an
article in Time Magazine last
week,
·
the job ~tlook for
1976
college graduates would be glwn.
But according to Larry Snyder,
Office of Career Development,
things are not as bad as they
seem. Snyder said, "I am op-
timistic that with the proper
awareness
·
and training, our
graduates will be able to get
jobs."
·
·
According to a survey sent out
by
the Office
of
Career
Development, 60 percent of the
.
130 graduates
.
c;>f
.
1975 who an-
swered the survey are now in full
·
time
-
~mployment while another
20
percent
are
attending
graduate school.
65 percent of
those in full time employment are
-
.
working in fields related
to
the
academic courses taken at
Marist.
They've got
a
tong way to
go .
.
fn a world that isn't easy.
But with someone
'
s help,
they'll make it
.
What they need
is a friend. Someone to act as
confidant and guide. Perhaps.
it coul
_
d be you as a Safesian
Priest or Brother.
The Safesians of St. John
Bosco were founded in 1859 to
The survey also mentioned that
the salaries of those who went
directly into full time em-
ployment ranged from $5500 to
$12,500. The largest
-
number of
graduates were hired in the $8000
to
$8500 range.
Although only 37 percent of last
year's graduating class an-
swered the survey, Snyder
believes that it is fairly typical of
the class in general.
Some of the jobs held by Marist
graduates are: sales represen-
tative, assistant economist,
teacher, food manager, ac-
countant, child care worker,
assistant buyer, correction of-
ficer, police officer, bookkeeper,
and
·
psychotherapist technician.
Although Snyder is optimistic,
he warned that "you have to work
at getting them (jobs), they will
not
be handed
to
you." He added,
.. Do not be discouraged if. your
first job is not in your field."
serve youth: Unlike other orders whose apostofate has changed
with varying conditions, the Salesians always have been - and
will be
,
youth oriented. Today we're helping to prepare young-
sters for the world ttiat awaits them tomorrow
.
Not an easy
task but one which we welcome.
And how do we go about it? By following the precepts of·
our founder. Don Bosco. To crowd out evil with reason, religion
and kindness with a method of play, learn and pray. We're
trying to build better communities by helping to create better men.
As a Salesian, you are guaranteed the chance to help
the young in a wide range of endeavor ... as guidance counsel-
ors, technical and academic teachers, as coaches,
psychologists
...
in boys clubs, summer camps ... as mission-
aries
;
And you are given the kind of training you need to
achieve your aims.
·
The Salesian family
is
a large one (we are the third largest
order) but a warm
·
one. A community with an enthusiastic family
feeling where not only our talents are shared but·our short-
comings, too. If
·
you feel as we do, that service to youth can be
an important mission in your life,
_
we welcome your interest.
.
·---'!"'--------
-
,
For more information about Salesian Priests and
I
·
Brothers, maif
·
this coupon to:
1
F~ther Josep~ S.D.B.
Room B-637
I
1
Sales1ans
~~.!':.!~H:.:~::.~ ...... NY ... ,.,
1
f
am
·
interested in the Priesthood
O
Brotherhood
D
.
I -------- ·--
I
I
Nam•
Age
1

'
I
Street
Adilre11
-
1
-
ctty· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.s1a1e,
_ _ _
z1p·
I
.
1
·
CollegeAHendfng _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
I
'
ClaHof
.
f
------------
.
,
.
·
.
·
,
:.
,
·
.
·
.
·,
·
..
.
·
.
·
.
• , '
'
.
•'





















































































































.,
THE CIRCLE
APRIL 15
1
1976
No Fault
Guilt
Free History
the Social Democratic Party (for Having witnessed myself t~e
not resisting sooner), the special _treat~~mt of
,
p~bllc
members
-
of
the German figures like R1cha~ M. ~~on,
resistance )for resisting too late) John N. Mitcnell, lieut. William
slid into thinking Hitler might not
interpretations of relevant moral President Roosevelt (for ap-
L. Calley Jr. and numerous other
be
so bad, soon decided to vote
dilemmas. In these papers it was peasing Germany in the 1930'.s), unindicted
Watergate
co-
for
him,
and finally welcomed
not a matter of indifference to and the Allies for bombmg conspirators, I can understand,·
·
By
Richard
M.
Hunt
Copyright 1976 by the New
him
as "the savior of Germany"
Nazi oppressions that I found. Hamburg and Berlin and although
,
scarcely condone,-
!llY
.
York Times Company. Reprinted in 1933.
Nobody attempted.to minimize to Dresden in the 1940's.
students' reaction to the guilty
by permission.
·
In another topic we examined
"explain away" Nazi excesses.
Reading these "papers I leaders of earlier times.
Cambridge, Mass
.
Not long ago the obscure origins and public
Rather what struck me most recalled echoes of the same
Do I overinterpret
-
when I
I finished giving a course about career
-
of Franz Stangl, former
forcibly were the depressingly' "blame games" played out in the sunnise that they were only
Nazi Germany
-
to 100 Harvard commandant of the Treblinka
fatalistic conclusions about German
dramas
_
of
Rolf reading into their understanding
·
undergraduates. Altho~gh I'd extermination camp. More than
major moral dilemmas facing Hochhuth and the memoirs of
of Nazi Germany some of their
given a somewhat similar course most, this man's life exhibited
the German people at their Albert Speer; I wondered how
own current
_
preoccupations
,
on the same subject before, the the paradigmatic seductions,
particular time and place in such games came to the minds of
-
cynicisms, fatalisms? At any
reactions of my students this careerisms, and horrors of Nazi
history
.
.
a few American students.
rate I believe now my c
_
ourse
time were different
,
even
Pl!Z·
Fascism. like Hitler, born in
I read comments and questions
At the end of the term, I became for some students' a kind
-
zling
-
and in the end qmte Austria of Roman Catholic such as
·
these: "In the last' realized my own worries over
.
of projection screenfor
-
~heir own
disconcerting.
- parents, Stangl began as a func-
analysis what else could the student reactions were shared by
moral struggle and dilemmas
.
In years past! used to teach the tionary of
.
the early Nazi
average citizens of these
little
the teaching assistant in my
Some day soon I'll be teaching
·
course from a straight historical eutha°'asia program, and then
towns have done but vote. for a course. One day he said, "You the same course again. But not in
perspective. Emphasizing social
was
rewarded with the leader-
dynamic leader like Hitler?" know
r
think
if
some of our
·
the same way. Ne~t time I hope
and economic factors I helped my ship of the largest of the five
"Given the desperate
,
cir- students were sitting as judges at
·
to stress more strongly my own
students trace the origins of extermination camps in occupied
cumstances of 1930 'it was the Nuremberg trials they would
belief in the contingencies
,
the
Nazism back to earlier centuries. Poland. What made his "case" so
inevitable that the Nazis would probably acquit
-
or at least open-endedness of
history

Later we focused on the Weimar intriguing, as recorded in Gitta
come to
_
power."
·
"After all pardon- inost of the Nazi
__
Somehowlhave got to convey the
-
·
Republic, the rise of Adolf Hitler, Sereny's portrait "Into That nobody in 1933 believed the Nazis
-
defendants." We were both
-
meaning of moral decisions
·
and
Nazism in peace and wa!, the Darkness" was the first-hand
would really lead the country into stunned at what he had said.
their relations to significant
extermination of European Jews evidence of this man's initial war." "When the regime sue:.
Maybe in the end if
is
true that outcomes. More important, I
.
in the holocaust
·
, and finally the character flaws thatled
him
in a
ceeded in controlling public quite a number of students want to point out that single acts
post-war Nuremberg trials
.
It
all straight
·
path
from
self- -'opinion through censorship of the nowadays hold to a despairingly
.
of individuals and strong stands
came out fairly well, no hassles, deceptions to self-corruptions. press, radio and public speeches, ·deterministic
_
view of the past of institutions at an early date do
no surprises.·
.-
Thrown'
into
-
thP
com-
how could anyone
-
disbelieve and present. Clearly some trends make a difference i1fthe long run
.
-
But this time I decided on new pany of a morally vacuous yet Hitler's promise 9f. peace, full of our time seem to be running
,
This is my next assignment.
approach. I called the course ideologically fanaticized employment, a 'reborn Ger-
toward a no-fault,
·
0
gu11t-free Now I'~ through teaching po-
,
"Moral Dilemmas in a Re
-•
movement, Stangl found it in-
many'?" "And with
-
the
·
ever society. One might say the vir-
fault history.
_
_
pressive Society: Nazi Ger- creasingly easy to rationalize his
-
present threat of Gestapo terror, tues
'
of responsible choice, paying
Richard M
.
Hunt is associate
many"
,
Through case studies of evil deeds in terms of higher who would dare to speak out and the penalty, takmg
_
.
the
_
con
-
·
dean of the Harvard Graduate
issues and personalities I tried to necessities and future good
.
Most resist? Would you? Would
.
I? sequences all appear atfow ebb School of Arts arid Sciences
·
and
present the Nazi phenomenon· of my students and
.
I felt that Probably not!"
·
today.
·
·
president of
·
the !\merican
from the inside so to speak, from
·
Stangl's motivations fitted not at
But there was more to come.
On the rising ride are the
Council on Germany, which
_
seeks
the experience and testimony of all into current theories
.
of the Perhaps as a consequen~e ofsuch claims of
·
the amnesty
.
outlook
to promote closer West
.
Geiman -
those who lived
.
through the "banality
of
.
evil"
and deterministic thinking, not a
few
and the pardonable ·offender~. U!)ited St
'
ates relations.
period as victims
_
, victimizers, "obedience to orders."
papers went on to
.
express
bystanders, true believers, and
Later on
·
in the course, I in~ __ covertly but sometimes even
members of the resistance.
·
I troduced the
-
problems
·
of overtly whatI can only call a "no-
gave special attention to the Peal~ resistance to tyranny
·
in a
fault" view of history; Since most
life sometimes life-arid-death totalitarian state, and we looked coices of many people were
moral dilemmas of specific in- closeiy at the heroic student wrapped up in extenuating cir-
,
dividuals and groups.
opposition called the White Rose
·
cumstances, since
,
·
the en-
For
.
example, we read William in Munich in 1942-43. We studied trapments
_
of the regime took
SheridanAlleri's fascinating book the ethics of German and Allied
:
place
so
slowly
and
so
"
The Nazi Seizure of Power: The bomoing during the war.
_
We reasonably, and since the
Experience of a Single German dealt with the fearful brutalities ultimate confrontation with the
Town, 1930-1935
.
" Using the of life
-
in Nazi extermination Nazi evil came so late inthe
_
day,
author's vivid documentation we cainps and we followed with then who is to say where and
_
.
tried. to figure out what it was
·
dismay the
-
perversions of . wh
_
e~ and
.
)Vit~
.
~hor.n
'
th~· real
-
thaf turned this
rather
staid modern science-carded ou.tinthe responsibilityJ1es .
. : :
: .... - _. -
-
sleepy Himoverian town ofl0,000 edical
''experiments" on hJlpless . Most- disturbmg of
all
.
to me
_
people into an early
.
Nazi human subjects
:
These themes was the
·
end
.
of the line
·
of such
stronghold.
,
.
,
were more than
,
enough
-
to arguments.
·
This point was
We watched as the Nazis dishearten all of us by the term's reached
-
by
p.
few students who
literally "blitzed" the town with end. At one point when I asked for seemed somehow to realize the
political
propaganda
and comments, a student quoted me moral peril of such
-
exculpatory
demonstrations and we observed Kurt Vonnegut's word
:
"There
fa
judgm!_!nts. Their way out was-to
the developing weaknesses of nothing ir:itelligent to say about a lessen the responsibility of
various traditional political massacre."
anyone by dispersing the guilt
parties. Finally, we pondered the
-
-
Nevertheless, l was surprised , among everyone.,
·
moral dilemmas of those or-
by some of the things the students
"Guilt by diffusion" extended
dinary and not-so-ordinary did 'say
\
in their end-of-term _ to the Pope. the Roman Catholic
citizens who almost reluctantly
-
papers. I had
-
asked for personal Church, the German Prote{>tants,
-
Handicapped Learn To Swim
Continued from
Pg. 2
In this program, volunteers are
more than assistants. «They are
people willing to go out and have
a good time," said
Ms
.
Cook, who
points out that the volunteer is
learning and socializing just as
much as the disabled student.
"It's a way to get involved,"·
echoes Ms. Frances Miller, a first
semester student at Dutchess
Foundation
.
grant,
_
has been
designed with special feat_µres for
_
·
·
_
the handic
_
apped.
Price
Hike frpm
Pg.
1
in Bender's office at
.
the
suggestion of an instructor
.
who
thought she could assist a deaf
student with studies.
"
Do you
swim?" she was asked.
_"
How
about Wednesday night?" and
"There are certain hard
she was involved into the realities facing higher education
program.
today," says Vice President
Frivolous
~
-
Sal
.
II
·
19.
~caclemy
_
St.
L
·
ive
·
Entertaznmen
·
t
Nightly
-
110 covaR
NO MINIMUM
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
JAM SEss,oNS
Bring your instr"Q.ments
.
,
we have
-
the PA
·
System
-
-_
from Poughkeepsie.
"
Somebody
needs a hand, but it
'
s a dual
process
.
"
Ms
.
Miller
acts as an
interpreter for Jane Barnhart, a
deaf student
.
Ms. Miller's
parents and brother are deaf, so
she is familiar with sign
language. Ms. Miller found ?~t
·
about the program after stoppmg
Involvement has extended Waters,
,
"If
we are going to cope
itself as far as the office
_
of the_ ~uccessfully. with
_
these re?,lities
president, as Dr. Linus Foy and there are ·some tough decisions
Dr. John Connolly, presidents of that
.
have to be
.:-
made. Among
Marist and Dutchess respec- these isthe fact that we may not
.
tively, visited a recent session of be able to provide
·
for salary
_
i.-wt.MMIAIIIW~MMAIIW~MNWW~MN4iNW~MNW.__,
the group
.
increases.
"
·
With Marist's
·
new recreation
To meet
·
the demands of the
·
r.enter scheduled for completion 197?-78 budget, Vice President
_
next fall, Dr
.
Foy sees expanded Waters indifates that the College
opportunities for handicapped
--
will be under~
_
aking . several
swimmers:The pool area, which _cour_ses of ~ctton._ First,
~x~
_
is supported by a Mccann tensive and mtens1ve plannmg
.
ALBANY POST ROAD. HYDE PARK, N. Y. 12!538
TELEPHON.E ( 914)
.229
_
-9000 .
.
Radio_
Stolen
from
Pg.
1
.
.
-
.
will take place to develop
a
5-year
Burglaries frompg,
1
·
'.model for operati011, and all of-
h
·

·
,,
.
fices and departments will be
adequate security over the past anr ot er sch
_
ool
_
m
.
the ar~a.
·
subject to cost effective studies in
said Bodo.

-
.
th
·
B · 11
th
four years."
·
In addition to Marist, the town
__ -
e c~mmg year
..
a~ica
Y.•
e
When questioned about the of Poughkeepsie police depart-
,
c_lass1c
_
steps ~or copmg
_
Wit~ ~
-
incident
,
Phillip McCready
,
ment is responsible for Dutchess tight budg~t wlll be unde
_
r,taken
director of safety and security, Community and Vassar colleges.

~a~ely,
-
_
improvement of_ ~f-
confirmed the theft but refused to
.
Although Dutchess is a com-
-
·
fic1_en~y? mcreased. produ~tiv1~y
elaborate,,,"until
!
see what's in muting co}!ege and Vassar has
JO
of md1v1du!3ls and mnovabon m
the letter,
.
he
_
sa~d .
.
·
paid
.
uniformed guards oil duty prograf!lmip_g
.
.
-
,

·
He wished to remind students Bod~ feels that
'
the security
"~a:ist WI
_
ll come through this
Pabst '12
oz.
Returnables
less than
3.99
_
½Case+ Deposit
No
Return
Bottles
_.

.
"
Less
Than 5
1.-56 6
pk.
·
-
Bock
Available
·
_
.
_
Genesse
.
-Reading-Pabst
t~at _"the college is not respon- problem at Marist; even with the penod b~
_
cause we h~ve
.
learne?,
s1ble for person~l
.
p~operty · shortage of manpower, can be
_
well
_
to l~v«:
.
0I,1Jhe _fiscal ~dge?
.
stolen" from
·
automobiles on solved with stronger disciplinary
,
says
.
lbe
.
.
vic~freSident,
.
.
As
.
I~
.
Over
·
40
'
1mported
·
Beers
campus:
- ;
·
.
.
action.
_
-
..
.
.
:
_ -
the
_
past
,
w~
Will
'.
have
_
t!) make
_
-
--
..
.
-
He added, "he (Berkery) was
.
'
''!think
the
discipline
at
Marist
•:
.
~reful,
:
t:iard step~.
If
we
.
do ~nd
:
-
-
'
·
Available
the complainant.'
-'
In
cases such
is
weak
·
and alni~t non-existent,
-:
_if ~e
_
plaf!
:
\Vell,
,
W~
shouldp~tJust
.
Bl
t
C
ns
-
as thi~,
)t
is the
;
studen~'s
·
arid what
·
protection
·
does
'.
that
~rv,vul~
-
t
-
~9it!nue
_
t\fn~~
-
-
-
,•
-
-
a
,
Z
a
,
-
.
,,
.
/
r~pons1bility
to report
the m- offer for
the
studen
_
ts?~'

he
\
lll
a~a
lie
·
,
~
art?
;
r .
,
:
:<
.
Less
.
Than
'
~1-~2
-
6
pk.
_:
c1dent to
_
town
'
pollce.
-
:
·:
·

concluded
:
-
,
t: · ,.
_:,-r
,
c::
:-·
· .-
"
an
_
.
wan
.
or
,

8 ~
-
-
·
•·

·
-
-
1-.........
....;..;... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~ - - -
.
·,
.
:
·
,•·
I
i
.
i
!
:































































APRIL
15, }.976
THE Cl·RCLE
PAGE
7 .
Track Seeks Undefeated Season
By
Tom McTernan
Van Keuren also won the 880
yard run in 2:05.3, just ahead of
Led by Pete Van Aken's teammate Keith Millspaugh.
domination in the weight -
John Vandervoort placed second
throwing events, the Marist track in both the 100 ( 11
.
3) and the 440
team boosted its record to
i -
0 as (52
:
8). Brian Costine was second
they defeated three opponents at in
_
the intermediate 440 yard
New Paltz on Monday.
hurdles with a time of 1:02.0. And
Marist accumulated 72 points for the second straight meet
,
the
to
.
outdistance Oneonta State, result wasn't certified until the
which ended with 60. Monmouth final event,the mile relay, which
and York finished with 30 and 28, Marist won in 3:34.8.
respectively.
Oneonta
had
.In the previous meet, at
\defeated Marist by 25 points a Westfield last Saturday
;
the mile
year ago.
relay of Vandervoort, Dave
Van Aken, the _team's leading Schools, Millspaugh and Van
point - getter this spring
,
Kenren had set a new school
remained undefeated in the record with a time of 3:29.6. Their
-
hammer throw (133-10) and also third :. place finish in the race
won the shot put ( 42 - 2) and gave Marist a total of 51
½
points,
discus throw (121-11
1
k
)
and was ahead of Westfield and Bentley
,
third in the javelin
(154 -
3)
.
He w~ich finished with 43 apiece
.
got strong support in the weight Two other schools, Wesleyan and
events from Ray Leger(second
·
Keene State, finished with more
in the discus and third in both the points than Marist but were
.
n
_
ot
hammer and snot) and
.
Steve scored against the Red Foxes.
Blenk (second in ·the hammer.)
Van Aken also
·
set school
·
In other field events,
·
Rich records in two weight events
:
136
Schanz had first in the long jump
~
1-
in the hammer (first pla
·
ce)
-
(19
-
~
lHz)
and third in the triple and
42 -
4~-z_in the shot (second).
·
·
jump
(40 -
5~i) and Steve Van Fred Kolthay
.
set a new record
Keuren had no competiti,on in
_
with 14:58.5 in the three - mile
wiiming
·
the pole vault at
IO "
6. run.
-
but had to settle for fQurth.
I
·
.
·
-
~Ac
·
adeinic
-
'
Calendar
Kolthay was also
.
third in the mile far back in the final standings.
(4:24.2).
Once again Van Aken was the
The other first place finish for
·
big scorer with victories in the
Marist came when Dave Schools hammer, shot (41 - 5
1
h)
and
edged teammate Brian Costine in discus
(119 -
3) and a second in
the 440 yard hurdles. Sch
_
ools also the javelin (145 -1). His bid for a
placed fifth with 51.7 in the 440
.
fourth victory was stopped by
Vandervoort came in fourth in Van Keuren, who
-
threw the
the 220 yard dash
in
23
.
5 and javelin 146 - 4 to take first. Van
MUlspaugh did 2:01.4 for fifth in Keuren also won the pole vault at
the 880.
.
10 -
6 and was second in both the
Van Keuren cleared
11 -
6 in the 120 yard high hurdles and the 880.
pole vault to finish in second Schools was first across in the 440
while Mike Dombroski tied for yard hurdles
in
60
.
(
second in the high jump (5 -
10)
Phil Cotennec won the 120 yard
and took fifth in the javelin (149 -
hurdles (17.3) and tied Dom-
6).
·
broski at 5 - 8 for first in the high
The Red
.
Foxes opened their jump. Contennec was also second
current season with
a
smashing in the 100 yard dash in 10.5
.
and
victory lasf .Wednesday with 120 third in the
220
(24.6) and the long
points while
_
Wagner (55) and jump (19-7
1
-"
.!)
.
Schanz won in the
New York Maritime (16) finished triple jump
(41
<
P
'.!
)
and had 19-
11
~1!
for second in
the
long
jwnp.
The Red Foxes also placed
second in both distance runs with
Mike Mahoney
(4:38.6)
in the
mile and Tom Luke (15:54) in the
three mile.
Marist has just four teams left
on their regular season schedule
and coach Rich Stevens feels "we
can go undefeated for the first
time ever if we beat Siena next
week." Marist will host Siena
along with Fairfield on Wed-
nesday at New Paltz. The team
will also be looking forward to the
first CACC Outdoor Track
Championships, to be held at
Kings April 27
.
Marist will seek to
duplicate its cross - country title
in the conference
.
Netters Await

r
.
CACC Opponent
By
Tom McTernan
A trip to
·
Long Island to play
Dowling has become
-
to be
dreaded by basketball coach Ron
Petro in recent years
.
But now,
·
as coach ofthe
O
~
3 men's tennis
team, he has every reason to look
forward , to Saturqay's match
with the Golden Lions in their
that the Rea Foxes lack a strong over I<'ord
.
numbers one and two players
.
In the other matches against
John McGraw, who has played
·
Kean, Dave Chung toppled
the top spot in all three matches
·
McGraw 6 - 1, 6 -
l;
Steve Levin
, thus far, has yet to win in singles. defeated Arico 6 - 2, 6 - 3; Kurt
··McGraw's a steady player but Kreisell
decisioned
Steve
he just doesn't hit hard enough Sullivan 6 - 4, 3 - 6, 6 - 4; Rich
for a number one player," said Kardell downed Sclafani
6 -
2,
6 -
-
Petro
.
.
1;
and Elliot Shlosser won over
Spring
.
Semester 1977
_
-..._
.
January
17Monday
S
. S
.
·
cA~C opener.
··
-
pnng emest~r
It's not
.
really Dowling but
Quinnipiac won four of the six Lucius Bonneson
6 -
0, 6 -
1.
matches in singles. McGraw lost
Al
New Haven in their opener
6 - 3, 6 -
4; Mark Kessler downed
last Wednesday, Marist was
Jay Metzger
6
-
3
,
6 - 1;
Art without the services of Kolthay
Traeger
defeated
Walt and Metzger while being sliut out.
Brickowski 6'-1,
6 - 3;
and Steve ·oean Coogan outplayed McGraw
Sc hart outlasted Steve Sullivan
7
6 - 3
,
6 -
4; Jim Blasczyk edged
,.
.
20-25 Thursday
-
Tues4ay
25Tµesday
, 26
Wednesday' ,
·
February
7Monday
·
25
Friday
March
11
Fl'.fday
12-20
15Tuesday
28
-
31
_
30
-
l April Wednesday-Fri
.
April
8Friday
llMonday
May
·
5Friday
9Monday
-
.
: t Saturday
~
6Monday
;
June
.
IO
Friday
28-3
_
0 Tuesday-Thursd~y
Summer School
1977 Evening
,
June
;
l
Wednesday
6Monday
July
.
15friday
. .
_
18-22 M9nday-Thursday
.
.
.
1977 Mini
·
Session
June
-
~18
'
"
·
20-Jµly2
•,
.
July
•.
5-16
'
classes begm rathedhe CACCthat his players
Co~rse can't wait for, which is no sur
-
change period.
.
prise considering the Red Foxes
·
_
La~t ~ay have won the CACC title during
for late ,registration, each of the last four years. But it
change of courses, becomes
a
different story when
1h
tuition refu~d after they play such non - conference
- 6, 7
·
-
6.
Arico 5 - 7, 6
-
4, 6 - 4; Kevin
thi~date.
_
schools as New
.
Haven, Kean
.
Deadline for
·
State and Quinnipiac, as they
·
did
The only Marist wins in singles
Prentice beat Brickowski
6
-1,
6 -
were by Ernie Arico,
6 -
3,"11-
6, 6 -
1; Owen Stewart defeated
2. over Jeff Adler; and Ray
Murphy
6
-
3
,
6
-
O;
Greg Garvey
Murphy, 3 -
6, 6 - 3, 6
°
3
over Don
topped Bonneson
6 - 2, 6 - 3; and
Reims. Arico and Fred Kolthay
Lenny Volarelli downed Steve
mcompletes and gra_?e this past week.
·

.
·
......._~hanges for Fall 19,5.
.
"
These teams are really good,"
a
NO
tuition refund
after this date
.
Last date
for reporting P-NC Option
and dropping courses
.
without
penalty of failure
.
Last day
said
'
Petro during Monday's 6 - 3
loss to Quinnipiac in their home
debut
.
'.
'
And the wind was
.
very
strong at both New Ha~en
(
9 - O
loss) and Kean (7 - 2
.
defeat)
.
Sure, it affects
·
both teams but
·
they practice there all the time
and are
a
little more used to it."
Another reason. for the team's
slow start, according to Petro, is
later gave the Red Foxes its only
McCarthy
6 -
1,
6 -
3.
.
win in three doubles matches
The Red Foxes will face Bard
with a 6
-1, 6-
1 romp over Norm
here tomorrow before their trip
Stacheler and Traeger.
to Dowling on Saturday. Next
Arico had also teamed with
week are CACC matches with
Mike Sclafani
·
on Saturday for
Nyack here Tuesday and at Kings
Marist's only doubles victory
on Wednesday
.
It looks like a new
over Kean
.
·
They beat Donald
season is about to begin.
Chung and Chris Ford
6 -
2, 7 -
6
.
Metzger scored the other point in
the singles with a
6 - 2, 6 - 4
win
·
Knick Lacrosse
.
for payment of fees. Service charges - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
assessed on unpaid balances.
·
Spring Recess.
Dowling
w
L
2
0
Mid:term grades due.
Advisement
for early registration.
Submiss
i
on
of registration forms at
,
Registrar's Office.
·Holiday
Holiday
·
Spring Semester ends
;
Senior final grades due.
Thirty-fii:~t Commencement
_
·
Final grades due.
Deadline for
incompletes and grade changes
for Spring 1977
Freshman Registration
Final Registration
.
Classes begin
.
Classes end.
Exams
First Session
·
':t
·
Second Session
·
1 HAYE.PLANS
F
-
0■
YOU.~.
plans for peace, not disaster,
reserving a future full of hope for you ...
.. .it
is
Yahweh who speaks.
God has continually
(Jer.29)
God has continually
.
acted in creation calling men
.
Throughout
time men have
-
responded to this call.
·
Great prophets, like Isaiah and Jeremiah,,sought to bring the
people of theirdayto the realization of God's love for them.
Jesus lived and died to show that same love, and he realizedthat
it would only be through men that the Gospel would be
proclaimed
·
to other men.
Marcellin Champagnat, a man among other ~en, heard that
.
call and took it seriously. He founded a community of men - the
.
MARIST BROTHERS - called by God to proclaim his love to the
world .
.
Today the Marist B
_
rothers are continu~g to answ~~ t~ call.
Their work - teaching, counseling, social w?rk! m!-mstenng to
the needs of others - is their response to the mv1tabon of Jesus,
-
"Come,
_
follow me."
·
Contact:
.
Bro. Philip Robert
83-53 Manton Street
Jamaica, N.Y
.
11435
M"RIST'
·
■ROTH■
-
■S
ThirdSession
L..-.-----------------------..
Kean St.
1
0
Montclair St.
~
1
0
CCNY
0
0
FDU-Teaneck
·
O
1
N.
Y. Maritime
0
1
MARIST
0
2
ANNOUNCEMENTS
There
will
be a rally to prgtest
the rise in tuition on Tuesday,
April 20 at 2:30 in the Marist
Theatre.
NOTE:
The CIRCLE
will
not
publish next week due
to the extended weekend.
To the Members of the Maris!
Chlldrens Theatre •
Thanks
·
for the fun and ex-
citement you gave all us kids.
.
Lorry
HYDE
PARK
A
-
RMY
-NAVY
10%
DISCOUNT'
GOOD TIIRU NEXT WEEK
-oN RT. 9
-· SUE
-,
























































































:
>:
PAGE 8
The
Varsity Lightweights during race at
.
Ithaca
·
Saturd9.y.
.
.
-
.·.
By Tom McTeman
<
·
_
·
~ild Larry ~t_reigel
.
·
(Streigel
photo. I
APRIL 15,
.
t'976
High
,
On
.
Sports
·
By Thomas McTernan
WOMEN
NETTED
BY.VASSAR
Cross-town rival Vassar defeated Marist 7-2 to spoil their season
opener last Friday,
·
.
·
·
·
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
Phyllis Mendreski, playing number three, was MarISt's only smgles
·
winner after
she
recovered to beat C.andy Spiellberger ~.
6-3, 6-3.
But
coach Rori Petro pointed out, "Tina and Shelli (Iraca) both lost close
matches
and their fourth player, Jeanne Guarino; was sick
;
" Tina lost
7-6, ~. 6-3 to Debbie Connell and Leslie Harokawa topped Shelli 7-6, 6
-
a
.
.
.
.
.
.
In other singles matches, all Vassar wins, Felicie .Bendit whipped
·
Suzanne Galucci 6-l, 6-1; Ann Jaffe nipped Claudia Butler 7-5, &-a; and
Chris Garvan blasted· Ahor Shafa 6-l, 6-1.
. .
.
Shelli Iraca and Butler combined for a 6-2,
~3
.
win
over Ann Philbuck
and
Wendy Lippincott for the only Red
Fox
doubles win.
.
.
· ·
The women are now off until Wednesday when they' traveUo Kings
.
_
Toei
have a postpoiled match with !JI~ter C.C. rescheduled for ~ext
Thui'Sday ~ere.
·
'
. ·
.
·

.
·
.
. ·
.
·
.
·
.
. ·
TRACY NAMED ATHLETE OF THEWEEK
-
.
_
Greg Tra
_
cy, a junior from Briga'11tine, N.J.,
has
been named Marist
College A~hlete of the week for the week ending Aprill 0.
.

.
-
Tracy, siroke of!he varsity heavyweight ere~ ;
·
was mstrwnental in
picking up the stroke
as
the Red FQxes
:.:
defeated
·
Massachusetts
/
Sat~fCiay.
<
·
·
-
·
·
·
INTRAMU
.
RAL ROUNDUP
..
'
. .
/
.
-· .
.
Intramural Softball began Mo9day:
-
in
firs~
day contes~ "Seventh
_
Heaven''
.
blasted
·
«Bennett's Bumblers'
~
J4-6,
''.The
Boys"
trounced
"Tony's Pizzeria"
11.:s;
,
'
!
Footlights
'.
'
.
edged ''Nittany °I..ions" 7-6
.
and
.
"3rd
.
Floor Leo"
·
outlasted
<'Leo
E-Z
·
Fifth"
9"o:
.:• ·
·
·
·
·
.
.
'

Int
t
amural floor hockeybe'gms iri gyin
:
TuesdayJiiglit .
.
·
·
TlII~
w
_
~
EK
,
~N ~isT
-
;ronfs
(April
~5-2
°
1
/
·
. . .
..
.
Th~rsday, A:Pril 15-Lac!osse: ~t CCI'fY._. 4 p.m
.'. -
.
Frtdar, Apnl 16 -
.
Lacrosse: atQue~ns
,
-J p
:
m:
,
.
..
-Tenms: Bard (Men m;ily) ~home-3 p
~
m •
.
':
.
:
.
.
Saturday, April 17 - Crew:
·
LaSalle~ home~
.
9: 30
a.m.
.
~
Ten~s
:
at {)owling (Men oJily)
~
2
p
.
m,
·
·

· ··
·:·
Tuesd,y, April 20 ~
·
Lacrosse:
_
at N:Y
;
Maritime-
.
4 p.m.
~
Tenrus: Nyack (Men only) -home
.:
2
p.m.
·
- Golf: Qui,nnipiac -at Beekman CC- lp.rri'.
,.
Wedt1esdat ,April 21 ~Tennis:
~t
Kirigs-2 p.m.
:
-
-
·
Ti:a~k
:
l{mgs "at New Paltz
-:-
~ p.m
,
,
.:
·
· ..
.
· ·
·
G0lf<3rs
.
'
-
.
.
·-
._.
:
Split
Opener.
·
/fiJv,t
J
·
.
_
Keep an
Eye
On Our
(ff!.et
.
·,
Spring
lino
Fot 76
·
. .'
:~·:
Pough
kee:p
_
~ie
::
-
-
/
.
.
.
.
,_
4
_
54L
·
73{)9
·-
..
_~-
=
:
.
:
-
•..._,..
••

I
~
~ :
·
:,:,

: ·
,-::,
,
.

-
:
-
faMOUi Nom• lkc-nd1
Sandab fndud.--
.
_,,.
..,...
.
t•-
·
·-\
~~"DI._....
. .......... I
I


17.9.1
17.9.2
17.9.3
17.9.4
17.9.5
17.9.6
17.9.7
17.9.8